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tv   Bill Hemmer Reports  FOX News  February 25, 2020 12:00pm-1:00pm PST

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taking it all in stride. if you can't laugh at yourself, what's the point of laughter? thanks for joining us everybody, i will see you on the five. here is bill hemmer. ♪ >> bill: thank you, dana. we got a jam-packed show this afternoon and will check in with our friend jerry who was a passenger on that cruise ship still in isolation come across but recovering from the virus. plus another sentencing in the college admission scandal. why are so many wealthy parents paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to get the kids into school? we will talk to someone who does it for a living today. and a woman playing the violin while doctors remove and brain tumor. ♪ >> bill: that was then and today she is back home. we will talk to her alive.
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first though, get ready for another fight night tonight, seven democrats hitting the stage tonight. we are less than a week from a fiery show down in vegas over the weekend. that shows joe biden on top of saturday's primary and the palmetto state with bernie sanders closing close behind. and after dominating the nevada caucuses and solidifying his front runner status, which, are they gunning for bernie sanders tonight? >> i don't know what will happen but i can tell you, whether it's health care, and we have a high african-american population so my guess is that this debate will focus heavily on that tonight. i think looking into super
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tuesday, this is not only the south carolina debate but this is the last debate before super tuesday. so i think you will see all of the candidates try to appeal to that broad coalition tonight and we are excited to see it. >> bill: you were exactly right about that. here's part of bernie sanders decision. it was a major literacy program and there were a lot of folks think about that point, there were illiterate. he formed the literacy brigade, you may remember reading that. they went out and helping comic helped people to read and write. >> so we are very clear in the democratic party that we speak out against brutal dictatorships
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like those of castro and we support the people of cuba, fleeing cuba under that dictatorship. i encourage all of these, go to florida and talk to people in florida, listen to their stories and listen to what they went through. i think any candidate would benefit from that and that is what is part of this primary. you go and appeal to a broad coalition of people and you think that will be relayed on super tuesday. >> bill: so the other comment about bernie sanders, all the free stuff that americans expect, by the way have you seen the unemployment rate? they are leading the country. how do you make the message sink in? >> i think if you look back to
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barack obama, he brought us to this point and when it comes to the unemployment rate, a lot of people aren't feeling the game and a lot of people aren't seeing that in their pocket. >> any credit for the current administration? >> i think that part of it is that donald trump gave a tax cut to the ridge. and people thought that was going to their wallet. and so people are concerned. that's every major battleground state, so i think that's an important thing, and the thing about that is, they seem to be writing a pretty good wave. >> why again do you think senate candidates like jimmy harrison are doing well in the state? south carolina should necessarily be open to the
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democrats winning, and we ask why, health care, health care, health care. candidates face pressure to get out and exit the presidential race. i don't know when that winnowing happens but it hasn't happened just yet. is the party happy with that? >> we don't know who that nominee is, we've made that loud and clear. at this point, they only have 5% of the delegate. there's a lot of race left and we don't know what will happen yet.
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>> bill: and thank you very much. back here on the board we show you the results from 2016 and south carolina. and it's 2,020, where are we n now? that's an issue, we will fix this thing. right now the trump team and come and give an update on how the feds are handling the coronavirus after the cdc warns it's not a question of if but when the virus will spread here in the u.s. stocks are taking it on the chin again today, one day after the dow lost more than a thousand points and that's where we are now. as of now 53 americans testing positive for the virus and most of them were passengers on the diamond cruise ship. we've been following the story
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of jerry's sorority harmon's journey. her husband tested positive for the virus but has now been fever free for six days. jerry, how are you feeling tod today? >> i'm feeling wonderful. >> bill: all the tests have come back negative to date so you are 3 for 3 for the moment? >> yes. so we just learned today in order to leave here, he's got to test three times negative and i have to test two times negative so this was brand-new news tod today. >> you've been speaking to him, how's he doing? >> he's doing amazing. he writes a daily blog that appears on a website and he has become quite the comedian. >> bill: how so, still got a sense of humor? >> very much a sense of humor. that's how we are getting
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through this. >> bill: how is the staff doing at the nebraska health center so far? >> you know it's an absolute blessing that we are here. when we arrived here and had to come here, i was so upset. if one of the top three in the country, whether it's here where i'm at at quarantine or with carl in the hospital, it's unbelievable here. >> bill: so you so far, i've you had much contact with those who are on board that boat for you? >> and i've talked to one of them, i'm only one of 2 out of 14 that still negative. >> bill: do you feel lucky, jerry? >> i feel blessed.
