tv Hannity FOX News July 17, 2020 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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>> lisa: great senior. >> lisa: that's about it for us tonight and so much fun. if tuning in each night to the show that's the sworn enemy of line, line, smugness, pomposity, and groupthink. >> congress and civil rights leader don lewis died, 80-year-old announced that he had advanced pancreatic cancer and illness prevented him from going to capitol hill so he used to posses to use his vote in congress made the civil icon remained vocal during the recent george floyd protest and released a statement in late may saying that his heart is broken for the men, women, families and during systemic racism in the u.s. lewis, activist during the civil rights movement and arrested after he was in a white restroom in 1961, he understood the pain
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he was experiencing. lewis represented georgia's fifth congressional district in serving his 17th term in the house. congressman john lewis and political career spanning more than four decades free to fox news correspondent jonathan serrie taking a look back at his long and distinguished career. >> hate is too much of a burden to bear. >> america lost one of the most iconic figures of the civil rights movement. >> it's close to being a saint. is anybody i have lived with. >> february 21, 1940, he was born into a family of sharecroppers of alabama. growing up in the south he became acutely aware of racial injustice and how inspirational and the sermons of the dr. martin luther king jr. as a young man he became chairman of sncc, the student nonviolent coordinating committee.
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he was the youngest to speaker of the 1963 march on washington. he helped to lead a march across the edmond bridge in selma, alabama. he suffered a fractured skull when state troopers used force to break up the peaceful demonstrations. televised images of the violent police, and i support in 1965. >> lisa: the one thing is to do the will of god no matter what the cost. john lewis walked into congress with that same sense of oneness with god. >> in 1981, he won a seat on the council and five years later elected to congress where he joined the fifth congressional district for nearly four decades. lewis was a member of the congressional black caucus and served on the committee on ways and needs and continued to champion progressive causes including women's rights,
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immigrant rights, health care reform. although a member of the washington establishment, he never lost his active spirit. 2016 he let democrats any surprise sitting in the house chamber calling for gun control. he boycotted the inauguration of george w. bush and donald trump and trump a barrage of angry tweets from the latter president describing the congressman's georgia district is in horrible shape and falling apart. two years later, he joined the chorus of democratic house members calling for president trump's impeachment. >> i believe, i truly believe the time to begin impeachment proceedings against this president has come. >> the most polarizing of times, he won the respect of colleagues from both sides of the aisle. speak of the fire and positive sense of the where. >> lifelong efforts for equal rights he never dreamed it possible that america would one day elect a black president.
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>> from his activism to the nearly 25 years in house of representatives, john r lewis. >> president barack obama awarded him the medal of freedom, the ceremony took on added significance. >> john lewis is my hero and my friend. it's a great example for me. >> late 2019, he announced he faced a different type of file, a fight for his life against stage iv cap pancreatic cancer. he continues to serve in congress while undergoing treatment saying there's still plenty of unfinished business to be done. it's that fighting spirit that enshrined the legacy of this gentle warrior of the civil rights movement. in atlanta, jonathan serrie, fox news. >> once again, congressman and civil rights icon john lewis has died. 80-year-old lewis diagnosed stage iv pancreatic cancer and
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undergoing treatment. the youngest and last surviving member of the big six civil rights activist to organize the 1963 march on washington. spoke shortly before the group's leader martin luther king jr. right before he gave his eye have a dream speech. back to our regular programming, already in progress. beto o'rourke, the squad. he's for taxpayer-funded abortions on demand, open borders, all of these extremistz liberal, leftist, socialist, marxist policies. he can't hide behind the face of a moderate. he's absolutely the faith of bernie sanders campaign. >> tammy: yeah, and he sent a difficult position because he clearly has to deal with the far left in his own party. representative biggs, we have a dynamic here where someone might argue he's pandering to them and will govern differently. do you think that's the case? clearly joe biden has been in public policy and government for almost 50 years.ha do we know him well enough to know what he would do if he was
