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tv   Hannity  FOX News  April 16, 2020 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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changes in power, attitude and custom. things will not look the same year from now. so it's worth thinking through no what they are going to look like. have a great and happy evening with the ones you love. sean hannity is live. >> sean: i have the hannity plan, they open yankee stadium. we continue tonight to expose how china consciously, knowingly put protections in place for their entire country while putting the rest of the world at risk, resulting in sickness, death and disease. a full report, and remember last night brett bear revealed from multiple sources that the coronavirus likely originated in a wuhan testing lab. the patient zero was a worker in the lab that became infected by a bat. as of now it's accidentally,
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that's what press is reporting. according to him at patient zero was a worker in that lab and was infected by a bat, the creepiest, ugliest creatures on earth, those and rats. according to reports in the days and weeks that followed, china shut down all domestic travel to and from wuhan. people in wuhan couldn't travel to china but they allowed people in wuhan province to travel all around the rest of the world. in other words, china knew how dangerous it was so they protected their own citizens but put the entire world at risk. we know how bad this is now. tens of thousands data, thousands hospitalized. economy shut down but they protected themselves. those reports are new. true, that would mean, and we
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have a lot more in the investigation part two. joe biden in his own irredeemable and deplorable moment. how do we open new york city my own thoughts, and i will share them from you. also, this question. >> does the statement hold for you? if nominated i will not accept, if drafted i will not run, if elected i will not serve. >> sean: that's what we call a t's. he unveiled and finally he hoped he could move on.
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that starting as early as may 1st but actually early in some cases. south dakota never closed at all, even the restaurant stayed open. take a look. >> president trump: based on the latest data are a team of experts now agree is that we can begin the next front in our war. that's how: opening up america again. our national shutdown is not a sustainable long-term solution. to preserve the health of our citizens, we must also preserve ourselves and functioning of our economy over the long haul. you can't do one without the other. that will allow governors to take a phased and deliberate approach to reopening their individual states. >> sean: you have to remember
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that i'm in new york. new york and long island hardest hit in the country. that they chose to backs up all their items, dairy and in between, and those medical supplies didn't shut down. aveo pharmaceuticals didn't shut down, those that build the math and gloves and the gallons of the respirators in the ventilators, they all were working. the whole country didn't shut down. those are unique circumstances. for example, densely populated new york city will not be on the same timeline as montana or south dakota which never shut down anything. instead of a nationwide schedule, the plan has been broken down into three phases in order for the state to begin a three-point process, it has to
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satisfy that. governors wake up a lot of you, some of you are asleep. do your job. they are now asked for the ability to make these decisions, and you got it. the president and his task force see that you're messing up and hot spots are emerging, they will come down hard on you. phase one recommends continued restrictions on nonessential travel. it discourages social gatherings of ten or more people and calls for americans to continue to work from home whenever possible. phase one also recommends large venues like restaurants, movie theaters and even gyms. they can reopen but you have to use very strict physical distancing protocol which would mean a lot of puerile and a lot of wipes. if the covid-19 curve remains flat then you can move to phase two. that continues limits on
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occupancy and bars will be tough. ultimately the last step, phase three, that would lift staffing restrictions, and that allows visits to senior care facilities and hospitals to begin again, each phase of the plan to get americans back to work will take extra precautions. now in a place like new york city. it's a very small geographic area, the largest concentration of people governor cuomo was on my radio show for an hour and we talked at length about all of this. i shared my views and he shared his. it will take a little more work in a place like new york city. take a listen. >> it will be a phasing in and it's going to be different. i don't know different words, it might even be different better but it's going to be different. this is going to do what 9/11 date. if i ever told you before 9/11
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you would have to take off your shoes when you go to an airport and walk through a metal detector on a line and have them go through your bags, people would say no how, no way. but 9/11 changed our orientation. this is going to change our orientation and people are going to want to change. people want to be safe, first of all. >> sean: some of this is annoying, nobody wants to wear gloves and a mask but for the time being -- we are also doing it for the people that are most vulnerable. underlying conditions and compromised immune systems. over the past several days new york has seen actually, finally, tremendous process progress. the models are holding as we hoped they would. hospitalizations dropped by 600 which is the largest decrease to date. total integrations dropped by 40, also the largest decrease and the death rate is starting to decline, that is the lagging
