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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  June 22, 2020 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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carley: than jillian: thank you, carley. rob: more on the big bolton interview and bolton big and "fox & friends" coming up in 3 seconds? jillian: see you later. ♪ [gunfire] >> more shots fired. i'm running away. steve: no kidding. good morning, everybody, monday, june 22nd, 2020. start with a fox news alert. 6:00 in new york city. the second straight night of violence inside of seattle's chop zone one person shot. that victim from last night is in serious condition. ainsley: comes after 19-year-old was shot and killed in that autonomous zone over the weekend. body cam video shows police struggling to reach the victim. >> please move out of the way so we can get to the victim. all we are trying to do is get to the victim.
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brian: price have explain themselves. prefortsd yelled and threw bottles. chop activists as they call themselves say they're looking for ways to stop the violence without police. i would say that's an epic fail so far, guys. by the way, you look good in person. ainsley and steve. i would say. ainsley: it's been so long you forgot. steve: good morning, everybody. live from studio f. we are august in one room together after three months scattered throughout the tristate area. of course, as is america, we are social distancing. so ainsley is over in what we refer to as the fish bowl. brian is over at the big plastic desk and i because i showed up last week and i got to pick my spot i'm in the living room in the most comfortable chair at the fox news channel. brian: you are in the man cave. steve: next three hours it. is good because today as well, new york city is entering phase
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2. people are going to be able to get a hair cut. restaurants are opening for outdoor dining. progress. brian: maybe we can get a hair cut while outdoor dining. steve: it's america, baby. ainsley: no, you will get hair in your food, brian. ainsley: i keep looking at y'all in the studio. straight ahead at the camera. i haven't seen you for so long i want to stare at you guys. you look great. everyone healthy in hour whose holds? brian: everyone is great. this abhorrent situation in seattle where the mayor has just given up on controlling that three block square radius in that city. and the governor seems disinterested and joe biden refuses to comment on it that we could see there salahless nature to what's happening there. they wanted their own freedom. they wanted to make their own rules. and now we have death and destruction. steve: yeah. it was terrible what happened. apparently had been two shootings over 48 hours. a teenager was killed on
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saturday night and here's the thing. because the police are apparently respecting the protesters' right inside that autonomous zone if they're called, they go to a staging area and they wait to be escorted in when it's safe. but, apparently when they went in to get this 19-year-old kid, body cam video shows an officer with a bull horn saying please move out of the way so we can get to the victim. all we want to do is get to the victim. the protesters were shouting put down your guns. and eventually they got to the area and as it turns out, the volunteer medics, volunteer medics inside the chop zone had treated that victim, but, you know what? , wound up taking to the hospital. he was pronounced dead 11 minutes later. and while no id has been released on this personal. the seattle times says friends and teachers say that the guy who was killed on saturday night graduate grd high school on friday. ainsley: wow.
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he was killed. someone else was critically injured. and then there was that second shooting that we just learned about this morning as well. so, maria, if you watched her show yesterday. she always has such great guests. she had bill barr on her show yesterday. she was asking him about what is happening in chop in these zones. listen to. this the job of the department of justice to mete out justifiable fairly and even handedly in this case and not be influenced by the mob. it's responsibility of the local and state officials to protect the rights of their citizens. at the end of the day, the federal government does have a responsibility to make sure citizens are not deprived of their federal rights. >> will you challenge that autonomous city? will you suit mayor? what will do you. >> we will not get into specifics but we are obviously keeping an eye on it. as the president said. in due course we may have to do something about it we can't let it go on indefinitely.
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brian: this is unbelievable this is allowed to take place seven blocks to three blocks. mayor says this will be the summer of love. summer of love as anyone would predict has turned into violence and death. and the mayor is responsible for this. the governor is responsible for this. and i'm looking around and i'm wondering how many other cities, portland is trying to do it desperately almost popped up in los angeles. and pa what a terrible precedent for the country. i'm curious is joe biden going to say it's outrageous for make to give up three blocks of their city where they can make their own rules and regulations. are they thinking because they don't say anything they get a pass on this? it's embarrassing to exist let alone now death and destruction and the police, to their credit, if i'm the police, i would not even show up in that area. because you took over the precinct. you were forced to evacuate. you said you knew better and vilified the men and women in blue and the police commissioner has been humiliated by politicians and now you are
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saying please let me in to help you and they screamed at them explicatives? it's just unthinkable. steve: just imagine if you lived inside that zone. there are business owners who are freaked out now. they are afraid to go and do their work. i read this morning that one of the business owners said that this whole chop movement is distracting from the rest of the movement battling racism and police brutality. the quote is it's been a total distraction. it's destroyed the neighborhood. it's made people feel unsafe. of course, you have leaders to keep you safe. where are the leaders? they're not keeping them safe. because they are relying on the people inside of the chaz or the chop to keep people safe. as we saw, ainsley, over the weekend, it isn't working. ainsley: that's right. all right. let's talk about this statue that is in front of the museum of natural history this that popular museum up on the west side. we all take our kids there many of you who have visited, have you gone there this statue right
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outside of the museum. it's president teddy roosevelt and he is flanked by a native american man and on the other side a black man the museum has decided to take down the statue it. has been there since 1940. they are getting the support of mayor bill de blasio as well. he says it symbol lays colonial expansion and racial discrimination. brian: here is what the executive said of the natural history it said over the last few weeks our museum community has profoundly -- was profoundly moved by the will movement of racial disblawivel has emerged after the killing of george floyd. we have watched as the country has turned to statues as powerful and hurtful symbols of systemic racism. simply put, the time has come to move it. when the museum of natural history has a man who was born in new york, who is alternative for the white house is the only one to live on long island whose father helped found the museum of natural history who has done so much for the environment, who
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was the first to invite an african-american to dinner as president of the united states,that has shown no history of anything but a man of his times who overcame impossible odds not only to survive but to become president of the united states former police commissioner of new york city. i don't think we look back at hills industry until the last few years and said man these people are perfect. wow were they foresightful. wow was teddy roosevelt perfect. let's move every statue of every single statue of every single person that is not perfect and not reminisce sent of 2020. it's reminisce sent of its time in history. steve: brian, here is the thing. as you look at the closer detail. it's teddy roosevelt flanked by african-american and by somebody who has. ainsley: a native american. steve: exactly. for a long time in new york city people have objected it said it's a symbol of colonialism and
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racism. what's different about this i is it what's even about this particular movement the museum where it sis in front, says you know what? we are going to take it down. president trump said ridiculous, don't do it. and then we hear this morning in the pages of the "new york times," theodore roosevelt fourth, who is teddy roosevelt's obviously heir says take it down. it's time it take it down. brian: here is the state assembly member. first they go after our nation's founding fathers george washington and city hall. now teddy roosevelt? this is instan at this and it has to stop. george washington's memorial was defaced in baltimore. francis scott key torn down in san francisco and also took down ulysses s. grant. my goodness. he fought for the union. this is absolutely out of
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control. the president predicted it in that famous for all the wrong reasons press conference he said if you take down, this what's next? jefferson? washington? there is no united states without washington. no declaration of independence without jefferson. i don't understand why these people in our past have to be perfect. you could put a plaque next to it owned slaves, did this negative, did that negative, go ahead. you can't rob us of our history. ainsley: what's the line? we want people to weigh in on this foxnews.com because there is the history component, there is also the offense component, brian. and i'm from south carolina, and when they took down the confederate flag from the state house dome and then they put it down on the property and that was their compromise, nikki haley became the governor she said this is ridiculous. it's offending a lot of people. we are going to move past this and taking it down. more people were for that, brian, down in south carolina
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than they were to keep it up. because it does -- it's the offense aspect of this, too. brian: i get your point. i think confederate flag and george washington and teddy roosevelt and the confederate flag dr. that the micly different. confederate soldiers differential conversations that ulysses s. grant. it is out of control. jefferson went into a society where his parents had slaves. slavery is abhorrent. it was everywhere on earth. not just in the united states. as some would have thought was right. we will never ever be able to get our head around how the smartest people on the planet could rationalize this horrible behavior. the smartest people on the planet gave us the country we are in that allows us to grow and change and progress that was built into the constitution. so you don't wipe them out of history. you don't say they don't matter. you are going to have a history book, social studies fifth grade is going to be nothing but blank pages.
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steve: in this case it's the actual museum saying you know what? times have changed, take it down. we will keep you posted. the timetable is uncertain on this monday morning. meanwhile, what was uncertain going into the presidential rally in tulsa oklahoma center has how many of the 1 million people that we heard had registered would actually show up. well, they estimate that the crowd size was probably 62, 63, 6400. >> and so people immediately started to wonder what happened? and there were these reports that teenagers on tiktok and fans of the group k pop took credit because they reserved a bunch of tickets. never intending to show up. brad parscale tweeted this out. that that apparently was wrong. he said radical protesters fueled by a week of apocalyptic media coverage interviewe inter. they blocked access to the metal detect torres. we will show that you in a
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minute preventing people from entering. thanks to the thousands who made it anyway. let's adding and show what you brad was talking about. we do have an image of you who protesters were able to shut down. that's the mai entrance to the t that according to brad parscale. >> all right. so aoc. she weighed in on this. she said you got rocked by teens on tictoc who flooded the trump campaign tricked you into believing a million people wanted your white supremacist open mic enough to pack arena during covid. shout out to zoomers, yawl made me so proud. ainsley: post video on ticktock and funny and couples doing it and trying t try coordinate dan. activists were say going to sign up to reserve a ticket. reserve four or five of them so they think a lookout of people will coming.
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steve: hundreds. ainsley: and then you reserve those seats so that the people who really want to go there are no more tickets left over. brian: number one, families feeling secure going there hearing about these stories. protests being huge. others saying no so crowded won't have anywhere to park. other seniors i'm the one in the target range with the coronavirus. i probably shouldn't put myself at risk at a senior going to an event like that. and you know the president dominates in that age bracket. so that's will figure into a lot of it. i think the administration has to -- not the administration, the campaign has to recalibrate their next event. they talked about arizona next. arizona is having a slight particular up. they have to think about how they want to do it from here. let's be honest as experience as anyone is, no one has ever been through a campaign with a pandemic and civil unrest. two things out of control. democrats and republicans. steve: i think, brian, because
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on friday morning we had the news story that they were declaring a curfew because they were worried that anarchists were going to descend on tulsa. there would be melee. a number of people didn't show up for that reason. we are during a global pandemic. i don't know who thought it was a good idea to put 20,000 people in a room and the -- with masks optional. i was at two outdoor dining events this weekend at restaurants in new jersey which is slowly reopening. and i have got to tell you, people felt safer outside. if going forward the campaign wants to do big events and apparently they thought about drive-in movie theaters but that wasn't big enough. they want to do something big, think stadium. think an amphitheater. nascar track. outside, people can social distance and feel safe. the president could still preside over the crowd. but the thought going forward not only has to be about a rally to support the president as his
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fans would do but about their own personal safety. brian: we will see where it goes from here. being that steve just talked, ainsley, do you want to toss to jillian or diewrpghts me to. ainsley: i want you to go back to weird toss. brian: here is a woman that would love to do anything that we ask, most importantly, she wants to do the news. therefore, jillian, go ahead and do the news. jillian: i would argue that first half. second half i'm upstairs. hello, good morning. i will say hi in the break. ainsley: okay. jillian: nascar is launching an investigation after noose is found in driver bubba wallace's garage in tell san diego go. it comes two weeks after he successfully burninged to pan. wallace the cup series only black drivers writing this will not break me. i will not give in nor will i back down. i will continue to proudly stand for what i believe in. new york city and new jersey milestones today.