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elected? >> yeah, i don't think he's going to come back to the middle on this because normally what you do is after you secure the nomination, which he has done, then you start moving back to the middle to try to win back t the independents and moderates in your party. he's done the exact opposite. he's gone hard left. when you get beto o'rourke who wants to take away guns, that resonates with the middle. they don't want that. but it sits wonderfully with the hard left of the democratic party. he's not even moderate anymore. he's not liberal anymore. he is now hard left. you bring in aoc. you bring in the squad. you're going to remake this country. you're going to have higher crime, higher taxes, more regulation. that's what you're going to get with the biden presidency. >> tammy: i think what we have seen and especially with you being a media watcher, in fact it seems apparent that the democratic party has been now, the far left is taken control of it. donald trump was one candidate
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for the first time ever really who espoused a policy position, had an attitude and approach during the general election, during the primaries, and didn't tonge and didn't tack back some other position for the general election. but we see maybe a joe biden is just going to take this and run through the general election. what do you think, especially with how the media seems to be trying to position him in a t strange way as a moderate. >> it's interesting because tammy, media has gone left just as joe biden has gone left and look, joe biden shifts to whatever is politically expedient. g he was against same-sex marriage in 2006. he voted for both iraq wars. his crime bill will get him ostracized from the party, the one he helped write in 1994. a biden victory and even some democrats will tell you it means that your president will probably be elizabeth warren who's already helping out as far shaping policy, could be his vice presidential pick as well. and nancy pelosi, because obviously she's house speaker. good chance democrats keep the
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house in the fall. decent chance they could even take back the senate, and if joe biden is saying yes to everybody and his party just keep them happy, the way of going to work is the bill in the house goes to the senate, goes to biden and he doesn't even blink. president needs to make it a two issue race and he's trying to do it but really these are the only two things he should talk about. who will keep your taxes down? who will keep the economy are boring because right now we are already seeings a v-shaped recovery a lot faster than people expected.ll next year gdp could be 6%. who's going to keep you safe? all he has to do is point to new york, portland, seattle and say this is what you'll get if you elect joe biden and essentially make nancy pelosi elizabeth warren your hacopresidents. >> tammy: that's an excellent point, because there does have to be a focus, and jenna, i just have to say the mount rushmore speech, if that was the template, because that's heart and soul of the president. he's not pandering to anyone.
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he's being himself. that speech really laid it out. wouldn't that be the focus because well we know joe biden has problems it's clear what the left has in store for this country and americans do not like mob violence. wouldn't that be the best approach for the president to use that speech as a template moving forward? >> oh, 100% and i think that he's going to continue on with that message of saying that american heritage of liberty and freedom and being the best country for the most opportunity to pursue happiness, to pursue freedom and liberty in this a country is our heritage. and that mount rushmore speech, i was there with the president. he was amazing. everyone loved it. i think that turned a corner in terms of the contrast between him and joe biden. this is, really a single issue race. it's either that you want to preserve and protect the freedoms and liberties that we so enjoy in this country that our government is obligated to preserve and protect. or we want to completely transform america and totally sell it and give it away to joe biden and a reasonable
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american understands president trump's america first is all about protecting andd preserving our fundamental individual rights moving forward. >> tammy: it's interesting here in the left has done this for the president, he's once again the outsider. you know, we see what the democrats have in mind and in some cases they are saying joe biden is going to be just a placeholder and they are effectively admitting that the establishment has been running the country or they want to get back to running it, and adonald trump of course ruined all those plans. i think americans didn't put him in as a lark. it was more of a challenge in a statement that we don't want with the left was offering and now of course we see what everything has come to which is unfortunate for so many of these liberally run cities. everyone, thank you so much. congressman, jenna, joe, thanks for being with me. is. appreciate it. look at your screen right now and you can see the aftermath of clashes between police and protesters in chicago near a
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columbus statue. this has just been happening. we are monitoring the story closely just with what we were talking about, very good example of this. coming up next, more from the president's interview with chris wallace and will discuss the importance of getting our e kids back to school. that is key obviously. with kellyanne conway. she joins us after the break. staying with us. >> tammy: welcome back to this ♪ guys, it's that time... and nothin's happenin'. well now there's score!, from force factor, to rev your libido and maximize physical response. it's no wonder force factor is the #1 fastest-growing men's health brand at walmart. unleash your potential in the bedroom with score!.
