tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News February 24, 2020 11:00pm-12:00am PST
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the u.s., 53 cases so far. no deaths. >> trace gallagher, thank you. that's all the team we have left. let not your heart be troubled. laura. >> laura: could you not sayot psychotic and then say "hi laura!" >> last week you made me stand up and show my jeans and sneakers. >> laura: you have a lot of people saying you have lost weight or something. what were you wearing that was levi's? or wranglers? >> i try to be -- people say this all the time. you are taller, skinnier, younger in person. which means i'm short and fat in tv?yo >> laura: someone said you look a lot taller on tv. i said really, you look thinner and person.ou that's what i say to them. >> i get that too.
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i get that all the time, you really wear jeans every night? you forced me to show the world that i wear jeans every night. and to force me to show the world that i hate this stupid type. >> laura: we have to get to >> laura: we have to get to michelle before we get in trouble. great to see you. take care. i am laura ingraham. this is "the ingraham angle." democratic voters are feeling sunburned. the democratic establishment is feeling sunburned. s also tonight, joe biden is banking his entire campaign on the african-american vote and south carolina. as the former vp taking these voters for granted? candace owens has answers. but president trump is finally improving a purge of the intel community. why is it happening now and why the deep state is freaking out.
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in a "the ingraham angle" exclusive, benjamin weingarte previews his new book on ilhan omar. why he says she is leading an effort to dismantle our core institutions. but first, dr. frankenstein. may your monster. that's the focus of tonight's "angle." >> washington democrat meltdown over the weekend. it was about as much fun as watching the last democratic debate. you all know by now that sanders one. and to watch the reaction, you would've thought that donald trump had just one reelection. >> democratic candidates really are not vetting bernie sanders. >> democrats need to sober up and to figure out what they are going to do about it. >> i believe the real winner was putin. >> we are living and a political equivalent of climate change.
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>> he says it's over. >> laura: the thrill is not running up that leg tonight. and what did they think was going to happen? did they really believe that stoking radicalism on college campuses and fueling this general mind-set -- you've all felt it, seen it, felt it. of victimization? did they think that that was going to lead to good outcomes?, they really believe celebrating a deeply dark and cynical view of america and our pop culture is going to end well? what are they think was going to happen when they stood by and nodded approvingly as our young people were pummeled with a message that our country is racist, sexist, unseen of ohmic, and just plain rotten? well guess what? over time and in the absence of actual facts. the poison plant of radicalism
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will take root. >> the truth is, i'm sorry to have to say this from way back on racist principles. when i talk about creating america that works for all people, it means doing away with the systematic, the systemic racism that exists from coast-to-coast. in some ways we are not. >> laura: why would new citizens unaware of the less ongoing intoxication of our schools, sometimes churches. why would they think that socialism is all that bad? the democrats couldn't even stand let alone applaud. s when at last year's state of the union speech the president said this. >> america will never be a socialist country.
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[cheers and applause] >> laura: well, one of the democrats in that audience did not stand. now most schools don't tell students the truth about life under socialism. that it almost always leads to less freedom to the average citizen. at the bottom line is that democrats have no one to blame but themselves for bernie.n. and so many claim that obama was such a moderate, he bears some of the responsibility to. >> if you have a business, you didn't build that. >> i believe in american exceptionalism, just as i suspected that the brits believe and british exceptionalism. >> laura: we will all agree to be exceptional together. this is exactly what sanders, a dirty millionaire himself, believes. >> may be your workers played some role in that as well.
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and it is important that those workers are able to share the benefits also.or >> laura: he didn't build that. with biden faltering, we knew that democrats would go for this radical alternative. these new revolutionaries, we are about to throw it in with biden. why would they do that? go for the incremental stuff. they want free stuff. and they want it now. and they don't want to hear anything about compromise or how he was working with the republicans. just about a year ago, i was actually taking them various seriously as a political force. while others have laughed at aoc, i think they are the legitimate thought leaders of the democratic party. the new socialist may be an experienced, but they are bold, energetic, and determined to shake up their establishment.
