tv Bill Hemmer Reports FOX News June 23, 2020 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT
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any food bank across the count country, type it in. >> dana: that's generous of you to say. everybody across the country is in need. thank you. thank you for joining me. i will see you on "the five." jon scott is next. >> good afternoon i am jon scott and for bill hemmer. we began in arizona where president trump is hitting the campaign trail. right now he's holding a roundtable on border security and that he is set to visit the border wall between the u.s. and mexico. all of this before a campaign event phoenix later tonight. jeff paul reporting live from phoenix. >> we are more than three hours away from president trump taking the stage. there is already a lot of people inside and taking their seats. all of this happening while
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arizona has become one of the worst states impacted by the coronavirus spirit record numbers, and a mandate for folks. they are told are doing temperature checks and masks are supposed to be worn, but it doesn't seem like money are following instructions nor social distancing. everyone is packed in. he is in a border town about 18. he landed a short while ago where he will see some new sections of the border wall and attend a roundtable on border security. he touted some of those new measures shortly before leaving the white house. >> we have 212 miles of wall. that's good. we are going to be doing a number of other things. were going to be making a speech to young people and arizona and we'll be meeting with some of the arizona officials to talk about their border and how strong it has become.
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>> this is the third time president trump has visited the state of arizona over the past five months. only this time there is a major situation going on with corona infections. the governor here, there were calls for him to stop this event from happening. obviously that's not happening. the governor saying it's the people's right to assemble, especially during an election year. >> jon: thank you very much. the president won a mac arizona by fewer than four points in 20. once reliably read, analysts call that a battleground now. let's bring in karl rove. carl, i want to start with the latest fox news poll taken between may 30th and june 2nd. it shows joe biden ahead of president trump 46-42 in arizona. those are numbers that the president's campaign can't turn
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around, but they certainly have to be worrisome at this point. >> the real clear politics average shows them down, so there is confirming data there. 133 days, but it does show the president has an uphill climb. you have two or three problems. one problem is that he has a problem with suburban college educated women. he also has an issue among latinos. in this state uniquely he has a problem with mormons spirit a large number of latter-day saints in the state as there are in the joining state of utah and this has beena republican oriented group to the electorate, but they have a little trouble with how the president handles himself. just as he ran less than the average republican and utah, he faces that same problem in arizona. some work to do. they're obviously focused on it to giving the president's visit
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there today and the money. the president's campaign is spending a million on televisi television. an outside democratic super pac has about 900,000. 1.8, 1.1 million advantage for trump right now in the advertising department. >> jon: right now we are looking at young people, these students for the organization gathering in this church. the president obviously would like to gather as many young voters as he can. what do you think about this from a campaign standpoint? what do you think about putting those people side-by-side during a coronavirus pandemic? is not a bad side or good politics? >> check back it with me and a hundred and 33 days. this is the trouble with running a campaign in a time of blagg. do you retreat to your basement studio and do interviews with
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local tv stations? do you do it president trump is attempting to do which is attempt to be in front of people and drawing energy from them and energize them in return. we will see which one works out the best. each one is following his own path. the president likes being in front of a crowd and feeding off energy. my suspicion is that 300,000 so gathered today, they're thrilled at the chance to meet him. you are right. how many of them have masks and how many of them are social distancing? it doesn't look like much social distancing going on there. let's hope there are a lot of masks. >> jon: you have run a lot of campaigns but you've never run one during a pandemic. if you were advising the president, what would you be advising him to do? would you tell them to take that route and stay in the basement and campaign by internet? or does he go out and meet as many people as he can?
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>> the president does have a huge advantage in the digital infrastructure that he has built over the last five or six years. he gets very large advantages in the number of facebook followers, twitter, you name it. across all social media channels. that means he is able to create his own television network that in the evening broadcast shows and lines up viewers among his many supporters. it wouldn't matter what i said to him, it's what he wants to do and it's clear this president likes to be in a place where he is with an audience. use out the other day and tulsa. you will see it and arizona. he likes being with people. he feeds off of that. gets his campaign a structure and an energy. it doesn't matter what anybody like you or me might say, this is what he wants to do.
