tv Fox News Live FOX News February 20, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PST
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eric: war in europe not seen in 70 years, stopping that, the focus of president biden meetings', meeting during evolving situation that continues in ukraine. french president emanuel macron and vladimir putin, they held a 100-minute phone call this morning saying that they agreed to keep the diplomatic window open even as the ominous signs remain that putin is preparing to invade his neighbor. the white house saying that a attack could begin, quote, at any time.
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russians diplomats coughing at that. world war ii hanging in the balance. hi, arthel. arthel: hello, everyone, i'm arthel neville. russian president vladimir putin oversaw planned nuclear drills yesterday and holding more military exercises in belarus and off the block sea off ukraine's southern coast. massive evacuations are underway in eastern ukraine ahead of a potential russian invasion. biden administration warning of severe consequences if russia sus attack. >> we have said all along that these are going to be crippling sanctions, sanctions the legs which we have not put in place before. they are going to be unprecedented and mean this as strong message to mr. putin and deterrent. if you pull the trigger on the deterrent, well, it doesn't exist anymore as deterrent. he has not conducted yet another invasion in ukraine yet. we still think there's still
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time to prevent that. arthel: we have live fox team coverage. lucas tomlinson standing by in western ukraine and steve harrigan in kviv. mark, what can you tell us. >> president biden is meeting with national security team today, the meeting as ongoing negotiations with u.s. and allies to prevent war at any moment. on friday the president gave a bleak assessment that russia will invade ukraine and today we did hear from antony blinken who left the door ever so slightly for diplomacy to prevail at 11th hour. >> until the tanks are rolling and planes are in the air we will try everything that we can to get president putin to reverse the decision he's made and part of that is the prospect
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of massive sanctions. >> right now vice president harris in the air. the vice president though said today sweeping sanctions the ones still under consideration, the one that they've been working on, once imposed will have a major impact on russia. >> we strongly believe and remember also that the sanctions are a product not only of our perspective as the united states, but a shared perspective among our allies and the allied relationship is such that we have agreed that the deterrence is still a meaningful one. mark: the vice president cautioned though that americans here at home could feel an impact if russia invade ukraine specifically when it comes to energy cost. the administration says it continues to have talks with
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other oil producing countries to look for ways to make up for short falls and tapping into the strategic petroleum reserve. as for president biden we believe that national security meeting is either about to get underway or already underway. we saw the defense secretary pull up to the west wing just a few minutes ago. whether or not we will actually hear the president give any readout later today is yet to be seen. as you can imagine, things can king pretty quickly. we will let you know if the president has anything new to say. arthel: no one is hoping for war which would produce horrible human peril as you also know it has political ramifications. any sense of what an invasion could also mean for the president politically here at home? mark: you bring up a good point vice president warning that gas prices could spike or there could be impacts here at home, that certainly would have severe political repercussions no matter who would be in oval office. americans would reflect on what's going on with their wallets when they go to fill up gas tanks. in terms of members of congress we heard from lawmakers on both
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parties, they want to see putin punished if he invades. i would imagine the president would get support there. think about the time and energy the white house has now having to divert it to ukraine and what's going on with russia as opposed to focusing on its domestic agenda which was already facing so many challenges, arthel, because of the pandemic, arthel. arthel: mark meredith live right there at the white house. thank you, mark. eric. eric: ukrainian military reporting two were killed yesterday. the flair-up in violence all this past week adding to the already strong fears of russia military action, the increase in shelling seen as possible precursor toward a wider conflict, steve harrigan live in the capital city of kyiv. steve: a lot of concern shelling in eastern ukraine, ukraines on
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one sides are not taking the bait and two ukrainian soldiers killed and 5 wounded and there's been evacuations carried out. the russian-backed separatists that control parts of area have warned of invasion and have not offered evidence and 150,000 plus russians troops at the bored, highly unlikely that ukraine will never invade. evacuees are said to be given $130. the president of ukraine zelensky expressed irtags over repeated warnings from the u.s. about eminent invasion. >> it means crushing the national currency. money being taken out. can you live in that kind of country? can you have stability in that kind of country? no. steve: biggest show of force on saturday russia vladimir putin over saw ballistic missile test