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now i take them at their word. sorry to say it. but see, i told you so. and by the way, it didn't take long for pelosi to start catering to the squad. they promised their constituents impeachment, and they delivered. and who is more exciting and the democrat seen today? buttigieg, mr. perfect. klobuchar. michael bloomberg? not a chance. sanders is a lot more honest than obama and his crowd. and i love how they pretend that bernie is somehow not a logical outgrowth of what came before. have we not forgotten who obama's spiritual mentor was? >> the government gives them the drugs, bigger prisons, and then
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wants us to sing god bless america? no, no, no. not god bless america. god shame america. it's time to act. >> laura: for the past 24 hours, mainline democrats desperate to derail the bernie express have been circulating his most recent comments about cuba. >> we are very opposed to the authority and nurture of cuba. it is unfair to sibley say everything is fine. when fidel castro came into office, he had a massive literacy program. is that a bad thing? >> laura: wait a minute. where have i heard something like that before? >> cuba has an extraordinary resource. a system of education which values every boy and every girl. and in recent years, the government has begun to open up to the world. it is opened up more space for that talent to thrive. >> laura: said today, supposedly, more moderate democrats, they all want you to
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know this but they are a heck of a lot closer ideologically to sanders than they want you to let on. they love calling themselves, all of them global citizens. since they believe america really isn't any better than any other country. it certainly not a constitution. not a flag, not our declaration of independence, not even our patriotic music. a lot of our monuments, tear those down. how can a nation that elected donald trump claim to be exceptional after all? the democrats had a chance to put down the bernie rebellion years ago. frankly, decades ago. but they decided to ride the socialist wave. r even hillary never really attacked his ideas is dangerous or wrong.ed they have basically played a patty cake with him. he has gotten stronger, and more dangerous. >> it's alive! it's alive!
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it's alive! it's alive! it's alive! >> laura: very much so. dr. frankenstein, you created this monster good luck controlling him. and that's the angle. trump 2020 campaign jennifer holdsworth, democrat strategist for pete buttigieg. jennifer, do democrats really not to realize they created bernie? >> i don't think that they think that they created a monster. but i do think that a lot of democrats are very concerned not about a lot of bernie sanders policy but the fact that he will have trouble winning. ideologically, i think that'st all of the democrats on the stage believe in universal health care. it's about how to get there. they believe in a woman's right to choose, it's about how to get there. i think ideologically. but -- b >> laura: you guys are acting like this is something new.
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i almost spit out my coffee. >> that's the point -- >> laura: that's the craziest things i've ever heard. it's because they don't challenge them very often. i think he is being challengednt for one of the first times. >> i think the debate is going to be an interesting place to see that they are going to turn their attention from poor michael bloomberg who failed miserably last week, now going after bernie sanders. they know they have to take bernie sanders. buttigieg has been doing that. will they be successful?af i doubt it because i think it energizes his base. i think that the democrat establishment is just simply dead. and the media leads are freaking out. they are thehe one saying -- >> laura: i am enjoying every minute of it. a so boring to me because i knew it would happen. if joe faltered, he would have been able to vanquish. >> i think he is strong. everyone has to take a breath right now.
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we have allowed less thann delegates, without the superdelegates. >> laura: i will grant you that. >> vp biden is in a very good spot. everyone thought he was going down. >> laura: put the screen up. >> he is doing very well. >> laura: to look at what he really did -- i want to go back to the 2016 establishment democrat said about bernie sanders. back in 2016. watch. >> bernie is speaking to a yearning that is deep and real. and he has credibility on it. >> laura: who was the leader of the democratic party right now? >> sanders is out there. big ideas like medicare for all. >> bernie, he is fabulous. >> laura: building him up. free housing, free preschools,
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triple funding for schools. money must grow on trees because literally bernie is going to free be at all to everybody. that's enticing to young people who frankly don't know any better. because they don't know that's going to affect them. it's going to be a huge expense that we can't pay for it from our government. there is a way to have common sense policies to help make sure that we have economic growth. like what president trump has done and having this vision of economic prosperity. for bernie, it's moving so far to the left where the government takeover of health care it where it's removing your freedom. trying to figure out how you're going to eliminate the fossil fuel industry.e >> laura: this is a real honest question but how do you win in pennsylvania with the fracking message?