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>> jon: perhaps no surprise that these people were campaign is critical of what the president is able to do. here's a statement from the biden organization. "his decision to hold a rally in arizona as the state deals with a severe covid-19 resurgence is reckless and irresponsible. make no mistake this visit is a distraction." obviously the numbers have been rocketing skyward and arizona, but the president wants to let people make their own decisions and let them get out and attend these rallies. >> the biden campaign use the phrase this is a distraction, where they are released as a distraction. it's a hypocritical distraction. similar statements calling on people who were marching in new york city, new jersey, minnesota, florida. everywhere where we had protests
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of the death of george floyd. where was the biden campaign discouraging people from doing that? the fact of the matter is that under the first amendment we have a right to peaceably assemble. that applies to the kids and the trump supporter's at the rally. the people who are marching across street after street and across united states and protest to george floyd's death. this is silliness. the biden campaign was not so desperate to make sure they were in the headline, i wish they would think twice about making such statements as 3,000 kids can't assemble and phoenix, but tens of thousands can assemble and brooklyn and downtown new york city. >> jon: karl rove, thank you. >> thank you. >> jon: a live look and atlanta where a funeral for rayshard brooks is wrapping up.
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a police officer shot him and the back after he ran from cops and fired a taser taken from them outside a wendy's restaurant. steve harrigan reporting live outside the church. >> emotional conclusion to the funeral for rayshard brooks inside the church, inviting guests and family. outside, a jumbotron an end overflowed crowd. reports of a black man 27 years old shot and killed by two white police officers outside a wendy's. this after fighting with the police officers. the reverend who gave the eulogy said it's more than about brooks. he said it's about the mass incarceration of black men in the united states. >> rayshard brooks was not simply running from the police. he was running from a system that and traps people who are trying to have a second chance,
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a shot at redemption. >> the two police officers involved both face charges. the officer who fired no shot, he faces several charges included aggravated assault. he is out on bond. as for the other police officer, he was fired immediately after the shooting. he faces 11 charges including felony murder. he can face up to life in prison. his attorney has said the case has been a rushed before a full investigation has been completed. also the police have staged stake outs. a number of them not showing up for their shifts, both the mayor and police chief have said morale and the police office is at an all-time low. the crowd begins for this emotional finale. keep in mind a 27-year-old has a wife and three small children reared back to you. >> jon: steve harrigan,
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thank you. president trump putting protesters and notice for tearing down and vandalizing statues across the country. he said there will be consequences end of that is sparking another wave of demonstrations. we will check in on those. members of the coronavirus task force testifying on capitol hill. dr. anthony fauci says the next couple of weeks will be crucial in stopping the surges of coronavirus that we are seeing. he is putting a timeline on a vaccine. >> i feel cautiously optimistic that we will be successful in getting a vaccine. ♪ y for what you need? i should get a quote. do it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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>> i still think there is a reasonably good chance that by the very beginning, if we are going to have a vaccine that we will have it by then. >> jon: dr. anthony fauci testifying along with the cdc director, the fda commissioner, and top hhs official. he also said that to his knowledge no one on the task force has ever been asked to slow down testing. in fact the country keeps doing more. today's hearing comes as cases arise in a more than 20 states. let's bring in dr. robert, professor at new york medical college and chairman of medicine. doctor, it is so disheartening. we have endured three months of lockdown. people basically not going to
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work, not going out to restaurants or to even be with friends. we are starting to tiptoe out of that horrid situation and the rates in roughly half the states are starting to rise. how do we explain that, how do we deal with that? >> it's like, thanks for having me -- it's like a wave that's going across the country. i think this is the viruses first phase. dr. fauci mentioned there are 30,000 new cases. there are been over 120,000 deaths. we can hardly say this virus is contained. it certainly seems to be contained, but we are very cautious. we are concerned that the people and arizona, texas, florida will be coming back northeast and may bring the infection back. we will have a second wave.