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>> bill: so the quarantine could last how much longer? >> i'm hoping i get tested monday, tuesday and wednesday. we spending contact ever since you came home. there's this layer of fear that's rippling across the world, and you see what's happening for investors. they are bailing on stocks here in the u.s. and we haven't seen that for a long time. what do you think we need to know or understand about this. >> i think it's just a report released today on cdc.gov, and i think i need people to get educated. we are still getting hate mail but we know if when we get home we will be in the clear. no one can catch it and he will never get up again. my body right now is totally immune to the virus so people do not have too fear it and educate
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themselves. >> bill: why don't we check in again tomorrow before the weekend gets here. >> yes, let's hope. >> why do you think you can call yourself free? >> i'm really hoping wednesday. >> bill: that's another week, do you have it in you? >> absolutely. >> it's kind of like when your trainer says you can do another mile, i could do another week. thank you, and our best to carl. thank you. breaking news and other big stories. will roger stone get another trial? we will find that out in a matter of moments. president trump getting a rock star will culminate in the after a whirlwind 36 hours. what did he accomplish while he was there? and congressman kim jordan will tell us why americans and republicans are not happy about
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obstruction and witness tampering is part of the investigation. as lawyers say come at the forum was biased against him and the president which he denies. david, good afternoon. >> roger stone is in the courtroom right now and jurors are testifying about the alleged bias of the original bias of the jury or person. she did run as a democrat in congress a number of years back, and they're hearing is audio only though to protect the jury's identity especially that four-person, where both roger stone and president trump are calling bias. this is video of stone arriving at district court a couple of hours ago. at the judge's sentence him specifically to 30 months which is three years and four months behind bars. the judge judge denied a motion to recuse herself from the case, she still on the case and will decide if she will grant a new trial to stone. president trump right now in the air on air force one on his way back from india but he just
quote
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tweeted in the last few minutes, he wrote "there has rarely been jurors so tainted as a four woman in the roger stone case. look at her background. she never revealed her hatred of trump and stone. she was totally biased as is the judge. roger wasn't even working on my campaign. miscarriage of justice, sad to watch. bill will come at the president has not said specifically on where he is on pardoning roger stone. last week he's had on camera he needs to see his friend exonerated and let the process play out. we have a producer in the courtroom and any updates this hour we would be glad to pass on to you. >> bill: meanwhile the president us heading home after all where whirlwind 36 hour trip in india. john roberts is live in new delhi on that now. >> good morning to you from new delhi for the president left a little while ago. first of all he had a business
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roundtable in new delhi earlier today where he sought to quell economic fears about the coronavirus and saying that while the stock market is down right now it will likely go back up, also saying the united states has got things well in hand when it comes to the coronavirus. following that roundtable with business leaders the president held a news conference at which he talked about the two and half billion dollars he requested from congress to fight the coronavirus and develop a vaccine. he also let loose on the criticism that he has had from democrats about all this. listen here. >> president trump: two and a half million to make billion dollars we are putting in. chuck schumer criticized that it should be more and if i gave him or he would say it should be less. these characters, they are just not good for our country. if i gave more he would say, it should be less. that's what they do in the meantime that's all they can do, they are not getting anything done.
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a >> schumer did say the president should have committed $3.1 billion to the coronavirus and the president should have put tax force on this weeks ago and there's a vaccine delivered to the federal government to begin testing in april. he faulted the president for not having a plan. >> but here in the united states the trump administration has been caught flat-footed. the administration has no plan to deal with the coronavirus. no plan, and seemingly no urgency to develop one. we have a crisis and the trump administration is trying to build an airplane while already in midflight. >> the president also praised the chinese president xi jinping for how he has addressed the coronavirus, noting that the rate of infection in china is dropped fairly significantly. >> bill: president trump called out the supreme court justices to recuse themselves from certain cases that involve him. what's that story about?
