tv Fox News Live FOX News June 27, 2021 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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jardiance. ask your doctor about jardiance. eric: the death toll as sadly is expected to rise in the florida condo collapse and we're now learning more about the red flags and alarming warnings that were raised about the integrity of the building, nearly three years before thursday morning's tragedy. in 2018 a report from an engineering firm warned of, quote, major structural damage to that tower, cracked concrete and steel, a design flaw at the building's base and reports that the building was sinking. the concerns led to a pending $9 million repair project that was being planned just in the last few months. but apparently that work three
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years too late. those fixes had not even started. hello, and welcome to "fox news live." i'm eric shawn. hi, arthel. arthel: hi, eric. hello, everyone. i'm arthel neville. at least nine people are now confirmed dead in the partial collapse of the towers and families are growing frustratedded on this fourth day of the search for more than 150 people still missing. >> since the wee hours of the morning thursday, we've been here, 24 hours a day. we have six to eight squads that are on the pile, actively searching at any given time. hundreds of team members are on standby to rotate as we need a fresh start. so we are not lacking any personnel but we have the best. we have the right people and the right number and we are getting it done. arthel: and we have live fox team coverage, charles watson
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with new information on the victims identified so far. but first, to steve harrigan in surfside, florida with the latest on the search and the investigation. steve. >> reporter: arthel, that confirmed death toll has gone up to nine as expected. we've seen it go from one to three to five and now to nine. number of still unaccounted for, the number of missing people stands at 156. we expect that to drop as the he death toll goes up. of course, a challenge to identify in some cases the remains of the bodies. rescue efforts continue here on day four. there have not been any rescues since thursday. this as new details from a 2018 engineering report cites serious structural flaws in the building that collapsed. significant cracks and breaks in the concrete which required repairs to ensure the safety. those repairs would have cost more than $9 million. they were not done before the collapse. again, this is not pointing to a direct relationship between those cracks and the collapse
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but certainly some red flags being raised. in the meantime, officials sheer demanding inspections for tall buildings 40 years and older. here is the mayor of miami-dade. >> we want to make sure that every building has completed their recertification process and we want to do this swiftly to remediate any issues that may have been identified in that process. so we're going to conduct this audit within the next 30 days and we are beginning right now. >> reporter: one building here getting a lot of attention, shamplain tower north, built by the same developer, the same style, one year later than the building that did collapse. there is no mandatory evacuation underway but a lot of people moved out they out of fear that the same thing could happen to their building. arthel: thank you very much. live in surfside, florida.
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eric: police are releasing four of the names of the victims as rescue workers continue to make their way through the pile of debris in the desperate search to try to find any more survivors. charles watson standing by at the site in surfside with more on this. charles. >> reporter: hi, eric. well, you can imagine this is an incredibly difficult and emotional time for everyone involved in this partial building collapse and the search and rescue efforts that are ongoing right now, the latest numbers, nine victims confirmed dead. four of those victims have been identified as 83-year-old antonio lazonoo and his wife, 79-year-old gladys, manuel la font and stacy fang whose teenage son was pulled out of the rubble alive a few days ago. at this harks it's unclear the
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exact number of how many people that are missing but that number has been hovering around 150 people there who are unaccounted for. officials tell us rescue crews are finding human remains as they sift through concrete slaps and twisted metal and you can imagine that is unwelcome news to family members who were forced to wait and wonder throughout the search and rescue mission that is now on day four. >> i haven't slept much. i haven't eaten much. it's been a tough few days. i just want to hug my mom and be reunited. this is the worst nightmare of my life. >> reporter: and family and friends have set up a memorial with flowers an pictures of some of the missing not far from the collapse site. we've also seen the red cross on the ground handing out care packages with food and clothing to victims who are displaced. authorities in miami-dade have been trying to keep the families