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dr. fauci was very clear on what i saw. to identify and to do more testing. once you do more testing you identify and then you have tracking, and you have to trace and track. once that's done we hopefully will have a handle on these cases that will in fact tends of hundreds of people. this is not a time to react on mike relax. by my way of thinking this is a time to be very cautious spirit wear the mask, be careful. >> jon: there are other doctors i've spoken with who say look, this is not a disease that is particularly fatal to young people appear there is no reason to be closing schools and colleges right now. those younger people who are not particularly sub-septal should be free to go out and learn and associate. what do you think? >> that's one way of thinking at it. you could say that children seem to be fairly immune and i use
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that in two ways. immune to the virus, great immune systems. younger people, not so sure. especially in the sauna belt we have seen a lot of young people, especially those who congregate on the beaches, picnics and bars. people below the age of 35 have been infected. and then there is the multisystemic syndrome that's dreadful, that involves the heart and it is deadly. that occurs in certain young people. we don't know who. it's probably genetically carried along, but young people are certainly less likely to get devastating disease than a person in the nursing home, but they can still be infected and pass the disease along. even a systematically. we understand that kind of a systematic transmission is not likely to happen in about 80% of cases. they still can carry the
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infection and we just don't know enough about this virus to say okay, we can have 200,000 people without masks together. all you need is two or three cases of the virus infected people and you've got a major epidemic within the pandemic. >> jon: people who have had the virus do develop antibodies. doesn't that mean, if the human body cannot fight this thing off, shouldn't it be easy, relatively easy to develop a vaccine? if so, where we now hearing it will be spring? >> dr. fauci was very optimistic from the house committee meeting and said that he was hoping cautiously optimistic, that we would have a vaccine by december. number one, we have novel ways of producing vaccines, unlike our predecessors. we injected you with dead virus,
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we can virus. we now have mechanisms such as the injection of something called messenger rma, carrier viruses to take the covid-19 virus into cells and make the body be fooled into thinking you are infected. those viruses are on a rapid warped speed pathway. those are words of president trump. were very optimistic that we will have something by december. here's the glitch. we are infected with coronavirus as every year. that's the common cold. that's one major cause. we get these common colds over and over again. were not immune to the common cold. the fear we have is that this coronavirus, covid-19 might be like the common cold. it keeps coming back and coming back. that's not a good thing to think about and i don't want to make everyone frightened, but that's a concern. this virus has to be very
quote
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specific and good neutralizing antibody that has produced against it. once we have a good neutralizing antibody and we can prove that, then we are sure that you will be immune to the virus going forward. >> jon: dr. robert leahy death, thanks the democrat who runs the house committee says he is preparing a subpoena for the attorney general bill barr. he is the focus of an investigation by democrats. the top republican is pushing back and said there is no reason to force him to testify. a former prosecutor joins us next. ♪ well i didn't choose metastatic breast cancer. not the exact type. not this specific mutation. but i did pick hope... ...and also clarity...
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there are no term contracts, no activation fees, and no credit check on the first two lines. get a $50 prepaid card when you switch. 5g is now included with all new data options. switch and save hundreds. xfinity mobile. >> jon: jerry nadler says he plans to subpoena the attorney general bill barr as
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part of a democrats investigation into his leadership. democrats say the firing of a an attorney who investigated people is the latest example of barr politicizing the justice department. >> we are very worried that the independence of the justice department and the district of new york is being interfered with and subverted by the attorney general on behalf of the president. >> jon: the committee's top republican says there is no legitimate reason to subpoena barr since he has already agreed to testify after the pandemic. let's bring in jim trusty, a former federal prosecutor. precedence is a big part of the legal system. is there are precedents for president to fire u.s. attorney? >> absolutely. you go back to the early 90s and bill clinton had them connect 93 out of the 94 resignations on day one.