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>> what's really got the president's fire up scathing article that is called the public charge case. that's circumventing that typical appellate court process going straight to the supreme court looking for stays in certain cases and also faulted the supreme court for taking up those stays saying that one netiquett litigant hasd from above all others. ruth bader ginsburg has had something but the president some years ago, saying that both should recuse themselves from cases in which the administration is involved. here's what the president said at the news conference. >> president trump: i just don't know how they cannot recuse themselves having anything to do with trump or trump related. the right thing to do now as the supreme court justice is
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different standard. restatement was so inappropriate, and almost what she is trying to do is taking people that do feel a different way and get them. >> it doesn't happen frequently but it's not unusual for the supreme court justice to recuse themselves in certain cases but no indication from justice sotomayor. >> bill: no trade deal left without getting that done? >> the president came away with three big things. he came away with a lot of goodwill, and a promise to work together toward any negotiations. on that last one, nothing substantive and not even a rollback in tariffs on harley-davidson role motorcycles of the administration had hoped to come away with. the president was saying on his way out the door that he was going to keep pushing for it,
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listen here. >> president trump: that's a situation when one company is paying 100% in the case of numerous companies and actually tariffs were raised not too long ago. i can't lose it. you know what, i would never lose it, it's too easy. because i want reciprocal. it has to be reciprocal. >> that is a favorite refrain of the president, the trait has to be fair and reciprocal. he's optimistic you might be able to get a trade deal with india but getting them to drop their protection and practices that they fit in place for so long will be a heavy lift because that's one of the ways that india has grown its manufacturing base. >> bill: okay, john roberts, the middle of the night in new delhi, india. another parent in the college admission scandal learning her punishment today. i will speak to a consultant who is a competitor of the ringleader, rick singer.
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>> bill: a judge about to sentence an heiress to the hot pocket fortune. michelle janice admitted to paying 300,000 to boost her daughter's test scores and have one of them labeled as a fake volleyball recruit at the university of southern california. she will be the 17th defendant sentenced in the scam. prosecutors have called her one of the most culpable parents. my next guest started a college admissions consulting business. alan, thank you for your time and good afternoon to you.
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i saw something extraordinary. parents will pay you up to a million dollars to help their kid gain access? >> not all of our clients, only the ones with very complicated situations. >> complicated as and how? >> geographical complexity, if they have homes in multiple places or multiple stepparents, learning disabilities. life is complicated and the more complicated situation the more involved we can be. >> the one story that everyone remembers is it rick singer. he admitted a lot of things and you said you were shocked by what he admitted to. how come? >> shocked because most college consultants are in this to inspire and mentor kids come up to unlock their full potential and help them be competent. everything rick singer did runs counter to how people go into college consulting in the first
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place. >> bill: so you help out the application and you get tutors for testing, what do you do? >> we have tutors and test prep. a lot of what we are doing is not just the strategy of cultivating a growth mind-set to help kids be positive and enjoy the process and take full advantage of being the people they want to be. >> bill: so what do you say to someone who doesn't have the means, can't even come close to hiring someone like you. as the system fair in that way, alan? >> i think the system is very complicated. the united states has a very opaque commission system. so for a child that can't afford the resources, you could email or call universities and really engage in conversations with them and many of them are happy to make the time. >> bill: do you make guarantees to any of the
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parents? >> absolutely not. bill: how come? >> when you're dealing with people you can't guarantee their behavior. what we can do is raise the probabilities but we can never guarantee anything. >> bill: do you think the system is good? >> the system is what it is, it's been this way for a long time but people just haven't known about it. i think the system is very complicated. there's a lot of social engineering that universities are trying to do so just a lack of transparency there is very complicated. >> bill: i think a lot of people watching think, it's just not fair to me or it may be the kid down the street. i would you defend the business that you have run? >> so first of all we do help children who can't afford it and we do get scholarships for our services. many of these universities are specifically selecting for students that do not have these opportunities.
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some of the top universities, 20-25% of the incoming freshman are first generation college student so there is tremendous opportunity for students who don't have the resources. >> bill: i'm just wondering, is the system bound for change or is this the way it's going to be? >> the system has been changing so the early decision and action round has already happened. the results came in december. the final results for the regular round won't come until mid-march to early april. but so far the early results seem to be that, colleges are taking it out on affluent prep school kids. >> bill: do you think the parents are desperate here? trying to help the kid? >> i think parents are desperate but it's more a testament to their unwillingness to have difficult conversations and really inspire a growth mind-s mind-set. >> bill: what do you mean by that? what do you mean difficult conversations, about what?
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>> what colleges are looking for is unnatural maturity. the kind of conversations you have to have her kids to have that growth mind-set, high school students work harder than virtually anyone in america including all adults. they have to take six or seven difficult classes, playing a varsity sport and theater. it's basically a 16 hour per day job, and the seventh day it's maybe just five or six. >> bill: it appears that business is good and i appreciate you sharing a little bit of insight. i think you've shine some light on it. allan coe, you are going out of business soon, i will tell you that. in the meantime, markets plunging at this hour in the second straight day. right now on track for the biggest to day point loss ever. and playing the soundtrack of your own brain surgery. meet the woman who chose to stay awake and play the violin while doctors removed her tumor.