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with the president of belarus alexander lukashenko and the missiles could potentially carry nuclear war heads and belarus says the military exercises with russian forces, they were supposed to end today but they have been extended. eric. eric: yes, steve, meanwhile reports say that putin has designs on key that he may try to blow right by donbas and the nipa river and get clutches onto kviv, the capital, is that city prepared to war. steve: that's a two hour ride from the forces in the north. i saw people in bank lines. fewer people on the street but overall i don't think people are expecting a major russian invasion to come to their capital, psychologically, they just don't think it's going to happen. they are not there yet. eric: they have been living for years, 14,000 killed so far in eastern ukraine, steve harrigan
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in kyiv. arthel: city of lviv remains open this as the u.s. and other western embassies have relocated from that city as the fears of russian invasion grow by the hour. lucas tomlinson, well, he joins us live from lvivi, lucas, 7:07 p.m. sunday evening there. what's the mood there? lucas: good evening, arthel, similar to what steve said the mood here is one of relaxation, most people walking, carrying on, going to the part, going to restaurants, going to bars, it's a weekend here in ukraine and feels very similar as it does back in the united states and if it wasn't for reporting out of washington and pentagon, you wouldn't think a russian invasion was happening. we talked to people act it on the streets, they shrub and saying we have been going through this for 8 years, annexation invasion of crimea which by the way happened 8
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years ago today. we heard from steve president belarus announced russian forces are staying and not going home after the drills which were supposed to end today. >> first of all, these steps are aimed to prevent war, our president said it more than once during meetings. we don't want war but they either don't hear us or don't want to hear us. lucas: german diplomats have joined american counterparts in lviv. the kremlin opted for the massive missile drills from land, sea and air. today ukrainians mark the eighth anniversary of invading crimea, 100 protestors massacred. putin's obsession with ukraine goes back over 30 years.
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while the west was celebrating the fall of the soviet union vladimir putin and kgb agent in east germany said it was the worst day in russian history shrinking russia's borders since 1964. he feels betrayed by the west. u.s. promised not to expand nato. hungary, poland and czech republic and nato bombed serbia after they joined. he does not see nato a defensive alliance. he points the operations in iraq, libya proof with nato now in country's border in baltics, putin wants to stop ukraine from joining alliance in the west. last summer putin wrote a 5,000 word essay posting as one people. i looked at it this morning. it's a blue precipitation for what's happening right now. boris johnson gave the following chilling warning. >> i'm afraid to say that the
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plan we are seeing is for something that could be the biggest war in europe since 1945 and just in terms of sheer scale. lucas: this year marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of the soviet union, another anniversary which perhaps wants to take advantage of, arthel. arthel: by most accounts experts are saying the likelihood of ukraine joining nato at this time, we are far from that, the door is open. most people in the meantime, the world is hoping for a way around war here and from where you sit in lviv is there a set for off ramp for president putin? lucas: we heard from john kirby when asked by bill hammer, what is the off-ramp, what can the u.s., the west give putin security guaranty and arms control treaty.
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we heard a little hint. kirby said perhaps u.s. doing something with offensive missile capability. the u.s. military remains nuclear war heads, nuclear weapons in a number of bases in western europe and also one of the things that has angered president putin for years are the missile intercepters in bases in romania and poland. they are designed -- missile launches believe it or not as he's trying on u.s. missile destroyer and cruiser. they can fire missile intercepters and they violate the treaty but vladimir putin and the russians, kremlin thinks those intercepters can launch offensive into moscow and deal can be made to be open and transparent. that off ramp some kind of arms control is what we are looking at right now, arthel.
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arthel: lucas tomlinson live in lviv ukraine, thank you, lucas. eric. eric: president biden with vow to putin, moscow would be hit with sanctions if he invades. russia has been under sanctions since illegal invasion of crimea, would vladimir putin even care? jim walsh from mit on putin's brain next. ♪ ♪ ♪
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eric: polond is not taking any chances and warsaw writing to strengthen cooperation as the threat from moscow is looming. mike tobi anymore with the very latest from there. mike: some of them are from the 101st, given a history of these soldiers and paratroopers in europe the mere presence is to send a message that the u.s. stands with its nato allies. now their task is described as multimission capable. they may be helping u.s. citizens who get in trouble. they may be providing manpower in the event that the polish border is overcome, overwhelmed
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with ukraine abe refugees and that is a potential that has the polish government very concerned. >> it will be very challenging for our country. we are aware of how big amounts of ukrainians can reach polond after invasion from russia. we are creating our plans, how to host those people. mike: now we visited the town right on the ukrainian border. the people there are scared. if russia takes ukraine putin will keep coming for more. we did not find a lot of affection from the ukrainian people but even if there were local that is want to help, the predicts is that there will be too many refugees. >> in my opinion, we shouldn't take them in. the ukrainians are worse than the russians. >> our town is too small.
