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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  November 10, 2020 3:00am-6:00am PST

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act unconstitutional. and we'll see. it certainly has the ability but the supreme court is very rarely, yeah, very rarely going to issue an unconstitutionality. jillian: i hate to cut you off. the show is over. have a good day. carley: see you brett, "fox & friends" starts right now. >> the department of justice investigating allegations of voting irregularities. >> president trump is 100 percent within his right to weigh his legal options. this election is over. it's time to put aside partisanship. >> hillary clinton didn't say hey, wait a minute, this doesn't feel right. stop the count. all of you, suck it up. suck it up like we sucked it up. >> the biden campaign is starting to make a list of executive orders to sign on january 20th. >> those actions include rejoining the paris climate accord, reinstating daca. rejoining the world health organization and repealing president trump's travel ban.
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>> control of the senate may hinge on georgia where both seats are up for grabs in a run-off election. >> they will take your guns and raise your taxes and deal fund the police and gut our military. that's the stakes of this election. >> on the way, and it is good. with zeros on the clock. brian: and the jets are winless. attorney general bill barr -- hi, everyone, by the way. to say look into quote substantial allegations of voting irregularities. steve: that's right it. all comes down as the trump campaign and republicans fight legal battles in the state of pennsylvania and elsewhere, we believe. gillian turner is live in washington, d.c. to give us the very latest. good morning to you. gillian: good morning, brian and steve. you are correct. the attorney general has broken his silence now really for the first time since election day. he has ordered the u.s. attorney to investigate any allegations of voting irregularities that he deems are substantial.
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as you know, election day is now a week behind us. some states are still tallying up votes after experiencing historic voter turnout. now, let's take a look at what the attorney general actually said in this memo. he directs that investigations should happen if there are clear and apparently credible allegations of irregularities that, if true, could potentially impact the outcome of the federal election in an individual state. richard pill der, a department of justice official who oversees investigations of voting rhymes cro like this reportedly just stepped down from his role immediately after this barr authorization was released. now, the white house meanwhile is claiming that democrats are welcoming fraud without providing any tangible evidence of this is going on. president trump for his part has the state of pennsylvania in his crosshairs. he halls now tweeted, quote: pennsylvania prevented us from watching much of the ballot count, unthinkable and illegal in this country. now, take a listen to senator
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lindsey graham who backs the president up. >> we don't need their permission to look into these allegations. we owe it to those who voted for president trump and the country at large to test the system. if we don't deal with voting by mail in 2020, we will never win the white house again. gillian: now the pennsylvania attorney general is pushing back hard on this. he himself tweeted not breaking. the trump's campaign latest filing another attempt to throw out legal votes. my team and i were already prepared for this. sleep tight, we will protect the laws of our commonwealth and the will of the people. it's not just pennsylvania the trump campaign has now announced they are deploying recount teams to the states of georgia and arizona as well in addition to pennsylvania. brian and steve? steve: all right, gillian, thank you very much. >> you bet. steve: it's interesting, as she just detailed, mr. barr said the department of justice could look into specific allegations of voter fraud. and according to the "new york
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times," it sounds like there are two particular things that they're looking into. they are looking into ineligible voters in nevada and you have heard about that, you know, we telling you about that republican referral where 3,000 nonresidents allegedly voted. they are looking into that. and also they are looking into that affidavit by the postal worker in erie, pennsylvania, who essentially submitted the affidavit. we have all taken a look at it. what did says is that he says the u.s. postal service bosses there in erie, pennsylvania concocted a plan on how to back date the ballots, which would make them essentially legal even though they were not legal. in both of those cases, however, brian, there do not seem to be enough votes involved to actually overturn those states. brian: yeah, i mean, you got thousands. have you got to get over 10,000 everywhere even though they're whittling it down in arizona it seems pretty big. we counts in georgia we will
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see. wisconsin, we will see. the other thing is about the arrogance of people saying the president can't get a recount or can't get into allegations. same people like hillary clinton who called him illegitimate. eric holder didn't show up for inaugural called him illegitimate. jerry nadler said he didn't win. did he better this time than last time and came out on top and they didn't want to acknowledge. now when he challenges after getting historic 72 million votes they are saying well he has no right to look into it. the g.o.p. is saying pretty much united outside of senator collins and senator sasse and saying we are keeping our powder dry not congratulating president-elect biden if that is indeed the case until we find out about this. here is senator mitch mcconnell. >> let's not have any lectures, no lectures about how the president should immediately cheerfully accept preliminary election results from the same characters who just spent four years refusing to accept the validity of the last election.
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and who insinuated that this would be illegitimate, to be if they lost again. only if they lost. from people who push you this hysteria could not have more egg on their face than they do right now. brian: so i understand the transition and remember the delay in the transition with al gore 30 plus day. hey take your office space go ahead and start ramping up and worse comes to worse and president does get four more years, how could it hurt to have the american party start staffing up as if they are going to take over. this way the country is not hurting. tensions are down. people could honestly look at the battle ground states without the pressure of saying i need to get started on the preliminary work leading up to the inaugural, steve.
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steve: yeah, well, i mean it's a tradition where this normally happens. these are not normal times as we know. however, a lot of people are making this political. they are saying the gsa administrator is a president trump appointee and this is political. apparently, you know, the administration -- gsa just says stand by on all of that. it's interesting going back to what we were talking about a moment ago with bill barr. you know, the doj and his spokespeople say specifically that this was not at the direction of the white house or republicans or anybody else. what is curious though is that he did meet with membership mcconnell yesterday afternoon when asked both sides were asked what did you talk about they both declined. but, nonetheless, so the doj is looking into those specific allegations. meanwhile, joe biden, you know, he's in wilmington, delaware where he has been for months and he made it clear we knew that he was going to have a little press
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availability. although the press showed up and he didn't answer any questions to talk about his coronavirus advisory board. but he also took the chance to make it very clear where he is -- those are the people are on his advisory board right there, he made it very clear where he sees the election right now. watch this. >> this election is over. it's time to put aside the partisanship and the rhetoric that designed to demonize one another. it's time to end the politicization of basic responsible public health steps like mask-wearing and social distancing. we have to come together to heal the soul of this country effectively address this crisis as one country where hard-working americans have each other's backs and we are united in our shared defeating this virus. steve: he also at one point talked a little bit about how i'm not going to be the president until late in january
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but if you wear a mask, thousands of people's lives could be saved. so, please, jewels wear a mask. and what they are suggesting is wear a mask any time you are outside of your house. he also, his team was able to put together. so things they were going to put together this has been confirms by fox news. what he would like to do on day one i income incoming presidents are able to do so. without the help of congress is he going to rejoin the paris climate accord. reinstate daca, the dreamers. >> rejoin the world health organization. and repeal president trump's travel ban. this is something incoming presidents do and he has put his list out. brian: going to end america first right away. he does not want america first evidently. he says america is only first he said right before the election
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in coronavirus cases when we make up 4% of the world's population. 20% of the cases. he brought that up. so it was brought up, too. the words are great and written by john meacham one of the best writers in the country we found out for when on saturday when president-elect joe biden if that is indeed the case made his speech says look, it looks like i'm going to be president. i want to bring everyone together. brought up in the "washington times" by call thomas. want to bring everyone together a funny way of showing it. here's what he said for democrats healing in unity often means bowing to their policy wishes it. never seems to work in reverse. biden says he wants to bring us together. on which issues would he be willing to compromised and find common ground win to win the approval the democrats, their media acolytes, republicans must lose elections and then forfeit their principles. rick santorum brought up a interesting point if you want to bring up people together why would you start with a series of executive orders which are just
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basically you acting alone unilaterally. we will have to see. i think the only way to joe biden will necessarily have to work with democrats, with republicans is if they are able to win those two senate cease o. one of the two senate seats up for re-election on january 5th because they both have to do a runoff because right now it looks like it's going to be 50-48 if alaska comes in and north carolina holds out with thom till liz 50-48 and two more up for grabs. that is really what's going on in georgia right now there couldn't be any more action in georgia, steve. especially because the attorney general, republican, is being asked to resign by two republican senate candidates. steve: the secretary of state is in that particular state because they are in charge of the election. kelly loeffler senator and david perdue is saying hey that person has got to go. brad roethlisberger is his name.
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he is accused of being an embarrassment by the two senators and failed the state. while he two the senators from his party said too bad. i'm not quitting. so it looks as if he will be in charge of the election which should be on january the 5th. it is interesting though because the republicans are reluctant to make any move to alienate trump voters before that particular elections and that's exactly what the democrats are trying to do as well. they are trying to keep everybody in line by not actually giving answers to really important questions. because, keep in mind. if the senate were in democratic control, we have heard that they are going to try to get rid of the filibuster and pack the courts. last night on our air, joe mahin was asked by brett baier whether or not he would either of those things and he was straightforward. he said absolutely not. that's not the case with rauf fell warnock who would like to be the next senator from the
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great state of georgia he said. this i think they are trying to divide us again at the end of the day e pluribus ewe numb out of many one that's the covenant we have with the american people. the reporter chimed in and said do you think amy coney barrett on the supreme court would you want to seat court expanded? so they asked again, and so his answer well, i'm really focused on representing the concerns of ordinary people here in georgia. i think it's presumous for me to go further down that path without talking about what ought to happen in the courts. he was asked twice, brian, he he will not reveal it exactly the same as joe biden did. mr. warnock to his credit didn't say he was going to ask for a commission to look into it for 180 days if elected. brian: pretty clear he wanted to put his mask on and change america that has a lot to electoral college adding two
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states packing the courts and the list goes on. senator tom cotton knows exactly what's at stake especially with these two candidates. listen. >> if jon ossoff, a trust fund socialist and raffaele warnock, jeremy writes biggest supporter in georgia win on january 5th and chuck schumer will lead the senate they will in fact try to change america. they will pack the supreme court. they will make washington, d.c. a state. they will eliminate the electoral college. they will give amnesty and voting rights to 15 million illegal immigrants. they will impose nancy pelosi's voting law on this country. they will take your guns, they will raise your tax. they will defund the police. and they will gut our military. that's what at stake in 24 election. that's why everyone needs to support kelly loeffler and david perdue in this runoff election. brian: stakes couldn't be hired and both candidates are favored to win right now. can't get it together once ruby red georgia they don't deserve those seats. we will see what happens. i thought tom cotton laid it out
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perfectly. steve: it is so tight right now. when you take a look at all the people running in that primary and add up on the republican and democratic side. i think they were both within the democrats and the republicans i think within one or two points. so, it's going to be once again, all about the ground game. which side will be able to get their side out. brian: senator purdue .2 away from 50% and they only need one of two senate seats to get the majority. and prevent the changing of america and maybe demand some cooperation. meanwhile jillian mele fresh off her show is set to help out this show. >> good morning. we begin with a fox news alert. manhunt intensifies a suspect killed a houston police sergeant on his way torque woman of achievement police say sergeant got into a shootout knew near a free way and died at a hotel trying to call for help. the police chief sending a message to his killers. >> we are going to catch you. we are coming after you.
