Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  March 30, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PDT

3:00 am
we hope other students on other campuses realize if you fight back and dig in deeper and willing to put in the work you will not be canceled and we will show you that next week. griff: tomi lahren check out no interruption on fox nation. thanks, tomi. we are out of time. thanks, carley. carley: "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ ♪ >> we are now witnessing one of the biggest cover-ups in history. >> we will have half of central america in the united states in a year if we don't change these policies. >> i'm going to can request [inaudible] >> pending doom does not fit the current circumstances with over 3 million doses of vaccines per day. >> the biden administration now talking of a possible digital vaccine passport. >> it's completely unacceptable that you show proof of vaccine. >> one of the most anticipated trials is underway. >> there are children -- trained to do. >> becoming the ninth woman to
3:01 am
accuse new york governor andrew cuomo of sexual misconduct. >> while still hand forcefully grabbing my face. >> it's going to win the dirt race at bristol. how about that? >> unreal. >> what a race, what a battle, different leaders, joey la gano is pumped up. ♪ me and my gang, we live to ride, we live to live. steve: as you look up avenue of the americas come on in 1211 avenue of the americas "fox & friends" gang live on this tuesday, march 30th, 2021. it's going to be a nice day in new york city. we are going for a high of about 60 degrees and i think we will take it. rachel: okay. brian is moving all around, wets his pallet. a drink of water on camera. brian breen when you say gang you don't mean outlaw units you
3:02 am
mean our gang like spanky. steve: i don't know if you noticed but they were singing about me and my gang. brian: i'm sorry i wasn't paying attention. steve: are you watching? brian: i don't get into lyrics i like songs with a beat. steve: can we play more of that me and my gang. ainsley: wait for it ♪ if you want to hang with me and my gang. brian: i got it. ainsley: good morning to all of you. you are in our gang. you all are our friends. brian: right, you are in a gang. steve: this news gang has three hours of news and we start rate now, thanks for joining us on this tuesday. south carolina senator lindsey graham is calling out the biden administration for a cover-up as a crisis. at the border. while the white house says the vice president who we thought last week was going to be the border boss not the border boss, trying to sort it all out, griff jenkins joins us live from washington with more. so, griff, if she is not the border boss, what job did the
3:03 am
president give her last week? >> griff: well, garage, steve, ainsley and brian. a bit of a cleanup on aisle five. jen psaki issuing a clarification less than a week after the president assigned vice president kamala harris in charge of the border crisis. watch. >> of course the vice president of the united states will be helping lead that effort, specifically the root causes, not the border. there is some confusion over that. griff: this as you mentioned, steve, republican lindsey granel is accusing the white house of lying to the american people about the crisis. >> well, i saw a giant cover-up and i saw massive system failure, tax dollars are used to reunite the family. this is not catch and release. this is catch and reunite. griff: meanwhile, overnight, guatemala declaring an emergency amid rumors they a new caravan may be forming in honduras. the emergency decree will restrict open air gatherings and
3:04 am
demonstrations without permits and be in effect for two weeks. the government tries to justify restrictions saying, quote, groups of people could put at risk the life, liberty, security, health, access to justice, peace and development of guatemalans. it comes as border patrol encountered 44 unaccompanied children near the rio grande valley sector on sunday. just one of many groups coming. it's very interesting, guys, as you remember, i reported for you in 2019, january of 2019 when that caravan spun up, guatemala tried to put it down, couldn't, and it reached our borders. we will see where this all is headed. brian, ainsley, steve? steve: all right, griff, thank you very much. we should point out when lindsey graham said it's not catch and release it's catch and reunite. he was telling the story that each of these kids has a wristband on that ainsley has been talking about and there is a phone number on it. so the federal government, when the kids are released into the interior, they call the number on that wristband, sometimes
3:05 am
it's family member. sometimes it's a sponsor. these days, however, it doesn't sound like those people are going through much background check, so they call those people, figure out where they're and then the federal government takes those kids and flies them anywhere across the country to reunite them. that's why he says it's catch and reunite. ainsley: he says it sends the wrong message. they are using your tax dollars to do. this senator ron johnson was down there. we had this problem solved under president trump now we are back to square one. it's worse than catch and release. it's close completely open border. there is nothing humane about it. a perilous journey subjects them to human traffickers, sexual abuse and even death. brian: that's not exaggeration we have been through this before and we have seen this drill it's ugly. in the middle of a pandemic because of that one of the things that the trump administration did ring you enacted title 42 dates back to the 1940s in the middle of a health emergency when an unaccompanied minor comes to our border they are going back. we are not saying here go walk
3:06 am
pack. we were flying them back to their countries. that all changed and the biden administration was given a head up. if you get rid of the remain in mexico. if you allow unaccompanied minors to say and reunite this is going to cause a massive invasion. they ignored it and we have got a massive invasion. one that the president won't go see himself and the vice president won't accept the responsibility. so, you ask yourself, ask the unaccompanied minors and the numbers are are cbp 5767, yesterday. so some of them are being transferred to different conventions centers. one in dallas kay bailey hutchison center and saying. this is stunning news, guys, in san diego and our heart goes out to all these kids, obviously, it's not their choice at 9, 11 or 13 years old to be without their parents. i get it. their parents are deciding to do that for various reasons. but, because they are in the convention center, they are now, i understand, getting class in
3:07 am
person class teachers are teaching them at the convention center and bringing them through english class, they are also giving them a chance at social emergent. social emotional learning opportunities. they are phone in teachers to the convention center. ainsley: asking teachers to volunteer because teachers are on spring break. no word yet if tea parties are getting paid but parents are furious about that. steve: they're. there are 700 girls there at the san diego convention center right now. by the end of the week, it could be double to 1500. so the san diego office of education is responsible for providing for these children, thee migrant children in person education while they are there. this could last through july. so far, according to the san diego local media out there, 13 teachers have volunteered and they could start as early as today.
3:08 am
ainsley: the reason the parents are upset they are saying, look, we have a heart for these kids and the district is saying that they have a moral obligation a lot of these parents agree that they want to help me kids but they said our kids aren't being helped. we are taxpayers, our tax dollars are going to pay kids here illegally. our kids, 130,000 of them in that school district have not been in class in a year. they are not going it back until april 1st. even when they do go back it's a hybrid model. brian: unbelievable. steve: why is it okay for the teachers to go into this convention center to do in person teaching. ainsley: why is that safe? steve: sure. but they can't go back to their own schools. we understand apparently coming up on the week of april 12th the teachers are going to resume some sort of hybrid, in person learning. keep in mind, this school district took millions of dollars of government money in the beginning of this school year to bring the teachers and the kids back in the beginning of the school year. here we are almost to april already.
3:09 am
do you know how many kids in san diego are actually having in person learning? 6,000 out of, what, over 100,000 could be. brian: unbelievable. steve: that's why there is such outraged and the parents are steamed. brian: emily tee as a san diego parent said this to fox news the system is broken when san diego teachers are teaching migrants in students tax paying families at unified school district are stuck learning in zoom school we believe every child deserves education why are tax paying students put last? if this is the humanitarian issue, then who is rescuing san diego unified students because our leader have failed them? steve, you mentioned they got money? they are getting more money not to teach. and guess what? steve: zoom teach. brian: guess whether a? in san diego, when janice dean does the weather. it's pretty nice and it barely rains. you could be having class outside. you could be setting up open-ended tents to protect in case a drizzle comes through and be teaching school if you are
3:10 am
that concerned. obviously, you are not that concerned if 1 showed up and i'm sure even more will. how do you feel if you are in california knowing you are paying these exorbitant tax dollars, you are not getting what you want. you have an awful governor who only knows about shut down and deny and now all of a sudden they say illegal immigrants come first and other people's kids come before yours. why do people stay there? steve: brian, it's a sanctuary state. brian: a joke. ainsley: congressman darrell issa weighed in on this it's not fair our kid haven't been in school or the kids there haven't been in school for a year. and they are being told by the governor, just wait, just wait. >> steve: hang on. ainsley: these teachers are allowed to go into another area. a reason for not going back to school they don't feel it's safe yet. why would it be safe at the convention center? i'm under the belief that these kids, if you listen to the cdc, if you listen to the doctors, our kids are all in school, they are doing it safely and in many
3:11 am
of these counties the county will close but the private school in the middle you have the county is open and they are doing it safely. steve: you are right. we have heard that the number of people coming into this country, the migrants with covid is north of 10%. so you have got to figure there is some exposure. how safe are the teachers out there? well, they are volunteering for the job. the san diego county office of education sent a statement to fox news and said the san diego county office of education is providing the educational program for the unaccompanied migrant children who will be staying at the san diego convention center through july. all kids in california, regardless of immigration status, have a constitutional right to education which is absolutely true. the educational program will include english language development and social-emotional learning opportunities. teachers who participate in the program are doing so voluntarily and the program is volume strict covid screening protocols based on guidelines from the u.s. centers for disease control and
3:12 am
prevent. ainsley: one spokeswoman wasn't sure if teachers are getting paid. they asked them to volunteer it. depend on the county. 14% of the school district according to ms. diaz who gave that statement to fox news has kids with disabilities. do you know how hard it is to teach them at home? these children are falling behind. all the children are falling behind these ones especially they are getting services when they go into the classroom. brian: there will be no youth left in guatemala, honduras and he will value have a door. why would they stay there? great services. placed out of hhs to custody. 396 were placed. this is a great program for other people's children. congratulations. meanwhile -- steve: let me add one thing, brian. it's fine for them to give the migrant children in person education, that's fine. but just give the regular kids in the school district the same opportunity. brian: you mean american kids. let's talk about the pandemic. a lot of people are getting concerned because cases are ticking up. over the last two weeks the cases are up 19% in country.
3:13 am
deaths are down 30% in this country. however, over the last 17 days, when it comes to the mask mandate, a lot of things, there is pressure from the president now to say hey, guys, start masking up, you are being -- slip shot with some of the protocols we have put in place urging governors to put the mask mandate back on. but, when you look at what is happening in texas and mississippi with the mask mandate no longer in play, cases are going counsel look at places like california and new york where the mask mandate is there cases are going up. here is a very emotional cdc director rochelle row len ski talking about doom and gloom about to hit us along with the president. >> i'm going to reflect on the recurrent feel i have of impending doom. we have so much to look forward. to say so much promise and potential where we are and so much reason for help but right now i'm scared. >> i'm reiterating my call for every governor, mayor, and local
3:14 am
leader to maintain and reinstate the mask mandate with cases rising again, new variants are spreading and sadly some of the reckless behavior we have seen on television over the past few weeks means that more new cases are to come in the weeks ahead. steve: have you got to figure when he is talking about reckless behavior and things like that he is talking about those governors. remember, it was back in the day when he referred to that kind of thinking as neanderthal thinking. brian: can i say something to wrap these two things? don't tell me you are concerned about cases and putting on masks if when you are not even testing illegals at our border allowing them to stream into our country we know nothing about, you haven't even pushed a rapid test down to the border but you are concerned about north dakota and south dakota? a little bit of hypocrisy there. you crack down everywhere not in the places that are politically beneficial for you. ainsley: that just shows you they want as many to come in because they are not going to test them and deal, that's another thing they have to worry about and deal with.
