tv Outnumbered FOX News December 31, 2020 9:00am-10:00am PST
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auckland, new zealand, celebrating in a year nearly six hours ago. check out "new york post" front page cover, it sums it up, leland. good riddance to table 2020. happy new year, leland. >> leland: happy new year to you, happy new year to you at home. here's to a great 2021. "outnumbered" starts now. speeeleven fox news alert, just days away from tuesday's crucial georgia senate runoffs, when voters decide which party will be controlling the u.s. senate paid coming up in 2021. republicans are highlighting what they call the largest and most aggressive voter integrity operation in state history. the g.o.p. recruiting with an 8,000 volunteers to serve as poll watchers, double brought into monitor early voting. meantime, president trump and president-elect biden said to hold dueling rallies the day before the election. fund-raising in the runoffs are setting records with the four
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candidates raising a combined $340 million, senator kelly loeffler says the stakes couldn't be higher. >> all the eyes in the country are on us, georgia. i know you feel the pressure. we are going to get this done. we are the firewall stopping socialism. take an oath to support and defend the constitution. they would use the supreme court to package liberal justices who had run over our religious freedoms, our second amendment rights. >> julie: you're watching "outnumbered." i am julie banderas pity today, rachel campos-duffy, fox news contributor. kat timpf, fox news contributor and host of "sincerely kat" on fox nation pay leslie marshall, syndicated radio host and fox news contributor, and david webb, fox news contributor and host of "the david webb show" on fox news patriot. thanks for holding off on the cocktails for this show.
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except for you, kat. [laughter] anyway, rachel, i will start with you. [laughs] i'm two deep, actually. [laughter] last night, fox news was told this would be "the largest and most aggressive ballot security and voter integrity operation in state history." there will a thousand volunteers serving as poll watchers, that's double the roughly 4,000 volunteers basically used in any other prior election. is this going to be enough to suppress the cries of election fraud for whichever party is the loser? >> rachel: i don't know, julie, but i'm glad they are doing the largest voter integrity operation. they are flat-footed during the november election. places like michigan, for example. pennsylvania, and georgia, where they stopped the counting overnight and they found suitcases with ballots and all kinds of funny business. a water main broke, but there is
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no maintenance report for it when they stopped the counting. i think people are demanding it, they deserve it. pull watchers are needed. frankly, the poll watchers that republicans did have were treated terribly. a lot of them were not allowed to get near in view of where they could see what was happening with the vote counting. others were kicked out to the applause of some of the vote counters. it was terrible. maybe the republicans have finally woken up to the fact that voter fraud happens, and you need a lot of poll watchers to stop it. >> julie: kat, both president trump and president-elect biden will be holding dueling campaign events in georgia. monday, the day before the election, that will decide which party controls the senate. which one of these two will have the greatest impact on voters? >> kat: oh... look, i think they are going to have an impact on people who already are democrat or republican. i think they are so divided. look, i'm a libertarian, i don't
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trust anyone who is in power over me regardless of what political party u.n. i think more accountability is better, but i think the volunteers to watch the polls doubled that they were in november, it shows that no matter what happens, we are still so divided right now. i know joe biden likes to talk, he can talk a lot about unity. every time he talks about unity, healing, bringing the country together, i don't think half the country's whatsoever down for that. i think people are going to be fired up on both sides. it really is anybody's race here. it's very, very close. i don't think, no matter what happens, that we are going to have this healing and unity that people seem to want. i would love it, but i don't see it happening. >> julie: now. we are going to go to mitch mcconnell on the senate floor for just a moment, speaking as we are waiting to see if they can combine these bills are separate them to get the $2,000 stimulus check out to americans. let's watch. >> to instead send thousands of
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dollars to people who don't need the help. experts from across the political spectrum agree that our colleagues from vermont is dead wrong on this. socialism for rich people is a terrible way to help the american families that are actually struggling. let me say that again. barring from our grandkids to do socialism for rich people is a terrible way to get help to families who actually need it. washington democrats took president trump's exhaustion and skewered it so that checks would benefit even more households. imagine a family of five where the parents erin $250,000 per year and have not seen any income loss this past year. speaker pelosi and the senators want to send them $5,000 from uncle sam. they make a quarter of a million dollars. nobody is out of work, but our so-called progressive friends say the household needs "survival checks."