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we don't have infrastructure to accommodate refugees. >> now ukrainians have been immigrating since 2014 with the takeover of crimea and destablization of the donbas region and they'll be ukrainian infrastructure, if you will in poland already who could absorb some of the refugees but if they come in millions as predicted, there will simply be too many, eric. eric: mike tobin in poland. mike, thank you. arthel: we will get back to washington where president biden is meeting with members of the e national security council as tensions over ukraine run high and as the president is facing criticism for not acting now to stop a potential russian aggression of its neighbor. >> i can't imagine why president biden will not step forward and take an action. it appears that he is waiting for things to escalate for lives
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to be lost, property to be damaged, but we do neglect that sanctions work and one of the things he could have done was to move in and remove, have russia removed from the swift international banking system, hitting those banks would be the appropriate thing to do. arthel: joining us jim walsh, mit studies, we will unpack the senator's remarks in a moment. let's talk with ukrainian president zelensky, he's asking the u.s., if you're certain that vladimir putin is going to invade, why wait after the fact, do it now as a deterrent, does president zelensky have a point? >> no, i don't think so. i think the president and senator have it backwards. the u.s. objective here is to prevent russia from invading in the first place and in this
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situation that means deterrence. we are saying to russia, if you invade, we are going to make you pay a big cost, but if you sanction russia before it acts, it has no reason not to invade, right? it's already being punished. in fact, it's incentive for invading increases because it says to itself, well, as long as we are being punished, we need to get something out of it. you threaten punishment and if you don't do it, you don't punish them but if you mix that up you get the worst of both possible worlds. putin will say, the u.s. in the west threw the first punch, i didn't invade. they started it by sanctioning me and now they forced my hand. now that on the one hand that's a bunch of a bologna but on a
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propaganda level -- >> arthel: what you're saying president biden is doing the right thing at this point. let's move onto president putin. well a know he's kgb smart and today he has deputy ambassador to the un out saying, hey, look, you can't trust the intel of the u.s. saying remember weapons of mass restriction in iraq and you just heard british prime minister boris johnson warning this week that president putin preparing for the biggest war in europe since 1945. jim, i ask you, is this hyperbole and rhetoric across the board or is this real? >> i would say it's a little bit of hyperbole. it would be the biggest war since world war ii if they went in and try to cake kyiv so, yeah, this would be a big deal, certainly we have seen conflict
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like in this europe, the middle east but not in europe. as far as saying putin we got it wrong in iraq, let's judge by action and not word. they have surrounded, surrounded ukraine with troops, tens of thousands, more than a hundred thousand troops on all sides. they are engaged in missile and nuclear exercises. you know, if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck it's a duck. it looks to me that we have good reason to be concerned. is he going to do it, it doesn't make any sense, it's going to bring problems raining down on him but he by action, by action he is acting as if he plans to do it. arthel: no one wants war. how do we stop it from happening? how do we stop it from doing? the potential domino effect of russian invasion is very complex. it's far-reaching and not to mention so many people will die. is there a last-minute 11th hour
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way to prevent this? >> you know, i think it all depends on putin. i don't know why he doesn't declare victory and go home or wait for another president. he's determined to invade, there's something that we can physically to do about that because he had an advantage of geography, he's already on the border. but if he -- if this is not about he's just determined to matter what and it's about grievances that have been resolved diplomatically, yes, definitely i don't see why it can't be resolved diplomatically, it doesn't make you would run all the senses and pay all the costs and ended up in some world where you don't neglect what's going to happen next. what reason and why now, what's so urgent that this has to happen? arthel: that's what i was asking, what's so urgent? it's not like ukraine is about to sign on the dotted line to get into nato and your point for him to declare victory, i asked someone -- i forgot who i was
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talking to honestly two weekends ago, hasn't putin won on a level, hey, look, i've got the world's attention, i've done this, i've done that everybody is paying attention to my every word, every move. he has gotten what he wanted which is kind of you have to pay attention to me, go ahead, sir. >> yeah, you are absolutely right. ukraine isn't joining nato any time unless putin does something that sort of produces that as a result. but i don't know. some people theorize that the covid and quarantine and all this has changed him. who knows? it's certainly out of character. he's always been a tactician, innovative and tried stuff, then turn back, so sort of launching a giant war in europe. he's never done this before, you know, so i'm puzzled by it. arthel: even the president of finland is puzzled and he knows him very well and he's usually able to figure out his moves, he being president putin. jim, i love talking to you, they just told me i have to wrap.