3:15 am
dr. marc siegel weighed in on this and he made a good point, several points, listen to this and we will react on the other side. >> i bet she wishes she could have that back, impending doom does not fit the current circumstances with over 3 million doses of vaccines per day going into people's arms. everybody gets vaccinated then we are going to come out of this pandemic and we are going to come out of it over the summer. the other point would be nobody is counting the people that have natural immunity from having gotten over covid. i think you need more of a sense of optimism. we're all moving to florida. why are people moving to florida? because the rest of the country has this impending doom over it. this cloud of doom. ainsley: i just spent a week in florida you all go down to florida a lot. everyone is very responsible, at least where i was at the hotels where i was, you had to wear a mask. they encouraged that unless you were with your family, you were on your beach chair, but, if you got up out of your beach chair, you are not allowed to eat around the pool where i was staying. you had to get up out of your beach chair and you could go to
3:16 am
the restaurant, you could order food there and eat there and then they had a whole system of how you ordered your food. so they're taking precautions down in florida but they're allowing people to make the choice as to, you know, if they want to go down there and be with their families and take their masks off but it's not like everyone is walking around without a of course that. steve: it's not crazy town. and, brian, to your point, the number of people who are getting it continues to go up. the average is trending up but what's interesting it's actually the younger people getting it now. yale's new haven health system the admission between people of 25 and 34 is up 44% in the last seven weeks. while the admissions of people 65 and older is down 70%. why is that important? it is showing that the vaccines absolutely work because the people who once were vulnerable no longer not so much. 73% of people over the 65 have had one shot, which is great
3:17 am
because we heard yesterday that if you have had one of the shot of the pfizer or the moderna you are protected at 80% after the first shot. but 95 million americans have had one shot. so ultimately, that's really the news. we have been waiting a year. when it's your turn, get a shot, you will be protected. brian: i got one yesterday. the pfizer one. ainsley: how are you feeling? brian: i feel great. just a little bit of a headache last nate and i got up this morning and i felt great. deaths are down 30%, hospitalizations are down, too. cases are up in florida. they want seniors first. even before first responders and working their way down. ainsley: the president did say everyone is going to have an opportunity to get the first shot i think he said by may 1st s, right? the majority by april 19th. that's good news, maybe there is younger ones in that 30 to 40-year-old bracket. steve: then they have to figure out how to give the shots to kids because that's what the experts say could be the key. ainsley: did you hear the democrats are saying they said we should have the vaccine
3:18 am
passports? and republicans were saying wait, you don't even require passports to get in the country anymore on our southern border yet you want us to show a passport when we get vaccinated. brian: that's a show within itself. steve: crazy. a lot going on on this tuesday. up on the mezzanine level carley joins us with headlines. carley: good morning to you all. we are going to begin your headlines with. this today a public memorial will be held for boulder police officer eric talley who was killed in last week's supermarket mass shooting. his funeral was held at a denver cathedral where he was remembered as a hero for sacrificing his life to save others. officer talley will be laid to rest today. he leaves behind a wife and seven children. a married couple is killed after their car is smashed by a falling redwood tree in california. police say jessica and jake woodruff were on a road trip when a giant tree uprooted and fell on their car as they drove down a highway.
3:19 am
police say the tree was likely uprooted by natural causes. the couple leaves behind five children, unbelievable. well, traffic resumes in the sue he see canal after a ship was stuck for six days. cargo ship evergiven was freed after getting wedged in the canal blocking traffic in one of the world's busiest water ways. a probe has been opened to figure out what exactly went wrong. the stuck ship created a trading disaster and despite being freed experts warn the supply chain could be disrupted for weeks if not months. turning now to sport, march madness eating up baylor beating arkansas 81-27 in the elite 8. the razor back fall behind the bears in the first half and nearly rallied to tie after halftime. but, eventually fell short. baylor reaching its first final four in 71 years. they will take on houston this saturday after the cougars ended
3:20 am
oregon state cinderella story. houston overcoming a 17-point lead to hold off the beavers, 67-61. pushing the cougars to their first final four in 34 years. so congratulations to all the teams that won. that is so good. brian: you don't care about the teams that lost? carley: i do care about them. i would like to retract that statement, i apologize for the unfairness in my. brian: i accept your apology on behalf of the losers. steve: congrats galatians to all teams everywhere. ainsley: i need a list of the cinderellas because i'm pulling. brian: because you had lunch with one. steve: at disney world. ainsley: ninth accuser comes forward against new york governor andrew cuomo we will show you the photos to back up her claims. brian: one state offer covid-19
3:21 am
to prisoners immediately. we will tell you where. that's coming up. look for the men in the jumpsuit and the women ♪ go home ♪ go, go ♪ go big or go home ♪ go, go ♪ go big sensodyne sensitivity and gum gives us a dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend. we made usaa insurance for members like kate. a former army medic, made of the flexibility to handle whatever monday has in store and tackle four things at once. so when her car got hit, she didn't worry. she simply filed a claim on her usaa app and said... i got this. usaa insurance is made the way kate needs it - easy. she can even pick her payment plan so it's easy on her budget and her life. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa.
3:22 am
usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa. it's lawn season. and i need a lawn. quick. the fast way to bring it up to speed. is scotts turf builder rapid grass. rapid grass is a revolutionary mix of seed and fertilizer that will change the way you grow grass. it grows two times faster than seed alone for full, green grass in just weeks.
3:23 am
after growing grass this fast, everything else just seems... slow. it's lawn season. let's get to the yard. download the scotts my lawn app today for your personalized lawn plan. guy fieri! ya know, if you wanna make that sandwich the real deal, ya gotta focus on the bread layers. king's hawaiian sliced bread makes everything better! ♪ (angelic choir) ♪ and here's mine! i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred.
3:24 am
don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
3:25 am
♪ ♪ ainsley: a ninth woman comes forward accusing new york's governor andrew cuomo of sexual harassment. jackie ibañez joins us live with more on the allegations against the embattled governor. jackie? >> yes, that ninth woman is sherriville. surveying flood damage at her new york home in 2017. ville erecounting what happened. >> went between the dog and mine
3:26 am
and kissed me on the other cheek. and what i felt was highly sexual manner. >> cuomo's attorney rita gavin pushing back saying the governor has greeted men and women with hugs and a kiss on the cheek. vill joins a group of other women who accuse the governor with shower. she says she will cooperate with the insurance attorney general's with the allegation. it's not the only scandal brewing, of course, top officials threatened nursing home operators earlier this month for allegedly failing to pick up shipments of covid-19 vaccines they supposedly ordered but sources on that call said their claim was inaccurate. cuomo is also under fire for allegedly prioritizing covid-19 testing for members of his family and others. "the washington post" monday reporting that the so-called vip list reported 100 individuals with close ties to cuomo. a cuomo spokesman says there was quote no v.i.p. program calling
3:27 am
the claims absurd and offensive. back to you guys. steve: thank you very much, jackie, "the washington post" disagrees they said on the vip list cnn anchor chris cuomo and cuomo's brother-in-law kenneth cole the famous fashion designer special treatment on list where a doctor went to chris cuomo's house a number of times for hours to give him the test that he could afford but didn't pay for while people all across the state were, you know, literally dying to get the test. ainsley: according to "the washington post" state trooper were actually on stand by and told to rush the samples to the lab for expedition got results in an hour or maybe a day compared to that point in the process had you to wait a week to get your results. brian: here is theresa saari. she had lost her mom she was on "fox & friends first." she read all of this and just outraged. watch. >> at this point, cuomo really,
3:28 am
he is not going to resign so clearly he has to be impeached and he has to get out of offers. sexual abuse scandals, you know, everything that's going on with the prioritizing for his family members with covid testing, especially so early on in the, you know, march of 2020 can't believe he had his brother tested before my mother, and i had to have my children say goodbye to her on zoom and he is sitting there getting his mother tested, his brother tested. it's outrageous this guy is definitely abusing his power and he needs to go. brian: just think about how big this story is. not only 8 accusers and v.i.p. list but now you have a situation where the albany times has done a great job leading the charge or this story. albany times in new york and "new york post" has done fantastic and now "the washington post" is picking it up. hard to dismiss all these organizations as right wing
3:29 am
organizations especially when they found a v.i.p. list of hundreds of individuals logged into electric data sheet. it's not necessarily hearsay at all, ainsley. ainsley: all right. i was reading that other story that she was talking about the nursing home association rep, they were getting the phone calls from the people who work for cuomo, the state department health commissioners and they got an email, she says, or he says, it's anonymous at 12:54 p.m. on march 17th and they said you have to take part in this call at 1:00. and six minutes it's urgent. they pick up the phone, they are on this call and getting screamed at for not picking up their vaccines they said it was inaccurate information. there is a lot of bullying, the shower. , the nursing home scandal keeps stacking up. brian brain right. ainsley: 6:29 on the east coast. coming up later our friend tucker carlson is going to join us, a barber who defied covid shut down you may remember hit with huge fines.
3:30 am
he explains coming up.
3:31 am
3:32 am
we're carvana, the company who invented car vending machines and buying a car 100% online. now we've created a brand-new way for you to sell your car. whether it's a year old or a few years old. we wanna buy your car. so go to carvana and enter your license plate answer a few questions. and our techno wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds. when you're ready, we'll come to you, pay you on the spot and pick up your car, that's it. so ditch the old way of selling your car, and say hello to the new way at carvana. [sfx: psst psst] allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! all good are you managing your diabetes... ...using fingersticks? with the new freestyle libre 2 system, a continuous glucose monitor, you can check your glucose with a painless, one-second scan. and now with optional alarms,
3:33 am
you can choose to be notified if you go too high or too low. and for those who qualify, the freestyle libre 2 system is now covered by medicare. ask your doctor for a prescription. you can do it without fingersticks. learn more at freestyle libre 2 dot u.s. ♪♪ protect your pet this flea and tick season with chewy. find everything from flea collars and sprays, to prescriptions that keep pests away. chewy has what you need to keep tails wagging and pets itch free all season long. shop pet prescriptions and more at chewy.com today.
3:34 am
carley: good morning, back with quick headlines, on this day 40 years ago, john hinckley jr. tried to asass sip nate former president ronald reagan. hinckley shot six rounds at reagan when he was leaving the washington hilton in 19 1. the president was hit and rushed to a hospital but resumed some of his duties the very next day. the attempted assassination of ronald reagan narrated by our very own bret baier is available now on fox nation. a judge rules inmates must be vaccinated at all new york prisons and jail. the new york supreme court judge reportedly saying state officials left inmates out of vaccination at first calling it unfair and unjust. governor andrew cuomo's office says the state will follow the judge's order and will expand
3:35 am
vaccine eligibility to inmates starting today. and listen to this, joey la gano win's nascar's first dirt race in 51 years. 51 logano will, truck loadsof rn to the track on bristol motor speedway. late race accident sent the race into a two lap overtime. the win is la gano's first of the 2021 season. congratulations to him and all the losers as well, brian? brian: and everybody that lost. thank you, carley. meanwhile on this note, former police officer derek chauvin's trial over the death of george floyd has begun with both sides making their opening statements yesterday. >> mr. derek chauvin betrayed this badge. derek chauvin did exactly what he had been trained to do over the course of his 19-year career. >> cause of death?
3:36 am
death complicating that is evolving law enforcement subduing george floyd, restraining and compressing his neck. >> mr. floyd tied of cardiac arrhythmia that occurred because of his hypertension, coronary disease ingestion of methamphetamine and fentanyl. brian: those are the substances in his body but doesn't matter. joining success ted williams. ted, first off, let's take the case. when we saw that tape, the prosecution tape and we saw and heard all the comments from the bystanders who saw how bad things were for george floyd, and you see chauvin and you see the other officer stand in front and make sure those bystanders didn't get involved in this, what did you walk away with? >> you know, brian, i have got to tell you that tape was chilling. for the first time and i have been seeing snippets of this for a year now, for the last 10
3:37 am
months. but when you see nine minutes, 29 seconds on that tape and you see this man, even though the bystanders are hollering out, the man, george floyd is hollering out, i can't breathe. i can't breathe. calling for his mother. that is powerful. that powerful information that you toll that jury. brian: there comes the defense afterwards. and the defense comes out and says, listen, he had a whole bunch of things in his body, that were led to his death and the original autopsy backed it up. hypertension, the arrhythmia that they mentioned, the methamphetamines, fentanyl, were in his body. that's why he died. so, did that push back on what you saw in that nine-minute tape to the fact that if you are in the jury there are legitimately two sides to this story? >> well, you want a fair and impartial jury.