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of those victims who are missing right you now updated at a meeting last night. families expressed while they are grateful for the work that first responders are doing out here, with the search and rescue mission, they are incredibly frustrated with how slow this effort is moving. guys. eric: charles, thank you. arrest arthel. arthel: just days after vice president kamala harris' visit, another biden administration official is heading to the southern border, health and human services secretary is set to visit an intake site at fort bliss, tomorrow as migrants continue flooding into the u.s. despite brutal heat and other dangers. let's go live to the border in mission, texas where we find our alex hogan. >> reporter: hi, arthel. he will visit the emergency
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intake site at fort bliss. the site is under scrutiny for conditions for children and some are calling for the site to close down. again, citing that these kids are staying there for longer and it's taking a mental toll on the kids and some are reportedly put under supervision to make sure they don't harm themselves. as this weekend, there are more than 14,000 children in u.s. facilities for kids who crossed the border alone. what happens next is the three-step process. >> it really is a three-step process. the first step is a child goes into the border patrol custody, then the second step is they go into hhs custody and then the third step is they leave hhs custody and go to a sponsor, usually a family or loved one, who cares for that child while they go through the immigration court process. >> reporter: the american immigration council says now the goal is speeding up that
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process. meanwhile, it has been a constant flow of crossings in the rio grande valley. one group approached our crew, 20 people who had been traveling by foot for two weeks, among them were a handful of children, again, who had been traveling all alone. back at the border, this is a live look of what this section of the unfinished part of the border wall looks like. border agents say when they intake the children they speak to the trauma that many children faced while making the trip alone, the things they have seen, of course, this is only the beginning once they arrive before they are taken to these other facilities. arthel: alex hogan live along the border in mission, texas. thanks, alex, eric. eric: president biden walking back that threat not to sign the huge bipartisan infrastructure bill unless it comes with a separate and much larger democrat only package. that is likely to pass on a party line vote. the president's sudden comments this weekend kind of threw a bit
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of a monkey wrench into the negotiations of what everybody agreed to. mark meredith standing by at the white house with the latest reaction to what happened this weekend. >> reporter: good afternoon. the infrastructure framework agreement between the white house and a handful of senators appears to be holding but as you mentioned things were a little rocky the past 48 hours. the president had a chance to issue a statement to make sure that the deal would be kept alive and keeping it from imploding. the president issued a rare statement while up at camp david. he insisted the deal is very much alive and he didn't mean to create the impression that he would only sign infrastructure if he also got his way first on a much larger spending package that's really just tied to democratic priorities. the president saying on saturday, quote, i gave my word to support the infrastructure plan and that's what i intend to do. i intend to pursue the passage of the plan which democrats and republicans agreed to on thursday with vigor. today, republicans appearing to
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accept his clarification. >> i'm glad they have been delinked and it's very clear we can move forward with a bipartisan bill that's broadly popular, not just among members of congress but the american people. >> reporter: as to write this agreement into legislation, that's expected to take several more weeks. white house officials say they don't expect the bill to reach the president's desk until september at the earliest. we're hearing from democratic senator joe manchin, he says he remains hopeful democratic colleagues will get on board even if they don't get everything they want. >> this is the largest infrastructure package in the history of the united states of america. i can tell you there's so much good being done. and i would hope that all of my colleagues will look at it in the most positive light. >> reporter: there are still questions about timing of all this. the white house seems to be kicking the process and planning over to the house and senate leadership. we are going to be hearing from president biden about this again later on this week. he'll be doing a stop in