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>> i'm sitting here watching your coverage since 12:00 o'clock on. lucas has covered, the other coverage of polands attitude, really outstanding reporting, singular outstanding reporting. arthel: thank you, retake pride in our reporting staff. thank you very much jim walsh. take care. eric. eric: fox news has outstanding news people. well, they want today strip george washington and abraham lincoln off their schools but now you know 3 san francisco board members have been booted out by people in a land slide. how they revolve against their policies in blue city may spread say experts nationwide. ♪ ♪ ♪
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well, she's tripled vaccinated and said to have mild cold-like symptoms. the palace said she's doing well and on light duty staying at windsor and happens to not just be the only royal to come down with covid in recent weeks. her son the heir to the british throne prince charles and prince camila also tested positive for the virus earlier this month. here at fox news we wish her majesty a speedy recovery and turns 96 in april. arthel: complete recovery, indeed. canadian police are cracking down on the truck protestors only a few remain in ottawa after police in riot gear swept through canada's capital saturday yesterday regaining control of the area truckers had occupied for more than 3 weeks. grady trimble live in ottawa with the very latest, hey,
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grady. reporter: hey, arthel. what a difference a day makes. 24 hours ago this was the main area with a stage and several trucks lined up. today police have taken back wellington street in front of parliament here where truckers and other protestors gathered for about 3 -- more than 3 weeks, in fact, and well take a look back at how we got here. this has been a multiday operation from police. they started moving in on friday pushing crowds back and then things got a little more tense yesterday as they moved in. the police said they were assaulted by protestors, protestors claimed in their words police had brutalized them but by american standards in terms of crowd control and protests i would argue that it was actually quite a tame operation. let's go over the numbers with you about 200 protestors were arrested, about half of those were charged. 57 vehicles were towed, that
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indicate that is the majority of them actually drove away voluntarily. the mayor here in ottawa has suggested that vehicles that were towed and have been impounded should be sold and they should use the money to cover the cost of this operation which police say they still have not calculated. this all because of the emergency's act which the prime minister invoked at the beginning of last week. police say that's how they were able to move in and remove the protestors from this area. that's still a very controversial move by the prime minister. now, though, the downtown area occupied by police truckers are gone, arthel. arthel: grady trimble, thanks, eric. eric: in san francisco fallout there continues from the landslide vote to recall 3 far-left members of that city's school board. critics accuse them of prioritizing so-called woke politics by pushing to remove the names of presidents among them abraham lincoln and george washington from the schools, for
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example. but one of those booted board members the one in the middle gabriela lopez, ousted school board president tweeted this, quote, if you fight for racial justice this is the consequence, don't be mistaken white supremacists are enjoying this and the support of the recall is aligned with this. the recall vote is now some questioning the fate of san francisco progressive district attorney, the son of two radical militant members of the weather underground and decades in prison for the murder among others two police officers, recall election vote is set for join. richard greenberg, san francisco commentator, former mayoral candidate. is this the result of white supremacy? >> thanks for having me this morning? actually not. it is not a result of white supremacy, white supremacists or
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white supremacy adjacent as they sometimes say. this is just ridiculous. what we are seeing now is pushback. the san francisco voters are not aligned with this kind of extremist left-wing radical rhetoric and we are seeing this now at the polls and the results with a landslide recalling of 3 of board members is indicative of what's happening in june. eric: what tipped it? >> so i -- you know, we have this problem where there are a very small, very vocal group of cult -- acting in a cult-like manner. we've got these elected officials that have been preaching their own will directed either locally or from outside the city that are --
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that have taken over the past couple of and the city is just sick of it. they don't agree with it. at first they were intimidated by it and at first they thought that they were making sense. maybe the elected officials were speaking truth but we are finding that now that that's not the case at all. eric: do you think people -- is this blowback from the so-called woke politics? let me read you what the atlantic which is basically liberal magazine, quote, even voters in one of the most liberal cities in the country have had it with symbolic racial politician. the recall demonstrate that is woke racial politics have their limits even in one of the wokest cities in the country. the board insisting racism, white privilege and the rest is
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schools they want to close or names stripped off and others. abraham lincoln, george washington, thomas jefferson, theater roosevelt, paul revere and even senator dianne feinstein, are people sick of this? >> absolutely sick of this and as i said before, what these school board commissioners and other leaders, other elected leaders and candidates for office here in san francisco, they are not reflecting what voters want. they are not reflecting what the majority of us residents here want. we want clean streets, we want safe streets and we want our businesses to be able to thrive and we want our schools and the children to be able to get educated for the future. we don't want them to become radicalized and we don't want them to be indoctrinated and we don't want them to be social justice warriors which is what we have seen the school board