3:38 am
derek chauvin deserves a fair trial. and here the defense is working with what it has. and what it has is that autopsy that shows that he had these drugs in his system. that he had a bad heart. that he had hypertension. and so that has to be taken into consideration when you are talking 'reasonable doubt. brian: true. and does it get into whether you get second and third degree murder? second degree is, third degree murder is was there an intent to kill? >> see, that's the thing about this case. you do not have to show under minnesota law that chauvin intended to kill mr. floyd. all you have to show is that it was a substantial factor in the death of mr. floyd. and that will get you a conviction if you are the prosecutor. brian: so if he had all those things in his system and gets cuffed and goes into the pack of the car and goes into cardiac
3:39 am
arrest, there is not a trial. it's the face down with the knee on the neck that he loses his life that's the trial. no one is denying the drugs are there and no one is denying what chauvin did. and the question is from day one is there enough doubt right now. you watch that nine minute tape and hear everything that we saw, that's a tough case to defend. >> it is it is. it is a very stuff of tough case to defend have got to see where it's going. we have only seen a small smidgen of the puzzle let's see what the prosecution is going to put on and the defense. and it's got to become the battle of the experts. brian: yeah, we will see. ted williams, thanks so much. appreciate it. look forward to your steady coverage throughout. >> my pleasure. brian: meanwhile a stream of migrants it ranchers will. feels forgotten by the biden
3:40 am
administration next. get in line. so many are. i knew about the tremors. but when i started seeing things, i didn't know what was happening. so i kept it in. he started believing things that weren't true. i knew something was wrong, but i didn't say a word. during the course of their disease around 50% of people with parkinson's may experience hallucinations or delusions. but now, doctors are prescribing nuplazid. the only fda approved medicine proven to significantly reduce
3:41 am
hallucinations and delusions related to parkinson's. don't take nuplazid if you are allergic to its ingredients. nuplazid can increase the risk of death in elderly people with dementia related psychosis. and is not for treating symptoms unrelated to parkinson's disease. nuplazid can cause changes in heart rhythm and should not be taken if you have certain abnormal heart rhythms or take other drugs that are known to cause changes in heart rhythm. tell your doctor about any changes in medicines you're taking. the most common side effects are swelling of the arms and legs and confusion. we spoke up and it made all the difference. ask your healthcare provider about nuplazid.
3:42 am
it was a life changing moment for me. i had no idea that my grandfatherhealthcare provider was a federal judge in guatemala. he was an advocate for the people... a voice for the voiceless. bring your family history to life like never before. get started for free at ancestry.com before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, marie could only imagine enjoying freshly squeezed orange juice. now no fruit is forbidden. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection.
3:43 am
can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? start the year smiling at aspen dental where new starts happen, every day. get exceptional care at every step, unparalleled safety at every visit, and flexible payment options for every budget. now, during the everyday smiles event new patients get a full exam & set of x-rays with no obligation. no insurance? no worries, it's free. plus, now all patients can get 20% off their treatment plan. find every reason to smile. every day at aspen dental. call 1-800-aspendental
3:44 am
or book today at aspendental.com ainsley: as the white house grapples with how to describe the my grant surge americans living along the border are sounding the alarm on this crisis. our next guest is a rancher from new mexico and says that the number of migrants traveling through her property has increased drastically. our guest name is amanda adoni and she joins us now. good morning, amanda. >> good morning, how are you? ainsley: doing well. i know you are worried you have a family and you think about that and you don't want anything to go wrong. what are you seeing on a regular basis now? >> um, the presence of walkers and a lot of, a lot of border patrol trying to catch them. ainsley: so they just walk through your property? how close do they get to your house. >> fairly close. a lot of them come into the
3:45 am
house. ainsley: they come into the house? >> well, not in to my house per se but like down into the yard asking for food and water. ainsley: wow, do you help them? what do you do? >> yeah. we have, you know, we don't want to get hurt, so we feed and water them and try to get them to go on or we come in the house and call the border patrol. ainsley: what's interesting is if you look at the numbers, they have released all the numbers of every single sector down there in your area, el paso. you have seen more than double increase in the unaccompanied alien children from this past february to february before. look at those numbers. more than 5,000 came in this past february. when it comes to family units, it's actually down in your area, 8500 last february. this past february almost 6,000. most of them are aspergillus, according to those numbers the rio grande area and then single adults increased from more than 12,000 last february to 41,000. why do you think that is? do you have any idea? >> i think, in part, it's the
3:46 am
asylum cooperative agreement that they terminated. the biden administration just basically gave them a green light to come up. and they are not wanting to get caught. they are trying to run as fast as they can. ainsley: i know you have told our producers that they aren't afraid. >> no. they are not afraid. ainsley: when they see a border agent. when they would see a border agent when trump was president, what would they do compared to what they do now? >> when they saw a border agent before, they stopped and they waited. and now they keep trying to go. ainsley: and do the border agents let them go? >> no, no. they catch them. when they see them. that's the big problem is when they get up to my house, essentially they are almost -- ainsley: they are on american soil and so they are allowed to stay under this administration. last question, what's your
3:47 am
biggest concern here? >> now that the border policy has changed, what's going to happen now? what are they going to do with stopping asylum seekers? i just feel sad for the people who are trying to come in legally and they can't because of all these asylum seekers. ainsley: thank you so much for being on with us. stay safe, mand. we wish you all the rest. you are a commercial cow rancher we appreciate what you do for our country. >> thank you. ainsley: hand it over to janice dean who has the forecast. it is pretty here. janice: it is. we are going to get a a bit of a change over the next couple days in the northeast. take a look at the temperatures. we have this cold front and behind it, yes, unseasonably cold air that's bringing not only frigid temperatures but very gusty winds and potential for high fire danger from the plain states all the way down to the southwest. not a lot to tell you on the radar.
3:48 am
gulf coast showers and thunderstorms. that cold front is going to start to bring in gulf of mexico moisture that's going to bring the potential for heavy rainfall over the mississippi and tennessee river valley. tennessee, middle tennessee has flash flood watches and warnings in place. and look at this. do not adjust your set. april fools, no, it's going to happen. some interior northeast snow on thursday. so we will continue to track that. ainsley, back to you. ainsley: april fools, i forgot about it. thank you. think of your trick for your kids, janice. all right. thank you. he refused to shut down his business during the lockdown and now michigan is trying to make this barber pay the price. karl marchy on his battle against governor gretchen whitmer's administration next. ♪ ♪
3:49 am
introducing voltaren arthritis pain gel. the first full prescription strength non-steroidal anti-inflammatory gel... available over the counter. voltaren is powerful arthritis pain relief in a gel. voltaren. the joy of movement. introducing the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it's the most comfortable, dually-adjustable, foot-warming, temperature-balancing... proven quality night sleep we've ever made.
3:50 am
the new queen sleep number 360 c4 smart bed, is only $1,499. plus, free premium delivery when you add a base. ends saturday. germ proof your car with armor all disinfectant. kills 99.9% of bacteria and viruses.
3:51 am
3:52 am
♪ steve: michigan barber karl manke has been fighting the lockdowns in his state. his patel isn't over yet. now he has been fined $9,000 for, among other things, carrying a comb in his pocket. not making it up. karl and his attorney david join
3:53 am
us now. guys, good morning to you. >> good morning, how are you? steve: i'm doing okay. karl, you are a barber. and you are being fined $9,000 for, among other things, for having a comb in your pocket? >> well, you know, are occasionally someone has a hair ball come up and we have to use those combs as a tongue depressor. so we have to keep sterilized at all times. steve: okay. you are just joking. david, you are his attorney, why is it he owes thousand dollars including comb money. >> yeah, $3,000, steve, minor technicalities ridiculous. 60 years as a barber. he has never had a complaint and then they issue these maximum fines. $6,000 of the fine is for his protesting the governor's illegal executive orders. our supreme court said they were illegal and unconstitutional. he protested against them. they are finding him $6,000 for protesting. steve, one of the border members
3:54 am
on this border that made this decision testified against karl at his hearing. i mean, the unfairness of this is breath-taking and we are going to fight it. we are going to appeal to the court immediately. we are going to get into a real court and we will see what they say about it. steve: karl, you have won your court cases. this is now just the state finding you for a variety of reasons. are you going to pay this money? >> you know, i'm not going to pay this money but you know, i want to really thank all the people out there that have supported me with this thing. do you know what the governor tries to do and what governments have a tendency to do under this administration is to become tyrannical in the sense that they can intimidate people by -- they have the pockets are never ending. we have only a limited amount of funds. they know they can break us. so they intimidate the citizens, using this particular type of draconian power. so i thank all the people out there that have, you know,
3:55 am
supported me financially and supported me spiritually and mentally and physically. we have go fund mes that are helping me quite a bit, you know, if it wasn't for those, these governors would -- i would be in jail. i would be in jail right now. just as she put in prison the lady from melania over on the other side of the state they would do the same to me. steve: 2k5eu6d, the reason he faced scrutiny is when governor whitmer locked down he said after a while you can't do. this ultimately you won those cases. what is the moral to the story about how they went after your client? >> well, again, steve, i think people need to understand the virus is real there are issues people should use common sense. that doesn't mean the state can trample our civil rights and trample on the constitution and do it illegal way. that's what's been happening in our state. people need to wake up and stand up and push back on these sorts
3:56 am
of activities. steve: all right. karl, you have been through the ringer over the last year, would you do it again? >> i would do it in a heart beat. you know, i'm an american. someone coined me as america's barber. i like that. i'm an american and a barber. can i stand up against this it particular type of tyranny, it's unconstitutional, it's immoral, it's draconian. i can't find enough adjectives to describe this administration that we have here in michigan right now. steve: i understand. you are a great barber but a lousy doctor. do not use a comb as a tongue depressor. [laughter] steve: all right. karl and david, guys, thank you very much. ♪ thma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred.
3:57 am
don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
3:58 am
♪ ♪ we made usaa insurance for veterans like martin. when a hailstorm hit, he needed his insurance to get it done right, right away. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa the ergo smart base from tempur-pedic responds to snoring - automatically. so no hiding under your pillow. or opting for the couch. your best sleep. all night. every night. experience the mattress ranked #1 in customer satisfaction by jd power, two years in a row. in customer sguy fieri!n
3:59 am
ya know, if you wanna make that sandwich the real deal, ya gotta focus on the bread layers. king's hawaiian sliced bread makes everything better! ♪ (angelic choir) ♪ and here's mine! you know that look? that life of the party look walk it off look one more mile look reply all look own your look... ...with fewer lines. there's only one botox® cosmetic. it's the only one... ...fda approved... ...to temporarily make frown lines... ...crow's feet... ...and forehead lines... ...look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic, may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow, eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects.
4:00 am
so, give that just saw a puppy look. and whatever that look is. look like you... with fewer lines. see results at botoxcosmetic.com ♪ steve: lindsey graham is calling out the biden administration for a cover-up at the border. >> this is not catch and release. this is catch and reunite. >> he has disregarded his responsibility as a president to protect american citizens. >> president biden is eyeing a tax increase to pay for his infrastructure package. >> a so-called vehicle miles traveled tax could be a way to do it. >> the democratic party used to be known as a tax and spend party. now it seems spend and then tax party. >> the trial against an ex-cop in the death of george floyd gets underway in a powerful first day. >> when you see george floyd shouting out i can't breathe, i
4:01 am
can't breathe, that is powerful. >> a ninth accuser comes forward against new york governor andrew cuomo. >> while still holding one in my hand forcibly grabs my face and kissed my cheek. >> with that shot of his say good knight. night.night for him. final four for the first time in 71 years. ♪ ♪ ainsley: it's not a southern summer yet. we are in spring officially now. we are inching closer and closer to summer it. feels so good to new york statue of liberty. steve: statue of liberty. brian: we did see the statue of liberty. i don't know. are we allowed to go into the statue of liberty yet? ainsley: i don't know. that's a good question. brian: ted, could you get on it. ainsley: there are no tourists to go up though. brian: there are no tourists everyone has seen it once. steve steph from the outside.