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the big apple entering phase 2 which includes outdoor dining, retail and hair salons. in new jersey hair salons, barbershops and tattoo parlors may reopen as states move forward with recovery. abc news reports more than a dozen states seeing a spike in cases. the world health organization reporting largest single day increase in cases with more than 183,000 in 24 hours. south carolina protesters being urged to get tested for the coronavirus after several pest positive. according to organizer lawrence nathaniel, four organizers of the i can't breathe have coronavirus. along with six protesters and three photographers. the demonstration is taking place in columbia, charleston and greenville between may 30th and june 17th. plans for some protests are being put on hold for at least two weeks. that's a look at your headlines. ainsley: my family is down
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there. my family says it's spreading like wildfire in south carolina now. everyone be careful. thanks so much, jillian. john bolton claiming that ask president to buy u.s. farm products to win reelection. >> stunning statement by a president to the leader of an adversarial foreign country. ainsley: mick mulvaney was in the room, too. he says that never happened. he joining us live, next.
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♪ >> he focused on terms on china buying moral agricultural products which he said to xi
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jinping would help him in the farm states. stunning to from the president to leader of adversarial foreign country. brian: john bolton accusing president trump of asking china to buy farm products to help him win re-election. the next guest at that meeting firing back saying it never happened. mick mulvaney has been around the president as much as anybody in consequential times. mic, your thought about that hour we watched on sn bs we will see more throughout the morning and afternoon. >> i watched the wholening cover to cover. i haven't read the book yet. i'm not going to pay for it. i cringed. i imagine that former chief of staffs and former national security advisors. former cabinet secretaries from all administrations cringed to watch sort of the betrayal of competence last night by john bolton. it was really a classless display. talked about what was driving it. it was hard to watch to have somebody in the oval office with
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the president almost every day sort of turn on him just because he didn't like the style. didn't like sort of the policies. it was really really hard to watch last night as a public serve vangt. you know, the "wall street journal" wrote a piece earlier this week or last week that said -- asked whatever happened to the concept of honor in public service? clearly john bolton doesn't have any left. brian: i know the judge who ruled that bolton's book is going to be allowed to come out because it's basically out already. he said john bolton likely jeopardized national security and exposed himself to criminal prosecution. did you see that in that interview? >> i didn't see anything in that interview. but, of course, the book is 500 pages. what i saw mostly in the interview was that john bolton didn't like how the president worked. he didn't like the way the president interacted with kim jong un in north korea. didn't like the way he interacted with vladimir putin. didn't like the way he interacted with president xi from china. which is just outrageous.
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if you don't like the way the president acts, either you quit, or you run against him. but, as a member of the inner circle of his team, if you don't like his style, you don't run and write a book about it and make a million bucks. it was really outrageous to see john sort of minimize his relationship with the president like that. it was, again, it walls difficult for someone who is on the inside to watch last night. brian: did he violate the law? that's the main thing. did he disagree with his policy with china or did he say help me get reelected by buyin buying soybeans. go -- that's the conversation. >> talk about the conversation with xi which i read the excerpts of in the book. pertains to the conversations g-20 meetings in last summer. did the president of the united states try to encourage the
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chinese to buy more american agricultural products the answer is soybeans. the answer yes, he tried to do that every time we talked to the chinese did. that link. it did not. would it be good for the country, yes it would. good for our country. would that be good for the president's re-election changes? yes they would. to say weave them together as john did last night to something criminal or underhas underred on unconstitutional is completely outrageous. face it john was in that meeting and did not complain to a soul, not to me about the meeting or white house council about that meeting not to anybody until the book comes out that he even raised the issue. more importantly, i think, secretary pompeo was in that room. secretary mnuchin was in that room. trade representative lighthizer was in that room. i was in that room and none of us saw what john says he saw in that room. so, i think it undoes john's credibility considerably and rightly so. he just starts introducing these things at the last minute to try and sell books.
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brian: mic, look forward to talking to you again. sadly out of time i have about 5,000 nor questions to ask you. at the time when the president is trying to get on track. it's ill timed this june book. we will see if it factors into october. mic mulvaney, thanks so much. coming up straight ahead, ohio business owner who had her store ransacked during riots earlier this month now facing more threats all because she wants to cooperate with the cops. she joins us live next.
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steve: 6:30 in new york city. news by the numbers. >> the supreme court could issue first main ruling on abortion rights since president trump took office this week. all eyes are on chief justice john roberts who sided with liberals two landmark cases last week. you know that the ruling will indicate the court's willingness to revisit protections granted in roe v. wade. and tomorrow president trump heads to arizona so celebrate the 200th mile opt border wall. the president will reportedly be bereaved of construction of the wall along our southern border. and meet with leaders to talk about border security. ainsley? ainsley: thank you. an ohio business owner who hid with her staff as her store was being ransacked and looted during cleveland's riots earlier this month now says she is facing more threats to her business as she is targeted for
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cooperating with police. in their investigation. the owner of colossal cupcakes. her name is kelly canda and she joins us now. >> hi. thanks for having me back. ainsley: you have been on our show before to tell us what ha was happening. may 30th. tell the folks at hom if they dt watch that interview what happened. >> my store was rioted after we locked the doors. my staff and i had to barricade ourselves and lock ourselves in the bathroom while my store was completely destroyed and ransacked on that day. ainsley: you had to lock yourself in the bathroom. were you terrified? >> yes. ainsley: they were on the other side of the door, right? >> i'm sorry? ainsley: they were on the other side of the door and you didn't know when police got there if they were trying to trick you in saying we are police so that you would come out, right? >> right. the leaders were actually pounding on the door after we ran in there i was skeptical to believe whether it was the cleveland police or not.
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but it was. it was. ainsley: police could have saved your life. >> they did save my life. absolutely. on top of that. ainsley: so what happened after that? because some of these looters were threatening you, you say? >> yeah. the stores gotten some threats. when it guess rebuilt it's going to hit again. that my cooperation is unfair. that i shouldn't be -- i shouldn't be cooperating with the fbi. that, you know, it's not -- against the cause. i'm actually absolutely for the cause. but it's upsetting people that i involve the police over something such as property. ainsley: didn't someone walk up to you when you were locking up your store? what did they say to you on the street? >> yes. the week after is it was an evening i was damage and i was leaving and someone walking by approached us and said you know, when the store rebuilds, when
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you rebuild, this i'm going to to come back and destroy it again and you. he kept walking and gone. ainsley: that's scary. are you scared to open back up? >> yes. ainsley: i know you do so much for the community. what do you say to the critics that say because you called the police. because you are thanking them now for saving your life that you are racist and you don't support black lives? >> it's really sad. unfortunately we are not -- my store is not open right now and i'm so involved with the community and i'm so involved with our inner city schools. and i'm so for the cause that i do a lot of community service. right now i can't. i don't have anything being brought in to be able to donate as much as i usually do. anybody who researches colossal cupcakes and myselves know i am very involved with the community. my business and i both do as much as possible. ainsley: have you donated kitchen aid mixers to younger people who want to get into the culinary field.
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i hope our country can heal and come together. kelly, i wish you all the best. stay safe. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. second straight night of violence inside seattle's police free chop zone. [gunfire] >> more shots fired. i'm running away. ainsley: so does this prove that we need the cops? dan bongino is next. you turn 40 and everything goes. tell me about it. you know, it's made me think,
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weekend. steve, you were saying earlier he just graduated the day before. body cam video shows police struggling to reach the victim. >> please move out of the way so we can get to the victim. all we are trying to do is get to the victim. [shouting] brian: get, this police as you see there. forced to retreat as greeforts yelled and threw bottles at them who were there trying to help. activists saying they are looking for ways to stop the violence without police. so far an epic fail and predicted by dan bongino. fox news contributor, former nypd officer and secret service agent. dan, they are better men and women than me. if you took over my precinct. kicked me out of three blocks. vilified me with signs and explicatives, i would not be in there to try to safety day. they still tried to get in. >> yeah. i mean, on the way in they have spray painted on the walls acab all cops are -- i can't even use the last word because it's
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television and family-friendly. can you figure it out. starts with a b. these are the kind of people they are dealing with over there it shows, number one. the disparity here amongst these professional police officers who, again, despite being just crapped on, insulted, having things thrown at them in some cases attacked still respond inside with some of these people in there who treat them like total garbage and filth. now, brian, listen, i spent a lot of time in graduate school for psychology, right? i didn't learn that much great stuff. there are a few good takeaways, maslow had this hierarchy of need things. food and water, right? what's next? what's next is security. if the government can't even provide security because you're handcuffing your police officers, and let me be clear, i'm not blaming the cops for the chaz or chop or chop vein i van. i'm not blaming the cops. i'm blaming the mayor. the cops know what to do. it's the mayor. if you can't provide security in
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hierarchy of needs for people. then what's the point? what's the point of government? i mean, to have your garbage picked up a few times a week? well, what is this game of thrones? we have a war lord in there. brian: i agree. >> this is like a bad com comic book. one more point. defeats the whole liberal ethos. government will be there for you. you don't need firearms. forget the second amendment. you can't do squat. have you one job, and you couldn't even get that right. it's pathetic. steve: dan, on saturday night. into sunday after that kid was shot and killed, died 11 minutes after he got to the hospital. he was carted off. we saw the police being taunted by the protesters. then a little while later, somebody else found a guy who had been stabbed on the hood of a car. it was a nurse, used her sweatshirt to provide a tourniquet. called for 911. called for the police to come and get him.
