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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  June 5, 2021 9:00am-11:00am PDT

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doctor fauci under fire is a growing number of lawmakers accused him of brushing on the wuhan lively theory. as was recently released e-mails, ashley is hitting back calling their claims nonchalant welcome to fox news live. >> this comes as separate e-mails obtained by fox show internal power struggle for two officials were at odds in january how to deal with this
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investigation. here is the latest. david. reporter: the president hands down anthony fauci after the release of e-mails, doctor fauci started at the national institute in 1958. he let the country to the early days of the eight prizes in the 80s and the white house press secretary jen psaki yesterday defended doctor fauci. >> he's overseeing management of multiple global health crises and attacks on him are certainly something we wouldn't stand by. >> doctor fauci himself last night on msnbc defended his reputation, e-mails are taken out of context. >> my job was to make a vaccine and use my institute and count sciences we have the and that we find various universities to get a vaccine highly effective and
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we succeeded. that's what i do. all the other stuff just terrible, not happy type of destruction but it's all nonsense. reporter: in the final days of the trump administration, releasing a report on the origins of the pandemic detailing evidence supporting a possible last week. trump era officials including former secretary states mike pompeo blamed doctor fauci for inconsistency in messaging. fox news obtained e-mails early january, the former acting under secretary for arms control and international security the former acting assistant secretary of the bureau of arms control verification january 5, he wrote it's becoming embarrassing and if i may say, more than a little worrisome that they are ducking at expert level engagement to evaluate its own wuhan institute of virology allegations. he responded we've briefed you
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and your experts at our initiation several weeks ago. i'd like to know what is objectionable. bottom line, between some of those top officials at the state department and doctor fauci is calling for the wuhan institute of virology to release the medical records related to nine people who worked there who were sick in november 2019. jacqui: interesting develops. thank you. giff: joining me now, republican congresswoman infrastructure committee has foreign affairs committee, nichols and serves assistant before the house gop, congresswoman, thank you for taking time on this saturday. you heard our reporter, david at the white house and the latest about the e-mails. let me get your reaction to that. >> as i was going through some of the reporting on this issue,
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i've noticed the actual parts to talk about in connection to the lab has been redacted so first, we need to know what was in the redacted e-mail that he sent as it relates to wuhan. now he seems to be changing to calling for a formal investigation and we need to have access to the lab records and we need to know what the individuals in 2019 were at the lab, we need to know more about that because we set displays symptoms of covid and it's something that we've been advocating for formal investigation members of the subcommittee on coronavirus. it shocking for democrats have not yet brought forth panel to have a real discussion about this and the other thing is,
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america should be leading the way. we must be advocating for answers of the communist party. that in itself, the fact that 4 million people died, 600,000 in the u.s., a global community demanding answers and we should be holding funding from the world health organization and get serious about transparency and holding the chinese communist party accountable. giff: a lot of questions whether we might get those answers from china do you anticipate getting testimony from doctor fauci on the hill? >> we should absolutely be bringing him in, we've already written to speaker pelosi, demanding that she calls a hearing on this issue, both the covered subcommittee as well as oversight committee, we must investigate this further, we should be questioning doctor fauci and the ceo of those who provided grants to the wuhan
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lab, federal dollars that went over there, we should be doing whatever we can as american officials to get answers for the american people. giff: speaking of doing enough, i want to switch gears a bit, we got the friday jobs report yesterday and the chairman putting out a statement, applauding the jobs report and taking aim specifically as republican members of congress like yourself, here's the statements the chair put out saying as each day passes it becomes more clear congressional republicans made a callous decision to turn their backs on struggling families and businesses when they needed help the most. that's from her directly. republicans were not advancing the president's agenda. >> joe biden's words, that is.
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i'll say if anything, the democrats to our full recovery, 100 million americans on the sidelines while small businesses are desperate to get back to work and the reason is because they decided to give individuals more money than support their workplace. that is irresponsible and frankly once the mandates and restrictions like governor, put in place were lifted, we knew jobs would come back but despite credit for that, flipping on the light switch, it's disingenuous. of course we always wanted to support small businesses and those suffering but that's not what this package is, they put in all sorts of additional spending is going to hurt our nation and is already hurting us when you look at the lack of
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labor available. when you look at the amount of products available on the market, the supply chain is interrupted and the cost of goods are going up, inflation. everything is going up and the results of the policies put in place by democrats. giff: we are out of time, we've got to leave it there. a quick short answer, the negotiations are being installed but continue on infrastructure, do you think it will be released next week? >> i'm still hopeful. they are taking up a bill wednesday, as long as we focus on real infrastructure, we can have a deal. giff: thank you for taking time on this saturday. >> thank you. jacqui: for more reaction to president biden's spending plan turn to california congressman and member of the transportation and armed services committee, john, congressman, thank you for being with us. >> my pleasure.
