tv FOX Friends First FOX News July 27, 2020 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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rob: it is monday, july 27th. shots ringing out overnight in portland on the 60th night of unrest in the city, on the heels of a chaotic weekend across the u.s. new video shows explosives hurled against police officers in the streets of seattle, dozens recovering from injuries. jillian: as violent instigators fuel the mayhem, one democrat says this. >> that's a myth that's being spread only in washington, d.c. >> about antifa in portland? >> yes. jillian: we're live with the latest unrest unraveling overnight. >> we're prepared to act quickly. this is all about kids and jobs,
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this is our focus and we want to make sure something gets passed quickly. rob: in just a matter of hours, republicans expected to reveal their plan for pandemic relief with another round of stimulus checks, but without president trump's payroll tax cut. jillian: we're live in washington to break it all down. rob: and a mon ten of a -- mountain of a rescue for one four legged friend. jillian: "fox & friends first" continues right now. ♪ ♪ everybody's just getting by. ♪ jillian: a very good morning to you. you are watching "fox & friends first" on this monday morning. i'm jillian mele. rob: i'm rob schmitt. thanks for getting up early with us today. overnight, violence breaks out
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in major u.s. cities. in seattle, officers clashing with rioters outside of a police precinct. jillian: in portland, one person is shot near a riot. todd piro joins us live as city leaders refuse to take action. todd. >> reporter: good morning. overnight, unrest growing in seattle as thousands join protests in the streets. take a look at this. officers removing rioters from the police department's east precinct, all this just one day after it was damaged from protesters throwing explosives. the seattle police department releasing body cam video of the attacks. 59 officers injured during saturday's dangerous protests, 47 people arrested. meantime, demonstrations in portland stretching into their 60th straight night. two people taken into custody after opening fire just one block from those demonstrations. one person was hurt. on sunday morning few you churs,
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dhs secretary chad wolf demanding city leaders step up and put an end to the violence. >> what we see in portland is a city at least at certain hours of the night completely out of control. we see city leadership there has fostered an environment that allows these criminals to do this throughout the night, untouched, absolutely untouched. >> reporter: the protests still rocking cities from coast to coast. in new york city, protesters lining a highway, blocking traffic. and in austin, texas, a man is dead after shots ring out during an anti-police march. meantime, gun violence in chicago not getting better. more than four dozen people shot just this weekend. city leaders still pushing back against any federal intervention. >> we can't just allow anyone to come into chicago, play police in our streets and our neighborhoods, when they don't know the first thing about our city. that's a recipe for disaster.
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>> reporter: meantime, new video showing congressman jerry nadler refusing to condemn violent acts during protests. >> is this about what's happening in portland right now. >> that's a myth being spread in washington, d.c. >> about antifa in portland? >> yes. >> reporter: at least 19 people have been killed in protests since the death of george floyd on may 25th. back to you. rob: thank you. jillian: a candlelight vigil is held for a man that was shot and killed in a black lives matter protest in austin, texas. people gathered around downtown where garrett foster died. rob: he was shot trying to stop a car from driving into a crowd of protesters. police say the driver called 911 and reported the shooting. he was released in custody after cooperating with police. lawrence jones explored race and
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policing in the country and joining that conversation, fox news political analyst juan williams, pushing for better leadership in the black community. >> where is the black leadership? where is the naacp, the urban league? where is black lives matter when it comes to shootings that take place inside the black community, black people killing black people? to my mind, and i've been on this bandwagon for a while, of i've wrote a book called enough, phony leader and deadened movements and it spoke to the idea is why don't you see al sharpton and jesse jackson saying we can't have the gangsters dominating our communities. jillian: tessalmos tesslan s democrats and republicans have to do much more to create actual change. >> we have these conversations on we're removing folks from bottles and who should be on a
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syrup bottle or not, i think that's important to a lot of folks but my concern is talking about the actual policies that we're pushing and right now democrats and republicans are failing in this area and i don't favor one or the other in pushing one ideology over another. it's why we keep coming back to the same question over and over. jillian: both parties have come up with their own police reform bills. it's unclear when or if they could strike a deal. rob: in capitol hill, in hours the white house is expected to unveil its $1 trillion coronavirus still liss plan. jillian: doug luzader will break it all down. >> reporter: 1 trillion versus 3 trillion, that's a huge difference between republicans and democrats on this. let's take a look at a rough outline of what the republican