4:02 am
few have gone inside. it's a great one. brian did one for a tv show that you can get i think on fox nation. ainsley: did you go all the way up to the torch? brian: did i the secretary of the interior brought me all the way up there. it was fantastic to look down and see the top of the lady's head pretty impressive. ainsley: you have a really cool job you got to go behind mount rushmore for fox nation and now got to go up to the torch and no one is allowed to do that. steve: i have only been up into the crown. it's still a nice view. brian: you can see ellis island. ainsley: i hope you are having a great morning. 7:02 on the east coast. senator lindsey graham from the great state of south carolina is calling out the biden administration he is saying it's a cover up at the border while the white house says the vice president is not in charge of the migrant surge. peter doocy joins us live from the white house with more. i thought she was, peter. there is a lot of confusion. >> and they are trying to clarify the confusion. we are hearing now from republican lawmakers and some
4:03 am
democrats who have been down. they have laid eyes on these overcrowded border patrol processing facilities and they say they are having a hard time squaring what they saw with what they have heard this white house talk about as being an immigration priority. >> well, i saw a giant cover-up. and i saw massive system failure. tax dollars are used to reunite the family. this is not catch and release. this is catch and reunite. >> there is a lot of concern about migrants bringing covid into guatemala where the president caught wind of a caravan forming to his south and now called a state of prevention saying that groups of people could put at risk the life, liberty, security, health, access to justice, peace and development of guatemalans. the biden administration admits this is all a problem. they have talked about challenges and they have named kamala harris to be the point person when it comes to figuring out the best ways to spend u.s. tax dollars in guatemala and
4:04 am
honduras to convince people there not to leave. >> of course, the vice president of the united states will be helping lead that effort, specifically the root causes, not the border. there is some confusion over that. >> the white house though is hinting at some possible vice presidential travel to the region and to the border and depending on when that happens, as in if it happens really soon, she could beat president biden as in first one to have an international trip and first one to make a trip down to the border since being sworn. in back to you. steve: she is not the border boss. peter, let me get this straight, so the president of guatemala is worried about migrants bringing covid into guatemala. >> yes. and he is trying to stop a caravan that is forming down to his south in honduras. he does not want to risk having a bunch of people who have not been covid tested or covid vaccinated come into his country and possibly infecting people
4:05 am
there. steve: all right, peter, thank you very much. the irony with that is just the fact that the biden administration let how many migrants into this country without ever being tested for covid? but they are worried about it in guatemala. ainsley: and they are worried about it now with these states that are saying no more mask mandate. they are saying please reverse that we need to be wearing masks. yet, they are not testing down there. the government is not providing tests for these folks that are coming down. we are hearing 10% of them have covid. so there is that. there is also in san diego that we talked about in the last hour the convention center. they are teaching those kids, they are asking for volunteer teachers to come to in person classroom teachings, yet, those very teachers are still doing virtual but the taxpayers kids in that area. brian: right. it's okay. even though we are on a tight budget we are accepting 9,000 -- we have 9,000 apprehensions a day let alone the people sneaking the drugs in that we have not caught. meanwhile, let's talk about what the president thought he would be talking about at the press
4:06 am
conference last thursday. he thought he would be able to take a bow after passing $1.9 trillion spending despite he got hundred billion in december into the bloodstream he wanted 1.9 trillion. we know only a small percentage went to pandemic related things it goes to his programs and questions to pandemic agenda items. many about were surprised that he has got two more bills coming. one looks between 3 and $4 trillion, so the question is how are you going to pay for that? one way they are going to talk about a gas tax. now they are talking about -- always talking about a carbon tax. for a while they were talking about possibly having a tax per mile, mileage that you drive. here is pete buttigieg. he seems to be stepping back from that. he is the secretary of transportation. >> i think that shows a lot of promise. if we believe in that so-called user pays principle, the idea how we pay for roads is you pay based on how much you drive, the
4:07 am
gas tax used to be the obvious way to do it, it's not anymore. so a so-called vehicles miles traveled tax, mileage tax, whatever you call it could be a way to do it. >> is that under consideration? >> no. that's not part of the conversation about this infrastructure bill. so, just want to make sure that's really clear. but you will be hearing a lot more details in the coming days about how we envision being able to fund this. steve: how great is this. only in washington can you say something with clarity on friday and then a couple days later on monday you have exactly a different answer. ainsley: kamala harris is in charge, no, no, no, no she is not. steve: she is the boss. she is not the boss. "the washington post" is -- way. the number now they are going to raise taxes $3 trillion. but, they are going to spend $4 trillion what they are trying to do is try to draw the
4:08 am
republicans in by saying, look, this is great big program for infrastructure because republicans love to pay for bridges and roads, they think. the problem is, do republicans love to pay for infrastructure if it includes pre-k and carbon taxes and things like that. brian: free community college. brian. steve: it goes on and on. apparently josh gottheimer which is the district i live in new jersey and tom suozzi from new york. they are both moderate democrat they are both saying the only way we are going to get behind any tax increase for anybody in the united states is if the biden administration gets rid of the state and local taxes deduction of only up to $10,000 because people who live around here they have got a lot of property taxes they have got mortgage and all sorts of stuff. and $10,000 doesn't cut the mustard. ainsley: you pay a city tax, a county tax, a new york state tax, a federal tax, it just adds
4:09 am
up. when they talk about increasing taxes more and more, more people are going to move out of these high state tax. they want to reduce the income inequality. they are say going they do the tax hikes the wealthier people will pay more and that will go to the people who don't pay as much. but people who are concerned about this say there is a huge gap between our spending and our revenue and they said then that amounts to widening the deficit then that triggers a spike in interest rates if you want to buy a house, they could go up. federal debt payments are going to skyrocket, clean-up is what we pay our creditors. it just snowballs and it gets worse and worse. we can't charge everyone -- you can't spend more like do you in your home you can't spend more than have you. brian i know that get under your skin you talk about it a lot. brian: not my perm debt. that's something you and i talk about in the breaks which hopefully i will be able to write off at some point. mollie hemingway weighed in. she also said the pandemic was
4:10 am
the best thing to ever happen to the democratic party. she went on. >> the track party used to be known as a tax and spend party now it seems to be moving into a spend and then tax party. these are just astronomical budget amounts. republican does it deserve -- how recklessly they have spent when they were in power. nothing compared to what we are seeing with price tags associated with these bills. again though, biden promised he was a unifier and a moderate. if he really wants to be what he claimed he was, it should not be hard to come up with infrastructure bills. you can get a bunch of republicans to sign on to and a way to pay for them. then he is unable to really suggest just how extreme he is. brian: they also -- talk today about he is going to it $10 trillion green infrastructure climate justice bill. that should be fascinating because solyndra which he was a part of and that 123 battery system he was a part of and that
4:11 am
fisker, that green car fisker that he was a part of all failed spectacularly. so what did he learn from that? i need to spend more on these programs including putting wind mills -- wind mills into the ocean. so those people who want to stare at the horizon can stare at wind mills. steve: like a pinwheel. you can see it on fox. here is a story has us scratching our heads we do not understand it. see if you can. a fellow by the name of richard rivera was in a queens new york bar back in 1981. and. ainsley: hanging out after his shift wearing a cowboy hat. steve: and do you know what? there was a problem, and a guy, richard rivera, as it turns out, was did something against the law, and off duty police officer by the name of robert walsh was there. and there is he right there
4:12 am
wound up getting shot in the shoulder by richard rivera. richard rivera after he shot him, walked over to him and put the gun up to his head and pulled the trigger. said it was described as an execution of that new york city police officer. richard rivera spent 39 years in prison and now this convicted cop killer is helping reform the police in new york after the death of george floyd governor cuomo said we have got to have these police reform boards so municipalities need to form them. they put this guy on the board to figure out how to reform police. he is a cop killer and we don't get it. ainsley: yeah. he went into the bar with some of his friends and tried to rob it and robert walsh was in the wrong place at the wrong time, i guess, according to his family maybe he did save some other people's lives throughout all of this. maybe the guys ran out and got scared. this rivera guy sitting on this
4:13 am
and it was launched by governor cuomo. i know people will be critical. i don't know if walsh's family would find this acceptable. >> i can't control that. what i can control is the way that i have been living my life. then they called the son robert walsh jr. he said we are completely shocked that the man who murdered my father is being trusted to create please forms. my father dedicated his life to serving and protecting new yorkers. he should be the one serving on a panel to help reimage policing. but, he will never get that chance. can you imagine reimagine policing? '. brian: pat wench weighed in benevolent president very opinionated always especially now. despicable not only cop killer get paroled but got a seat at the table to help did dismantle the police department did. anybody expect him to be fair and open-minded in his review. trampled like robert walsh
4:14 am
upheld. ultimate disrespect to the service and sacrifice. can you go sue that cop that arrested you if you don't like the way you are handled? that means they are not even protected so you give him or her auto $50,000 to go out there in the most dangerous city now, maybe in the country, do the best you can and if you overstep your bounds and the body camera shows something that makes you vulnerable, just keep in mind you could lose absolutely everything. why would someone go through the academy while murders quadruple and assaults and carjackings go through the roof. it's stunning to see. look practically. this guy has been away for 40 years. what does he know about reforming the police. the only thing he has seen he has been behind bars. he is probably the least qualified. last time he was out was in his teens. steve: who thought putting a cop killer on a police reform board was a smart idea? i would like to know. brian: does anyone think that people running this state and city are smart? have you seen them do anything smart over the last four years? and cuomo is being unwound
4:15 am
before our eyes now. steve: that's why people are moving to florida. ainsley: you are right. our thoughts are with that family because you know this is bringing up all of that again. all of that. four kid he had brine brian makes you think what did he die for? ainsley: this guy is getting rewarded. >> steve: it's a head-scratcher. it's a quarter after the top of the hour. and carley joins us now with big news from the big city. carley: that's right. get straight to it. the murder trial fins for the former minneapolis police officer charged in george floyd's death. jurors were shown the full nine minute video of exofficer derek chauvin kneeling on floyd's neck. the 911 operator who dispatch chauvin testified at the trial saying she called police on police that day because she felt something, quote: wasn't right. a man is caught on surveillance video vandalizing a church in california. police say he busted dozens of windows and doors with rocks
4:16 am
that were placed around the church's decoration. no arrests have been made yet. the pastor says despite the daniel, the church will still hold easter service. looks like president biden will not dismantle all of his predecessor's policies. the biden administration poised to renew the white house national space council month after the press secretary dismissed the space force. >> wow, space force. it's the plane of today. carley: an nfc spokesperson says the space council will be renewed in to assist the president in policies strategies and sick connizing america's space activity. listen to this, staff members at the university of oxford link sheet music to white supremacy. the telegraph reporting some professors feel music notation hasn't, quote: shaken off its
4:17 am
colonial past. they argue sticking with sheet music would be a slap in the face for students of color. they also suggested certain classical instruments like the piano should cause students of color great distress. so sheet music is now racist in the eyes of some, guys. brian: amazing. all right, carley, thanks so much. i will see you in the green room. meanwhile, 17 minutes after the hour. a plans to give lisa murkowski a run in the senate. he just threw -- threw her hat in the ring that story is next. ainsley: still ahead we will hear from tucker carlson, shannon bream and congresswoman van dime. and we will also hear from brandon judd. ♪
4:18 am
introducing voltaren arthritis pain gel. the first full prescription strength non-steroidal anti-inflammatory gel... available over the counter. voltaren is powerful arthritis pain relief in a gel. voltaren. the joy of movement. cal: our confident forever plan is possible with a cfp® professional. a cfp® professional can help you build a complete financial plan. visit letsmakeaplan.org to find your cfp® professional. ♪♪ pets are family and we know it. so rely on the experts at 1800petmeds for the exact same medications as the vet, but for less with fast, free shipping and our 100% guarantee. visit us at petmeds.com today.