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at least since then we have our always had this concept that the u.s. attorney serves as the pleasure of the -- this is the interim u.s. attorney. he had even gone through the senate confirmation. it's the definition of a limited post. and somehow, you are sitting in new york, i don't know what it is about the water, but the southern district of new york attorneys think they should never be treated by the other 93 u.s. attorneys that can be fired on day one. >> jon: the number two on the committee, jim jordan has written a pretty fiery letter to the leader of the committee jerry nadler saying when you postpone his testimony, you acknowledge that the justice department had committed to reschedule the testimony. has the justice department informed you? relevant circumstances have not changed since march sufficient to warrant a subpoena.
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in other words, barr will talk to the committee anyway, so what do they get subpoenaing him? >> its theater and they're trying to make it into this incredibly important acquisition about the misdeeds of mr. barr and i don't think for a minute that bill barr is shaking and his boots or worry about if he has to appear by way of subpoena. he will show up when he needs to. he will not be afraid of the cross-examination of jerry nadler and others do something as bedrock as this. if the president can move people around then he can put new u.s. attorneys at his pleasure. i don't think it's going anywhere, but i do think there is a reason for it which is trying to preempt what is coming. i think i heard andrew mccartney say something about this the other day. everyone on the panel knows that john durham has a report coming. not a report, indictments coming that will be significant.
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if those come out, this is a preemptive strike. don't believe barr, political cronies to damage control something that can be very important. i would add a second part, i think there is a good chance this justice department ends up identifying and indicting antifa. that could also be a bombshell and i think there is going to be resistance from the local quarter is on that. i think that could happen and there are reasons why people would want to go after barr until then. >> jon: the top national security officials. jim trusty, four mode doj. thank you. seattle police investigating another shooting as they said he moved to shut down an occupied protest zone. president trump threatening to use serious force if protesters create an autonomous zone and d.c. he is calling for prison time for people who tear down statu
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significant police presence. they've been here holding this line for many hours. not so many protesters out today as we have seen in recent days very people have been gathering, for the most part people have been peaceful. d.c. metropolitan police ted confirmed that they arrested two people during the same protest last night. president trump says these protesters are anarchists who want to destroy american history. it is also authorized law enforcement to arrest any american who vandalize as public property now and retroactively take a listen. >> last night we stopped an attack on a great monument. the monument of andrew jackson in lafayette park. i just want to thank law enforcement. they did a great job. we were working very closely with the white house. some of our executives.
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>> the president said he's working on this executive order that's going to reinforce existing legislation to punish americans who tear down statues. listen. >> we have a very specific monuments act that we are looking at long-term jail sentences to these vandals, hoodlums, and anarchists, agitators. call them whatever you want. some people don't like that language but that's what they are. they're bad people. >> overnight protesters behind us here did deface the statue of andrew jackson. they try to tear it down but were thwarted by police. also later in the night at st. john's church protesters trying to set up the black house autonomous zone. they spray-painted it across the churches columns. now the other shoe that is left to drop today is a word from d.c.'s mayor, she set up black
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lives matter plaza about ten days ago. she hasn't way to end yet on what happened last night. she hasn't waited on the fact that the folks who said that autonomous zone up are taking over black lives matter plaza. we will get back to you if we hear anything from our offices. >> jon: it will be interesting to see how the mayor handles that. gillian turner, thank you. seattle's occupied protest zone might be coming to an end. the mayor urging protesters to begin a leaving. she said the city is working to shut it down move police back in their abandoned precinct following some shootings. dan springer reporting live. >> there is a different field today. there are slightly fewer black lives matter protesters inside. we also see there is no longer anybody guarding that barricade behind us. there still a lot of people and
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structure around the precinct which is behind me. the problem is going to be getting 200 homeless people and all their protesters who are intense around the area. yesterday we got some video inside there and we can tell you that there are social workers who were inside trying to negotiate with the people to leave voluntarily. the mayor here said this cannot continue. one of the reasons is because they have had or people shot over the last four nights. the latest one was at 5:00 p.m. when a man was shot outside. jenny durkan said they will have to come in and get back into that precinct come up with are not going to take it by force. >> there is no scenario where we can clear people out, but we have working people to de-escalate, telling people it's time to go home. >> i have been told that they will have to be moved out by force. one of the big questions is will the police be able to use tear
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gas. they been told they cannot and they might be able to get back in that presaint, but how do they keep it? yesterday the police chief said they need to have those tools to control the drought. >> no one, especially the officers want to be in a situation where they have to use any other option. the only option, if that being, a baton or a gun. neither of which are the appropriate response to the situation that we are seeing on the hill. >> that becomes the key political question. will the city council reversed their position on tear gas add to these other methods like pepper spray? right now i'm seeing no indication that the city council will back off on that. we might see the police back on that precinct, but then will they be able to keep it without having a flash point like we saw
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before they vacated this precinct? >> jon: dan springer. let's bring in former fire and police commissioner. commissioner, the mayor in seattle said it was going to be the summer of love inside the chop zone. now you have four shootings and one death. it seems like the mayor's optimism was not exactly founded on fact. >> certainly not. the mayor exceeded that zone to these anarchists and vandals, rioters, ignoring the rights of the 30,000 good citizens there. now she and the police have lost all their leverage. now they will have to negotiate their way back in and if that doesn't work there will come a point where they will have to use force. it's going to be very ugly if it comes to that. this never should have happened. the protesters should have been kept out of that area.