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who knows where that button is? i don't have silent. everyone does -- right up here. it happens to all of us. we buy a new home, and we turn into our parents. what i do is help new homeowners overcome this. what is that, an adjustable spanner? good choice, steve. okay, don't forget you're not assisting him. you hired him. if you have nowhere to sit, you have too many. who else reads books about submarines? my dad. yeah. oh, those are -- progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents, but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. look at that.
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teachers who feel that it's unsafe to go back? >> i would tell parents and teachers that you should findee yourself a new person, whoever's in charge of that decision, abecause it's a terrible decision. mothers can't go to work because all of a sudden they have to stay home and watch their child. and fathers. what's happening, you know, there's a tremendous strain on that whole side of the equation. >> so it's a balancing act? >> it's a balancing, act but we have to open our schools. >> tammy: now it comes as joe biden and the lawless left continues to use the virus has a 2020 cudgel instead of putting public health before politics especially on the issue of masks. chris wallace asked the president about all of this in an interview that you're going to be able to see this sunday. here is a short preview. >> do you regret not wearing a mask in public from the start? would you consider, will you consider a national mandate that people need to wear masks? >> no, i want people to have a
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certain freedom and i don't believe in that, no. andd i don't agree with the statement that if everybody wore a mask, everything would disappear. dr. fauci said don't wear a mask. our surgeon general, terrific guy, said don't wear a mask. everybody was saying don't wear a mask and all of a sudden, everybody's got to wear a mask, and as you know, masks cause problems too. with that being said, i'm a believer in masks. i think masks are good. >> tammy: sure to react to all of this is counselor to thee president, kellyanne conway. kellyanne, thank you so much for being here. i appreciate it. >> hi, tammy. >> tammy: look, this interview is going to be great on sunday. every time the president has a chance to speak his mind, the american people realize how serious he is and what he wants to get done. that conversation in particular is very important because he was talking about dr. fauci, who flip-flopped on the issue of ermasks as an example. now i've got the president, he's not doing those briefings that he was doing every day but we've
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got dr. fauci with his big spread in "in style" magazine. he'sut going around, kind of perhaps a lack of seriousness or vanity that's impacting him. what do you think of the president's opinion, his voice, being able to get out there out there a little bit more when it comes to this continuing conversation about the coronavirus? >> i am all in favor and i've been very public about it, including today. the president had a 51% approval rating handling the pandemic when he was doing the daily briefings. they don't need to be two hours long. with confrontations instead of information with a press corps that's just berating him and trying to battle him for their own book fees and speaking fees and fame. he can provide information to americans, because nobody does that quite like president trump. he's already provided what i call the democratization of information through his twitter feed and all the social media platforms. he has 170 million or so a followers on social media. he's cut out the middleman, tammy. everybody gets the information
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from the president at the same time, stay-at-home moms,oc billionaire ceos, the plumber on the job checking his phone.or the only people who don't like the fact the president has cut out the middleman is the middleman. and that's the media. but i think when the president provides basic information about where we are coronavirus and look, he and the task force were doing at a reasonable day when the information was t devastati, we had over 2,000 deaths per day. we were there. the president was there everyat slow day every weekend. he was in the white house with the coronavirus task force. all of that were there was put forward really now needs to i believe be carried through. i want to say this. people try to separate president trump for members of p his task force includingds dr. fauci. they are all on the same task force. dr. fauci is part of the president's government now, as is dr. redfield, dr. birx and others. but also our great economist, secretary of labor and treasury and other people are trying to get p the economic relief going. this president's handling of dual financial and medical crisis has been excellent. people don't want to give them credit for a surging ventilator capacity, i see you capacity,
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exercising theirir domestic production act, working -- working with democratic governors. he's done so many great things that people don't want to give them credit for, but the american people see it. >> tammy: the american people don't necessarily see it all because the media covers it up, right? they don't talk about those things. it's always the panic porn, if you will. negativity. even the manipulation of the numbers. we thought polls were manipulated, but now we have the actual data, we are finding out that it was manipulated about the coronavirus. it's clear the president should at least have a voice in making sure that people know exactly what it is that's going on because they appreciate it. but in the midst of that, as we heard with the president's answer regarding schools is that there's also this misinformation about the danger of schools. europe has open up their schools. they've not found a surge.