4:19 am
4:20 am
want to brain better? and our 100% guarantee. unlike ordinary memory supplements— neuriva has clinically proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try our new gummies for 30 days and see the difference.
4:21 am
it's moving day. and while her friends are doing the heavy lifting, jess is busy moving her xfinity internet and tv services. it only takes about a minute. wait, a minute? but what have you been doing for the last two hours? ...delegating? oh, good one. move your xfinity services without breaking a sweat. xfinity makes moving easy. go online to transfer your services in about a minute. get started today.
4:22 am
♪ >> steve: alaska's senator lisa murkowski has been criticized by some republicans in alaska for the way she has voted over the last couple of years. even getting censured by alaska's republican party earlier this month. now, ahead of the 2022 election she is being challenged by a state official who says murkowski has left many alaskans feel left behind. young us right now is republican senate candidate and former alaska commissioner of administration kelly -- kelly, good morning to you. >> thank you. thanks for having me today. steve: well, talk about why you want to be the next senator from alaska in a moment but, first, why do you say lisa murkowski
4:23 am
has got to go? >> you know, lisa murkowski has been in the united states senate for just about 20 years. she has handed the seat by her dad. he had been in the senate since 1981. and lisa murkowski has forgotten her alaska values. she has become more like the d.c. insiders than us. she has been voting with the liberal lines and not standing up to the radical biden agenda that is killing alaska's oil and energy jobs. she voted to allow illegal immigration in our country even if they have committed crimes. she was a deciding vote in allowing obamacare to remain and that means higher healthcare costs and fewer healthcare choices for alaskans and she has voted against common sense judges that would protect and preserving our second amendment rights here in alaska and that's really important for us. we feel forgotten in alaska. and i want to be a voice for those forgotten alaskans, i want to go back to washington, d.c. and i want to fight for alaska.
4:24 am
steve: she was also one of seven republicans in the senate who voted to impeach president trump and, you know, that really got under his skin and we have heard him say that he is -- you know, is he going to support anybody who runs against these and he has referred to them as republicans in name only. do you expect to get the president's support in your run, kelly? >> you know, i would love to have president trump's endorsement. alaska voted for him twice to be their president and for good reason. he opened up anwr for drilling and pushing back six decades of federal restrictions. we value our freedom here in alaska. we think alaska should be sovereign. lisa murkowski has been in the senate for two decades and she couldn't achieve that for us. we passed the largest tax cuts in american history when government grows freedom shrinks, we like our freedom up here. we appreciated him for that and he supports our military. a lot of alaskans remember that when biden was last in the white
4:25 am
house, with president obama, they cut our military spending 20 to 25% entrepreneurship rebuilt the strength of our military. we appreciate that lisa murkowski says it was her constitutional duty to vote for that impeachment. but, if you actually read the constitution, it says impeachment is to remove someone from office. president trump was already gone. it's almost like she doesn't think very much of us up here like we can't think for ourselves. and we are tired of being demeaned by d.c. insiders. we're actually intelligent, independent-thinking alaskans up here and we want someone in the senate who knows and understands and respects that about us. steve: well, and, kelly, have you dedicated your life to public service when you look at your resume and it's very impressive. your parents were -- your father was a union electrician and vietnam war vet. your mom was one of the first workers at the start up of prudhoe bay. your parents were homeless for a while living out of a tent. and, yet, from these very humble
4:26 am
circumstances you have been able to work your way to a point where you are now able to help other people. >> that's right. i'm a fighter. and that's an alaskan story. we alaskans are fighters. we are strong, independent, resilient people. we have fighter values. we like to talk straight. we value our freedom. we love our state and country, and alaska gave up a ton of opportunities and that was how my story turned out and then i was able to fight to expose waste and fraud in government, fight to hold insiders accountable and then return hundreds of millions of dollars to american taxpayers. lisa murkowski has forgotten those alaska values. she fights for d.c. insiders. and what she does is hurt our alaskans way of life. we are losing our oil and tax job when biden's nominee for their department of interior came before her, she didn't even ask her about the future of oil and gas leases and permits. that's directly tied to the future of alaska. she is not fighting for us.
4:27 am
and we need someone who is going to go, remember our forgotten alaskans, be a voice for them and fight for the future of alaska. steve: well, the fight is on. kelly thibaka currently the commissioner of the administration out there in anchorage, clerks thank you very much. >> thank you, and please, if your viewers could help us out by going to kelly for alaska. kelly forak.com. we would really appreciate their support. thank you very much. staff steve kelly, thank you very much. 7:27 here in new york. the long awaited report on the pandemic's origin expected later today. but a leaked draft indicates that the world will health organization does not belief the virus came from a lab. w.h.o. adviser and former national security council member sounds off on beijing's outsized role in guiding and chaperoning the probe. coming up next.
4:28 am
i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred.
4:29 am
don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
4:30 am
4:31 am
4:32 am
carley: good morning, back with quick headlines, ghislaine maxwell is charged for the first time with sex trafficking of a minor. maxwell the long time associate of jeffrey epstein is accused of grooming a 14-year-old girl. it comes nine months after maxwell was arrested on charges for allegedly luring underaged girls for epstein. maxwell is in jail awaiting trial which is set to begin in july. pop star lady gaga's dog walker is released from hospital. he was shot while walking lady gaga's dog in l.a. in february. brian fisher shared some of his story online saying he had a chest tube put in, trouble breathing and even needed help walking. he is finally back home where he says he is surrounded by loved
4:33 am
ones and doing better than before. god bless him. take a look at this video shows an suv giving donuts but there is no driver behind the wheel. the chevy suburban got stuck in reverse in a detroit parking lot with its wheels turned to the left causing it to turn donuts across the three lanes. it didn't stop until a man smashed the driver's side window allowing a woman to reach inside and open the door. that's when the man jumped inside the suv and put it in park, what a story there, brian. brian: thanks, carley. meanwhile, the report from the world health organization as we change gears china on the origins of the covid-19 virus expected to be made public at some time this morning. according to a draft copy obtained by the a.p. it alleges, quote, transmission of the virus from bats to humans through another animal is the most likely scenario and, that a lab leak is extremely unlikely. but our next guest warns the
4:34 am
w.h.o.'s inquiry was highly chaperoned. w.h.o. adviser and former national security council jamie metzl joins us now. have you had a chance to see this report and how should we view it in your information, if so? >> thanks, brian. i have read the full report, and i think we should be very upset about this process. it is entirely inadequate. they have done a thorough job of investigating the first hypothesis that you mentioned that it jumped from bats to other animals to humans and that's possible. they entirely discounted without any significant inquiry the very likely possibility that covid-19 began from an accidental lab leak. brian: why? why wouldn't they look at all scenarios? what else are they doing? why pursue one hypothesis? >> it's really outrageous, the problem is ultimately structural. this isn't the w.h.o. issuing the report. it's a joint report of a study between an independent advisory committee appointed by the w.h.o. and their chinese
4:35 am
government counterparts. and the chinese government was never going to sign off on this possibility. that's why in my view, this entire study process was flawed from the start. and i think we need to really start over. brian: yeah, i would think. so why would the chinese not transparent about this? if they didn't do it on purpose, if it could happen again, if they have already had sars vices and other things spring from inside that country and if they really feel bad about poisoning the world and killing millions of people, why wouldn't they at least say let's explore together how it happened. >> it's a great question, brian, they have been all n investigating the animal hypothesis which let's them off the hook and from at a one they have been destroying samples, hiding records and imprisoning journalists. they have a universal gag order on scientists. that's why any process that relies on the goodwill of the chinese government is flawed from the start. brian: i want you to hear, they played your clip on face the
4:36 am
nation and it was just a preview of what was going to be on "60 minutes" later on sunday night. and i was struck by interest fauci hearing what you just said roughly, here is what his response is. >> it's entirely conceivable that it was spreading considerably for weeks, are if not months before we recognized it at the end of december, giving it plenty of time to adapt to a human. and that would really be completely consistent with just jumping species in the wild. the other theory that people have is that somehow it did that in a lab and it accidentally escaped. i think the most likely one that in nature in the wild it adapted itself. brian: he really had no reaction to your outrage and that was where his theories. what do you think about that? >> well, i have a lot of respect for dr. fauci and i think he is right. it is conceptually possible that this happened in the wild. the evidence for it so far is
4:37 am
nonexistent, but we know that past outbreaks have happened that way. he also recognizes that a lab leak is very, very possible. dr. redfield made a stronger statement over the weekend and i think we need to be thoroughly examining both of these hype cease. brian: jamie, here's the thing with people at home. instead of saying retribution for china, which is another category for somebody else, why is it important we find out how this started, put it in layman's terms. why we need to know how we this began. >> brian, when a plane crashes, we don't say let's just make -- redouble our efforts for airline safety. we say let's figure out why this particular plane crashed because we know there are other planes in the air. we need to know how this terrible pandemic started because that need to be our priority in fixing our biggest problems. until we do that we are unnecessarily add risk.
4:38 am
brian: e. jamie, i almost feel you are alone in expressing the outrage of we not knowing and the chinese preventing us from knowing. there is no western europe outrage. there is no anthony fauci outrange. there is no thirst for answers or pressure it seems just coming from lone voices like yourself which is powerful and that piece was powerful and staples are powerful but it's not going to get the chinese' attention. thanks so much for joining us though. >> really my pleasure, brian, any time. britain brian all right. meantime, we will forge ahead. migrant children packed inside a federal holding pen, the searing image taken by one of our next best touring the border. beth vanduyne and brandon judd live next. ♪
4:39 am
never run dry of... killer attitude. or hydration. neutrogena® hydro boost. the #1 hyaluronic acid moisturizer delivers 2x the hydration for supple, bouncy skin. neutrogena®. tired of daily insulin injections? omnipod delivers insulin through a discreet waterproof pod to help simplify life. just one small pod replaces up to 14 injections.
4:40 am
it's game-changing. and the wireless controller helps deliver the right amount of insulin. get started with a free 30-day omnipod dash trial today. go to omnipod.com for risk information, instructions for use and free trial terms and conditions. consult your healthcare provider before starting on omnipod. simplify diabetes. simplify life. omnipod.
4:41 am
among my patients i often see them simplify diabetes. have teeth sensitivity as well as gum issues. does it worry me? absolutely. sensodyne sensitivity and gum gives us a dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend. [typing sound] i had this hundred thousand dollar student debt. two hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars in debt. ah, sofi literally changed my life.
4:42 am
it was the easiest application process. sofi made it so there's no tradeoff between my dreams and paying student loans. student loans don't have to take over for the rest of your life. thank you for allowing me to get my money right. i've got moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now, there's skyrizi. with skyrizi, 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months, after just 2 doses. skyrizi may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. before treatment, your doctor should check you for infections and tuberculosis. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms such as fevers, sweats, chills, muscle aches, or coughs or if you plan to or recently received a vaccine. ♪ nothing is everything ♪ now is the time to ask your dermatologist about skyrizi. ♪ >> i would say to him that his lack of plan is a disaster.