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the police should have done their job and they should not have surrendered. >> jon: ed sounds like the police have been handicapped, the tools had been taken from them. they cannot use tear gas. what you think of that? >> it's ridiculous. seattle has always been a very leftist city. they have never supported their police. they're not doing it now. the seattle police know what to do, but if their leaders tell them they can't, they're not quinn to be effective. it's happening in seattle. it's happening in chicago and minneapolis. we have to stop this ridiculous scenario that's going on and take back our cities from rioters and people who harm to good citizens. >> jon: it seems like a lot of police forces are coddling the criminals. they're allowing vandalism, takeovers, and the rest of us get pushed out.
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>> we have to stand up and change the narrative. the fact is that police are not racist. there is racism in our society and that's what need to be addressed. we are listening to the loudest voices and in progressive cities like the one i just mentioned. they're caving immediately. here in my hometown and new york city we have taken our anti-crime off the street, 600 cops who kept drugs and guns under control and we have a 70% increase in shootings, increase in homicides. it's ridiculous. we turned over with mayor bloomberg, two mayor de blasio the safest city in america and now it's going back to the bad days. >> jon: no more broken windows policing as your department advocated. thank you. president trump heading to his next stop in arizona celebrating
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construction of miles of new border wall. he has just arrived. more on that just ahead. >> to commemorate the completion of more than 200 miles of powerful border wall, we are on pace to complete 450 miles by the end of the year and 500 miles immediately there. ♪ 's why i like liberty mutual. they get that no two people are alike and customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. almost done. what do you think? i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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about 200 miles of construction. last month the president said he plans to build 400 miles of wall by the end of the year. let's bring in tom homan, former acting director of customs. he's also a fox news contributor. you heard the president say illegal border crossings down 84%. is that because of the wall or something else? >> the wall as part of it but you can't give credit to anyone else. the president has done this by his own. there has been zero help from congress. zero help from the court. he has succeeded without their assistance. this is a huge milestone. not only to decrease illegal immigration, but building that many miles of border wall. >> jon: we've gotten the statistics from the customs and border protection service. about 216 miles of new primary and secondary border wall constructed since the president took office. only 3 miles of that is fenced
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or wall, where none existed before. everything else 213 miles or so is an upgrade from what was already there. still effective in your view? >> absolutely because the facts are the wall is being replaced, it's exactly where the border patrol says they need it. there is an existing border, that needs to be replaced first before a new wall goes up. understand this 214 miles of system is being placed on prioritization on the border patrol on where they're having the most problems. this is going to be a huge plus for the border patrol. it's going to result in a decrease of drug flow. it's going to save lives. every place, 100% of the time it's resulted in less immigration and drug flow. joe biden, hillary clinton, chuck schumer it would be
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applauding because in 2006 they dedicated $50 billion of border barriers. obviously they think it works too. the president is walking the walk. >> jon: we have all seen the footage of, would-be immigrants basically peeling back chain-link or even climbing over some of the fence. that kind of an era is coming to an end you are saying in the sections of the 216 miles of border wall? >> let me say this, a new border wall isn't impenetrable. the walls are built to slow people down. it has technology where border patrol knows if someone touches it, climbs it, it gives the patrol time to respond. it slows people down so that they could be arrested. suppose you can't bust through or climate, they funnel to an area where they can cross more easily. where border control can use less access and resources.