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we are going to capture you. so do yourself a favor and turn yourself in. >> police escorting sergeant's body overnight. 295-year veteran leaves behind four children. his death comes just three weeks after veteran houston sergeant harold preston was killed. the fda did an emergency use approval to eli lily's covid-19 antibody treatments. the drug helps trigger immune response in patience to moderate to mild symptoms. it would be provided at no cost. eli lily has promised to provide 300 vials in the next three months. 10 million confirmed cases. more than 100,000 new cases were reported on monday. today andrew mccabe is set to testify on the russia probe. the fbi director admit mistakes made by the agency in the investigation. according to prepared remarks. mccabe will tell the senate judiciary committee quote we opened a case to find out how the russians might be undermining our elections.
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we opened a case because it was our obligation, our duty to do. so we did our job. will jeopardy paying tribute to alex trebek on the first episode after his death. >> he loved this show and everything it stood for. he will forever be an inspiration for his constant desire to learn, his kindness, and for his love of his family. on behalf everyone here at jeopardy, thank you for everything, alex. jillian: look at that trebek died sunday after battling pancreatic cancer jeopardy's producer says he spent his final hours watching horizon with his wife jean at heir home. episode will air on christmas day. steve: it will be a different world when you turn the tv on in new york city as millions throughout the last 30 years you turn it on and there he is.
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end of an era. god rest his soul. all right. thank you, jillian. as we discussed with our lead story the department of justice now may get involved in election fraud cases. sounds like they are, actually. up next, we are going to hear from a former doj official on what this could mean from that guy. ♪ ♪ vraylar effectively treats depression, acute manic and mixed episodes of bipolar i in adults. full-spectrum relief for all bipolar i symptoms, with just one pill, once a day.
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get started with a powerful internet and voice solution for just $64.90 a month. plus, for a limited time, ask how to get a $300 prepaid card. call or go online today. ♪ steve: well, our attorney general, bill barr yesterday instructed the department of justice to look into quote substantial allegations of voting irregularities. if such claims could potentially change the outcome of the
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election. this, as the trump team launch as new lawsuit in the state of pennsylvania. ian prior served as doj deputy public affairs director under president trump joins us right now from d.c. to break it all down. good morning to you, ian. >> good morning. steve: traditionally, the department of justice would not look at something like this until after the results are certified. what do you think they are jumping the gun. >> traditionally kind of looking at the horse after it's left the barn. right now we have a spotlight on voter fraud in america and the best time to look at it is in the present time. for the folks that say voter fraud is a myth. that is ridiculous. lyndon johnson run his first senate race by stuffing the ballot box. cook county voter fraud in illinois. you don't have to go back that far. philadelphia, june 2020 they indicted a former judge for voter fraud. so this exists. it should be looked at.
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the question is there enough to swing an election. that's where i think you run into some trouble. steve: right. and you know there is a longstanding department of justice tradition where you don't -- they don't do anything that might might impact the outcome of an election ultimately either before or after. >> that's true. but i think in this case what you are looking at serious irregularities and the possibilities that voters have either been disenfranchised or voted illegally. it's so important to make sure that we look into these things so that the election and the results aren't ultimately disputed going into next year and beyond. steve: right. for the most part. nearly all the top republicans are saying the president is 100 percent in his rights to challenge the outcome. challenge the outcome of sork essentially what the administration is going to do later today in court the supreme court for the third time they are going to hear a case. how do you think this is going
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to shake out because the democrats really made this a gigantic campaign issue. >> two issues here if you remember back in 2012 john roberts said the individual mandate was attacked and therefore the law was constitutional. 2017 tax reform they got rid of the tax. therefore, you get rid of the constitutional prerogative of the individual mandate. that is what is being challenged. if there is no money being charged for people for not complying with the individual mandate, then that individual mandate is no longer constitutional. but then the question comes if that's not constitutional, do you sever that from the rest of the law? and so on that front, i think you are going to have roberts, sotomayor and kagan that say look you can sever that constitutional mandate from the rest of the law. you are going to have thomas and gulch say no, you can't. and then the other three that are going to be up for it are kavanaugh and alito who have expressed willingness to sever
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unconstitutional pieces of the law and justifiable barrett who we don't really know yet. my prediction is that the mandate will be unconstitutional but the law itself won't be struck down. steve: even though they are hearing the case today, we are not going to know what they think for months well into next year. >> that's right. i would think probably in june. steve: all right. very good. hey, ian, thank you very much for joining us from washington, d.c. today. thank you, sir. >> thanks for having me. steve: you bet, always a pleasure. the democrats' blue wave did not hit washington. do you know who made a big splash? republican women. our next guest says this is just the beginning. ♪ man, i feel like a woman ♪ ♪
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steve: it is 6:30 in new york city and we have headlines for you. a former indiana woman spend more than six years in prison for supporting isis. samantha l. hasan any gave that terror group more than 30,000 bucks worth of cash and gold. she claims she was tricked by her husband to join n syria and that's why she did it. meanwhile border patrol agents have arrested 44 illegal immigrants trying to cross into the u.s. agents busting the group after relentlessly tracking their
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footprints for 12 hours near texas. cbp says the immigrants came from mexico, guatemala, honduras, el salvador and nicaragua and they caught 44 of them. all right. that's some of your news, brian. brian: so much for the blue wave, right? as 2020 election proved to be the year of the republican women in many respects with a number of g.o.p. women newly elected to the house of representatives. our next guest says it is just the beginning. here to discuss is communications director for winning for women olivia perez cubas. why do you think you were able to pick up so many seats. >> i mean, look, if 2018 was the year of the woman. 2020 is the year of the republican woman. more women than ever before are going to be sitting in congress next year and it's not by accident. we went out and recruited the best of the best candidates. they had the supreme court of party leadership. the support of coming woman elise stefanik and groups for winning for women the one i worked for to make sure they had the resources they need from
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start to finish to get through the finish line and they did just that. brian: a lot to do with recruiting. >> you still trail 87-24. democrats have 87 female as opposed to 24 republicans. you could have as many as 19 especially nicole malliotakis is really way ahead of matt, they haven't called that yet. do you believe that it was the republicans were slow to pull the trigger on this big push to get women in there? >> i think it's a do you different reasons but also democrats under performed in congress this cycle and republicans overperformed. they really have republican women to thank for that six of the eight house seats that were flipped were flipped by republican women. it's a testament to their candidates, to the campaigns that they ran, the support that they had. but, also, we see so many groups on the left that claim to be champions of women. and these are the very groups that for years have been going after and targeting republican women and i think the republican
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party finally said enough. we went in and made sure that they had support and resources. it worked and the proof is in the election results. brian: how do you go about the recruiting of candidates and what do you think the success will do for 2022 as you look, to i imagine, add more? >> absolutely. i think that this is just the beginning for republican women. we look for candidates who are the strongest who have good campaign teams who can fund raise for the best fit for their districts. we don't go in and support women simply because they are women. these women are the absolute best. for example, ashley hinson in iowa who is a former tv reporter. a state representative beat a first term incumbent out in her state. stephanie bice in oklahoma, who is the first iranian american who ever serve in congress a woman and republican woman at that i would be remiss to not mention senator kelly loeffler down in georgia. she and senator david perdue are in the fight of their life right now. we have seen for many years
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democrats in congress try to pass these radical and extreme policies like medicare for all. the green new deal, socialism and at this point the only thing standing between americans and that radical left agenda are senators down in georgia. brian: kelly loeffler will get the support of doug collins who they were able to run off allowing for two person runoff. martha mcsally was not successful in arizona astrodomet mark kelly. >> thank you we feel confident. brian: there are still 22 undecided races left in the house. incredible. very slow counting. thanks. meanwhile. >> thank you. brian: coming up straight ahead. she spent four years going after the president. now whoopi goldberg is telling trump supporters to accept defeat. >> all of you suck it up. suck it up like we sucked it up. brian: you didn't suck it up. you complained the entire four
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when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo >> hillary clinton didn't say hey, wait a minute, this doesn't feel right, stop the count. she didn't say this isn't right. i'm not going for -- she didn't say any of that so all of you suck it up. suck it up like we sucked it up. do what we did. find things and then take it to the law. if the law says it's something to look at. look at it. from now on suck it up. grow the pair for him. that he can't grow for himself. 'cause this is ridiculous you not showing that he won. how dare you question it. ainsley: wow, strong message there let's bring in joe concha media columnist for the hill and is he a new fox news contributor. congratulations, joe. >> thanks, ainsley. appreciate it. ainsley: you are welcome.
