tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News October 25, 2020 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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started yelling at supporters. admitted to committing voter fraud accidentally. kamala harris doesn't know what city she is in and the president did t t t t t ♪ will: we are down to single digits. nine days until the election. good morning to "fox & friends." will cain, jedediah bila, pete hegseth. we said 54 million people had already voted in this country. make it 54 million and one. president trump voted right after "fox & friends." reports are that he voted for a man named trump.
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pete: port reports. jedediah: that is shocking. the enthuse as. , i went into manhattan for an appointment, the lines for voting were wrapped around the block. the enthusiasm. a lot of people will show up in the next nine days. on both sides of the aisle the enthusiasm was pretty high. i never seen in all my years of voting what i saw yesterday. it was a moment. will: small correction, 56 million and one. couple million votes overnight. banked in. i asked you guys since new york has early voting whether you would vote tomorrow. have you voted yet? pete: have you voted? will: not yet. jedediah: not yet. pete: we'll keep a tracker on will, jed, and their voting status. i have no doubt with nine days to go they will make it. good morning. i said it before. it is worth one of those
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appreciating, one of those cable news days where you turn on the tv, donald trump was in a different state every time you looked up. the back trop looked more or less the same. did you look at one in ohio. right there the two nuns franking him. i said he has the maga nuns. there they are. that is the one in ohio, i guess. that is the one of in the middle of the day. joe biden left his basement previously to do pennsylvania a few miles from his house a quick little drive. the president crisscrossed the country. president went to ohio, michigan ohio. here is portion what he said. president trump: great to be in lumberton. we'll win the state of north carolina. we'll win four more years in the white house. i fight for the middle class. biden and his cronies, serve one class, the donor class. hello circleville, it is great
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to be back in ohio to celebrate the return of big 10 football. sleepy joe said, president trump didn't want to have football. i said what the hell is he talking about? hello, wisconsin. the people of wisconsin must stop these anti-american radicals by giving joe biden a thundering defeat. if we win wisconsin, wins, if we win, america wins. pete: kamala harris was caught on a hot mic moment, are we in cleveland? hello, cleveland. not like they're making a lot of stops. watching campaigns, barack obama and joe biden, the hat and humans versus honking horns. magas versus the mazdas and people versus the priuses. huge rallies, people swarming we want to be open for the economy versus the sort of very
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different approach biden is taking. will: we have a lot of that coming up later in the show including how joe biden spreonded to some of that honking. here is what you expect for the coming days. president trump seven events in three days including a busy tuesday he will be in michigan, wisconsin, and nebraska. meanwhile as pete mentioned joe biden is taking the day off today. he is at home in delaware. he will deliver virtual remarks as i will vote virtual conference that will feature bon jovi and cher. on tuesday he gets out, going to warm springs georgia, atlanta, georgia. says two things in my mind. jedediah, we can read two things. seems to indicate some confidence on joe biden's part. if you're ready to run the clock out, you run the clock out leading on the scoreboard. it would indicate they feel somewhat confident. pete as you pointed out, going to georgia is a state democrats
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normally won. is this a state he believes he can actually win. president trump is the one hitting the road, jedediah, joe biden is not, i guess that is confidence? jedediah: yeah. i think he is very confident. i think they're looking at polls, whether or not the polls will be accurate. we all saw in 2016 who didn't go well. who knows, maybe this time it will. there is one risk of being out front and center so much. maybe the biden campaign is factoring that in, i don't know. the challenge is, really a challenge, this hate in the game, often times you have to make a decision, do you want to rally the base or do you want to sway those undecideds. the technique you use, the language you use, the rhetoric, the topics you talk about are very different from each other. meaning what you would say in a rally and what you would say in a debate format might be very different. so the risk for the trump campaign potentially, am i going to marginalize the undecideds by some content in the rallies?
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you can very easily see that by the contrast in husband approach in the last debate which i think was set up in a way he could very much situation undecideds his way. in a rally like yesterday, some of the language with respect to covid-19 might marginalize the undecideds. that may be a decision the biden camp says less we say the better, easier, less likely to marginalize, sit back, let trump do the talking. hope for the best. as of this point they are leading in the polls. who knows. that strategy might completely backfire. the next nine days will show it. pete: the bum rush versus the basement. nothing but a zoom call with celebrities is what joe biden has. if the attempt to sway undecided voters, that is such a small fraction, right now. ultimately you need to motivate your people, bernie sanders is not ruling out a 2024 primary
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challenge. he has his own 100 day plan as a socialist at the beginning of a biden administration. this is not in the bag for him at all. will: i want to say about the confidence concept as well. there is difference between confidence and irrational confidence. like a shooter in the corner, waving my hand i'm open, i'm open, the problem in 2016 the same shoot are missed that shot. although clinton to biden, that confidence can be irrational or earned. we'll see which way to go. pete: you can't always know you're passing to steve kerr or not. make you are, maybe you are not. maybe he will hit the shot. good point. the crazy part about this moment comes alongside of a senate confirmation of supreme court justice amy coney barrett. at the beginning of the process there was uncertainty, republican senators were coming out saying, the especially like alaska senator lisa murkowski. maybe this is too soon. maybe we shouldn't hold the
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vote. lisa from alaska, decided even though she didn't like the process from the beginning, she will be voting for amy coney barrett. here is what she said. >> i believe the only way to put us back on the path to appropriate consideration of judicial nominees, is to evaluate judge barrett as we who would want to be judged on the merits of her qualifications. we do that when that final question comes before us. and when it does, i will be a yes. jedediah: yeah. she will be confirmed and she is a fantastic choice. anyone who watched that hearing and didn't walk away with immense respect not only for her accomplishments but her ability to artic late her positions, not let her own opinions get in the way, really do the job we should want any supreme court justice to do, look at the law and not let her own perspective on things come into play in any
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way. that is truly the person that she is. we have had pleasure people who have known her for years who attested to her character this is span fantastic choice who should be confirmed. senator chuck schumer wasted no time, giving his commentary on mitch mcconnell in particular. listen to what he had to say. >> i just heard the republican leader say there is no inconsistency between what republicans are doing now with amy coney barrett's nomination and what they did with merrick garland and 2016. who would believe that? the contradiction is glaring. the contradiction will be a stain on the leader's forehead and on the entire republican caucus if it continues. will: generally familiar with a stain on your record. a stain on your forehead is a new one to me. it is a evocative. i will say this, the great question is how many people will
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vote for president trump in 2020 i believe who didn't vote for president trump in 2016. pete you mentioned undecided voters left in the process. we'll be speaking to several undecided voters on "fox & friends." that will be a fascinating conversation. for many tentative or shy conservatives in 2016, the reason to vote for president trump was this, was conservative justices on the supreme court. senator lindsey graham saying if that was your litmus test, it has been an absolute success. listen. >> she will not impose the law of amy on the rest of us. she will apply the law to the facts. we have the votes. i think she will be on the court early next week. this is one of the most significant accomplishments for president trump, a constitutional conservative on the court. this makes three. this is why we're in this business. this is why we work so hard. this is why we put up with all the bs for moments ike this. this is a very big deal, america.
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thank you, president trump. pete: i love admitting when i'm wonderfully wrong, when rbg passed this will make kavanaugh look like touch football. it didn't. ultimately she was bulletproof, jed. as you talked about. the republicans handled the process very, very well. it could have been something far nastier and worse. she will be a justice come monday night. will: the process went smoothly t was fairly cordial. and three supreme court justices in one term for president trump, which for many voters was -- jedediah: big deal. will: a really big deal. turning now to your headlines. five top aides for vice president pence testify positive for covid-19. among them chief of staff marc short and political advisor marti oaks. both are in quarantine. "new york times" reported three other vp staffers tested positive. vice president pence and the second lady tested negative for
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the virus yesterday. country music world, the texas country music world is morning the loss of legendary singer, songwriter, jerry jeff walker. ♪ every chance in a honky-tonk honky-tonk, ♪ will: wanting to introduce pete and jedediah to music like this. every texan can sing the words by heart. jerry jeff walker passed away after a battle with throat cancer. he is known writing the song, mr. bojangles. ride high, wild one. and the paramount theater in austin, texas, posting a picture of its marquee, farewell to our tried and true friend, jerry jeff walker. he was 78 years old. tampa bay rays winning game four of the world series on a wild final play.
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>> that is in to centerfield. here comes kiermire. a rozanea coming around. he stumbles. the ball gets away. will: l.a. dodgers giving the rays a walk-off victory on an error on the throw home. tampa bay winning, tying the world series 2-2. only on fox. those are the morning headlines. will: i had not seen that yet. first had him in a run-down. instead he bobbled it and scored good for the rays. >> baseball games are very, very long. the scores are very tiny. like i could be sitting there, have it on in the background five hours, it is 1-0. how is that a thing? will: very exciting. jedediah: coming up one of the few pollsters who predicted the trump's in 2016, is bet he will
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♪. president trump: we had polls come out, very strong polls, trafalgar he called it very accurately last time. that we're two up points in the michigan in the trafalgar poll which is a very accurate poll. pete: president trump touting polls of our first guest this morning. one of the only pollsters who accurately predicted 2016 election. he says the president is on the way to win re-election on the shy voters. robert, thank you so much for being here. what are you doing, what did you do in 2016 and what are you doing this year to other
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pollsters are not doing that make your polls accurate? >> well, we are employing methods, what is called the shy trump effect or the social desirability and that's peoples unwillingness to express an opinion if they think we'll make them look at, in some light to the person asking the question that is not favorable and, it is in way we do it with insuring a little more an themty. we use a mix of all kinds of digital platforms as well quick questions. -- people participate are some of the keys in doing that. will: pete: shorter poll questions, so people don't hang on the line, larger sample sizes. the mainstream pollsters dismiss what you do, they get it wrong. do they know that they're missing these voters that you're talking about.
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>> i don't know the answer to that. it seems rather strange to me they haven't learned any lessons. they say they corrected things. that is nonsense about adjusting their sample for education weighting, yet when we have -- again in place in florida, gilliam-desantis race, last year, 2018, they were all wrong again. we were the only ones right too. pete: the governor's race in florida. take one place in michigan. it has trafalgar race in michigan, president up 1%. "real clear politics" the famous aggregator, has the president down eight points. that is a nine-point gap. you have a strong senate candidate there in john james. when you look at a race like that in particular, are you confident that the president's ahead there right now? >> you know i really am. i look at three factors. one, there is a lot of folks who are absolutely enthralled with
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john james as a candidate. he is also kind of, coming in as outsider which makes his message mesh very well -- giving some strength to the ticket. also, we can't, there is no one that trump can be more appreciative of than gretchen whitmer because she is single-handedly created environment where people in michigan -- back to business and that is also an advantage for the president there. pete: yeah. a lot of key contrasts there in michigan. listen, i for one hope your polling is correct. i think people should be paying a lot of attention to it as poe es toddies missing it. robert, thank you so much for being here. pay attention to the polls. trafalgar group, if you want a real sense where the race is right now. still ahead the senate is expected to vote tomorrow to confirm judge amy coney barrett to the supreme court. our next guest says she could be a beacon for a new kind of
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♪. jedediah: the senate is expected to vote on judge amy coney barrett's supreme court confirmation tomorrow. while democrats have warned she will be a threat to women's rights our next guest argues that, quote, barrett is a beacon for a new kind of feminism in america. here with more the executive director of heritage action for america, jessica anderson.
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that is your op-ed we referenced. welcome to the show, good morning to you. what did you mean by that, a new kind of feminism? >> good morning. thank you so much for having me. so judge barrett's potential ascension to the supreme court i think represents this new wave of feminist role models for women everywhere. for decades feminists have told us you have to choose between having a job and a career or having a family or, you have to put off having a family. get your abortion, wait 15 years, whatever that might be. and then you pursue your career. judge barrett represents you can do both, have a loving family, a professional career, has the potential to have the highest judicial route you can take on the supreme court so it is very exciting to see her move through this process. jedediah: yeah. you know i have immense respect for her ability to juggle all those responsibilities. i have one 11-month-old and a
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job. it's a challenge. more power to her yes. >> as a mother, i'm a mother of three young children. jedediah: yeah. exactly. i know. i feel like everyone at home, i was speaking to a lot of friends of mind who are parents, how does she do it? how does she do it? that is testament to her absolutely. one thing i think with this particular nomination and likely confirmation is that this is a win to me for americans because this seems to be a woman who isn't trying to be a policymaker. she knows she is not a politician. she really wants to sit there, interpret the law, stick to that. that is what a supreme court justice is supposed to do. seems like someone who really understands the role she wants to play and plays it. >> that is exactly with her testimony the last week 1/2. she was pressed to take a policy position on a forthcoming case. no, look, i'm going to be known
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as someone who will be a textualist and originalist. interpreting the law. i don't have a policy agenda. i didn't wake up this morning to pursue something. that is the job of congress, not the job of the courts. that is the reason she becomes such a great role model not just for women but americans across the country, to see the original intent of the court return to that. really return to its fundamental role as one of the three branches of government. jedediah: jessica, were you surprised by the civility in the hearing? there was a lot of talk about, oh, this could be a repeat of kavanaugh. i was really impressed by people on both sides of the aisle questioning her. there seemed to be decency in the room but a lot of tough questions but it was not a repeat of kavanaugh. did that surprise you? >> i am glad it was not a repeat of kavanaugh. they didn't go on the smear campaign. you saw liberal media, blue
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checkmarks in twitter instigating her, her faith and family, how can she have that many children to keep up with her duty. mainly the democrats in the senate judiciary to use a time to advance a policy agenda, get 30 second of youtube clip for their own campaigns that was really more how they used the time as opposed to going down a smear tactic that they did with kavanaugh. in that way was i relieved. i was encouraged how strong and steadfast she was. she had a command of her previous hearings, her legal career and that really shined through the entire hearing process and was exemplary. jedediah: that is absolutely right. deeply, deeply impressive woman. jessica anderson with a aspect on feminism. check out in the hill? >> thanks for having me. jedediah: joe biden campaign happening after a day calling to
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it is about decency. i work as hard for those who don't support me as those who do, including those chumps with the microphone out there. look, that is the job of a president. will: kind of hard to claim decency while simultaneouslily calling people chumps. also kind of hard to say you will represent blue states and red states, yet again call your opponents chumps. talk about it with sean parnell, gop congressional candidate for pennsylvania. retired army captain. i do want to ask you this question. >> good morning. will: i can hear, well, president trump is aggressive with his opponent. had people thrown out of his rallies. gone after nfl players. he is aggressive with his opponents. what makes joe biden different than president trump's aggressiveness? >> this is disturbing pattern for radical leftists who run for president. with barack obama people in pennsylvania were simpletons who clung to bibles and guns and
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religion. under hillary clinton we were deplorables. now under joe biden we're chumps. in the span after week joe biden said i am a proud democrat, i will run as an american president. comes to my home state of pennsylvania and calls people who don't support him, chumps. this is quintessential joe biden says one thing. does another. and i think the people of pennsylvania ultimately will reject it. jedediah: sean, one thing that will have deep impact of voters in pennsylvania, the issue of oil and gas industry of fracking. get a reminder, campaigning in pennsylvania joe biden says he won't ban fracking. listen to that first. >> i will not ban fracking period. i will protect pennsylvania jobs period. no matter how many times donald trump says it. unlike donald trump i don't think big oil companies need a handout of federal government.