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wisconsin on tuesday and the white house says he'll also be working the phones trying to keep senators on-board with this agreement. eric. eric: all right, mark. thanks. arthel. arthel: all right, eric and mark. thank you. vice president harris making her first visit to the border as vice president but after critics over the vice president for taking so long, there's criticism for that and they're criticizing her over where in texas she went. texas congressman tony gonzales will be here next to discuss. liberty mutual customizes car insurance so you only pay for what you need. how much money can liberty mutual save you? one! two! three! four! five! 72,807! 72,808... dollars. yep... everything hurts. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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eric: an arkansas community this morning is in mourning for a fallen police officer. kevin apple was killed in the line of duty yesterday after police say he was run over and dragged by a driver when he approached their vehicle at a gas station. two suspects, 18 and 22 years old, have been arrested, charged with capital murder. officer apple was a 23 year law enforcement veteran. this morning, community members joined law enforcement in a he procession to honor him. arthel: vice president kamala harris finally visiting the southern border friday, more than three months after president biden put her in charge of handling the migrant crisis. vice president harris went to
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the el paso, texas, not the epicenter of the border surge in the rio grande valley which is hundreds of miles away. however, the vp did meet with migrants at a border facility and she criticized trump era immigration policies. >> it is here in el paso that the previous administration's child separation policy was unveiled so we've seen the disastrous effects of that right here. it is here in el paso that the return to mexico policy from the previous administration was implemented. we have seen the disaster that resulted from that. here in el paso -- arthel: texas republican congressman tony gonzales joins us now. i'd like to get your reaction to the announcement that just days after the vice president's visit, health and human services xavier becerra will visit
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tomorrow, he'll visit an intake site at fort bliss, texas, what do you make of that. >> it took the vice president 93 days to acknowledge the border crisis that they caused. they talk about the root cause many it's very easy. the root cause is when they did away with trump policies back in february. you know, kevin mccarthy and a i, i hosted him back in march, and -- arthel: in el paso, right? >> yes. that's right. in el paso. when we went to el paso, it wasn't a photo op on the tarmac. we went to s-1. we spoke with border patrol agents that highlighted to us that fentanyl was coming over at record numbers, that they were seeing folks that were on the terrorist watch list coming over, you know, months later you had a couple little girls that got thrown over the side of the wall. guess where that was at? that was in el paso. it's not just that she showed up in el paso, she didn't go to the right places. she didn't go to fort bliss where there are thousands of beds, over -- arthel: congressman, i know we have a lot to cover.
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i understand your passion. i respect that. fort bliss, that's where xavier becerra will go tomorrow, the health and human services secretary. what do you make of that. >> in fort bliss, what he's going to see, he's going to see thousands of beds of unaccompanied children. he's going to see over 1600 unaccompanied children there, over 120 of them have been there for months. the flores agreement, they're breaking the flores agreement. they're going to hear about children that have mental health issues, that are under anxiety. this crisis has gotten out of control and the migrants are having to deal with it. that's what he's going to see at fort bliss. arthel: of course, destination aside, the vice president has to offer more than what the previous administration did wrong. do you expect or plan or trying to schedule a meeting with vice president harris to get a layered debriefing from her and also to submit suggestions to hopefully be incorporated into
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the way forward. >> myself and other of members of congress like henry cuellar who is on the other side of the aisle have pushed to make this a bipartisan solution to the problem. the issue is, what worries me is now that she has visited, no that they've acknowledged that there's a border crisis, now what? every president has had to deal with immigration and border security. how is this presidency going to do it? are they going to make things worse by doing away with title 42 or are they going to work with congress in a bipartisan manner. arthel: that's what i'm asking. you have great ideas. are you going to try to get a meeting with vice president harris. >> absolutely. we pushed hard to get the administration to get involved. what i mean by we, henry cuellar, democrat south of my district, senator cornyn led the way in the senate, along with senator sinema. we have a border solutions act. the issue has been this administration has not wanted to sit down and have a discussion on it. hopefully that changes. arthel: i hope so too.
