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tv   The Five  FOX News  November 11, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

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that we still face as a nation today. >> neil: all i know, commander, it's guys like you that have our backs. so i can freely read a prompter. yours is more dangerous. thanks, commander for that. thank you all veterans. >> dana: hello. i'm dana perino with katie pavlich, jesse waters and juan williams. the democrats are bickering after the election. moderates are lashing out against the squad as the party embraces socialism. james carville not happy with where things are headed. >> people need to take a nap. all right? i mean, we got -- we have good candidates out there. we lost some close races.
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vice president biden had a message that resonate add -- resonated across the country. >> members of the squad are not backing down. rasheeda talib says we have to hear every voice. alexandria ocasio-cortez says people should not be so quick to work with republicans. so much for unity, jesse. >> jesse: so much for unity. i did a deep dive into the democratic party. >> dana: how did that go? >> jesse: i know more than juan does about my research. here's what i found. racially the break down are the democrats about the blacks. 2/3s of spanishs and 50% less than the white. they're struggling because of ideology. they can't compete outside the
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coasts and the cities because of socialism. they have to run moderate candidates to compete in red areas and sometimes they win but in a cycle or two, they're out. that causes a lot of recriminations and finger pointing, which you're seeing now. it's also this. this is important. they have alienated the democrats through the identity politics. the most important voting block in the country, the middle class, people making between $500,000 and 100,000 without a college degree. hillary clinton and biden lost the middle class. what you're seeing is, the economic populism is making inroads not just in this group with blacks and hispanics, trump won an additional 5% of black democrats and an additional 7% of hispanic democrats. and at this point, if you're a democratic party official, you
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have to spank these socialists back to the coasts. because of this ideology, you're losing geographically, you're losing in income levels and losing a very critical racial demographic. so what usually happens now? the last two incoming democratic administrations, first two years they lurch far left and then red wave. it happened in 94 with bill and 2010 with barack obama. if the democratic leadership doesn't send them packing, biden lurches left and you'll see another red wave. >> dana: some of these democrats, like moderate democrats, like conor lamb of pennsylvania, he knows that in 2022 if there's a biden administration in 2022, his race, that's a prime target for republicans to go in and take that one back. >> juan: sure. this is what we know. i can't compete with jesse in a deep dive in democratic politics.
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so pardon me. let me try to keep up. i know that it was moderates that gave the house to democrats in 2018. and i do know this. let's not miss the big picture of what is going on right know. democrats won the white house. democrats retain a majority in the house by a narrow margin but they're in the majority. nancy pelosi is the speaker of the house and i think will be and given the outcome of a very critical senate run-off in two senate races in georgia in january, democrats at this moment have a chance to control the u.s. senate. so to me, that is the big picture. let's not focus -- >> jesse: limited chance. >> juan: there's no chance. i don't think there's a chance. there's a reality here. so all of these reports of losing this, losing that, the republicans of the democrat's demise grossly exaggerated at this point. i think the reality is that pelosi and the democrats -- the
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democrats are a big tent party. we have more people in the party than the republicans. the republicans had to deal with the tea party and the freedom caucus and raucous dissent and managed it. democrats can do the same. >> dana: katie, i have a theory that i think nancy pelosi just may end up in the biden administration. that she would take an appointment. >> jesse: no way. >> dana: this is something that i'm going to pay very close attention to. >> jesse: you must know something. >> what do you think she will do? >> dana: i will reveal that as i develop my theory later. i want to go back to james carville. i love his way with words. i think that he is trying to give the democrats really good advice. you're from arizona. you saw what is happening. i'm from colorado. i saw what happened there. it does -- i think they would be wise to take his advice. you think they will? >> you saw kristin cinema that
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ran as a moderate democrat. she won in that state two years ago. you had that happen again in the most recent senate race. i think when you look at what juan was just saying about who had to deal with the tea party and republicans, you know who else who had to deal with the tea party? barack obama. i watched joe biden giving a speech about healthcare. he talked about obamacare and how he's going to revise it, improve on it with the backdrop of this socialist medicare for all. in 2010, president obama said they got a shellacking as a result of that. they lost more power in the house and to jesse's point about competing on the coast. michelle steele flip a democratic seat in california. this happened twice in the past two decades. the democratic party is starting to realize that people in this deep blue districts have the benefit and the luxury of being able to be very, very far left
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because they're always going to get re-elected. joe biden is also going to have to deal with not just the reckoning of the democratic party but potentially losing the house as a result of being pushed to the left in 2022. >> dana: she brings up an interesting point. brian, in california, when voters had a chance to vote on several initiatives, all of the initiatives went to conservative way. so there might be a movement afoot. >> i think there is. kevin mccarthy will split the democrats wide open in the house. i can't believe they're up to 203 sets. it's an incredible night. juan, i can see you're happy that joe biden is president but donald trump remade the republican party and the republicans had a monster night. it was to do, donald trump helped everyone except himself. he changed it to a working class party. he changed it to a multiethnic party. he changed it to a party that will go to bat for every group without pandering. he didn't say let's not talk
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about immigration. that will tick off hispanics. no. these are my policies. the cubans, we shouldn't have relations with them. he didn't do that to get the vote. he didn't get the venezuelans exciting. when it came to americans, it came to americans. that's why he got the rio grande valley. that's why people are listening to him. he got 13% of the african american vote, which is pathetic in the big picture but almost double what mitt romney got. he didn't make the direct statements that let's say president trump has made. lastly, i can't believe that guys like jim clyburn, joe manchin didn't have the guts to say defund the police is a problem. didn't have the guts to say that burning down cities because you're angry is a good way to handle things. the green new deal is a way to destroy the country. be prideful that we have our 18 energy autonomy.