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>> you don't. that's all there is to it. i think he already lost florida today. >> laura: you are saying bernie sanders has lost florida because of that? >> i heard that, but i think you are actually right but i think that senator sanders is tapping into something that is real. the economy overall in term of macro factors is doing reallyin well, but the kitchen table issues -- there are people that are suffering that a lot of elected officials are not talking to.ng and bernie sanders -- >> laura: i think donald trump taps into those people. t we are seeing most support coming from the black community. there is no question. and from the latino community. they are seeing their economic opportunities grow. they are seen and packed. i was just talking to my overie driver, he said he is making more money today under the trump economy than i did under the obama economy.
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he was latino. >> laura: we love plain chris mathis because he is entertaining. we have to start out with humor. this is what he said. watch. p >> i am wondering whether the democratic moderates want bernie sanders to be president? too exciting a question to raise, they don't like trump at all. do they want bernie sanders to take over the democratic party in perpetuity? he takes it over, maybe they would rather wait for years and put in the democrat that they like. >> laura: you have any doubt that if that bernie gets the nomination that obama will come out? maybe it's a little too extreme, doesn't follow the rules, that they are going to support him? >> i think it's going to be verl similar to the republicans in 2016 who were saying all kinds of things about president trump. i know some of them are his biggest supporters. at the end of the day, like i said, i think a lot of the --
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>> laura: trump's policies worked. >> you are saying that these democrats are going to accept the squad and the extreme, the far left of the party. >> i think in terms of the nomination. >> this is capitalism versus socialism. you are saying that the democrats are going to support socialist policy that will fundamentally change america. that's, i just think that that's -- >> i don't support democratic socialism. >> we are going up to make the argument that democratic socialism is different than socialism. >> laura: oh, good luck! all right, we have to go ladies. socialism and cuba, i am feeling the burn definitely. great to have you on as always. always fun. as i said, bernie's rise was, i think, almost inevitable due to the decades of indoctrination and some of our schools and universities. w there are few who understand this.
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i don't think there's anyone i know who understands the ideological rot and our education system better than my next guest.t joining me now, conservative author. his new book "united states of socialism." out in a few months. it's ironic, although not surprising, we saw the rise of it. it's only gotten worse since. >> yeah, i think at my college days and subsequently i thought that these ideas were a kind of distinctive feature of academia. academia is somewhat insulated from the larger society. all types of strange people walking around. all this craziness of socialism, identity politics, the extremes of political correctness. this is a subset of american life. in contrast to this, with mainstream america, but i think what's happened in the last couple of decades is that these
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academic nonstorms. the craziest of them. have since exploded in a viruslike into the culture. the media has been the transmitter of this. and the democratic party has embraced it. so i think bernie is, in that sense, a product of obscure philosophies concocted by people like john rowles who would say that years and years ago thateo essentially whether you arese hardworking or smart, you are just lucky. you just got those brains by chance. even your hard work is the result of what your parents taught you. you don't deserve the fruits of your labor. >> laura: yeah, you didn'tusot build that. it's going up to obama and all the negativity from reverend wright. because all the original sins of america -- they can never be forgiven and less the left wants to redistribute all the wealth. expiation for our sins, that's all that's going. bernie sanders on "60 minutes" said something else that is not getting quite as much play, we
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are going to play the longer version of it. watch. >> is america great? g >> in many ways we are. in other ways we are not. we are not great when half of our people today are living paycheck to paycheck. when 500,000 people are going to be sleeping out on the streets including 30,000 veterans. >> laura: my question to that is, things have been worse? the states where it's gotten really bad is california in a couple of others. >> i think what he's doing is engaging in this old idea of moral equivalence which is basically yes, they torture people and the gulags, but in i the other hand we don't have enough people who have free health care., kind of the moral equivalence is something that comes out of academia. now, for many, many years the democrats were too smart to take
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these academic ideas hook, line, and sinker. they would moderate them. his to so in politics, he sounds like centrist while acting like a socialist. the difference with bernie as he has the comic guy who didn't get the joke. he doesn't know that he is supposed to do a wink-wink kind of approach to socialism. he goes the whole hog. he says exactly what they say in the sociology classroom. on the other democrats can't stop them. >> laura: they are same no, we cannot agree with that and public. behind closed doors. that's kind of an inflammatory climb. the democrat establishment is begging them to save the party from bernie sanders. candace owens reacts, next. ♪ good morning!