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>> bill: 3 minute 3:30 five, 25e minutes of trading. stocked up at the worst drop in two years and this coronavirus case is surging around the world. the white house is asking congress for $200 billion to help fight the outbreak and get ready for it. susan li is back with more, the virus is leading the way. >> we are less than 500 points away from the correction which means the markets are 10% down. right now we are on pace, and if you see a lot of accelerating selling into the close that's not a good sign of that could mean that we could see more declines in the future because investors don't want to hold risks. they probably think there are
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more declines to come and there might be worse to come by coronavirus. and things seem to accelerate this afternoon when the cdc put a warning out about the virus here in america. >> they said it's not a question of if but when the coronavirus spreads and that trickled down. we saw record lows in treasuries and the interest you get back on u.s. government bonds because that's where investors are rushing for safety into u.s. treasuries and also gold pricing as well. a lot of these economically sensitive sectors are the ones being pulled off. and that's where there will be a hit on the run. >> people say i'm up at up 21%. >> that's probably what it is because keeping things in perspective, we are still around what 10% away from record highs?
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we've made a lot of money in big tech and they might not look over the last two days but over the past 52 weeks it may not be bad. >> bill: 20 more minutes, what could go wrong. [laughs] meanwhile from washington, lawmakers bracing for a fight over the foreign intelligence surveillance act known as fisa, which allows officials to collect communications. house judiciary committee member republican jim george says he would like to make some changes to the democratic chair jerry nadler's bill to reform the law. our team has reached out to chairman nadler's office and so far no response but jim jordan is with me now live. good afternoon to you and welcome back to our program. >> good to be with you. >> bill: thank you very much, don't be a stranger. >> we have to remember what prompted this all.
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the justice department in 2016 went to fisa court, and that was a way of saying they lied to the court 17 times. i think you need someone that represents the american citizen. and that allows this agency to collect data, do you have a problem with that? >> you make sure that our fundamental liberties are protected and we know that didn't happen in the carter page example. remember, 17 times they misled the court. i always go back to what the attorney general said to come about eight months ago when you testified in front of congress and he was talking about the whole trump-russia investigation. he said for a very important things. there was a failure of leadership at the upper echelon of the fbi. certainly true.
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he said use the words that drove the left crazy. he said there's a basis for my concern about the spying that happened and maybe most importantly he used the term political surveillance. a term that should never happen when we are talking about the united states of america. so that is what is prompting all of this and why we need to make the changes. why we need to have an advocate there. >> bill: it let me find out what the right changes are. i assume you would support that? >> we are looking at lots of things. we are actually trying to put together a piece of legislation that we think is much better than the one that mr. nadler has brought forward, one that's consistent with the principles that are part of our constitution and part of our bill of rights. as i said the most important aspect is this an amicus prospect where we have someone representing the individual who's about to lose their fundamental liberties.
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i also think it's important that we develop a record of what takes place in the courts. there should be a transcript of these proceedings and i think when we are talking about a candidate, talking about a campaign, an election and a person running for office, or the staff person for some of those campaigns or members of office. there is a sign off before that kind of procedure moves forward, a sign-up from the highest levels of the justice department before any type of surveillance can take place. sekulow more quick things. if the president doesn't get the changes he wants, what he veto this? >> the good about what the president is being put through. he started clear back before he was even elected, before he went to the court and lied to the court, he named the investigation crossfire hurricane where he had that peter strzok and lisa page issues. they are talking about accomplishing. >> bill: last point on this. you are hearing about this reports of him cleaning house,
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trying to get the never trumpers out of his administration. what do you think about that? >> i think the president is entitled to have the people around him that he thinks will accomplish a policy that he campaigned on and that 63 million of us elected to accomplish. i think that's entirely with the president wanted to do, at those officials in the administration, when we gave him that electoral college landslide. now. what they push back? of course. you try to drain the swamp in the swamp will push back but we want him to keep fighting and that's exactly what he's going to do. >> bill: jim jordan, thank you for your time. you got a deadline in three weeks, thank you for your time today. in a moment, a story straight from a medical tv drama. a woman playing the violin while doctors operated on her brain. we will speak with her in a moment about why she did it.