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walls are about stopping drugs, stopping people, but also slowing people down so that they can be arrested. >> jon: tom homan, thank you. >> thank you. >> jon: president trump suspending work visas for the rest of the year. the administration claims that should preserve jobs for americans and keep more than half a million foreign workers out of the country for now. some major companies are warning it will end up hurting businesses. kristin fisher reporting live from the white house. >> a lot of the big tech companies do not like the executive order that president trump signed yesterday because they rely heavily on the h1v visa program which has been essentially frozen until the end of the year. companies like amazon, google, uber put out statements. twitter is saying, it undermines america's greatest asset, its
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diversity. unilaterally stifles america's attractiveness to global high skilled talent is shortsighted and easily damaging to the economic strengths of the united states. the white house says this executive order is designed to free up half a million jobs for american workers in the middle of a pandemic with so many people losing their jobs. here is top economic advisor. >> i think the president's view and, i served on that task force and we agreed that we have to help americans get back to work first. >> this order is going to suspend about five different types of temporary visas for foreign workers spirit h1 v visa's for certain types of highly skilled workers, these are the visas that all those big tech companies are so worried about. h2, not agricultural seasonal workers, age four, dependent family members. jay 1r for cultural exchanges,
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things like au pairs. l1, managers of multinational corporations. there are some exemptions and exclusions, but not many. on top of that of course as you were just talking about, president trump is in battleground arizona. he met with all the border patrol agents and yuma, arizona. and now he is minutes away from touring his new border wall. despite the pandemic and these protests, president trump is making a push year to put the spotlight back on the topic immigration. which served him so well back in 2016. >> jon: it was a big part of his campaign for years ago and now we are nearing the end of that first term. thank you so much. demand for plastic protection against microbes skyrocketing as more companies get back up and running. an inside look at how one small business is ramping up production next. ♪
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>> jon: major league baseball team on his wedding to move forward with a 60-game season that likely will start in late july without fans in the stands. the players union needs to improve health and safety standards and agree to reports for july 1st, the league asking the union to respond by 5:00 p.m. eastern today if players sign off on the 60 game schedule, it will be the shortest baseball season since 1878. well, as companies try to make work spaces safer customers and employees, demand for plastic protection is surging, getting an inside look at one business in new york city gearing up for a post-pandemic moon. christina? >> jon: it's a good time to be in the plexiglas business, the see-through acrylic sheets normally bring in about a billion dollars each year in revenue but now that's more than
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doubling with the increase. i am at canal plastics in new york city and they have seen a significant uptick in the last few weeks or so, the centers for disease control and prevention as required a lot of businesses to put up these sneeze guards, these individual plexiglas dividers to keep people away from each other and that has increased demand. in june alone, we are seeing demand almost four times higher than last year at this time. here at canal plastics, they are seeing an uptick in e-commerce, listen in. >> sneeze guards, demand has gone up quite a bit. and the whole situation, it's definitely the majority of the orders we are taking at least as far as custom work goes. >> and what's happening right across the board is we are
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seeing traffic a little slower, in this particular shop, confident they'd be able to meet demand, back to you. >> jon: thank you. i will see you again tomorrow "your world" with neil cavuto up next. ♪ >> neil: turns out andrew jackson was too heavy to bring down, now the president of the united states saying the law will be heavy if you even try. welcome everyone, i'm neil cavuto and this is "your world." a different world from a president who has had it with monuments being torn down again and again, says it is violating our basic trust and understanding. the move is controversial because by executive order he is going to make it an
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