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in fact, they believe a family of five should have to earn $350,000 before the spigot of government money would stop entirely. socialism for rich people. that's what speaker pelosi and senator sanders have sketched out. a terrible way to help those who need it. experts across the political spectrum agree. the liberal editors of "the washington post" and blasted so-called progressives demanding a norte nontargeted gy to comfortable families. the treasury department to president clinton and the national economic counsel for president obama, he says there is "no good economic argument." for more nontargeted checks with no linkage to need. the liberal "new york times" reported this morning that a majority of the households that get nontargeted checks do not
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end up spending them on urgent needs, but rather just add to their savings. "we know where the pockets of need are." said one economist. "putting money they would be a much more efficient to use." fortunately, madam president, the sum of our colleagues seem to have forgotten, that's exactly what we did only a week ago. it's been less than five days since president trump signed into law another historic bipartisan rescue package targeted to americans who actually need the help. we passed an entire second round of ppp loans, which save small business jobs, targeted to the hardest hit. we renewed multiple kinds of additional federal benefits for unapplied workers, including an extra $300 supplement every week. there are billions for targeted food assistance, billions for targeted rental assistance, and many billions of dollars for vaccine distribution, so we can finally beat this virus and
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reopened the economy in full. these are the kinds of targeted emergency programs that directly help the most vulnerable, and we just poured almost another trillion dollars into them less than five days ago. along with more direct checks that are already arriving in households' accounts. that, madam president, is what we did just five days ago. this crisis has not affected everyone equally. the data show that many upper middle-class americans have kept their jobs, worked remotely, and remain totally financially comfortable. on the other hand, some of our fellow citizens have had their entire existences turned upside down and continue to suffer terribly. we do not need to let the speaker of the house do socialism for rich people in order to help those who need
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help. our duty, both to struggling americans and the taxpayers, is to focus on targeted relief that will have the maximum impact and help the people who need it the most. that is what the experts say we should do. that is where there is broad bipartisan support, and that is exactly what we did less than one week ago where nearly $900 billion in more targeted relief was signed into law for our people. >> julie: and there you have senate majority leader mitch mcconnell essentially teeing up the vote on whether or not to veto the president's anti-stimulus bill. he wanted the $2,000 checks to be lumped into two other bills. the president wanted it to be a stand-alone to get this checks through. minority leader chuck schumer,
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let's dip into him real quick. >> the leader has refused to allow us to vote on legislation to provide the american people twodollar checks. he has twice objected to my requests to set a time on the measure, claiming yesterday that direct stimulus checks were poorly targeted, been running the idea that some of the checks might go into "the hands of democrats 'his rich friends who don't need help." senator toomey said much the same thing. funny, i don't remember their te republican leader and senator toomey complaining about how to trillion dollars across the board in corporate tax cuts was poorly targeted because some large companies didn't need the help. >> julie: will have much more on this with both the majority leader and minority leader talking as they continue to try to tee up the vote to override the president's veto of the $740 billion national defense authorization act. much to be discussed right after this break. stay right there. did you know you can go to libertymutual.com
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>> julie: new developments in the fight in congress over the demand for $2,000 stimulus checks. senate majority leader mitch mcconnell speaking just moments ago. watch. >> socialism for rich people is a terrible way to help the american families actually struggling. let me say that again. it's a terrible way to get help to families who actually need it. >> julie: rachel, what do you make of mcconnell's comments about borrowing and giving to the rich? is he referring to these $2,000 checks? you have to be under certain tax bracket even be eligible for receiving them. >> rachel: you know, i don't know. i will say this, the $600 that
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went out in the last relief bill was only $600 because nancy pelosi loaded it up with all this pork and there was only $600 left at the end for the american people. president trump said that's not enough, they need $2,000 pay but he also asked for the $2,000 to come with a look at section 230s and the election reforms because of what happened in the last election with corruption. you know, you look at this, and the democrats are trying to say, "we are for the little guy, we are fighting for the $2,000 x necklace could if they wanted, they could get the $2,000 and look out for the little guy. if you're looking for the little guy, you're not just looking out for the $2,000. you would care about the biggest most dangerous corporations. they would care about voter integrity. all the little guy has an assistant, julie, is they vote.