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plan will be we think when it's introduced later today. first of all, new stimulus payments to many americans, there would be income requirements on that. we would see enhanced unemployment benefits, likely to fall short of the extra $600 that many americans are receiving at this point. there's more funding for schools as well. this will not include something that the president really, really wanted, and that's a payroll tax cut. >> we know we need bipartisan support. we have tax credits that we put in here to incentivize people to get back to work and small businesses of to hire people. we have the direct payments. the direct payments are a quicker way of effectively giving everybody a tax cut it's much quicker than the payroll tax cut. >> reporter: getting republicans on-board with this plan has not been easy. getting democrats to support it will be the bigger challenge, especially as president trump and house speaker nancy pelosi
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have been trading barbs. >> this president, i have a new name for him. mr. make matters worse. he has made matters worse from the start, delay, denial, it's a hoax, it's a miracle and all the rest. >> reporter: the administration meantime has been defending its response to the coronavirus and that includes efforts to really expand testing in the country. >> spent the entire interview talking about how great and perfect everything is. this is the weakest part of the response to this virus is testing. >> i started out by saying that we are never going to be happy with testing until we get turnaround times within 24 hours. >> reporter: we are not there yet. president trump meantime heading to north carolina to tour a biotech facility that is involved in vaccine development and of course vaccine development is happening on a
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number of fronts. rob and jillian. jillian: thank you very much, doug. rob: more than 9300 coronavirus cases confirmed in florida on sunday. look at that ful number. it's closing in on california for the most cases in the nation, florida is. the state has about half of sunday's cases came from the southern parts of the state. on the west coast, california's taking the top spot with over 445,000 cases, new york trailing behind with more than 415,000. jillian: one week after president trump sat down for a very wide ranging interview with fox news sunday host chris wallace, joe biden turned down the show's invite. the biden campaign told wallace he was not available. rob: we expect biden to announce his vp pick may da anyy now. a new report shows kamala harris is the frontrunner. nine minutes after the hour now.
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pro and anti-police protesters clashing across the country. former detective oscar odem says we need to focus more on the common ground between us. he joins us live with that message coming up. jillian: a brave boy is getting a sweet surprise after saving his sister in a dog attack. we're going to tell you about it. ♪ book two separate qualifying stays and earn a free night. the open road is open again. and wherever you're headed, choice hotels is there. book direct at choicehotels.com.
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of credit card debt. they helped me consolidate all of that into one low monthly payment. they make you feel like it's an honor for them to help you out. i went from sleepless nights to getting my money right. so thank you. ♪ jillian: a fox news alert, pro police supporters square off against anti-cop protesters at back the blue rallies across the country. rob: it seems like it's nearly impossible to support police right now and also support peaceful protests at the same time. joining us now with his take is former nypd detective dr. oscar odem. thanks for jupe coming on. seems like there's a huge divide between us right now. what do you have to say about that? >> first, as always, i would like to thank the women and men in blue of the nypd who put their lives on the line every
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day. i think the political leaders need to lead from the front and not the sidelines. maybe we need to keep them on the sidelines and sit down and talk with black lives matter and talk with them directly so we make sure we're on the same page. i'm quite sure we're on the same page that we don't want murders in the community, we don't want our of grandmother's being robbed and pushed and assaulted, taken advantage of. we can look at the data and see murders, robberies, assaults are going up and they should agree also that they don't want these type of crimes taking place in their neighborhoods, as do we, the police officers and definitely myself as a black man, i don't want these type of murders taking place in my community, nor robberies or assaults. we should sit down at the table and look at the data and the data will indicate and dictate that these things are going up and we need to sit down and put a stop to it. because a body is a body, whether it's killed by anybody, it's still a body and it's dead and now the crime that is going up and the murders that are