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jacqui: president biden rejected a new offer from the senate for republicans today calling it modest even with the proposed additional $50 billion in spending in the gop, white house abandoned corporate tax rate hikes for this field replacing with 15% minimum on a handful of companies that pay little or nothing in taxes. biden speaking again monday the white house saying the administration is going to engage a second group of bipartisan lawmakers. you think it's going to be another slog of waiting around only for this to fall apart? >> certainly we are going to continue negotiations as necessary but as we do, we ought to look at what this america really needs. yes, we need streets, roads and bridges and the numbers we are putting together this week in the markup of the bill to move out of transportation committee are significantly less and what the american society of civil engineers calls for but
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nevertheless is a significant increase on what we are currently spending and i would say most americans, if not every american understands that we are significantly understanding infrastructure. streets, roads, bridges and the like. senator mcconnell has a major bridge across the ohio river a couple billion dollars debt that needs to be built and another one in detroit so those are significant increases we need to make in addition to that, we are talking about a five year program so as we look at the infrastructure the top line number, we need to look at what's included in that top line. we have a good electrical grid in america? of course we don't. we have broadband services of course it does not exist there so we need to look at this
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broadly as we look at infrastructure so the american economy in the future has a solid foundation on which to grow you can have research, schools, all our fundamental infrastructure pieces and we need to build the infrastructure. jacqui: it's clear what democrats want to achieve in the president's plan for senator manchin said he's not going to do a democrat only deal. it looks like reconciliation is off the table for now but there is a five year $878 billion plan in the works from the members of the g20 including a carbon tax that would exceed the standard of the paris climate court and environmental objectives from the green new deal. how likely is that to go over? does it address the things you're talking about? >> a $25 billion, the answer is no. most of that is existing money that we know is inadequate. we know roads and bridges and
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streets are integrated, it's inadequate for the challenges our economy and society have so we need a number that addresses the additional money necessary to build this broad infrastructure donation for american economic growth. we can debate how much money we need for a new system, how much we need for speech, roads and bridges, each one added up and say okay, that's what the number should be. going forward, we do need to pay for this carbon tax is certainly one way to do it as is the corporate tax and biden seems to have moved away increasing overall but going to 15% minimum is necessary because some of america's largest corporations are zero corporate tax. jacqui: one more answers from you because the jobs report looks healthy, weaker than
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expected but trending in the right direction. next month we are going to see a big impact potentially of some of these states no longer taking federal enhanced unemployment. see if the numbers go up, wouldn't it be wise to get this covered money laid out for 2022 -- 31 as it pertains to unemployment and get to pay for the infrastructure they are talking about? >> that's a possibility but this nation is a very different place one place to another. in some places $300 may very well be keeping people from rejoining employment and other places it's not so you need to take it on a case or state-by-state basis and even within states there are very significant variations so that $300 put in place at the time when the epidemic was raging across america, we did not have a vaccination program in place,
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the biden administration using the rescue money, he put together a very good vaccination program that's allowing states to open up much faster than anticipated so therefore, look at the $300, if it's not appropriate in a particular state or region, it could be done away with so let's see where we go from here but that states actually, put aside the talking points, which we really need to grow america? jacqui: : subject before we run out of time, the wuhan lab theory has gotten a lot of attention this week, bipartisan bill in the works to look at the u.s. government response, doctor anthony fauci has been under scrutiny mostly from hopkins saying his e-mails show him not taking seriously the idea of a lab theory, secretary of state mark mike pompeo said he would have had access to the same
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intelligence pompeo did in the arms services committee, would fauci have had access to intelligence like pompeo mentioned? >> let's look at the time. , we are talking about the february and march of last year. the epidemic was breaking out around the world. archie's task was to figure out how to deal with what we knew at that time which was a new virus and as he said, he was working on vaccination programs, social distancing, the normal healthcare programs we need to put in place, trying to find out exactly where it came from, yes, we must do that now but to blame him for february and march for not being on top of this when he had a raging pandemic breaking out in the u.s., he didn't need to worry about well, was at the wuhan lab, did it come from there were wild animals? that's the undertaking that we must do now around the world,
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every health lab around the world must be dealing with this because we need to understand, how did it emerge? was it an accident? we need to keep in mind we have our own hand here, you think about the anthrax scare 15 years ago, it came from american laboratory. jacqui: we are going to have to leave it there but appreciate you being with us, thank you so much. >> thank you. jacqui: coming up tomorrow on fox news sunday, senator joe manchin talks to chris wallace check your listing for time and channel and went about the medias handling of the wuhan lab theory that tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. eastern. >> former president trump is said to be speaker about the north carolina republican party meeting in greenfield, that will be interesting and we have mark there with a preview.
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reporter: good afternoon. former president trump it clear he wants to remain active in politics. he's going to get his chance tonight speaking later on this evening, he is expected to tackle a number of different topics. the former president go away and heavily on it only on the economy but what you are talking about, the coronavirus origin. as well as the thought that yesterday, facebook is going to keep him off their platform at least until 2023 at the earliest. the former president put out a statement writing next time i'm in the white house there will be more dinners i is request with mark zuckerberg and his wife, all business. that statement is fascinating because it indicates the president himself is back in the white house at some time, will be looking tonight to see if there's anything else we can read about his future plans and we are going to hear from other republicans who want to see
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their party grow in the state. we caught up with the chairman of the state, doing all they can to show differences between what was going on during the trump years and what washington is like now. >> it's a big bold liberal agenda and i think the average voter in north carolina is not there so they are going to see a big pendulum swing report we expect to hear from south dakota governor it is interesting because while she's up for two editorial election in 2022, fist talk about her as a potential candidate in 2024, we'll see if she has anything to say about that he has the stage later. giff: i applaud the audience, i give you applause throughout the entire report. good job. jacqui: a brand-new report set to be released to the public about ufos, why it might lead to more questions than ever about whether we are alone in the universe.
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next. ♪♪
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care like a parent with a newborn. care like we took an oath. care that's strong, fast and safe. that's care without limits.
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you know them as ufos, pentagon calls them a phenomenon them. we are hearing the first bits of information from a government report said to be released this month.