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♪ >> laura: the democrat establishment is cooking up a one final plan to try to save uncle joe's candidacy. now what is it? an endorsement from jim clyburn. politico is reporting panic democrats. they said they see it as a last-ditch effort to blunt bernie sanders momentum before he runs away with the nomination. joining me now, radio talk show host candace owens. candace, what does it feel like that the democrat establishment is taking advantage of these voters? is that what's happening?t >> i think they have alwaysnt taken advantage of the voters. right now, they are paying for it. they are trying to make black america not look at him. bernie is the natural conclusion. you mention this in your opening, the rhetoric. all of the hyperbole. over four years, you've been saying to black democrat voters
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that they are never going to get ahead. that america is evil. the candidate that they are going to be drawn to was the one that wants to uproot america. it talking about marxism and a proletariat war against the elite class. that is bernie sanders, and they have to contend with angel. as a conservative, it is beautiful to watch. it really is. it is beautiful to watch. we've been saying it for years. at last, they are realizing they have a problem. they are siding with insanity. >> respectively, i think you come to the problem at the right place.y. but i disagree with the conclusion. the democrats don't know who they are. they are at least two different parties. >> laura: they are anti-trump. >> yes but -- >> laura: but?! >> what is it that a real democrat is going to stand up and proclaim and get voters to
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come out for? what is the message that mobilizes? what is the vote? we go back to obama's presidency, his firm was hope. hope, come out hope. what is the verb now? in the fact of the matter thatat you have this desperate fate of candidates for a numbered of different things. you have various factions of democrats who -- >> laura: not the primary process. >> that's the process, but it strikes at the heart of what is the democratic candidate goingat to do to row unite the party, i don't think it's -- >> laura: here is what joe biden said. watch. >> you are reliant on african-americans, do you think they are going to stick with you? >> yes, because they know me. they know i had a brock spack. they know bernie wanted up don't like primary barack. he thought barack was too cautious, didn't do what he
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wanted to do. he saved the economy. a great president. i really do. >> laura: startling that he thought that the president was, while he was vp -- it was a polite way of telling an elder you need to move out of your house. we need to put you, we don't need to talk about the next steps. it's sad. >> it is sad. from writing on the coattails of a former president is not a good political strategy. but i think would biden also suffers from is that he -- there is nothing novel about him. he is a forgetable candidate. he doesn't even know what he is talking about. he doesn't know what is vision as is despite the fact that he d has been with obama for years. that's why you are seen people realize he has a lip not aob
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leader. >> laura: i want to play this for you. this is al sharpton on msnbc. he sounded concerned as well. watch. >> if i was bernie, i would want to take all the shots now because when or if he is the nominee, he will get it all from donald trump. and if you don't train well, and boxing if you don't do it in the gym. you are going to get knocked out in the ring. so his followers need to quit hitting sensitive or overly sensitive and get him ready if he is going to be the nominee. or get another fighter in the ring. se >> laura: he went on to say it's not done. we don't have that in the clip, but he said donald trump is h going to be president. it was a little fatalistic. like, you got to, come on. >> twice a day of a broken clock is right. the truth of the matter is if the messaging is in there, if you don't mobilizes voters to go out and vote for the democratic
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candidate, well of course donald trump is going to be president. it's not even fatalistic, it's realistic. >> how have african-american voters done so much better in the last three years? everybody has had a higher level of success economically. >> i would argue that there are a lot of people who are absolutely hurting. >> laura: they were for eight years under obama. >> however dumb i guess, however, i am not going to try to argue economics without having brushed up on specifics. but we have a lot of people who want to wear, who weren't getting the jobs that they want, concerned about educating our kids. concerned about their health care. >> laura: we are all concerned. >> they want to sign they are getting opportunities. and that's why trump is going to win. at the left is not offered opportunities. w >> i think it's going to be
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a kim family button to publicly display their loyalty and fealty to the great leader. loyalty and fealty to the administration and to the president, personally, takes higher presidents over competence or experience. >> laura: that was former cia director james clapper completely level reaction. now, scouring in these unaccountable bureaucracies reportedly has some senior officials looking to leave. looking for the exit. how sad.en and we have to think that that's a bad thing. it also makes it easier for trump to actually implement this. over the past 18 months have created a list of disloyal officials. former cia officer and