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taking place are not by police officers, it's by people in the communities on one another. jillian: i hear you talking about some po potential common ground. i'm curious how this happens, then. at least 19 people have been fatally shot during the unrest since george floyd's death and even after his death short time after his family came out against the violence, against the rioting and looting that was going on. of course, everyone was in support of the peaceful protests. that's something different. the question is then how do you stop this number from increasing? >> right. and the tough part about it, you've got to let police be police. you can't hold police officers back and say don't do this. you cannot have police officers arrest people and they beat the police officers out of the booking station and they're back on the streets again because now they may be committing more crimes, more murders, more assaults and different things like that. so that is a big issue and that's also of a big concern that they need to get involved with the entire criminal justice system when this is taking
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place. also, police officers are not punching bags. we never took the job so we could be a abused, so we could be shot. what happens is some of them are lumping us in with the few that are bad and doing certain things. when you look at the data, of 40 of thousand police officers, over 98% going 20 years or more without fire ago weapon of one time, that's a big thing. people need to read and see that. rob: talking about the violence and what we're seeing in the cities across the country, especially in the northwest right now, here's jerry nadler from new york. listen to this statement. >> is this about what's happening in portland right now. >> that's a myth that's being spread only in washington, d.c. >> about antifa in portland? >> yes. rob: i mean, what planet is he on, doctor? >> well, most definitely, like i said, they speak with forked tongues. basically they talk about all these things that are happening
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and at the same time they do not get rid of their security detail. so they should get rid of their security details and do ride-alongs and go on the front lines and lead from the front. demonstrate all of these different theories and aha moments that they're having right from the front and let's see how it works out. apparently right now they have no magic words that could quell it because these are people from their districts that they represent and apparently there's no leadership there and they can't speak to them because if they could, this would stop. but apparently they can't. and obviously they're not reading the data because these crimes are taking place inside these areas. they need to pull out the police reports and looks at the data and say let's do some data evidence, look at it and see what's going on and look at the numbers because they can read. jillian: dr. odem, thank you very much for your time. rob rob: 17 minutes after the hour. a hours drawn casson taking the
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this is xfi complete from xfinity. you'll get the xfi gateway with advanced security, so your connected devices are also protected. and stay out! plus with unlimited data, you can stream and scroll more than ever. and we'll ensure that you get the most wifi coverage throughout your home. this is xfi complete. simple, easy, awesome. get the security, unlimited data and wifi coverage you need. plus, xfi customers can add xfi complete for only $11 a month. call or visit a store today. rob: honoring an american hero, john lewis' body crossing the edmund pettus bridge one last time. jillian: his memorial continues today where lewis will lie in state in the capitol rotunda. rob: alveda king joins us to reflect on his legacy. so good to see you. what did you make of following and watching that body cross
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that bridge one more time? >> good morning. as i have watched the tributes and the time of sa salut ation o congressman lewis, we talk about his 30 plus years in congress, however, five decades of service if you count the time he spent on the selma bridge and during the civil rights movement of the 1960s, all the way until today. it is very fitting that he be honored, he be remembered, and i believe that it's very appropriate, everything that's happened. it's a somber time to a certain extent. however, all of the tributes that we are hearing, many have been celebratory as well. congressman john lewis was a peaceful warrior and we will remember him as such. jillian: i know he's a family friend of yours. i'm curious, what stands out in his life to you? i know there's a lot, but is
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there anything in particular? >> i remember the days of john with his wife, lillian, here in atlanta and knowing that he was in the halls of congress throughout the years and as a family friend -- now, my cousins are younger than i am and many of them call him uncle john. i felt more like a contemporary because i was a civil rights youth organizers in the 1960s and i remember my father talking about that day on selma bridge. my dad was on the bridge as well, and others, and they were beaten as well but not like john was and they marveled, daddy would comment on, you know, john didn't strike back. he followed the rules. because the rules of nonviolent engagement means you don't fight back, you don't retaliate with your body or with physical weapons. you use your voice.