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what else your reaction to this? >> oh, you know, they say comedy is dead. but i believe it's alive and well on "the view." up intentionally mind you. she claimed that mrs. clinton accepted the results. she conceded, yeah. but then for the next four years after president trump took office, she went on a public therapy tour talking about how the stolen election about how she has election stolen from her. let me give you some quotes from mrs. clinton. quote: you could run the best campaign. you could become the nominee and you can have the election stolen from you. another quote. is he an illegitimate president talking about president trump. the trump campaign used varying tactics from voter suppression to voter purging. again, all this is said without evidence and, yet, you had anybody who was interviewing her during these statements just nodding their head like it's bobble head night and no gettinp on the usual soapboxes no, mrs. clinton, that's wrong you don't have any evidence of that like we are see now with president trump. brian: absolutely look at jimmy
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carter, jerry nadler, john lewis wrong said he was illegitimate and fought him for the next four years. katy perry did something that was pretty cool she obviously was four joe biden. joe biden when he got named saturday by the media president-elect she tweeted this out. the first thing i did when the presidency was called is text and call my family members who did not agree and tell them i love them and i am here for them #family first. call your family today. happy sunday. how is that received by her friends and family. i don't know about her family but by her social media friends, joe? >> oh, that's being called a ratiod. responses 30 to one the number of people that share the tweet. and almost of the responses were screaming at katy perry saying how dare you accept these people. and we saw this. if you remember, and i know you guys talked about it i was on talking about it ellen degeneres she went to a cowboys game with
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george w. bush said we can all get along you may disagree with these people but let's not start attacking people personally because you disagree with them ellen basically got canceled and now the same thing with katy perry who puts out a nice note of unity like the gaffe did last week and this is the result you see you cannot accept these horrible people that divided the country and that's the way trump supporters all 71 million that voted for him are being portrayed right now yet we are seeing calls for unity all the time yes, we have to come together except for those people who are really bad. steve: the former first lady michelle obama actually combined both those messages of unity. and she said this in a tweet. let's remember that tens of millions of people voted for the status quo or donald trump. even when it meant, according to her, supporting lies, hate, chaos, and division. we have got a lot of work to do to reach out to these folks in the years ahead and connect with them on what unites us.
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joseph, what do you think of that message? >> well, that's not exactly page 1 in the winning hearts and minds playbook, right? you say okay, all these racist homophobic xenophobic puppy hating trump lovers lies and division you can't paint that much of the country in that corner and at the same time sing kum ba yah let's come together for the good of america. it's such a contradiction and beth inintentional comedy you will see out there. steve: puppy-hating? >> they may not have been accused of puppy hating good fact check feels like that's coming at this point, guys. steve: all right. joe. thank you very much. ainsley: thank you for being with us. good to see you, too. >> of course. ainsley: janice has the forecast for us. hey, j.d. janice: good morning. i want to make mention that we have another named storm in the atlantic and now we are
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officially the busiest hurricane season the atlantic has ever seen. 2020, my friends. this is theta it's moving away from the u.s. we are now pointing out we are now in history making territory. tropical storm eta watching this. this is a weakening tropical system that's the good news. still have to monitor the next few days as it comes very close and makes potentially another landfall along the gulf coast anywhere from texas to the florida panhandle. you need to watch this. the good news is we do not think it is going to be a hurricane. it's going to continue to weaken. the rest of today's forecast we have a cold front bringing snow, freezing rain, even thunderstorms and the potential for severe weather today. we also have quite a bit of snow moving into the west feet of snow across the higher elevations. can you see the snow behind the cold front move eastward over the next few days and several inches of snow four across the upper midwest.
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you can see very warm across the east coast and cooler temperatures over the west. we are going to break some record temperatures across the east. 71 here in new york in almost mid november. pretty crazy stuff. something for everyone. steve, ainsley, brian, back to you my friends. brian: thanks so much, janice. jillian, while we were busy you were busy. jillian: i was very busy. get started with the stories we are following. we are beginning here minneapolis is considering bringing in outside police officers amid a shortage of manpower and unrest in the city. the minneapolis star tribune is reporting if the mayor and city council approve the plan, deputies from the county's sheriff's office and metro transit police temporarily respond to violent 911 calls. arizona's largest county is dropping marijuana charges after voters choose to legalize it. the attorney's office will implement the will of the voters immediately. the measure passed with 60% much the vote. arizona one of four states that
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voted to legalize marijuana last week. florida georgia line tyler hubbard tests positive for covid-19. hubbard posting on instagram that he doesn't have any symptoms and is quarantining inside his tour bus parked outside his house. the country music duo canceled performance at the cma lee brice tested positive and will also miss the ceremony. police make a surprise house dual celebrate a woman's milestone birthday. watch this. >> open the door, police. [laughter] >> you have a right to have a happy 90th birthday. [laughter] ♪ happy birthday to you. jillian: several officers from the nyssa police department singing happy birthday to the 90-year-old at her florid her o. calling her amazing lady. brian: i was worried they would
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scare her. at 90. steve: they opened up hello police and she opened up. brian brian no problem happened before. what time is it again another raid. steve: all right, jillian, thank you. meanwhile, joe biden has said he will stop construction on the border wall when he takes office but retired ice director tom homan says biden is a hypocrite when it comes to immigration. he will have an explanation coming up next. ♪ everyday you're eating acidic foods; you're constantly weakening that enamel structure. pronamel repair allows more minerals to penetrate deep into the enamel layer and it repairs it. it is pretty phenomenal.
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brian: back in 2016 trump won the white house by taking tough stands on border security. with vice president biden taking charge in january how will that policy change? well, watch. this trump campaigned on build that wall. are you willing to tear that wall down? >> no. there will not be another foot of wall constructed on my administration. i'm going to make sure that we have border protection but it's going to be based on making sure that we use high tech capacity to deal with it. brian: wow, here to react is fox news contributor retired ice
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director tom homan, that must not be a heartening statement now that some -- we have him as president-elect. >> look, there is two issues with it. first of all, he voted for a secure fence act in 2006 would have spent up to $50 billion building border barriers obviously he knows they work. before he makes the decision to stop building the wall you think he would take the time to look at the data. brian, data is clear, every place they put a border barrier and border wall it has result interested in decreased illegal immigration and decreased drug flow. this is a wall that the border patrol asked for. the experts on the border asked for this and the president has given them the wall exactly the way they wanted. president biden needs to make doo his research before he makes a reversal on the decision. brian: you know also he has a history and history of being sometimes a little harsh on the border. what about his policy when it came to kids? >> let me tell you something, when i was command in ice i was called to the white house on two different occasions i was told they wanted me to do a
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nationwide operation to go arrest unaccompanied children here in the united states illegally came to the united states in children and ordered removed. they will wanted me to is a send armed agents to homes in the united states to arrest children. and deport them and if their parents didn't have a removal order yet and didn't want to leave, i would separate them. not only separate them but remove them from the country. that is far worse than anything the trump administration did. when we separated families on the border under trump, it's because the parent was being prosecuted and sent to jail just like u.s. families deal with every day. u.s. families are separated by law enforcement every day when the parent is prosecuted. what the obama-biden administration wanted me to do was to send armed agents to arrest children and remove them from the country. i rid of to do it. brian: when we talk about success at the border. the reason why i know it's successful people stop talked about it. they haven't recognized that joe biden was named president-elect think have a remain in mexico policy. they the president marines on
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their southern border. besides that we had diplomats and people like mark morgan go into the triangle countries and stop the caravans, what happens to all of that? >> it all goes away on day one. look, president trump unprecedented success on this border. illegal immigration is down between 60 and 80%. unprecedented by any president i have worked for starting with ronald reagan. he did it despite the fact that congress fought him every step of the way. no one has had this success and it all goes away under a biden administration. we lose the border under biden administration. he made promises to stop deportations, end ice detention. get free healthcare. who wouldn't want to come to the greatest country on earth if you know you won't be arrested and detained and deported and we will give you free healthcare. it's terrible what's about to happen to this border. brian: do you realize the opportunity joe biden has. the biggest objection i'm not doing immigration reform until you secure the border. the president is en route to
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securing the border. knock out the biggest obstacle immigration reform from conservatives and get into the other stuff that i think a lot of us are on the same page with when it comes to those who want to be here legally. so, do you think there might be a practical side to joe biden? >> no. bottom line is congressman work with president trump have the first secure border in my lifetime they refuse to do it. 80% decline unprecedented. joe biden, even though believed in border security once before. he is going to do what they push him to do. kamala harris compared ice to the ku klux klan during a hearing. no, i don't see them coming back of to make common sense of securing this border. his statement about technology on the border. technology is part of the wall. it's a smart wall system. the wall comes with anticrime and anti-dig. if us sometimes tuchings or climbs that wall someone knows about it. theaption the kind of technology the border patrol needs and he
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is ignoring that. brian: save manpower with the wall. >> absolutely. brian: no one said it was the cure all but it was a long way there. it's a shame. by the way, politically, you don't do politics but it didn't really hurt the president with the hispanic vote. got more than mitt romney and more than 2016. they understand the difference and it's not against the hispanic community. tom homan, thanks so much. >> thanks for having me, brian. brian: i know how frustrated you are because you got so close. sign of things to come. democrats at odds president-elect joe biden should add to his administration. will progressives like aoc get their way with a far left cabinet? we're going to discuss that next. ♪ ( ♪ ) ready to juvéderm it?
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it's time for theraflu hot liquid medicine. powerful relief so you can restore and recover. theraflu hot beats cold. >> attorney general bill barr telling the doj to look into voting irregularities. >> if there are clear and apparently credible allegations. >> for folks that say voter fraud is a myth that is ridiculous. the question is there enough to swing an election. >> hillary clinton didn't say hey, wait a minute, this doesn't feel right. stop the count. so, all of you, suck it up. >> she conceded, yeah, but then for the next four years she went on a public therapy tour talking about how she had election stolen from her. >> democratic senator joe manchin says he understands america wants sensible middle of the road politics.