4:43 am
it is -- it's just not going to work. and he has disregarded his responsibility as a president to protect american citizens. and it's not a matter of if we will be joined by other families, it's a matter of when. and because of his lack of leadership, what he is doing is putting our borders at risk even more. without borders, weigh are not a nation. without borders we don't have an identity as a culture. steve: as can you hear right there president biden taking heat over his response to the border surge as new alarming images shared by our next guest reveal an inside look at overcrowded migrant facilities along our southern border. ainsley: texas g.o.p. congresswoman beth van duyne is part of a delegation that's touring the border she joins us live with brandon judd, the president of the national border patrol council. good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> good morning. ainsley: good morning. so, congresswoman, i know you
4:44 am
wanted to go down there and see first hand because this really effects texas as well as other states. what are you finding? what are you seeing? >> what we are seeing a tremendous humanity crisis down here. you have people who are in a facility right now the majority of them unaccompanied minors that was a facility that was built to house no more than 250 people currently has 6700 people in it. these are children, they are packed and stacked on the floor barely able to see ground because some of them are stuffed in there. it is a processing plant. you have got, you know, customs and border folks who are at the end of their rope. they are doing what they can. but they are also very frustrated realizing that they had actually warned this administration what would happen if they decided to push back on policies that were put in place by the previous administration that were working. they were keeping children with their families. they were keeping people over
4:45 am
the border. they were keeping them in the first safe country that they came to. and what we are seeing is a massive surge now at our borders and response from the administration, the biden administration instead of actually reversing policies that have caused the surge, what they're doing is forcing thousands and thousands of kids to make this journey and they are setting up decompression centers across the country. sending by bus or sending by plane thousands of children further away from their families into the country and then trying to process them through into our cities as quickly as they can. i just went to the kay bailey hutchison center, the centers that they have set up in dallas, they had 3 and a half days to set the center up and it's five days it was at capacity with 2300 kids. steve: it's unbelievable. that is why some have called this a cover-up because, you know, a lot of people don't actually know what's going on
4:46 am
and there has been a lack of transparency as well. brandon judd, do you think the biden team knew this was going to happen in getting rid of the remain in mexico program and everything else? is this exactly how they wanted it to work? just, you know, get them in here as quickly as possible and just move on. >> i don't know that they wanted this particular surge to happen exactly the way it's rolled out but, yes, they absolutely knew that this was going to happen. they knew that there was going to be a surge if they rolled back the policies. you know, again, i apologize for looking so haggard this morning but i have been out on the border all morning long reviewing what is exactly is going on, how the number of people that we are taking into custody whether or not these people are trying to evade apprehension or whether or not they are just giving themselves up. that's what we are seeing today, they are giving themselves up knowing that they are going to be released into the united states. so, again, when we look back and we look at the policies that president trump enacted and how
4:47 am
they work and the roll back of the biden administration, yes, they had to know that this, in fact, was going to happen? brian: right, congresswoman, i think that the vice president has got this portfolio now to stop the illegal immigrants from coming here. she is going to go where it all started where it starts and that's into the via angle countries where the former vice president joe biden had that great idea by putting a street light in honduras to stop the gangs and they are also talking about opening up boys clubs. that's what kate bettingfield said over the weekend. are those the type of cutting edge ideas i hope she brings to the table. >> i think you saw cutting edge ideas from the last administration. this administration forced policies again that's going to separate children, that's going to separate families and quite honestly doing nothing more than empowering and enriching drug cartels and human anything smugglers.what we saw yesterdayr
4:48 am
speaking with d.e.a. and dhs and others doing their job to stop gang activity to be able to patrol our borders, make our cities safe. what they are having to do is baby-sit. so you are seeing resources from other departments now. brian: unbelievable. >> come from what cbp is notably to do. it's coming at a cost. ainsley: speaking of that brandon, the baby-sitting lindsey graham said he saw kids with phone numbers on their bracelets. are you seeing things like that where you are. >> that's exactly what we are seeing. i was out with lindsey graham when we took him out to the border so he could see exactly what was going on. we wanted to give him a day in the shoes of a border patrol agent so that they could understand and they greatly appreciated that but, yes, that's exactly what we are seeing, we are seeing children come over with numbers written on their chest, numbers written on their arms, they have wrist bands showing that they have already paid the cartels. again, it's pulling our resources off of the border.
4:49 am
we are stripping the line and we are allowing the cartels to generate huge profits because they are running their higher products right behind when we take our agents off the line. steve: brandon judd, thank you very much for joining us and your public service and also to congresswoman beth van duyne. former mayor of irving texas and now a u.s. congresswoman. thank you very much. >> thank you. >> thank you. steve: all right. meanwhile, the supreme court takes up an abortion related case for the first time with conservatives in the majority. shannon bream on whether this case could open the door to something bigger coming up next. ♪ spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! all good
4:50 am
how great is it that we get to tell everybody how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? i mean it... uh-oh, sorry... oh... what? i'm an emu! no, buddy! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪ guy fieri! ya know, if you wanna make that sandwich the real deal, ya gotta focus on the bread layers. king's hawaiian sliced bread makes everything better! ♪ (angelic choir) ♪ and here's mine!
4:51 am
4:52 am
4:53 am
♪ ♪ >> the supreme court will referee a kentucky legal fight over who can argue for the state's controversial late term abortion law. republican attorney general david cameron wants to previously blocked 2018 policy against the democratic governor's wishes. an appeals court says that he came in too late to intervene. here to discuss is fox news at night anchor and author of the women of the bible speak which is out today. we are going to talk about that in just a moment ms. shannon bream. hey, shannon. >> good morning, ainsley. ainsley: good morning. does this mean the supreme court
4:54 am
is going to weigh in on roe v. wade. >> not exactly in this case. what you described there is exactly what's happening. the attorney general daniel cameron is a republican. is he a conservative and pro-life. he says let me come in and defend this law. it was passed under republican governor, signed by a republican governor. but now there is a democrat governor who is running kentucky. and he is not defending this law. so, this attorney general wants to step in and do it. so the supreme court is going to look and see whether daniel cameron can step, in defend the law that was passed under the republican governor but over in arkansas, i have to tell you, they are trying a completely different strategy. they are making a straight run at roe v. wade. the governor there asa hutchison, a republican who is pro-life, has just signed a very restrictive abortion law into -- it would actually go into practice may 3rd. he knows it's going directly to court. he says i'm fine with that we are actually passing this bill to make it a direct challenge to roved. that one is -- we will definitely watch to see if it ends up at the supreme court. ainsley: let's talk about your book. the book is called the women of the bible speak.
4:55 am
tell us about it. it's out today. >>s it out today. it is a broad look at all kinds of women. we didn't have to add anything to their stories. they are fascinating. they are coach all throughout the old and new testament. it shows us that that's women were important to god. they struggled with issues that women struggle with today. i find not only the problems but also the solutions are timeless. and that god was working in every one of these stories. some of these women were faithful from the beginning. others of them made mistakes and got off track like we all do at some point. it is beautiful to see gods would working through all of their stories whether on track or not he was able to redeem them. ainsley: was there one you resonated with. >> ask me a different day i may give you a different answer. i love debra from the old testament. she was a judge. she was the leader of the nation of israel. god told them to go into battle against this group that nobody would have thought on paper that they had any chance of succeeding against. she didn't question that she went and got her military leader together and said let's go do it. she was brave and courageous.
4:56 am
and a real role model of leadership that i think inspires all of us. ainsley: right, we learn about ruth and her relationship with naomi and esther and if there is woman out there not familiar with the women of the bible, you can learn so much. i read your book. it's excellent, shannon. thank you. >> thank you, ainsley. ainsley: you are welcome. "the women of the bible speak" there is a special on fox nation as well. it's available now. you can sign up on fox nation to see this. plus get exclusive access to other original content, events, and your favorite personalities on any device. go to amazon right now and also buy her book and support her. well, american students learn online teachers in san diego are -- they are going to give classes in person to migrants. we are going to talk about that coming up next. ♪ t, not what's easy. so when a hailstorm hit, usaa reached out before he could even inspect the damage. that's how you do it right. usaa insurance is made just the way martin's family needs it
4:57 am
.. i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala. germ proof your car with armor all disinfectant. kills 99.9% of bacteria and viruses.
4:58 am
♪ ♪ we know it's going to take many forms of energy to meet the world's needs while creating a cleaner future for all. at chevron, we're lowering the carbon emissions intensity of our operations, investing in lower-carbon technologies, and exploring renewable fuels of the future. we work hard to care for the homes we love. but it's only human... to protect the one we share. we work hard to care for the homes we love. it's lawn season. and i need a lawn. quick. the fast way to bring it up to speed. is scotts turf builder rapid grass. rapid grass is a revolutionary mix of seed and fertilizer that will change the way you grow grass. it grows two times faster than seed alone for full, green grass in just weeks. after growing grass this fast, everything else just seems... slow. it's lawn season. let's get to the yard. download the scotts my lawn app today for your personalized lawn plan. there it is... “the extra mile.”
4:59 am
on the border of expected and extraordinary. for those willing to go further. like vans customized for work or play. with safety and tech to keep you connected. supported by a five-star sales, service and finance team. and backed by the one star you know. so, go the extra mile. it's never crowded because so few have what it takes to go there. mercedes-benz vans. before nexium 24hr, anna could only imagine a comfortable night's sleep without frequent heartburn waking her up. now, that dream... . ...is her reality. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts, for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? some say this is my greatest challenge. for all-day, governments in record debt; inflation rising, currencies falling. but i've seen centuries of this. with one companion that hedges the risks you choose and those that choose you. the physical seam of a digital world,
5:00 am
traded with a touch. my strongest and closest asset. the gold standard, so to speak ;) people call my future uncertain. but there's one thing i am sure of... >> this is not catch and release, this is catch and reunite. >> the origins of the covid 19 virus will be made public this morning. >> entirely discounted the likely possibility covid 19 began from an accident in the laboratory. ainsley: educators in san diego teaching migrant children in person before their own students return to the classroom. >> senator lisa murkowski had a challenge of the primary. >> not standing up to the radical biden agenda.
5:01 am
>> >> what a race, what a battle. steve: this is how we start the radio show and that is the washington monument in the upcoming series on fox nation. he asked us to whisper, he still sleeping but tucker carlson will be on our show talking about his series on fox nation. ainsley: did you find out who the architect is? architecture in south carolina? steve: we started it, stopped, had a civil war, then different colors. steve: right of the side, you can see it is a little gray, the
5:02 am
civil war is 555 feet tall and as we know it was a number of years ago they had to close it for a long time because one of those earthquakes in western portions of virginia shook it. before is an open house? steve: know. an hour ago the question was whether the statue of liberty is open and my doctor send me a note. will: it might have closed again. the quarry, the time they rebuild it they go to a different quarry and how do i know so much? i watched the flintstones which is a documentary about working at a quarry every single day. will: the washington monument according to google, opening 9 am to 10:00 pm, it is open.
5:03 am
brian: two minutes after the top of the hour we move on to the final hour of the show senator lindsey graham calling out the biden administrative for calling out the crisis at the border, the white house says the vp is not in charge of the migrant surge. and he wants to portfolio she got. steve doocy joins us with more. >> reporter: officials insist the majority of people who show up at the border are sent back and people who are detained are respectful of covid 19 guidelines but lawmakers who eyeballed things for themselves say that is not the case. >> i saw a cover-up, massive system failure, tax dollars used to reunite the family. this is not catch and release, this is catch and reunite. >> reporter: concern about migrants bringing covid into guatemala, the president caught
5:04 am
wind of our caravan to the south, call the state of pretension saying groups of people could put at risk the life, liberty, security, health, access to justice, and development of guatemalans. the white house is hinting advice presidential travel to the region, to clarify her job is to figure out the best way to spend taxpayer money in guatemala and honduras, for current citizens to stay there instead of wanting to attract from mexico to the us border. >> the vice president of the united states will be helping lead that effort, specifically the root causes. there is confusion over that. >> reporter: no events concerning immigration, trying to stay focused on his efforts on the economy. steve: you were talking how the white house maintains the
5:05 am
majority of migrants were turned around, you asked jen psaki about this quoting and ask you support that said something like 13% returns around but 100% of the kids were kept and i saw another report that said 10% to 20% are turned around and that is the vast majority who get in. any idea where the white house gets these statistics? >> reporter: the numbers are confusing. family units are the ones that only 13% are turned back so these groups that are showing up as the feds determine if it is a family unit that can stay, a family unit at all, they are doing all that on the border for anything. steve: thank you very much. go back to work. brian: that is the number one story, lots of questions about the border, not talking about $1.9 trillion coming straight at us.