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former president trump will visit the border this week, wednesday, to promote the completion of his wall that president trump couldn't get built in four years, mexico did not pay for it. the point is, it's complicated. so how does a border trip by the former president and some supportive republicans help solve a crisis that is now in the hands of the current president, president biden? how will the trump trip move the needle forward on bipartisan border resolution? >> i think it highlights how important securing our southern border is to everybody that lives along the border. in particular, hispanics. my district's over 70% hispanic. what we've seen with this administration, the biden administration, is they have forgotten about hispanics. they haven't taken the crisis serious. and you wonder why you're seeing more and more hispanic americans come over to the republican party is because we've shown up and you're seeing it from president trump. he is showing up. even though he's out of office, he is still showing up and
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making sure that this is a priority, that's how the republicans win over hispanics. arthel: i have to leave it there. congressman tony gonzales, i have so many more questions for you. i love texas, by the way. i lived in austin, houston and dallas. i wish you well. thank you very much. eric. eric: former president trump dishing out political playback idea. he threw support behind max miller, he's the challenger to anthony gonzales, one of ten house republicans who voted for trump's impeachment in january. matt finn in ohio on how the rally went. >> reporter: max miller is running for congress in ohio. this was trump's first rally
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since january 6th when his supporters stormed the capitol and here in ohio thousands and thousands of supporters packed the lorraine fair grounds. trump did not hold back, slamming president trump, saying biden has undone trump's work on the border, jobs and putting america first. trump taking a jab at vice president kamala harris, saying she only visited the area near the texas border this week because trump first announced he was going to the border many the rally in ohio was primarily to stump for max miller who is drumming for anthony--who is supporting anthony gonzales. >> he's a sell-out, a fake republican and a disgrace to your state i will tell you that and he's not the candidate you that want representing the republican party. >> reporter: ohio republican congressman jim jordan was also
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at the rally, a ranking member of the house judiciary committee, told us he was not at trump's rally to endorse max miller or campaign against representative gonzales, rather jordan told us he was there to to support president trump who won ohio in 2020. here is jordan when trump called him up to the stage. >> thank you, mr. president. they've already heard from me. they want to hear from you. mostly what they want is for you to run in 2024. and go back to the white house. thank you all very much. >> reporter: former president trump did say at that rally he is considering a third run for the white house. he also said over and over that the 2020 election was stolen. the people in the crowd obviously agreed. they chanted throughout the night that trump is their president. back to you. eric: all right, matt, in a windy ohio today, thank you. arthel: the race to be new york city's next mayor taking shape as we have a better idea of who
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eric: sadly, the death toll now has risen to nine people who perished in thursday's morning condo collapse in surfside, florida. searchers found more bodies in the rubble as newly unveiled documents show that a multi million dollar repair project was supposed to get underway in the building, prepared to fix concrete and other concerns, they say there was a design flaw the building near the base. the inspection warned of major structural damage, lots of people wondering why the building department hadn't jumped in sooner. there was a report that a building inspector was on the roof of the building the day before it collapsed. a lot of questions to the
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engineers, to the condo association as well as to the city. the desperate search for survivors, though, has been slowed by rain the past couple of days and fires keep burning deep in the debris. here is the mayor of surfside. >> like i've always said, we don't have a resource problem. we have a luck problem. we've had the fire. we've had the weather. and, you no, but the logistics, we've had support from the white house, our two florida senators, our fantastic governor, our fantastic county mayor. we don't have a resource problem. we just have a luck problem. we need a little more luck. we've got to get lucky. eric: well, with the death toll now up to 9, at least 150 people are still reportedly unaccounted for in this collapse. that 12 story building, lots of concerns about how and why this happened even with those warnings. arthel. arthel: well, eric, the supreme
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court expected to issue a series of rulings this week ahead of its summer break. the court is set to weigh in on cases involving state's voting rights and whether charities should have to disclose the names of major donors. david spunt is live at the justice department. david. >> reporter: hi, arthel. good afternoon. it is always the last week in june that most of the eyes are on the supreme court of the united states. there are five cases left to be decided. the justices are expected to hand down in the next few days, the first one deals with voting rights. it's a case out of arizona, specifically dealing with the attorney general in arizona and the democratic party of arizona. it's a lawsuit between both those different parties, the democratic party says arizona's t voting laws discriminate specifically against blacks, native americans and hispanics, this also deals with ballot harvesting when a third party collects a ballot and delivers in one group, the second law