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why did they wait until after the election to say how bad it was? why not before? >> dana: maybe jesse can tell us. he did a deep dive tied. >> jesse: they know. they held it. >> keep it together but -- not enough spackle to keep that group together. >> dana: spackle is a great word. coming up next, all eyes on georgia. the control of the senate hinges on two run-offs in january and a new report says democrats are calling on people to move to the peach state to vote in those elections. ♪ into a smaller life?
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♪ >> juan: the political fight coming to georgia got more intense. republicans are on the verge of keeping control of the senate. it was announced today that they won a key race in alaska. so now control of that chamber comes down to two run-off races in the peach state in january. both parties laser focused on winning the contest. and now there's controversy.
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democrats are urging people to temporarily to move to georgia to vote in that election. tom friedman with "the new york times" is also backing the idea. >> i hope everybody moving to georgia in the next month or two, registers to vote for these two democratic senators running against two senators that were selling stocks before the public was aware of that information. both of them were investigated for that. >> juan: jesse, i'm glad you're back from your deep dive. i wanted to start here. there's going to be a recount in georgia. >> jesse: an audit, i believe. >> juan: a recount, i believe. can we all agree that recounts are fine but they don't move votes by the tens of thousands. so joe biden is winning, right? >> jesse: traditionally you're right about that with the
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recounts. i heard this was more of an audit. they're not just going to reprocess every audit. they're going to do a forensic analysis of all the ballots to see what went down there. that's fine. we'll see what happens. just the amount of scorched earth oppo drops that i've seen on these two democratic senators in the last 48 hours, my god. they sound like -- one guy backed reverend wright and another guy defunds the police and one guy loves communist cuba. and rubio is flying in to georgia, all of these republican senators are on the ground there. the republicans know this is do-or-die. the stakes are high. the back is up against the wall. i think life as we know it hangs in the balance. if the democrats take both of these seats and control the senate, bye-bye america. we loved you.
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had a nice run. it's over. we're talking green new deal, we're talking tax hikes. we're probably not going to have a national anthem. >> juan: did you hear that, katie? the question for you, dana, since biden won in georgia even jesse says that is likely now, don't democrats have a good chance in this run-off? >> dana: i think they have a chance. i don't know if it's good. republicans almost always win these run-offs. especially in a state like georgia. i think the idea that you have to invade georgia with your voters in order to win is pitful. congressman ro khanna says that is not a good idea and shouldn't be encouraged. i'll give you an interesting figure. so joe biden is up by around 14,000 votes. david purdue, the republican incumbent is down -- needs 14,000 more votes to avoid this run-off. so is it possible that there's
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enough democrats? yes, in a presidential election. in a run-off? i don't know if it's right to say that the democrats typically don't vote in run-offs because they don't care enough. i think everybody is super engaged this time around. i talked to a few people today that work in republican senate races. they went from cautiously optimistic that everything will work out to extremely nervous. >> juan: so brian, dana was picking up on this. it's potentially a low-turnout election for these two seats. can barack obama and joe biden help the democrats and can a losing president trump help the republicans? >> brian: very interesting. i think probably fascinating. i don't know what barack obama's impact was in the last few days when he went over there. stacy abrams raised $10 million. show might have more of an impact. a lot of georgians like their old identity, which they lost if the recount goes the same way.