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indicator as we talked a lot about. for this progress to continue in a place that's densely populated as new york city, i know it sucks. residents there will need to take important precautionary measures. if you want my plan, we will call the hannity plan. to reopen new york city would be the following. masks and gloves might be the new normal in new york city, even indoors. nonessential workers, they will have to work from home. at least 50% of the workforce in every building in new york, 50% is the goal. keep them working at home and that allows more social distancing. less concentration on the streets in the buildings of new york city. digital temperature checks. they don't touch you, but the thing on your for hedda, boom. that should be mandatory again, temporarily. if you want entrance into any building in new york city. i discussed all of this with the governor today. i want to see yankee stadium
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open. i want citi field where the mets play open. i want metlife stadium in new jersey open for the giants and jets. now this is not my decision, but you have to start with this one thing. people most at risk with underlying health issues or compromised immune systems, guys, you shouldn't go, not this year. you have to take a year off. every player, every trainer, every coach, every ticket taker, every food and beverage worker will have to have that added five-minute test. anyone that wants to attend again. now if i have a choice of attending a game and not attending a game, and i'm just speaking for myself, consult a doctor, i'm not a doctor. but you must get the temperature test to get into yankee stadium. if you have a temperature, you they give you the information, go to her doctor, be safe at home, how to do contact tracing. you can't have a database, you have to respect privacy, but if
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you have a temperature you can't go it into even an outdoor stadium. now temporarily, again not the best conditions but if it's my choice, and if i have to wear gloves and a mask, okay. i will wear it. i'd rather go and wear it. if everyone else is wearing it we can set up for a couple of months until things have passed. you probably can't eat popcorn but you could probably eat a hot dog. open up your respirator come and take bite and you chew it under your mask. i have to drink my beer if i'm at a game so if i have to use a straw and slip it in, i will do that. whatever it takes to get my beer, i want to have a beer. everyone has to make their own decision. what is your appetite for risk? you get in a car and it's a risk. consult with your doctor. i'd rather have my temperature taken, drink beer from a straw, eat a hot dog by going like this and chewing it with a mask than not going at all. i'm pro-choice and i know this
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is not ideal but if it's about saving the lives especially of other people more vulnerable and getting our economy back up and running full speed as quickly as possible, i will suck it up. and i think a lot of new yorkers would suck it up and want to go to the game, where the mask and gloves and beat the yankees and the giants and jets and mets can make their own masks and hand them out as you go in with their emblems on it. medical privacy is a must. it can't be compromised. no government databases, sorry. we have a constitution and civil liberties. people can decide to go or not go based on these temporary rules and i choose to go. same with football, same with outdoor concerts, and indoor events? while i think you could move the new york rangers and islanders to yankee stadium and city field, they do that once a year anyway. a recent poll shows that some democrats, the majority of them, would likely support mandatory nationwide blood testing and electronic ankle bracelets for
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those who are sick. joining us now to weigh in on all of this because we can't have draconian measures as we kick it off here. okay, larry kudlow. i'm cutting half my monologue short because i'm ad-libbing so much. you're the chief economic council guy and a friend of mi mine. okay. i want the games, i want the economy open. how bad is the second quarter unemployment going to be? how bad would it be gdp second quarter would imagine god awful. >> is going to be pretty awful. the important thing here is the president's guideline with the doctors giving us a pathway to reopening the economy. we have to be safe. we have to be healthy. as you were going through, i agreed with pretty much everything you said. we have to have the right testing on the right diagnostics, the right hospitalization, all that should be in place.
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all that practice with social distancing and so on and so on. but the key point is we've laid out a pathway guideline for all the state governors across the country who will then begin to reopen the economy. it will be done in phases. may will be a transition month but this thing will get us back on track. i mean the economy, look. in the last four weeks, these numbers are very painful because they have hardship written all over them. unemployment insurance claims, sean, went up 22 million in the last four weeks. that's about 13.5% of the whole labor force. it's a terrible number, no question. but, with these new guidelines and as we gradually reopen phase by phase and state-by-state we will see a turnaround in the economy in the weeks ahead. i truly believe that.
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>> sean: i believe it, too. we are still in april, just begin the second quarter. so april, may, june. i would imagine 90% of the country is going to be open probably in early may, by the end of may if i really want to be conservative. what did you think about my idea for yankee stadium and city field? if everyone has to wear a mask and get their temperature taken, you have to drink beer through a straw, i meant. i would rather go than stay home. thoughts? >> i agree. i'm a big baseball fan, life long yankees fan. yesterday when the president talk to all these business task force executives, we also met with all the sports commissioners and they wanted to open up. baseball wants to open up, and they may have to start slow and may have to figure out the best practices and procedures but they want to get going.