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challenges when a vote is cast out of precinct. there's a move to make sure the ballot is destroyed rather than transferred to the proper precinct. the second big case deals with challenges from two conservative groups that are challenging a california law that requires charities to disclose not only the names but home addresses of their major donors. a lower court ruled against the argument that the policy violates the first aminutement to the constitution -- amendment to the constitution. the groups take are fighting ash guy that publishing names and addresses will have people shy away from giving donations. this is video of the justices for the first official photograph. this was taken just a couple of months ago this spring. the justices are still not in the actual courtroom. they will not read opinions from the bench because of covid. that was a tradition before the pandemic hit. normally the court releases opinions on monday. for whatever reason, they are not doing that tomorrow. they are expected to finish up by the end of the week and we should see them back on the
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bench for normal times as we would say in october. arthel. arthel: okay, david spunt, live at the justice department. thank you. >> this is going to be a campaign clearly in which i talk about cracking down on crime. [cheers and applause] >> supporting the police. >> [cheers and applause] >> re-funding our heroes, the police. hiring more police. taking the handcuffs off a of the police and putting it on the criminals. eric: well, that is the one and only curtis sliwa on election night. the new york city legend, founder of the anti-crime volunteer group, the guardian angels, who spent decades on the streets and the subways of the big apple, focusing on crime and the quality of life in the city and he's been a long-time popular talk show host. now, curtis is the republican candidate for mayor. he is expected to potentially face democratic member in
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november. so man oh, man are we going to have a fiery campaign, curtis sliwa joins us now. curtis, always great to see you. first, what does new york city and other of cities across the country, what do they need since they're confronted with such rising crime recently? >> well, first off, eric, we are the largest city in america with the slowest recovery rate and all these political politicians, professionals, the wonks, they have no idea, they haven't made the connection yet that the reason people aren't flocking back to work in the empty high-rise buildings that are a ghost town. the reason people are not visiting, the reason that tourists are shying away from new york city is because of the crime. crime in the streets, crime in the subways, crime in the park, crime everywhere. and that needs to be addressed. and i have been consistent in fighting crime since i started
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the guardian angels in 1979. i obviously helped rudy giuliani get elected. his mandate was law and order in 1993. i learned a lot about what he did, to take new york city from the crime capital of north america to being the largest safe city in america and it starts by putting back qualified immunity. this is a difficult arrestingment. most of the taxpayers don't understand what happened here and is happening across the country. our police officers who risk their life each and every day are having stripped from them the protections that we the taxpayers afford all civil servants, elected officials, judges, district attorneys. now police officers have to go out and a prospect for their own police malpractice insurance policy, the way doctors and lawyers do in private practice. how is a police officer who graduates the academy earning about $42,000 a year for the first five years in the nypd,
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can't even find a affordable housing, you how is he or she going to be able to afford an actual personal policy for malpractice as a police officer? so what you've done is you made it even twice as hard for the police to go out there and do their job. i want to re-fund the police. i want to hire 3,000 more police and i want to take the handcuffs off the police, the heroes, not the zeros they were made last summer and have them put on the criminals, lock them up and throw away the key and ask how is that working, the no bail issue. there should be bail and these criminals should be remanded to jail. eric: eric adams, potentially would be your opponent. he's a former police officer, captain of the nypd, carries his service revolver. he's been tough on crime. here he is talking about that. listen. >> when you have worn a bulletproof vest for 22 years,
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stood on street corners, and watched babies wake up to gunshots and not alarm clocks, when you watch mothers teach their children the drills of how to duck, how of dare those with their philosophical and classroom mind sets talk about the theory of policing. you don't know this. i know this. i know this. eric: he says that but where does he stand on qualified immunity? >> well, he urged it. he became the proponent. they would always -- the democrats say look at eric adams, he served as an nypd police officer for 20 years. he wants qualified immunity stripped from him. he carries a weapon. i don't carry any weapons, as you know, eric. you've seen me on the streets. i don't have a bulletproof