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>> but because they had been taunted before. they said we're not coming in again. we just can't do it. she wound up putting him in a van and took him to the hospital. how does this end? at what point does the mayor say, you know what? we had an experiment it worked out as it did and we now we are going to put the police back in there. >> i think it's only a matter of time before the president of the united states has the fbi go in there and start pulling people out there guilty of crimes. i mean, someone has got to come out of there in handcuffs. somebody who committed a crime has to come out in handcuffs. this isn't a joke. you know. i know we all know this on the panel. i was a cop for a long time. you know, all this stuff about oh, just let it burn out. no, don't let anything burn out. this is america, okay? i don't care. seattle is still in the united states for those who have a geography problem. these people are entitled to the dignity of american citizens and the god given rights we all have. something has got to be done. this isn't a joke. you show up to a crime scene
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when you are a cop and season was stabbed daughter stabbed and dying on the ground it changes you forever. it's not a joke or comic book or movie. this is the real world. these are real people. not everybody in the chop or whatever the hell it is some kind of liberal lunatic or some crazed whack nut job. they're american citizens, too. we better establish who is in charge. ainsley: last night or yesterday during the day i was watching maria's show and bill barr was on her show and asking about the bill durham investigation when is everyone going to see the results. was it delayed because of the pandemic. he said there were delays it. did slow down the process because of the pandemic. he said we are pushing as long -- durham is pushing along as fast as he can. listen to this. >> is he pressing ahead as hard as he can and i expect, you know, we will have some developments hopefully before the end of the summer. but, as i said, his
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investigation will continue. it's not going to stop because of the election. what happens after the election, may depend on who wins the election. ainsley: hopefully before the end of summer, dan. what's your reaction? >> i see two big takeaways here. number one, john brennan, listen, there is a legal bulls eye on the back of john brennan right now. brennan said he didn't hear about the dossier until december. i think that's going to be proven false. i think easily proven false. and secondly, the dossier, any activity before july 31st. that's when they say the case started is going to show that the fbi was lying. and i think there is a significant amount of activity surrounding the trump campaign before july 31st. they are in a lot of trouble and i think barr is zeroed in on that. ainsley: he did say in that interview. he didn't give away a lot. but he said i will tell you it looks like we are investigating what happened in that transition period when barack obama was about to move out before trump moved into the white house.
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>> maria nailed it, ainsley. ainsley: she always does. >> she really nailed that interview. terrific work. ainsley: she has the best guests on. i love that show. dan, thanks for coming on. >> thanks, guys. ainsley: over to jillian. jillian: remains of a missing foold soldier discovered nearly one year after he vanished without a trace. foul play is expected. tipster led them to the remains of private gregory scott morales on friday. found in a field near fort hood. autopsy is being conducted to determine how he died. north carolina teen barely he is scapes a shark attack. nic arthur struggling how describe how he got away. >> my fingers were all scratched. i was going to pry his mouth open. 15-year-old says his dad came to his rescue repeatedly punching
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and kicking the five foot beast until it broke loose. he ended up with 40 bite marks and 15 stitches. he says the shark came out of nowhere. brett favre getting a lot of reaction after comparing colin kaepernick to tilman. he walked from a nfl contract and died searching his country. green bay legend made the comparison after talking to tmz. it's not easy to solve something you have always dreamed of doing for something you believe. in pat till man is another guy who did something similar. we regard him as a i'd assume that hero status will be stamped with kaepernick as well. a look at your headlines. second it back to you. brian: there you go brett favre weighing in. a little bit of a surprise. janice dean surprising us with what i will predict will be a perfect prediction and projection of the weather analysis. janice: you know what? for the northeast. especially new york city, it's going to be very summer like and
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we had our first day of summer on saturday. so par for the course. take a look at the temperatures right now. 72 in new york. 72 in raleigh. we can see some of that cooler air behind a cold front. that cold front is actually going to trigger some showers and thunderstorms throughout the day today for parts of the plain states. the southern plains, the ark-la-tex and into the mississippi river valley and widespread thunderstorms for parts of the northwest and interior northeast. that's going to cut back those temperatures a little bit and with that the potential for large hail, damaging winds, isolated tornadoes. we will watch for that the heat returns to portions of california as well as the southwest and then those scattered storms as i mentioned over parts of the southern plains. also wants to make mention, this is good news, the is a hair ran dust from africa is cutting back on some of the tropical formation. that is the goodness. we are not tracking any tropical storms right now and part of the research is because we have this layer of is a hair ran dust that
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we watch going into the gulf of mexico. for the next week or so, no tropical developments. so great news there steve, ainsley, brian, back to you. steve: that sounds like a first good week of summer. thanks, j.d. all right. 11 minutes now before the top of the hour. as the covid-19 restrictions continue to ease up here in new york city, we are moving in phase 2 today. more than a dozen states reportedly seeing record high new cases. but what about hospitalizations and what does this mean going forward? dr. nicole saphier joins us to talk about that and opening the schools coming up next. ♪ i'm greg, i'm 68 years old. i do motivational speaking in addition to the substitute teaching. i honestly feel that that's my calling-- to give back to younger people. i think most adults will start realizing that they don't recall things as quickly as they used to or they don't remember things as vividly as they once did. i've been taking prevagen for about three years now.
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steve: as coronavirus restrictions continue to eyes up, a dozen states reportedly seeing new highs sings friday in cases. joining us is fox news medical contributor and make america healthy again dr. nicole saphier. have been hearing over the last week or so how there are all these spikes in the sun belt states, isn't the number we really need to worry about the number of people who have going into the hospital and right now i understand the higher number seems to be younger people who don't go to the hospital, right? >> that's right. steve. you are right. 22 states are reporting increase
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in cases that there are about five seeing steeped increase in spikes. south carolina, arkansas, colorado and texas. you are absolutely right in that the far majority of people testing positive are under the age of 49 which is great news in the sense that we ever protecting ou -- we areprotecti. there are about 17 states that are reporting dwindle ling hospitalization avaiveltd, specifically arizona. a lot of states are now reporting low 20% of availability of hospital beds and icu beds. usually they sit at about 35 to 45%. we are watching that very carefully. we have to remember to stay vigilant. steve. as we saw in new york and new jersey, as we see increase in cases the hospitalization rates tend to lag about one to two weeks the death rates lag another one to three weeks. staying vigilant right now is very important. states need to start looking at their numbers and doing what they can to make sure that they have hospital bed availability.
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steve: dr. saphier, speaking of young people. the president has called for schools to reopen in the fall. here he is at the rally a couple nights ago. watch. >> kids are much stronger than us. let's open the schools, please. [cheers and applause] we got to get them open. in the fall we have got to get them open. steve: okay. a lot of people would agree with that but we need to do it safely you would say you have got some suggestions. don't you? >> that's right. steve, absolutely. i definitely agree with the president. i think that schools need to reopen in the fall. as you mentioned, they need to do it in a very smart manner. it's crucial for childhood development to make sure they have that social interaction in addition to their fundamental education. we have to be watching the numbers. we have to make sure that children not integrated as much say in the cafeteria. they have to have smaller class sizes. they have to have the ability to still do we moat distance learning if a member of the household is sick and strict
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screening measures in place so that sick children do not enter the school so we don't have an outbreak. will there be school districts that may need to close down? possibly. we see that with the flu all the time. but people need to stay vigilant. be safe, but, yes, children need to get back to school. steve: all right. dr. nicole saphier joining us via remote. >> thanks, steve. steve: thank you very much. thank you, dr. saphier. top of the hour. almost 7:00 in new york city. coming up straight ahead newt gingrich and kayleigh mcenany from the white house. but thanks to you, we're finding new ways forward. your comfort and care push us to do even more. your generosity reminds us what matters most. and your courage inspires us to find better solutions for tomorrow. on behalf of all novartis employees, thank you.
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♪ ♪ brian: there you go. that man with the hands in the air is none other than joe coffman. ainsley: i wanted to give you a big hug, joel. we can't hug. steve: fulton. been together so as long as brian has forgotten the name. hi, everybody, welcome back. "fox & friends" live from studio f as new york city enters phase 2. you have got outdoor dining. can you go out and get your hair cut. some stores are open. and some offices as well. so, new yorkers, some of you, welcome back to work today. ainsley: we're coming back, baby. new york strong. we are social distanced. we are in the same studio on the main floor where we usually have our live studio audience show. brian is over there, steve is over there.
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steve: jillian is upstairs. brian: we think. she doesn't check in with us. we look up and she answers the call. i was stunned by the amount of damage just going down. i could not believe the damage the boarded up buildings, unbelievably abhorrent. number two is open up the gyms. where is the schedule to open up the gym. people have to work out. ainsley: a lot of people are are still working out. all of my girlfriends are doing zoom exercise classes or many of those have bought those pelotons they are expensive but they are wonderful if you have ever done them. brian: i got them, i was doing it. i worry about the gym owners. ains anks i do worry about them, too. steve: i heard one gym owner said the only way i could open is if i could provide adequate ventilation and social distancing. moved all the gear into the parking lot and so he was able to open up and that was good for him. brian: awesome. steve: good for everybody who was able to work out. anyway. thank you very much for joining us. it is a delight to be back in the studio all together. we have been apart for about 100
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days. we start this hour of information on june 2 27bsd. ainsley, with a fox news alert. ainsley: that's right. second straight night of violence inside seattle's chop zone as at least one person is shot. [gunfire] >> more shots fired. i'm running away. brian: yeah. i would run away, too. fox news is told the victim is in serious condition. it comes after a 19-year-old has shot and killed in the autonomous zone over the weekend. body cam video shows police struggling to reach the victim. >> please allow us to get by. please move out of the way so we can get to the victim. all we are trying to do is get to the victim. >victim. [shouting] >> police were forced to retreat as protesters yelled and threw bottles at them. chop activists say they are looking for ways to stop the violence without the police but
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now they have got to figure out what to do because in the last 48 hours they have had two shootings and one man was found stabbed and bleeding on the hood of a car. luckily, a nurse came by, thought he was in distress, used her sweater as a tourniquet. but, unfortunately, because the police were turned back earlier, just annual hour or so earlier with a 1-year-old, who graduated from high school on friday and then died on saturday. because the police were turned around when they went in for the teenager, they didn't even bother going in for the person who was stabbed because ultimately, they felt that perch wound up taking the stabbed guy to the hospital, ainsley, in her van. ainsley: just shows you the men and women in blue are such servants. this is a crowd that didn't want them in there still, when they hear gunshots, they come running to help are trying to get to
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those victims. dan bongino was on our show. this is what he had to say about it. >> i think it's only a matter of time before the president of the united states has the fbi to go in there and start pulling people out that are guilty of crimes. someone has to come out of there in handcuffs. all this stuff about let it burn out. no, no. don't let anything burn out. this is america. something has got to be done. this isn't a joke. you show up to a crime scene when you are a cop and you see some other crime because mother established dying on the ground. it's not a comic book or a movie. this is the real world. not everybody in the chop or whatever the hestled it is some liberal lunatic or some crazed nut job. they are americans too. we better stab who is in charge. brian: send in a social worker to find out what really have driving the bullets into people's bodies. that is really what they do want. they want people who are going
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to go in there and do the opposite of what cops do and that's law and order. they are working on reform in washington. we are are going to see something move through the house and see something move through the senate, hopefully. the president has moved some executive orders. i want to see democrats weigh in on how they feel about this chop zone or the awmentz. you watch, they are going to stop cropping up in the same organized way in which they looted these cities. they will start cropping up in these areas, taking 7, 8, 12 blocks. we will see how that goes. there will be where that will run rampant. bring something else up which i think is important. the mayor who says i want the summer of love, good luck with your love. number two is the lawmaker that called for the ouster of the liberal mayor, who is organizing all of this and says this will never be a police precinct again in the blood is on your hands, too. you got your nirvana and it's full of lead and gunpowder and rage as the people there who are now enemy number one according to the lawmakers in that city.