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we're going to get rid of 40 billion-dollar fossil fuel subsidies. we'll invest it in clean energy and carbon captures. jedediah: obviously been terribly inconsistent on this issue. even "snl" couldn't help themselves pointing it out. watch that now. >> as promised i have saved exactly 60 seconds for climate change. mr. vice president. >> well, since we're almost out of time, oil no, wind yes, fracking, depends on what state i'm in. jedediah: true. so, but, sean, seriously, how important is it, at this late-stage of the game, could this make a difference? >> absolutely could make a difference. people in pennsylvania remember under eight years with barack obama and joe biden this, state lost over 50,000 manufacturing, oil and gas jobs. joe biden has systematically waged war on the american worker for 47 years in washington, whether it is disasterous deals like nafta or tpp. people in pennsylvania remember
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what it was like under those economic policies. in three years under president trump, he has brought back all of those jobs, plus a net 13,000 manufacturing steel, oil, gas jobs. people in pennsylvania will remember. i'm telling you, that comment about oil will hurt him on election day in pennsylvania. will: sean, we're talking about election day, but really election season right now. people are concerned about voter integrity. when you look at the race, pennsylvania is that swing state. your district, pennsylvania 17 is the swing district inside the swing state. what happens in your race ripples across the country. the pennsylvania board of elections has acknowledge the that they center erroneously out nearly 29,000 ballots. they sent the wrong ballots to the wrong district. now you're in a fight to prevent ballots sent to the wrong district being counted for the wrong candidate. it sounds like a mess. can you explain what is going on
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there? >> it is absolutely a mess. the allegheny county board of education admits, bored of election admits it sent out 30,000 ballots to the wrong people with, the wrong district, in some candidates to the wrong flame on it. in order to rectify they sent out 30,000 more. i'm asking ballots separated people vote one time and for the candidates that actually represent them. my opponent is advocating for the opposite, that they not be separated at all. if that is the case, how do we insure people are not voting twice and for candidates that actually represent them. what conor lamb wants, what my opponent wants for people outside of the district to vote here in my district. so why should people in pittsburgh, pennsylvania, have a say over say who represents beaver county? conor lamb is a lawyer, federal prosecutor. he should know better. what i want is to protect the integrity of our election and to make sure that in pennsylvania we have free and fair elections. in conor lamb has his way we
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won't have that at all. pete: sean, you mentioned lawyers. lawyers descended on your district. mark elias, dccc democrat lawyers, they filed multiple filings to prevent the subpoena race. effectively everything goes into the same pile, you can't siphon out someone voted twice or even in the right district. for you the district next to you, pennsylvania 18 is heavily democrat district, if those votes pour into yours and change entire state. >> absolutely. the core of this lawsuit, what conor lamb is trying to do. don't believe me, look what he says. he says right here your vote shouldn't go into a separate pile counted differently because of a contractor's mistake. what he is saying people from outside the district to vote in our district. it is worse and more complicated what you said. ballots from pa 18, came into pa
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17. it is a absolute mess. i'm trying to bring a level of order, this is problem, democrats from governor wolf on down created. i'm trying to make sure that my constituents and the people of pennsylvania that therapy votes count and their votes matter. it is absolute chaos here. we're in the think of it. if you're watching right now, please go to my website, sean for congress.co. help me win this election. help me fight the fight. will: you point out the way sean's district goes, could be indicator for the entire nation. let's hope this chaos and lack of order is not a indicative of a mess in mail-in balloting across the nation. we invited his opponent, congressman conor lamb to appear for an init interview. we have not heard yet. sean, thank you for your time. >> thank you. jedediah: we'll turn to headlines for you right now. crews wipe out the first necessary of murder hornets in
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the u.s. workers wore heavy-duty protective gear to in washington state. they filled the tree up with foam, and covered it with plastic wrap. they put put in a tube collecting the nesting hornets. the nest was the size of a basketball with 200 hornets inside. that is rough. texas deputy is hailed as a hero for saving a joking baby. >> come on, baby. come on, baby. please, please, please. jedediah: terrifying. deputy adam dodson performing life-saving measure on the baby boy after he became unconscious. body camera video capturing tense moments in college station. finally after one extremely long minute, the baby starts breathing on his own again, thankfully. aggressive turkey is no longer terrorizing the streets of oakland, california.
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a wildlife trapper disguising himself as a older lady, helped capture gerald. he frequently attacked older women closing a popular garden. they are looking to find a new home for gerald. not certain what gerald should go to farm sanctuary. or go to adam klotz, what do you think, adam, are you up for a bird? adam: thanksgiving coming up. thanks, pete, i knew you would love it. thinking of thanksgiving, we're stepping all over each other. then we can talk about that. tropical storm zeta near mexico. we're moving through hurricane season and getting closer and
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closer to winter-like temperatures across the country. the water is still warm. climbing up to a category 1 hurricane. what are we talking about for arrival in the potential system? these are all the tropical models. still early. there is time for this to shift off towards the west and towards the east. a lot are running to an area just been battered. louisiana, stretching over to the florida panhandle. what is happening across the country, feeling more and more like winter. these are some current temperatures out there, getting down into the teens and into the 20s. feeling like thanksgiving as toss it back out there. i'm starting to get hungry when we talk about turkey. guys? pete: adam for the win. thank you. coming up disneyland may be taking california's governor to court over covid-19 lockdowns. up next hear from a laid-off employee who is fighting to get the park back in business. so that she can get back to work. this is what people want to do. and all those fine folks, coming up on "fox & friends" too.
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♪. pete: we're back with quick headlines. facebook is demanding nyu shut down a research project collecting data how the company targets users for political ads. the nyu ad observatory has gotten information on more than 200,000 ads. the facebook says the collection of the data is against its rules and threatening additional enforcement action if the project is not stopped and data deleted by november 30th. only they can do that. a group of uber drivers is accusing the company of bullying. they are accused of coercing workers to support proposition 22. the law on the ballot classifies drivers as independent contractors instead of employees. uber tells fox business most drivers support prop 22.
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will, over to you. will: thanks, pete. a group that represents california's largest theme parks including disneyland is considering a lawsuit against the state over its covid lockdowns. disney laid off 28,000 employees due to the shutdown including our next guest who organized a rally calling for the park to reopen. joining me is former disneyland employee, desi diamante. let's get to the rally in a moment. walk me through the last couple much months. as disneyland was shut down, you were furloughed, what were the four or five months like? >> it was only supposed to be a furlough for two weeks, obviously turned into now seven or eight months. so it was a lot of waiting, hoping, kept getting email updates. everything was fine and all of sudden news broke, 28,000 cast members were laid off. one by one, we, i seeing all of
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my friends posting notices they were one of the ones. i hoped they would sweep me under the rug and skip me but i was one of the 28,000 people was laid off as well. will: you saw over a period of weeks you saw your friend turned into laid offs. correct me if i'm wrong, you got laid off a month ago? >> three weeks ago friday officially. will: yesterday he decided to hold a rally to get the government of california to get gavin newsom to allow disneyland to reopen. what made you decide to put a rally together? >> i think it came to the point of seeing some of my friends, i've been working with the company, 20, 30 years, getting, getting their notices that they're just a number and then, my heart just kept breaking for them. i couldn't, all these people i invested all of this time, i know that disney has been fighting behind the scenes trying to get gavin newsom to open things up and he has been
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really bullheaded and, kind of putting the theme parks on the backburner. i was frustrated. i need to do something about it. a friend of mine reached out to me, plan something, plan the rally. will: i should correct myself. the rally was on the 17th. >> yes. will: let's go over the restrictions gavin newsom is putting on the opening of theme parks. tied to what county your theme park is located in. disneyland, your former employer unfortunately now is under one of the most strict restrictions. california is requiring the positivity rate to drop below 2% for the county and less than one new case per 100,000 residents. that is one per day per 100,000 residents. i don't know, desi, if disneyland could ever accomplish something like that until the coronavirus is swept away and quashed? >> yeah. even with the coronavirus and the vaccine he is making the restrictions so intense, even with the vaccine approved by the fda he is saying well california
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has to approve by its own scientists. when can that be? he keeps pushing the bar, farther and farther back. disneyland prides itself on safety is the number one key at the disneyland resort. they keep everybody safe. i think that with all of the restrictions he keeps setting in place, makes it next to impossible for anybody to work. will: next to impossible is the key you just said. really quickly, desi, under these guidelines it is hard to know if disneyland would ever be able to reopen, would you agree? >> absolutely. it is extremely tragic. the purpose of our rally was to raise a voice to hopefully have him see that there are human beings, lives at stake. it is not just disneyland but the surrounding community at disneyland that has been suffering because disneyland is not bringing tourism in from all over the world. people are not necessarily, people are afraid of the coronavirus and so they're like, well i don't know if we want
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people to come in but tourism is what has been keeping orange county alive. will: we got to run. thank you for sharing what is going on in california with us. more "fox & friends" right after the break. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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along with the and here we go today. so i don't know, i'm excited to win that prize. now i'm going give it out to people that need it. now a lot of people need because of flooding and hurricane coming. no working. so% of what will be donate and i will buy my daughter a gift this weekend. will: min won $50,000. you can win money too. fox is givingwa ay one million dollars of terry bradshaw money. download the fox bet super 6 app on the google play. he saw about fox news. saw about the fox bet app. he answered six questions.
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he won. how cool he will give away money to natural disaster relief of his home country in vietnam and present for his daughter. pete: his daughter will get a great gift, maybe bigger than expected. i want to make sure terry bradshaw shows up to write the check when i win it. jedediah: i don't have luck like this. i don't know if you won anything like this. i'm a girl that goes to atlantic city and lose every time. will: it is your mentality. when i go to casino. on occasion, if you go in trying to protect yourself from losing you will. go if ready to win. you will win. it is here. pete: i take the exact opposite approach, i'm prepared to lose x-amount of money. i'm paying for the time to enjoy losing that money. that is how i look at it. jedediah: pretty cool for him. will: very cool for him. always cooler to win somebody else's money. you can wintry bradshaw's money
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on fox bet. jedediah: absolutely. that's right. straight ahead. thousands line up in new york for the first day of early voting in the city as over 56 million americans across the country have already cast their ballot. we'll break down the impact on the race at the top of the hour. r $409 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. to customizes yourcan gocar insurancetual.com so you only pay for what you need? really? i didn't-- aah! ok. i'm on vibrate. aaah! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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♪. pete: saturday nights, i don't know how you spent your saturday night, i spent mine watching the man on the left crisscross the country, ultimately ending up i believe, ending up in north carolina or ohio? wisconsin is where he ended up actually. hard to keep track of the guy because he is hitting the trail. joe biden did an event in pennsylvania. he has a lid already today except for a virtual event
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tonight. we're nine days from election day. thinking back to four years ago, not that it will be a repeat, totally different, but has a lot of same feel, hillary took a different approach, wasn't out in certain dates. biden in georgia. is that pa play to expand the map. we don't know. the he is in his basement and president is out on the trail. jedediah: nine days. i can't believe we're almost here. it is right around the bend. there are similarities people questioning the polling once again because they felt very disappointing in the accuracy, lack thereof, i should say of that accuracy in polling last time around. of course, joe biden is a very different candidate from hillary clinton. so we should note that. times are different. we're in times like we haven't seen before with covid-19, with lockdowns. these are challenges that a president hasn't had to face challenges like this in a very long time. so it's a unique election, a distinct election. one whose results i think will speak volumes on many issues.
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will: it is a unique election, although we count down to election day, we already know it started. 56 million people already cast their vote. including the leader of the free world. president trump went to the polls yesterday. he told you who he voted for, listen to this. president trump: only your vote can save america. this is the most important election. i never thought i would ever say it. [cheers and applause] i never saw i would say it after what we went through four years ago. i said that has to be the most important. this is more important. >> it is go-time. it is gameday. we have 10 days left t may come down to pennsylvania. and i believe in you. i believe in my state. the choice has never been clearer and stakes have never been higher. will: both president trump and joe biden encouraging people to get out and vote. president trump did address the media yesterday when asked who he voted for.
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he said a guy named trump. he joins legion of some 56 million people who already voted, who voted early. here is the cover of the "new york post" you can see in just a moment. entitled, flock the vote. why? because there are massive lines on the first day of early voting in new york city. so there you have it. while it is nine days away the process already started. if i would highlight one thing, it is this. there is promises made about positions on policies take place, verify before the election, joe biden, whether or not he would pack the court all over the place on fracking. guess what? the election has begun. we do not have clarification on some of those issues. pete: maybe next weekend we do a segment on people who voted earlier and change their vote based on what happened in between. day one of early voting you confront a long line. day three, day four, maybe people are not out as much. the lines might be shorter.