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as more. reporter: highly anticipated report, there's no conclusive evidence of 120 u.s. navy pilots flying objects that can't be explained dating back to the 1990s. marco rubio demanding answers from the spending bill mandating this report congress. >> people start about little green men, we're not at that stage. there are things that are not ours, talking about things flying around, we just don't know need to know what they are. >> no evidence there alien spaceships. some believe ufos potentially are from russia or china, both but the u.s. development of hypersonic weapons traveling five times sound and john kirby spoke about the report coming out this month, record national intelligence. >> we take all incursions into
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our operating spaces seriously at the defense department, we are taking the entire matter fiercely. reporter: barack obama waiting earlier this week. >> the knowledge that there are aliens out there would what we have a common is more important but no doubt it would be spending a lot more money on weapons systems. >> president obama said there's footage objects in the sky, what you think? >> i asked him again. thank you. [laughter] >> familiar with the findings of this report may disappoint ufo enthusiasts with more concrete answers. griff: this is what this kind of
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information viewers turn in for. he might have had a conversation in the office and i felt you are more skeptical, maybe more open to the ufo realization so i ask you, i've got a few years on you, you a viewer of the show x-files? >> i was speaking to a colleague for this, i was not. some of these references, i'm just not aware of them. i will say my question is why haven't air force pilots or army of marine pilots not seeing these? >> that the great question. you are skeptical as you should be, maybe we will get more videos. >> jacqui, this story has gotten a lot of interest but lucas is rightfully skeptical like many americans, we will see what report, maybe we'll get a broader picture of it but i saw this yesterday, form majority
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leader of the senate during interview with blanche's biggest review journal out there, here is what harry reid said feeling vindicated about this report think i'm glad i blew the horn, i was told early by friends to stay away from this and he pushed for it. obviously when you got area 51 and a lot of believers in your backyard, perhaps you do it for political reasons but i don't know, i think we might learn certainly the most we've ever had on record about what the government does or doesn't know. jacqui: that's assuming they tell us everything if you're going to be a skeptical as you have to wonder, are they withholding a little bit? >> do you think will get evidence pointing toward the legitimacy of these ufo
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witnesses? jacqui: i don't know but i do think it's great this is the one issue in washington for republicans and democrats seem to be coalescing around without any partisanship. everyone wants to know, are we alone? >> you looked at senator rubio on his package adam schiff talking about, who knows, maybe the issues that unify washington around ufos, "stranger things" have happened. jacqui: all right, fox news has exclusive video of the chaotic crossing, migrant crossing the border. lift to rio grande valley in texas coming up. ♪♪
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you are looking at live picture of our seven quarter courtesy of our fox flight team for the migrant crisis is growing by the day. new numbers show nearly 11000 encounters venezuelan so far,
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135 all of last year. here's some exclusive video. reporter: harris had to american this weekend, americans would like for her to make a pit stop here at the border on her way. the biden administration has pledged 300 million dollars to triangle countries while safely texas are practically on their own dealing with the humanitarian criminal elements of this crisis. reporter: the cries of children here's to the rainstorm in texas thursday night as they rode along with the texas department of public safety officers. at this crossing, a large group of about 70 people including 40 unaccompanied children. we saw kids hiding from the rain under trashbags waiting hours to
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get processed because border patrol didn't have enough buses. this man from el salvador introduced us to his wife and 1-year-old baby covered in mosquito bites. he says the journey north was a dangerous one. >> somebody take the baby, police and military take our money. reporter: we saw migrant making a run for it, officers tell us this man was supposed to get picked up by smugglers but got lost and started running when he saw a truck. check out this trail cam recently found the suspected cartel scout, thursday he stole it from the border likely trying to clear a path. >> this is the problem from the federal government not supporting u.s. border patrol. they are overwhelmed with the processing my grandson coming
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across. reporter: kamala harris heads to guatemala this weekend, i asked the man from el salvador, what would it is taken for him tuesday? he says there are too many problems, too much corruption in this country, he and his family had to escape. jacqui, vp harris is not scheduled to visit el salvador and honduras on her three day trip. jacqui: thank you. griff: joining us now to discuss this and other top stories, let's bring in talk radio host and progressive radio show host and fox news contributor, leslie marshall, thank you for taking time on this saturday, so much to get to, let's start with the report you just heard from out of texas talking about vice president harris' trip, not to our south west border. the vice president be going to our border at some time on this
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trip? >> absolutely, it doesn't have to be this trip, never any dignitary from our country or another for the president number one or two vice president trump, it's an upheaval in office you the border patrol has their hands full however, what she's doing is bringing gifts if you will in the form of gaps vaccines and money, we have a big problem with their relationship to the criminal element, drug cartel criminal elements within their borders rather than their military and government speared by the cartel, it's the other way around. one more thing, with mexico, this is going to be very important, this diplomatic cash gift conversation, one reason is we arrested the former defense
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minister and the former administration bill bar was attorney general then, he backed off but that angered them. we had a rocky relationship mexico for about two years when it comes to immigration. griff: the southern border in mexico with guatemala, i've been there, maybe she will accomplish getting that, the migrant come across that before they get two hours but let me ask you, you heard when jacqui was talking, 11000 venezuelans this year across our border so what is it that the vice president will accomplish when you got so many other countries coming? >> a couple day vacation with a lot going on around her but other than that, nothing. this has been framed she's going to to come up with the underlying reasons that this is happening. we can give you the reasons, we
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have open borders, you show us which after footage hundreds and thousands coming across our borders, nothing being done about it really and if anything, they act like they are in denial which is almost impossible to believe but let's go with the underlying issue really, they come to america because they can work and make great money and send it home, we know that, it's been that way for years and years they are coming here to make money. others are involved in crime but i believe that's the minority. i believe most are coming for a good life because america is a great country. that's why all immigrants come here. the only thing we've ever wanted is control over it, if you come, we want to know who you are and come in the right way i know that's simplistic but that is the story. griff: we will see what becomes of this trip, i want to shift
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gears though because there's another story that needs attention, not as doctor luna, a psychiatrist, several degrees, she's giving a lecture to medical students at yale university and it appears it's about race and her solution to racism to put it bluntly, seems to be to shoot white people. let me give you a quote. she says i've been unloading a revolver into the head of any white person who got in my way, wiping my bloody and as i walked away relatively guiltless with a bounce in my step, like i did the world and i think they were, white people are out of their mind and have been for a long time. we are now in a predicament because white people feel we are bullying them when we bring up
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race. unbelievable remarks. why in the world she go to any campus and say these things? >> i think many of us have really dark thoughts and nobody should be telling anybody that especially when you look at the diversity among our medical community, i would imagine there were white people in that room as well as many people of color and i'm not sure what fantasies have to do with it, people get sick of me saying this but i've been with them the first year of medical school and i can guarantee he didn't have issues on race when a patient comes to the door, all my husband is looking at is the phone, not their skin color or filter background or ethnicity and i certainly would imagine every single physician in this nation not worldwide does that as well so i don't understand why this person is speaking about that
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content and there are some things that really you should keep to yourself and this is one of them and it's concerning. griff: rj, i want to get to your thoughts because she's not only not walking back from it, she's on tik tok demanding yale release publicly the lecture. >> first of all, she's a racist. we've been told through this debate that people of color can't be racist. are you kidding me? listen to the statements. she needs kat time. this psychiatrist needs a psychiatrist. this is the kind of stuff psychiatrist would have heard from tony soprano, honestly. this is crazy. i'm sorry, she really is a lunatic speaking like this. i agree we all have dark thoughts but this is incredible and she knew there were five bullets and a revolver so she thought about this private.