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steve: you know what we saw here in new york city after the violence and the looting a couple of weeks ago here, we heard that so many of the people who were caught were immediately released because of the bail rules. the new criminal justice reform here in new york state. so, what did the feds do? they decided that one of the cars that was fire bombed, a police car, police vehicle that is to say that was fire bombed, because they were worried that the local authorities would not adequately charge those people, they wound up charging them with a federal crime, which was destruction of a law enforcement vehicle. so, when we had dan bongino on with bus a half an hour ago, he said it's just a matter of time before the fbi goes in there and starts arresting people. and as mr. bongino said, somebody has got to come out of there when they figure out who broke the law in handcuffs. brian: think about how dangerous it's going to be when the fbi goes in there armed, carrying guns. the fbi has to go in and take
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back a zone lawmakers. if i'm the fbi i would say no, you guys handle it. you got into this mess. i'm not going to go in there in front of a hail of bullets and try recapture three blocks that they gave away. steve: local police work for the mayor. the mayor is fine with how this is right now. governor jay inslee said yesterday that he supports the city. brian: whatever a disaster. >> whatever they decide is okay with them. it's kind of looking, in looks like macy, just saying. ainsley: bill barr says protecting the rights of the citizens first it's the responsibility of state officials, local officials. can't gjohn bolton slams president trump saying is h dangerously damagine united states, brian. brian: he said a lot. sounding off ahead of his book release tonight. steve: gillian turner john
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bolton could be called in to testify. we heard jerry nadler say yes, after he had already said maybe not. gillian? >> that's right. good morning to all three of you. great to be with you. so president trump, we're waiting, standing by here at the white house to see what his reaction is to that interview last night. but bolton, the former top foreign policy advisor to the president did not mince words in this interview. he said he believed the president unfit to be the commander-in-chief. he said he's not going to be voting for him come november. he also says that 8 years of a trump presidency could prove to be irreparable to the united states. take a listen. >> i hope it will remember him as a one-term president who didn't plunge the country irretrievably into a downward spiral we can't recoil from. we can get over one term. two terms i'm more troubled about. >> in response to accusations that he should have testified in president trump's impeachment trial last year, bolton said
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this: >> i was fully prepared, if i got a subpoena. i think the way the house advocates of impeachment proceeded was badly wrong. i think it was impeachment now practice. >> bolton also called a litany of security foul citing a laundry list of countries, rush russia, china, north korea, turkey and five others. he saved special scorn for the president's dealings with the government of ukraine. take a listen. >> the linkage between the military assistance and that opportunity to go after joe biden didn't emerge immediately. but i could see that the issue was there he said it to plea directly that's what he had in mind. >> we are eagerly standing by to hear what president trump has to say in response to that interview this morning. we will bring it to you, brian, ainsley and steve, as soon as we
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get it. brian: thank you, gillian, appreciate it. gillian turner helping us out. steve? steve: indeed. so, you know, when you look at that and it does sound as if mr. bolton's book is going to be coming out tomorrow. a judge ruled that essentially everybody has already heard about all the stuff. the big question is whether or not he will be held responsible, libel in some measure. he could actually if things don't go his way, ainsley, forfeit all the profits from his book and book royalties and book advance. we will see what happens. >> he is getting paid a lot of money allegedly. mick mulvaney who used to be the chief of staff he said i was in the room with him. all the things he is saying in the book is not true. he doesn't agree with president trump's policies. is he more prone to go to war. that's what he wants. that's why he is saying he hopes he doesn't get four more years. then he went on to 15eu6 he is not going to vote for joe biden.
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mick mulvaney said. brian had a great interview with him earlier in the show. watch. >> i cringe. i imagine that former chiefs of staff and former national security advisors. former cabinet secretaries from all administrations cringed to watch sort of the betrayal of confidence last night by john bolton. it was really a classless display. it was hard to watch, to have somebody in the oval office with the president almost every day sort of turn on him just because he didn't like the style, didn't like sort of the policy. i think it undoes john's credibility considerably and rightfully so when he starts introducing these things at the last minute to try to sell books. brian: reportedly according to some excerpts i read blows up nikki haley says she wasn't expert enough to get that job. most people thought she was extraordinary at her job. an example of another official who did not know donald trump and left. i have heard nothing in reading her book and talking to her
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personally, nothing but positive things about the president. and even though he is unorthodox at the international relations level as john bolton would point out, i also point out, too, he also very critical of general mattis. he mentioned to me one time that the generals are the problem. okay. generals are the problem. nikki haley is the problem. who isn't the problem? i mean, it's not president bolton. steve: you know, brian, there is one thing about the john bolton book, and this is it has united the country. because both republicans and democrats are you're fuss at him. republicans are furious that he would spill these beans. democrats are furious that he wouldn't come testify when he it his opportunity to damage the president. ainsley: let us know what you think about that. are you going to buy the book? steve: we know everything in it already. ainsley: mick mulvaney said i'm definitely not buying that book. i washed the interviews, i watched every second of that
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interview yesterday, i refuse to may money to buy that book, januaryian meally has headlines for us. >> we begin with a fox news alert now, two people are dead and 12 others hurt after a violent night in charlotte, north carolina. police say dozens of shots were fired during a father's day and juneteenth block party. seven were hurt by the gunfire and five more were hit by cars. witnesses call the scene absolute chaos. this marks the end of a bloody week across the united states. in chicago at least 11 people killed and 67 injured. a 3-year-old boy was among those who died. in minneapolis, one person was killed and 11 others shot. and the "new york post" reports one person was shot every hour in new york city on saturday. nascar launching an investigation an a noose was found in driver bubba wallace's garage in talladega. it comes two weeks after wallace successfully pushed to ban the confederate flag at tracks. wallace the cup series only
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black driver releasing a statement writing in part, quote: this will not break me. i will not give in, northerly back down. i will continue to proudly stand for what i believe. in police in richmond, virginia surrounds a confederate monument after declaring unlawful assembly overnight. >> we are peaceful. stop using weapons. demonstrators trying to topple a statue honorable honoring a confederate general. protesters placing fireworks on the statue that is more than 110 years old. two city council members calling on the state of ohio immediately remove all monuments for public safety reasons. eli manning trolling tom brady. check it out. >> tom brady was like a mythical character. there was only one person who is a real thorn in brady's side. >> hello all you cats and
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kittens. >> tiger king spoof to present the awards. jk simmons to parody joe exotic producer nut netflix series. i still haven't seen a minute of. ainsley: i watched a little bit. steve: tiger king? i watched it all. ainsley: i couldn't get into it. steve: once you start, hard to stop. ainsley: i'm out of everything else. maybe i will watch it. brian: what i had though do last week i never thought about doing in my life. doing something i had no idea that 40 million people will do this year. and that is put my family and my dog into an rv and i went down to florida 800 miles. steve: are you hugging the dog while you are driving? >> yeah. we thought -- it was 40-foot rv, a winnebago. i never drove anything that large. suv suburban for me is large. that's my duarte apollo.
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ainsley: rocky? jillian: how dare you, ainsley. brian: so cool with the rolling living room and bond with your family. a lot of people don't feel comfortable with air travel yet. i said let's give this a shot. 800 milingsz both way. there is dawn who went back and forth. and the dogs were very nervous in the beginning that was darryl who handed it off to me able to rent it for two weeks. i was able to come back. anyone thinking about doing it. it's up 300 percent this year because more people are saying i'm staying home, staying with my family. they don't feel comfortable going overseas to the caribbean or europe yet for obvious reasons. i strongly recommend it. ainsley: it was fun? jillian: i was thinking about it. brian: i'm an average driver at best. a little nerve-racking. but, i thought it was a lot of fun. if i can do it, anyone can do it. ainsley: did you drive the whole time? brian: no. but my son did. my son drove for a while. ainsley: how long did it take
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you to get from new york down to florida. brian: the first time the dogs needed a few stops. i had a few doors come open underneath a couple of times. i had trouble getting through a tollbooth like an inch on both sides. 20 hours you have the first time. 17 the next. that's a lot of staring straight ahead. steve: brian, not only is it -- my family did an rv things years ago. it was a lot of fun. now the price of gas is so low as well. brian: that's a great point. brian: 7 miles to the gallon. don't go below a half tank refrigerator poured. i was going over to get gas. my son would hop out and tell me exactly where the gas thing was and get it perfect. everyone would run out and have to get the dogs out. it was certainly trip within a trip. steve: at what pointed, brian, did the theme song to the national lampoon vacation. brian: that's all we talked about. steve: brian griswold.
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ainsley: y'all been watching this show so long and know brian's personality's. we all have smiles on her face, we know brian's personality. he was cooped up in this small little studio so long. such a good mood because so social. because did he tv and radio in that little room. now he's back. driving this thing. y'all know how brian is. i'm sure this is the most chaotic thing in the world. doors were flying open while you were driving? brian: i didn't lock while. my luggage was like this. my luggage stayed in but i didn't lock it securely nut beginning. and look down, look down. look down. all the doors were open for all my luggage. jillian: are you going to buy an rv now? brian: i don't know if i will buy it. might have to buy a driver with it to can i relax, too. steve: you said you had trouble at one of the toll spots. does that mean there is surveillance video of us getting
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our hands on of you not being able to get through the. >the. brian: got throi got through i should have went more left instead of so far right. if you go rving, it was fun. >> ainsley: thanks, brian. funny cute pictures. great you had fun and made it home safely. today marks the beginning of phase 2, hallelujah. which includes dining outdoors. how big is this for restaurants that are struggling to stay a aafloat. the owners of grimaldi's going to join us next ♪ ta-da! did you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? given my unique lifestyle, that'd be perfect! let me grab a pen and some paper. know what? i'm gonna switch now. just need my desk...
