tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News July 30, 2020 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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that desperate tactic has made sure that there is no middle ground, which is why i hear a lot of people saying they are voting a straight republican ticket to save this country. >> sean: and they add 999, it would be the perfect year. >> 2 out of 3 is not bad, sean, okay? >> herman cain, he's in his heavenly mansion prepared for him. laura ingraham, we miss our friend. >> laura: we sure do, sean, that was a gut punched this morning to get that news. we will pick up the remembrance of what we can learn from his life. >> sean: amazing. by the way, god prepared many mansions. he is living there and telling everybody 999, i was right. [laughter] >> laura: thank you so much. thank you so much for that. >> sean: thanks, laura. >> laura: his smile and courage, hannity, thank you so much. i am laura ingraham and this is "the ingraham angle" from washington. we began by marking the passing of two amazing men.
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they are american stories both inspiring and different ways. first congressman john lewis laid t to to rest today in atlaa and he served on the house more than three decades and before that my course he rose to prominence for his role as one of the original freedom writers. and as a lead organizer of the 1963 march on washington. he was badly beaten by police as he marched for racial equality, but lewis nevertheless remained a passionate believer in nonviolent means to effect positive change. and today, of course i sean and i was just talking about, we are very saddened to learn of the death of herman cain to the coronavirus. he was an internal optimist, and he had an effervescent personality. >> that is what they are doing, laura. but that dog ain't going to hunt. we are not talking about the american that you here today on your show, the people that i hear from every day. they are not listening to those.
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they are creating their own narrative that is not in touch with reality. >> laura: john lewis and herman cain probably didn't agree on much, but they shared a dedication to family and to country, and they were never afraid to stand up for what they believe. their accomplishments were a product of hard work, perseverance and be safe and god. classic american success stories. look at what these two men did coming from very different political perspectives and ask yourself, with this have been possible if the country were as racist and rotten as radicals are alleging? of course not. god bless them both. later in the show, we will get special insight from herman's two close friends mike huckabee and darrell scott. so be sure to stick around. but first, a teachable moment. that is the focus of tonight's "angle." a little past 24 hours, we have
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gotten a huge reaction for last night's angle about the horrific murder of 6-year-old bernell trammell in milwaukee, wisconsin. he was gunned down in broad day light one week ago, mr. trammell had been a fixture in the river west neighborhood and a supporter of both blm and lately the reelection of donald j. trump. despite the poet holding a real trump sign was unusual to say the least. some believe his killing was politically motivated. while the police are still investigating, based on demand shown in this photo, and they say he is a prime letter comic murder suspect. as of this evening neither blm nor single democrat elected official in the state of wisconsin has commented on mr. trammell's death. not a peep from milwaukee mayor tom barrett. nothing from wisconsin
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governor tony evert. nothing from attorney general josh call. not any of the democrat congressman, none have expressed their condolences or outrage about the possible political slaying of a peaceful law-abiding african-american m man. the earsplitting silence with a disturbing pattern of democrat disinterest in the larger african-american community as well. since the coronavirus lockdown and racial justice protest began, killings of black men, women and even children have skyrocketed. but not at the hands of bad cops. overwhelmingly these murders have been committed by other african-american men. now, of course, al sharpton and blm activist don't show up to march against this carnage. no call for the removal of mayors and governors who refused to tackle violent crime and do so head on. no celebrities doing instagram live concerts in memory of the
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victim. why is that? because there is no political benefit in it, that is why. now a similar scenario is playing out in the debate over reopening schools is full. teachers union joint at the hip with democrats refused to return to their job. today in washington, d.c., joined a slew of other school districts and announcing there would be zero in person learning for kids. it is all going to be online. pretty much every pediatric that i have seen believes this 100% distance learning approach is a total disaster. it is terrible for all children and all parents, but especially for at risk kids from single-parent families. >> we know that children from low income families in particular who are being homeschooled, they are not getting an adequate education because their parents are working. >> particularly the younger group k through eighth just does not work.