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so my dad would talk about that during his lifetime until my dad was killed in 1969. rob: the memorial continues today. you have john lewis the congressman in the capitol rotunda. we can pull up information, the invitation only ceremony today at 1:30 of tom. the pub. the congressman died at a tough time for race relations in this country. what's your message on that? >> i believe we are experiencing a changing of the guard. in the 20th century, the movement, the civil rights movement was led by god. it was under the guidance of god, a lot of prayer, a lot of nonviolence, the race wars that we're seeing in america at this time needs god more. there needs to be more prayer and much more non-ry nonviolenc. the protests do start out of peacefully but they have not always remained that way in every case and i believe if
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young people today would follow the example of the peaceful order very strong, not weak at all, very strong, and very devoted, we were a little bit different politically of course and philosophically. i'm a gospel of jesus christ, john was fighting with the social gospel, for social justice. he did it peacefully. he was a strong, peaceful person. i believe that people could learn a lot from congressman lewis and i believe it's appropriate as all the tributes are saying, you hear about john, but he always spoke with a quiet voice and a gentle voice. when he was agitated it was a little bit louder but not really. so there's a lot that can be learned from congressman lewis. peaceful, nonviolent warrior. jillian: a quiet voice can certainly be a strong voice.
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thank you for your time. we appreciate it. >> thank you. jillian: and we'll be right back. are you sick and tired of looking and feeling heavy? probioslim promotes healthy digestion and helps you lose weight. patented probiotics ease constipation, gas, and bloating, while powerful egcg burns fat and calories. unleash your potential with probioslim, the #1 probiotic fat burner at walmart.
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♪we're taking everything we wanted♪ ♪we can do it ♪all strength, no sweat jillian: good morning. we are back with a fox news aall right. breaking right now, four police cars are set on fire in philadelphia. an arson investigation is underway right now. this is the third major u.s. city to see overnight violence. in seattle, officers clashing with rioters outside a police precinct, one day after it is damaged by explosives. the seattle police department releasing officer body camera video of the attacks. 59 officers were injured during the protests on saturday, 47 people were arrested. rob: in portland, protests stretched into the 60th straight night. rioters setting off fireworks near the courthouse overnight, police using tear gas to try to
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disburse the crowds. two people are in custody. as the weeks of unrest sow seeds of division in the country, benjamin watson is sharing a message of unity at hope. >> the number one thing is we hear you and understand you. one of the biggest challenges, so many people want to say what should we do, what is the next step. how do we as black, as white, as christian, as nonbelievers, how do we approach it. the first thing we have to do is love each other of. love is a decision that carries out the best for the object of the affection. rob: the protests began after the death of george floyd in minneapolis police custody. jillian: overnight, china seizes control of the u.s. consulate in chengdu after american diplomats are forced to clear the premises. rob: this is an interesting situation happening here. this comes days after the chinese were forced to leave
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their consulate in houston. trey yingst is live in tel aviv as the tension escalates over diplomacy, trade and also hong kong. trey. >> reporter: rob, jillian, good morning. that's right, new overnight, chinese officials took over the u.s. consulate in chengdu after american officials were seen leaving the premises. now, on sunday morning, there were a number of cars seen leaving this building as well as moving vans. police kept back a crowd of people who gathered to watch. the chinese government did order the closure of the consulate last week, after the americans closed the chinese consulate in houston. the americans have accused china of using the texas facility to spy and steal data. a charge that the chinese have denied. china issued a similar statement through their foreign ministry spokesperson, saying some u.s. officials at the consulate in chengdu were operating outside of their capacity. a senior research fellow, dean chang, discussed the significance of the consulate closing this morning on "fox &
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friends first." >> it's the main american diplomatic outpost for all of western china, it's a gateway to both where the chinese are arresting millions of uyghurs, and also to tibet and it's located in the most densely populated chinese province. >> reporter: the diplomatic tension between washington and beijing comes amid ongoing trade disputes coupled with actions by the trump administration related to a controversial chinese security law in hong kong and the chinese covid-19 response. earlier this summer president trump cut special trading ties with hong kong and has criticized china for the coronavirus outbreak handling. last month the u.s. state department imposed visa restrictions on chinese tech firms. while most of the actions we have seen so far have been diplomatic in nature, earlier this month the united states carried out what they're calling
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navy military drills in the south china sea. this provoking new tension between washington and beijing, but the trump administration looking to send a clear message to the chinese that they're prepared should all of these disputes escalate. rob, jillian. jillian: trey yingst live for us. thank you. rob: okay. a major bombshell in the investigation into the fbi's fisa applications. the primary subsource for the steele dossier referred to as russian based in the fisa application renewal revealed to be an american. not a russian. >> the russian subsource who was american based, not russian based, told consider i christop, here's what i've got, it's bar talk, it's rumor, innuendo. christopher steele turn it into a tom clancy t novel. he sold it to the fbi and they sold it to the fisa course.