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ainsley: rntd owners like your next guest our next guest allowed to offer outdoor dining with restrictions. here with an update owners of grimaldi's cold brick oven pizza anthony piscana and -- >> good morning. ainsley: love your pizza. so popular all around the country now. probably around the world. how is this affecting you? i know you are very excited, right? >> these are fantastic day for new york. we're going to open up and all the restaurant owners now we have a book of negativity. i hate that book. we throw that book away. this is a positive day. the positive book the city has big energy we can feel and it going to do phenomenal now. ainsley: frank, how are you going to do it. >> first thing we will do offer all our customer come and say
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"fox & friends" give them a free dessert. delicious pizza. number one rated pizza in new york. pick me up. service is good. but we also have cheese cake and [inaudible] >> good. outstanding. that makes everybody happy. ainsley: yes, they do. are did you going to have to put up tables outside? >> yeah. we are all set outside. we spent all weekend preparing for this day like it's our birthday. so, we welcome all the new yorkers back to our restaurant to come to the church of love and happiness. >> sitting outside. everybody passes they all smile. they are all happy that we're opening and inside the old wine light. we have a double energy here. double energy here good feeling. new york going to come back big time. outstanding. ainsley: i hope somplet we have had our moments. my friends from new york or live
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here where you do get a little teary eyed because we love the city so much and so much has happened to it. what are your restaurant friends saying? are most of them coming back? >> i want to -- i would say about 60% to 70%. guys coming back positive energy. when you go into a restaurant, they are happy they smile. they make you feel good. of the guys that are all depressed. having a hard time to start with and i think they have a hard time now. i wish everybody comes back. i want to see everybody come back and get back to the new york style. >> number one rule at grim maldy's come here to have fun. if you don't have fun, it's your own fault. ainsley: thank you so much. i'm glad you are coming back. if you are watching, go by one of their restaurants get free dessert because you are a "fox & friends" friend. >> just for the limelight. ainsley: just for that one. what's the address of that location? >> sixth avenue between 20th
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street and 21st street limelight. big huge church and you can't miss us. ainsley: yes, sir. i know where you are. thank you so much. god bless you all. >> thank you so much. ainsley: i love your positive energy. okay, another person, unfortunately shot in the chop zone. what more evidence do we need to realize the police are indispensable. panel of law enforcement experts on deck. you know what's good about this? your sign's pointing at my sign, so people are gonna look at my sign. switch to progressive and you can save hundreds. you know, like the sign says.
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brian: fox news alert now. second straight night of violence in the chop zone one person shot in serious condition. comes after 19-year-old was shot and killed in the autonomous zone over the weekend. body cam video shows police struggling to get to the victim tto help them out even though they are not wanted. we are privileged to have with us simone. the president of the washington state federal order fraternal order of police marco deblanco and former nypd officer you know him well lieutenant darrin porcher. let's start with you marco. your reaction to that three-block chaotic autonomous zone and the cops trying to do the right thing were prevented from doing the right thing. >> i want to tell you this is
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very concerning to us. we are seeing this situation where we are being denied our citizens community denied public safety services. public safety services we can't truly protect those who are in crisis. and i look at this as an issue with lack of leadership. lack of leadership of the city, with city officials. and also with our police -- our police administration and labor union. you know, we need to come together and have true discussions on reform, but we have to stop with the hate that's going on. and dr. renee brown who is a researcher said it best. you know, it's hard to hate close up. why don't we just take a step back, take a quick breath and come back in and have true discussions on reform instead of having situations where we deny public safety services. brian: if you don't mind me saying, dr. porcher, there is leadership. the leadership says this is okay. the lawmaker organized it, the mayor says it's going to be a
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summer of love and the governor said i'm okay with it. so that's leadership, isn't it? it's bad leadership but it's leadership. >> i agree with you, brian. the leadership is horrible to say the least. we have to look at this for what it is. we have a six block radius that's been taken hostage and these people are hostage takers so to speak. and when we look at a police department's tactical look into how deal with hostage stakers it traditionally evolves this way. whenever the hostage taker exhibits violent tendencies that's when the police will come in and take back that particular property. here we have the hostage takers, meaning the people that have taken its place under the control are standing by as we have had shootings, multiple shootings, not just on friday but just as recent as yesterday. therefore, police have to come in and take back that property. because we also, there is something that's being left out of this.
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there is these city leaders can be held liable, civilly in a civil court. because we look at all of the business owners that have no representation whether a so ever by the city leaders; therefore, when we go back to your point of the lack of relationship, brian, this is a classic example of leadership at its worst point. brian: simone, i want you to weigh in quick and want you to change topics and talk about the violence over the weekend. your thought about this? >> good morning, brian, these people have set themselves up of the new world order of this area. i think they failed big time. you know, they failed that 19-year-old young man who was left to die in the streets when we were trying to get in there as police to help them to get the crime scene secured. it's a big fail. i think, you know, i wonder to myself where do these people come from? what neighborhoods do they live in? why don't go back and start and
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first. so i just -- i think this is all going to go down real bad for this group. brian: i like love to talk about race relations move further and progress. i can't do that when you take over a city and started shooting people and don't let cops in and take over precincts. change gears about violence and policing. 22 shootings in new york city over the weekend. it is going through the roof. in minneapolis there were 11. in chicago, 99 shot, 12 dead. let's start with you, marco. i know it's outside your state, but what's happening in newark right now. >> what is happening in newark we are vilifying the police departments throughout this country. you know, we are hard-working individuals that really do this job just to take care of those citizens of our community that deserve law and order? >> seeing all the violence we are experiencing that not only
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are we having, you know officers having icious and being able to do their job, we have 63% decline in law enforcement applications. that's a huge amount. brian: 63%? yeah, let me. >> 63%. brian: we are running out of time. that's staggering. dr. porcher real quick because i want to get c' mone in. i'm the bad guy? i'm the problem, mayle male or female? go ahead. have at it. >> i agree. brian, this is the classic example of where do black lives matter? black lives matter in connection with the fortifications that are applied by police. police are protecting the communities of color. and when you look at the overwhelming number of victims they consist of african-americans. moratoriums on police have subsequently led to more lives lost in the friend community.
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these leaders need to step to the plate and say to themselves look, we are here to protect these communities of color as opposed introduce the banner of black lives matter which actually move them away from protections in these communities. brian: we are all for protests, that's how things get better in this country trirks the free speech is cherry irished but not the violence. c' mone final thought. >> final thought, brian, calmer heads are going to have to prevail. this will be a time when we come together and sit down in groups as organizations as the community as police and talk about what the issues have and figure out what we can do to change it. brian: i agree. c'mone and darren and marco, thank you for what you do. monitor this and get this in control because right now it's out of control. thanks. >> thanks, brian. >> thanks, brian. >> you got it have a great day. attorney general bill barr calling out china. >> property when think steal our secrets about futures
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technology, they are stealing the future of the american people. brian: they're. newt gingrich knows it. he is here to react and talk about his brand new book next ♪ born and bred in the u.s.a. from her sickie long hair t -- reverse early gum damage. gum detoxify, from crest.
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>> leader in all the future technologies, dominate the economy. and so what's at stake is the economic opportunity of our children and our grandchildren, whether we can continue to be the technological leader of the world. the chinese have embarked on a very aggressive program during this time of stealing and cheating in order to overtake us. they have stolen our intellectual property. when they steal our secrets about future technology. they are stealing the future of the american people. steve: there you have got the attorney general he's appeared
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yesterday on maria's show. let's bring in newt gingrich, fox news contributor, former speaker of the house and author of the book that comes out tomorrow it's called "trump and the american future." it's a good one. there is the cover right there. mr. speaker, good morning to you. as the attorney general detailed right there, there have been china business plan for quite a while. if you want to do business as an american company in china, they are going to shake you down for the secrets. how do we change that? >> well, they also just steal secrets by using cyber attacks. they have an entire unit of the people's lirkz army just outside of beijing whose only job is to steal american secrets. so, the former director of national intelligence obama jim clapper at one point steal about $500 billion a year. they steal more in secrets then all the sales we make to china combined. i think the attorney general is right. he left out one thing.
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this is if they get to be the technologically dominant country in the world, they will dominate the world. we are in a contest now with a totalitarian dictatorship the chinese communist party whose specific goal is to dominate the entire planet by just shear mass. they have a billion 300 million people. also the most advanced technology it. will be very, very hard to deal with them. this is really a matter of life and death. in fact, i have an entire chapter in my new book on trump and the american future which talks about china and the threat from china. brian: it's real and joe biden just a few months ago said come on, china, china is not a threat we can eat their lunch. he is now the nominee. we don't see. of him. meanwhile the war on history continues. you probably don't know that from where you are, perhaps. george washington memorial was defaced over in baltimore. the francis scott key statue was taken down in san francisco.
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ulysses s. grant. he was the leader of the union army took down his statue and now want to remove teddy roosevelt statue in front of museum of natural history. the museum of natural history president is the one doing it quote saying over the last few weeks our museum community has been profoundly moved by the racial justice emerged after the killing of george floyd. watched as the country has turned to statues as powerfulful and hurtful symbols of the systemic racism. simply put the time has come to move it. your reaction? >> well, look, i'm a huge fasten the american museum of natural history. in fact, calista and i have a small scholarship there for paleontology students. i think she is right for two reasons. if you look at the statue in its whole, it's really perfect example of the white supremacist
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feeling of the ear wrath theodore roosevelt and woodrow wilson, et cetera. two, if they don't move it somewhere safe it, will sooner or later be destroyed. because it is so -- i'm a huge theodore roosevelt fan that particularly statue is clearly out of its time. the answer is to put it somewhere as a teaching device, not to destroy it. the other example, i wrote a piece this week, newsletter can you get at gingrich 360 for free. i said you are dealing here with babarbarians. grant was not only the union general who defeated the confederacy and the slave states. is he also the president who set in the union army to break up the ku klux klan in south carolina. it was democrats who were defending the ku klux klan and segregation while the republicans were actually willing to use the federal military in order to break it up. so, you have people totally ignorant. they don't know anything. they are out there destroying things. and they remind me a lot of the taliban when it destroyed the
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two giant buddha statues in 2001. these people are anti-sizzles and ian sifertion. civilization. no one has to the right to stop the police. when this kind of stuff happened in mississippi in the civil rights era, we sent in the fbi. they tracked down the people and ultimately locked them all up. sooner or later we will have to defend those americans who are being held hostage by a radical group in seattle. ainsley: so, newt, tell us about your new book, trump and the american future. >> i wrote it because i felt we were going to need a handbook of you who to win the arguments this summer and fall. there has been so much false media attacking the president. when you put together what the real choices are between the machine of biden, pelosi and schumer vs. what president trump has done. i think basically my book trump and the american future gives anybody who is pro-trump a
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really good tool to be able to win the argument with their friends and to be able to understand how to put in context what's going on. and i think that it's really a key decisive moment. this may be the most important election since 1860 and the election of abraham lincoln. the choice between biden, pelosi, schumer, future and a trump, mcconnell and mccarthy future. that gap is so gigantic. and i tried to capture that in trump and the american future is as a way of helping people understand why this election matters far more than most elections. steve: well, we are all looking for new things to read. the book comes out tomorrow again. "trump and the american future." mr. speaker, thank you for joining us from rome. >> great. thank you. steve: why no news conferences from joe biden in nearly three months? well, his campaign manager tried to answer that question this weekend. joe concha has a better idea.