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pediatricians in the united states are saying you must get children back into this environment. what can we do? and obviously i think the president's right but he must take some action to be able to move this forward. otherwise it's going to be a lost generation.d forget about a lost economy. this is going to go on as a problem for 20 years. >> it's true and you know was disproportionately hurt by this, some of our lower income students, those who rely upon school choice, opportunity scholarships, charter schools, they don't have the certainty that they are going to have the continuity, tammy. some of us are pushing for legislation to make sure that if their schools aren't open they can take that money with them and go to another school. so we stop this interruption in their academic schooling but also in all the services that so many of our school children across the country rely upon. in the first three weeks in march, 75 million students stopped going to school. nearly 100% of our students weren't in school. t saw the digital divide laid bear.
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so many of the kids could not access basic digital assetsgo to let them learn remotely. the statistics are worth repeating that our schools report about one in five child-abuse cases. it's a place where many of ouret students get their nutrition. it's where they are able to see another adult and tell them something. they get their mental health services, basic health services. all that is so important because we can't create a pandemic within a pandemic. everybody wants it done safely and securely. i've talked to school districts and superintendents and board members and some people are being very creative with solutions that are coming up with to be creative and innovative and get these kids back to school. it won't maybe feel the same. maybe have fewer assemblies. mom and dad can't come in and do reading time or cupcake partiesa for birthdays. we can be innovative. we are america. we have to get kids back in
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school and joe biden's against school choice, opportunity scholarships. standing in the schoolhouse door traveling kids inside of it. can't get a better education. preventing other kids from going in and starting the school year. it's terrible. >> tammy: the choice has been clear and remains clear. kellyanne, thank youtu for joing us. we know virtual learning is a failure. we've learned a lot that we have to move forward knowing what it is we must do and obviously the president, kellyanne laid it out quite well right there, knows what needs to be done and it's great that he's on this. we are monitoring a situation i chicago where you can see live pictures of protesters right there clashing with police near a columbus catcher. that city remains lawless. morere on the surging violence n our democrat led cities. all of it is coming out all of i sudden. we will have a live report coming up next. stay right there. ♪ stare there. -- statatatata itching for a treat.
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♪ >> this is a fox news alert lie from atlanta. 80-year-old announced in september he had advanced pancreatic cancer. remained vocal during the george floyd protest and released a statement that his heart is broken for the men, women, families and during systemic racism. lewis, activist during the civil rights movement and arrested after using a white restroom back in 1951. he told demonstrators he understood the pain he was experiencing. lewis, representative for georgia's fifth congressional district serving out his 17th term in the house. congressman lewis' long this tennis career on capitol hill,
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turned to chad pergram with mo more. >> mary ann, john lewis was the youngest to speaker at the lincoln memorial alongside duttodr. martin luther king. lewis said "we are tired, tired of being beaten by policemen and how long can we be patient? we want our freedom and we want it now." lewis was one of the original 30 activist who participated in freedom riots in the south and segregated lunch counters and he said just before president obama's inauguration that he never thought an african-american would be elected president back when he was protesting. important to note that lewis first back hillary clinton over obama in 2008. much to the dismay of congressional black caucus colleagues. leading the march to selma, alabama, from 1965, alabama state troopers lay in wait across the bridge and alabama state trooper cupped lewis with a concussion.