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♪ >> bill: that is the sound of a miracle. a professional violinist did not stop playing as the surgeons worked to remove a tumor from her brain. her medical team came up with the plan after she said she was concerned about losing her ability to play. she is now recovering at home with her husband and her 13-year-old son and her name is dagmar turner and she joins me by way of skype. how are you doing at welcome to
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our program here. >> thank you very much. i'm actually doing very well. this was now just over three weeks ago. >> bill: i saw the video, and i said it, it just blew me away. i said i must speak to this woman. when you see or hear the video of the operation, what do you think and feel? >> you didn't think you were playing well enough? >> it's pretty hard to think about what to play during this operation because i was alone that suggested it to the surgeons. and they didn't really talk to me about it. you know, you think you will
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play beethoven orbach, and you just improvise something. it just comes right off the fingers. >> so the doctors came to you and said you've got an aggressive tumor, and it was on the right side of your brain, you knew if that was a case it would take away your ability from your left hand. how did you overcome that? >> i was trying to come up with the plan on how we could avoid that. and they told me that there was a case where someone actually played the violin. and i thought i could play
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something if that helps. and in my right hand, and we did and this was the result. >> bill: unbelievable. apparently they've done it with the saxophone player but you are probably the first violin player. doctors were able to take an mri image of your brain, and then they figured out what they could do to attack the tumor. they knew whether or not they were doing the right thing, i think it's just six ordinary stuff. how are you feeling now? i know you haven't rejoined the orchestra yet but will that happen, and when? >> i have. i went back last wednesday nig
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night. >> bill: so six days? >> yes. i went last wednesday. they were very happy to see me. so i'm back tomorrow night again. >> bill: how do you feel? >> great. >> bill: i'm alive. >> yes, absolutely. >> bill: congratulations to you. the connection can be a little sticky with skype but we wanted to share your story without our viewers. my best to your husband and her 13-year-old son because they have their wife and their mom and the sound back in their home. thank you and good luck. we will stay in contact. >> thank you very much. i hope next time for the next one i will practice a bit more. and hopefully, i will see you in
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new york. >> bill: we look forward to having you here. in a moment, i have the crop of california grapes is good news for wine lovers and that was good news, they are. leaving up bad taste with growers handling the vineyard price drop. we will take you straight to the source. ♪ with relief of your worst symptoms, including itchy throat. plus an immediate blast of cooling sensation. feel the clarity and live claritin clear. what's going on? it's the 3pm slump. should have had a p3. oh yeah. should have had a p3. need energy? get p3. with a mix of meat, cheese and nuts.
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your favorite bottle of california wine could be getting cheaper. that's good news and apparently bad news too. he is at vineyard in southern california. hey, robert. >> hey, bill, thanks so much. a lot of people would welcome a correction and wine prices and
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at the industry. serious supply and demand in balance. a record harvest of grapes in 2018. at the same times those groups went into a market that's how the same decline in consumption in the u.s. of mine since 1994, a quarter of a century. what happened is they left a lot of grapes on the vine. tens of thousands were not harvested for wine. stabilization on the supply side while also trying to boost demand. andrew murray, whose vineyard we are standing in today, that could be a good thing to lure villanelles into wine, because so far they have not adopted it as many other older cohorts have. they are looking at it as a positive. he is investing in a new vineyard. at the same time, you may find some values. if you are on the consumer side of this, some secondary labels to come in at vastly discounted
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prices these guys are not going to cut prices, but you will find higher quality grapes in those same price point lines. more bang for your buck, if you will. >> bill: thank you, robert. great looking in california. we are going to get this thing working. before we say goodbye today, we are going to get this machine working, and now it is, we thi think. >> hillary clinton ran the board. he is won every county. where are we so far and the rates for 2020? on saturday, bernie sanders ran away with it. what a 7% of the vote almost, joe biden second place at 20%. bernie sanders was the winner as well by a point or .3 over pete buttigieg. for iowa, we have a winner in iowa. who knows, right?
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pete buttigieg and sanders on the board, points 10% with a continued counting in iowa. as you can see, he's got some pretty good momentum going into this debate. average them together, and this is what we have as of yesterday. joe biden with a 5-point lead. bernie sanders coming up on this poll right now. if you look at the pass pulling over the past seven days. sanders at 22. we've got fighting down here for a third-place finish. what goes down tonight, we will watch it and let you know what it is from charleston, south carolina. in the meantime, check out these markets. what i market it is. off again today, down 800 points, holding for the moment. we will get you the lowdown from neil cavuto in a moment. i thousand twice yesterday, hundred points today. there is concern and fear that
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we don't know what the end is on this virus. we are here monday through friday, 3:00 p.m. eastern time. set your dvr and never miss a show. we will see you later and again tomorrow. have a great day. "your world" with neil cavuto stretch right now. >> neil: another one and a big one. welcome, everybody, i am neil cavuto. fox on top of a market that cannot seem to find a bottom. the dow jones getting another 877 points. with this off today, all of the major averages are only performing, they are all underwater. the nasdaq hopes that doesn't seem to be the case. at coronavirus that seem to can obtain itself seems to be the big reason again. what is different this time is how big and widespread it keeps getting. the number of cases in italy

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