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it is emblematic of course of enthusiasm. the question which one has more of it. how do you fire up your base, create that contrast and certainly, the economy and covid-19 are front and center with very different approaches on how it is characterized. we'll have a democrat on the program earlier. they will make the claim obama gave this gangbusters economy to donald trump. then they failed to acknowledge the slow recovery as well as what happened with covid-19 from china. it is a big game as to who, what voters perceive as who would be prepared to take us out of this covid-19 moment and reopen the economy to a place where their lives are better off than they were fours years ago, jed. when you look at the surveys, despite covid-19, 56% of americans say my life is better off now than it was four years ago. how does that translate into votes? that is the million dollar question. jedediah: yeah. i mean i think a lot of it will come down to safety and security in all of its forms.
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we spoke to lee carter yesterday who pointed that out very well. i hadn't seen lines like that before in new york city when it comes to voting. i think the enthusiasm on both sides. when it comes to president trump you see it more regularly. he is doing rallies. you get to see the base. you get to see the crowds. you get to see the crowds. i think with joe biden is little bit quieter because he is not doing from the time and center rallies. as much as people who support trump are passionate about voting for him and everything he stands for. a lot of people who are not necessarily joe biden. they don't love joe biden but they're anti-trump. i think that enthusiasm is there as well. the question how many people will turn out? was this just first day of voting in new york city. will it look like that straight through to the end. what will it look like through other states. a lot of states will be pretty close. that will really be the test. who is passionate and who shows up. no matter how you feel about an
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issue if you don't cast your vote, it won't register. we'll cover all of that. exit polling on some issues will be fascinating in terms of how people really felt about the key issues facing the country. we'll follow all of that. another thing, that will be interesting to see is who people felt was more unifying for the country. a lot of people voiced their opinion, particularly independents, undecided, i want someone who has the ability to unite, who has the ability to get stuff done. this is an interesting moment. while making his pitch to the president who will unite the country, joe biden said that many times he made a comment in pennsylvania, check it out. listen to what he had to say. some are saying maybe that comment didn't hit home with the unifying message as well as it could have. >> by the way, we don't do things like those chumps out there with the microphone are doing, the trump guys. [applause] it is about decency. i will work as hard for those
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who don't support me, including those that do including those chumps with the microphone out there. look, that is the job of a president. jedediah: i'm going to be honest with you. i don't think this is going to register because they both talk like this, right? joe biden talks like this. president trump talks like this. look at president trump's twitter feed. arguably that people may like about both of them, there is unfiltered element that people really like. i don't know that people will register that i think they laugh it off like some of the comments president trump makes. i know you don't, because of the types of people they both are, i think in some ways that is endearing at times more so than anything to be perfectly frank. will: i disagree. i do in the think that will be endearing. i think it will register and have a negative effect why. quicick story for both of you. i was talking to a friend of mine who spent the pandemic in pennsylvania outside of
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pittsburgh. he had a man who worked on house projects. come a long line of family unions, vote democratic. his progression went like this, when president obama said they clung to their guns and religion his eyebrows went up. a lot of his friend papped family, eyebrows went up. they continued to vote for president obama. when hillary clinton calmed them deplorables they realized something. they hate me, my friends and my life. they openly hate who i am. everyone on the left talking about everyone who disagrees with them racist or some other ist, deplorable word, what many people feel like there is open antagonism now. this chump line feeds into the same progress from deplorables back to cling to their guns and religion. pete: very interesting. we had a candidate running in pennsylvania, sean parnell, touched on the topic and what is hearerring from voters and
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comments like that. >> this is disturbing pattern for radical leftists that run for president. under barack obama people in pennsylvania were simpletons who clung to guns and bibles and religion. under hillary clinton we were deplorable. and joe biden said we're chumps. he said he is a proud democrat and run as american president. comes to my home state of pennsylvania and calls people in pennsylvania that don't support him calls them chumps. this is quint tension joe biden. says one thing, does another. i think people in pennsylvania will reject him. will: pete: tetonic shifts happen over time, don't happen simultaneouslily. little ingredients, a candidate like donald trump says i will throw out the playbook. i'm a disruptor. you union guys on the sures fa might not have a lot in common with me, we resonate on basic
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stuff like we support hard work, capitalism, supporting the police. blinders come off. i'm been taken for granted by a party. will: antagonism already has begun to take a toll on the democratic party. jedediah: just one quick point. guns and religion is very specific. that is going after second amendment, religion is deeply personal. chump is more generalist comment. hillary clinton with deplorablables. hillary clinton was not joe biden. she was perceived very differently. her likability was perceived very differently this is, i promise you when you talk to joe biden supporters in particular, people who are even on the fence this is part of his likability. i highly doubt this will affect -- also part of president trump's likeability. his supporters look at the twitter feed. some of us don't like it. i said on the show it drives me nuts. a lot of supporters say go for
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it. speaking your mind. people on both sides of the aisle like that kind of talk. i disagree a little bit. great points made by both of you. we'll see if this has any effect. pete: they go at guns and go at religion, they're going at first freedoms. i think people start to see that. the labels fall off. jedediah: that is different. pete: turning to a few additional headlines a senior al qaeda leader is killed in afghanistan. afghan security forces killed i am in a special forces operation. he is believed to be al qaeda's second in command. fbi put him on the most-wanted list in 2018 including charges on conspiracy to kill americans. democrat vp kamala harris caught in a hot mic moment, asking if she is in cleveland while in cleveland on the campaign trail. >> are we in cleveland? yes. hey, cleveland. pete: that is the best. harris was in the city. she didn't know it for a moment.
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then she knew it, she told everyone she knew it. big 10 football is back with a bang, indiana, upsetting pen state in a controversial finish. >> [inaudible] he is in. reporter: take a look. bring it in. did he have it? boy, i think that is a touchdown. will: i don't know,. pete: pete that is close. instant replay. let the refs make the call, we all celebrate. i'm all in, not for banning bracing. banning instant replay. beating the knit at this lions after that crazy 2 point conversion over time. the play was challenged. it was challenged because called on the field it stood. ohio state dominating nebraska,
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52-17. michigan steamrolling the golden gophers. the wolverines beating minnesota 49-24. we had pa good team last year. will: minnesota is on the rise. pete: maybe. wolverines play rival michigan state saturday on fox. those are the headlines. jedediah: i'm not going to opine on that. i will spare you guys the misery. still ahead president trump and joe biden offering up very different takes on covid-19. president trump: this election is a choice between a trump super recovery and a biden depression. >> we're going to die with it. there is a dark winter ahead. will: going to die. jedediah: dr. nicole saphier says the nation needs hope. she explains that. ♪.
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♪. jedediah: covid-19 cases topping 80,000 for the second straight day with at least seven states reporting record one-day totals. this as the flu season officially gets underway. what should americans know about their health? let's ask fox news medical contributor, author of make america healthy again, dr. nicole saphier. doctor, welcome to the show as always. love having you here. unfortunately this topic is getting a little scary. people are seeing the numbers climbing, we're entering flu season, what should people do? >> that's right, jedediah, flu season is here in the united states. we have a good bit of news in the southern hem had miss fear.
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flu in the southern hemisphere is negligible. we trend ours with that. the southern hemisphere flu season coincided with the harsh lockdowns in may. hard to say whether it was the stay at home orders that reduced flu transmission. the september cdc report with flu activity in the united states, telling us flu activity is way down. of course that people are distancing, wearing masks, everyone is washing their hand as lot more. we're in flu season. we still have covid-19 and we have flu. they are both respiratory infections. they are both contagious. you will do the same thing to prevent both of them, the one thing you can do is get a flu shot. that flu shot will really help us not only keep flu levels down, but make sure we keep the hospital beds open if we need them for covid-19 patients because you have to remember, hundreds of thousands of americans are hospitalized with the flu every single year. so while we are still in the mix of this pandemic, it is essential to keep flu activity
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down. jedediah: you know, dr. saphier, as we've been watching these two presidential campaigns we've seen very different approaches to covid-19. let's take a little bit of a look at that contrast, then i want to ask you about it. president trump: this election is a choice between a trump super recovery and a biden depression. >> trump is still saying we're rounding the corner. it is going away. we're learning to live with it. we're learning to die with it. it is a dark winter ahead. jedediah: so the approach has been different in terms of the rallies and then a lot of stuff being done virtually. the tone is now very different. i care much more about what people like you have to shea on covid-19, the medical community. what do you think of the two tones? what do you want to hear as a doctor? >> well, jedediah, i can tell you as a physician, each doctor handles bad news very differently. on one hand you could have alarmist. on other hand you have an
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optimist that doesn't have any substance behind that. for me, when i give a cancer diagnosis, which unfortunately i do that every single day, the one thing i do say to my patients this time next year, you will be in a much different place. that doesn't mean the next year will not be difficult. i want to make sure they have the hope. they know they will get over this. so for me, i like to think i'm pragmatic, yes. we're going into a hard winter but there is light at the end of the tunnel. we're so much better now than we were before in terms of treatment and our knowledge on the virus. let peace continue to do what we can. we have to keep transmission down, to keep people safe. jedediah: dr. saphier, bringing wisdom as always. thank you for being here. get her book, "make america healthy again." one of my favorite read this is year. thanks so much, nicole. we're nine days from the election so some voters are still undecided. what will it take to win them over, all from battleground states. that is coming up next.
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♪. will: welcome back. president trump and joe biden making last minute pitch toughs the american voter. >> if elected president, there will be no red states or blue states. only the united states. it is time to stand up and take our democracy back. donald trump hasn't delivered on a damn thing. president trump: joe, you want to do all the stuff, why didn't you do it. you were there 3 1/2 years ago. you didn't do much joe. if you had done a good job i wouldn't have run. will: with nine days to go a small percentage of likely
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voters are still undecided. what will ultimately sway them. let's ask our panel. kate who voted for kin hillary clinton in 2016. chris from florida voted for independent candidate gary johnson. nick, also from wisconsin, supported johnson in 2016. good morning to you all. i have a lot of questions. hopefully we get to as many as we can. kaitlin, you voted for hillary clinton in 2016. which way are you leaning right now? >> yes. so i am leaning more right right now. i have just been doing as much research as i can, even up to right now, i live in madison. middleton, close enough to madison. very liberal. it is hard to lean left, i mean right out here. it is completely blue. will always be forever. so it is hard to even come out and say that. will: why are you leaning towards president trump? what is the biggest issue that
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could potentially sway you from supporting hillary clinton four years ago? >> you know there is a lot of issues at stake. i think the recent political environment is what has really gotten my attention. you know, two years ago i would have never even watched fox news. never even listened. i think to the president and that, i think is an issue there. so, i really tuned in. listening to both sides. keeping an open mind. the policies i think are what really is making me question. i support law enforcement. i also have three biracialal children. i have a child with preexisting conditions. i think one of the biggest reasons, i was fearful of trump which is now more recently come out regarding preexisting conditions with health care that was a big thing for me as it affects my son. his americans first health care plan he has now been talking
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about more recently is what really caught my attention. will: right. >> you know, i also am a catholic. so there is religious beliefs i have. will: let's goat to you guys. both of you supported gary johnson in 2016. chris we'll start with you. which are you leaning in 2020? >> like kaitlin i'm leaning trump. i feel like rock and hard place. trump's decency. you know what you get with him. i would like a more presidential last four years. biden side. been a moderate for his whole career but elected kamala harris part of the radical left-wing of the democratic party. as vice president. she is aoc look-alike. as cuban-american, my parents fled cuba. my grandmother fled cuba by herself with two kids and
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pregnant with a third. we set fled a terrible place with hard work and made decisions in this country. we love america. but that radical left-wing of the democratic party. talk about america as evil oppress sieve place, that you can't make it if you're this or that. i grew up with minorities. my family, friends were all minorities. we never ones said or believed we were oppressed in this country. with good hard work we make it. will: right. nick in as well. nick, again you supported gary johns son in 2016 of the which way are you now leaning in 2020? >> currently i'm leaning joe biden simply because i feel like he has a much more fleshed out plan going forward for some of the issues that i really believe in. i'm disappointed by his lack of tougher chance on china which trump has a very great record on. i'm also disappointed by the way that he is kind of going to be handling the economy and by his
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vice president's choice. i mean if you had, if you had such a great wide variety of choices if you want to pick a personal of color or another woman, there were plenty of great choices there i just don't believe in kamala harris. however, with biden's record on education, which is very important to me be the environment, how we are going to get get out of this pandemic, those are more immediate pressing concerns for me at the moment, which trump does not have a fleshed enough plan for me to vote for him this go-round. will: what are you specifically talking about, not a fleshed out plan? recovery from covid-19, nick? >> correct. both covid-19s. i'm an educator. education in particular. i think if you look at his plan, it deals mostly with school choice as well as american exceptionalism, which are great but we need, we need a little bit more than that i mean the other day, betsy devos i think, 94% of students who were in the
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public service loan forgiveness program had their claims denied. the process has not been transparent t affects a lot of public employees and people working the non-profit sector. so we need just a little bit more of a plan as well as how to get through the pandemic which, frankly ever since fauci left i just have not seen. will: fauci is still there to be clear. he is still working with the administration. >> he is not in the inner circle is what i meant. will: christopher, let me go back to you you're still undecided. did the debates help you at all helping you make up your mind. >> that first debate made me lean left. trump was a clown for tv on three hours. this last debate, showed a lot more civility, self-control, poise. policywise i thought they didn't move the needle policy wise in the debate. it made me go back to leaning
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trump. will: debates are over. kaitlin, go back to you. for all three quickly, what is left to change your vote? what moves you away from being undecided kaitlin. only 30 seconds. >> you know i think i will be voting on election day. at this point i will be voting in and voting on election day. i'm looking to do research until then. will: really quickly, one sentence answer, chris what could formalize your vote? what could put you in one camp or other? >> biden, tell me you're not part of the radical left? will: nick, same question to you. >> i would give the same answer. i will stick with my libertarian friend. show me you're not part of the radical left. will: thank you all three. you're very interesting. undecided voters always want to know what motivates, what is inside the mind of people not yet decided. thank you for sharing everything you're thinking right now. appreciate your time. >> thank you. will: former governor mike huckabee joins us next on the state of the race nine days
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also unclear if you were playing biden bingo if you had come on, man. he didn't say man. he said come on. will: you had over and under come on man, i get credit. pete: without the man it doesn't count. jedediah: different, will. different. will: you two ganging up. thank you, jed. get a final vote from mike huckabee, fox news contributor, former gop candidate, author of the three cs that made america great. governor, if he doesn't say man, does it count? >> come on, of course it counts. come on. will: thank you, very much, governor. grad to have you here today on "fox & friends." we knew we could count on you. we want to get your take on number of topics. nine days out. 56 million americans cast their ballot. you waited in the rain yesterday to vote early. what is it like for mike huckabee to wait in the rain in line?