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>> this country wants a moderation. you run your life. you run your business from the middle. not from the fringes. >> vaccine progress continues. one democrat is already politicizing it. >> the bad news is, this administration is going to be implementing a vaccine plan and i believe it's flawed. >> polk on the way and it is good. with zeros on the clock. ♪ oh, oh, oh ♪ brian: yes with veterans day told and today the marines birthday always good to look at the intrepid on the west side of manhattan. big tuesday edition of the big show. the president of the united states doesn't have anything on his public schedule but the vice president is going to go neat with the senate gop which is kind of intriguing. for the most part the gop standing behind the president's push, steve, to really examine this election before you get behind joe biden. steve: speaking of joe biden, joe biden today may actually
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take questions from the press, which the press thought he was going to answer some questions yesterday, ainsley. he did not. ainsley: yes. because is he going to be speaking publicly, right? i'm looking at the schedule. secretary pompeo is expected to hold a press conference at 1:00 and then at 2:00 president-elect joe biden will deliver remarks on the affordable care act which the supreme court is looking at right now as well. brian: right. okay. that was my mellow. i have nothing to look forward to the rest of the show. you know how i look forward to leading the hello. i will forge ahead somehow some way. attorney general bill barr telling the doj to look into quote substantial allegations of voting irregularities. steve: key there is substantial. that word. this all comes as the trump campaign and some republicans fight legal battles in the stated of pennsylvania. in our d.c. bureau right now gillian turner is there to explain what is happening over at the doj on this tuesday, gillian. >> i will try. good morning, brian, ainsley,
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steve. attorney general bill barr is breaking his silence for the first time since election day ordering his u.s. attorney to conduct investigations into any allegations of voter irregularities that he deems as steve said are significant. that is the key operating phrase here going forward. now, let's pull up an excerpt from barr's comments on screen you can see them there clear and concise while serious allegations should be handled with great care. spacious, speculative, fanciful or far-fetched claims should not be a basis for initiating federal inquiries. nothing should be taking that voting irregularities have impacted the outcome of any election. so now a week after election day, some states are still tallying votes. not entirely surprising. as the united states saw the largest number of mail-in ballots in its history as well as record voter turnout. the president and his allies though are continuing to call it fraud. take a listen to kayleigh
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mcenany. >> this election is not over. far from it. we have only begun the process of obtaining an accurate, honest vote count. >> richard pill gear who was a department official overseeing investigations of crimes has reportedly stepped down from his role. this came immediately following the authorization from barr offering evidence. not indeed the case. on the stump in pennsylvania. he tweeted most recently pennsylvania prevented us from watching. of the ballot count, unthinkable and illegal in this country. then the attorney general for that state punched back he stated not breaking. the trump campaign's latest filing another attempt throw out legal votes. my team and i were already prepared for this.
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sleep tight, we will protect our laws of our common wealth and the will of the people. recounts in georgia and arizona. showing signs this is far from over. brian, ainsley, steve? ainsley: all right. thank you so much, gillian. this is such a close election that most republicans are saying he has 100 percent the right to be able to investigate this, make sure there wasn't anything nefarious. make sure there wasn't anything illegal. investigate, get to the bottom of it. and if there wasn't. then move on then peaceful transfer of power. steve: right. ian prior was with us a little while ago. is he a former doj deputy public affairs director. we were talking to him a little bit about why exactly the doj -- and the attorney general would take this extraordinary step to say -- look into these specific things. according to the "new york times," there are two specific things they're looking into. one, one of them is ineligible
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voters in nevada heard stories how 3,000 people not supposed to an able to vote in nevada did vote the g.o.p. says. also there is a postal worker who filed an affidavit says the local postal devised a back date mail-in ballots. ian prior who i mentioned a moment ago said now is the time to investigate this rather than after the election is certified which it normally is the way things happen. watch. i think that right now we have spotlight on voter fraud in america and the best time to look at it is in the present time. people who say voter fraud is a myth that is ridiculous. lyndon johnson won first senate race by stuffing the ballot box. john f. kennedy won his race by cook county vote in illinois. you don't have to go back that far. philadelphia june 2020 they indicted a former judge for voter fraud.
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this exists. it should be looked at. the question ask is there enough to swing an election. that's where i think you run into some trouble. steve: that's right. because the margins are so big in some of these instances we don't know exactly how many votes we are talking about. but it could be just 1, 2, 3,000 in some cases which would not be enough. the "new york times," brian and ainsley, also says this morning that bill barr privately has told people at the doj that any disputes on this magnitude generally should be resolved by the courts through their campaigns. the campaigns should go to the courts to settle these things. which the campaign is doing. he also apparently told these officials that he does not see massive fraud and most of the allegations were individual not part of, brian, a larger systemic problem which, as we have heard from all the experts got to be really big to change an election. brian: arizona has 15,000 gap over 11,000 for georgia. have you got pennsylvania
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45,000. michigan over 146,000. wisconsin 20,000. nevada 36,000. so, unless there is something massive, it's hard to imagine these states getting overturned. especially when you do single affidavit after affidavit. it must be frustrating when the president got so close after getting over 70 million voters. meanwhile, if joe biden is going to go ahead and name his cabinet and is he going to go ahead and put together an administration, he has got issues. people on the left want a certain democrat. and it's not some of the people that joe biden is very familiar with. for example, someone helping him out on his covid task force is rahm emanuel's brother zika manual. and she weighed in and said this about the party. someone like rahm emanuel would be ezekiel' zeke's brother. left wing of the party. really i thought he had to be comfortable with what he wanted. i think the president-elect really hopes that he gets the
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republicans have control of the senate to protect him from his left wing if, indeed, his past track record of being somewhat in the middle is true. and in fact the fight for the senate will have at stake a big push for people like bernie sanders who will become in charge of the budget if of course they get the majority in the senate. the filibuster two, new states, packing the court. goodbye to the president's current president's tax cuts. and any nominee that they put up will just be on the glide path to being confirmed, ainsley. and joe manchin, ainsley yesterday had a chance to speak with us and in fact with bret baier yesterday. >> i'm a proud moderate conservative democrat. maybe there is not many of us left. this country wants a moderation. this country you run your life and business from the middle. not from the fringes. that's where i was always been. whatever the message was, it was wrong for this many people to be split for us not to be able to
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have a message that didn't scare the bejesus out of people. when you are talking about basically green new deal and all this socialism, that's not who we are as a democratic party. it's not how i was raised in west virginia. it's not the democrats i know. but yet we have been tagged. if you have a d by your name you must be for all the crazy stuff and i'm not. ainsley: steve, the party is -- they are in a pickle right now. because you have got those progressives like the aocs that are trying to pick the cabinet members for joe biden and joe biden promised them get me elected and i will fulfill your agenda as you heard his campaign, his deputy campaign spokesperson kate saying that yesterday that, you know, oh, no, no, no. he ran on this progressive agenda. the energy -- he is going to push through all your progressive policies. and we had guests on yesterday that said no, no, no. that is a lie. he won't do that the best thing that could ever happen for joe biden is for the republicans to keep the senate. because if democrats take the
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senate have to push through policies that that the senate would never allow and probably not for those progressive ideas. >> one of the things before the election we were having a discussion where, you know, the left wing of the party was telling joe biden essentially we will be on board but then after the election we are going to pull you to the left and make you more to the left. people like aoc do not like rahm emanuel who was chief of staff in the white house and had another communications. brian: terrible mayor. steve: he was a mayor and things like that. >> awful. ainsley: how do you feel, brian. steve: secretary of transportation. while people on the far political left said we will get him elected and then we will pull him that way. joe biden never said he was going to do though. in fact, when rahm emanuel was responding to the suggestion that joe biden would have to go further to the left to win the election, he said we don't need
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to go to the left. what we need to do is why need to appeal to the swing voter. and that ultimately is what they did. brian? brian: yeah. couple other things. if rahm emanuel goes back into government that would be quite interesting but i actually don't know what joe biden really wants to do because joe biden never really told us what he wants to do. he was all over the place. the only thing he said the mask mandate was probably the thing that got through. one thing clear short-term memory loss seems to be an issue with democrats especially with hollywood celebrities like whoopi goldberg for four years she talked about how the president of the united states massive push back as illegitimate look at john lewis and jimmy carter and senator hillary clinton who thought she had this whole thing robbed from her, so now with the election still up in the air in these battle ground states and all the ballots not yet counted, whoopi goldberg weighed in yesterday and just said this to republicans. >> hillary clinton didn't say hey, wait a minute, this doesn't
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feel right. stop the count. she didn't say this isn't right, i'm not going. she didn't say any of that so, all of you, suck it up. suck it up like we sucked it up. do what we did. find things and then take it to the law. and if the law says it's something to look at, look at it. but from now on, suck it up. grow the pair for him that he can't grow for himself. because this is ridiculous. you're not sure that he won. how dare you question it. ainsley: okay. all right. well, hillary clinton didn't think there was fraud four years ago. and she said whoopi said if the law finds that there is something to look at it, then look at it. well, that's exactly what the president is trying to do. we haven't heard from the president. so, we don't know what his tone would be. it probably won't be like hers. and then if he -- it turns out there wasn't anything illegal, and joe biden did win this race
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fair and square, then you know, i'm sure we don't know how the president would react. hopefully peacefully and hand him the keys and write a nice letter to him and try to heal this country. but, he has every right to go through make sure he thinks there has been fraud to investigate that the american public has a right to know. make sure joe concha was on our show earlier. sorry, steve, we are having a delay. joe concha was on our show and he was talking about hillary questioning questioning the results of 2016 results. you heard whoopee's comments. this is joe concha reacting to that listen to this. >> they say comedy is dead. but i believe it's alive and well on "the view." unintentionally mind you. she claims that mrs. clinton accepted the results. she conceded but for the next
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four years after president trump took office. she went on a public therapy tour talking about how the stolen election about b. how she had the election stolen from her. >> all of this said without. anybody interviewing her during these statements just nodding their head like it's bobble head night and not getting up on the usual soapboxes and say no, mrs. clinton, that's wrong. you don't have any evidence of that like we are seeing now with president trump. steve: we heard some republicans throughout all of the levels of government is the president is certainly within his rights to challenge the outcome. brian: yup. steve: let it play out it won't take long. >> mitch mcconnell was up there and stood up to chuck schumer yesterday outside of ben sasse and susan collins all standing behind him. only thing i wish was the president would blow up his whole staff fired the secretary of defense. i heard fbi and cia could be next. i hope that doesn't happen. steve: looks bad.