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steve: welcome back. 81 days. that's how long it's been since joe biden has held an inperson news conference.
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when asked about the controversy on "fox news sunday" the biden senior campaign advisor simone sanders had this to say. >> we take pride in prioritizing local media. until the vice president is doing local media introduce he is doing national interviews and taking questions from reporters. >> speaking of reporters media reporter for the hill joe concha. what do you make of that. >> it's a 00 ease year, steve and good morning. >> to have hand picked interview where have you ground rules for interviews with certain outlets that may be friendly to your can dited as opposed to having a press conference when mr. biden has not done for 80 days. and hillary clinton made this same mistake steve in 2016. she went 270 days without having a press conference and what that tells you is that the biden campaign isn't competent in their candidate. a lot oa democrats will tell yoe doesn't have the mental acute he
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did a couple years ago. not the candidate would that would be able to withstand the type of press conferences the president curnghtly has he taking questions from multiple outlets with no ground rules atasmsd, steve. steve: whifsz watching the president's rally in tulsa over the weekend i was thinking to myself what's it going to be like when joe biden and donald trump are on the same debate stage? they have differences in styles, obviously and volume levels as well. >> that's exactly right. rally over the weekend, 6200 people attended. that's still bigger than any biden rally throughout his campaign over the last year and a half including his launched campaign rally in philadelphia. so, in terms of enthusiasm, i don't think it's really a fair question as far as the number of people that attended. obviously a lot of people are still not crazy about going to an indoor arena surrounded by 20,000 people in a pandemic. we see this is indoor contagion, prisons or nursing homes or
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cruise ships. maybe consider only outdoor events. as far as mr. biden is concerned, i would love to see these questions asked, steve, as far as, for instance, what's going on in chaz chop this weekend in seattle. what would you do mr. biden would you send in the fbi to investigate? how do you break this up? how do you get the police force back in there. i don't see that question being asked. i don't see that about shootings in new york and chicago over the weekend where dozens were killed or injured, do you plan on defunding the police department or reduce the funding to those police reports? i would like to hear mr. biden answer those questions. i'm not seeing them right now in terms of the local outlets and national outlets who are currently getting the at bats there. steve: ask him about the crime bill in 1994. working with segregationists. there are lots of questions. the campaign there were reports that tiktok teens and fans of k pop music may have been to blame for a bunch of the tickets getting grabbed up.
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at the same time, to your points, this is real quick. it sounds like just the fear of covid and the fear of protesters according to brad parscale is the reason to believe they didn't show up. quickly. >> yeah. when you see rioting in the streets over the past month on your tv screens probably you are thinking my family 6, 4-year-old and a wife i do want to bring them into that sort of environment and then the covid concerns on top of that also saw fear mongering, steve and i know we have to go in oklahoma and cases surging look at deaths and hospitalizations over the last three days, one death, one death, and two deaths in oklahoma. i thought that was pretty i couldn't know fair. got to go have to hit the car wash, steve afterwards. it's about to open the ford festiva in need -- anywhere a migraine attacks without worrying if it's too late or where you happen to be. one dose of ubrelvy can quickly stop a migraine in its tracks within two hours. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors.
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steve: live from new york city, ladies and gentlemen, after 100 days, we are all back in the studio again, social distancing but nonetheless it's good to be back live in the big room, brian is right there, ainsley is right there and thank you for joining us. you know what this means? brian: when we have comments on each other we no longer need a delay we can actually comment. ainsley: i know and the lighting is beautiful in here. steve: it's much different. ainsley: and we also want to thank all of our staff there's several here. i know the guys here in the room with us, joel and dave and all of the people in the control room that were working the
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entire time. which there were points where them were scared to come into the city and scared to come into the studio and that's why we did our home studios but we all want to thank you all for sacrificing so much and still the show must go on and we appreciate it and we love you. steve: and we should also point out that one of the as you walk into our world headquarters here at 1,211 avenue in the americas to be in the buildings you need to have a mask on, and so when we come into the building we do but because we're socially distanced with our own little zones we're free not to wear it. also just one thing you do not know and that's for the last three months we have had dedicated producers trying to remember who just talked last because i'm going to say okay, ainsley you're next, brian you're next. it was as if they were working at laguardia as air traffic controllers trying to keep it safe sometimes we stepped on each other. ainsley: remember our first show in our studios? we were talking over each other we had to come up with a system. steve: i hear that voice right
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now. brian: the producers would say when we stepped on each other it was never my fault. ainsley: agree to disagree. steve: brian that's a different voice in your head. ainsley: [laughter] brian: all right, so, on a serious note let's get started. right to a fox news alert the second straight night of violence inside seattle's chop zone as they call themselves at least one person is shot. >> [gun shots fired] >> more shots fired i'm running away. steve: i would too fox news is told that victim is apparently in serious condition that comes after a 19-year-old was shot and killed in that zone over the weekend. killed on saturday, apparently the person reportedly by seattle times graduated from high school on friday. body cam video shows police struggling to reach the victim.
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>> "please move out of the way so we can get to the victim. all we're trying to do is get to the victim. " ainsley: police forced to retreat as protesters were yell ing throwing bottles at them chop activists say they are looking for ways to stop the violence without the police. brian: so let's bring in karl rove, fox news contributor, deputy chief of staff with george w. bush, first in this autonomous zone, where is joe biden on this? he wants to be president. shouldn't he take a stand about the lawlessness, a city has been taken over, three square blocks and the cops have been told to stay away. >> good luck to getting him to answer that question, unless you're local news anchor in idaho you're not going to get a chance to ask him that question. brian: absolutely not but attorney general barr weighed in on where we're going and what he has to do eventually. listen. >> the job of the department of justice to meet our justice
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fairly and even handed in that particular case and not be influenced by the mob, it's the responsibility obviously of the local officials and then the state officials to protect the rights of their citizens. at the end of the day, the federal government does have a responsibility to make sure that citizens are not deprived of their federal rights. >> so will you challenge that autonomous city, will you sue the mayor what can you do? >> i don't want to get into specifics but we're obviously keeping an eye on it and as the president said in due course we may have to do something about it but we can't let it go on indefinitely. brian: could you get into specifics? what could we do about it? what's practical? >> well i hope that federal, state, and local law enforcement have informants that they planted into this chaz/chop zone people who could go undercover and begin to piece together a picture from the inside of what's happening. at minimum they need to have information. i mean, i wrote about this last
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week in my column in the wall street journal and i mean, the mayor of the city says well this is democracy in action well this isn't democracy in action. this is lord of the flies and that story didn't end very well, and you know, we've now had several instances of violence and they won't allow the police to come into help the victims. as they're taking gun shot victims at least two gun shot victims were taken in the last several days to hospitals by people who threw them in a car and drove them off. i mean, god knows whether that helped them or no. sometimes you need to have somebody stabilized and no guarantee whatsoever that they've got the kind of emergency services available inside this zone people need. it's horrific, and the mayor and the governor have a responsibility to wind this thing down and put it, return it to a situation of normalcy and they seem to be in capable of doing that. steve: they don't seem to be in a hurry but this does give the
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president an election issue and it's like hey, look there are movements look what's happening in seattle. look what's happening with these defund the police or dismantle the police department in minneapolis, and things like that, and donald trump is the counter-argument and he's like look i'm not for any of that stuff i'm the law and order guy. how big is this going to be on the first tuesday in november? >> well i think it depends on what happens between now and november. if we see more minneapolis and more chop zone, more chaz zones then it's going to be problematic. i do think the president has to have a ying and yang on this. i think the argument that he's a law and order president becomes more powerful if he embraces the police reform efforts being led in the senate by tim scott and pushes it through legislation that helps reform the police as i said in a column two weeks ago there is a majority in this country, a very large majority, 73% of the people a couple weeks ago approved of the protests and 79% said that the looting and violence that accompanied them
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undermine the purposes of the protest. that means somewhere between three-quarters to 80% of the american population are simultaneously saying that i'm horrified by what happened to george floyd but i'm also equally horrified even more horrified by the violence that accompanies these protests. i'm in favor of the protest but we got to do something about that violence so i think that's an opening for the president to say, do you know what? i'm the guy whose the full spectrum on this issue. i'm the person who wants to reform the police just as i did with the law enforcement law the bill passed last year, i'm the guy whose willing to engage in reform and i'm also the guy whose tough on disorder in our country and stand up for law, the rule of law, and it can be a powerful argument but a lot depends on what happens and it could be a conditions-based election. that is to say the things that are happening in the real-world are going to have a huge impact on the outcome of the election. ainsley: okay i want to talk to you about john bolton, his book
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comes out tomorrow, supposed to come out tomorrow looks like it's going to because it's already in the bookstores. steve: we already know everything in it. ainsley: he's had interviewed over the weekend slamming the president. so, republicans as you know, are mad at him because they say it's the ultimate betrayal, he used to work in the white house and writing a book a tell-all about the president and then democrats are mad because he never testified at impeachment. here is john bolton this morning on another network talking about democrats and their impeachment and calls it malpractice listen. >> let's be clear. the primary way that we reign presidents in is not through impeachment. it's through elections, and presidential behavior can be wreckless, reprehensible, dangerous, doesn't necessarily make it impeachable. i think one of the mistakes that the democrats made, and they made plenty, is the idea that everything is resolved through the impeachment process and they mishandled it badly. i called it impeachment malpractice in the book and you
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know, what they do next, obviously, is up to them. ainsley: so it's set up in the top it was sunday but it was actually this morning when he said that. what's your reaction? >> well he also said it last night too. ainsley: yeah, same thing. >> look, this guy is an equal opportunity anger, i mean, he's irritated the republicans who support trump by writing the book and now he's angry that the democrats by saying you were incompetent fools by focusing on the narrow question of ukraine and then they're angry with him because they were sort of like well where were you while we were engaged in impeachment. you refused to testify and he says now if i'd been subpoenaed i would have testified but it would have made no difference that he's dismissive of the process, he's dismissive of what the democrats attempted to do so he's at equal opportunity both sides are going to be irritated with the guy. and it seemed to me in the book he also settles some other scores last night he talked