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there was an announcement that the golf tour may begin in early june. people love to watch golf. i'm a tennis player myself but i think the tenants people -- maybe we can have the u.s. open in new york. all i'm saying is the president has done here with safety uppermost in his mind, we need safe american people. now these guidelines put out by the best doctors in the best science mines will open the door to a resumption of sports. i mean heck, i want people to go back to work. >> sean: truckers never stop working. farmers never stop, suppliers never stop. >> the truckers are phenomenal. people forget how important trucking is to this economy, 70% of the freight hauled in the u.s. is done by truckers. those are your supplies and your supply chains. by the way, they've been working for the most part.
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now we can begin to open up the rest of the economy and because the economy was pretty darn strong, the trump economy got pretty darn strong before this going in. we can recover that economic growth and to get people working again. that's the key. all we want to do is protect the workforce and the businesses. so in the next few weeks we can rebound. the rebound will come. a rebound will come and this is a big first step by president trump. >> sean: that's our hope third quarter. joining us now is louisiana senator john kennedy. i like the fact that they figured it out early and got on board fast and they were able to drop -- level at much faster than other places i would argue because we learned a lot, by the time louisiana got hot. >> we did learn a lot. we also benefited from the
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president's assistance. we got extra ppe. he was going to build us an extra hospital but we didn't need it. we never came close to running out of ventilators thanks to the president and the vice president. our numbers are now going in the right direction and we are starting to talk about reopening the economy. i was very impressed today with the trump-fauci-birx plan for reopening the economy. i hope the governors follow it. >> sean: is it true, did drew brees donate like $5 million to louisiana or something like that? a crazy amount of money? pretty amazing guy. >> he is, he's a wonderful football player but he is an
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even better person. and he's been very generous with his money. but a lot of people, in and outside of louisiana has been very generous to the people in louisiana, including and especially the american taxpayer. and i want to thank the american tax paper, compare because it's their money that we are spendi spending. >> sean: as long as it's for workers displaced and hospital supplies and ventilators and thermometers and testing and also small business and big business, through no fault of their own impacted, i'm fine with it. i think we will get into a fight though with your democratic colleagues because they will want to balance these corrupted budgets of -- these states by burdening the taxpayers. no more art centers, no more endowments and all going towards specific houses. can we do that and pass clean
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bills, sir? >> we can if speaker pelosi can agree to it. on which democratic senators were invited and i worry that some of them are not going to support the trump-fauci-birx plan for reopening the economy. i hope they are wrong. i know the tofu and arugula crowd will not like the president's plan and they think that we should leave the economy shut down until there is no more coronavirus. that's not realistic for two reasons. it's unrealistic. that's bone deep, down to the merrill stupid. number one the economy will collapse, the world economy will collapse and number two as we
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saw in michigan the american people are not going to stand for it. >> sean: our best to drew breese, ray antoinette, you know we can all eat kick as a nancy pelosi and apparently she flies out with our carbon emissions private plane into her gated neighborhood and she's not even working. she needs to get back on that private jet of hers and fly back to d.c. and get the job done. you know the paycheck protection plan for small business, they are out of money. pelosi and the democrats, they support it. they are refusing to re-up the program again, they are playing their games. again they want to waste money, again they are basically blackmailing the republicans and
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leveraging necessary needed money for unrelated issues. now, and 20,000 -- inside her gated multimillion dollar mansion. lindsey graham is with us, at least he would have brought us ice cream if he had such a freezer. she's been vicious the whole time. she's not at work, she's blaming president trump for everything and she's telling everyone february 24, come to chinatown. she was impeaching trump when trump put the travel ban in effect and now she's holding the money hostage again. >> i think she's been incredibly small in a time when the country
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needs big leadership. she held the articles of impeachment from december 18th and tried to get mitch mcconnell and now she is trying to hold the small business administration loan program that's working hostage, she's been a hostage taker rather than a problem solver. the one thing i want to say about president trump, a guy that i got to know in the last three years listens and leads. dr. fauci and dr. burks, and that phase opens up the country. he listens and leads and undermines and destroys. >> sean: have you been following bret baier's reporting about how patient zero is a guy that got infected from corona from a bat and he worked in that
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wuhan laboratory. i had seen all the conspiracy theories that were manufactured there. apparently china banned travel in and out of wuhan province according to bret, but they let people from wuhan travel internationally. that would mean to me that they knowingly, consciously, assuming all this is true as reported that they protected themselves and screw the rest of us with the help of the w.h.o. that lied to us. >> all the evidence indicates they -- iran is the larger state-sponsored terrorism and china has the lead just state-sponsored pandemics. this is the third or fourth pandemic that came out of china and the infection may have
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happened in the lab but the evidence seems to suggest it was spread at these wet markets. what did we do to iran who is the bad actor? and senator cruz has the bill to do that. >> sean: they need to pay for this because they knew wuhan was so dangerous that they could not travel in or out from china. if they didn't tell the rest of the world what they were doing with wuhan, but they let wuhan people travel everywhere else, they didn't give a flying rip about what they were doing to the rest of the world. they knew it was bad and they let it happen. >> if it were not for the irresponsibility of the chinese government party there would be no pandemic in the world and americans would be alive today and 22 million people would be at work. china is responsible and it's
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time to hold them responsible. they need to pay upfront. >> sean: yeah. maybe we don't pay back the debt they are holding. they pay for all of this. when we come back, lawmakers are demanding that china be held accountable as these reports surfaced that coronavirus originated person zero in that lab in wuhan. we will have more on the investigation after this and senator cruz, mar mark levin ane answer that governor cuomo gave me. a sherman-ask answer or? ♪ and, "let's go four-wheeling." maybe there's a little part of me that wanted to be seen. well, progressive helps people save when they bundle their home with their outdoor vehicles.