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>> the lower income families, the children to not have access to the internet. they don't have support for remote learning. >> laura: that how can democrats endorse keeping kids at home full-time when the virus poses a minuscule threat to young americans? after all, day care centers and essential workers never shut down and grocery store employees, they show up every day to work as do bus drivers and nurses. so why do educators get a special stay-at-home pass? especially while they claim to care so much about the welfare of the children. >> the administration are messing with the health of our children. >> moms and dads are worried. i'm worried that the grandparent whether our grandkids will be able to go back to school safely. >> you know, as i said before, these are not somebody else's kids. they are all our kids. >> laura: no of course shutting down is the only answer for the coronavirus. from california to michigan, you
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see a pre-election momentum beginning to build to either pause or reverse reopening. today, maryland's liberal republican governor larry hogan cited cases in other states to justify his own states reopening. >> we will remained paused at this point and not move into stage 3 openings until it is safe, prudent and thoroughly backed by the data. look at these other states. they have been doing pretty well and shut up and we don't want to be one of them. >> laura: it is unbelievable montgomery county, maryland the numbers are actually really encouraging. of course, these decisions are driven not by what is good for the general welfare but by politics. lockdowns plus trillions in welfare spending and taupe apparently to zero virus in america. that is realistic. remember the justification for stay-at-home orders was the need to preserve the hospital system.
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i can kind of understand that. but now they are using these lockdowns were pauses to reserve biden's chances to beat trump. it is truly disgusting. and whom do these lockdowns and school closures end up hurting the most? well rick's rich families hire tutors and take up new hobbies at home. it is the poor families that will struggle to hold down jobs and oversee kids zoom classes and all the homework. the divide between the haves and the have-nots will only widen. but one gets the sense the virus fearmongering is beginning to wear thin. more family see the need to move on to preserve what we have while still protecting the most vulnerable. even "the new york times" seems to think the unions have maybe overstepped and risk alienating millions of voters reporting that teachers in many districts are fighting for longer school closures must stronger safety requirements, and limits on what
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they are required to do when virtual classrooms. while flooding social media and state capitals with their concerns and threatening to walk off of their jobs if they are key demands are not met. demands? now, they can sit at home and their t-shirt and shorts and get the same pay and they are issuing demands? the miami teachers union is pushing to limit online learning, limit online learning. yeah, why? according to the times, they cited anxiety about how they and their homes would look on camera during wide teaching. so they won't go to the classroom, and they don't want to teach online. that's perfect. with the local union leader say if the teacher does not feel comfortable and the teacher is not comfortable in the modality, they will not flourish and give the best of themselves. modality? what about the comfort of students? will they be able to flourish cooped up in their home sharing a computer screen with a brother
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or sister or if they even have one and do this for end? the left doesn't care! if it was really about safety, why are teachers union fighting reopening plans, even in states where the virus is under contr control. and why, for example, one of the lowest covid rates in the country, teachers are resisting fully reopening, including on the small island of lanai, which has zero, zero confirmed cases. now, thankfully president trump wants the kids back in school. he has a solution for unions and school districts that do not put kids first. >> if the school doesn't want to reopen or the governor doesn't want to open may be for political reasons i may be but there is some of that going on. the money should go to the parents so that they can send their children to the school of their choice. >> laura: bingo! school choice. go to a school that is actually
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teaching. the nea and a ft are powerful forces, but if they only remain so, i think if americans continue to believe that public education is still worthwhile, by refusing to teach, by politicizing curricula, by jeopardizing the children's mental and physical well-being, they are showing us how nonessential they are becoming. and that is "the angle." joining me now david henderson, senior fellow at the hoover institution. david, it could unions actually be putting themselves out of business permanently with these charades? >> i think so. and the reason is, what will happen i think is a lot of parents potentially millions of parents will figure out whether they do learning pods or piercings to get kids together, i think they will figure out how mediocre the public school system is on average. >> laura: when you see the
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teachers through the union reps are now trying to dictate the terms of even their online teaching, i thought that was literally something from the total joke. they will not go to class because they are worried about the virus, okay, even if you with gnomic disagree with that, okay. but now they don't want to teach online either so what is the point of having these public schools in the circumstances and look i come from a family of teachers and i really appreciate great teachers. i had fabulous teachers in connecticut, love my teachers. but this now is just pulling the curtain back on all of this. >> yes, it is. and a piece in "the wall street journal" saying there could be a renaissance with child education because when this sense, whenever it ends where when it will seem to end, a lot of parents i think will not want to go back to mediocre schools. prepandemic mediocre schools.