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griff: thank you for taking time, we got to leave it there but great conversation. jacqui: violent crime spiked across the country, democratic socialist alexandria ocasio-cortez has a solution that might surprise you. next. ♪♪
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the governor speaking now at the north carolina convention, let's listen. >> a lot of time talking to attorneys, i wanted to understand what authority i had the governor and what authority i didn't have because i believe when leaders overstepped their authority, especially in a time of crisis, that's when we are country, that's when we break country, i didn't want to be the governor to do that. [applause] in south dakota we never want to close a single business the entire time. [cheering and applauding] i didn't even define what an essential business was in our state because i do believe governors have the authority to tell you your business isn't essential. [cheering and applauding]
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griff: that's the governor talking there at the gop convention in north carolina, i fundraising lunch. already time for campaign 2022, you just saw that there. jacqui. ♪♪ jacqui: as the weather warms up and pandemic restrictions are lifted, many american cities a search and violent crime. more inside, ed flynn, ed, thank you for being with us. >> thanks for having me. jacqui: we have seen a significant rise in crime, year to date, portland, oakland, l.a. county, minneapolis, atlanta, taking note that crime usually spikes in the summer, likely more after the pandemic that kept people inside and brought crime down, what do you see contribute to this? >> it's important to note the
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covered pandemic had nothing to do with the homicide rate people stayed home with her homes are difficult to burglarize for the homicide rate has been rising for two years and driven by the fact that the last several years there's been a concerted effort to discredit and dehumanize policing and render it ineffective and when policing is ineffective, people die and that's the disease we are facing now, significant increase in violence in the most disadvantaged minorities in america precisely because so-called reform are doing their best to make policing ineffective. jacqui: another fact you touched on, criminologist attributed the spike in homicide to be among residents hesitant to return to police for help saying people are less willing to cooperate with police and then you have more crime because the justice
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system isn't working so would you agree with that? >> i agree with part of that, in my experience in every city i've worked in, citizens when they fail cooperate with police, it's not because i don't trust them, it's because they are rightly afraid, they live in neighborhoods where criminals are walking around on bail or released early to intimidate them if they bear witness or report a crime to the police or otherwise cooperate, they are rightly worried about their personal safety and the system can't guarantee that. jacqui: i want to play some sound from alexandria ocasio-cortez on what she thinks a good solution is and then i'll have you react. >> if we want to reduce violent crime, the number of people in our jails, the answer is not building more, the answer is to make sure we build more
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hospitals, pay organizers, get people mental health care and overall healthcare employment, etc. we should support communities, not throw them away. jacqui: what you make of that? >> the way to deal with the covered epidemic is close hospitals and not count how many people die that way you don't have an epidemic just like we have an epidemic in homicide, if you don't hold people accountable, we don't have a homicide problem, it's ludicrously but not to be unexpected. jacqui: thank you very much for discussing this sensitive topic with us. griff: the third leg of horseracing triple crown set for this afternoon, we are live in new york for the 153rd running, next. ♪♪
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returning tonight, organizers allowing last year due to the pandemic, alex hogan gives us a preview live from the track very an outstanding fascinated. reporter: thank you, 153rd
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belmont stakes, 11000 people will be here much less and 90000 we saw 2018 but of course last year no one at all was here. [inaudible] >> it's a tradition every year end last year we missed it. >> a ton of extra people, great for the business great to see all these people out and about having a good time corporate today, essential quality and others with favorable odds, still in the middle of the conversation is the controversies surrounding medina spirit, the rest testing positive for the second time, they have band the trainer for racing two years. it will take place at about hours time, first event for many people the pandemic and there
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are vaccination tent just before the entrance and offering tickets for next year if people do decide to get vaccinated today we want great hat and i told jacqui i'm going with rock your world. we'll have to wait and see where it goes. thank you so much. a wave of rain somewhere plaguing american industries, how we can fight back. that's next. ♪♪
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>> new details emerging on the theory that covid may have come from inside a was happy lab as documents obtained by fox news show state department officials clashing over the investigation into the virus' origins. welcome to fox news live, i'm jacqui heinrich. griff: and i'm griff jenkins, good to be with with you, j acqui after dr. fauci faces criticism of dismissal last year. david spunt with with the latest from the white house. hi, david. david: the president and the united states teamed on dr. fauci. freedom of information act request show that he was reacting to some possibilities
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that this may actually be a lab-leaked theory in early days of covid-19. last night dr. fauci defended himself from these attacks. >> it is what it is. i'm a public figure. ly take the arrows and the swings. they are fabricated. that's just what it is. we will have to do our jobs, rachel. david: detailing possible leak theory and trump officials before leaving office, secretary of state mike pompeo blamed dr. fauci for inconsistency in messaging. >> i've seen some of the emails. what really matters here is when it mattered most when the chinese were covering this up in early january of 2020, dr. fauci certainly would have seen the same intelligence that i saw. >> david: fox news obtained emails sent in early january
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this year by chris ford, former acting under and thomas, former assistant secretary of the bureau of arms control verification. ford wrote on january 5th it is become more embarrassing. we briefed our slides to you and your experts in our initiation several weeks ago. i would like to know what in the slides they find objectionable. griff, that clearly shows in-fighting there at the state department meanwhile dr. fauci began his career at the national institute of health in 1968 and led the united states in early days of aids crisis 40 years ago, the white house is pointing to that record saying he's a public servant and they are standing behind him 100%. griff: what did he know and when he knew it, david spunt at the
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white house. jacqui: christina coleman joins us live with that story, christina. christina: the crew members stopping man yesterday. man -- s angeles to nashville. they were able to hold the man down by putting his hands behind his back with zip ties. man has not been identified and it's unclear what prompted his frightening behavior. delta flight 386 was diverted to albuquerque, they made an emergency landing yesterday afternoon. the man has been arrested by airport police. the fbi is investigating. the agency tweeted yesterday that there were no threats to the public. delta also released a statement
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thanking the crew for assisting and detaining the unruly passenger. they said, quote, the aircraft landed without incident and the passenger removed by law enforcement. we apologize to our customers for the delay and any additional inconvenience. now, this comes as the faa deals with a spike in outbursts on flights since january 1st, the agency has received more than 2500 reports of unruly behavior by passengers. the faa says most of them had to deal with people upset over hearing masks, jacqui. >> incredible. quick thinking. griff: the department of justice says it's making ransomwar inch.