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he carried a steel plate in his head until he died. the annual pilgrimage across the bridge to commemorate letty sunday. he also helped lead a sit in on the house floor on guns in jun june 2016. present obama present him with the presidential medal of freedom. when parents teach their children about what's courage, the story of john lewis will come to mind. if african-american who knew that change can't wait for some other person, time, and life is a lesson in the fierce urgency of now. lewis diagnosed with pancreatic cancer late december last year and foxes told it's possible lewis could lie in state in the capital. john lewis, 80 years old. marmary and buried >> chad perg, thank you for your insight once again. if john lewis died at the age of 80. youngest and last survivor of the big six civil rights
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activists organizing their 1963 march on washington. spoke shortly before that the leader referendum martin luther king jr. before he gave his eye have a dream speech. back to our regular programming already in progress. her own citizens and city, telling kayleen mcenaney "hey, karen, watch your mouth." after the white house press secretary slammed the mayor for failing to rein in violence in the city of chicago. because in the last month alone, you guys, hundreds have been shot, dozens have been killed, including a 5-month-old baby boy shot just last night on the city's north side. so look, let me be clear here. safety and security, peace and prosperity, all of it is on the ballot in november. a vote for a blue wave becoming rather obvious is a vote for a crime wave. too many people already know that. a vote for joe biden is a vote to bring the high crime from the states of major cities like new york where i am right now or chicago to your front door no matter where you live. now joining me for a reaction, fox news legalhe analyst
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gregg jarrett along with former florida attorney general pam bondi and new york city councilman joe borelli, one of the few conservatives on that council but i think a good example of how even new york knows good leadership when they seeg it. gregg, let me start with you. chad wolf says that the president has had enough and they are going to be taking action. we see this chaos in great american cities, every city is a great american city. what exactly can the dhs do are the president do to stop this kind of violence? >> well, if there is insurrection in a city and people's lives are at risk, the government under a congressional act is allowed to go in. they are also allowed to protect federal property. a lot of this is happening due to the protests. you know, let me say this. black lives do matter, this is an important movement because it brings needed overdue attention
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to the fact that there is racial injustice and that african-americans are in many cases unfairly targeted by police. so people need to speak about it. they need to protest and demonstrate for better government, better policing, training and reforms. but the constitution and these cherished rights of assembly and to protest your government doesn't give demonstrators a license to turn themselves into criminals and engage in rampant acts of looting and vandalism and arson and assault and battery. mayor de blasio is doing nothing about it. as joe well knows because he voted against this, the mayor and the city council cut a billion dollars of police funding. de blasio disbanded the very successful anti-crime unit. 600 cops that managed tost get many of the guns off the streets.
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instead what the mayor does is paint a mural on fifth avenue. it's insidious. the irony of that is extraordinary because as you'veg got the mural being painted, the violence is taking lives of people of color. and it says that when we got apparently police protection now, joe borelli, for the mural whereas we finally caught the person that murdered allegedly the dad who was walking his little girl across the street. whhe gets shot down. we finally arrested that person. maybe that man would still be alive of the police were able to actually do their job. it's people of color who are being victimized in this process. so that's the other thing that of course turns this on its head. joe, what are you seeing exactly here in new york? >> sure, you're certainly right. 94, 95% of the victims of shootings are people who are nonwhite in new york city. but you mentioned earlier in the reporter just before, the attack on chief monahan.
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takepe that on its own for a second. that person was released without bail for assaulting a police officer. that wasn't done at random. that was done because democratic politicians here in new york city and new york state decided bail was something we should not have been any circumstances even in circumstances like this where it's clearlyw warranted. now we also and the mayor just signed this law yesterday, we also criminalized basically the movement of a police officer putting pressure on the perpetrators diaphragm. they call it a choke hold bill. it also makes a crime out about police officer leaning on or kneeling or sitting on. it makes it impossible. we have change the balance of criminality in a fight. >> tammy: and we have signaled of course to the population that theliin police are the problem. now we have criminalized them if they do their job. pam, as a former attorney general, you see this. it's not just in new york. these are liberal policies.
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it's not just a bad judge. are you seeing this everywhere? do you think this in some ways can be stopped or is the president going to have to stop and? >> well, it's certainly not happening in florida. i think the common denominator, these liberal politicians. the mayor in chicago. look what's happening, what you said tammy. a 5-month-old baby a shot in the eye.e. from this time last year, homicides are a 417%. oh, and what kayleigh mcenany said is completely correct, that mayor is derelict. what's the definition of derelict? grossly negligent in your duty. she's letting these crimes run rampant. she will not enable her police to do their job in chicago. look what's happening right now as we speak in chicago. look at portland. we have the mayor, the liberal mayor in portland, telling the federal authorities stay inside, don't come out and protect the federal courthouse. that's not going to happen under president trump. the 9,000 plus federal buildings in our country will be protected.