5:06 am
ainsley: that is why she doesn't want to be in charge. steve: she was handed a grenade into 20 it to explode on her. the vice president was handed a grenade under president obama, he flew to the triangle countries and started meeting with them right away. she was given this assignment last week, where is she. you are from a border state, probably have a handle on it, your policies are upside down but you probably know what is going on but she doesn't want -- never heard of this -- steve: she was the attorney general for california. a sanctuary state. insurance policies are much much different.
5:07 am
and the confusion, they tried to walk away back. and and to figure out how to keep them from coming. >> jen psaki working with hhs, we interviewed congresswoman beth van dyne, mayor of irving, texas and now a congresswoman, and he's a national border patrol council, and lindsey graham, this is what they had to say. >>
5:08 am
>> instead of reversing, they have thousands and thousands of kids. some decompression centers across the country. >> there was going to be a surge of they rollback the policies and we look at the politics of donald trump and acted and how they worked. the rollback of the biden administration, had to know this was going to happen. brian: they don't seem to care. but joe biden says i will go down, he took the weekend off, complaining about being stuck in this warehouse while they revamped the vice president a living conditions. i don't understand it. it is an emergency, democrats, republicans, it is an emergency, opening of military bases, opening a convenience center, it is an emergency. talk to the biden administration they don't care, jen psaki's is
5:09 am
different, the vice president doesn't show up, the president won't go. ainsley: ron johnson was down there, senator, under trump, here we go, floodgates are open. you mentioned the convention center, one in san diego, housing the children and parents are upset about the convention center because teachers who are currently on spring break, kids are with their families, not teaching zoom, going into the convention center in teaching migrant children, taxpayer dollars are going to fund it, and they are not going back until april 20 fourth. brian: worried about their welfare and they got millions of dollars, at the beginning of the school season, the kids are back. the pictures they are allowing
5:10 am
us to see at the conference center there are no children fair because as we know, the system, 700 kids in an empty facility, at the end of the week they will have 1500, 13 teachers from san diego volunteered and could start teaching, who will have hamburgers like that later today and parents of the kids who live in san diego are so unhappy. we are going to have in person teaching, the migrant children at the convention center as they -- in person teaching for the children who are supposed to be in those million-dollar schools scattered throughout san diego and a lot of parents are upset.
5:11 am
to teach the migrant kids in person at the san diego kids who live in the district. ainsley: italy diaz said begging new cemented armored of education where the superintendent going, they must mandate 5 days of in person learning, 14% of the district, san diego teachers teaching migrant children, san diego unified school districts, deserves in person education, wire taxing students but last? this is a humanitarian issue who is rescuing students? our leaders - brian: how big you want your homeless population to be, and living that type of life, san
5:12 am
diego county, all children in california regardless of immigration status have a constitutional right to education, illegal aliens have a right to an education, teachers participating in the program are doing so voluntarily in the program is followed i guidelines from whatever. this is part of the curriculum for the people staying in cots are us. the education program will including was language developing, social emotional learning opportunities, going without your parents paying coyotes to go through his traumatic, no question about it but the people who made it seem plausible are being rewarded. i got my kids to america and they are getting free education, free healthcare, free testing and free schooling. unbelievable to get the screening protocol so learning english and look at these numbers, 248 were discharged
5:13 am
from hhs into america, they will be back again, 396 from cvp, h hs has 12,000 and children and cvp are 767 and don't worry, we are getting 9000 a week a day, there will be kids to grow the class-size a little bit. steve: what exactly is the agenda of the teacher? they are okay with teaching migrant kids at the convention center, we get why they are entitled according to statute, why can't the teachers teach in person their kids? it brian: good to package into these convention centers but we can't have conventions and sporting events but you can pack it out with kids with aluminum foil blankets to sit there and told the camera's. when president biden says everyone be vigilant when it comes to holding onto your mask and distance don't tell me you care about us and our health while you opened up our borders
5:14 am
and let poor countries for in. i'm not buying it. ainsley: seeing what is happening at the convention center, parents have every right to be angry. brian: he's joining us tomorrow. ainsley: carley shimkus has some headlines. carley: a texas state trooper shot in the line of duty will be taken off life support. chad walker was shot several times during a traffic stop last week, police say he is no longer showing signs of brain activity. organs will be donated once he is taken off life support. flash floods killed 7 people in tennessee, severe storms prompting the second highest today rain total in nashville, 7 inches of rain, to high levels, tennessee will see heavy rain in the next few days and flash flood watch issued tuesday
5:15 am
through thursday. a ninth woman accuses andrew cuomo of sexual harassment. sherry ville releasing this photo of the moment cuomo kissed her on the cheek when surveying flood damage at her home, in 2017, recounting what happened. >> between the dog and mine, in a highly sexual manner. >> cooperate with the state investigation to cuomo's alleged behavior, new details emerge about cuomo's alleged a circle getting priority covid testing, the washington post reporting over 100 vips were put in a separate database for the general public and fast-track virus testing. nurses were allegedly pulled from their job they get private in-home tests.
5:16 am
girl scout cookies galore, this a-year-old in california set the national girl scout record selling 32,000 boxes in just 3 months. >> i never knew i could do that. i saw that huge number. >> she overcame cancer when she was a toddler, in local buyers, congratulations to so many people but she definitely deserved it. steve: another problem with the pandemic, because of the pandemic so many parents missed the cookie sign-up sheet. carley: she said it is the biggest number she has ever seen.
5:17 am
carley: for you ever involved? steve: in the girl scouts? carley: i do indulging cookies. ainsley: i was a brownie and use our money -- brian: you didn't open your dad did. steve: i brought the list in, 305 boxes and i had to deliver the next four weeks. ainsley: rusty, our director, you got the email on "fox and friends first," got the email in his little daughter abigail -- i get them in the mail. steve: girl scouts always liked the cub scouts at school and there is a natural synergy. the girl scouts loved it. ainsley: go girl scouts, go boy scout, go eagle scouts. carley: i am about to get small. brian: and other political
5:18 am
plans, the push by facebook and twitter to promote aggressive voting law hr one plus tucker carlson joins us live later. . lutely. sensodyne sensitivity and gum gives us a dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend. ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ excuse me ma'am, did you know that liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? thank you! hey, hey, no, no, limu, no limu! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
5:19 am
you need a financial plan that can help grow and protect your money. an annuity can help cover essential expenses in retirement.
5:20 am
have the right financial professional show you how... this is what an annuity can do.
5:21 am
wanna help kids get their homework done? professional show you how... well, an internet connection's a good start. but kids also need computers. and sometimes the hardest thing about homework is finding a place to do it. so why not hook community centers up with wifi? for kids like us, and all the amazing things we're gonna learn. over the next 10 years, comcast is committing $1 billion to reach 50 million low-income americans with the tools and resources they need to be ready for anything. i hope you're ready. 'cause we are.
5:22 am
will: big tech extend the reach, for google except lunch the chamber of commerce sentiment tech coalition backed by groups you may have heard of, amazon, facebook, twitter and google declared their devotion to a progressive society, economy and workforce. the first order of business advocating for hr one that will nationalize federal elections. the author of the forthcoming
5:23 am
book woke incorporated, does this surprise you? >> it does not surprise me. crony capitalism, the largest tech companies in the world hired a policy director to advance their objectives. that is classic crony capitalism, using government as an instrument. woke smoke to cover up what is happening so they deceive the public about the essence of what is happening, viewing progressive values to address self-interest as a way of taxing government subsidies. brian: i'm conserved, these are backed by the behemoth they left, amazon, they have a lot of money, then look how radical hr one is, 800 pages, mandatory automatic voter registration nationwide. allows voters to substitute photo id with a sworn statement.
5:24 am
i swear on that expand mail in voting, that went well last time, restore voting rights for convicted felons, expand mail in voting no id and encourage statehood for washington dc. what does that have to do with voting rights? in our constitution, not supposed to happen. why would you pick this radical legislation? >> let's put aside having basic identification, let's put aside the actual issue, tech companies are doing, has nothing to do with big tech regulation and they will talk about climate change and progressive taxation that has nothing to do with big tech regulation. they are bowing down to the party in power. democrats control congress, the senate, the white house. they know where the regulatory bread is buttered. it but is there bread. they want to keep special legislative protections intact and to the extent they implement regulations they will make sure it is regulation that keeps their own monopoly, using government to accomplish their
5:25 am
goals and blowing smoke on woke values that make the left happy to engage in a range marriage, not a marriage of love, and >> >> everything is way less. it is moderate to write. here's what the chamber of commerce promoting hr one in some ways the tech industry, democratized commerce and information. we also need healthy participation underlying our economy, voting rights was a natural industry focused on democratizing services. do they want to know it is my
5:26 am
credit card, a person that shows up to vote is that person. what does that have to do with them? >> they are justifying this involvement saying it is about democratizing voices of our democracy. big tech wants to play a role making a democracy robust, engage in political discrimination so we have true marketplace of ideas rather than constraining by debate set by the ceos, that is how they cultivate democratic culture in america, lobbying for objective democrats in congress, to get more favorable regulation from big tech, a perversion of american democracy and american capitalism, neither democracy nor capitalism but crony version of both, we need to call it out. >> you just proved it, thank you for joining us and look forward to your book. if you look at the pressure they
5:27 am
are getting in georgia, hr one who they have in support, they have to be ready to fight. 26 after the hour. the california teacher accusing parents of white supremacy for pushing schools to reopen, leo terrel calls the claim outright stupid. we put that in bold in the prompter. veteran homeowners: during uncertain times, money in the bank can bring you and your family real piece of mind. refiplus from newday usa can make it happen. refiplus lets you refinance at the lowest mortgage rates in history plus get an average of $50,000 cash for the financial security you and your family deserve. refiplus, only from newday usa.
5:28 am
i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala. enocide took the lives of six million jews and thousands of jewish survivors are still suffering in poverty today. god calls on people who believe in him to act on his word. "comfort ye, comfort my people." especially during this holiday season of passover.
5:29 am
when i come here and i sit with lilia i realize what she needs right now is food. these elderly jews are weak and they're sick. they're living on $2 a day this now, is how god's children are living. take this time to send a survival food box to these forgotten jews. the international fellowship of christians and jews urgently need your gift of $25 now to help provide one survival food box with all of the essentials they critically need for their diet for one month. your special holiday gift will provide everything they need to celebrate the holy season of passover. do you remember matza? this is the first time in over 70 years that she has anything to do with faith. she hasn't seen unleavened bread since before the holocaust.
5:30 am
and now we're coming to her and saying, "it's okay to have faith." for just $25, you can help supply the essential foods they desperately need for one month. i just want to encourage all of you to join with yael eckstein and the wonderful work of the international fellowship of christians and jews. god tells us to take care of them, to feed the hungry. and i pray holocaust survivors will be given the basic needs that they so desperately pray for to survive.
5:31 am
brian: california teacher fired over a social media post where he slammed parents pushing their kids to get back into a classroom. on high school jesus book teacher damon harmony post, i am as disappointed as i am unsurprised that last week we all had to hear the cynical pearl clutching urgency, structurally white supremacist hysteria, this is not a country club. our teachers are not waitstaff. fox news contributor and supports attorney leo terrel joins us. good morning to you.