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they might want to continue homeschooling, pulling deity 48f parents inclined to home school and i think that is overstated but even if a third of them do, the number of home school kids would look almost quadruple. and then there are also charter schools. thousands of dollars cheaper per student per year. and so i think a lot of parents would start pushing for those. people who have kind of been passive about this might start pushing to have charter schools. spewing catholic schools as well. a lot of them are looking at this in person teaching and understanding the importance of parent involvement, teacher to student interaction is so essential to go that route. listen to what biden said when he was addressing the national education association earlier this month. >> the bottom line here come up when we win this election, we will get the support you need
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and the respect you deserve. you just don't have a partner in the white house. oh, wow! [laughter] the one that is a shocking admission in any election, but particularly now that the unions are striking really against the kids. they are striking against kids at this point. >> yes. and so, of course, the problem is, the standard problem with unions, it is very hard to fire someone who doesn't perform. you put union and government together, and you've got those two problems multiplying each other. and that is very hard. that is why charter school, that is one reason charter schools are very good. it is very easy to get rid of nonperforming students. and attract teachers who really want to teach. >> laura: if you are an essential employee, which they are an essential employees, once they have a severe comorbidity,
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extremely vulnerable and i don't understand how they get away with any of this. but this is the governors and the mayors and larry hogan and maryland and ralph northam in virginia, both of them are complete outrages. i'm getting parents calling me morning, noon and night and also d.c. come of course. this is where parents of all backgrounds, races, and ethnicity have to work together to say no, we don't accept this or go with different direction altogether. david, your piece with fantastic and i will make sure to tweet it out. thank you so much. reopening schools isn't just about education but about preventing other public health crises. when the director robert redfield said is beginning to rear its ugly head among high schoolers. there is another cost in high schools. we are seeing sadly far greater suicides than deaths from covid. we are seeing far greater deaths from drug overdose. that are above access then we
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are from deaths from covid. this is why coming back for the overall social being of the individuals. >> laura: joining me now is phil curbing the committee to unleash prosperity, fill. you feel that pain in your heart when you hear those comments. anyone, and we've all in some way have been touched by these horrific stories of suicide. and people don't like to talk about it. it's uncomfortable. but we have to talk about it in relation to the school closures because it is a real problem of isolation and desperation. that is a shocking admission from redfield. >> it is pretty incredible because a lot of us predicted this might happen and unfortunately, it appears it has happened. of course, suicide self-harm is the number two cause of death in teenagers after accidents. killed thousands a year but
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compared to a virus that killed ten, even a increase in the percentage will be a much bigger number. we thought that might happen and now it has happened. and laura, this is a big deal and the cdc is not touting it from the platform, not going to the white house podium or a show like yours and saying it. he said this on a tiny webcast from a dark office with a shadow have his face, and nobody even noticed this for a week or two. this was a throwaway thing. this was a big deal and it is really devastating that we are doing this to children in this country over a virus by and large doesn't threaten them. in the same interview one in a million risk as far as would kill a child, the flu is five to 10% more dangerous. same interview. he's not saying were screaming from the stomach screaming from the rafters, or from the podium of the white house, but he is saying on the web interview, very strange. >> laura: phil, thank you for
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saying that because if we are going to do these coronavirus briefings every day, fine. and we get some information, but you got to look at the whole patient. if america is the patient, you can't just look at what the virus does. you have to look at the job loss, the livelihoods destroyed, alcoholism, desperation, depression, suicide. i think dr. fauci and all these people have to answer those questions. because they are not looking at the whole patient. they are looking at one aspect, a very narrow aspect that is important but a new study out of germany found exposure to children may make adults less likely to control covid-19. now the study reads that certain infections might provide personal immunity against covid-19. covid-19. thereby potentially could reduce the need for icu therapy in adults. the study has not been peer reviewed yet so we want to be cautious, but it certainly sounds interesting at the very
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least. and just as plausible as these other things we are hearing. >> wouldn't that be an unbelievable irony after all these strikes, demands and the step from the teachers if it turns out that being around children's is actually protective and the child colds and illnesses they have our challenges to the immune system of adults to protect them from future covid infection. we have seen several other studies suggesting that may be the case. that would be kind of the ultimate irony if school closures endangered not just children through what dr. redfield was talking about, but may be endangered, school closures endanger teachers as well by denying them access to children that tends to be protected. >> laura: phil, we are not going to let this issue go, no way. thank you so much. while the schools and the media use death for political points, we pay tribute to herman cain's amazing life and legacy with his closest friends. mike huckabee and pastor darrell scott also here. they join us in moments. you don't want to miss this