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>> following spring of targeted attacks against u.s. businesses. >> we can't do it alone. business leaders have a responsibility to strengthen their cyber defenses to protect the american public and our economy. charles: just this week alone a ransom ware disrupted fare services in martha's vineyard and another linked to group in russia, jbs to shut down 9 u.s. processing plants which account for a quarter of u.s. beef supply. the company says those plants are now back up and running and as far as the price of meat goes, experts say it may go up in the short-term but this latest attack will not have a long-term effect on the u.s. supply. >> the pandemic and how it affected the meat backing especially in the midwest. we saw a fairly resilient food
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supply chain. charles: in the mean time we are learning more about the cyber breach that led to the shutdown of colonial pipeline. did not use multifactor verification. the account was not acted and reportedly the vehicle used to shut down the nation's largest pipeline. griff. griff: well, charles, from pipelines to beef to fairy service, it's getting scary out there. thank you for covering that, charles watson in atlanta. >> for more on growing threat let's bring former state department senior adviser morgan wright. thank you for being with us today. i want to start with the ransom ware attacks on the rise. the u.s. consists of 52% of the world's attacks. why is that and what can congress or the biden
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administration do to curve it especially knowing that 90% of critical infrastructure is privately owned and that's a risk to supply chain? >> you know, jacqui, that's a great graphic. we have a large infrastructure and we are open in terms of the people that can come and the things that you can connect to so it creates an initial problem and then the other part of that too, a lot of the infrastructures, 85% owned by the private sector, a lot of infrastructures that have not been modernized or built on modern technology. they've applied things to the top of them to connect them to networks and the internet but some of the things, jacqui were never designed to be connected to the internet and that created problems that companies really need. >> russian cyber criminals are suspected in colonial pipeline
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and jbx hacks, does he push sanctions, what's actually going to be effective in intimidating russia? >> you know, we are the good guys. we always fight with one hand behind our backs, can we take critical infrastructure, can we take out power, water, schools, absolutely, we don't because we are not that kind of a nation and we don't allow games like that to operate inside of our borders. sanctions aren't going to work. we have to realize it's a fiction to believe that russia, china, north korea, iran will ever go by the norms of the rest of society and be good cyber citizens. instead, what we have to do is take a lesson from elon musk. elon faced space travel by saying, why can't we use rockets. we have to stop thinking about recovering from attacks and start saying, we have to stop these things before they even get started. there's no need to respond to something that has been stopped dead in its tracks. >> i want to play a soundbite
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from director on what he said about ransomware becoming a profitable business. >> it's a business that's profitable and we will see hackers overseas, criminals overseas continue to flood into the market and until we change the equation and the profitability of this criminal enterprise, it will continue. >> what do you make of that and what role if any do you think crypto has in all of this? >> you know, jacqui, this is something that i've been saying for a long time. because one of the gains, dark side have taken lessons from, it's estimated they made $3.2 billion in ransomware payments. it's crypto, we don't want you to do that.
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guess what, the bad actors are ruining it. you will have to verify who the payments are going to and be able to stop payments and if you can demontize it and takeaway the financial incentive, a lot of the things will go away. their capital is set hard even in russia and china. the way they make money is holding companies ransom until they pay. >> former state department senior adviser and chief security adviser at centinnal1. griff. griff: parents around the country are speaking out against woke curriculum as most schools embrace critical race theory, crt for short. we will speak to a parent who is fighting back in the washington area. first take a closer look at exactly what crt is. many americans aren't familiar with the term critical race
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theory. a controversial concept that's decade's old suggesting racism is at the core of our institutions, policies in society, but it's gaining momentum now. in public schools curriculums across the country stirring fierce debate and upsetting many parents because it focuses on equity, race and transgender matters rather than traditional reading, writing and arithmetic. no nowhere is raging more here in suburbs as for use parents are fighting for their kids' education. >> that means it can't be done away with which is an excuse for failure. it's a very dangerous ideology and for the white kids, it's, you know, what -- what did i do wrong and am i responsible for this, that guilt, it's a
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destructive theory. griff: superintendent insists they are not teaching critical race theory. >> our equity programs in our professional development for teachers is not about bringing one student down or elevating another student. our equity efforts is providing a world-class education for all of our students. >> charge against crt, executive direct o of the fight for school's pack and the father of two children in the county school district. ian, thank you for taking time so you see the superintendents saying, well, it's not crt but parents like you feel this is crt. what is being taught to your kids? >> well, you know, it's funny. i actually just tweeted out one of the training materials in public schools where it's a list of your either an oppress e or privileged, right? if you're a christian you're an oppressor.