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i think you're taking a few photos. what is your take on energy in the race right now, everyone voting early? >> i see the enthusiasm factor for donald trump and i don't see it for joe biden. i see there is an enthusiasm factor against donald trump by the far left but i don't see people who are going out saying, i just love how joe biden lays it out there. that would be if they said it, a bunch of malarkey because he doesn't lay it out there. in the last half hour of the debate he honestly seemed to be fading. i'm not trying to be unkind. i'm saying his words began to slur. like he was out of gas. it was very evident watching in those last moments. yesterday, watching his speech, when you see him he is like an angry man standing on his porch telling you to get off his lawn. got the eyes squinted. here there are a bunch of chumps out there. this guy is not a guy who is happy. he is angry. and he is flailing. i just think a lot of people are going to ask themselves, is this
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guy capable of being president? if you don't work hard to become president, what makes you think he will work hard if he becomes president? he has basically, as they love to say, put a lid on it. it has been under the lid now in these final days of the campaign. that is unbelievable, and unprecedented. jedediah: governor, i want to ask you about a populist message. i think both candidates really attempted to convey the populist message. joe biden saying trump has forgotten about the forgotten man. this is him in pennsylvania on saturday. take a listen. >> barack and i worked hard to earn your votes 2008 and 2012. i tell you what, it wasn't, it wasn't, i thought it was great to see him out on the trail again for me quite frankly but i understand why some people voted for donald trump. they believed they were not being seen, respected or heard.
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trump ran around saying he represents the forgotten manned and woman in this country. i get it. then when he got elected he immediately forgot the forgotten man. jedediah: is that accurate and does that line work? >> it is ridiculous t was trump that got the tax cuts for the forgotten man, that put money in the pockets of every single worker in this nation. people deep down know that their pockets got heavier, not lighter when donald trump passed the tax cut. they know if they're a small business operator, it got easier to run the business when donald trump took the regulatory burden on off their next. if they're a firearms owner, donald trump protected their second amendment rights and not threatened it, put under indictment for the couple in st. louis. if they're pro-life, they're no longer chased and hunted by the irs for the organizations they belong to. this is nonsense. of all the things joe biden said
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i think he forgot his own record as vice president and his record as a democrat over these past few years and he seems to have forgotten the positions he has taken because he has taken a position to protect the elitist, to protect the people who went after donald trump from the highest levels of government and there are a lot of people in america that look at them say, if you can do that to the president of the united states, what could you do to me? i hope people understand that this isn't about donald trump. it is about them. and they need to vote accordingly. and not let joe biden and kamala harris get in who believe in a big, heavy footed government on their necks. will: the fight for the forgotten man. the campaign message goes back to calvin coolidge. by the way, governor, you won't be forgotten having my back on come on, man, whether come on counts. always welcome you back. governor, thank you for your time today. >> you bet. thanks. will: still ahead former president obama making a final push on the campaign trail for
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joe biden but is it too late? jack brewer weighs in next. ♪ ♪ ♪ smooth driving pays off with allstate, the safer you drive the more you save you never been in better hands allstate click or call for a quote today you never been in better hands allstate we knew that this was really, really bad. we had ample forewarning. but we did almost no testing, almost no contact tracing. completely ignored the science, completely ignored the warning signs. there were things that could have been done.
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♪. jedediah: we are back with some quick headlines. today the marine corps marathon is set for a race unlike any its 36 year history. participants will run the marathon virtually this year as a precaution during the pandemic. runners will travel from the mgm national harbor to the francis scott key bridge and back. tv's longest running game show is set to get back on the air tuesday without its biggest star. >> come on down. first four contestants of the price is right.
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jedediah: the price is right and host drew carrie returning this returning without a live audience as part of safety measures. socially distant contestants get the iconic call to come on down without the loud cheering from the crowd. i will miss that cheering. back to you, pete. pete: some things are not the same virtually. president obama taking shots at president trump as he talks for joe biden in florida. >> just like everything else he inherited he fumbled it. he doesn't have a plan. he doesn't even acknowledge the reality of what's taking place all across the country. pete: here to react, advisory board member of for trump, jack brewer. jack. connell: -- jack, you have seen both sides of this.
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do you think former president obama hitting trail will be helpful toe joe biden? >> they were really counting on president basement as you've seen from the debates and every time joe biden speaks it is never about the actual issues he will put across. always slamming president trump or trying to create these narratives. it is really unfortunate, whether it is immigration, we all know that obama actually created the cages and funded cages so many want to talk about. you talk about criminal justice reform, you know the obama administration refused to go back against those mandatory minimums that incarcerated so many black men. i mean these are things that the american people are now aware of. they can't run and hide from these oppressive policies that obama and biden let go on for so long. pete: real quickly, because the president said at the debate, he looked at joe biden, i ran because of you. i ran because of you and barack obama. i didn't know you had been part of nfl players for obama.
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explain your progress. was it largely based on the policies as well? >> man, i got woke ken up. i started nfl players for obama, i could literally quote his speeches. i was so mesmerized by his words. but as we got into the fifth, sixth year of his presidency i didn't see any works. i didn't see any policies being passed to go along with the great words and eloquent speeches he was giving. i had to really look at deep within myself and go to my faith. i'm a guy, i'm a god-driven man. a lot of policies and things he was pushing just didn't allow with me spiritually. that was the same for so many americans. i work in the prisons. to two into the prisons to see the guys locked up for so long, to have a black president did nothing about it really hurt. so i think president obama coming into the forefront and being just so progressive in his
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policies, in deregulations and spurring job growth, really bringing opportunity to the most underserved americans, that is what it was about for me. i got to tell you, man, it has been a great ride. i just hope that we can win this election. pete: well-said, words versus works. when you look what is being done it can change the perception of anybody. speaking of that and works of the trump administration, van jones on another network has the pesky habit of speaking truth on occasion even though we don't agree on much. here is a portion what he said about president trump's record with minorities. listen. >> trump, i get beat up by liberals i keep saying it, he has done good stuff for the black community. black college stuff. i worked with him on criminal justice stuff. i thought donald trump has african-american people formally incarcerated in the white house. embraced them, treated them well. there is a side to donald trump
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i think he does not get enough credit for. pete: jack, you were woke by lack of actions for the obama administration. certainly reinforced by the actions the president has taken. will we see support amongst the black community higher than 2016? >> yes, you will. i mean we're going to double the black vote. i worked hard with so many of my colleagues to build black voices for trump coalition. i got to give you a thank you to van jones. this is man who actually worked with president trump. who actually sat next to him, actually really started to press these issues. hive done the same thing. and anyone who has met president trump says the same thing. he is so gracious but he does what he says. i think that is what it is all about in this election. you have already seen people like ice cube, 50-cent and others that are coming out supporting this president. i think that is inspiring people like van jones to speak out. and i'm going to speak out. and actually this week we got more prominent african-americans that will be coming out in support of this president.
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we will double the vote. will: pete: fascinating. you can only call somebody names so long and ignore the actual record what they have done as human being. jack brewer, thank you very much for being on the show. >> god bless, brother. pete: halloween celebrations unfortunately looking different this year. you can get the whole family into the spirit we say. trick and treats you will need. next. e same, the rx crafted by lexus. lease the 2020 rx350 for $409 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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so you can really promise better sleep? not promise... prove. save up to $1,000 on the new sleep number 360 smart bed and adjustable base. plus, 0% interest for 24 months & free delivery. ends monday. ♪. will: halloween may look a little different this year but it doesn't mean you can't have some safe and festive fun at home. jedediah: here with some tricks and treats to help you do just
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that, lifestyle expert lemor is here. welcome to the show. i love halloween. what do you have for us? >> of course halloween will be a little bit different this year. what you want to do is still want to deck out everything in festive decor. what i have done here i actually decorated outside. did this yesterday. i put up spook tack lar lights with damage free hooks. i have the light clips. when you're done with halloween decor, put up the christmas lights. over here i made a candy wreath for the kids. just stickers and some candy. just really fun way to kind of still have some fun even though it might be a little bit smaller this year. of course, you want to get dressed up. even if you're not going anywhere, doing much of anything, you can get adorable costumes. but the cdc is recommending though even though your costume might come with a mask, to wear a face mask as well. the costumes and face masks are
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from jcpenney. all the kids costumes are there. see them in one second. trick-or-treating if you are trick-or-treating this year, the cdc is recommending putting candy in other bags. i have a really fun way to keep your social distance and trick-or-treat at the same time. check this out. i created a candy chute right over here this is shipping tube. get it on amazon this one is four feet. you stand back a little. they stand back. you want to help. you put candies inside of the chute comes out for trick or tweeters. fun way to trick-or-treat. to have some fun. okay, we're done with the candy chute. >> [inaudible]. >> now we're, like watching over dead bodies. single serve. so everything, think single serve. we have some dummies and eyeballs, things, little
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fingers. i have spooky snacks. we have halloween colored tore tortilla chips and some is kosher. i cut up jack links, 100% premium beef jerky. put it in little cauldrons. you have a highly nutritious snack and delicious. single serve, i got, it is a little chilly outside. i have swiss miss hot cocoa. you do marshmellows put it into the containers. activities and snaps into one. over here i created these little boxes for the kids. you're going to make, you're going to make dirt cups and make spider cups. use vanilla snack packs or milk chocolate. each one gets really fun. we have little buckets of halloween fun as well. will: really good stuff.
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pete: go to instagram for all of her ideas. turn the tube into a mortar tube and shoot the candy. will: still ahead. thanks. president trump set to light up the campaign trail. joe biden stays at home facing fresh backlash over fracking. can we vote by mail here? (grandma vo) you'll be safe, right? (daughter vo) yes! (four girls vo) the polls! voted! (grandma vo) go out and vote! it's so important! (man at poll vo) woo! (grandma vo) it's the most important thing you can do! it's eithor it isn't.ance of a 165-point certification process. it's either testing an array of advanced safety systems. or it isn't. it's either the peace of mind of a standard unlimited mileage warranty. or it isn't.
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♪ it's a god morning ♪ wake up to a brand-new way ♪ good morning. jedediah: good morning, everyone and thanks for joining us at fox & friends weekend. it is the 8 a.m. hour. we are live. look at that number. 56 million people plus have already voted in the united states. here we are just nine days away from the election. and that's a pretty big number here with pete hegseth, will cain. pete: every time we play that song it's like a fake song made
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for a fake morning show. they can't be a real song. i'm still hung up on the halloween segment. i love leemore suggs, but the mask under the mask thing, i think i'm going to just throw the candy at the kids. will: coming from the cdc, we've got to regain our candy. spinning off into some crazy areas. want everybody to have a safe and is happy halloween. that number 56 million people who have already voted includes the leader of the free world. it does not include jedediah bila or will cain. it does include pete hegseth. pete: a hundred percent i drove to the board of elections and handed it to the board of elections personally. i'm not putting that thing in the mail. come on. so i'm in there. i'm in that 56 million. will: well, forgive me for that mischaracterization. we have before we hit the road, both of us, for election day, we have a few days to get out there jedediah, to get our votes in for early balloting.