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dreams unfulfilled. but it is a calamity to have no dreams. >> laura: herman cain's life story is that of the american to impurity a true rags-to-riches story. while his mother cared for his family, his father took on three jobs to support his family and provide a solid foundation for his son to excel. and herman did just that. he took the world by storm and got a degree in mathematics before going to work as a ballistic analyst to the u.s. navy. after that, cain took on the business world and after climbing the ladder at hills berry, he took the reins as ceog godfather's pizza chain. he quickly turned it around as one of the most successful chains in the entire country. and just when you thought he had peaked, he broke new ground. a staunch conservative and supporter of american businesses
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and american workers, kane rode the tea party wave and became the first african-american to leave in a national poll in the american primary. though he ultimately lost the 2012 primary, the kane train was not out of steam. he went on to expire and relic and serve those with fiery talk on radio and tv, including the contributor on this network. he campaigned for president trump in 2016 and help them reach the white house. he lost his fight to covid-19. working to do just that again in 2020. help trump win. his life was nothing short of extraordinary, and we will all miss him dearly. here now to discuss his life and legacy are two friends, mike huckabee 2016 g.o.p. presidential candidate, fox news contributor and pastor darrell scott, cofounder of the national coalition for trump. governor, why was herman cain such a powerful voice in today's
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political conversation? >> laura, one of the reasons, he was the quintessential christian gentleman. he had such a positive outlook on life. he cared about people. that was a genuine passion that he had about everything he did. but there was something else about herman. he had a great sense of humor. he treated everyone with great respect and dignity, but he never, ever whined or complained about where he had been. he was just so grateful for all that god had given him the opportunity to do. his spirit was contagious. you get around herman, and you just felt like life was going to be okay. and i tell you, we lost a giant of a person who was a great entrepreneur, a great christian gentleman, a great business leader, a great political leader, a great humerus and let me say come i will put on my twitter account from a great singer. he actually had a terrific voice. i played bass guitar at the iowa
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straw poll in 2011 when herman was singing. i have no idea if the guy had it in him. he was just an all-around great human being. we are really going to miss him. >> laura: and little-known fact, herman cain was i think one of the first to campaign for donald trump. here he is back in 2016. ♪ >> we are on track, you know that and the only way we will get back on the right track is that we have got to have the right leader in the white house. >> laura: pastor darrell scott, you shared this picture of you with herman cain back in another 2015 rally in georgia. tell us about that day. why was it so significant? >> president trump then counted down and invited myself and african-americans from about 50
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of us actually went to the very first rally in georgia. it was there i met herman cain for the first time. i was very pleasantly surprised to see him there. a lot of people don't open they make these different type of allegations against president trump he has two black guys myself and herman cain to open up his very first rally october 2015. i found him to be a great, great guy and great american, great conservative, great christian, and a great trump supporter. he encouraged the media and he said, man, don't let the crowd, public opinion, don't let anybody tried to bully you are pressure you or intimidate you into not standing firm on your convictions and following the dictations of your conscious. you stay in there. if you need me for anything don't hesitate to call. you have not because you ask not. he was a great, great, great, great guy. when governor huckabee was talking it brought a smile to my face. it caused me to remember to reflect on the type of person
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that herman cain was. he was a great, great guy. and history has been a kind of guy to him and his accomplishments. the political realm, with the business realm and the spiritual realm that cannot be overstated. >> laura: his spirit reminds me a little bit of justice thomases. he was just always last thing, fun and always made you feel good about where you were and what you were doing. even when the going was getting tougher donald trump in october 2016. i was at an event in california in bakersfield, and he basically said come with these other republicans are falling to the wayside and predicting doom and gloom, keep going, laura this wa fantastic journey that we are on right now. and he just always made people feel better about the moment. governor, there has been ugliness in the wake of his death. tonight on cnn, chris cuomo had one of the more disgusting takes. >> i wish that this president had no peace until he thinks