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if you're a light-skinned individual of one race, you are an oppressor, if you're a darker skin person of the same race, you're privileged. i mean, you're oppressed. they are really integrating what i call a religion of division in county public schools. they start saying we don't do critical race theory and they came back and said, well, you know you saw the video but that was a college course of critical theory. now they are admitting that culturally responsive learning is interwoven with critical race theory. the more we expose and communicate the message from loudoun county shifts. it felts down to the classroom. they will try and keep pushing back against it but the fact is we have dozens -- hundreds of documents to show exactly what they're teaching and we will continue to fine a light on it. griff give what recourse do you
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have? >> we started a recall of the 6 school board members that are pushing this and involved in this list back in march. we launched it on may eighth. we collected 1500 signatures on days. last week we collected another 1500 signatures, so as of sunday we are at 5,000, now we need about 17,000 total. i would expect by the end of this weekend when we get to the count, we will are probably close to 50% of the threshold for some of these school board members so we are really making progress. parents are taking time out of their day. they are this all day every day getting signaturing and required up and every time that loudoun public schools does something like putting teachers on leave, our our coalition grows larger. griff: i saw a video of a woman being interviewed because she's fighting crt and yet another neighbor was flipping her the
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bird. >> yeah, that's why i call it the religion of division because this is our point. this kind of thing put in schools or in the government or even in the corporate workplace, it divides people and, you know, the people that are for critical race theory that think is valuable, their motto, if you're against this, then you're a problem, you're a bad person. you are the enemy and they don't have respect for first-amendment debate. they don't want to actually defend this stuff because they know they can't, so what do they do, they attack and they try and silence. they don't believe in the first amendment because if you get to critical race theory you will see it's systemically racist. there's no respect for civil discourse. at the end of this where this all comes to a conclusion, you will see that over the past several years, right under our noses special interest groups have taken over our local public schools and we've got parents out there every day that are working and i think we are going
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to expose exactly how this all happened. griff: ian, quickly, the 30 seconds that we have left. for parents this is personal. what are you telling children what you're seeing coming home in the homework? >> i try and teach them how i want them to view people. i want people to view people for the content of their character and look at individuals. if they see something in school that goes against that and makes them concern, i want them to tell me and i will deal with that at home. government does not get to control how i teach my kids, how i raise my kids to be good moral human beings. that's the job of parents and not the schools. griff: ian prior, thank you for taking the time. keep us posted on how your fight goes. >> thank you. >> president biden marking 4 decades since the first patients were diagnosed with aids. the president saying in a statement, quote, on the 40th year of hiv-aids epidemic we
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remember the lives cut short by the terrible disease including so many whose pain went unacknowledged for far too long. we must rededicate ourselves to reducing hiv infections and aids-related deaths. the president said during the campaign he would move to decriminalize hiv exposure. today's statement doesn't have any mention of the promise but biden has pledged to support a bill reintroduced by congresswoman barbara lee earlier this year. rare public appearance from north korean dictator, kim jong un, that's coming up next. ♪ ♪ ♪
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with real-time notifications and a week of uninterrupted recording. all powered by reliable, secure wifi from xfinity. gotta respect his determination. it's easy and affordable to get started. get self protection for $10 a month. griff: north korean dictator kim jong un made a rare appearance friday at a government meeting in pyongyang, first time in public since may sixth. he addressed the deteriorating north korean economy made worse by the covid pandemic which closed many border crossings with north korea's main trading partner, china. ♪ ♪ ♪ jacqui: president biden rejecting latest gop offer on infrastructure during phone call with the lead republican negotiator senator shelley, biden proposed $2.3 trillion deal. part of 6 trillion-dollar budget for fiscal year 2022.
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that was quickly rejected by republicans in congress saying such a massive spending bill will have a severe impact on generations to come. democrats say, though, the spending is necessary to bring the economy back from the pandemic. i want to go, though, to the full screen that we have talking about this. the budget for the fiscal year 2022 and if you look at the projected revenue, it looks like 4.174 trillion, deficit $1.8 trillion. this is what republicans have been sounding off on, democrats say this is going to pay for itself over time. we had congressman geramendi on the show last hour how we haven't made the investments in the country's infrastructure for a long time. here is what he said. >> most americans if not every american understands that we are
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significantly understanding for our infrastructure, streets, roads, bridges, and the like. in fact, senator mcconnell has a major bridge across the ohio river that's a couple of billion dollars right there that needs to be built. so as we look at this infrastructure and the number, the topline number, we need to look at what is included in that top line. griff: senator mcconnell was in kentucky this week how he's holding out hope but i don't think republicans and democrats are seeing off the same sheet of music, if you will, here. we talk today congressman nicole from new york, republican, here is what she said about where negotiations stand. >> they put in all sorts of spending that is going to hurt our nation and already hurting us when you look at the lack of labor available. when you look at the amount of -- of products that are less available on the market because of the labor shortage, the
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supply chain interrupted and the cost of goods are going up. inflation, food, gas, everything is going up and as a result of the policies put in place by the democrats. griff: jacqui, you're on the hill all week long, where what's is your sense of where things stand? jacqui: the understanding is that they will do the social programs in the second bill. it's surprising almost to see that there hasn't been a ton of traction between the gop and -- and the white house on figuring out this hard infrastructure bill because it's already been established that they are going to do the roads and the bridges and the broadband in this first iteration but then they were going to do the social stuff by reconciliation second and what's interesting is senator joe manchin, west virginia, democrat, moderate. he says he's not going to vote for a democrat-only bill on hard infrastructure because you've got this demonstrable support
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from republicans wanting to come to the table and make investments in infrastructure, but this is taking a really long time and they're actually having to concoct this backup plan if the gop and white house talks fall apart so congress has something else to fall back on. it's just, you know, i think feeling like this has -- is in the final stage of the dance here on congress. griff: talks will only on monday, we will see what happens. one of the things from the start, though, there was a sticking point it seems is how you pay for this. we showed the numbers very high numbers, but how you pay for it and whether it threatness the president trump 2017 tax cut law. jacqui: most recent offer from the white house, they got around the proposed increase in the corporate tax rate. they were proposing 28% tax hike up from 21%. biden said that we are not abandoning our long-term plans. we still want to hike corporate tack rate but for the purposes of paying for this specific plan, proposed 15%, minimum tax
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on the handful of companies that pay very little or nothing in taxes and still didn't get a whole lot of movement from the gop. now, on the other hand, republicans are saying, look, you have so much money laid out for 2022 to 2031, look at unemployment, billions of dollars laid out for that and the job's reports are showing steady growth, certainly not where you want to be, but trending in the right direction. so especially when the june job's report comes out in june and you can see when the states that aren't taking the federal enhanced unemployment benefits anymore, maybe you see more appetite to move some of that unemployment money but right now they are just at an impasse. griff: we will see where it goes. more on that coming up. plus vice president harris headed to central america next week trying to stem the tide of migrants from the region heading north but is she going the wrong way? we will find out.