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chest. i was shot five times on the orders of the gambino crime family. i ride the subways every day. eric adams doesn't. last summer when there were the shooters and looters, did he stand up for his fellow police officers who were being attacked, having molotov cocktails thrown at them, equipment vandalized, graffiti everywhere, f the police and worse words i can't use on the fox news channel, no, no, he actually stood on the sidelines where i was out there with the guardian angels, battling, fighting the shooters and looters from antifa and black lives matter while eric adams every day with his friend, because he's a de blasio democrat, they're like two peas in a pod was painting black lives matter in the streets, instead of supporting the police which i was doing not only verbally but physically. i got a broken jaw. the cops were told to stand by by de blasio and you heard crickets from eric adams, former police officer, about that. eric: you know, adams is not
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here to defend himself. we hope to have him on. i have asked for an interview. have not heard yet. new york is a democratic city. we have elected republicans before. why do you think you can succeed with this message. >> i have an independent party line in the general election so for people who would never vote for a republican, they can segue through. also, as you know, i'm compassionate towards the emotionally disturbed, the homeless, i take care of them with the guardian angels. probably the key point that attracted so many across the divided line of partisanship, i'm the first candidate ever to call for no kill shelters. we are not going to be killing dogs and cats any longer who are sent to animal shelters and within 72 hours they're euthanized and it's do as i say, not as i do, eric. i not only take the subways, i have 15 rescue cats that i race
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with my wife in a 320 square foot apartment in the upper west side and every one of them would have been euthanized. they would have been euthanized in the shelter had my wife not gone to rescue them and people can learn more about my campaign and help me fight off the democrats and especially aoc, all-out crazy. ail they have to do is go to curtissliwaformayor.com. help me defend my honor. they will call me a racist, hoe homophobe, that's what they do against republicans. eric: curtis, i've covered you for decades. this is going to be quite an astounding election, folks, as you can see. curtis sliwa, republican candidate for mayor of the great city of new york. curtis, thank u and we will be right back. >> thank you, eric, for the
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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, 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
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>> if he gets the infrastructure bill, he is going to sign the infrastructure bill. no ifs, ands or butts, no conditions. >> this president has had a strategy since the beginning, rescue plan, jobs plan, family plan. and we expect to do exactly what the jobs plan, what we did with the rescue plan and a will do the same with the families plan. we're going to sign all three because the country needs them. >> but no conditions, one on the other? >> well, we don't have to talk about conditions. arthel: a that is president biden senior advisor on fox news sunday, telling chris wallace this morning that president biden does back the bipartisan infrastructure package. meanwhile, republicans say they're confident the president will approve the plan. >> we came to an agreement on the infrastructure effort in a way that i think is really
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impressive, as you know, it is true infrastructure, bridges, roads, rail, electric utility support and so forth and without raising taxes and so this is a bill which stands on its own. i am totally confident the president will sign it if it comes to his desk. arthel: let's bring in jonah goberg, fox news contributor. what does it say about president biden that in 72 hours he walked back his original stance? >> i think everybody in washington has been trying to figure out exactly what this whole thing was about. you know, my suspicion is, it's not so much that it's weird that he had to walk this back, it's weird that he said it in the first place, that he tried to say that he wasn't going to sign this bill that he touted as being incredibly popular and a sign of us returning to normalcy and bipartisanship and said by
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the way, everything not in it if you don't pass that other five or $6 trillion worth of human infrastructure, i'm not going to sign this wonderful bill and a everyone was like what the heck and i think the answer -- part of the answer is he's caught between a rock and a hard place, is that joe manchin is essentially the president of the united states in a lot of ways in terms of being able to get the agenda through and the base of the democratic party doesn't trust joe manchin to vote for the human infrastructure stuff and so they were trying to put pressure on him and i don't think it worked. arthel: did president biden risk having the negotiator -- negotiated republicans lose confidence in him or did the president save the negotiation, seemed like he might have according to senator romney. did president biden jeopardize confidence from the progressive democrats? >> yeah, i think he stepped in it. i think is the long and short of it. i mean, i think a little of the
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protesting from republicans is a bit overdone but it appears to have worked because while it is always true that the democrats had said they are going to do this on two tracks, they never said until thursday when joe biden said oh, of and by the way, they're linked and if you don't give us one you don't get the other and the republicans said why did we bother negotiating this at all so i think biden had to walk this back. he hurt himself with the base of his party. i think he hurt himself with republicans. the only saving grace for him is i don't think a lot of americans in the middle of june or the end of june are paying that much attention to these kinds of negotiations but it was a very strange moment. arthel: so we just showed you this morning when senator mitt romney told jake tapper that the senator believes an infrastructure bill, bipartisan, will be on the president's desk in july. do you think that's realistic? >> i think there are enough