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and i plan to do it today. president trump, by the way, -- jedediah: yeah, i'm going to head over on monday, will; so you'll beat me by one day. will: trump is still looking to sway voters who have not yet voted like the two of us. he wrapped up a marathon day of campaigning in battleground states and he's going to head back out on the trail today. nine days together, as we said. he's holding two events in pennsylvania. yesterday joe biden held two in pennsylvania. forgive me. he is home today. i believe the next three days i believe it is 11 events for president trump. it is two that we know of right now for joe biden. pete: we're nine days from the election. will: right and i felt joe biden biden's staying at home today? will: he's staying home today. there's some celebrities out, some surrogates and celebrities. cher is getting out there. pete: not really getting out there. virtually getting out th.re will: true. for a virtual concert. pete: big stuff. sometimes you don't even know what to say. but it is amazing if you're tuning in and watching the news
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throughout the day, yesterday was that day, i think the next nine days will be, you turn your head, trump is a in a new place still talking, then he's in a new place still talking. here's a portion of what both donald trump and joe biden said yesterday on the campaign tr.il >> it's go time. it's game day. ten days left. we know we're so much better than this. so much better. we can build back better than before. that's who we are. trump: at the debate this week the american people saw a contrast between a 47-year career politician who's seen better days. you want to do all this stuff, why didn't you do it? you were there three and a half years ago. do it. pete: and they are entertaining. i may look a little tired 'cause i was up watching that speech in wisconsin, you get a little something different every time. and, jed, i don't know. is the guy standing on the stage screaming at you technique a very effective one? 'cause that's -- when you listen to joe biden, you're like, when is he going to stop screaming at
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me? and is he even having fun? really, it feels like that's exactly the tone. jedediah: i think they have two completely different strategies, two completely different tones, two completely different visions very, very different candidates, which i like because when people make a decision, we will be able to say, well, this is what people were embracing versus what they weren't. there's a clear distinction here here. and i think joe biden's just made a calculation, a political calculation. he has not been front and center as much as president trump. he's watching the polls. he's concluding and his team are concluding that it has helped him to sit back a little bit, to let president trump be out front and center at those rallies, and joe biden just feels like he hasn't suffered. it does become challenging -- and i mentioned this earlier in the show for for those just tuning in, it does becoming challenging at some point. you have to decide as a candidate what the goal is. is the goal to bring out the base? is the goal to swing undecideds? because the way you speak, how
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you address people really has the ability to go in two very different directions. and the way you do it in order to rally a base may be very different from the way you do it in a way that will hopefully sway undecideds. so strategically i think it is a bit of a challenge for the trump campaign, very different delivery from him, in the last debate versus what you see at the campaign rallies. so i think joe biden has said, you know what? perhaps being front and center will marginalize voters. we'll sit back and let's just play out the next nine d.ys will: two notes on that. it would seem that the biden campaign is confident, if you see joe biden sitting back and making his only stops in georgia which would expand the map, it seems they are confident in their position going into the election. the question is is it earned confidence or irrational confidence. you pointed out undecided voters jedediah. who is still left to sway? earlier in the show i talked to undecided voters. we'll share some of that sound with you later. what is left to sway them? what issues are still out there? i would offer you this is
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potentially one of them, at least in places like pennsylvania, perhaps ohio, perhaps new mexico, and perhaps texas, the issue of fracking, it impacts employment, it impacts gas prices, it impacts many aspects of life and many are left wondering, where exactly is joe biden on fracking? because at any given moment he seems to have been on every side of this issue. watch. >> i will not ban fracking, period. i'll protect pennsylvania jobs, period. no matter how many times donald trump says this, unlike donald trump, i don't think big oil companies need a handout of federal government. we're going to get rid of the $40 billion fossil fuels subsidies and we're going to invest it in clean energy and carbon capture. will: that's what joe biden is saying today. that's not of course what he's always said when it comes to fracking. and many have noticed. in fact even saturday night live live. watch this. >> as promised i have saved exactly 60 seconds for climate
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change. mr. vice president? >> well, since we're almost out of time, oil, no be wind, yes, fracking, depends on what state i'm in. pete: that's right. i think the president's team has been so miffed about how he's tried to play this off, actually if you've watched the rallies they've taken to playing a video video. they just cut to the video for two minutes and they let joe talk over the last couple years where he quite clearly contradicts himself over and over again depending what audience he's talking to, whether he's in the primary, whether he's in the general, people see through that, and we will play that clip if your interview with undecided voters earlier in the show which is fantastic. yes, they talked about the key issues. but things like law enforcement, supporting the police, things like, hey, can't we love our country anymore, those came up, things like the radical left and is joe biden really captured by them? so a lot of those core cultural themes fit into a lot of what -- the way people are making their decision as well. and you mentioned, is it an over overcalculation -- jed, you said you know, is it a strategy not to go on the campaign trail for
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joe biden? i don't know. it could be hubris, and it could be arrogance, but it could also be they don't have another option. listen. joe is not on his a game; he's not on his b game; he's not even on his c game. you don't want him speaking. he's screaming at a very large telepromter with no audience. he doesn't have the energy he once had. why would you put a bat candidate out even more to expose him? it is a strategy because they don't have another option. and they're hoping donald trump makes a mistake. they were hoping he would in the debate, and he didn't. he had a very strong debate performance. and that's a four corners delay offense with the other team pressing you, which i wouldn't want to be in that position if i was the biden camp. jedediah: it is a strategy of two parts. it's a covid-19 strategy a abecause that has -- pete: a virtuing sig.al jedediah: -- a decision they made between themselves and donald trump. it is a strategy. you know, the the stocial, they've indicated that, the clear delineation between the two campaigns and it's also a strategy of him knowing that people are voting against trump.
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they're not voting for joe biden in large part. i'm sorry he has some supporters that are happy he's top of the ticket but a lot of those people they say it's not about joe biden, we don't love joe biden, he's been a clear politician for years, but we're voting against trump. the point is that still translates to votes. it may not be enthusiasm for biden but enthusiasm against trump will drive people to the polymers. the question is will it drive as many people to the polls as enthusiasm for trump will drive the other side, and thames rob seen. it will be a very, very interesting nine days to come. but for now we're going to turn to some headlines for you -- sorry, will, go ahead. will: no, i was just going to say, i think that is the characterization. the question is the numbers. we know at this point it's boiling down to people who cannot get over president trump trump's personality, versus those who are going to vote against the radical left and vote for president trump's politics. we heard that from the independent voters, the undecided voters we spoke to earlier and we're seeing that play out. the question is the numbers. how many people fall into those camps. pete: and could bernie voters be turned off if he moves too far
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to the middle, which is part of the conundrum he has on fracking fracking. we'll see. jedediah: lots to say on that undecided panel that will did earlier, hopefully we'll get to that later. for now we have some headlines. five top aides for vice president pence test positive for covid-19 among theme chief of staff mark shore and political adviser marty obst. both are in quarantine. three other staffers have tested positive. the vice president and second lady tested negatives for the virus yesterday. and this just in. dr. anthony fauci says a covid-19 vaccine could be ready by the end of this year. >> we will know whether a vaccine is safe and effective by the end of november, the beginning of december. but the question is, once you have a safe and effective vaccine or more than one, how can you get it to the people who need it as quickly as possible? jedediah: dr. fauci says the first doses would go to people
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at high risk and health care workers and that a vaccine wouldn't be widely available until next year. and turning now to the world series, the tampa bay rays winning on a wild play. >> jansen. that is into center fielder. here comes career meyer. he ties the game. arozarena coming around, throw home, now he stumbles. but the ball gets away. they're going to win this. jedediah: the l.a. dodgers give the rays a walk-off victory after an error on the throw home tampa winning 8-7 tying the world series 2-2. don't miss game 5 tonight only on fox. and those are your headlines. will: so many bobbles, so many stumbles on that one play until it eventually comes up. pete: two errors on the defense and the guy rounding third stumbled on his face. that's why he was hung up on the play to begin with.
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will: still ahead former president obama returns to the campaign trail launching blistering attacks on president trump's policies. his latest target -- the economy economy. is it justified? we'll ask juan williams next. ♪ here's some music for your ears >> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. this couple was on a camping trip... ...when their windshield got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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florida. so will this resonate with voters? let's ask fox news political analyst and "the five" cohost juan williams. you're a busy manjoo good to be with you, pete. pete: great to have you here. you're a busy man, nine days from the election. i would argue you're probably busier than joe biden here with all the analysis that you're giving. come on, you know it's fair. but the former president obama is back on the trail making the case that the world would return to greatness if only joe biden was there, a guy he didn't want to endorse and he didn't want to run at a certain point. help me help break down whether or not this is effective. because on the debate stage you saw it, president trump looked across at joe biden and said, "i ran because of you, because of that slow economic recovery and the people that were being left behind." can barack obama really help move the needle for joe? >> yeah. i mean, obviously he's clearly, i think, the preeminent figure in the democratic party, apart
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from the nominee, joe biden at this moment. and you think of the power he has, pete, in terms of his popularity. remember, he left office and his approval rating, favorability was plus 60. you know, president trump has never even come close to that. so it gives you an idea of the stature this man has not only in the democratic party -- pete: why hasn't -- >> -- but in american life and specifically i would advise you to look at the power -- excuse me. let me just finish this point -- specifically i'd ask you to look at the power he has with minority voters. pete: why hasn't he been more promptly featured throughout, then, -- we saw michelle obama who's very popular amongst democrats give one closing statement a week and a half ago. barack obama's barely been on the trail. as i said, didn't want joe to win. is that an issue of obama never believing joe should have been the nominee to begin with? i mean that's kind of an open secret, isn't it? >> no, it's not. i listened to what you said and i think what you more heard was
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that the former president obama really was cautious about joe biden taking this step and saying, joe, you don't have to do it, but he's been clearly a biden supporter all along to the point where several people who were running against joe biden cautioned him not to endorse joe biden early, to let the primary process play out and not make it seem like the establishment was picking a candidate. so i think that was one of the hindrances there for obama making a clear statement early on. but obviously biden was his vice president. but the point now is i think that he didn't come out earlier because, you know, pete, you're a great athlete. and i think, you know, you save your closer, your finisher, whether it's a relay race or a baseball game, for the final run run. and right now is the final stretch. and that's where you got your closer, barack obama, in the game. pete: well, for joe biden, barack obama is still his closer because he's not out there
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closing. i have to look at this, though. you look at the rallies for the president, the crowds remain huge, enthusiasm, parades across the country. you don't see that for joe biden in part because of the campaign approach that they've taken. deep down -- and be honest -- do you have any concerns about an enthusiasm gap on your side when it comes to actually turning out the vote? not the polls. turning it out. >> oh, yeah. i mean, you saw this -- the enthusiasm was on the president president's side when people were doing polling for most of this campaign. but what we see now in the polls the latest fox poll has both sides in the 80% range in terms of people enthusiastic about their candidate. so i think that has now, we look at the long lines at early voting sites, i think that clearly has turned. i think there's equal passion on both sides right now for their candidates. and, you know, we'll see what happens but right now in terms of early voting, gosh, the early voting setting records, pete. you know that. pete: it sure is.
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real quick. exit question. about a week and a half ago bernie sanders -- or i think it was last week -- bernie sanders came out and announced he would have his own 100 day, first 100 day plan, alongside or in addition to whatever a joe biden presidency, if that were to happen, would do. is there still a big tension between the left and the biden campaign? are you split? >> oh, i think that there's some differences. i don't think there's any question there. but in terms of tension i think the story has been that people like bernie sanders and others on the far left of the party who didn't win the nomination so far have folded their tent and said, "we're with joe." and again, you know, there was a real question about whether or not given what happened last time you see some people say, " "oh, i'm not gonna, you know, back the party candidate. i want my guy, i want what i want right now." that hasn't happened. and i think, again, your earlier question about support for biden passion; i think that indicates how important this election is
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for democrats across the range of political viewpoints. pete: or they dragged joe into their leftist tent. that's another way to look at it too, and maybe he's getting cozy in there. juan, thank you very much. >> have a great sunday, pete. thank you. pete: straight ahead, scot peterson back in court and new developments with nancy grace coming up. we're carvana, the company who invented
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jedediah: thanks, will. another bombshell in the scott peterson case. just weeks after his death sentence was overturned, a california court is now taking a second look at his murder conviction due to an error in the original jury selection. peterson made a virtual court appearance on friday. he was found guilty in 2004 for the murder of his pregnant wife, lacey, and their unborn child. our next guest was outside the courthouse every day during the initial trial. here now is fox nation host nancy grace.
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nancy, welcome. this is a really interesting curve ball. so talk about this retrying of the case. is this common? does this happen? and why is it happening in this case? >> good morning. thank you for inviting me. it very, very rarely happens, especially in a death penalty case, and i'll tell you why. only certain lawyers are qualified to try death penalty cases. you got to have a lot of experience to do that. the court is very careful in all of its rulings in a death penalty case 'cause someone's life hangs in the balance. therefore, i believe you see fewer errors in death penalty cases. however, the court, the california supreme court, has made it very clear -- scott peterson is guilty. there was nothing wrong that happened during the trial. the errors, under the law, occurred during jury selection. some of the jurors said they were opposed to the death penalty, just a handful. and they were not questioned further. now we have alleged juror misconduct.
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one juror said she was not a crime victim but as it turns out she has filed a tro, protective order, against her boyfriend's ex-girlfriend who was harassing her, the juror, during the juror juror's pregnancy. so that is a problem. but the bombshell to me is that in the last hours, the state, stanislaus county, has announced "fine. we will retry the penalty phase. we're not going to just let him have life behind bars. we're going to retry him and seek the death penalty again." now, here's what you just said, jed. the california supreme court is now saying, "well, maybe the whole conviction should be thrown out." you know what? that's okay. this is why. when you retry a penalty phase, the jury really needs to hear the whole kit and caboodle, all the facts and evidence before they decide death penalty or life. so the state in effect is going to have to put on all the
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evidence anyway. so have at it. jedediah: so what do you anticipate in terms of time frame here? is this something that goes on for months, for years? what happens here? >> i think it will be a lot quicker than that because, first of all, there is a new defense lawyer. his name is pat harris. he said immediately that he needed time. and, you know what? he's right. because he's got to assimilate all this evidence and get ready for trial. the state needs to put it all back together again. when i first went to the d.a.'s office once i started trying homicides, i tried a very old case that had to be retried. very difficult to put that murder case back together again. thankfully i did and the jury convicted, but it's really hard to find all those witnesses again. some have moved. some have died. things have changed. to try to present a case to a jury. but i think stanislaus county is up for it. i would predict it's going to
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happen within the next two year. jedediah: two years. nancy grace, great stuff, as always. and i'm should check out "crime stories with nancy grace." it is available now on fox nation. it's good stuff. you definitely don't want to miss it. thank you, nancy. >> thank you. jedediah: the president ending yesterday's marathon day on the campaign trail in the battleground state of wisconsin, where our next guest, sean duffy rachel campos-duffy call home. nice. this is the new buick? i think you mean the new alexa. it's a buick. it's an alexa. check it out. alexa, turn on the outdoor lights. ok. that's cool, but i'm pretty sure it's a buick. clearly an alexa. alexa, get directions to the 8-18 grill. getting directions. it's a buick. the first-ever encore gx, available with alexa built-in.
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♪ jedediah: it is your shot of the morning. just call them the maga nuns. they stood front row right behind president trump at his ohio rally. will: the sisters wearing maga face masks. one held up a bible while the other two held rosaries in their hands. pete: the show stealing sisters won hearts on the international know internet. myself included spotting them right away saying that is something you don't hear right away. let's bring in sean duffy along with rachel campos-duffy, fox news contributor and host of moms on fox nation.