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brian: creates more enemies and sit down with george stephanopoulos or earnt anderson cooper. he will doesn't need it. creates chaos and uneasiness which we want to have less of that. steve: we do indeed. 7:16 now in new york city. and jillian joins us here again on the mezzanine level with the news. jillian: that's right. good morning. begin with a fox news alert. a man hunt is intensifying for the suspect who killed a houston police sergeant on his way to work. police sergeant said john rios got into a shootout near a freeway and died at hotel trying to call for help. sending a message to his killers. >> we are going to catch you. we are coming after you. we are going to capture you. so, do yourself a favor, and turn yourself. in. jillian: police escorting sergeant rios' body overnight. the 25 year veteran leaves behind four children. his death comes just three weeks after a veteran houston sergeant harold preston was killed. today the supreme court will
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hear argue. s on the future of the affordable care act. republicans want the entire law struck down after congress repealed the individual mandate in 2017. the aca has gone to court three times. but this will be the most conservative panel of judges to hear a case. president-elect joe biden will deliver a speech in delaware today defending obamacare. hud secretary ben carson and trump campaign adviser david bossie have both tested positive for covid-19. dr. carson briefly treated at walter reed medical center. bossy's chief of staff good spirits. helping with the president's legal fight to contest the election no. word on his symptoms. it comes a few days after white house chief of staff mark meadows tested positive. and history at the naval academy for the first time ever a black woman will serve as brigade commanders midshipman first class sydney barber of illinois will take the highest position in students leadership for the spring semester. she will be the.
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barber says she is humbled by the honor. amazing. >> thanks, jillian. the balance of power in the senate could come down to two runoffs in georgia. let's be honest, it will be. what is the state of each race? we will break it down next because we promise to. oh humans.
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♪ steve: the balance of power in the senate likely coming down to just two run-off races in georgia. republican incumbent david perdue will face democrat jon ossoff and raffaele warnock will face republican kelly loeffler
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how to break it down what it means republicans hold the senate. >> if joe biden and kamala harris are ultimately victorious through all these legal challenges and she becomes vice president, that would make her the tiebreaker in the senate. huge stakes involved here. two seats up for grabs. which would mean if republicans were successful, not only would they hold onto the majority but they would have one extra seat for willing room in case a senator like lisa murkowski susan collins decide to break with her party decide to do so on a handful of issues. ainsley: four republicans this race keeping the senate is that more important than having a republican president? >> in some ways. you know, at this point it's certainly very important to republicans because it's going to be able to stop a lot of things that a president biden
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would want to do far left to the voter is or republicans would like to see. it would also influence how a president biden as judges. one of the things of trump's legacy all of those judges he nominated that mitch mcconnell's senate was able to get confirmed and pushed through very quickly. so that's why the senate is so important. steve: so, kristin, one of the determining factors in making it so close for the democrats was stacey abrams down in georgia really had a gigantically effective get out the vote campaign and so many people from all over the state wound up registering and voting. as you see it right now, which of the two parties has the edge going into this runoff? >> republicans still have a slight edge in my view. even though georgia is going to flip very slightly blue after all of this recount is most likely the presidential level, it is still fundamentally a state that's pretty favorable to
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republicans. the question is did democrats and stacey abrams build infrastructure that can turn people out over multiple election sibletion or more about incredible enthusiasm and excitement at the presidential level? we will soon find out. ainsley: i know kelly loeffler will probably get doug collins' votes those two combined might be enough to defeat the reverend. what are you expecting as far as outside money and mudslinging and commercials. what can georgians expect? >> well, the big winners in all of this are local tv stations based in georgia because there is going to be an unbelievable truck load of money coming down to georgia to put tv ads on the air because it's going to be the only game in town up until this november, all of these big party donors were spreading their money out across a variety of races, georgia has become the only game in town. so it's very likely that georgians are going to see nothing on their tv but political ads from here until that runoff is concluded.
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steve: in those political ads from the republicans, kristen, i would imagine chuck schumer where is he going as soon as we win georgia we are going to change america in every ad. >> absolutely. i think there is going to be a lot of the talk about things like democrats saying they want to remove the filibuster. this is not even just necessarily about what the u.s. senate will look like for two years or trying to block biden administration and appoint years. also about what would the rules of the senate look like long-term. would they do things like get rid of the filibuster. if democrats are in charge some of them have signaled they are interested in packing the court. biden has backed away from understanding that's unpopular. these are the kind of long-term issues that go far beyond who is just in the senate for the next two years that make this race so important. steve: let's see what happens. election early in january. kristen, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: meanwhile, here in new york state, the governor, andrew cuomo says firsz's vaccine progress actually bad news. >> it's about two months before
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joe biden takes over. that means this administration is going to come implementing a vaccine plan. >> dr. marc siegel hog wrote a book on covid says cuomo's comments are disturbing. you will hear from the doctor coming up next. u can show more . so roll up those sleeves. and help heal your skin from within with dupixent. dupixent is the first treatment of its kind that continuously treats moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis, even between flare ups. dupixent is a biologic, and not a cream or steroid. many people taking dupixent saw clear or almost clear skin, and, had significantly less itch. don't use if you're allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur, including anaphylaxis, which is severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems, such as eye pain or vision changes, or a parasitic infection.
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brian: major development in the quest for the coronavirus vaccine as pfizer announces their covid-19 vaccine more than 90% effective. stunning news. new york governor andrew cuomo says there is a downside. >> the bad news is that it's about two months before joe biden takes over and that means this administration is going to be implementing a vaccine plan. the vaccine plan is very important. and it's probably the most ambitious undertaking since covid began. the trump administration is rolling out the vaccination plan and i believe it's flawed. brian: really? here now fox news medical contributor author of this great book "covid" the politics of fear and the power of science dr. marc siegel. dr. siegel, first off, andrew cuomo doesn't like the military implementing a plan that's ready to go and it could be monitored in the smallest hospital in the biggest city? what's not good about this plan that was featured on "60 minutes" 48 hours ago?
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>> brian, you just took the words out of my mouth. we have her had the before where the dod the department of defense, which knows the word deployment, don't they? partners with the cdc and the mckesson and company already sent vaccines around the country multiple times the plan is in place and never been done this way before. they are already geared up to already send out 50 to 100 million doses. governor cuomo is talking about underserved areas but the plan includes temporary clinics being built in under served areas on indian reservations in poor neighborhoods in order to get the vaccine to people who need the most. healthcare workers will need it, the elderly will get it. the poor minorities will get it. all is he doing is shaking confidence in a vaccine we have very exciting news about. our big problem is going to be vaccine compliance. how disturbing is that for him to be shaking the confidence in this vaccine at exactly the wrong time? brian: we think it could be ready. they want to get the shot going,
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their words, at the end of this month, but they need two shots i understand it. then all of the sudden later in the day i read about moderna, excuse me, i have got one, too. what should we know about that? >> well, that's a very similar technology. that's been under the auspices of the nih. they are looking very closely at the moderna vaccine. both of these vaccines use again net particular material to signal your cells, brian, to make the spike protein from the virus. guess what? we are seeing robust immune response we saw over 90 percent of people got sick with covid were in the la seen bow group. the vaccine was protective. it's never been done before at this rate of speed. this is historical day for science. the governor should be ashamed of himself to be attacking the vaccine while we are excited about getting it out there. brian: by the way, i want to move over to biden's plan. eli lilly to start shipping the antivirus drug immediately after getting emergency fda approval in the second covid-19 break through in 24 hours. amazing just a week from the
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election. okay. i know it's a coincidence. let's talk about wha president-t biden said yesterday he put out a plan here is the skeleton of it restore the white house director for health and security. reengaging with the who. relaunch ago packaging tracking system. calling all governors to enact mask mandates and call on authorities to reinforce orders. what's new about this? >> well, brian, we already have a mask mandate in over 30 states. in tennessee studied the mask mandate recently and found when it's done in conjunction and this is the key part, with distancing and no crowds, it actually decreases hospitalizations. we know that a mask helps. but a mask is not the big issue. the big issue is distancing and not being in crowds. so i was disturbed to seat celebratorsee thecelebratory crn president-elect biden was out there after the election there was celebratory crowds huddling
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together? how much virus was spread then. if they want to send a message of compliance. the message should be don't gather to celebrate. celebrate the vaccine by the way. don't celebrate victories. and more regulations. and more mandates, brian, are going to lead to noncompliance not more compliance. brian: doctor, right before i came on, i checked your book to see if there was an exemption if notre dame beat clemson can you celebrate? did you not have an exemption. i'm sorry notre dame, get tested now. i understand it's a big win but you can't run on the field without masks. >> and test something key. test something key, brian. that's the thing nocialg exemption for notre dame. brian: don't leave campus without getting tested. covid great book answers all the questions. thank you, dr. siegel. >> thank you, brian. brian: coming up straight ahead what president-elect biden's agenda could mean for your wallet. brian brenberg is ahead and we see his wallet.
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celebrating the 215th birthday of the marine corps with a live ceremony next ♪ ♪ i'm erin. -and i'm margo.
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simplify life. omnipod. brian: all right this morning we are celebrating the 245th birthday of the united states marine corps. steve: here to help us with the honors barracks look at that great shot military assistant to the cam can't of the marine corps colonel ahmed williamson. colonel, good morning to you. >> good morning from the marine
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corps barracks in washington, d.c. steve: it is an honor to have you with us today. it was on this day 245 years ago, november 10th, 1775, tell us all what the second congressional continental congress rather did at tavern in philadelphia. >> well, on the 10th of novembe. that's when the marine corps was established. that's what this special ceremony is about today. wherever marines are throughout the world globally whether we are in the field of deployed or even in gainerson take the time to stop and celebrate the 245th history of our marine corps. steve: great. ainsley: colonel williamson, what makes you want to serve? what does the flag mean to you and what does service mean? >> it is my absolute honor and privilege to serve this great nation. i have been tremendously please blessed and my family has been blessed by being a part of the country give our gifts talents and abilities to serve. great privilege to serve our
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country and remain strong. i'm proud to stand here today with dedicated men and women who want to give their best to serve our country. brian: colonel, real quick question. how have the marines been affected by the coronavirus. how have you changed from basic training to here? >> well, obviously we are in unprecedented time but marines are no stranger to the difficulties and challenges. we have made adjustments. we have compliant with cdc and health protection measures. we continue to recruit and continue to train and making sure the marines are the most readied when nation needs it the most. steve: of course, colonel, you can't have a birthday without cake and right there on that table you have got a cake. we have done this tradition many, many years. so you have got the youngest member of your group who is going if cut the cake for the eldest most senior member. can you introduce them to us? >> well, i will be doing the cake cutting i'm going to cut the cake. traditionally what we do is we
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offer the first slice to the oldest marine. the oldest marine present today is matt sergeant -- weighs born january 16th, 1980. and he gets the first piece of cake. >> he gets the first piece of the cake. ainsley: why that that continue, colonel? does it symbolize the passing on to a new generation? >> absolutely. after i gets his first slice, going to take the second slice and is he going to hand it to the youngest marine. that symbolizes the pass down of tradition, heritage, wisdom and experience from one generation to the next generation. the youngest marine with us today is [inaudible] he was born april 23rd of 2002. steve: wow look at that. brian: from 18 to 40. colonel, can't thank you enough for your service especially during these times especially challenging. and i know we are going to hear from the band on the way out of this block.