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when their vote is canceled by corruption, they have nothing. looking out for the little guy is looking for all three of those points. the $2,000, raining and big tech monopolies that are ruining our democracy, and also a look at election integrity. >> julie: leslie, mcconnell accuses nancy pelosi and chuck schumer of attempting to "warp" president trump's call for $2,000 direct payments for americans. yet mcconnell says the senate is not going to separate the vote on the $2,000 stimulus checks. why not make this a stand-alone bill so americans can get that money they so desperately need? >> leslie: when i'm agreeing with president trump -- >> julie: there is 2020 for you right there. [laughs] >> leslie: that's 2020, we are all in agreement. rachel, i love you, but you're wrong here, girl. let me tell you why. the president wants a clean bill. he agrees with me.
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he agrees with the democrats and some republicans. look, even senator lindsey graham was saying to mcconnell yesterday, to leader mcconnell, "you've got to put this to a vote." this leader mcconnell attaching looking at section 23, the voter integrity. those are two important issues. quite friendly, section 230 has bipartisan support to be revisited. not now, during a pandemic. not with this, when you're talking about people dying and not when you are badly needing this money. you mentioned the cap, you are looking at a gross income, that is not rich. they are losing some of that money to try and keep things open. the thing out what kind of restrictions are because of covid. others, the income, how do we know what somebody makes? look at last year, we don't know
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the tax returns for 2020 yet. that this will help the rich, the bottom line is all along democrats of said it's got to be more than $600. so did the president paid after that was passed, he said to go back to the drawing table up to the two grand which they wanted originally. >> julie: this is pretty or michael to see the democrats are actually agreeing with the president on this. refusing to separate the votes, mcconnell is essentially making this impossible. he is combining the stimulus relief bill with a bill that includes the establishment of commission to investigate election fraud and a repeal of section 230, yada yada, it would protect social media platforms over liability from third-party posts? how is that even at all priority right now? that leaves no clear path for these $2,000 checks being rolled out. i can't imagine the political backlash that mcconnell is bringing onto his own party, particularly in georgia.
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>> rachel: it's democrats, too pay deception to the previous omnibus bill to restrict to ban the aping products, it really? with everything going on right now, we are attacking i vaping? it makes it harder for them to play politics, that must be tough for them because it's really fun to play games with other people's money. for those of us who actually is our money, it's not so fun. when i watch chuck and mitch going back and forth, "no, you!" i get physically ill. i really don't think i can be the only one. i want them to be the priority. quit with the games with one party versus the other. come on, grow up. this is a similar situation we're in right now. try to go out for once. >> julie: it sounded like mcconnell is basically setting up for all of us to accept that they're not going to push through this $2,000 check. what do you make of senate
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majority leader mcconnell and his remarks when he accused a top democrat nancy pelosi and chuck schumer of trying to pull a fast one? he warned that in a floor speech yesterday that there was no realistic path to quickly approve larger stimulus checks. they are trying to pull a fast one. what does he mean by that? >> david: well, this is washington at work. welcome to the real world. that's for you, rachel, of washington politics and how the sausage is made. they attach things, they put pork in this. by the way, it isn't just socialism. it's redistributed into the world. both sides are missing something that we need in washington because we don't have regular order. i get leslie's point, trump agrees with this. the words may match but the policies do not. the democrats are trying to pack as much in, and the republicans are trying to pack as much in. the businesses that are closed, my solution, because i'm sick of the arguing back and forth, by