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rob: we break down what the information means. you've got this guy who was allege todd of have been a -- alleged to have been a very well connected russian. we find he's an american. what do you make of that? what does it mean? >> the most shocking thing to me is first of course that he was american based, he was here in the united states. he wasn't some russian who had all these different russian sources. he was here in the united states who had a social circle of maybe old friends that we have no evidence were intelligence officers. the worst part of this all, all these new revelation toss me is the fbi's conduct. they didn't bother to try to verify the tenets in the steele dossier until president trump won the election and until inauguration day in january when they started to do the interviews. it wasn't until after inauguration day in late january that they interviewed dan chenko
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to find out the steele dossier was a bit of gossip. yet it was used to roil the united states government for years and accuse president trump and his campaign of being russian assets. it's shocking. rob: this was the guy, right, this was the source for the information that steele had, steele makes this entire report based on what this guy told him. and it turns out that he is not this well placed, well knowledged russian asset that steele used to get the information. it boggles the mind, really. will anything change from this? >> you know, rob, that's a great question. i hope bill barr and john durham are going to put out a thorough report. there may be indictments for lying to the fisa court. there may be charges for things like civil rights violations, trying to intimidate the new administration by leaking the threats and the pieces of false information that the president and his team might have been in
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the russian's pocket. i hope we see some accountability. i very much fear, though, that malfeasance is not the same as criminal conduct and we may not see very many indictments and i think that the american public deserves to see people go to jail for creating the chaos that they created in this government for the first at least three years of it. rob: yeah. here's a statement from his lawyer. mr. danchenko stands behind his data and research and leaves it to others with regard to the final report. i assume you feel that's a meaningless statement. >> it is a meaningless statement. he stands by his research, means someone told him those things. it doesn't mean the things that were reported were true. i blame the fbi who are trained and who have first year out of the academy person would have known that these items contained
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in the dos dossier were garbagem the start and they're garbage today. rob: thank you so much. we'll keep following the story. good to see you. >> thanks, rob. you too. jillian: here's something you need to see, a new york giant taking a giant leap out of a pool. check it out. man, he's impressive. this is daquon barkley making it look easy, holding onto weights, part of his strength training which i definitely don't have in my strength training routine. rob: that's crazy. i can't imagine. doing that without the water would be impressive. take a look at this rough rescue, more than a dozen volunteers carrying a 121-pound saint bernard down the highest mountain peak in england. the owner says her pup collapsed and refused to move while
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of hawaii, coming within a razor thin distance of a direct hit. jillian: in texas, tropical depression hanna leaving behind major flooding, cars getting stranded in high water. three people were rescued from a sinking boat in corpus christi. we go to meteorologist janice dean who has her eyes on something else. >> it's busy, absolutely. remember gonzolo. that disintegrated over the carribean. we are watching something behind it. let's take a look at douglas, amazing that this storm just missed the hawaiian islands. we have the potential for heavy rainfall, high winds, flash flooding, across the islands for the next 20 to 24 hours as the storm moves north of haw which which. we also -- hawaii. we also had hurricane hanna, the potential for heavy rain for south texas as well as the southwest, where we have flash flood watches and warnings. this is mainly because of the
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monsoonal flow, the shift in winds that brings the moisture from the gulf of mexico and the pass figure. and this -- pacific. this is the next area of concern, it will be named possibly in the next couple days. it's the i storm, isiaya. it's a tough one. we'll be dealing with this over the next week or so as it comes very close, we think, to the east coast. i like this computer model because it brushes the eac eastd it moves out to see. we'll have to wait and see what happens with this next named storm. the other big story is the heat. hot and humid across portions of the east coast again today and tomorrow. by wednesday, things will start to cool off relatively speaking. all right. rob, jillian, back to you, my friends. jillian: thank you, janice. rob: i saw 99 was the high today in new york city. that's just obscene. jillian: it is july. rob: got to get the ac going. thanks so much.