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the other thing i heard is jon ossoff in terms of negative campaigning, he's a trust fund socialist and warnock loves cuba and jeremiah wright. so the other side, purdue and kelly loeffler, who doug collins says i back her now. that gives him his 24%. they're both favorites. the second amendment. both are pro second amendment. georgia is a second amendment state. that's where the rubber hits the roads and purdue and loeffler are combining like a joined ticket. and mitch mcconnell tends to get his way. i think he will pour a lot into that. >> juan: katie on the hard-nosed money angle here. how much money hours in? here i am picking up on dana perino's point that the democrats spent a lot of money in south carolina, kentucky,
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didn't get much back. so how much money do democrats put in to the races in georgia given what just happened in the last season? >> katie: we're seeing a loot of grass roots money pouring in. i'm sure they will convince the big donors, yes, you spent $100 million in south carolina but this is for the balance of power but we need you to push us over the edge. >> brian: and kentucky. >> katie: and kentucky. this is why we need your money. in terms of who can win it, it can go either way. don't underestimate democrats here. >> dana: i agree. >> katie: the machine that democrats have built in georgia. they're obviously ahead in the vote count right now. republicans can not count on this. given the high turnout of the election, they may have a problem. if the senate races have go as republicans have seen house races go and the sentiment against the socialism and the far left policy positions of the
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democratic candidates in georgia, republicans will be in good shape. it's a fight. >> brian: they need one. >> dana: jon ossoff is the candidate going against purdue. oprah went town there, samuel l. jackson, jane fonda. $50 million was spent on that race, a house race. he got the nickname the human cash incinerator. i don't know if you're a democrat if you want money in there. the grass roots donors will probably show up. >> brian: with george sakai she loft? >> juan: the republicans say they don't like the secretary state. >> brian: he came around. >> juan: a little republican rift in there. >> katie: can i say something about democrats threatening to move to georgia even though ney don't live there? the reason why georgia has lacks
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laws is to allow for more people to vote. it's not for people from out of the state to come and vote in a place that they don't live. because it's legal doesn't mean it's ethical. you shouldn't be doing that. >> juan: she's not a scuba diver. she doesn't go deep like you. the media being accused of a double standard in how they cover president trump and president-elect joe biden. that's next on "the five." ♪ - i'm norm. - i'm szasz. [norm] and we live in columbia, missouri. we do consulting, but we also write. [szasz] we take care of ourselves constantly; it's important. we walk three to five times a week, a couple miles at a time. - we've both been taking prevagen for a little more than 11 years now. after about 30 days of taking it, we noticed clarity that we didn't notice before. - it's still helping me. i still notice a difference. prevagen. healthier brain. better life.
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♪ >> jesse: liberal media bias on full display. the press shaming republicans over election challenges and giving joe biden the softball treatment. take a look at these attacks on the gop. >> the republican senators that are still silent about biden's win, they're enablers, too. here's the list. we'll leave this up a second.
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>> those people in his administration that not only drafted some of those policies, but were complicit, i don't think they should be forgotten and we shouldn't look the other way. i think people need to be held accountable for their actions. >> jesse: compare that with these softball questions for joe biden. >> will you move as head as the president continues to concede? >> how do you work with republicans when so many have not acknowledged your victory? >> what do you say that president trump has yet to concede and what that might mean for the country? >> jesse: tough questions, brian. i don't know if you can answer those hard-hitting questions. >> brian: right. a couple of things. at least we didn't get what enchants you most about the job you're about to get. i don't mind those questions. i just wish most of them were asked to the president. give him a second to reflect and find out something about him and instead of what do the russians know.