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the way, kat, i like that. why don't we cut to the point of reopening the country safely? the science, they've been telling us, the democrats follow the science. they are not following the science. get america reopened, do it safely, business owners and entrepreneurs can find ways to do this. i talked to many of them on radio daily, they just want to go to work. they have hundred 60 million person workforce in america. they are not all shut down, nor should they be. >> julie: those $2,000 checks could go to business owners who have had to shatter their doors because they can't afford to pay their employees are now unemployed. get these unemployed back to work. you guys all stand by paid critics say the defund the police movement may have something to do with this video which is absolutely and raging. they are teenage thugs attacking an occupied car in broad daylight on a new york city street. this is a 70-year-old sitting in
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the backseat. disgusting. this, as president-elect joe biden says the doj should police the police? what's that all about? plus, another recent move by the biden transition team that may signal a lack of transparency with the media. next. >> will you go back to georgia? >> will you have a republican in your cabinet? people were afraid i was contagious. i felt gross. it was kind of a shock after i started cosentyx. four years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. learn more at cosentyx.com.
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driver, and his 70-year-old mother. what the heck connect one of the thugs jumped on the windshield and nearly caved in. they took off before police arrived, but this morning cops arrested one suspect and they're asking the public to come forward with any information. i hope they get the worst when it comes to punishment. meantime, biden has sidestepped because the defund the police but his campaign website says he plans to expand the justice department's power to address systemic misconduct by police. partly through consent decrees. the obama administration, by the way, he's those very same tools to address misconduct in places like ferguson, missouri, back in 2014, but the trump administration has largely scrapped them. rachel, i will start with you. what do you think, first of all, but biden promise that the expanse and use of the justice department is appropriate in addressing misconduct in police to parents and prosecutor offices? is it appropriate to use the doj to crack down on police
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departments? >> rachel: no, it's not paid by the way, this is a warning shot to cops at the biden administration is coming after . again, we see democrats going after the little guy. here the cops on the beat, making $55,000 a year, facing always unpredictable situations. what they need is more money for training. they've asked for it, they want it, they want better training. instead of going after the very powerful, the most powerful law enforcement, the fbi, the leaders of the fbi and the doj who tried to overturn an election, they attempted a coup, those guys are going off scot-free. but the democrats go after the cops. and they do this, they say, "we are coming after you," instead of giving them the money they want and need for training. >> julie: the obama administration used both pattern and practice investigations, kat, to address police misconduct in places like ferguson, missouri, which, as you know, erupted in violence after the death of michael brown
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in 2014. my question is this, i wonder if the biden government will offer the same protection to police officers when they are under violent attack while trying to keep the peace during anti-police protests, like they were here in new york city. literally being violently attacked, which is the exact reason these thugs here in new york city, teenagers, that was okay to attack a car for absolutely no reason, because the cops had literally been stripped of their power, and they think, "there's no deterrent, i'm going to do whatever the hell i want." >> kat: joe biden is going to do whatever he thinks is politically popular, because that's what he's done his entire career. in the '80s and the '90s he was leading the charge for locking people, nonviolent, imprisoned, disproportionately black men, because that was popular then. now we have a criminal justice guy, you hear in the leaked audio, "we should cool it on the defund the police stuff for now because georgia -- "so it that his only concern -- what is he
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concerned about? is not surprising, because it's what he has always done. but it also is surprising. it's like, dude, you are 78 years old! are you concerned about shortening your budding political career? it's the exact reason people don't trust and don't like politicians. they'll say one thing to gain power and once they have it they'll do whatever they want. >> julie: joe biden won the election, he is the president-elect, leslie, and he has been a question on where he stands when it comes to defunding the police. during his campaign he was adamant to say, "no, i don't plan on defunding the police." now he's the president-elect hear his thoughts currently. >> i also don't think we should get too far ahead of ourselves on dealing with police reform and that, because they've already labeled us as being "defund the police." that's how they beat the living hell out of us across the country, saying that we are talking about defunding the police. we are not. we are talking about holding