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♪ >> sean: also developing tonight, it turns out the u.s. and canada have actually funded the chinese lab. here to explain more, chief correspondent trace gallagher. according to brett's report, they knew, they stopped travel to and from wuhan into china but they let them travel internationally. >> my shot of the laboratory was part of china's effort to show that they could identify and combat viruses as well as the united states. even though back in 2018 u.s. officials sent messages to the state department raising alarm bells about risky practices inside of the slab. the officials were not advocating for it to shut down but rather to give it more money to improve safety. and those other institutions to help fund research considerin cg
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coronavirus and bats. canadian funding went to the wuhan lab and now they are trying to follow the funding to see exactly where it leads. this could be where the virus accidentally escaped, and infected a lab worker who then spread it to the larger population. there still no proof that the virus came from the lab but wherever it came from there is ample evidence that china spent weeks trying to cover it up. >> sean: for weeks and weeks people have been sending me this -- it was invented in this lab, because i thought it was a conspiracy theory and, bret's report is not saying that but have we ruled that out yet? have we ruled out it that it's a regular virus this guy
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contracted? >> correct. this was not made in a lab, not a biro weapon, it was unnatural emanating virus that was contracted by a worker inside the lab who then spread it. big one is that 100% confirmed? >> that is 100% confirmed. >> sean: it's 98% similar to sars. senator ted cruz introducing legislation to old china accountable for the virus cover-up. their deceit, their lying. and with their reaction, senator cruz, i am so angry at the idea that they stopped all travel to and from wuhan within china but they let people in and out internationally. i'm like, that means they knew the risk and they didn't care about the rest of us. >> shawn, that's exactly right. china's responsibility and responsibility for this pandemic is enormous and those are at least three different aspects. we were discussing a moment ago which is a very real possibility
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that this coronavirus originated in the chinese lab. we know that there are two chinese labs controlled by the chinese government that we are stuttering not just coronavirus' but that coronavirus within miles of where this outbreak occurred. the question there, there were multiple state department cables before the pandemic raising concerns about the safety and security of these labs in them not having adequate protection. the question the chinese government has refused to answer is whether they were studying this particular virus, the novel coronavirus in one of these labs and did it escape accidentally? they are stonewalling and refusing to answer that. that's issue number one. issue number two is there cover-up and is undisputed that the chinese government for weeks kept silent and tried to hide and try to obscure this outbreak. you had position whistle-blowers bravely trying to blow the
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whistle on this. the chinese government came down on them and silenced them. if they behaved like an ordinary government, there's a possibility we could have gone and with health professionals and contain the outbreak and kept it as a regional outbreak rather than a global pandemic. then the third critical element that this has underscore it is the degree to which our employer, entire supply chain is gone to china including critical infrastructure, pharmaceuticals and medical devices and we have got to correct that and bring that critical supply chain back to the united states. >> sean: they hit it, they protected their own people and they let the rest of the world to get infected and die. that u.k. study i think is the one you were referring to and they said 95% of this could have been prevented. that means they had blood on their hands.