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the miracle-ear advantage for yourself. griff: you're looking at live pictures from our southern border there. courtesy of fox flight team where the migrant crisis grows by the day. that's la joya, texas there, we can see that border patrol has encountered yet another group of illegal crossing migrants. la joya is in the rio grande valley, ground zero for president biden border crisis in the rgv, just this year they have had 60 large groups of 100 plus migrants in the very location, right there where you're looking at this group. this past week they had 192 migrants in one crossing, in the 198, 50 were unaccompanied children. aishah, live 15 miles of la joya in mission, texas with new
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exclusive video of migrants crossing. the video is quite something. aishah: thank you. thanks, griff. yeah, we have been seeing a lot in the past couple of days and republicans as you know would love to see the vice president make a pit stop here at the border on her way to central america this weekend just to get a firsthand look at what some states like texas are going through. take a look at some of the video that we captured over the week. this is thursday night. we saw a big group, 70 migrants including 40 unaccompanied children crossing the la joya, texas during a terrible thunderstorm, lighting too. they waited hours, griff, to great processed because border patrol did not have enough buses to go around and then check out this dps trail camp. it was recently found with a suspected cartel scout, officers say he stole it from the border likely trying to clear a path for smugglers. this week governor greg abbott vowed that texas would begin
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arresting anyone crossing the border illegally and spend time in jail for criminal trespassing on private properties as the president promises more than $300 million in aid for the triangle countries. >> he has the power to look at that little boy crying or the one that was dumped over the world several weeks ago, the little girls, and say i want something done about that. it's awful what he is doing to american citizens and to those innocent people and children who are trying to get here who should only come here legally. aishah: and griff, as vice president kamala harris heads to guatemala, i ask the man from el salvador who came over with his wife and his 1-year-old baby, you know, what would it have taken for him to stay in his home country. he says there's just too much corruption engrained in their society and culture that there was just nothing that was going to make him stay. he was coming here to america no matter what, griff. griff: vice president harris
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going down to address the root causes of northern triangle. i want to ask you because you have done great coverage all this week and we had 178,000 crossing encounters in april before that and march 100,000, it peaked early. much earlier than we traditionally see. may, certainly has not slowed down. are you getting the sense that our border patrol, dps officials and others are really getting overwhelmed? >> they are deeply, deeply frustrated. of course, we have sources on the ground that talk to us all of the time but even just, you know, at the site on thursday that i visited during that terrible thunderstorm, you could see it on their faces. they didn't have enough buses. i mean, they were out there for hours trying to process these migrants and, you know, we often see a dip in the migrants coming over during the summer months because it gets so dang hot down here, but there is a lot of
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concern on the ground about title 42. of course, pandemic related restriction on adult migrants basically sending them back immediately. there is a lot of concern that once that is lifted, we don't know when that's going to happen but when it does, if there's not a plan in place, a relate plan, then these folks here on the ground, dps officers, border patrol agents are really worried about what they're calling, you know, the flood gates will open and they just don't feel like they are prepared. griff: incredible that it could get worse if title 42 is removed. aishah in mission, texas, thank you very much. aishah: you bet. jacqui: the supreme court is wrapping up their term this month and they're set to announce some rulings on some very hot button cases. our legal panel breaks it all down coming up next.
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jacqui: g7 nations reaching a landmark agreement this morning to raise taxes on big-tech giants like google, apple and amazon. ryan breaks it down for us, ryan. ryan: hi, there, jacqui, met in london and agreed to support the idea of a global minimum corporate tax of at least 15%. why? to deter multi-national companies from avoiding taxes by stashing profits in countries with lower tax rates.
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the g7 is, of course, shorthand for the group of 7, that's some of the 1 richest countries in the world. the richest economies including the united states and the biden administration has been championing this idea for a good while pushing it within the group. keep in mind, president biden will be traveling here to the uk later this week for a gathering of g7 heads of state, so this is in the run-up to that and this is a big win for him ahead of the meeting. secretary of the treasury janet yellen spoke with reporters a short while ago. >> for too long there has been a global race to the bottom in corporate taxes where countries compete by lower tax rates instead of well-being of citizens and natural environments. the g7 has taken significant steps this weekend to end the existing harmful dynamic making commitments today that provide tremendous momentum towards achieving a robust, global
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minimum tax at a rate of at least 15%. ryan: jacqui, another aspect would see tech american companies like apple, google, pay taxes where they sell services and not have physical presence. that's been a big bone of contention with the united states and european allies for years. now, of course, jacqui, 7 countries agreeing in -- >> jacqui: looks like we lost ryan, but we got most, the jest of his report, thank you, ryan. all right. we want to move now to a busy month for the supreme court. the justices are going to issue rulings on 23 cases involving issues like free speech, religious liberty and health care and that's only naming a few. joining us to discuss
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constitutional accountability center president elizabeth and president judicial crisis network kerry saborino. >> great to be here. >> great to be here. jacqui: whether the affordable care act can survive without the mandate. democrats including president biden said during justice amy coney barrett could try to strike down aca that chief justice john roberts pushed it beyond its plausible meaning to save the statute. elizabeth, i will ask you first and carrie respond. can the aca stand if the law is struck down? >> the republican congress that zeroed out the individual mandate intended to have that and given that that's the case, the case should be an easy one for the supreme court even for those justices like perhaps justice amy coney barrett who opposed the aca more generally as a matter of principle but
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this case simply is just another attempt to try to get the supreme court to do what republican politicians want but can't seem to the political system which is get rid of the aca. but the fact is that it's very popular of americans because of the protections of preexisting conditions and allowing people to stay on parents' insurance and chief justice roberts said during argument, it's not our job. don't bring these kind of frankly legally bogus cases to the court trying to get them to do their dirty work. jacqui: what's the response to that? >> they are effectively trying to apply a tax that can come out to zero and it makes it a crazy situation for them. the big question here is, if the individual mandate goes away and there may well be votes that that's unconstitutional in the court right now, what happens to the rest of the law? that would be a fractured decision. it doesn't necessarily line up