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a brave little boy gets a sweet shopping spree. the 6-year-old, bridger walker, has been hailed a hero after saving his sister from a dog attack in wyoming. a denver store rewarded him with a shopping spree. a dog bit his face as he tried to save his sister from the attack earlier this month. it's a tremendous story. he had surgery and now he has candy. he also had celebrities weighing in on that and giving him something to be proud of there. jillian: absolutely. it is about 15 minutes until the top of the hour. try to check in with brian kilmeade. >> i can't wait to see you some day in person, maybe at the christmas party. it will be great. health and human resources secretariasecretary alex azar ws an update on the coronavirus. we'll talk about the reagents and the testing.
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when is all this going to slow down? we'll have the latest. we're going to hear from the white house trade advisor, peter navarro, how he got the big editorial in the usa today. with less than 100 days until the election, how is the race shaping up? we're going to hear from ronna mcdaniels. also on deck, senator tom cotton, people are critical of him. he's critical of the 1619 project. dan crenshaw will talk about protests that are ravaging city after city after city. what's behind it. plus, john tapper, how to open up your restaurant safely. charles payne, do we believe the market or the unemployment numbers. dan bongino on the unrest, especially in chicago. lawrence jones after his great special last night. and jack brewer, on many things, including how the nfl plans to get back to work.
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all those people plan to be on this show. my plan is to get them all in and to look this good. guys! guys! safe drivers save 40%!!! safe drivers save 40%! safe drivers save 40%!!! that's safe drivers save 40%. it is, that's safe drivers save 40%. - he's right there. - it's him! safe drivers do save 40%. click or call for a quote today. i discovered my great aunt ruth signed up as a nursing cadet for world war ii. she was only 17. bring your family history to life like never before. get started for free at ancestry.com to life like never before. where you live has never no mattermattered more.e, for over 100 years, realtors® have been providing expert guidance, helping people find new places to dream and thrive.
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the host of e's the soup! camp tonsafun. it's like summer camp, but minus the poison ivy. unless you own poison ivy. in which case, why? just say "summer camp" into your xfinity voice remote to join. jillian: good morning. with less than 100 days until the election the battle for battleground states is underway. polling showing joe biden with leads across the nation as he drops millions on campaign ads. where do the candidates stand in the swing states. here to debate this, thank you for being here. >> good morning. jillian: we'll pull up the numbers one more time. i'm curious what you both think about this. i'm going to start off with you, joseph. what do you think about all the battleground states where joe biden has a significant lead in some areas at this point? >> well, look, i think the
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reality is that what people poll on in the summertime is really what they vote on when it comes to november. what this election is going to be about is not the enthusiasm gap but literally the living and dying of america. who has the opportunity to put americans back to work? who has the plan to make sure that people can put food on their table? this is no longer a game of who is wearing the mask and who is not wearing a mask. it's really going to be a plan of who can make america rise like the phoenix we are in a post covid-19 world. jillian: you guys know, both of you know the importance of florida, especially. joe biden taking the lead there at this point. kevin, i'll go to you with the significance of that. >> yeah, jillian. florida is the whole ballgame, in addition to the former blue wall states of michigan, pennsylvania and wisconsin. i've been encouraged to see the consistency of polling that we're seeing out of florida with the former vice president leading president trump anywhere between 5, 6, 7 points.
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the interesting thing to me also too is the pr precipitous declie of the president with regard to seniors. seniors are a key voting block in his 2016 coalition. they broke with him 7, 8 points nationwide. we've seen recent polling that has him down 10 of points with seniors. we know they show up. to joseph's point it's all about the covid-19 response. seniors are focused obviously on that issue. jillian: texas obviously of importance. joe biden you can see with 45% to president trump with 44%. this is a poll from july 16th through 20th. joseph, i'll go to you on this right now. the president is supposed to hold a campaign fundraiser this week in texas. what do you think he needs to do in order to gain ground there? >> i don't think he needs to gain ground. i think he re-- he needs to remind texans they're texans.