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they save themselves and knowingly knew the risk for the rest of the world, that would mean they had blood on their hands. >> over 140,000 people have died worldwide from covid-19 and had china not covered it up and been so afraid and embarrassed of having their culpability exposed, we could have prevented the vast majority of those deaths. there needs to be serious accountability and serious transparency and the chinese communist government doesn't want to see it. most of the mainstream media in the united states doesn't want to see it as well. when the first reports came out about these labs studying coronavirus from baths, you had "the washington post" putting out reports can debunking this conspiracy theory as they called it. they focused on what you were just talking about a minute ago. the argument from science is that it doesn't appear this virus was created in a lab, it appears to be naturally
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occurring. the question is not was an artificially constructed but the question was are they starting this virus from that and did they screw up and accidentally infect someone and let it out? and they don't want to answer that question. most of the mainstream media doesn't want to acknowledge the question exists. >> sean: unbelievable senator. thank you for all of that information. i want to remind people, because this is very important. the media has been so corrupt and all of this, over at fake news cnn, we know their behavior for three and half years. thank you senator. for three and a half years they were the worst culprits. they were the ones that put in their conspiracy theories and their lies and their mysteries. over at cnn they called the coronavirus, they didn't like it that we called at the wuhan coronavirus. this so that was racist. then they published more chinese
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propaganda from a bogus chinese property report seeing the chinese navy was better prepared than coronavirus than the u.s. navy. cnn was more than happy to say it was xenophobic and stigmatizing and cnn also said according to ms. mythbusters they turned out the networks. the worst example of cnn's discussing, don lennon last night took a very ugly, twisted sick victory lap. a pastor in virginia died from a coronavirus and this guy makes the statement that, that ought to serve as a lesson to the faithful. really, don? from your ivory tower? >> let that be a lesson that you can have faith but you also have to heed the warning of the authorities and the experts.
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i think that should be a lesson to people who are trying to gather, and you shouldn't do it. my heart goes out to that fami family. bless them, but they should be a lesson to everyone out there who's trying to defy the authorities and say, don't do it. >> sean: lesson to the faithful. anyway, up next, the great one, mark live in. lives right now, today, for the freedoms that we have here in this country. so for us, at newday to help those people at this point in time. it's a labor of love, it's a noble service, and that's what we're all about. thwe've never seen it look quite like this, but there's no mistaking it.
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>> sean: all right, the great one, mark levine, warning back in february that democrats destructive impeachment might harm the coronavirus response. he's been a number of times over on the freedom of the press, and on sunday nights, life, liberty
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and live in. call him a great one a reason. great one? yeah, it hurt. nancy pelosi saying go to chinatown, donald trump implement at the travel ban that was implemented a month ago. >> yes, and now she's apparently a nonessential employee because she hasn't showed up for work and she's number three in line to be president of the united states. as for her ice cream i'm lactose intolerant so i would never touch it. i want to thank the president and the vice president, they are the ones that have been pushing to open up the economy. the governors have shut down the economy, not the president. the governors have shut business, not the president, and several of them are dragging their feet. you can see trying to press to open up the economy. i just wanted to point something out. these states do not have plenary police power when they -- to
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deal with what they've done. 22 million people filing for unemployment compensation? this has an national intrastate effect. the debate about federalism was a fake debate and i've given this a lot of thought. this has nothing to do with federalism. the president has more power to order governors if he chooses to open up the economies than people think. states have the power to regulate congress within their boundaries but the congress under the federal constitution is the only body that has the power to regulate interstate commerce. governors through their dictates and their fiats of what is essential and nonessential, shutting down businesses, that's the ultimate regulation. if it affects interstate commerce in a negative way the president can in fact enforce the interstate commerce clause of the constitution where governors do not have the power to control interstate commerce. the states police powers do not
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extend to interfering with interstate congress. the clause was explicitly put in the federal constitution to promote commerce, to promote commerce. nationwide. it follows that when a governor by unilateral action, i don't even know where they get the power from and some of the states but by unilateral action, it orders businesses closed that effect particularly in a negative way interstate commerce, it's a governor that may be violating the federal constitution. it of course the comp comic president's job as the head of the executive branch to protect the constitution. so it's absurd to say the president has no power. it's not a federalism issue. i will give you an example. if the governor decided to close all the wheat farms in kansas or prevent those farmers from exporting wheat to other states for any reason including a