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about for example, that in the first days he was in the white house, that there was this is during the time the syrians were revealed with using poison gas at their own people and he takes a wack at the department of defense for not giving robust options. he says i expect them to have low level, mid level and high level responses so it's really interesting he's now settling with the department of defense as well. brian: yeah, mick mulvaney was on a short time ago for omb and acting chief of staff and he said this. this was our first guest this morning. >> i cringed and i imagine that former chiefs of staff and former national security advisor , former cabinet secretaries from all administrations cringed to watch sort of the betrayal of confidence last night by john bolton. it was really a classless display. it's hard to watch, to have somebody in the oval office with the president almost every day sort of turn on him just because
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he didn't like the style, didn't like sort of the policy. i think that it undo john's credibility considerably and rightly so just when he starts introducing these things at the last minute to try and sell books. brian: and you know him very well, and i know you're somewhat torn by this because he served for a year and a half as u.n. ambassador for you guys i'll point to this , mick mulvaney an excerpt from sarah sanders book, she describes an incident where john bolton seemed to be doing his own thing all the time and then took his own car to an event and mick mulvaney got out and says normally laid back mulvaney got caught up in seniority and said "let's face it, john, you're a blank self- righteous, self-centered son of a, you can fill in that last word, so there was conflict and there was isolation already and dysfunction already at the
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staff and he also was very disappointed in general mattis. >> well, look this is one of the problems with these books being written. we want to have a sense of what went on. a sense of history, but the books that get written while somebody is still in office tend to be more sensational than books written after they leave office because in part the focus of the editor is i need controversy in order to sell more books but i do need to say this two things. one is i've known john bolton a long time. i was 20 years old and the college republican executive director of the national republican committee and he was the director of research a couple years older than i so i've known him a long time and yes he served in the bush administration as the ambassador to the united nations and had a recess appointment because it was so controversial democrats wouldn't give him a fair shake and i have to admit i was one of the people who said let's make a recess appointment this is a test of the president that we ought to put him through and he'll only serve for a limited
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time, year, year and a half, but you know, i'm disappointed in the book. this doesn't serve our country well to have this kind of thing happen in the middle of a president's term, and at the beginning of a consequential election, and if he had a story to tell, the story would have been better told after this was all over but he made the decision to do it and he'll have to live with the consequences. nobody is going to like john bolton after this is all over. the republicans aren't going to like him let's be clear the democrats aren't going to like him. he's going to be a very lonely guy, and you know, but he's made this decision. steve: speaking of disappointed the white house and the campaign has got to be disappointed at the turnout in tulsa. there are also reports going around the internet that say people are hitting the roof they can't believe it happened they are going to do some sort of post-mortem to date. your advice going forward to make sure they are not haunted by all those empty seats again? >> well these kind of things sometimes happen so i'd say a
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couple things. let's pay attention to the important things. let's remember what the path to victory is. first of all he is the president so he has a big megaphone and he ought to use it in a disciplined focused fashion with just over 130 days left he ought to seek to say one thing a day and not allow his tweets or other ancillary things to get in the way of that message and he ought to have a plan to use the presidency to indicate what it is is that he wants to do next like for example, you know, he had a great event last week with victims, families of victims of police violence and with police. he issued an executive order which had a lot of good things in it. he ought to build on it for example, giving an address maybe in the east room where he endorses tim scott's efforts and the efforts of congress to get a bill passed. second of all remember that the president continues to have a big lead on the issue of whose better able to bring the economy back. there's a reason why. understand that reason, and explain that reason to the
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american people. they'll agree with the president and he can push ahead on that issue but they have to have more discipline and focus. don't let this one event bring everybody down. these kind of things happen. pick yourself up and stay focused on the main task which is what's the contrast between joe biden and donald trump. what is it that donald trump wants to do in the next four years versus what joe biden wants to do and what are the weaknesses in joe biden's character and record that can be exploited. ainsley: thank you so much for joining us. >> you bet. welcome back to your old house. steve: good to be back. ainsley: great to be back. thank you. jillian has headlines. jillian: and we begin with this fox news alert. we have just learned an american in one of the victims in a terrorist attack in england. the man from philadelphia was among three people killed when a 25-year-old man allegedly attacked them inside a park just outside of london saturday night joe richie bennett the brother of a philadelphia police captain moved to england 15 years ago
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according to the philadelphia inquirer. the suspect is in custody and believed to have acted alone. >> nascar launching an investigation after a neuce is found in driver bubba wallace's driver. it comes after two weeks he successfully banned the confederate flag and he wrote this will not break me, i will not give in nor will i back down. i will continue to proudly stand for what i believe in. >> new york city and new jersey are marking major reopening milestones today. the big apple entering phase ii, which includes ought door dining , retail and hair salons and in new jersey hair salons, barber shops and tatoo parlors may reopen this as abc news reports more than a dozen states are seeing a spike in cases. dr. nicole saphier joined us earlier to explain why the spike may not be as serious as it was months ago. >> the far majority of people testing positive are under the
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age of 49 which is great news in the sense that we are protecting our vulnerable and it's not the elderly testing positive like we saw a couple of months ago; however, there are about 17 states reporting dwindling hospitalization availability. reporter: meanwhile the world health organization reporting its largest single-day increases in cases with more than 183,000 in 24 hours. those are your headlines i'll send it back to you. steve: jillian, thank you very much meanwhile 8:17 here in new york city and on the east coast. democrats and republicans set to faceoff in d.c. over dualing police reform plans this week. arizona congresswoman debbie les ko joins us next to play out the republican plan. if your gums bleed when you brush you may have gingivitis. and the clock could be ticking towards bad breath, receding gums and possibly tooth loss. help turn back the clock on gingivitis with parodontax. leave bleeding gums behind. parodontax.
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steve: democrats and republicans set to faceoff over dualing police reform plans this week. the senate is expected to try to vote on the republican's justice act on wednesday, and the house could take up democrats justice in policing act on thursday. but will there be any way to find common ground? here to discuss republican arizona congresswoman debbie les ko, member of the house judiciary committee. congresswoman good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: you know, it seems like both sides want to do something but it also looks like there's not a lot of common ground there can you explain what's going on? >> well, it sure would have been nice if the democrats and the house would have spoke to the republicans about their plan , because there's parts of the democrat bill in the house that republicans and myself can support but other parts would undermine police's ability to get their jobs done because i talked to various law
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enforcement officers with vary ing backgrounds and they said some of the portions in the democrat bill would harm their ability to do their job and so we can't go for that. steve: sure and part of that is the democrats want to get rid of qualified immunity, that you know, in case an officer is involved in some sort of a lawsuit, you know, essentially the police department stands up for them. they would like that to go away. now, that is not part of the justice act which tim scott introduced in the senate last week. explain for me, if you will, how hard it is going to be for mitch mcconnell to get seven democrats to sign on to that particular bill, so they can do the vote and then try to figure out something in compromise committee hearings and whatnot going forward. >> well, you know, i'm not in the senate but mitch mcconnell has proven before that he can get the job done. i mean, this is so important that republicans and democrats
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need to get together to negotiate on this , because we need to heal our country. i mean, all these riots and looting that are going on, it just really is causing people to be really up tight and so gosh i sure hope we can get it done. representative karen bass whose a democrat working on this she's a good person. i respect her. she has worked with republicans. she's talked to me on other issues before but sometimes leadership in the house like pelosi and nadler are the ones that i think are causing the problems. steve: let's talk a little bit about tomorrow. the president's going to play out to your home state of arizona because they have just finished the 200th-mile of the new border wall. how big a deal is this for the people of arizona? >> this is a big deal and i'm hoping to fly with him on air force one to be with him tomorrow. i was at the rally the other day
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too and so but regarding the border, that has been the number one polling issue in arizona during my last election and the election before for years. people want a secure border. now, we're compassionate people in arizona. we don't mind if people come over legally and work in arizona legally especially in the yuma farming area that's already being done but in a legal manner but we can't have just people rushing over our border in a lawless behavior and having drug cartels and human traffickers and sex traffickers coming across our border so president trump has promised during his initial campaign that he was going to secure the border and so this is a big deal. steve: all right, 200 miles that's a lot. we're going to see a lot of it tomorrow. debbie lesko from the great state of arizona, congresswoman, thank you. >> thank you. steve: all right meanwhile the
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president betting on a great american comeback saying our economy will be better than ever soon. will that message resonate with voters? charlie hurt says the president is on the right track and charlie is on our track, next. >> ♪ ♪
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not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala at home. find your nunormal with nucala. steve: well it's a brand new trend that mobile salons bringing their services straight to your curb, amid the covid pandemic. grady trimbul from our sister network fox business joins us live in chicago where hair cuts are hitting the road and grady, you know, we were talking this past week that you needed a hair cut, and thank goodness you're about to get one.
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reporter: [laughter] yeah, thank goodness just rollout of bed and it comes to your front door and preston is going to do the job here. i've never had a hair cut on live tv before but we'll see how this goes. keisha king is the owner of the salon and you've been taking this on the road but because of coronavirus you've seen a change in your customer base what's happening? >> definitely a shift. usually we go after corporate clients and offices but now we've been seeing a lot of individuals a lot of families reaching out. we've seen 400% increase on our website traffic and they've been individuals wanting us to come to their home. reporter: these are basically people who don't really feel ready to brave a regular barber shop yet but they know that you could have just their family in the mobile salon at one-time. >> exactly. its been tough. you know we just opened up so there are a lot of people still cautious about going to the barber shop, but we come right to them and they can enjoy it with their family and community. reporter: but you do really need
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corporate events to start back up again because you get a lot of foot traffic. most definitely we do a lot of brand activations, trade shows, corporate events so we're ready for that to come back. reporter: thank you, and steve, you will be happy to know that even though it's a mobile salon we're not driving while the hair cut is going on so if you hit a bump don't worry. steve: [laughter] no kidding all right it looks like a professional salon but that is actually on wheels grady thank you very much. looking sharp. all right ainsley over to you. ainsley: [laughter] thank you so much steve after a strong showing in the may jobs report, president trump making this prediction about the economy. president trump: we're going to have a phenomenal economy and next year we'll have a good third quarter but next year will be the single greatest year economically that we've ever had ainsley: so will this economic focus resonate with voters come november? here to discuss is opinion editor for the washington times and fox news contributor, charlie hurt. good morning, charlie.