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but happy birthday to all marines. you are never a former marine. you are always a marine. once a marine always a marine. we have learned that. steve: yes, sir, colonel. thank you very much, everybody for joining us today from washington, d.c. and the marine barracks there. brian is absolutely right. they are going to be playing at the end of this segment. first, we have got to start this segment, switching gears, vice president joe biden has vowed to build back the economy better. >> i know there is nothing the american people can't accomplish when we work together as one people, with one mission. we can get this virus under control, i promise you, we can rebuild our economy back better than it was before. brian: right. this as a new report says biden's tax hike would accelerate the exodus from high tax states here to react is brian brenberg. i was surprised by that, brian, we know one thing that all these democratic states like new york and california want is get rid
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of the salt out out put back the salt deduction so you can write off state tax. is he probably going to do it. wouldn't that help more people stay in high tax states. >> well, that would help, brian a bit. buff the problem is at the same time that he is doing that he is raising a whole slew of taxes racing income tax and payroll tax and capital gains tax. he says that's on people making more than $400,000. that's fine to say that but here's the problem in a lot of these states. they have huge budget deficits. they can't pay their bills. and if they raise the taxes on their highest earners who have an incentive to bolt for the doors. they have to raise that revenue somewhere and it will have to end up coming from not the rich but the middle class and higher taxes and higher fees you can't just look at one part of the puzzle you have to look at the whole thing. higher taxes going to hurt the states most favorable to biden to begin with.
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ainsley: i know that you said that america's economic center is shifting moving south where it is cheaper to live. what are the statistics showing. have you seen a massive increase in the number of people leaving these expensive northern states or california? >> yeah. ainsley. you know, that actually started even before this pandemic for about a decade now people have really been asking themselves that question am i getting my money's worth by living in these high cost areas and where can i find more opportunity? and so they have been shifting to florida, to the southeast, 20 the south. you are seeing those numbers. and you saw them pick up during the pandemic and it's important to understand that people have choices. they have always had the choice to move but in a world of remote work, those choices have just multiplied people are saying where the where if i work hard i do keep most of my money and it tends to be in places with lower taxes and lower cost of living and those tend to be pretty well governed places as well. places like new york, illinois, california, they are realizing
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in very significant ways right now that people aren't going to stick around and deal with ever higher taxes, ever higher regulation. they want real opportunity and there is a lot of places in america that offer it you left out the weather there is a lot of reason people move to florida the weather is fantastic there if joe biden is able to do what he said out on the stump and published on his website some of the things they would like to do is raise the top individual tax rate to almost 40%. cap tax breaks for the wealthy at 28% and that about 12.5% social security tax on income above $400,000. split between the employees and the employers. but, brian, ultimately disiferl this coach doifer to corve down to congress if there is a republican led senate none of that stuff will happen, perhaps. >> that's right. these bills have to go through the senate which is why those races down in georgia are so consequential. so, you look at the stock
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market, it's sort of trusting that georgia is going to end up with republican representation in the senate. but, here's the problem. i just want people to understand one way to go after money is through a tax regulation. the other way to put through regulatory state. executive branch. the people who run his treasury department and his commerce department and the epa, please understand that legislation is not the only way is he going to put his stamp on the economy if he is president. if this election holds up, he has a lot of levers he can pull that never go through congress and that can have a big effect on big industry. >> all the rests that were chopped away put aside they will come right back especially when it comes to environmental regulations, the oil and gas industry. that's what the american people may have voted for. brian, thanks so much. >> you bet. brian: corporate tax rate is likely to go up to 28% if he gets his way. meanwhile, as we go to break, united states marine drum and
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bugle come performing on the 245th birthday of the marine corps. let's bring it up. ♪ ♪ and that guy does, too. people cough in the country, at sea, and downtown. but don't worry, julie... robitussin shuts coughs down.
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i decided that i wanted to go for electrical engineering and you need to go to college for that. if i didn't have internet in the home i would have to give up more time with my kids. which is the main reason i left the military. everybody wants more for their kids, but i feel like with my kids, they measurably get more than i ever got.
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and i get to do that. i get to provide that for them. steve: before joe biden became president-elect our next guest was out on the streets of philadelphia interviewing protesters the day after the election. she says in a new op-ed in the "wall street journal" return to normalcy well not on the streets of philadelphia, far left protesters see vindication in a biden victory and a debt they're prepared to collect. joining us now editorial page writer jillian melcher. jillian, good morning to you. >> thank you for having me. steve: okay. so tell me about what it was like on the streets of philadelphia. i know we saw so many of these protests before the election trying to make sure the people voted for joe biden all right after he had won although it was
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not official. what do the people say? >> well, it was kind of an interesting mood on the streets. you know, philadelphia just had another incident where a police shot a black man so there have been protests and rioting the week before. emotions are running really hot. and we saw a lot of the stores boarded and plywooded up in anticipation of possible riots. fortunately the riots and protests i reported on were peaceful. i think the most interesting thing that i have heard from the people that i interviewed is if you had hopes that a biden presidency would end the unrest in the street, would that bring back normal an end to the protest? don't hold your breath. because a lot of people are still planning on protesting even in a biden administration. they are mad at the republicans. they're mad at the trump administration. but that doesn't mean they are supportive of biden or particularly trustful of the democrats. >> okay. so i know that among things that they want they want the green
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new deal. they want $15 minimum wage. they want police reform, things like that. but what do they want from joe biden? >> well, they are not really happy that he was chosen at all. a lot of them are from the bernie left across the protest movement have you anarchists, you have got socialists people who identify as antifa. and a lot of them really see the democrat party is as part of the problem. they are critical of the entire system. so they want to push joe biden left. they pointed out that the occupy movement that black lives matter happened under the obama administration and so they are really planning on pushings the democrats using that threat of unrest or disruption in the streets to push them further left. and they think one thing that they told me is they think that the democrats caved to trump so they will probably cave to the radical left as well. steve: all right. well, let's see what develops because out on the streets of philadelphia, the protests
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continue and will for a while. jillian melcher, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: all right. our final hour of "fox & friends" straight away. congresswoman elect. yvette heller, jim gray, john rich and dan rooney. live from new york city. we will be right back. it really hurt. then i started cosentyx. okay, thanks... that was four years ago. how are you? see me. cosentyx works fast to give you clear skin that can last. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx.
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>> the department of justice investigating voting irregularities. >> president trump is 100% within his right to weigh legal options. >> the election is over. brian: taking stuff stance on immigration. >> you would think he would take the time to look at the data. >> the good news is that the pfizer tests look good, the bad news is the administration will be implementing a vaccine plan. >> the governor should be ashamed of himself attacking the vaccine while we are excited of getting it out there.
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>> it's going to be able to stop a lot of things that a president biden would want to do. ♪ ♪ steve: live from new york city high in the 70's. you can't beat that. ainsley: oh, my gourd. -- world. beautiful day. hope you're waking up on the right side of the day. brian: senatorial committee and meet with them and see they are
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on the same page on recount efforts. so far remarkable how they stood by him through this time in which the media names joe biden including this network, president elect, but so far the president is not providing any information and the gsa to go ahead and open up offices and the material and the money to do so because he wants to find out what is going on in pennsylvania specifically. attorney general bill barr to looking into, quote, substantial allegations of voting irregularities. steve: trump campaign fight including in pennsylvania. jillian. reporter: ordered to investigate any voter irregularities that he
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thinks are substantial. serious allegations should be handled with great care, far for fetched claim should not be basis for initiating inquiries. nothing should be taken indication that the department has concluded that voting irregularities have impacted any election. after the election in which mail-in ballots broke new records, some states are still left tallying votes. here is lindsey graham. take a listen. senator: we don't need their permission to look into allegation. we owe it to president trump and the country at large to test the system. if we don't do voting by mail in 2020, we will never win the white house again. gillian: georgia and arizona and, of course, pennsylvania.