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them accountable. >> julie: okay, so you got police reform and you've got defunding the police. which is his plan? leslie? >> leslie: well, defund the police is police reform. the problem is the wording is really bad for my party. i would agree with the president-elect on that. vice president-elect kamala harris said bad cops make good cops look bad. >> julie: you're right. >> leslie: according to the department of justice, let president-elect biden is doing, first of all, it is the justice department's responsibility. here's what it is. one of the responsibilities of the department of justice is to review conduct of local law enforcement directed by the violent crime control and law enforcement act of 1994. so all that he is doing, all that barack obama did, is basically saying to the department of justice, "do your job." if you notice, it's not saying systemic racism, it's regarding systemic misconduct. that's not only the department of justice's responsibility to oversee that and to ensure that,
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i think when you are preaching this message of unity, going forward it is something you need to do. they have been problems within police departments that make it harder for those good cops to do a good job. then with regard to funding, to reform funding, to have people who are mental health specialists assist in his mental health situations. that is really where the vice president-elect has been. that's where central moderate democrats like myself, the majority of the party in voters and the politicians, stand. >> julie: david, we'll get to you after the break. i have to take a commercial break. new york governor andrew cuomo wants to let thousands of fans attend a football game. how does that square with his restrictions on indoor dining? plus, white house reporters calling out the biden transition team, accusing them of ignoring calls to take more questions? in the president-elect continue to claim he wants to be held accountable by the media? >> president-elect biden
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>> julie: the biden transition team once again facing criticism for its apparent lack of transparency with the media. daily beast reported an incoming politico white house editor, sam stein, treated this on wednesday. "the biden transition team appears to have disabled the public chat function on its transition zoom call, the place where i and others had been routinely complaining to them to take more questions." they used chat to call out the biden team after they only took five questions. and he wrote, "since this is only once a week, can we go longer or hold more frequent briefings?" zeke miller from the
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associated press added, "any chance he could take a few more questions connect there are a lot of folks here with questions." and andrew feinberg from the white house also chimed in saying, "is there a point in saying when we want to ask questions if you only call on the same small group every week?" last month the biden spokesperson said the president-elect valued the media. >> president-elect biden believes the media is a critical piece of our democracy, that transparency is incredibly important. he also believes the media's job is to hold him accountable, and he welcomed that relationship. >> julie: does he? david, president-elect joe biden's transition team, by disabling the chat function, they are basically disabling the opportunity for reporters asked questions. they they're saying, "you are allowed to ask questions when we want you to come up that we will limit the questions." how is that transparency? >> david: it's not, but first of all, how is anybody surprised? humana campaign from his
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basement, and suddenly the mean girls media club thinks all of a sudden he's going to be open and transparent and are going to hold him accountable. sampson and others, i don't have any sympathy for you. he propped this up, he played this a long, and i are being left out. get over yourselves. biden was always going to do this and he's been doing this since the campaign. >> julie: you're right. if you watch here as joe biden dodges peter doocy's question about his son, hunter, earlier this month. watch his reaction. >> reporter: mr. president-elect, do you still think the story about your son hunter -- [indistinct] >> yes, yes, yes. god love you, man. you're a 1-horse pony. >> julie: rachel? >> rachel: [laughs] first of all, i love how the complaints from sam stein and the others i like, "can you please?" they are so meek and compliant, they are like abused girlfriends