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why are you and melania not staying in the same house. why is baron so tall. all of those questions. he never had an easy question in four years. but he's getting it. the other thing, who cares? if someone in "the view" doesn't like you and targeting you, who cares? you people up a list of people that endorse the president and you expect a murder she wrote? we know. they're still counting ballots. we have to get a thicker skin, stop targeting people. that's your problem. overall, i'd like the dana perino method of i don't care, i don't check my voice mail, i don't check any texts. it's not on social media. it's hard to know who is mad at me when i don't care. i'm tapping into the dana perino magic. >> jesse: maybe that's why she doesn't call me back. dana, what do you think about
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putting people on lists? i don't like having to be accountable or enablers? what does that remind you of? >> dana: in history -- i'm not nor cancelling anybody. except for two people that i can think of. gutfeld -- >> jesse: he's been cancelled. >> brian: i'm here. >> jesse: that's why we have you. >> dana: i think this whole idea of cancel culture did hurt the democrats. it's not just because of the individuals. it's the whole feeling of this is not how we were raised. this is not like if you believe in a higher power. that's not how you're taught to treat other people. because some people decided to work on the national park service under a trump administration, they deserve to be cancelled? doesn't make sense. >> jesse: cancel the park service. katie? i can imagine that if joe was down and he was filing filing
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legal challenges, he would want to make sure that every vote was counted. >> katie: yeah, we wouldn't be declaring anything and backing his decision and the president shouldn't be celebrating yet. we know the media is biassed. the press will miss president trump. you already have reporters saying they're not getting call read-outs with foreign leaders that joe biden is supposedly making. you have reminders during the obama administration that they were spying on reporters. the justice went after him. they're going to miss the access and the transparency and the president coming out multiple times a day and talking to reporters, giving them the sound bites that they need and the thoughts, everything that they need to be successful in their jobs. i think they'll be missing him. >> jesse: juan, the president made a lot of media people stars the way that they had these robust exchanges on tv.
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you know, the books -- >> brian: have a list of people to call on. >> jesse: we used to sit here and watch these brawls between the press and the president and people made big names. now they're whining they're not getting any access. you think the press may miss president trump a little bit? >> juan: i think mr. deep dive might miss this president. i think the reality is first that i don't like lists, let me say that. i think that the whole notion of people being held accountable is legitimate. but enemy's list? targeting people? that is the opposite of what we need in a free society. i don't like it. i don't also like when you see people that refuse to say oh, there was an election, there's no evidence of fraud and i acknowledge a fair result and therefore i acknowledge
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president-elect joe biden. too many republicans right now and republican leadership in washington are refusing to do it. i don't know if they think this will generate excitement for the georgia race. i don't know what they're doing. it's not in keeping with our democratic norms and not in giving the incoming administration the opportunity to have a peaceful successful transition and today i read in the paper something very interesting act what happened after that 2000 race with the month-long count in florida. the people on the 9-11 commission said the failure to have a speedy efficient transition opened the door to some of the damage that we as a nation suffered in 9-11. i think that is damaging, jesse. people should be held accountable and say stop it. we had a real election, a winner -- >> katie: can i ask a question? >> juan: sure. >> katie: if the president did come out and congratulate joe biden but also said i want lawsuits to move forward to do
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an analysis and audit of these elections considering that they changed the rules, we have a new election systems with these mail-in ballots, studies that showed they're available to fraud, would you be okay? >> juan: sure. >> katie: to make sure they're on the up and up. >> juan: you can look at things again. you don't say i'm not going to concede. i'm an authoritarian leader, i'm the king. >> jesse: maybe we'll send fbi agents to the transition team. frame them for a crime they didn't do. coming up, new york governor andrew cuomo announcing new harsh covid restrictions and a top biden adviser pushing a controversial ideas where some americans may have to wait to get a vaccine. ♪
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ebb. ♪ >> brian: the country seeing a spike in the coronavirus cases and hospitalizations. new york governor andrew cuomo responding by strict measures. bars and restaurants and gyms are being forced to close at 10:00 p.m. indoor gatherings at private residents will be limited to ten people. we did get some good news on a potential covid-19 vaccine this week. some americans may have to wait until the rest of the world gets its first. that's if a biden adviser gets his way. he wants the fair priority model which calling for a vaccine to be distributed globally before all americans. katie, is that okay with you? let's make sure the russians have all they need before it goes to montana and new mexico. >> katie: the russians have
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their own vaccine. yeah, they can have their own. no, i don't think that's okay. the united states needs to get back on its feet. a u.s. company has developed the vaccine. the u.s. will get it to the most vulnerable populations first. to share it with the rest of the world and does this include china? i don't know. i want to talk about the restrictions as well. the restrictions, the threats of another lock down. remember back in may and june when they started -- questions about how long the lock down was going to go, 15 days, 30 days. people willing to do it for a little while. lock downs didn't necessarily stop because politicians thought it was fine to do it. people started to fight back. a woman in texas that went to jail over her salon. people say i can't feed my family if you continue to do lock down measures. governor cuomo admitted 63% of