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virus, that's unconstitutional. because of impact on interstate commerce. 2 million people will be unemployed, actually more. trillions of dollars more in debt by the federal government and you can't tell me that this is a state only issue. this is an intrastate and commerce issue. these governors don't believe in federalism. if he believed in federalism there would be no new deal for god's sakes. it's the supreme court, fdr and the new deal that even expanded the idea of interstate commerce. in 1937, i know. this is an hot stuff but stick with me. in 1937 in the nrb decision what did they say? activities in the state that have subject close and substantive relationship that their control is essential or appropriate to protect the
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commerce from burdens or obstructions that are within congress' power to regulate. so if the state even within the state congress has regulated in a way that arms or affects interstate congress, only congress has the power to regulate that according to the supreme court in 1937. i'm not saying the president is regulating it, and sing the president as the head of the executive has the power to enforce that. the big daddy decision is in 1942, wicker versus full burn. you know what they said there? a farmer grew wheat on his own farm, consumed it on his own farm, it never touched interstate commerce and here's what the court said. that still can be regulated by congress because, this is important "the simulation of congress' use of regulatory functions -- restrictions thereon." in other words, congress has the
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power to stimulate congress and therefore, infections were taken to a state to prevent the stimulation of congress but congress can regulate it. so what i'm saying here is the president of the united states is ahead of of the executive branch, certainly has tools and powers. this isn't a federalism argument. and finally, sean, federalism. these governors are confused. they think federalism means they have all the power and no accountability. they can make any decision they want on the rest of us have to pay for it. that's one way federalism and no such thing exists, that's it. >> sean: great one. sunday night it continues right here on fox. when we come back, you won't believe the comment that joe biden made. he had his own irredeemable, deplorable moment. that my exchange with governor cuomo on the question of, well, is he going to run for president? take a listen, next. ♪
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♪ >> sean: biden completely embarrassing himself yesterday at a fund-raiser. he reportedly said he can't connect with the president's base because "they really support the notion that, you know, all mexicans are racist and all muslims are bad. whilall, all, all. his reaction, a former white house chief of staff. irredeemable deplorables, bitter americans, it sounds like that's what he thinks of anybody that likes trump. >> why is it that the democrats have had three presidential nominees in a row who have had a very dim view of almost half of
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the country? you know, nearly every one out of every three latinos voted for donald trump. does joe biden think that mexicans are all bad? this is once again an elitist perspective that is going to put joe biden and difficulty just like it did or clinton and just like it did barack obama. >> sean: does this impact his chances in your view or does this resonate? maybe not now but when we get back to the campaign, 201 days away. >> it depends on how people look at it from here on out. you look at president obama and it hurt him, didn't keep him from winning the reelection but it hurt him. the question is, does joe biden reinforce it by hanging out with exactly the kind of people that the president's associated with those kind of comments? hillary data, barack obama data, we will see if joe biden
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continues to slander nearly half the american population. spain wanted by the of this week karl rove, we will have new whiteboards, they are in the mail. [laughs] >> there is a giant box on my front porch but it says covid-19 on it, i don't know. i'm not going to open it just yet. >> sean: that was probably sent by joe biden. when we come back, i asked governor cuomo if he's running for president. i have his definitive answer, straight ahead. every financial plan needs a cfp® professional --
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what does an apron have to do with insurance? an apron is protection. an apron is not quitting until you've helped make something better. what does an apron have to do with insurance? for us, especially right now, everything. ♪ i was told to begin my foaspirin regimen, blem. now, everything. and i just didn't listen. until i almost lost my life.
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my doctors again ordered me to take aspirin, and i do. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. listen to the doctor. take it seriously. ♪ >> sean: so was governor cuomo thinking about running for president? i asked him, here's his answer. >> i'm going to be governor of new york, sean. it's very important to me that people understand that, because frankly this is such an intense partisan environment, i can't do my job at this moment in time if there's any political agenda whatsoever. i'm not going anywhere.
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wow period. >> sean: thi does the statement over you, if nominated i will not accept, drop that i will run, if elected, i will not serve, is that your statement? >> yes. >> sean: all right. sherman answer. let not your heart be troubled. laura. i guess that's a pretty definitive no, he's not running. >> laura: i think it's actually really great that he comes on your radio show. i think it's good. >> sean: we got into a fight. >> laura: i love it. >> sean: we got into a pretty big fight because i was pretty unhappy with all the stuff that he was saying. >> laura: that's all right. >> sean: now we are back -- listen, i live in the state, i don't want anyone else dying, i'm sick of it. i want everybody to live. >> laura: all i can say is we didn't need, thankfully, 30,000 or 40,000 ventilators. great show can go to see you. i'm laura ingraham, this is "the ingraham angle." very busy washington tonight. this may be one of the most important shows we've done during this entire coronavirus crisis. dr. anthony fauci is here and he's going to tell us about