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congressman ryan eunice. why is all of this happening now? and why the freak out among the never trumpers and the left? >> i can tell you when it was supposed to start, it was supposed to start whenta general flynn clayman has as national security advisor. i know from my discussions with him i served on the transition team that he thought that the bureaucracy and washington, d.c., across all the intel agencies was way too big. he thought it should be shrunk down.nc and the dni where he is going, that is a bureaucracy that was supposed to be as strategic planning are. one of its only goals was to try to fix the process by which you get security clearances. and here we are, nearly two decades later, that's the one thing that they haven't fixed. all they have done is got larger and larger and larger.
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so republicans actually believe that the dni does need to be downsized. but i have to say, laura, justat so i am perfectly clear. i am not aware of any blacklists that have been created and washington. that sounds like a fake news story of some kind. the overall objective of reducing the signs of these agencies is a good one. the more people we have out in the field come up the much better we are. >> laura: i love this idea that the president should actively want to recruit peoplea who work against his agenda and have them populate is a administration. this is crazy town. the idea that you would have people who are burrowed into work against your administration's priorities is lunacy.op no one would come up with that. brian, remember that big media bombshell in the russia collusion last week? now even cnn is reporting it was bogus. shelby pearson told lawmakers on
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the house that russia was interviewing with the 2020 election with the goal of helping trump. the intelligence doesn't say that. a more reasonable interpretation of the intel is not that that they have a preference, it's a step short of that. it's more that they understand that the president to someone and they can work with, that he is a dealmaker. so brian, how would an intel briefer who is described as someone who has a reputation of being and did in judicious with her words? >> in the intelligence academy saddens them onto the hill, not sending the best. we have one of two problems here with this person. we have somebody who is either incompetent, which isn't reassuring, or somebody who has a bipartisan hack.er which is also deeply alarming. perhaps both. let's look at those two pieces. if she was a career satellite imagery specialist, why then did dni select her for this role in the depths of political analysis?
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the nuance necessary for that, i don't know. it's shocking. but yet we can't also say, can we, that she didn't have any particular bias. because we know that the whistle-blower of course had a political bias.y a multiple of them actually. we also know that he was leaking to achieve his partisan goals. we can also say that there was nothing nefarious there. to me, as a former officer, that's actually the most alarming and sad part of the story. yes, it's bad would happen. but it's the fact that you or i can't have faith in the intelligence committee. we have so many problems, so many enemies that we have to tackle and defined and neutralized. and how do we do that, how does the president do that? if they can't have faith of his intelligence committee is on his side and on the side of the american people. instead, doing what they want to do for their own personalen partisanship. >> laura: apparently needs to hire more people like shelby peterson. that's what he supposed to do.
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congressman, breaking tonight, this is about you. house republicans considering criminal referrals against molar prosecutors. if you are looking into those 302, those infamous 302's. what can you tell us tonight because people want accountability here. >> so slowly but surely, some of those reports are being declassified. so about a few weeks ago actually mention this on a couple of shows. we were going through those reports and then beginning to match them up to the molar indictments. the molar recommendations for prosecution. and one of the things that we found, and lee smith has done some great reporting on this, is that -- remember the whole story that he needed to be treated badly and sentenced to some time because he released up to the fbi from being able to find, joseph? and ends up that's not true. though 302 is actually say that
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he was trying to help the fbi and said it was going to be in the united states. and so if the lawyers that wrote that to the court, the recommendation to the court, they need to be held accountable. so we are scrubbing through all of these 302's, and we will be making some type of criminal referral, perhapsee attorney general barr is an appointed. we will see exactly what that u.s. attorney is looking at. but it's not okay to lie to his federal judge. >> laura: as brian said, as you said so many times, we need to be able to trust our intel. it should not be political. the fbi has to be fair across the board without regard to party politics. that's all the president is asking for.