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about what he is exposing people to. he didn't even mention that mr. cain was at his rally among the massive masses. maybe he didn't get it there. sure as didn't help. the one implying evidence of cause of death without any evidence. governor. >> this is just painful to watch. if chris cuomo wants to dress someone down about covid, why didn't he talk to his brother who is stupid decision about nursing homes killed thousands of people, including the parents in law one of my dear friends you and i both love janice dean? this is outrageous for him to come out here and speculate. herman cain deserves better. he deserves to be remembered only as that vivacious guy. i first met him in 2007. we were the advocates of the fair tax here at later when ran for president in 2012 and pushed
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out the 999, he said it was such, just gracious spirit. i will tell you come in all the time i've known herman, this is the first time, laura he's ever made me sad. >> laura: i agree with you. waiters put out a tweet -- i sht be surprised about, pastor scotn exponential candidate who refused to wear a mask dies after covid-19 diagnosis. so this is a man who accomplish so much in his life, and what they use as a positive praise if they still know what that means that waiters is that he didn't wear a mask. that is what his life amount -- amounts to at reuters. it is disgusting. disgusting is a kind word for it. people on the left, these media outlets and these, idiotic chris cuomo. in some of the most vital
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human beings. i don't even want to equate them to him. some of the file characters, the file characters i've ever encountered in my life to say something like that of someone who was so great of a legacy as herman cain purity was a great, great american, great christian and the reason they hate him is because he was also a great trump supporter. they need to be ashamed of themselves. but herman cain was who he was, done what he has done and left a tremendous legacy. he left some pictures for us to walk into too. >> laura: you better and we will do it too. i can't think of to better people to have on tonight any moment we take you like to portland where sharing video he captured on the ground last night plus a new batch of polls show a much closer race then it was even a few weeks ago. so we are seeing portland, may be of the school closures contributing to this.
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♪ >> get the [bleep] off my street! i paid for this leap! my taxes paid for your little black -- and your uniform and your [bleep] boots! >> laura: rioters still swarming the streets of portland on a nightly basis. some federal agents poised to be replaced by oregon state police. joining me live from portland is the journalist to film that video. you saw julio rosa sr. writer for townhall.com. julio, judging by the video, things not coming down there, i assume. >> no, not at all. in fact, the federal authorities last night were actually more aggressive in the first night i got here which was tuesday night. they give about five to six warnings to make sure that people were not trying to preach
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or throwing fireworks on tuesday. but last night, they only gave two warnings before they came out to again push people away from the fence. people using hacksaw's and they have given up since the federal agencies have really made sure to keep them in place. now, they are just trying to destroy it at different points. it is definitely, definitely not dying down. and we will see what tonight brings. >> laura: julio, one thing you noticed about the crowds is their size, pretty big. explain to the people who are watching at home just how massive the so-called protests, which really looks more like riots can get? >> it is pretty big. up until today, actually, they had a big encampment at the park right across the street from the hatfield federal courthouse. so they have tents there, tables, supplies for them to
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use, and they also have flyers come up bonfire is going on. so we got pretty big. about 500 people. and usually kind of dies down or fewer people there after the initial response from the federal agents at the courthouse. many still stay because a lot of them are more than happy to engage and fight for employees. and you see the videos that i have taken, they really, the cops have only responded whenever there is an object or projectile thrown at them. and that kind of gets a little frustrating because we are kind of vent across fires', the media. >> laura: julio thank you so much. new polling in battleground states shows the presidential race tightened considerably over the last two weeks. the latest cnb change research poll by dense eight-point lead and trump has shrunk to two points. arizona, the lead went from six points to two points and florida seven points down to three
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points. joining me tom bevan cofounder and president of real clear politics, and campaign pollster, tom. race is is a little tighter than the media wants the folks to believe, yes? >> i think it is particularly in the battleground states as you mention and the research the national number barely moved and trump gained one point nationally but the movement is happening in the six key battleground states. we have seen that from a couple of other polls as well so it is tighter than i think it is being portrayed certainly at the national level. >> laura: that cnbc poll found that americans and the battleground state, trump more than fight in on key issues. a four-point lead when it comes to getting people back to work, jobs, keeping them in the u.s. trump leads by six points. john, is this because americans
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are realizing that biden's answer to the virus like a lot of the democrats are clearly trending towards this is just a full lockdown, national lockdown if elected or are more people understand that this is where this is headed? >> that is true, that is true but also these polls, the polls you are referring to are likely voter polls and not disputed polls that a number of republicans 24, 25%. so you have a poll where you've got close to the polls 32% republican, and what you also have is the president has been focused and he's had a really good couple of weeks focused on stopping the spread of the coronavirus. trying to focus on reopening the communities in keeping people safe. that is a winning contest for the president. >> laura: and a nonhorse race polling situation, a new cato institute poll .62% of americans are afraid to share their