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the president tweeted this about the state yesterday. pennsylvania prevented us from watching much of the ballot count, unthinkable and illegal in this country. the state's own attorney general not breaking. sleep tight, we will protect the rights of the common wealth. let me make sure i have that right. richard pilger at the department of justice who oversees voter related crime investigation submitted letter of resignation and left after attorney general bill barr ordered u.s. attorney to look into the voting allegations. we will be tracking that for you throughout the course of the hour, brian, ainsley and steve. steve: thank you very much. sounds like he's going to go to another department at the
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department of justice. when it comes to court filings, apparently a michigan court rejected one of the president's campaign filings because they it lacked pieces of evidence, including any hard evidence of the allegation. meanwhile you do have bill barr, it sounds as if when they talk about they can investigate specific allegations, two things come to mind, the story we have heard where supposedly 3,000 nonvoters out in nevada actually did vote for whatever reason, they want to look into that, see if there's anything nefarious there and also, ainsley, they want to look into the affidavit that was filed by a postal worker in erie, pennsylvania, my boss has a plan where we could back date ballots so what is not legal votes look like legal
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votes. ainsley: mike pence is tweeting out, it ain't over yet. he's tweeting it out as well. joe biden was speaking yesterday and he said the election is over, he said republicans, it's done, it's time to move on. listen to this. >> this election is over. it's time to put aside the partisanship and the rhetoric that is designed to demonize one another. it's time to end politicization of basic responsible of public health steps like mask wearing and social distancing. we have to come together to heal the soul of the country so we can effectively address the crisis as one country where hard working americans have each others backs and we are united in our shared goal defeating this virus. ainsley: that was when he was talk about covid-19, rolling out his plan, expected a blitz of executive orders. they are talking even on day
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one, rejoining the paris climate accord, reinstating daca, rejoin the world health organization and repeal president trump's travel ban, brian. brian: tom was with us. honduras, guatemala and el salvador. if you can keep your people here, they could be here, they went over to méxico and said can you put marines in southern border and when you get them to border, mexican government said yes, we got 400 miles of the wall. illegal immigration was not a factor in 2020 was because president trump's plans worked and he went to plan b, military of budget and built 400-miles of wall. it looks as though that a lot of
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what the president has done joe biden is not going to pay attention to. listen to tom homan who has worked for democrats and republicans. tom: president trump is has done unprecedented success in the border. unprecedented since any president i worked with starting with ronald reagan. all goes away under a biden administration. we lose the border under biden administration because he made promises to stop deportation and ice detention, give free health care, who wouldn't want to to te greatest country on earth. it's terrible what's about to happen in the border. brian: guess what else happens, we are in the middle of a global pandemic, méxico are suffering from this and i feel bad for the mexican people but if you want security for america or if you want to have any controlling the virus, think if it was the wild west down south on the border in
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which the president when he took the keys to the white house, that's what he took over from. so if you want things to get bad quick, take down that wall, stop making that wall and then start relaxing all of the regulations and these rules and orders that the president put out there which i think he will do anyway. >> one of the things the president and the administration did in early days to have pandemic was they realized that when it became clear that the best way out of the problem we are facing with this pandemic is to get a vaccine, ultimately they started what is known as operation warp speed and it has proceeded and that's how we got the ventilators, the masks and the gowns and the shields in record time and it's way apparently we've had all of these big pharmaceutical companies coming up with all sorts of formulas for vaccines. the big news yesterday when we were with you at this time was the fact that pfizer and the
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vaccine they have come up with apparently 90% effective. we had never heard a number like that, 90%. we thought it might be 50, 60%, 70 at the best but pfizer came up with one that they said to press release 44,000 person trial was effective 90% of the time. that's great news. it's great news, governor cuomo. i'm telling you, it's great news unless you see a problem with it. >> the bad news is that it's about two months before joe biden takes over. the trump administration is rolling out the vaccination plan and i believe it's flawed. i believe it learns nothing from the past. basically going to have the private providers do it and that's going to leave out all sorts of communities that were
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left out the first time when covid ravaged them. we can't let this vaccination plan go forward the way that trump administration is designing it because biden can't undo it two months later. steve: ultimately it makes sense to put the vaccine as quickly as possible regardless of who is in the white house at the time. the president was a little upset yesterday with the timing of it because keep in mind, he was telling everybody, you know, it look likes there's a vaccine before the election and in fact, pfizer had said that they would come out with it by the third week in october and we hadn't heard about it until yesterday morning. the president essentially said yesterday via tweet, they didn't want me to get a vaccine and accused the fda of holder pfizer vaccine until after the election. ainsley: what is cuomo saying, trump can't handle it if there's
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a roll out before it's out of office or wants biden to get the credit for it? if there's a vaccine like you said, steve, so many people lost their loved ones. if you get vaccine, people will be excited about that as we all are. if you have the -- experts say it's healthy and it's fine and the people who have taken it and the trial, 90% of them are seeing remarkable, they are not getting the disease or the virus. if you're seeing that, why would you wait? i don't understand his train of thought there because americans need this vaccine. we all want this vaccine and if you don't want to take it, cuomo, you don't have to. you have the right to do that. offer it to the american public who wants to take it, brian. brian: he's playing politics and numbers are ticking up in new york. that will come up in the paper back and moderna vaccine also ready to go. you watch 60
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minutes on sunday, you saw that the military is ready to go and they are tracking to the point where they say not only can i tell if a vile has been delivered to a hospital, i could tell if someone gave the shot in the vile and being used. that's how well it's been performed. it's turned over to the military and since when men and women in camouflage turned him off? it's amazing what's happening just 6 days after the election. dr. marc siegel, listen to all of this, understands how effective this vaccine potentially could be and said this. doctor: the plan is in place and it's never been done this way before. they're already geared up, sent 50 to 100 million dose. the healthcare workers will get it, the elderly, the poor minorities will get it. all he's doing is shaking confidence in a vaccine that we have very exciting news about and our big problem is going to be vaccine compliance.
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howdies tushing is that for him to be shaking the confidence in this vaccine at exactly the wrong time? brian: especially when the whole city has been brought to its knees. networks have a staff, like, i don't know this one, no one is here, no one is going out to lunch, no one is taking the train, lack of tax revenue. you would think he would find a way to embrace rather than wait ing for a check from joe biden. we are used to that in new york. steve: joe biden said, look, i'm not going to be president until the third week in january, so please wear a mask. he said people who wear masks when they're out of thous around other people, that's how -- until we have a vaccine available to everybody, that's the best way to save lives. in my state of new jersey they are dialing back the -- they opened up the restaurants and bars and things like that but they're dialing back because
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it's starting to spike again and, in fact, i tried to get a covid test yesterday and i could not get one for two weeks from the doctor who has been working on me for 25 years because they are booked solid for the next 2 weeks, so many people in new jersey. brian: that's right. look at europe. they were supposedly doing it right and they are on their knees and locked down again. steve: the mask right now is all we have and governor murphy in my state will close all restaurants at 10:00 o'clock at night and you can no longer sit at a bar although i haven't sat at a bar in 9 months and it's killing me. brian: jillian mele, you have the breaking news. jillian: manhunt intensifying, police say sergeant john rios
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got into a shootout, the police chief sending a message to his killers. >> we are going to catch you and capture you. do yourself a favor and turn yourself in. jillian: police escorting sergeant rios' body overnight. a black lives matter protestor who attacked a truck driver in portland is sentenced to nearly 2 years in prison. marquese love assaulting adam until unconscious, love turned himself into police days after attack and pleaded guilty. he hopes love will learn a lesson from what happened. today to testify on russia probe, former deputy director plans to admit mistakes made by the agency in 2016 investigation. according to prepared remarks, mccabe will tell committee,
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quote, we opened a case because it was our obligation, our duty to do so. we did our job. cam newton rallying the new england patriots to victory of monday night football, newton leading to tie the jets in fourth quarter and winning field goal on the final play. >> it is good with zeros on the clock. jillian: patriots win 30 to 27, winless 0-9 and i apologize to jeff -- >> steve: are you okay? brian: he wants a high draft pick. jillian: true, true. steve: that's silver lining, jillian, thank you. straight ahead on tuesday
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republicans sweeping in the house. whatever happened to the so-called blue wave? we will talk with one to have new congressman breaking records in washington coming up next. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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steve: republicans cut in house majority, at least two dozen republican women are among them and record 13 are congressional new comers including our next guest and defeated democrat in new mexico and flipped seat from
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blue to red. congresswoman ivette harold live from new mexico. ivette, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: how did you do it? congresswoman: first i have to thank god for the victory. it was all in his hands all along and we had an amazing team and support on the ground and it was helpful to have president trump on top of the ticket because he won congressional ticket by 10 points in 2016 so having him at the top of the ticket again was very helpful. steve: i think you also got help from the democrats because joe biden at the last debate was talking about how he would like to transition away from oil and gas and then you had a number of political party people on the left talking about defunding the police and rather than defund, you were talking about defend? congresswoman: i was, throughout the campaign i had the endorsement of 12 constitutional sheriffs in the district,
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democrats and republicans. police are so important to our communities, all of our communities and cities and especially in rural parts of the nation where we have real family relationships, good ties with our law enforcement, but to be talking about defunding them, it just doesn't work because we already know they departments are stressed and they are understaffed, underbudgeted but the oil and gas situation really got people out to the polls because that is such a huge part of new mexico industry. largest industry and, in fact, puts about 40% of our money into our general revenue fund here not to mention that president trump ran on the promise that being energy independent and when you have counties like we do in this district that are top producing in the country, it's worth standing up and fighting for and protecting those jobs in the industry. steve: do you think nancy pelosi is scratching her head and saying, hey, my guy joe biden won but i lost seats, what the heck is going on? congresswoman: yeah, i think she's scratching her head and she's probably feeling very
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uncomfortable because just like you mentioned, we are picking up seats in the house, seats that were not expected to be won by republicans and i think it's going to be a little bit more difficult for her because she was unable to protect all of the seats that she promised during the last election here in november. steve: you know with a republican-led senate if that ultimately is what shakes out, if nancy pelosi wants to get anything done, you would think that going forward over the next 2 years she would try to been more moderate than so far out to the left. >> yeah, she really is. she's so off base and that's one thing i believe as a candidate i appealed to our district. we are pro-life, progod, probusiness, profamily district and, you know, the values that nancy brings to washington, d.c. are her own and they are not conducive. they don't mesh well with a lot of the districts throughout the state or throughout the country and, yeah, it's going to be a
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little more difficult for her coming up and i couldn't be more excited about that because really the people of america deserved to have their voices heard. we need to move far away from radical left agenda and start going the work of the people the ones that elect us into office. steve: thank you very much for spending time was. we know you're going to pack up and move to washington, d.c. very shortly. ivette herrell from the second congressional district in new mexico. >> thankthank you so much for hg me, steve. steve: you bet. biggest names in sports from muhammad ali to michael jordan and tom brady and now legendary sports caster jim gray reveals his never before told stories right here on "fox & friends", you want to hear him. ♪
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fantastic, the moments to remember and the stories you've never heard. jim gray joining us now. jim, this is your story, you're used to covering the story and now you're the story? >> i had a lot of help putting the book together and 43 years of broadcasting, tens of thousands of interviews and events and greg bishops of sports illustrated was terrific and helped me write the book and happy it's out. we got a game. brian: one of your buddies. jim managed to breakthrough. asked the tough question and ends up being friends with all ah lot of the biggest names in sports history and covering some of the biggest moments. the breakthrough is with muhammad ali, you were editor at college station and you get a
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call to no cell phones or pagers. we need somebody to interview muhammad ali, you're the guy and you go to meet him, what was it like? >> they were converting from film to video tape. it's channel 9 and denver, abc affiliate then. i had been an intern and all the guys were taking the buyout. the fill guys didn't want to learn how the video tape. i was in my booth getting ready to edit the red miller show, broncos coach. muhammad ali 2 hours early at the airport, i had never done interview before, no cell phones, no beepers, ali put me at ease, you sound like the local and after that i came back to the edit room, he gave me 45, you and this tape are barely adequate, we will put this on
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the air. here we are and then i got to go all over with ali, he took a liking to me, opened so many doors and -- and became a lifelong friend. brian: love of boxing was pretty clear then and you're probably one of the finest boxing commentators ever with the biggest interviews ever. another guy that you broke through is tyke -- mike tyson in your book. i like people and i'm interested in people, i listen, i ask a lot of questions, it's just my nature. i'm curious. you broke through when mike tyson went to prison, he wrote you a letter and you were the first person you interviewed before getting out of prison. >> he has to feel that too and all of the athletes and folks that i've been able to cover and develop a relationship. mike wrote me in the letter.