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he's not asking for special treatment. gentlemen, you are both fantastic. we appreciate you tonight. thanks so much. and in minutes, my exclusive with an explosive new book. you don't want to miss it. ♪ >> this is a fox news alert, in new york, we continue right now with the live coverage of president trump's trip to india. of president trump and prime minister modi are just about to leave the extended bilateral meeting at hyderabad house in new delhi what you're looking at on your screen. it right now, watching them make their way to the podium you see there in the leaders will make their joint statement and then bringing that to live as soon as that happens. as we way, of course, we are
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expecting them to talk about a couple of different things including trade, security, and just the regent in general. and it comes to trade, of course, we know that the u.s. wants access to indian markets, dairy, poultry, and also relief from tariffs on steel and aluminum exports to the u.s. so, right now, we see the vodka cuto ivanka trump and it jared kushner to their area where they are going to be conducting the bilateral statem. and we're waiting for the president and the prime minister to make their way out of the meeting and just a couple moments here and we will watch them make their joint statement life here. we also expecting them to have talked about security and the
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$3 billion deal that they announced at yesterday's rally. india will be spending $3 billion to buy military helicopters from the u.s. that's important, as china that really expands its economic and military clouds in that region and it's important for the u.s. to bolster india's security and economic and military clouds as well. perhaps, they talked about pakistan and the attentions that have been reoccurring between the two nuclear nations and of course, the u.s. is looking to sign a peace agreement with the taliban. if just around the corner here n february 29th, and so the u.s. really want stability in the region. washington, of course, once dialogue between india and pakistan as they get ready to sign the deal. if india and pakistan, as you
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know, have not really had any official talk since 2013. so perhaps the president brought that up as well. a couple of other items that may have been on the agenda, we will have to wait and see here and it may have been energy security, h1b, religious freedom in the region, and of course, counterterrorism as well. we are just going to watch here in just a couple moments and we are expecting the two leaders to come out, and after this bilateral talk, the bilateral meeting, we are then expecting the leaders and their delegations to take a lunch break and then the motorcade ovewill departs from hyderabad house and on his way to the roosevelt house was to
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which is the ambassador's residence. at the ambassador's residence, we are expecting the president to basically meet and greet with americans working at the u.s. embassy. okay, again, looking ahead at the remaining hours, mr. trump's world when tour holding a business roundtable followed bya meet and greet at the u.s. ambassador's residence. later on, the president and the first lady will pay a courtesy call to indian president and his wife at their presidential palace. it is known a, they will wrap up with the state abatement before the delegation makes its way back to air force one before tho washington. again, we are following the president's trip throughout the day and topic in the next couple
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of moments that the prime minister and the president will make their way out into the backyard and here at hyderabad house. and announce what they have decided on during the bilateral talks. the president and first lady are traveling to india with a 12 person official delegation, that includes the u.s. ambassador to india, the commerce secretary, the energy secretary, and apparently, shiva stuck nick mullaney is not with them and i'm told that he had a cold and had to stay back. national security advisor brian, with the president and we saw a couple months ago, first daughter of anke trump and her husband jared kushner. you been following their movements over the past two days and we've seen a very warm welcome that the delegation has received from the indian people and every stop along the way and
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the 36 hour will when tour with the cultural ceremony at the airport. if that's where prime minister mahdi was there to personally greet the presidential party and it was to see and then the motorcade drove through the streets with the security crowded and arriving at the stadium in the world's largest cricket arena for the mega rally called "namaste trump" 100,000 spectators, 110,000 spectators a belief. here's what president trump had to say at that rally. >> america loves india. if america respects india. america will always be faithful and loyal friends to the indian people. the story of the indian nation is a tale of astounding