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he needs to remind people of why they voted for him four years ago. i think democrats should be leery of falling into what i call the clinton trap of 2016, spending money in places they have no chance in really winning while the president is creeping up in places like pennsylvania and michigan because that is to me really of more interest than really trying to speculate on when democrats are finally going to be able to turn texas blue. it's not going to happen in this election cycle. jillian: kevin, i'll go to you with what joseph had to say about where joe biden is spending money. >> texas has always been the great hope for the democratic party. i don't know if it's going to be this election cycle or not. that's obviously encouraging polling out of texas. you saw the vice president spending resources there. it's not just in a gamut to win texas for the democratic column. there's a number of key congressional house races, like
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we flipped six seats in california in 2018. democrats are looking to texas to be that boone for us in terms of congressional seats but of course you're seeing spending in places like wisconsin, pennsylvania, michigan, that's the whole ballgame for the vice president. he wins back those three key states, he's the 46th president. also torques you're seeing him -- also too, you're seeing him spend in arizona which has not been in the democrat you can column in a very long time. so i like the map where there's offensive opportunities and the president is playing defense in these key states. jillian: some players will tell you defense wins games. >> sometimes. jillian: sometimes it does. joseph and kevin, thank you very much for joining us. we appreciate it. >> thanks, jillian. >>.>> thank you so much. rob: it's our pleasure to celebrate this special birthday, the party for a 90-year-old chick-fil-a employee, coming up. ♪ i like liberty mutual. they get that no two people are alike and customize your car
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♪ todd: bac rob: back with a live look at capitol hill where they are expected to unveil stimulus package. >> another trillion dollars here we go. kind of a paired down proposal from what the president wants. i will get to that in a second. there will be no payroll tax in it. but they will deal with the unemployment issue. they are going to have 70% wage
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replacement within this package. there is going to be money for schools. there is going to be money for communities involved in it. but they want to get this through quickly. the goal is to help businesses, help individuals. the big story here there likely will be according to treasury secretary steven mnuchin direct payments to individuals. not really sure what that number was going to be. last time it was $1,200. treasury secretary is telling fox news that basically this is the way to get a fast tax cut if you will, fast money into people's hands. as you know with more states kind of closing down the reopening has been slowed down across the country. this actually helps the economy. really helps the u.s. worker. but their goal here they took the payroll tax out because they are worried that the democrats are going to fight them on this. and they want to get this done quickly in the next week to two weeks. jillian: i think one of the things people are going to miss with the baseball seasonal is the food at the stadium, specifically the hot dogs. one team has an answer for this.
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>> yeah. this is the dodgers. this is interesting. this is a partnership between post mates out in los angeles and home team kitchens, they will deliver you your dodger dog. they will deliver you your garlic fries. also, i know this is popular in california micelataos. pizza, tater it as the, nas nacs to give you stadium experience but at your house. because we have empty stadiums with a bunch of pieces -6r7 paper that is supposed to be the fans. this is strange let's be honest. i watched it last week. this is their answer at least for the dodger fans. jillian: i luke it. if the phillies could figure out a way to deliver me crab peas. chick-fil-a celebrates their employees 90th birthday with a drive-thru parade.
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>> i can't work in the morning. [laughter] >> open late. >> never. >> happy birthday. >> thank you. >> thanks, guys. rob: great story. ann turning 90 tomorrow. she has worked at that that chick-fil-a in owe desis a, texas for 8 years. jillian: happy birthday. rob: happy birthday, see you later. ♪ ♪ ♪ steve: that man with his finger right there it means actions. at is "fox & friends" for a monday. already the 27th day of july. and there's a heat advisory for the big bad apple it. could be 101 the heat index through tomorrow night at 8:00. stay indoors. watch cable, folks. ainsley: that's exactly right. because it is going to be so hot that it's okay it's summer.
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