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>> tammy: yeah, and i think that's a given. americans are unfortunately having to see the extreme differences between the law and order that we want and must have for our family's future versus what is unfolding in liberal cities, because it's not natural and it's certainly not the american way. gregg, pam, joe, thank you for the work you do and for joining me.. the left won't give up on trying to boycott goya. a hollywood actor wants to start a conservative movieni studio. leo terrell and larry elder will be here with more on the backlash to cancel culture. stay with us. t ♪ be here with more on the backlash to cancel culture. stay with us.
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♪ >> tammy: hey, welcome back to the special edition of "hannity." this so-called cancel culture continues to hit new lows. a group called citizens for responsibility and ethicsec in washington filed a ridiculous complaint against ivanka trump accusing her of misconduct over this tweet showing support for
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goya and the work that they have done for the hispanic community. i made calls to boycott their products over their ceos support of president trump. also new today, nba star james harden is facing backlash for wearing a thin blue line face mask. it shows support for police. god forbid. harden responded to critics saying "i thought it looked cool. that was it." that's a shame, right? there may be suing some changes to the left's stranglehold on culture and entertainment. this morning, actor antonio sabato jr. joined fox business "mornings with maria" to discuss his plans for a conservative movie studio. that's kind of interesting. joining us with their reaction, civil rights attorney leo terrel and radio talk show host larry elder. gentlemen, thank you for joining me. i appreciate it. >> thank you, tammy. glad to be here. >> tammy: now, i have to say leo
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and i know each other well, both of us were on the left for an extended period of time. i come from the left. we know larry might still be a tiny bit but he's seen the light. when we see this kind of, we see, we are familiar with it, this idea of operating through threats or intimidation, punishing people who don't conform. it's difficult to watch. leo, what do you think overall when it comes to, like with the goya boycott and everything else you're seeing here? >> let me give you the answer in 45 seconds. first of all, the democrat party is the party of racism. they are the ones who say if you are, you vote republican, you ain't black. i'm black. i'm voting republican. they are trying to intimidate hispanics to stay in the democratic party. that's why you have this silly attack on this goya food company. because they are afraid that blacks and hispanics are going to start thinking and saying you know what, we are going to bolt from the democratic party and we
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are going to vote for trump and that's out of fear and what they are doing right now is trying to intimidate blacks and hispanics. james harden situation is outright ridiculous. you know why? it's a false assumption that if you'remi black you're not suppod to support the police. that's ridiculous. because police officers support us. >> tammy: leo, it comes down also to the fact that he was too afraid to actually own that mask, the fact that -- >> he had to back down. that's the pressure. >> tammy: we see this. it's part of the framework but it really is nowad at an intense point, don't you think, larry, that there's this generalizedin fear and it seems like it's really taking hold. do you think it can be reversed? >> i think it can be in tammy, that's exactly why i've done a film called "uncle tom" to address all of this. the film talks about black conservatives and how black conservatives are ignored or
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called all sorts of names i can't say on a family show just for suggesting as leo did that maybe we ought not be in the bed with the party of roe s v. wade. we maybe ought not be in the party of porous borders. maybe just maybe we ought not be the party of anti-school choice when so many of our public schools are lousy. you've got 13 public schools in baltimore where 0% of kids can do math at grade level but you're mandated to send your kids who just graduated from middle school to that school. republicans want to give you an option and democrats, 95% of the black vote. what's up with that? my movie "uncle tom" available on uncletom.com. please check it out. >> tammy: it's good stuff. at the same time, we have to look atts the fact that the republicans have never well, they've never -- very little very few opportunities to put out the options for people in the inner cities, the republican party has dropped that ball. they've not had options. the rate of voting is low and
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the expectation that people of color don't speak for themselves or don't think for themselves of course in and of itself ist racist. gentlemen, thank you. larry and leo, things for joining me. thanks for being here and coming up, explosive new evidence of deep state abuse. i know that won't surprise you. more details after the break. ♪
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♪ >> tammy: welcome back to this special edition of "hannity." senate republicans just released a trove of bombshell documents surrounding christopher steele's dirty dossier. according to the material, steele's primary sub source said the dossier was unsubstantiated and unreliable and that's not all.ave these documents reveal the anti-trump leaks in a 2017 "new york times" piece were wrong nine times in the same article. it's kind of like a weird theater, isn't it? joining us now with more is the ranking member of the house intel committee, devin nunes. and the coauthor of the new book "fall out," john solomon joins us.ea thank you for being with us.