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rachel, i thought of you when i saw the maga nuns enjoy love they would too. they were awesome. i don't know how much of the speech they were listening to because they were definitely praying that rosary and i know joe biden carries the rosary in his ad, but these nuns were actually praying the rosary so i think that's what donald trump will need to win this election because i think this election's going to be very tight. pete: you know what? i think you're right. i want to get your take on that pap sean, i'll start with you. if you talk to folks inside the trump world they're feeling better about the south, north carolina and florida, but they're looking at at michigan, pennsylvania, and wisconsin as states where they'll be fighting to the real end. >> the rust belt, pete. what really matters we saw donald trump in wisconsin last night, he's coming back in a few days, he was here last week. joe biden was here twice in the last two years. he hasn't shown up. you know, i've run, you know, many races and hard races. the best thing you can have as a candidate an opponent who's lazy lazy. you have donald trump who's running like he's in the wwf and
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joe biden who's running like he's, you know, in the westminster dog show. that matters because you have some persuadables still out there but in wisconsin like in michigan and pennsylvania, this is going to be about turnout. and when donald trump comes, you see these massive crowds that energizes his base which is really important to win on election day. donald trump was in janesville last week and he had like ten, 12,000 people there. and of that crowd, 25, 26% of them didn't even vote in 2016. so there's a whole new slew of trump voters that didn't show up four years ago, which i don't think really gets picked up in the polling. pete: very interesting. rachel, let's talk about identical politics. will: let's talk about race. it seems to define so many conversations in america today. in fact it was a conversation that comedian chelsea handler brought up recently when it comes to her former boyfriend, 50 cent. let's watch this first. >> i want to say 62% of taxes,
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he doesn't want to go from being 50 cent to 20 cent. and i had to remind him that he was a black person; so you can't vote for donald trump. will: rachel, i think irony is the word i'm looking for here. first of all, isn't that ironic? that's one of the most racist comments i could possibly imagine. but second when it comes to these accusations of bigotry constantly, they don't seem to be working at least when it comes to the latino vote. i know you have some information on that. >> well, let me just -- can i just backtrack a little bit on chelsea handleler. she not only said that he doesn't know he's black; so he's not allowed to vote for -- she had to remind him, by the way, he's not allowed to vote for donald trump. she also offered sexual favors if he would change his mind and vote for joe biden, which is what the left i think thinks is female empowerment. i thought it was absolutely disgusting for her to even joke about that. >> we call it prostitution. >> yeah, it's pretty gross.
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hispanics are on board for donald trump in numbers we have never seen. i think he's going to approach george bush numbers. i think if you take chelsea handler and you take those that are fired up about socialism, about donald trump's approach to taxes and free enterprise and small business, all of this stuff is very appealing to hispanics as well as the catholic vote and pro-life stuff stuff. what i think is interesting, no matter what happens in this election, is you are seeing minorities -- blacks, whites -- blacks, asians, and hispanics -- looking at things in different ways, not feeling bound by the party, waking up to the idea that there's a lot of white people that are telling them how to vote, and they don't like it. and so whatever happens in this election, i think donald trump is, you know, shaking it up a bit. and i think moving forward, more hispanics are going to vote not based on heritage or what their dad voted for because he was a
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union democrat, but they're going to be looking at policies and hopefully that will play out in this election too. >> everybody loves freedom; right? everyone loves opportunity and everybody loves lower taxes and 50 cent said they don't want to 20 cent, i want to be 50 cent. that matters across the board no matter what race you are. will: that's radical. be careful. >> saying she would pay his extra taxes but i don't think she offered to do that for the rest of amer.ca jedediah: sean, you brought up taxes and other issues there. being nine days away, we're in the final home stretch here -- if you could list out a few of the issues that people have in their minds at this late stage as they head to the voting boot. >> look at the last debate, when joe biden mentioned he was going to get rid of oil and gas; right? you think wisconsin, we don't have oil and gas but we have the best frack sand in america. it'sed hardest, roundest sand. we have huge facilities in central and western wisconsin. so fracking matters to us in wisconsin.
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we have way better sand than pete does in minnesota. so it's a huge industry. so that matters. really we have a huge manufacturing base so trade has mattered and fair trade policies that have come from donald trump for manufacturers to be treated fairly in this new global economy. farming matters, dairy, we have a huge barry, we have genseng and cranberries so us-m-ca was important. one of the big issues is health care. joe biden's out there talking about health care and how he's going to reduce costs with his new health care plan. donald trump is the only one who's brought down health care costs with what he's done with prescription drugs, he's done with favored nations. meaning he looks at ten countries, does an assessment of the prices and makes sure that american consumers don't pay more than these other countries, which is a really good thing. we're not subsidizing the rest of the world bringing down drug prices. i think that matters, too, to wisconsin voters. pete: definitely. sean, rachel i've given up a long time on attempting to defend minnesota compared to wisconsin. i won't even try.
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maybe on election day minnesota will bring some surprising heat for the president. we'll see. rachel and sean, always love having you guys on. have a great sunday. turning now to your headlines. an iowa farmer who'd featured on a democrat campaign mailer said she actually supports her republican opponent. he told the washington free beacon that he's voting to re reelect senator joni ernst. her opponent used the farmer on the campaign mailer. the farmer said he knew it would be used as a stock photo but said he would have appreciated a courtesy call from griefed's campaign. and in-person learning may not happen anytime soon at chicago public schools. the city says the teachers union -- shocker -- is refusing to discuss returning to classrooms even with safety measures and protocols in place. ooh, i wonder if they have another agenda? the union claims they are being forced to go into buildings without adequate protection. they have filed new unfair labor practice charges against the city.
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you know who loses? the kids. and you could soon enjoy the taste of chick-fil-a on sunday? will: this is huge. pete: the fast food chain will begin selling it's signature dipping sauces at grocery stores stores. they will be available at supermarkets in five states next month. all the proceeds will go toward a scholarship initiative for employees. a nationwide rollout is slated for next year. will got very happy, then he got very sad. i will say i already have one of those in my bridge. will: dipping sauce? pete: the dipping sauce in a bottle and i on occasion go by the fridge and squirt it in my mouth. will: i believe you 100 percent. pete: cause it is a hundred percent sure, chick-fil-a -- will: you are missed on sundays, chick-fil-a. adam closs, you're not missed because you're here with the weather. >> hey, hey, guys, good morning, guys. you know what i'm tracking out there? hurricane season continues even though we're now running up on november. plenty of cold air across the country but not down in the tropics. this is a system we're pay
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attention to. currently tropical storm zeta. winds at a hundred miles per hour. bumping up into the gulf of mexico where the water's still relatively warm climbing up to a category 1 hurricane, when are we talking about a potential landfall? these are all of our tropical models, louisiana, maybe over to the florida panhandle sometime on wednesday. boy, guys, it's been a busy season and we have yet another storm to pay attention to the next couple of days. jedediah: thanks so much, adam. early voting numbers surging across the country. and one state in particular is shattering records. senator marsha blackburne tells us what she's seeing on the ground in her home state of tennessee. that's next. (♪ )
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♪ will: well, just nine days out from the election, but tennesseans are wasting no time getting to the polls. the state is shattering early voting records with only 1.4 million ballots already cost throughout the state. let's bring in "mind of the conservative woman" author senator marsha blackburne. there's some wonderments over all this early voting is a good sign for democrats because traditionally they are the ones that get out for early voting, absentee balloting. but your state, tennessee, which is reliably conservative is also turning out heavy. this is what tennessee did in 2012, 1.4 mull voters. you've already matched that. and in 2016 it was 1.6 million early voters; so getting close already with nine days to go to the 2016 total. so what does that tell you about whether or not these early votes are leaning left or right? >> what it tells us is that
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you've got a lot of people out there like the cato institute survey said, 62% do not want to tell you how they're going to vote. and then you look at gallup survey that you all have discussed, will, 56% say they're better off now than they were four years ago. and i'll give you two examples of how this is summed up for me. i talked with a woman this week who was an independent. she said, "i am exhausted with living in fear. what i want is normalcy. and i think that donald trump is the one who is going to get us back to a solid starting point for recovery, faster than joe biden, because what got her was biden talking about locking down the economy again. so she changed her vote. and the second thing that we are seeing is people that say -- and i had a woman change her vote on this, saying, "i don't think i can trust joe biden to deal with
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china." and china has caused all of this chaos and upheaval, and you have to deal with china. and she said, "you know, i'm not buying anything that says 'made in china.'" pete: we talked to a panel of unidentified voters earlier in that cancel culture, that radicalism of the less was playing on their minds as well. you sit on the judiciary committee, you are scheduled to confirm judge amy coney barrett tomorrow. president trump has been on economy, foreign trade, but when it comes to accomplishments in his first term, where would you put three new supreme court justices? >> i put it at the top of the heap. and one of the reasons you were seeing the left fight this so fiercely is because they do not want a female from the political center-center right on the
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supreme court. you know, will, they have invested the last 45 years into creating a narrative that you are not fully female in this country unless you've been to the agenda of the left -- unless you bend to the agenda of the left, unless you are going to fight for the leftist version of women's rights and worker rights rights. and now they're seeing that barrier shattered and conservative women step to the forefront, and they're not happ. will: and really quickly, senator, it seems to have been exposed by hypocrisy. i think i have time. i want to play this back from amy coney barrett's hearing. you were there. your fellow senator mazie hirono said this about amy coney barrett and her choice in language. trump: thank you very much. what a great place. what a great place. what a place. will: that's the wrong clip. senator, i apologize. it's basically when she said amy coney barrett was wrong and offensive for using the term sexual preference as opposed to sexual orientation. she's then since been pushed on, "well, joe biden has used that same exact term. should he apologize?"
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and she holds him not to the same standard, senator. >> i think the most telling thing about that exchange, will, is that after it happened on october 12th, 13th, merriam-webster changed their online dictionary to come in line with what the left was saying on that definition. that just shows you how closely aligned all of these tech companies are with the democratic party. will: it just also shows whether or not it's a matter of principle or matter of politics as well. >> that's ri.ht will: senator marsha blackburne, thanks so much for your time this morning. >> good to be with you. thank you. will: nfl week 7 is here, and fox as a slew of highly anticipated matchups slated for today. fox sports reporter jen is here with her predictions and she's next. when we started carvana, they told us that selling cars 100% online wouldn't work.
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♪ pete: it is week 7 of the nfl on fox, and what are the biggest matchups? here to help figure it out is fox sideline sports reporter jen hale. good morning. biggest matchup, biggest headlines, biggest stars, it's got to be the greatest quarterback of all time with, by the way, a new wide receiver, who won't be on the field yet, but a new wide receiver in antonio brown. am i right, jen? >> not yet, guys, but it is coming. so brady and the bucs getting ready to take home the radars back home in tampa that front is betting big on embattled wide receiver antonio brown. they've agreed to a one-year deal. tom brady, by the way, a major force behind this and you're
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right, you're not going to see a.b. probably in two weeks, but i say no a.b., no problem, i've got tampa by 14 on this one. pete: how about green bay, fresh off a bye week, looking good, another top quarterback, who do you have there? >> green bay, i think aaron rodgers is on fire for some redemption here. he had a really humiliating loss one of the worst in his career. i think devante adams is going to be back toward that pro bowl form, another week for that hamm hammie to heal up but aaron jones, the leading rusher is questionable, i'm going packers by three. will: myself ask you -- i don't think i'm going to like the answer -- but america's team the dallas cowboys is down to their third string i think all across the offensive line, they take on the washington football team today, jen. >> this is going to be a tough one for the cowboys. this is uphill sledding with all of the injuries they've had, just a rash of them. i got to go with the washington football team here, but, hey, adversity brings out either the best or the worst in a team; so maybe, maybe, will, you'll see one of your new stars emerge
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from all of this. pete: oh, the opportunity side of the coin, new stars emerging. jen, appreciate that sunny outlook. fox bets super 6 of giving away terry bradshaw's money. >> it's free to play. all you have to do is download the app and that's free too and if you are correct in your score prediction, you could win a million dollars, and who couldn't use that? i know i certainly could, guys. will: not just a million. terry bradshaw's million dollars dollars. if i could win pete's money, it would make it ten times sweeter. pete: i got 20 bucks in my wallet. jen, thank you so much. appreciate your time. what game are you on today? >> today i'm in atlanta. i've got lions and falcons. matt stafford, can you believe 12 years in the nfl? he never played a pro game here in georgia, his home away from home. that will be a sweet homecoming. pete: highland park, texas, boy, but he did go to georgia. >> last time he played here 2008
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he was leading the georgia bull did you guys. will: we'll be watching. still ahead general jack keane, tim murray tau, kirk cameron and maria bartiromo coming up in the next hour of fox & friends. well, this has been an absolute [bleep] disaster from the beginning. this is real. that's the first thing. no pussyfooting around. we are not going to stamp this out unless ... a healthy, normal life again. ff pac is responsible for the content of this ad.
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>> ♪ ♪ will: you can feel it coming and you can feel it happening because it already is we're nine days away from the election but people are standing in line across this country to vote early it's fox & friends i'm will cain, pete hegseth and jedediah bila. jedediah: yes, thank you all for joining us this our final hour cannot believe we're in the home stretch right around the corner is election day although pete, many many people have already decided they're going to start voting right now, today, you voted already, pete, will and i are a little behind but we'll get to it this week.