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new cases in new yorkerly they are year came from people that were locked down. so you have to balance out the consequences of another lock down with the consequences of people not providing for their families. there's serious consequences. >> brian: jesse, lightning round. the whole city went to its knees. it will take decades to recover. he wants more of that or wants this in his paper bag? >> jesse: he wrote a book and this and now cases are rising. what kind of idiot does something like that? everybody here i see is wearing a mask in new york city. why are cases rising? i don't understand it. i know this. joe biden wants to give the vaccine to the chinese before the united states? that is insane. that is literally insane. here's more insanity. the biden-covid adviser says this. u.s. lock downs of four to six
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weeks could control the pandemic and revive the economy. they want more lock downs, months-long lock downs and say don't worry, we'll send everybody checks. so they can get by. >> brian: dana, lock down don't wore. europe is supposedly doing it the right way and they're flat on their back. >> dana: the other thing is, restaurants have to close at 10:00 p.m. does that mean the coronavirus doesn't presented at 9:00 p.m.? >> brian: everybody knows at 11:00 the virus goes crazy. >> dana: got it. american taxpayers are on the hook for the funding of the production of the vaccine but the distribution of it. after that, we should help others when we can. we should make sure that people in this country get it first. >> brian: juan, do you think a lock down for the next two or three months is the way in merkel says lock down for thanksgiving and you'll have a christmas. is that the formula for success? >> jesse: do they have thanks
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giving in germany? >> juan: look, you misframed this whole segment. to me, pfizer, an american company is also working with a german company. it's an international effort. as long as you have airplanes flying around, the virus is a global concern. what you heard from zeke emanuel said that once we get the vaccine in sufficient numbers, we should make an effort to look for other people. it's not like saying they're ignoring us good americans. they're ignoring people in montana. that's not fair. >> jesse: america first, juan. >> juan: okay to say that's what he's saying? that's not what he's saying. >> brian: it's a priority model.
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once you get a herd immunity, we're going to give it to other people. >> juan: the second point to katie's argument is this. to get the economy back in shape, we need to take steps. the economy can't recover -- >> jesse: you don't take it down -- >> katie: maybe the politicians should take their own advice first. >> juan: injury making a political argument. the scientists are saying here's the restrictions. >> brian: we locked it down. didn't work. we can't do it again. the american people will revolt. ahead, off the charts hypocrisy over their push to defund the police. wait until you hear this story from minneapolis next. ♪
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♪ >> katie: majorly -- hypocrisy after liberals in minneapolis push to defund the police. listen to this.
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>> katie: sounds like she wants and escort to the police to be safe. >> dana: it is hypocritical to defund the place and call the police for something like that. i think defund the police hurt the democrats and i think it's having practical impacts where you have police forces that are finding that they are short of people. they're cutting back on patrols like in lapd and you're also seeing like for example, homicides going up. there's real consequences to even the suggestion of the policy. the idea that you can attack police -- think about if you're a mom and you have children that think that they might want to go to the police force, are you excited about that? probably not. >> katie: in minneapolis, the place where the defund is police was this summer, they have increased police patrols. take a look at the crime numbers
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in minneapolis. it's insane. arson compared to last year is up by 76%. homicides 87%. jesse, assaults 24% and robberies 37%. so not only do they defund the police, now they have defunded more police and traying to bring in outside police to solve the problem. >> jesse: katie, the crime is mostly peaceful. mostly peaceful. who you going to blame? trump is not around anymore. when there's violence in the cities, there's more coronavirus cases. who you going to blame? he's not there anymore. i can't wait to hear who you try to blame. when he's not there, i don't know. these things will continue to happen. you'll see a rise in coronavirus cases, you're going to see a rise in crime. the democrats don't have any solutions. they want to defund and shut down. so it's just going to be interesting to see what happens in a lot of big cities. >> katie: the numbers are not just crime statistics, they're representative victims of crime. so isn't the minneapolis city
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council responsible for this crime considering they voted to defund the police? >> juan: what is missing here the george floyd. the cop that put his knee on a man's neck and killed him. >> katie: that justifies that? >> juan: i'm saying you look at that reaction and people are calling for police reform, less use of equipment against the community. more of an alternative in terms of dealing with people like the man in philadelphia that was mentally ill and wielding a knife. he was a danger. you have to shoot him dead? >> katie: so police have to get killed before they can fight back? >> juan: you throw around this term "defund the police." that reminds of a bad slogan. build a wall, have the mexicans pay for building the wall. a bad slogan. >> jesse: but they did defund it. it's not a slogan.