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with traditional idea logical grounds, how they are going to approach that. it's so important as you mentioned to remember this is a case that democrats use today completely scare monger the amy coney barrett hearings. remember all of the posters behind the senators, she will kick people off of the insurances. that's obviously that's not the case. they knew that wasn't the case at the time. that's not the question that's before the court. it has to do what parts of the law stand and what other parts are found unconstitutional. i think it's frustrating to see the evidence that a lot of us knew at the time. this is about political fear and they couldn't resist the opportunity to try to distract from an incredibly accomplished and talented woman rising to the peak of her career. jacqui: i want to move to another big case, voting rights. a challenge to two provisions of arizona's voting laws which lower courts found as racially discriminatory to people of color. carrie, i know that you have said this is a democrats are
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being hyperbolic and elizabeth, what do you say to that and, carrie, i will have you respond. >> i don't see anything hyperbolic to ensure protections for right to vote and including right to be free from racial discrimination are enforced and protected. that's what this case is about. we have seen the supreme court gut parts of the voting rights act, crown jewels to have civil rights law before and we hope that that will not be the case again. there's two laws at issue here but really what is at issue is whether or not the supreme court will preserve the right of the voting rights act that looks at whether laws that result in minority communities being unable to meaningfully and fully participate in the political process by using their vote of whether those laws will be struck down or not. and that's really what this case is about and we've seen all of the attacks over and over on voting rights particularly the rights of people of color and native communities, particularly in arizona where the case comes
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from are important here. jacqui: real quick, i want to get to carrie, i want to make sure you can respond to that? >> elizabeth can agree that the voting rights act is incredibly important law and this is not about racial discrimination, it's laws that arizona has put in place to do what there's a huge broad bipartisan coalition to do which is to make it easy to vote but hard to cheat and the types of regulations they have are shared by dozens of other states and are very popular including making people vote at their actual precinct and then limiting vote -- ballot harvesting in which activists and even campaign workers, a politician can go and collect absentee from large number of voters. this is something that, again, bipartisan coalitions have found this to be right with fraud. this is something that should be limited. jacqui: i have to interrupt you. i'm sorry, we have run out of time. obviously a lot to talk about.
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thank you so much for being with us and we will definitely have you back to talk more. >> thanks. griff: protestors taking to the streets in jerusalem this evening. it's a little after -- little before 9:00 p.m. there. you see the live pictures outside of prime minister benjamin netanyahu's residents. we have more up next.
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griff: you're looking live at the protestors outside of israeli's prime minister netanyahu in jerusalem. we will monitor the protest and bring you more when we have it. now as the protests comes, a coalition forming sending into motion a process to replace netanyahu. how will the change in leadership impact the future of u.s.-israeli relations? for more on that, john, senior vice president at the center for strategic and international studies and director of the middle east program, john, thank you for taking time on a saturday. you saw the live protests there. it looks like the previous attempts to remove netanyahu that have failed. this one might be on track for
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something different. >> yeah, i don't think those protests are really very demonstrative from a political context that means a lot. what seems to have happened is netanyahu who is a brilliant political tactician seems to have come up against another brilliant political tactician who has brought together a whole series of people who used to be netanyahu's closest allies who now are determined to push him from office. the coalition that the team has put together spans the entire political spectrum, people from the right to the netanyahu, people to the left of netanyahu, united in saying it's time for netanyahu to go and it's still early. it looks like netanyahu will probably be pushed from office about june 14th. griff: john, you put your finger on what we are all watching and that is how strong the coalition is, whether they can stay together.
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i know for many of the viewers that may not follow closely. you have a right-wing politician and you have palestinian and liberal politicians. it's the only thing that unites them, the dislike of netanyahu. >> interesting lapede who won more seats was willing to make the deals to bring people to give things and bring everybody on board with the goal of getting rid of netanyahu. here is the big where i think that will we have to look for. there is likely to be a large demonstration that was canceled on may tenth of right-ring israelis carrying israeli flags, that could create conflict and violence enacted to that.
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police haven't decided whether they are going to permit it now. they declined to permit it on may tenth. what netanyahu is doing in the intervening week is see if he can peel with people that gee with him and can he say israel faces a threat and the last thing that we need to shift away from a prime minister that can deal with that. griff: secretary jen psaki had this to say this week. >> we have a long and abiding relationship, strategic relationship with israel and that will continue to be the case no matter who is leading the country. griff: so if this coalition does hold and netanyahu is replaced, how difficult is the peace process made for president biden? >> i don't think there's going to be a peace process under this government. first of all, bennett, the likely incoming prime minister
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is to the right of netanyahu on a range of issues, but still hold netanyahu on extrahe intends to do and limits are. i think you not only have a prime minister but keeping the whole coalition almost means you can't do anything on arab-israeli because they can't stay together. they can't afford to lose one more vote. griff: yeah. >> i think that means they'll do nothing. griff: jon, we have to leave it there. thank you for taking the time. that's all for us this hour. jacqui, great joining you. i'm heading off tomorrow to the border. stay tune for that. jacqui: i hear you will be doing for that next week. griff: it's on fire as vice president harris heads to guatemala and mexico. fox news continues with eric and arthel.
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(man) i've made progress with my mental health. so when i started having unintentional body movements called tardive dyskinesia... ... i ignored them. but when the movements in my hands and feet started throwing me off at work... i finally had to say, 'it's not ok.' it was time to talk to my doctor about austedo. she said that austedo helps reduce td movements in adults... ...while i continue with most of my mental health medications. (vo) austedo can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington's disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood, behaviors, feelings, or have suicidal thoughts. common side effects include inflammation of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness. don't take austedo if you have liver problems,
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are taking reserpine, tetrabenazine, or valbenazine. austedo may cause irregular or fast heartbeat, restlessness, movements mimicking parkinson's disease, fever, stiff muscles, problems thinking, and sweating. (man) talk to your doctor about austedo... it's time to treat td. td is not ok. visit askforaustedo.com drama unfolding high in the sky as a flight attendant and passenger, a man trying to storm of the flight out of los angeles. a plane had to be diverted hundreds of miles from its destinations. hello, welcome to a brand-new hour of fox news live. hi, eric, good to have you back. eric: you, too. this is you everyone. that is a

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