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it's a crazy time. john solomon, let's start with you because it almost can become overwhelming sometimes, we get pieces of information that tells us all the times that this is wrong, that was wrong, that was a fraud, that was fake. how is it now, what is the new information and how are things proceeding? what's being released and what we can expect to have come up. >> listen, thesese documents toy deliver a devastating blow to the credibility of three central figures in the russia case. "the new york times" which drove the theory of russia collusion that was false. nine errors, nine substantive errors in a single story. they should retract that story. christopher steele, the dossier come his own source disowned much of the information when he met with the fbi. either christopher steele made it up or didn't take very good records and was a lousy intelligence agent. third, you have an entire example of the fbi knowing for months that everything they gave to the fisa court was wrong, everything. yet they never retracted it.
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they renewed the fisa application two more times. >> tammy: you know, it's amazing. i know will are waiting, representative nunes, we are all waiting for the durham report, the action when it comes to indictments possibly et cetera. but the american people, this affects the legitimacy of the government when we see this going on in the conclusions that we have to drive now we know everything we see shows thatt there was some kind of weird collusion to do something bad to stop donald trump. with everything you've been through in this regard, what is your take on where things have landed at this point? >> well, i think i'm not too interested in the durham report. i would like to know everything for the four plus years that went on including even the mueller investigation. but really what we want is we want indictments. we have made 14 criminal referrals. we have another investigation is ongoing. i would say the take away that i have tonight, john hit it on the head with those three important topics but also we have suspectedet for a very long time
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that steele maybe had only two russians. but we believe they were actually kind of real russians but he didn't really know them. the question is,s, how was it tt steele found these suppose it russians and was able to use them? we have asked the fbi and the cia about these russians. i've set for a long time we are interested in two russians. it won't surprise you,u,bl theye yet to allow us access to these two russians that we now believe our -- >> tammy: gentlemen, we are really tight here but clearly americans are hearing that very serious things are continuing to go along and we clearly still need the exposure of them. both ofer you are doing a very good job in that regard and justice is coming. i think it's safe to say that. gentlemen, thanks for being here tonight. oen we come back, a word from sean hannity. stay right there. ♪ tonight. will we come back, ordered from sean hannity.....
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♪ >> tammy: welcome back everyone to this special edition of hannity, before we go we have a sneak peek, sean hannity recently sat down with harris faulkner, take a look at. >> i look at the george floyd video and the officer who knelt on his neck, he has a track record. right? >> sean: how many times? ten? >> it's north of that, double digits. people knew about him. with your family history of law enforcement, why doesn't that get picked up? >> sean: george floyd was in handcuffs, he didn't need a knee on his neck for one second, you see his face pushed into the ground, autopsy with abrasions on his face and you can see it. you're referring to to the tape of the other officer trying to
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do crowd control and crowd of people, everyone should look ate this tape, that makes me angry. will you please stop it? he's going to die. and that officer had a responsibility to turn around off that- take him man. >> tammy: make sure to check out the full special this sunday at 10:00 p.m. eastern time on fox. we are still monitoring the situation in chicago are protesters attempted to take down a statue of columbus before police intervened. more on this story on monday. all of this is predictable, i wrote a book i want to share with you -- the death of right and wrong back in 2005. it's in paperback and it predicts what is happening right now. it would be great if you could pick it up, it's still relevant unfortunately but it is there and my thanks to all of you, my0 thanks to the entire hannity team. that's all the time we have left this evening and thanks to sean in thising me sit
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chair. i will see you next time, i'm tammy bruce here for sean hannity, have a great weekend everyone. ♪ >> laura: i'm laura ingraham >> lisa: high mary property, john lewis has died 80-year-old announced in december he had advanced pancreati pancreatic c. he used a proxy to cast his vote in congress and the congressman civil rights icon remaining vocal during the recent george floyd protest. he released a statement in late may his heart is broken for the men, women, families and during systemic racism in the u.s. lewis the activist during the civil rights movement was arrested after using a white restroom in 1951 and told demonstrators he understand the pa
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