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when it comes to the democrats. [laughter] look at this, these were serious questions that need to be asked. we have someone who will become president, potentially later this month, and he is compromised by the chinese government. there have been no questions about it. there is a laptop with emails that say he is the big guy getting kickbacks from his son's dirty deals in china and the ukraine, and china is our biggest, most dangerous geopolitical and military enemy. it is a very serious questions. the media are acting like children in this. you are right, david, they knew this was going to happen. this guy spent his entire campaign in his basement, and they let it happen. they never took into account on that. steel and biden has been so critical about how president trump handled the media and he didn't like certain
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questions coming from certain media that were biased. you would think this president-elect to go forward and handle this differently. it doesn't seem he is. which is a bit hypocritical. >> kat: part of it is the campaign pack secretary said joe biden loves the media, it's going to be a different culture than the past four years, and basically the argument throughout the campaign is, "yeah, but he's not." how long is he going to do that for? "but that guy, am i right?" stand up for something, count for yourself. >> julie: is this what we have to expect for the next four years it was he going to hate fox for four years and put us in the doghouse? >> leslie: i don't see the president-elect as hating fox,
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quite frankly. steel and hate is a strong word. disliked? >> leslie: he's gotten a lot of grief for not hating republicans and for saying he liked republicans and wanted to work for republicans. quite frankly the best presidents in our nation, whether the democrat or republican, if you want to look at ronald reagan and bill clinton as far as getting things done, we were able to bring the people across the aisle to come together to have bipartisan support for the best interests of the people. i'm going to comment on on this, you can't, my fellow democrats, the transition team -- you can't not say it you are going to be transparent and react that way. you have to get all the questions, the tough questions, as well, and give the answers. politicians left or right sometimes don't like the tough questions. donald trump has shown that and i hope that joe biden will not do that when he is president. >> david: to be fair, leslie, donald trump, by the minutes and
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hours, give the media more access than any other president in recent times. at least he would engage, even if he didn't like it. the media can't complain about that. >> julie: that's it for this topic. standby. what pandemic, by the way? governor cuomo making an exception. an nfl game that he himself could be attending. this, as indoor dining remains off limits for thousands of restaurants. talk about a double standard. we'll discuss. plus, good riddance to 2020. what leaders and the experts got wrong in a year many cannot wait to put in the rearview mirror. he's mirror. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ for every trip you've been dreaming of, expedia has millions of flexible booking options.
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>> julie: governor cuomo is getting blasted after announcing thousands, and i mean thousands, of buffalo bills fans to attend the playoff game next month in person, and he will be among them. many new yorkers are furious asking why the game is okay but indoor dining is banned. restaurant owners have protested for months over the dining band, arguing restaurants, according to cuomo himself, accounted for just 1.4% of infections from september to the end of november. yet, as business owners struggle to survive, cuomo is out cutting ribbons, celebrating a
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$1.6 billion train hall at penn station while warning folks not to travel. critics slammed the governor for joking around with his brother on tv while businesses were locked, on lock down. also promoting a book. there is so much to tackle here. david, he wrote the wild card game, which will be played on either january 9th or 10th, and will require, get this, all 6,772 fans. 6,772 fans, to obtain a negative cover test results through the nfl testing partner in order to attend the game. i don't need to remind the governor how testing works, right? you test positive or negative one day and your result could be entirely different three days later. testing over 6,000 fans, that is not a guaranteed. this is a super-spreader event. or at least something he would have normally called one.