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>> good morning, ainsley. ainsley: good morning, so if you look at the numbers there is a fox news poll. most people do approve of how the president is handling the economy. look at that 49% approved, 46% disapprove but those numbers are close. how do you think this is all going to play out in november? >> well, i think that the president, i talked to him last week and he went a step further on the third quarter and said it will be the highest gdp that we've ever seen, hard stop, period. i think he's probably smart. i think that the election as usually happens, elections turn on the economy, and i think this is no different. obviously there are a lot of other things going on out there but the economy is going to be the big thing and if people feel like they are going in the right direction, amid all of the craziness going on and the scary times that we've been through, if people think they are going in the right direction , they will give them another shot and, you know, just as a political observer i have
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to note, optimism always beats pessimism in a presidential election, and the president going out there saying look i did it before, look at the economy before. we had record stock market, we had record unemployment, we had wages going up. i can do it again. that argument is a very positive , optimistic argument and i think that that sort of thing always, and it puts your opponent in this weird position of sort of poo-poo'ing the economy trying to talk the economy down and that is an absolute loser. ainsley: how important is it for people going back to work to feel safe in that environment? rally is one thing but coming into this studio today for the first time is completely different because we're following the rules, staying away from each other, lots of sanitizeer. >> yeah, you know, it's a big deal and watching the images on the streets of people rioting and beyond the protesting, getting into the lawlessness that we see on the streets
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people tearing down statutes all that stuff undergirds everything with a worrysomeness, a concern about things, but you know, the idea that oh, but we're going to get better, we're going in the right direction, is a very very powerful incentive for people to give this guy another shot. ainsley: and he has about 130 days i think a little more than 130 days until the election. is that enough time for the economy to rebound and for people to feel more confident about voting for him? >> well, i don't, obviously it's probably not enough to get to return the economy back to where we were. we're still going to have alarmingly high unemployment. we're still going to have i don't think the stock market is going to be back exactly to where it was or it could be but the point is that you don't have to get it back exactly where it was before the pandemic hit. you have to have it going in the right direction. people have to, and the economy
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has always been a strong point for president trump, and trump has to make that point to people that i did it before and i can do it again, and look at the progress we have already made and what we have seen in the numbers so far have been staggering. for the may jobs report, instead of losing 10 million jobs, we gained over 2 million jobs and that's a big deal and if he can rack those sorts of things up so it looks like they're going in the right direction and people feel confident that things are going to turn -- ainsley: phase ii here in new york already so people will be going back to work so i'm sure the numbers will continue to grow. thank you so much charles for being with us. >> exactly. ainsley: okay 8:36 on the east coast john bolton speaking out slamming president trump's leadership and saying that he hopes he's a one-term president. what does the white house think of that? press secretary kayleigh mcenany is going to join us, next.
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>> the biggest fear i have is that his policymaking is so in coherent, so unfocused, so unstructured, so wrapped around his own personal political fortune that mistakes are being made that will have grave consequences for the national security of the united states. i think that it's important that the american people have these facts as they consider what to do in november and as we look at our history, and see trump for what i hope history will record it to be an aboration. ainsley: that was john bolton this morning talking about president trump and his time in office and his book comes out tomorrow let's bring in kayleigh mcenany white house press secretary good morning to you, kayleigh. >> good morning. ainsley: good morning so that was the latest john bolton sound bite. what's your reaction?
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>> job john bolton will be remembered as a failed national security security advisor, he's a war monger someone who would have had us at war with north korea and iran if it was up to him. the president brought him in to be a counterbalancing voice because the president appreciate s alternative opinions but ultimately president trump's gut leads the way and thank goodness it was president trump at the helm who was able to de escalate tensions with those two countries because john bolton was a complete and utter disaster. steve: let's talk a little bit about the tulsa rally the other night. i know that in anticipation of it there was some suggestions that up to 1 million people did register for it and in the end i think the official count from the fire department was something like 6,500, something like that and then there were reports that teenagers on tik to c orphans of kpop which is korean pop music may have sabotaged the rally. brad parscale said yesterday no it's the media freaked people
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out because they were talking about anarchists and covid. my question to you, kayleigh is how angry was the president that there was just a sea of blue empty chairs? >> the president was not angry at all. the president was quite energized i was him after the rally it was a huge success, his speech got rave reviews he was in good spirits on marine one, and what the president routinely does is draw extraordinary turnout as we saw for instance in the event with prime minister modi, 50,000 people turned out he was in a great mood it was a great night and there was a lot to celebrate strategist kayleigh you're saying he was not furious because we've known donald trump he was on this show every monday for years. that guy, who used to be on our show, would have been fur that something went haywire. >> in my interactions with the president after the rally on marine one with him i checked in with him on air force one and he was in very good spirits spoke with him again about the rally yesterday and it got rave
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reviews his speech was very good focusing on all of the accomplishments of this administration and he is very, he is in his best mood when he gets to speak directly to the american people because that's what he loves. ainsley: kayleigh bill barr was on with maria yesterday morning and she was asking about chop, that zone that's cop-free out in seattle and he said we're keeping an eye on it we might have to do something. we can't let it go on indefinitely. do you think the federal government have you all talked about it is the president going to step in? >> the president has said he's waiting on a call from the governor and i'm using that word calling him derelict of governor of washington failing at his job to secure his state. governors and mayors have the police power it's up to them to secure their streets and what we've seen so far is absolutely in excusable inaction from the governor there, and an individual died in chop. this autonomous zone, this lawless area of the city of seattle, and another individual was shot. this is what happens when police
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are not around. when they have to withdraw from an area and when radical leftist anarchists take over it is in excusable and time for the governors to act. steve: kayleigh this gives the president a campaign issue. he can go out and say look, there are people in this country who want to defund the police department, or dismantle the police department or you look at seattle, and it's like is that really what you want or do you want what i stand for , which is what the president would say is law and order. >> that's exactly right it's a contrast because it's not just seattle. it's these democrat-run cities and in some cases states, so look at minneapolis for instance the lawlessness we've seen there , 11 people shot over the weekend, and one individual, a father, a young father losing his life and it's father's day weekend. this is a tragedy. what we see in chicago the violence there 11 people killed in chi over the weekend. we need law and order on our streets because it's a tragedy each time an individual dies and what we saw is when the president took over and
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surged the national guard here in washington d.c. it was peace that monday night, compared to the absolute chaos we saw on sunday night, when mayor bowser was in charge of the streets of washington d.c. ainsley: kayleigh great to see you. >> good to see you. ainsley: thank you. jill jillian has headlines. jillian: good morning we begin with this story the remains of a missing soldier, discovered nearly one year after he vanished without a trace. foul play is suspected. army officials say a tipster led them to the remains of private gregory scott morales on friday and his body was found in a field near fort hood. an autopsy is being conducted to determine the cause of death. >> discovered the cia in its first-ever nationwide recruitment ad, you're seeing it first on fox news. watch this. >> the greatest reward is knowing your efforts will help keep every american safe. your achievements, not unknown to the public, are critical to
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our national security. jillian: the new ad aims to connect with americans on various platforms to excite them on a career with the agency. it's all part of the agency's focus attracting top talent for tomorrow's national security challenges. >> and getting a lot of reaction after comparing colin kaepernick to a patriot which walked away from a multi-million dollar nfl contract and died serving his country. the green bay packers legend making the comparison while talking to tmz this is what he said in part, "it's not easy to stop something that you've always dreamed of doing for something that you believe in. " pat tellman is another guy that did something similar and we regard him as a hero so i assume that hero status will be there as well. those are your headlines i'll send it back to you. steve: a lot going on jillian thank you very much. still ahead we told you about two friends going viral for this time reading black or white, relax and have a beer. well now two football coaches are jumping on that bandwagon their message of unity coming up
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from minneapolis to chicago, what does all this mean for the defund the police movement? we'll discuss and the president 's rally over the weekend brand new reaction from the white house coming up we've got marsha blackburn, john barrasso, and ronna mcdaniel from the rnc all coming up live from americas news room come join ed and me as we begin a brand new week. see you top of the hour. ainsley: about two weeks ago we brought you this story of two friends setting out to bring their community together, with this simple invitation, black or white, relax and have a beer. their invitation went viral catching the attention of country music star brad paisley as well as our next guest setting up a coaches and convo sign in ohio to keep this movement going and here with more assistant coach at university of akron football, jayden everett and defensive coordinator at university of virginia football jamie deberry. hey, guys. >> good morning. ainsley: so jayden, i'll start
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with you, precious kids. i'll start with you because it was your idea first, right? >> you know, it was collective. ainsley: so how did you decide to do this? >> you know what? being a coach in the platform that we have i was on social media a couple weeks ago and i saw what ben ben and marcus were doing and i thought that resonated to what i represent as a man and what jamie represents as a man, and so i posted that and then jamie was able to bring his family up. we tried to see each other once a year, and i showed it to him and he saw it from afar as well and we're like hey man we should just continue this message and spread love and being the common denominator in today's issues is hate and we want to fight with love so what better way than to follow in marcus and ben's footsteps and start coaching. ainsley: that's great so jamie you live in virginia and you went to go visit jayden, and you all did this in front yard, right? >> hi!
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>> yes. our biggest thing was just spread a message, and we had no, did not imagine this was going to take off like this , but, you know, the biggest thing is we want to do is just keep spreading the word and just getting people comfortable to have conversations. ainsley: did people come and have a conversation with you? >> we did. we had probably about 10-15 neighbors of jayden's so it was good for me because i'd never met those people and it was just a chance to talk and just make sure they were just spreading the love and just trying to be respectful and continue to meet people, and figure out and know people. ainsley: i think it is so beautiful. my dad is a coach too i grew up in a coach's home and i know what you all do. you love all the players you don't care about their faith or skin color you just want to be a team and teach them how to be individuals and grow up to be
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responsible, so jayden, i just think hads off to both of you i think it's wonderful we need to start doing this as a country. what was your reaction, jayden to it? >> when i saw all of those people come up, it was heartwarming. it was basically what me and jamie want this world to stand for. it was a lot of people different ethnicities coming together and that one common goal was just love. to put egos aside, and to put feelings aside and have honest conversations, and educate one another, and have those like we said have those conversations that ultimately are going to change the world. ainsley: god bless you both. your children are beautiful and i saw jayden your son, i could see some of his head is he right there? >> he's right here. ainsley: i want to see him. hey buddy! you're so cute how old is he? >> he is three. ainsley: that's wonderful. jamie i know your kids had fun
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playing together. thank you so much, jayden, thank you, jamie. you all seem like great men. keep it up, please our country needs guys like you. >> thank you so much. ainsley: okay, goodbye. i know she's waving. okay, we have more fox & friends just moments away. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. i wish i could shake your hand. granted. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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>> it's great to be back in the studio and the hardest thing about doing the show is the
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ending because at exactly 9:00, we have got to stop talking. we have 11 seconds. >> i know, and brian never did it right. i messed up a few times. we will see you tomorrow, thank you so much for joining us. >> years an here is "america's " >> sandra: expected to announce another set of opinions is morning, could include a case centering on the louisiana state law requiring doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles of the clinic. the way the justices rule in this case could have a major impact on future abortion laws across the country. we will have much more on this and other potential supreme court rulings later this hour. stay tuned for that. meanwhile, a weekend of deadly violence across the country, major cities like chicago and new york reporting an uptick in shooting as growing calls to defund and dismant

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