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pete: not only that vote i got a mailer my wife showed yesterday that confirmed my vote was counted so it's nifty to get. so you mentioned early voting welcome to fox & friends on this bonus hour on a sunday nine days before the election that's how many americans as of late last night had their ballots counted, over 56 million when you consider what the total number will be which is north of 100 million, there's still a huge wave to come and a lot of people think of a red wave to come of in person voting on election day way ahead of where we were four years ago and of course we're a world away, the campaign is shaping up in some ways similarly in that donald trump if you had the television yesterday he was in north carolina, he was in ohio, then he was in wisconsin, with huge crowds, big rallies, and joe biden had a couple of rallies in pennsylvania not far from his house, very different approach, and they're making their beginning to make their closing cases with all of the debates done, to the american people. here is a portion of what president trump and the former
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vice president said yesterday. president trump: only your vote can save america. this is the most important election. >> [applause] president trump: i never thought i'd ever say it. i never thought i'd say it after what we went through four years ago. i said that's got to be the most important. this is more important. >> it's go time. it's game day. we have 10 days left and it may come down to pennsylvania and i believe in you i believe in my state. the choice has never been clearer in the stakes have never been higher. pete: well it's the humans vs. the honking horns you might say maga versus the mazdas, i couldn't think of an m for a car or the people vs. the priu s and they are starkly different and will whatever you did earlier in the program which was great was talk to undecided voters a small sliver but there's still votes to be had. will: there are still people out there waiting to make up their
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mind. what are they waiting on what issues are they still waiting what moment are they waiting to unfold? well we spoke to some undecided voters a little bit earlier on " fox & friends" and got insight into what they're thinking watch this. >> the recent political environment is what has really gotten my attention. the policies i think are what really is making me question. i support law enforcement. >> for the biden side he's been a moderate his whole career but he elected kamala harris whose part of the radical left wing, that radical left wing of the democratic party and they talk about america as this evil oppressive place. >> i'm also disappointed by the way he's going to be handl ing the economy and by his vice president's choice. show me that you're not part of the radical left. will: there are three undecided voters jedediah. one voted for hillary clinton in 2016 the two gentlemen voted for gary johnson a libertarian candidate in 2016. the first two individuals you
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saw there are leaning towards president trump. the final one is leaning towards joe biden. i think, jedediah, as you characterized it earlier what you saw play out there are people weighing essentially their opinions of donald trump's personality against the policies and drift of the democratic party further to the left. jedediah: that third person that you interviewed was fascinating to me. that's someone who voted for gary johnson. the ultimate libertarian and is now leading biden and i just kept thinking that's like going from very little government to a ton of government involvement. it's a really interesting transition, i was wishing that you had, you know, a few hours more to map that out and to figure out how that reasoning happened because it's really fascinating some of these undecided voters. i think pete, to your point, there will be a red wave. i also think there's going to be a blue wave, because i think that there is very strong enthusiasm for president trump. people who support him. we've seen them out at the rall
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ies. we've seen it at many events that we've covered those boat parties, the floatillas, all that stuff but there are also very passionate people against donald trump and they may not be advocates for joe biden in fact many come out and say listen joe biden wouldn't have been my pick but they are so passionate against president trump that they're going to show up at the polls and vote against him and that translates into a vote for biden as well so i think it'll be really interesting in these next nine days as people vote early and on election day to see how many of those people on each side show up because ultimately what you feel on the inside doesn't matter unless you show up and you cast that vote and it translates into a vote that's what ultimately makes the difference and i think that's why you see both candidates something in saying get out the vote get out the vote because they need those votes obviously in order to win this election. pete: yeah, the problem for biden voters on election day is it's very difficult to go to the poll and vote with that big white circle around you and so how do you get , stay in line and how you keep the white circle around you with the people around you there will be a red wave because a lot of republicans have insisted this
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is still an election day activity we're going to do it and it is a covid-19 moment but we're responsible adults and we can do it if i can go to walmart and riot in the streets i can certainly wait in line peaceful ly to vote, so lot of votes still waiting to come in. i was intrigued by the policy part of his undecided voters as well because that's why you see joe biden trying to hide some of his policies so carefully whether it was packing the court adding justices i don't want to answer it, whether it's fracking saying well i was maybe for banning but not any more, because the more he reveals how left he's gone the more it turns off voters in the middle. it may energize his base a little bit but the middle voters don't like that drift to the left which is almost universally what we heard including the cultural thing like law enforcement love of country, which people have seen the democrat party completely abandon. but another big topic happening right now in the middle of the election the senate expected to vote tomorrow to confirm judge amy coney barrett, to the supreme court let's get straight
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to mark meredith in washington as the senate is scheduled to meet today. mark good morning. >> good morning, it appears judge amy coney barrett is set to be a justice of the supreme court. later today the senate will meet like they did saturday to consider his nomination. the white house has made it clear it wants barrett on the bench before election day and all indications is that she will clear a key proceed vote today and final confirmation vote likely happening today. senior democrats continue to accuse majority leader mitch mcconnell of hypocrisy for moving forward with president trump's nominee while refusing to consider president obama's nominee four years ago. >> the contradiction will be ab stained on the leader's forehead and on the entire republican caucus if it continues. >> meantime on saturday alaska republican senator lisa murkowski made up her mind saying despite being unhappy with the way this nomination played out she still plans to vote for a final yes on
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confirmation. >> i have no doubt about her capability to do the job and to do it well. i've concluded that she is the person that we want on the supreme court. >> murkowski is not up for re-election in this cycle but in two years and guys as you know the supreme court battle certainly motivating a lot of people at the polls as election day inches closer every hour, pete, jed and will back to you guys in new york. will: mark thank you, president trump has redrawn so many political battle lines and so many issues switched from right to left or left to right whether or not that might betrayed, free-trade dealing with china, foreign wars but perhaps no single accomplishment for president trump is bigger than making three nominations to the supreme court of the united states and i asked senator marsha blackburn earlier why this is such a big deal and what it is about this issue that infuriates the left. >> some of the reasons you were seeing left fight this so fiercely is because they do not
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want a female from the political center center right on the supreme court. you know, will they have invest ed the last 45 years into creating a narrative that you are not fully female in this country unless you've been to the agenda of the left. pete: yeah, i enjoy it when i'm wrong in this case i thought this be even harsher in the process than it was for justice kavanaugh as it turns out, amy coney barrett was an amazing nominee, it was handled very well by mitch mcconnell and lindsey graham and any democrats that participated were scorned so much they didn't show up or have an opportunity to block it at all and we'll have a new justice come monday night in the middle of a presidential election, jed. jedediah: yeah, she's highly impressive and she understands her duty and her job. she's not looking to be a political activist, not trying to be a policy maker, she's trying to interpret the law, leave it at that. it was very clear in the hearing i thought she did a fantastic job and she's a win for the
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country because she understands the proper job description of a supreme court justice and that's exactly what i think she intends to do is everyone should be celebrating that even though they aren't all , they should be. all right, russia and china could be heading toward a military alliance. how could this affect american and global national security? retired four star general jack keane is here to weigh in, next. >> ♪ ♪
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pete: russian president vladimir putin not willing to rule out a future russia china military alliance when asked about the potential union between moscow and beijing, putin said, "we don't need it but they theoretically it's quite possible to imagine it" let's bring in fox news senior strategic analyst and four star
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general jack keane. thanks so much for being here, russia and china have a very long history and much is adversarial but if they had a common enemy you could conceive of a reason to make it together. what do you make of vladimir putin's statement? >> it's an interesting comment and i think he being very truthful about it. the relationship he has with china has never been as good as it is since going all the way back to the earlier days of the cold war and it was a result of the next on administration, the henry kissinger that they split when we opened the door to china attempting isolate russia our number one strategic enemy so yeah, what they're really bonded by today is the fact that both countries disagree with the international order that we have experienced for the last 70 years largely driven by the democracies of the world and headed up by the global leadership of the united states. they are fundamentally opposed to that and want to change their spheres of influence and the world's as a result of it so that's why they have such a
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common bond. pete: we already see it of course oftentimes in the u.n. security council when they vote together against anything that would benefit the united states or the west. very interesting to see how that develops, two dictators dictating whether their countries will become friends against the rest of the world to reshape that order but i want your take on something happening here at home which has been massively underreported but the education department put out a statement on tuesday that says the education or this is part of what it was about the education department found that 12 u.s. universities collectively had $6.5 billion in previously unreported foreign funds schools like harvard and yale and stanford and georgetown taking money from the communist chinese, even the ccp specifically in these universities and not reporting it. what implications does that have , general? >> yeah, i think it's pretty significant revelation. this goes back to a somewhat obscure law, pete of 1986, passed by the congress of the united states, requiring
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universities to report their foreign donations over 250,000 bucks, and clearly, there is only 12 universities here that are under investigation, albeit they're very notable universities as you pointed out, and consider the fact that there's hundreds of universities and colleges in the united states so the amount of money involved here likely far exceeds the $6.5 billion and why are we concerned about this? well, because our adversaries russia and china are focused on the research and scientific advancing universities where they can steal intellectual property and research that's valuable to them particularly as it has military application to what they're doing and the association of american universities has come out and said this revelation is just partisan and it's political and it doesn't contain any substance , and that is manifest ly false, pete, because if you talk to our intelligence
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agencies, they will tell you this threat is real and those donations impact the chinese and russian's ability to steal our intellectual property and the personal date that they have on our people, so it is a good revelation and now we can get back to enforcing the law which largely multiple administrations have been. pete: yeah what can we do about it because it's clearly, in addition to the research part of it, an intentional attempt by the communist chinese or anyone else, to sort of cultivate the elite class into a friendly view of their rise and their development which is part of the reason why china took advantage of us for so long the bipartisan consensus that a peaceful rise of china was good for everybody and we've certainly seen a different story now. >> yeah, it is a different story. i mean, the complacency and appeasement policies of the past are largely over, and director wray of the fbi points out that china is the number one counter
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intelligence target that he has and he averages a new investigation every 10 hours in this country and they are focused like a laser beam on what has taken place here, and this is all about helping china and to a lesser degree, russia, achieve their national interest and goals at the expense of the united states and the security of the american people. pete: uh-huh. general we're seeing a huge change in the middle east, under reported as well, in most media outlets but the sudan israeli peace deal the third of its kind recently occurred here is a part of what the president said. president trump: in sudan they wanted to do a deal and that was in particular nice because they essentially have been at war with israel for a long time and now it's not only the deal was signed but it's peace so that's official and that's nice. we have at least five that want to come in.
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pete: general share with our viewers why does this matter? >> yeah, this is a major geo political paradigm shift in the middle east, and it's largely the trump adminitration deserves credit and they're not getting much credit for it but it brings in a new era in the middle east, and it's occur ring why? because one, the trump adminitration visited the middle east as their first international visit, summer jule 55 leaders that i, the president of the united states stand against the number one strategic threat in the region, iran. the following year he pulled out of the nuclear deal which all of the israeli country were opposed to that deal to begin with. that demonstrated to them that he had their back, and then, in talking to the arab leaders you get another opinion that killing soulemani was a factor because it showed the trump adminitration seriousness about the iranian threat. the second thing is the arabs
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are fed up with the palestinians why is that? clearly they have an alignment with them and they have their interest at-heart but they're fed up with their leadership because every concession the israelis make the palestinian leadership rejects and if you talk to them privately what they will say is they believe the palestinian leadership is corrupt because they want the status quo and they welcome it because they take donor gifts around the world and pocket it for themselves and the third thing is israel itself. this is an innovative country. pete: yup. >> it leads the world on a per capita basis and startups and the arabs want a part of that about stability, security and economic prosperity a huge step forward. pete: general jack keane wise words we appreciate your time this morning thank you. >> good talking to you, pete. pete: coming up president trump 's supporters refusing to stay silent, long island's loud majority, and they are, will take to the streets today for
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theinflammation in your eyeer. might be to blame.ck, looks like a great day for achy, burning eyes over-the-counter eye drops typically work by lubricating your eyes and may provide temporary relief. ha! these drops probably won't touch me. xiidra works differently, targeting inflammation that can cause dry eye disease. what is that? xiidra, noooo! it can provide lasting relief. xiidra is the only fda approved treatment specifically for the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease. one drop in each eye, twice a day. don't use if you're allergic to xiidra. common side effects include eye irritation, discomfort or blurred vision when applied to the eye, and unusual taste sensation. don't touch container tip to your eye or any surface. after using xiidra, wait 15 minutes before reinserting contacts.
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are nine days away, guys from election day, and both candidates have really come in and tried to in the last home stretch talked about a populous message, they've wanted t hit their home run on their issues they had two very different campaigns i think we've seen an increase in voter enthusiasm on both sides, but joe biden recently made a comment this is in bristol, pennsylvania that rubbed some people the wrong way let's take a listen to what he said. >> by the way, we don't do things like those chumps out there like the microphone are doing with the trump guy. >> [applause] >> i'll work as hard for those who don't support me
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as those who do including those chumps with the microphone out there. >> [applause] >> look, that's the job of a president. pete: it's about decency you chumps. i mean, will it have an effect ultimately on election day i don't know but will you pointed out it is part of a trend here, condescending to voters, yes, president trump nicknames and all of the things he does but he's going at political rivals for the most part in the case you see on on the left oftentimes it's the voters, the minions that are the problem will: i think it's a continuation a of what we heard from president obama then- candidate hillary clinton from they cling to their guns and their religion to they are deplorable to now openly disavow ing anybody who disagrees with you as a chump and it's a continuation of cancel culture. everybody who manages or dares disagree with me, shawn parnell, running for congress on the gop
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ticket in pennsylvania talked about that a little bit earlier on fox & friends. >> this is a disturbing pattern with radical leftists who run for president with barack obama, people in pennsylvania were simple who clung to bibles and guns and religion and under hillary clinton we were deplorables and now under joe biden we're chumps so in the span of a week, joe biden said i'm a proud democrat but i'm going to run as an american president and then comes to my home state of pennsylvania and calls people that don't support him chumps. so, look, this is joe biden says one thing but does another and i think the people of pennsylvania ultimately will reject it. pete: queue the t-shirts and the hats, chumps for trump. definitely coming. jedediah: [laughter] i don't know guys i think chumps is pretty benign, i mean i think it's very different from basket of deplorables and very different from, you know, guns and religion those were very specific, guns is your second
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amendment right, religion you're talking about your first amendment rights you're talking about your, i think this is a little bit different and president trump, listen he does this stuff all the time right? and his fans love it. he goes after the media. his twitter account is hilarious to those who like him and drives other people crazy this is just the language these two have so i be very surprised if this had an impact i thought it was funny myself, but we'll see , right? you never know whose going to be right on this stuff and we'll see nine days away so a lot of these answers are going to be unfolding in the next few days just nine days left as i said president trump is touching down in a key battleground state several actually while joe biden essentially stays home, closer to home, trump 2020 communications director tim murtaugh is here with a campaign plan and meet with the presidential debate game what he plans to do with his $50,000 prize. >> ♪ ♪ te what comes next.