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>> david: julie, first of all, let me say i'm happy for my uncle chuck who isabel's hand there, and they are in the wild card game. you are right, this is a joke. the "follow the science" crowd -- and, look, he is a bloviating buffoon sitting in albany. i'll call it what it is. he would have to test and retest and make sure the people coming in the gate have not been exposed. it doesn't really work. the nfl already has enough problems, they are down 7% in revenue and going even further. you look at the losses of the people, the vendors, all of this, either you have safe reopening and practices or you don't play this media game. i honestly think it just because he wants to go to the game. he wants to show himself to be a football fan. >> julie: i want to look at staff out of his own office that shows the spread of coronavirus by location. the football game hasn't yet been added to this, but let's wait for it. household gatherings at the
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largest culprits at nearly 74%, restaurants and bars rank fifth, and only 1.4%. leslie, isn't this usually hypocritical for the governor? >> leslie: absolutely. i'm from boston, i'm a new england patriots fan, although i'm not happy with tom brady, and i used to live in buffalo and have a soft spot in my heart for the buffalo bills. use the party back in a day with jim kelly and some of those guys. i know the fans are going to hate me for this, they should be no fans there. he should not be one of them. a true leader, i've said before, leads by example. i agree with you, this is a super-spreader. you can test negative today and test positive tomorrow. we know about the 7-10 or 14 and beyond window, the incubation period paid we have what we've seen in california yesterday. this is a big problem, it's hypocritical, and you've got to watch --
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>> kat: who would want to sit outside in the winter in buffalo? >> julie: that's a good point! [laughter] >> rachel: it is an outdoor event. i believe you can't get -- that the chance of getting coronavirus outside are much less. from everything i have been following, and i've been following closely, by the way. i did have covid and i did recover from it. i don't believe that being outside is a problem. in fact, we all need to get outside more pages how those figures and the stats, being indoors is the worst thing for spreading the virus. i'm okay with this but i say -- i agree, i don't like the cold weather, either. i say open up football. open up dining, too, i agree. >> julie: you just can't say, "you cannot dine, you cannot socially distance and serve meals," one last thing, what
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about contact tracing before the event? in the state of new york, if you travel to florida dave got to test three days before the date is after he reentered, and you are supposed to quarantine. are they going to require that? i doubt it. >> david: how come i can sit on the plane for hours and eat a meal but it can't go to a restaurant and sit and eat with several of the people around y you? give me a break, it makes no sense. >> julie: it doesn't. cities around the world are already ringing in the new year and giving 2020 the boot. a fox news poll finds a record number of voters feel a certain kind of way about the year now ending. the panel is eager to a on this, next. ♪ we are the thrivers.
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to the curb. today's "new york post" cover illustrating what so many are feeling about 2020, and in a fox news poll finding a record number of voters, some 67%, say 2020 was a bad year for them. 78% say it was a bad year for the country. i'm going to start with you, david. our one lucky guy. does that sound right to you? >> david: it sounds just about right, but i want to take another angle on this. 2020 showed us what resilience can really look like. i understand a lot of people have been hurt, they are still hurting, we have to do the right thing, reopen the country, get businesses and lives back on track. but resilience, we are resilient as a nation, we have produced vaccines in record time, therapeutics in record time, that helps us, that helps the world. i want to get out of 2020, but i'm going into '21 to recommit to a better future and that's what i want people to do. >> rachel: leslie, really
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quick, are you ready for 2020 to be over? will 2021 be better? >> leslie: i hope so. even though i'm a pessimist, bottom line, i think 2020 showed us that health care wor workerse real heroes. we need to unite to put covid behind us to help them, we need to look at the greater good and not just ourselves. >> rachel: kat, give us your last word. >> kat: make resolution like get out of bed in the morning, shower at least every three days, don't set yourself up to fail. [laughter] >> rachel: i love it, get out of bed every single day grateful that you're an american. thanks a lot, kat pay thanks to everyone watching. julie is back now with "outnumbered overtime." >> julie: fox news alert, the georgia senate runoffs coming down to the wire. candidates have just days left to make their cases to the voters, that one of the
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democrats is facing a growing wave of controversies. this is "outnumbered overtime," i'm a julie banderas in for harris faulkner. they contend is making a final push ahead of election day on tuesday. georgia republicans recruiting some 8,000 poll watchers, meantime, to help safeguard the integrity of the election. while democrats have managed to break fund-raising records, but one candidate, democrat raphael warnock, is facing a litany of questions on multiple issues, including domestic violence claims, praising a controversial sermon from reverend jeremiah wright, a hip-hop artist who treated a rape joke into a detailed performing at one of warnock's rallies, ouch, and alleged child abuse at a camp he ran a 2002. kelly loeffler, by the way, is facing warnock in the runoff and sh
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