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progress, the miracle of democracy, extraordinary diversity, and above all, a strong and noble people. if indians rise as a prosperous and independent nation is an example to every nation all over the world and one of the most outstanding achievements of our century. in america and in india, we know that we are all born for a higher purpose, to reach forward to our fullest potential and to work towards excellence and perfection, and to give all glory to god. >> later on, the couple pay a visit to the iconic taj mahal and new delhi, the landmark bill back in the 17th century by in indian emperor as a tomb for his beloved wife. scrubbed and cleaned prepared for mr. trump in the first lady as they took a private sunset tour and it was picture rest. again, all happening in india
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and you're watching the pictures on the right-hand side of your screen. after the taj mahal, they travel to the raj ghat memorial marking the site where mahatma gandhi was cremated after his assassination back in 1948. and president trump's brief visit will be long on pageantry and symbolism, but relatively short on substance. of course, he is hoping -- we are expecting for him to talk about trade issues with the prime minister but no formal agreement expected to result from the trip. the two countries, as you know, they face some pretty stubborn tensions over trade as they continue to deepen their bond and their trust and security cooperation in the region. as for lies ahead, on the agenda, the presidential party will wrap up their trip today and again, and embassy meet and greet at the u.s. ambassador's residence and after the joint
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statement. then afterwards, they will head towards the state bank went and for the first couple finally heading back to air force one and then back to d.c. >again, warily watching live pictures here from hyderabad house in new delhi where the bilateral talks have been occurring, and you are looking at what we imagine the leadership of india. and prime minister modi's members awaiting the prime minister and the president to make their way out and announce what they have talked about. if and perhaps what they have agreed on. of course, trade is going to be at the forefront of the talks. of course, prime minister modi and the president having the
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talks behind-the-scenes, no cameras allow it, so we are just watching and waiting now. we will return you to regular programming and bring you right back as soon as we see some action and as soon as we see the president come out. stay with us. laura: what about linda, i know you talk about the alliance, she popped up recently with ilhan omar, their ideological sisters obviously, the movement and oh, i'm not anti-semitic. ♪ >> this is a fox news alert, and new york, condemning the coverage right now in the last coverage of his trip to india, president trump and prime minister modi have just walked out of the extended bilateral meeting at hyderabad house in new delhi. making their way now to the
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podium, the leaders about to make joint statement and let's go ahead and listen in life as to what they have talked about and perhaps, some agreements they might have just made. let's watch. >> president trump, president of the united states of america. ministers, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon. before i begin with the president statement, i would like to announce, that during the visit first an element of mental health the department of india and the department of health and human services of the department of the united states of america. second, the mou on the safety of
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medical products between the central drug standard condition and within the health services of the ministry of family welfare, of the republic of india, and the drum administration of the department of health and human services of the united states of america. and finally, america corporation between the corporation limited and amazon mobile and energy limited, chart industries and purpose. i now begin the proceedings to begin, may request the honorable family of india, for his statement to the press. >> america, donald trump, america delegation.
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relations between the united states and india, not just limited as to the relations between two governments. they are people driven and they are people centric. this relationship is the most important partnership of the 21st century. and therefore, today, president trump and i have taken a decision to raise our partnership to the level of a comprehensive global strategic partnership. president trump contributions and raising our relation to this level has been invaluable. friends, during our discussions today, we had a productive
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exchange on every important aspect of our partnership whether it is defense and security. strategic energy partnership, technology cooperation, global connectivity, trade relation, or people to people ties. the increasing defense cooperation between india and the united states is a very important aspect of our trip dietrich a partnershi strategic partnership rate of operating in defense equipment e capabilities. defense manufacturers are becoming a part of each other's life here. indian life forces today, doing
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a new mechanism new mechanism >> a new mechanism for serious problems like drug trafficking, narco terrorism and organized crime. friends, recently established strategic energy partnership has become even stronger and in this area our mutual investment is grown. the us is an important oil and gas source for india. over the last four years we have talked about
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