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political views. and that includes 77% of republicans, tom, could this be part of what is going on in this polling? are people going to tell total strangers that they support donald trump and the environment that is as toxic as it is right now? >> well, that is the question, or at least one of the questions. i spoke with robert from the group a couple of weeks ago and he had a poll in michigan with a much closer than any of the other polls. i talked to him and he said he is seeing more of that social desirability bias. the official term for it, more this year than he saw four years ago in 2016. he is also finding some trump supporter's hidden on the side of the votes so they are not willing to say they will vote for trump. they are undecided as of yet. so that is something to keep an eye on. again, particularly in the swing states where it will matter, if those races are close, we could see a repeat of 2016 in terms of
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trump now in the polls 1-2-3-4 points. who knows. >> laura: john, barack obama is clearly in this to try to win this for his old vice president. and he came out today, spoke at john lewis' funeral and what many are describing as a purely political speech after the regular tribute to congressman lewis. and part of what he said was this. >> [applause] [inaudible] >> laura: a jim crow relic, the filibuster. is the trump campaign worried that they will be running against barack obama that is
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still widely popular? >> absolutely not. it is a shame he politicized a funeral, but on the other hand he doesn't mention the filibuster, those were democratic laws. that is what the democrat party did for the country with their legacy. donald trump and also republicans are on doing that. so that was a real shame that he did that. the other part is the trump voters are coming and these polls will find out. no matter the black media today, they were sagging, they were saying that basically they should do the poles based on census and dilute the number of republicans and have registered voters. we need likely voter polls because the last two elections the republicans 32% exit polls in 2016 and ended bad year 2018. most of the poles are not counting us. >> laura: great to see both of you, thank you so much. our latino voters turning on biden? it might explain why in which democratic senator said that
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this. latinos can be racist too. my community shows how. where the author complained she regularly sees cubans for trump signs. joining me now is steve,, trump campaign senior advisor, immigration attorney, steve. the article's thesis seems to be somewhat reminiscence of you ain't black from fight and but for latinos. your take. >> exactly, you know, laura it is interesting. left claim to be tolerant and champions of minorities, but the reality is they don't think very much of us including this author miss alvarez who wrote in "the washington post," she presupposed because of skin pigmentation or ethnicity that they have to think a certain way. that, by the way is the very definition of prejudiced. i will give you a similar example during the john lewis funeral which i know you have been talking about during the show. there was a talk that requiring voter ids is a form of
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minority voter suppression. now, talk about the bigotry of low expectation. the idea and joe biden, by the way, has echoed this ridiculous canard but the idea hispanic-americans and black americans are not able, not competent enough to furnish an i.d., that is the height of condescension. the left thinks very little of minorities. they think they are entitled to the votes of the hispanic-americans. they are not. president trump quite rightly has worked very hard to earn the support of the hispanics and polls are showing results. >> laura: let's get francisco in on this. you agree essentially without op-ed. so does that mean you can't be an authentic latino and support trump? >> look, guys, racism is not exclusive to a race. we are race, prejudice and all bias. okay? the democratic party has been
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taken the hispanic vote for granted and the republicans have written it off because they think they can't get it. it is up for grabs, but the thing about this is, you know, if we look at racism, the article focused on cubans. cubans are a different deal. they don't want to be hispanic. i love cuba and i go to cuba all the time. hispanic racism second, third generation against indigenous mexicans. blacks don't like browns, browns don't like mexicans and all you have to do is look at dallas city politics. we have to get past it and overcome it. if donald trump wants a vote he has to earn it. >> laura: this is an incredibly important topic and i apologize so short. we will have you both back. this is an extensive conversation. and we both will be back. up next, "the last bite." stay there.
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>> we hold china as a potential trading partner, as a country that has pulled millions -- tens of millions of people out of poverty in a short period of time. and as a respectable nation among other nations. and i deeply believe that. >> laura: forget those reeducation camps, the organ harvesting, forced abortions, no religious freedom, no freedom of speech, they are really evolving. unbelievable. the shannon bream and the "fox news @ night" team take it all from here. shannon? >> shannon: all right, laura, thank you so much. just hours ahead of the deadline to cobble together another round of federal unemployment payments, the president lays out his list of demands, calling for bipartisan compromise. millions to help with the new reality of covid-19. trying to bring kids in the fall,
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