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>> ♪ ♪ jedediah: it is your shot of the morning a downtown miami skyscraper becomes the country's largest electronic american flag pete: wait until they hear from the left about that be standing 700 feet tall the stream of red and white led stripes encouraging floridians to cast their ballot. will: it will be lit through
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election day. now let's bring in somebody playing a role in what happens on election day the director of communications for trump 2020 tim murtaugh is with us this morning good morning, tim it looks like the president has a very busy schedule 11 events over the next three days joe biden is taking today off and then heads to georgia. first of all what do you read into that? joe biden taking time off and then when he does return, returning to georgia. is that a campaign that's really confident in where it sits in the polls? >> no, i don't think so, and i think you can see the way that joe biden behaved yesterday in pennsylvania that he does not feel good. he shouted his way through his speech yesterday, was actually quite angry and i heard you guys talking about how he says that if you're in pennsylvania and you don't support him you're a chump. that's very similar to what he told black voters on the radio show that if you're black and you don't support him then you ain't black and it's not surprising that he be feeling the heat because in pennsylvania , as we know, joe biden will kill the fracking industry and that means the
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elimination of 600,000 jobs in pennsylvania, and i think he's also feeling the heat now because america is learning about biden inc, the biden family enterprise, of selling access to joe biden while he was vice president and afterwards selling access to power and really these scandalist revelations that hunter biden was on a world tour selling access to his father via businessmen from foreign countries and so i'm not surprised that joe biden is feeling the heat and, you know, he took five out of six days off leading up to the debate. he's about due for another day off i guess, so it's not really surprising. pete: taking one today, tim so i mean you're the communications director for the campaign. your job is to craft the message if you were to crystallize into one or two phrases or one or two issues, what are you closing your argument with right now? >> i think it's pretty clear. president trump has accomplished more in 47 months than joe biden has in 47 years of failure.
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president trump is still the political outsider in washington, the washington establishment still doesn't know what to make of him and joe biden is the d.c. insider, almost five decades of working in the swamp and we see that now , the evidence of it is this biden, inc, the hunter biden scandal selling access to his father and it's an economic question. the president built the world's best economy once he's already doing it a second time, joe biden has been an economic failure and now, would raise taxes by $4 trillion on more than 80% of american taxpayers. if you care about whose going to get the economy back to where we should be, it's president trump, and it's not even close. jedediah: tim, quickly, vice president pence's chief of staff has unfortunately tested positive for covid. there are also five aids that have now tested positive. the vice president, we are told, has tested negative. will his schedule continue as planned and are there any specific precautions being made to keep the vice president safe
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and covid-free? >> the president, the vice president is going to continue his travel schedule. he'll be in north carolina today and minnesota tomorrow and then on tuesday, north and south carolina there to thank lindsey graham for his leadership following the amy coney barrett vote on monday night, but as you know, the vice president is the leader of the coronavirus task force. he takes this very seriously. he wears a mask when he's not on stage of course on and off the airplane. the folks on his staff are in quarantine and he relies on the very sound medical advice of the white house medical unit. those are the best doctors in the world, the best experts in the world, and they have advised him that he can go about his normal business, and that's what he's going to do. pete: tim murtaugh you're going to be a busy man thanks for taking a moment on fox & friends this sunday we appreciate it. sure thanks you all. pete: turning to a few additional headlines crews wipe out the first nest of murder hornets found in the u.s. , stay home, everybody. workers wore heavy duty
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protective gear to destroy the nest in washington state. they filled the tree up with foam and then covered it in plastic. they then inserted a tube to suck up the potentially deadly hornets collecting them for testing. officials say the nest was the size of a basketball with about 200 murder hornets inside. hide your kids. will: enough! i know you're joking but enough. pete: i know. i'm doing it for you. democrat vp nominee kamala harris is caught on a hot mic asking if she's in cleveland, while in cleveland. watch. >> [applause] >> am i in cleveland? >> cleveland! pete: [laughter] harris was in the city for a campaign rally and you know, they travel a lot. they don't travel that much, joe and kamala, but she didn't know where she was. sam's club is selling an advent
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calendar for dogs. will: what? pete: this one features 24 doors , one for each day of december, ahead of christmas. do they know -- will: what's wrong with you right now? pete: behind each door is a variety of grain-free meaty treats for pups and it costs $10. will: i don't understand it's not a cat calendar, i don't understand. pete: i just want a human calendar. jedediah: [laughter] pete: they don't know what's going on that it's jesus' birthday. will: well you're not teaching them well. jedediah: this is where you continuously underestimate animal's intellect. they know, pete and you being a cat lover should know cats love everything all the time. adam klotz you need to weigh in on this. are animals actually smarter than pete thinks they are? >> adam: people love their pets so obviously, you need these things. that's all it boils down to. pete: you're a good politician, adam. >> adam: people love their pets and dogs should have calendars that's what i think. all right, let's get into this
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forecast, the tropical storm zeta continues to spin spin-off the yukatan peninsula this could be our next hurricane as we continue through this already very busy tropical season this is out in the gulf of mexico getting into monday strengthening up to a category 1 hurricane before it makes its way up to the louisiana coast or the florida gulf coast. these are all of our possible hurricane tracks right now. we're looking at a landfall perhaps some time on wednesday. you still see a lot of variety there and potential path so this is something we'll have to watch over the next couple of days. otherwise outside of the tropics , it's feeling like winter so we're talking about tropical weather and also really cold weather and this is the northern plains get up into the mountain states getting down into single-digits right now so bundle up and watch the tropics. those are the weather highlights right now back out to you. will: thanks adam. pete: thank you very much. will: so the winner of the presidential debate game is in and it's min tran of georgia
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the husband and father and the two girls won $50,000 and i spoke with min about his reaction and plans for the money earlier. >> i see on facebook and i downloaded it and then played along and having fun and then here we go today. so i don't know i'm excited to win that prize, 10% of my win i will donate to vietnam to help out people as they need it, there are a lot of people that need it there it's flooding and hurricane coming in, they're not working so 10% is going to be in vietnam and i'm going to buy for my daughter a gift this weekend. will: pretty cool that minh is giving away 10% to help in vietnam that puts the pressure on you because if you win the
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fox bit super 6 giving away $1 million of terry bradshaw's money, it's a big contest then you might have to give away 10% as well to match the charity, download the app at the app store or google play. you don't have to, but i mean -- pete: you don't have to. we've been talking about it so much i just did. i don't think i'm going to win. i don't know that i'm qualified if you're in the same company, i don't know, if i win, i will give it all back. jedediah: that be a scandal. pete: that be a scandal right? jedediah: scandal hegseth. pete: i would file a lawsuit to keep it. one of the top issues on voter's minds this year is the economy and president trump is making it clear contrast between his policies and joe biden's recovery or depression. maria bartiromo breaks down the weight of the economy in the election, coming up. ♪ ♪
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pete: coming up on "sunday morning futures" wisconsin senator ron johnson and ohio congressman jim jordan one topic you can surely count on, the economy and its impact on the election as the president spent yesterday rallying in their state. listen. pete: this election is a choice between a trump super-recovery and a biden depression. it's a choice between a trump super boom and a biden lockdown. i would not put joe in charge because you will come crashing down because he wants to raise your taxes massively. will: here with a preview is "sunday morning futures" host maria bartiromo. maria i think we talked last week about this idea between recovery and depression and here is what i'd like to ask you we talked to undecided voters today there's still some, i guess, to be swayed. how will the economy play or is that already baked into most voter's equation? maria: no, i think the economy's going to play pretty high up for
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those people. remember right now, we're in the middle of this stalemate where many people are hurting and they need help from government, two sides cannot come to an agreement i don't think you're getting any deal on stimulus before the election because it appears to me that speaker pelosi is trying to change the conversation away from hunter biden and joe biden and their deals across the world and instead talk about well, we're almost there, here is a deadline for the next 48 hours. it's all just noise. the other side critics of this president do not want to do another deal before the election because they almost want there to be chaos, people hurting as people go to election day, so i think the economy is going to be number one in terms of the important issues. i do think that the comments made about the oil & gas industry are going to play high, you're talking about almost 11 million jobs affected if in fact we were to see a ban on fracking. it's all going to be important as is the corruption end of this in terms of all of this
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money being paid to hunter biden, that one smoking gun e-mail that says 10% held by each for the big guy, that's going to come up this morning i'm going to have breaking news from senator ron johnson and i've got the letter he sent right here in my hands to the i g of the fbi, michael horowitz and johnson is asking horowitz to start an investigation into the fbi and why the fbi has sat on all of these smoking guns for a year , remember we had an impeachment trial at the beginning of this year. the fbi had these e-mails, they had the laptop going into and throughout that impeachment trial. you have to wonder why the impeachment trial was all about ukraine and the president 's phone call with the leader of ukraine. in fact we have e-mails about ukraine and all of the money that hunter was getting and that was really hidden. they sat on it, so we'll talk with ron johnson about this investigation. he wants michael horowitz to undertake and also peter schweiz er, investigative
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reporter has been covering this story since 2018 he's got new information and he met with bablinski from the former partner of hunter biden, we're going to talk about that as well that a lot coming up also we'll talk with mark meadows the chief of staff. he is going to talk to us about next nine days and how the president is going to try to capitalize going into the election. will: big show we'll be watching jedediah: thank you, maria. 13 minutes, 12 minutes now, we'll see you soon. forget mardi gras this is the long island loud majority parading for the president, thousands of cars are set to hit the streets and we get a sneak preview, next. >> ♪ ♪
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will: long island's loud majority is living up to their name thousands of cars will take to the streets for their fifth m aga graw parade rallying support for president trump. you may recall the parade where supporters gathered and prayed for the president after diagnosed with covid-19. those same organizers have been hosting maga graw rallies throughout long island and they're here now with a preview of today's parade long island loud majority co-founder shawn f arash, kevin smith and heather lehman. thanks for joining me, shawn first of alltel us what's behind your message, also you're driving me through suffolk and nassau counties, these are divided counties close to a split in these counties so what's your message and how is it received? >> message is suffolk county was red in 2016 but nassau county was blue. we have a ton of energy and a ton of enthusiasm.
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this doesn't happen for presidents who are unpopular this type of stuff the people you see behind me and all throughout this parking lot wouldn't be here if this president was unpopular and if he wasn't the greatest president we've all witnessed in our lifetimes. the message is it's okay to be loud. we're done being silent, it's time to rise up together find our voice and take back what's ours, we're taking back our country, we just took 10,000 cars on the road to montauch, so it's okay to be loud and conservative and okay to love your country and okay to love your president. will: heather i know you switched over from voting on the left voting for democrats, and i'd love to hear about that, also what is it this is not just a rally to show support. you're also giving back as well i believe there's a food drive, is there not, connected to the rally? >> yes, we decided to utilize our numbers to give back to our communities in need and our
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montauch rally, we do so many i start to get confused, there's a lot, we actually filled up 10 truck, 11 trucks, and we donated all of them to a pantry out east and they actually said to us that our donation was enough to feed the families for over a year. so that was a great feeling. will: well that's great and really quickly, heather what made you move over to voting for president trump after voting for democrats? >> just a lot of corruption i noticed over the past year on the left. will: fascinating and kevin so regardless of the way this presidential election goes, i see there's plans to continue holding these rallies and perhaps even focus on other elections. tell me about that, kevin. >> well in 2021 we have the new york city mayor elections, and it's time to fix the city. the last real republican we had was rudy giuliani and he fixed the city up after 40 years of
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turning into nothing but decay. bill deblasio in the 400-year history of new york city, is the single-worst mayor we've ever had and we need to do our best to get someone in there whose going to restore law and order and fix this bail policy and following that we have a governor election in 2022 and frankly, it's time to end the c uomo dynasty in new york. will: really quickly, guys shawn you can tell me this the plans for today driving from where to where and are you causing a lot of traffic here? >> [laughter] well it's causing traffic, it's kind of something we do, because i've never seen so many people happy and willing to sit in traffic that's all i know. this is something special but we're driving from farmingdale -- >> [applause] >> [laughter] >> [cheers and applause] >> that's what i'm saying this is the loud majority we're going from farmingdale to eisenhower park, and we're
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having a huge freedom rally. >> [chanting] >> this is great. listen to this! >> "four more years." will: i can hear it, it's not necessarily for traffic. >> those are the people that's what we're dealing with we're going to win. will: we got to run thank you guys. thank you for sharing that with us this morning more fox & friends just moments away. >> ♪ ♪
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to stir that fire, university of phoenix is awarding up to one million dollars in scholarships through this month. see what scholarship you qualify for at phoenix.edu. >> ♪ ♪ jedediah: it's a beautiful day! i love that song and a beautiful view we have there. happy sunday, everyone thank you for joining us, nine days get out there and vote! will: i got to tell you the show doesn't stop during commercial break if you could have a camera in-studio you would have seen me marveling at what pete hegseth
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was doing through the entire commercial break writing on a mug. pete: the best part of the show is the breaks. i said it was going to happen and it did this is my new chumps for trump mug which was just delivered here. jedediah: [laughter] pete: have a great sunday, everybody, go to church we'll see you next weekend. maria: good sunday morning everyone. welcome to "sunday morning futures." i'm maria bartiromo breaking news, nine days away from election day 2020, coming up white house chief of staff mark meadows on a blockbuster admission as the final presidential debate joe biden on transitioning the oil & gas industry. president trump: would you close it down? >> i would transition from the oil industry yes. president trump: oh, transition. maria: plus, the plot thickens on the biden family big money deals in china and ukraine, senator ron johnson w
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