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it was amazing, it came to my home in atlanta. we had not been social but the letter arrived, had been open by officials. they would let me out tomorrow if i admit to rape and i will not admit, next paragraph, four or five other things that i have done throughout the course of my life that i've done that are worse so therefore i feel like i'm at the right place at this time. i asked him on television, what was worst when he got out, can i talk about this letter, sure, go ahead and request me mr. gray, what was worst, looked at his lawyer, you know, i probably should not answer this question on national television, i don't know what the statute of limitations is however what i told you is true. so he's one of the last honest athletes, he takes his own medicine. he will tell you what's on his mind and he will answer the questions. i have tremendous respect and respect for mike tyson.
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brian: you will see it on fox sports too, you talk about the bite fight and courage to stand in the ring after some of the biggest moments in sports and you always standby the referee and never get hit but when mike tyson after he bit holyfield, don king and talked about it to get the composure and became the biggest story in the world, jim, and you were asked to talk about that ever since. >> that's true. when he bit the ear lobe and took a chunk of it off and it was despicable act and mike tyson didn't hide or wait 4 or 5 days and came out of locker room and did the interview and answered all the questions and he felt he had been head butted and he had a gash over his eye where you had seen the orbital form and this was his form of retaliation, i did address it in
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the ring, he had to feed his family and he felt that the referee should have deducted a point, so he had an explanation and -- and he faced the consequences of his action and ended up being suspended obviously by the nevada state athletic commission. brian: he's going to be coming at the end of the november and covering the fight. come brady writes the forward, there's a picture in the book of you interviewing tom brady after first super bowl championship. what does that relationship mean to you? >> means an awful lot. tom and i do radio show every monday night on westwood 1. he comes on in the pregame and half time, it's been more than a decade now and he's been terrific and he answers all of the questions. it's been a joy to cover his career, to see the excellence up close and to cover and have all of the access. it's just been an incredible honor and the fact that he wrote the forward and was willing to put his name on this book is
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something that we will always be -- i will always be grateful for, brian. brian: your relationship with your dad comes through despite all big names and the other thing that comes through is you're so much more than sports. the presidents from both bushes to ronald reagan to jimmy carter to bill clinton to barack obama and you even know donald trump for 20 years. i want to bring you to something you did documentary on, it's important to talk about bush 43 and after 9/11 attacks and threw the perfect strike, you did a 30-30 on that. how tough was it to convince 43 that this was worth going over in american history? >> seeing this moment in person, this and muhammad ali lighting the torch at the '9600 limpics and president bush in yankee stadium were two moments in sports, it gives me chills to see the moment and what muhammad ali did.
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for president bush to go out there and display courage and what he was saying, he was saying you know we are going to grieve, we are going to mourn but we are also going to play baseball and we will try and move forward with life and we are never going to forget those folks and he went out there by himself in front of 50,000 plus people and we didn't know if there was going to be anthrax attack or terrorist attack and he threw a perfect strike and it was just a symbolic moment, made you proud to be an american, proud for baseball, proud for the yankees who came back and won that game and it was just something that gives me chills so it took 12 years to convince president bush to do this 30 for 30 and he did it because he never wanted people to forget what happened on september 11th. brian: and, jim, you talk about one of the low points with pete rose that caused controversy. you will see in the special, he sits down with pete rose 21 years to talk about the infamous day at world series game, if you love sports and you love this
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country and you love father-son stories, you will love this book. jim, congratulations on it and honor to interview you for the special. >> thank you, thank you for going so far out of your way, i really appreciate it and looking forward to the special on fox news at 10:00 o'clock. thanks so much for your kind words about the book. brian: it's all true and we have it at fox sports as well as fox nation. congratulations on talking to gotes, appreciate it. get a free copy and has original video of 10-year-old tiger woods and kobe bryant in hong kong. another great friend of his. meanwhile coming up straight ahead, katie perry facing backlash after telling fans to reach out the family members who support president trump, john rich joins us live from nashville next.
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brian: katie perry under fire for push to get family members. steve: first thing i did was text and call family member who is do not agree and tell them i love them and i'm here for them, #family first, call your family today. country music star john rich, john, good morning to you. >> good morning, guys. steve: a lot of people appreciate her message of unity but it was not meant that way on twitter, was it? >> no, it wasn't. i have to thank her, that was empathetic thing to say, very kind hearted of her to make a statement like that. she was one of the biggest twitter platforms of anybody out
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there and put that out but validates to me something that my liberal friends have told me in the past 2 or 3 months, i have lots of friends, actors, comedians, people that are really left, bernie sanders supporters and have come to me one by one, don't tell me anybody but i will be voting for trump this time. i said why don't you tell people you are voting for trump this, are you kidding me, you know what would happen if i say something like that. it validates what i've been hearing from a lot of my friends why they're afraid to say and speak their mind. ainsley: john, if you go through twitter and you read the comments about things like this, we continuously see it, every day there's something like this in the news about privileged message, canceled culture, do you think the majority of america is really like that
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because sometimes i read the comments and i have to close it and say i can't believe i wasted 30 seconds of my time and are the majority of people like that, has our country gone that direction or are we more in the middle and can see both sides? john: i think we are more in the middle personally. i mean, listen, i would never come ask somebody for the way they vote them and i would debate them, we disagree, you want to have a drink, you want to play music or whatever. i think most americans are still like that but that -- that vocal minority, let's hope they're a minority, let's hope. i mean, the more you read on social media it seems like they are the majority. i certainly hope not but, again, i'm grateful that katie would say something nice like that and i wish others would follow suit and i hope all of the hate don't stop who they are. brian: john, i have a secret.
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twitter is not the real world. they are people that are angry. that's not the real world. we have to get off twitter and social media and start living our lives again. what she did is totally normal. the reaction was abnormal and i don't think really transfers throughout the country. outside the hollywood niche or the crazies. i don't-- john: i think you're right. i'm met all kinds of people. i've never had that happen to me in person. you're right, they only attack you that hard when they can hide on social media accounts. let's air on the side that this is the vocal minority and not the majority. steve: already, john rich joins us from nashville, john, thank you very much. brian: that's going to be our next guest bolds of honor. steve: up next dan rooney from
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folds of honor has a new series and new book called fly into the wind. he will join us live next. but what's coming up next, brian? brian: i want to check in with sandra smith whether you want me to or not. i will take all of the slings and arrows. sandra: great to see you guys, ag bill barr giving federal prosecutors the green light to investigate voting irregularities, what it could mean for president trump's push to challenge the results to have election. plus joe biden delivering remarks today defending obamacare. we are live in wilmington, delaware on what we may hear from him and dan henninger on the wall street journal warning this morning, watch out for biden virus king what they are saying about pfizer and vaccine cavalry. live from america's newsroom top of the hour
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>> i remember staring at the players' faces, that's one of the those moment that is changes
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your life. >> what really hurt me the most is the lies about me. >> it's going to be okay. >> just pay attention to right here, right now. >> steve: that is great, lieutenant colonel rooney, fox nation show fly into the wind and author of upcoming book fly in the wind and founder of folds of honor. good morning to you, dan. >> good morning, steve. steve: i know it's early but let's start with physics, what does fly into the wind mean? >> we always take off into the wind because we need resistance and the concept of the show and the book are exactly that. our lives are no different. and in these challenges moments that god places in our path ultimately helps us climb to the highest level and it's such an inspirational series on fox nation, book is just a powerful code of living that i put
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together engineering the life of fulfillments on a daily basis and blessed to share with fox nation. steve: the average person looking at somebody famous, that guy had a perfect life or things like that, that's not the case. they've had the resistance, they've been down but something in their character had them get up and get them where they are going. >> in this series the thing, the equation that is so obvious when you watch this out on fox nation is the bigger the success someone has had in their life, i can guaranty you they have a polar opposite in a challenge that they have fought their way through. and if this resilient spirit that really defines greatness because, you know, we look at
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2020, right, we are going to have challenges, you are going to win some and lose some, but that resilient fire in our hearts is what leads us to a life of fulfillment. steve: i love the idea and you have as the founder of folds of honor, you have a call to action, don't you? >> i do. the book comes out next week. it's available anywhere you buy books and audio but we are doing good with the book and if people join our squadron to support spouses and children who had someone killed defending freedoms, i will send you personalized signed copy and they can visit foldsofhonnor.com and this is a book that will change people's lives as well as the show. steve: with veterans day tomorrow particularly appropriate and you devoted your life to try to help military families. what you're doing is great, dan. >> thanks, god bless you, guys,
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and look forward to talking more about the show in the future. steve: all right. more information go to folds foldsofhono.org. buy it on amazon or some place like that and they will deliver next tuesday. dan, thank you. >> thanks, god bless. steve: god bless. all right, we are stepping away. back in a couple of minutes. ♪ and empties itself into a base you empty as little as once a month. and unlike standard robots that bounce around it cleans row by row. if it's not a shark, it's just a robot.
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>> that's it for the tv show. coming up on the radio show for the next three hours lieutenant colonel alan west and jack keane and stuart varney on vbn. see you. >> sandra: fox news alert. attorney general bill barr giving federal prosecutors the green light to investigate allegations of voting irregularities before states move to certify election results in the coming weeks. it is tuesday morning. good morning, everyone. i'm sandra smith. hi, trace. >> trace: good morning, everyone. i'm trace gallagher. he writes quoting such inquiries and reviews may be conducted if there are clear and credible allegations of irregularity that if true could impact the outcome of a federal election in an individual state. the director of the justice department's election crimes branch resigned in pr

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