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republicans who actually want to see a traditional infrastructure bill make it to the president's desk and i think there are enough democrats who understand that they can bluff a lot and say, look, we won't give you this 1 trillion in spending unless you give us our 5 trillion in spending but that bluff won't work and so i do think there are going to be ups and downs along the way but at the end of the day washington loves to spend money on infrastructure. they've been trying to do it for a long time and i think they'll probably succeed. arthel: so if the bipartisan bill gets pushed through in july which you seem to think will happen, where does that leave the democrats' only infrastructure proposal? >> that leaves them leaving -- sacrificing as many bulls to the shrine of joe manchin as they can possibly get away with because joe manchin is the 50th vote for reconciliation and you can't get that massive human infrastructure thing passed without doing it through reconciliation and if joe manchin doesn't agree to do
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that, then it's dead or if kyrsten sinema doesn't agree to do it, it's dead. and i just -- i don't know -- west virginia senators, west virginia democratic senators have a long tradition of likeing to spend a lot of money but this is a lot of money all in one year after we spent an enormous amount of money already. arthel: i've got 30 seconds left, circle back to the top which is president biden, you know, he waffled, he flip-flopped or he walked back i should say his statement, his stance that he said. but he did it. so what does that say? does he get some credit for saying wait a minute, everybody settle down, i hear the pushback, i hear the republicans, i hear you, i didn't mean that. does he get some credit for instead of sticking to his guns and say i don't care, i'm the president, my way or the highway? >> i think maybe at the margins. i mean, that's one of biggest advantages that joe biden has in washington is he's a known quantity. he says things that don't quite work and he walks them back
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because his mouth goes a lot faster than his head for the last 50 years and so i think a lot of republicans who wanted to save this deal appreciate it and i think a lot of democrats realize that this gam bit wasn't going to work and so it's like give me a do-over and d.c. is going to give him a do-over. arthel: jonah goldberg, you'll get a doover when you come back to join us. thanks for joining us, take care. >> great to be here. thank you. eric: the pacific northwest is going to feel like arizona, it's facing potentially deadly heat over the next couple days, temperatures there likely to hit 110 or more, that's the pacific northwest. the fox weather forecast on what those folks are going to get coming up. people everywhere living with type 2 diabetes are waking up to what's possible with rybelsus®. ♪ you are my sunshine ♪ ♪ my only sunshine... ♪
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he used to worry about how to fix the world's oral health problems. - i think i've got it. - [narrator] then he invented therabreath formulas. - you want fresh breath? i'll give you a fresh breath. - [narrator] for fresh breath, healthy gums, dry mouth, and healthy smiles. - whoa, that's fresh. - [narrator] now, the world's mouths have never been healthier. (sighs contentedly) - works for 24 hours, i guarantee it. therabreath, it's a better mouthwash. - [narrator] available at walmart, target and other fine stores. arthel: two big crashes in yesterday's first leg of the tour de france breaking down a bunch of riders. here's video. >> oh! >> massive crash there, what has happened? right along the side of the road there. arthel: in the first crash, german rider tony martin hit a fan standing by the road, showing off a sign for the cameras. there he is. starting a massive pileup with dozens of riders. french authorities are investigating the incident.
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and a second unrelated crash later in the race took down several other riders. wow. eric. eric: man oh, man, wow. well, a dangerous heat b wave is suffocating the pacific northwest, triple digit temperatures have shattered all-time records there. the sweltering weather is going to stick around for the week and could get worse. adam klotz live in the fox weather center. man oh, man what they're going through -- they don't get that type of weather usually, adam. >> no, they don't, eric. if you look at july and you look at june for the pacific northwest, getting up in the portland area, typically the mid-70s, maybe close to 80 degrees. now on sunday, 104 degrees. that's not the end of it, 111 degrees for folks on monday, the same for portland where 115 today, 115 on monday. you begin to see a little bit of a break of that heat by the time you get into tuesday but still very warm air so well above those seasonal averages i was talking about and then
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stretching all the way down to southern california where typically it is hotter but still incredible heat for those folks also. we have heat watches and warnings from southern california to the pacific northwest. the peak hours in the afternoon, that's a time to stay indoors if possible. anybody with respiratory issues, those are the folks most concerned when we talk about the extreme heat. otherwise, looking at the forecasted highs for today and you see a little bit of a frontal boundary set up in the middle of the country, along it we've seen a lot of rain so temperatures in the 90s in front of it, back more like the 70s, 80s on the backside and it's along the frontal boundary where we'll see showers popping up. we'll be tracking those of course, eric. eric: all right, adam. thanks so much. we're back at 4:00 p.m. eastern time. thanks for watching. ty mutual, so you only pay for what you need. oh um, doug can we talk about something
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