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they did. >> juan: what they did is to say we have different ways to teal with polices -- >> brian: one second. you know what i'm doing? i'm reimagining police, which is the most ridiculous statement -- >> juan: why? >> brian: reimagining police when you live in a lawless city is crazy. >> juan: what lawless city? >> brian: how about new york city. >> juan: not in my experience. >> brian: 2,004 have turned in their badge. it's up 25%. this city is out of control. minneapolis in particular, they're getting -- asking for $500,000 to get 40 more cops in to try to get some control. that doesn't help george floyd's memory, doesn't help george floyd's family. it vilifies all police officers, not the one in prison. that is the biggest mistakes. as james clyburn said, the slogan earring is one of the worst things that could happen. the south carolina seat was lost because of the phrase defund the
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police and kamala harris backed it when the lapd did it and everybody was in support of it with a billion dollar cut off the nypd. they cheered for it. they can't walk it back now. >> katie: one more thing up next. ♪ cell phone repair. did you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? just get a quote at libertymutual.com. really? i'll check that out. oh yeah. i think i might get a quote. not again! aah, come on rice. do your thing. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ and sweetie can coloryou just be... gentle with the pens. okey. okey. i know. gentle..gentle new projects means new project managers.
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♪ >> time now for one more thing. jesse. >> so fox news has been dominating the tv industry, the radio business, the internet, and now they are into the book business. check this out. at this is first official fox news book. from pete hegseth called "modern warriors," just in time for veterans day. it's a collection of inspiring stories by highly decorated seals and marines and army rangers. so think about this, this could be a collectors edition. the very first ever fox news
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book. so go over to foxnews.com, shop. check it out. >> it's like a babe ruth rookie card. it's based on a series. >> i'm glad you're going next, katie because we cut you off the last time. >> morgan county deputy sheriff in missouri had an emotional reunion with his son on monday after returning from a deployment in afghanistan. walking up to the car to his son after pulling it over. his son jumps out of the window and the two -- big hug, so welcome home, sheriff thomas, and happy veterans day to all of them. >> happy veterans day. >> brian. >> i've got to give credit to tony orlando, you know the song, ripping around the old oak -- really adopted for soldiers coming back from war, from deployment and now of course on veterans day, [indiscernible] red apple media and who does toys for tots and the marines, and they are handing out 100,000
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yellow ribbons on veterans day to symbolize those who have served and are serving and i think it's just a great cause they got behind and tony orlando is a great american patriot. he says listen, used to be in the clubs all the time, i can't perform anywhere, i can't wait to help out the troops, might be the next mayor of new york city, he came down and helped out. >> is he running for mayor? >> he's thinking about running for mayor. >> please run for mayor, sir. >> all right, so america, join "the five" and wishing happy birthday to catherine lorrie. take a look at this brand party thrown for this 100-year-old in gilbert, arizona. as you can see, she had a tr on as she watched cars, bikes, the police, the fire department all rolled on the street. she -- her daughter described it like this. her daughter is janet, she said mom lived through the great depression, two world wars and she raised six kids.
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she's a strong woman, and due to the virus honestly there was concerns she wouldn't have a big celebration but as you can see, she got a surprise parade. she even got a patch from the fire department and the police department. she is now an honorary officer, so happy birthday. >> terrific story. i love that. a birthday to remember. so there's a california man, he was very frustrated with the lockdowns and couldn't get to disneyland this summer and decided to bring a little disney to his own backyard. that's right, he is studying architecture and his brother built -- he and his brother build a version of his favorite disneyland roller coaster and right there in their backyard they started working on this in march, finished it over the summer and he says that he always wanted to build a ride in the disney rights have always been special to him because of their themes. he tried to include every detail that he could from the actual ride, including the famous yeti. >> is my favorite ride. >> a whole roller coaster? >> you. >> better get on it.
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>> you wouldn't get on it? >> a do-it-yourself roller coaster? i'm out. >> i feel like we have a do-it-yourself roller coaster on "the five" every day. >> [indiscernible]. >> that's it for us, "special report" is up next, hey, bret. >> bret: this toss is sometimes a roller coaster. thanks, dana. that evening, welcome to washington, i'm bret baier. legal challenges continue in several states contesting the election results, president trump attended a veterans day ceremony today. the president didn't talk to reporters but continued his twitter offensive against the media and politicians who are not supporting his challenge to the election results. that effort includes a new voter fraud lawsuit in michigan tonight. chief white house correspondent john roberts starts us off live from the north lawn. good evening. >> good evening. more than a week after the election, president trump still has not found a path to turnaround the vote count, but sources tell fox news he is

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