5:32 am
>> reporter: how are you doing? brian: okay but asking for your expertise. can you see the connection between white supremacy and parents asking to reopen schools? >> this is so crazy. we are the bluest states, total democratic leadership. what is happening is people are being allowed to through this racist white supremacist terms without proving any facts so you try to neutralize speech. this is a state where we are still closed. what i don't understand is it is okay to allow kids to go to school and your peace in san diego allowing migrants to go in class teaching, this is an unfounded baseless charge being used to neutralize and prevent progress, allowing kids to go back to school.
5:33 am
brian: essentially it said he posted that on his own time and is not the official opinion of sacrament a school, that is okay, right? >> as a civil rights attorney for 30 years of someone was a white supremacist i would take them to federal court and sue them but in this democratic playbook you can take that term, intimidate the other side and get what you want, you stop progress, that is what is happening right now. the term racism, white supremacist, is being thrown out with any -- without any supporting facts. steve: let's go from california to georgia. a number of businesses like major league baseball, aflac, delta, coming out and say something about this new georgia voter law which among other things requires photo id or
5:34 am
absentee ballot by mail. in georgia they are saying you need to come out and say this is a really good -- really bad idea. >> reporter: i will go out and buy some coke today, this is insulting. i want to be clear civil rights attorney for 30 years, this georgia bill is not racist. the reference to jim crow people throwing that term out. this bill is not racist at all. to claim the voter id, some form of identification is voter suppression, i have a passport, i do not need help to go forward but this is the same thing. to intimidate people and negate the idea of having an election
5:35 am
integrity. that is the whole catch of this whole argument. steve: trying to explain what is going on behind the news, thank you so much. >> thank you very much. steve: the white house tapping businesses to track 2, on privacy concerns, tucker is next. and we want you to see yourself in your new glasses and think, "ooh!" but if you get home and your "ooh" is more of a "hmm..." you have 100 days to change your mind. that's the visionworks difference. visionworks. see the difference. [sfx: psst psst] allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! all good
5:36 am
5:37 am
5:38 am
here's huge news for veteran homeowners. introducing refiplus from newday usa.
5:39 am
refiplus lets you refinance at record low rates to save money every month plus you could get an average of $50,000 cash. that's money for security today and money for retirement tomorrow. refiplus, it's only for veterans and it's only from newday usa. brian: you are looking live at the rio grande valley as border patrols are rounding up a group of migrants. we have a drone shot. what is interesting about this is once upon a time the migrants would reach across the border and scatter but now they are
5:40 am
waiting in place for border patrol to turn themselves in because if you are an unaccompanied minor child or a family for the most part it is an easy path to get into the united states, to turn yourself in and process you at one of those jail like facilities, the next stop is someplace in america. ainsley: some single individuals, unaccompanied children, most of the families if you look at the numbers from this past february compared to last february in the rio grande valley. tucker carlson his host of tucker carlson tonight. let's miss you on the morning show. is that the biggest issue right now? >> reporter: unlike so many issues we face, this one will change the country forever.
5:41 am
the stakes couldn't be higher, the question of who lives here is the central question for democracy. when you change the population you change the outcome of the vote. you change the way the country is run and that is the point of this. this country has gained 100 million people, most americans are not even aware of that. massive democratic changes not enough for the changes. this is an effort basically, if you opened the borders and sponsor legislation giving citizenship and voting rights, you are trying to change election outcomes. brian: those who think the hispanic the ghost of democrats didn't pay attention to the last election, a lot of precinct in texas in particular, eight in all mostly hispanic, they are
5:42 am
getting 9000 illegal immigrants daily. currently we have 11,000 children, more like 12 in hhs, 5067 cvp. i don't understand, you can see the bigger picture better than i can. how does this help president biden's administration, a 70% approval rating, $1.9 trillion he just got, he wants to talk about all these programs that all anybody else wants to talk about even democrat in other networks is this. how does this help joe biden. >> the democratic party is extremely frustrated by the idea there are americans who don't vote for them. if you change the nature of people who live here, people thinking longer terms, only 2 and a half months into the
5:43 am
administration, 10 years ahead, which is the way they think in a much broader way, the question is what is happening? a lot of them are being flown into the interior of the country. we will have the story tonight at 8:00, they are placed in foster families in states very far from the us border. if that is true it is an amazing story, they got biden elected, there has been a news blackout on what is happening at the border, huge number of people, where are they exactly? not all in texas, arizona, new mexico and california. brian: during the trump administration one image of kids in that room that had the chain-link fencing closure the
5:44 am
media melted down and said kids in cages. they are in the same cages, it is not the outcome we saw and what is different about now, there's a global pandemic. out of the white house apparently the president of guatemala, the family coming into guatemala might have covid which is ironic because the biden administration released untold regions of migrants in the united states without ever testing for covid. we got to bring the end to covid but at the same time the loophole, everybody needs to worry about covid except those coming into the southern border. >> to hold a job, after they
5:45 am
have a vaccine and remain in terror of the virus after you get the vaccine. and another example, to the interest of american citizens, they are homeless, no one seems to notice they are there unless you live in a big city. you are paying for hotel rooms, foreign nationals who broke our laws to get here, you are running the us government you've got to care about us citizens first and foremost that is your job. ainsley: in california and san diego, the convention center, asking taxpayers to -- who haven't been in school more than
5:46 am
a year, you need to keep zooming or virtual learning but your tax dollars need to go toward migrant children who are here illegally. we will pay for them to get an education, asking teachers to come to the convention center and volunteer in person on spring break right now to come in and teach migrant children, how do you feel about that be change keeping american children out of school for a year is one of the coolest things this country has ever done and it tells you the power of the teachers unions. there is no scientific basis for the policy. it has killed a lot of people, mental health issues among children skyrocketed, we interviewed parents of kids who killed themselves because the isolation of the lockdowns and yet they are putting once again the priority on foreign nationals.
5:47 am
it is not against migrants kids but the extent to which they ignore american kids is shocking and by the way california has canes 10 million people net since 1990, 10 million. it has gotten much worse. immigration is the main driver of population growth, people are leaving, the state every year gets worse for the middle class. people are not asking how is this going to prove our country, it is not. no one is arguing that it is. i think republicans need to wake up and see the big picture which is the country will be changed forever and no one is making the case that will improve. brian: i gave you time to run your stating california, what you gave us back was homelessness and kids who don't go to school. a lockdown stay with numbers that are higher than new york and higher than texas and new york and texas and florida, let's talk about something else that is getting a lot of
5:48 am
controversy and that is what happens when you get vaccinated. they are talking about a vaccine passport, then you can go to that game or go to that plane and if not maybe you don't. governor ron desantis in a state your family with, florida, says this about the concept of vaccine passports. >> is completely unacceptable for the government or the private sector to impose upon you the requirement that you show proof of vaccine to participate in normal society. you want the fox to guard the hen house? give me a break, this has huge privacy implications. it is not necessary to do. brian: where do you stand? >> wiser left to the governor of florida to say that? 50 republicans in the senate, white they aren't staying we are not doing this, you are not allowed. you are not allowed to know if your kid has a sex change and
5:49 am
now your private, whether you are vaccinated or not, that information in the hands of the tech companies and that will determine whether you participate in american life? if you're trying to calm people down about the idea of vaccines and make them less vaccine hesitant and convince them it is not a conspiracy run by bill gates then you won't consider doing something like this. the amount of paranoia, fear and distrust and social division this policy will engender is impossible to calculate. if you want to divide american society for the you would go ahead and do something orwellian like this. they don't care but where are the defenders of, i don't know, the american way? they should be outraged by this. pete: something we will hear a lot more of. if you move your hand a little bit we could see the line that
5:50 am
says tucker carlson today, right there. ainsley: tucker changed his name. pete: we love the new set. you've got some wood paneling, this is the official home of tucker carlson today. >> i like wood. wood was alive. the greatest building material there is. i like being surrounded by it. this is essentially an opportunity to go deeper and longer with interesting people. i talk less, they talk more. everyone learns a lot, future interesting, these interviews can go on for quite some time and if you like longform and i think there's a place for it it is great. it is not difficult to get but if you go to foxnation.com which i did saturday i was expecting -- brian: first time you've gone on fox nation? ainsley: when you get your show
5:51 am
-- to sign up. >> i work here so i have free access. i will do it and it is not hard. i can barely operate my ipad. brian: you and him have quality time. >> in an ugly direction. to politicize art, all of the things that were meaningful in our lives, tick-tock, splinter the cycle of politics. brian: is that your first episode?
5:52 am
we split it up into a couple hours. by the end of that interview i was so relieved and reassured. he has this overview on what is happening and what we can do about it that changed my view. >> do you want to fill in on "fox and friends" at all like you used to? >> that is the toughest, i hope your audience understands how hard it is to wake up 3 in the morning and do 3 hours. i'm filled with and respect. brian: he turned down the shift every day. tucker carlson today in the new ranch house is available on fox nation, mondays, wednesdays and fridays.
5:53 am
go to foxnation.com. thank you very much for getting up early. jillian: i can see your full name. we are friends. i like him. thanks. california youth sports, families are getting back to the sidelines. state guidelines only permit observation from immediate household numbers for the strict purpose of age-appropriate supervision even if the sport is outdoors. one county sheriff along with local parents say the state is overstepping. humble county sheriff joins me, good morning to both of you. tell us your story, how many children you have and what is going on? >> i have two children, my youngest is a junior,
5:54 am
multi-sport athlete, he hasn't played a game other than two weeks ago or a year for sports because they were shutdown in california. we are trying to get three seasons over 40 weeks to 15 and dealing with short seasons. in these small communities. jillian: how is it affecting them? >> he had a very challenging year, his whole demeanor changed, nice and day, he is an athlete, this is what he has done his entire life and to have that taken away from him for an entire year has been very hard
5:55 am
for him. he wants to play in college and this is an important year for him. >> what is your message to county leaders who say only one parent can go to the game even if it is outdoors and if you are divorced you have to divide it up, one parent is the only one allowed? >> this is a state rule, finally kids can play youth sports and they come out with a ridiculous rule like this that doesn't make sense despite the fact that kids come from stepparents and parents of multi-parental supervision, you're asking them to decide which parents to bring to a game because of undue stress on the children so they don't need it this time. let the parents decide what age-appropriate looks like. it is a novel concept, they need
5:56 am
a rally, allow parents to do what parents do and stay away. we don't have to divide this any further. jillian: thanks for serving and wish you the best in your children the best, god bless you both. nor "fox and friends" moments away.
5:57 am
here's exciting news for veteran homeowners who need cash. refiplus from newday usa. it lets you refinance at today's record low rates plus get cash. with mortgage rates low and home values high refiplus can help you lower your rate plus turn your home equity into an average of $50,000. money for security today. money for retirement tomorrow. refiplus from newday usa.
5:58 am
still fresh... unstopables in-wash scent booster. downy unstopables. oh! don't burn down the duplex. terminix. i always dreamed of having kids of my own. ♪ ♪ now i'm ready for someone to call me mom. at northwestern mutual, our version of financial planning helps you live your dreams today. i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had.
5:59 am
at nbut my nunormalual, our vewith nucala?ancial fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala. >> all right. bob seger singing us out as you look at the empire state building here in new york city. it will be a nice day. hope wherever you are it in a great day and we'll see you
6:00 am
back here tomorrow. >> what's coming up on the radio today? >> we'll have a great show talk about a lot of the same things we're talking about here. at this point i would like to tell you use the qr code and stay within yourself. >> bye. >> bill: good morning, everybody. administration scrambling to deal with the crisis at the border as we get reports a new migrant caravan is forge in central america. based on what we can tell so far, with the limited access i'm bill hemmer. a lot to get to today. >> dana: i'm dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." the feds are releasing new numbers on how many unaccompanied migrant children are in u.s. custody. double the number from earlier this month. >> bill: the numbers are stunning. the total more than 17,000 children with nearly 6,000 in customs and border protection facilities where we're seeing a lot of the overcrowded holding

259 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on