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commission, they failed in fashion, their arrogance is ridiculous. eric: saha bodin, you see what is happening in the wonderful city by the bay. shesa bodin, district attorney, son of kathy and david gilbert, his parents and i remember it well, convicted in the brink's robbery in 1981 in which two police officers were shot to death and members to have weather underground, part of the radical militant attack by the weather underground and serve decades in prison for murder, two convicted murderers and sasha says parents left with a babysitter to be get away driver and becomes hugo chávez
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translator, how did the city elect him in. >> that's right. you recapped it well. how did it happen? well, first of all, in 2019 he had a well-funded campaign. he went around the campaign trail debating other candidates that were running for da. he got a cold following. there were a lot of voters here that listened to his miami. message andthey liked his messae was a lot of confusion that people didn't understand what a da is supposed to do, you know, but he was elected -- >> eric: they are supposed to prosecute crime. doesn't stand for defense attorney. suppose to hold criminals to account. >> that's correct. and still even today i think there are people who don't understand what the role of a da is supposed to be. they are supposed to act on behalf of our -- of us, the residents and businesses and
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tourists as well to protect us from crime and criminals but that's not what's happening. and yet he was still elected, he's still is raising money now in his defense. he has a big war chest now and it's going to be a battle between now and june 7th but we are pushing and, you know, he's from the same recalled school board members -- he will, he will be. in a landslide. the thing is, though, he's not going to go easy. he's going to go kicking and screaming like we have seen from ms. gabriela lopez and others, allison collins, they will go kicking and screaming and so will he. eric: he was supposedly raised by bill harris, we will see what happens. richie, thank you. and we will be right back. >> thank you for having me. >> of course.
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numbers show migrant encounters at the southern border nearly doubled last month from january 2021. agents there say they are underfunded and overwhelmed. now arizona's attorney general is leading coalition of 13-state ag's to defend the public charge rule. arizona ag mark will argue the case before the supreme court on wednesday and he joins us now. so ag, let me set it up. the public charge rule ensure that noncitizens are able to financially support themselves in order to become u.s. citizens or to get a green card, what's your pitch to the supreme court? >> well, thank you, arthel, for having me on again today and basically it comes down to this. the public charge rule, the statute has been around for nearly a century in this country and basically says if you're a noncitizen, you to be able to support yourself. the trump administration promulgated a rule that basically said that you cannot be on welfare benefits for more than one year of your first 3 years here.
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it's a common sense approach to basically make sure that people are self-sufficient. the biden administration unilaterally illegally withdrew that rule. so states like arizona and other states are stepping up to say, if the biden administration won't do its job, we will step in and defend that rule. arthel: got it. i want to move to if i can to the steep surge in migrant crossings. if the republicans, if the republicans take back the house and retain control of the senate, besides building a wall which some americans might consider revisiting considering the steep surge and doing away with catch and release, do republicans have an applicable plan to stop the problem at the source? >> well, when we talk about sources we know the biden administration literally wants
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to spend $300 million studying the root causes and i will save them the taxpayer money. people want to come to this country because it's the greatest country in the world. i know this. my family lived through world war ii. my parents in communism, people come here because the rule of law means something, because america is the land of opportunity but no matter who you are and how you spell your last name that everyone if you play by the rules there's a consistency and certainty in law that you can make something for yourself and your family and what the biden administration is doing is essentially gutting the rule of law. so arthel, it has to come back to enforcing the law as it is and whether it's our lawsuit where the biden administration is refusing to deport people, deportation orders, more than a million people in the country with deportation orders are being released into the community including people who have been convicted and charged with dangerous crimes and we see the border not being secured, there's more drugs like fentanyl and methamphetamine fluking in flowing intothe country. it start with existing laws and
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making sure that we prosecute the cartels and those involved in human smuggling and not incentive like the public charge rule benefiting people that are here illegally. that creates incentive for people undermine and break the law coming in here and that's why as a result of the decriminalization and the incentvizzation of people breaking the law that's why we are seeing the record numbers and we are adjectives to describe the situation at the border is out of control. arthel: democratic president biden and administration owned the country as it is happening on his watch but we know party politics won't fix the problem and the party affects americans from all parties. can you update us on any bipartisan efforts to solve this crisis since -- since you and i last spoke 3 months ago? >> arthel, we know one thing for certain is that washington, d.c.
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is where good ideas go to die. that's part of the problem in the country, you have the biden administration lurching so far to the left trying to socialize the economy and, you know, essentially seeing control -- >> arthel: are you telling me mr. brnovich, that nobody in that administration will have you -- you have some good ideas, someone from your side of this aisle can go in there and get a meeting and really have conversations to try to get something solved, are you telling me that's impossible because it's unfortunate? >> well, it's unfortunate because i have literally have invited vice president harris who used to be the california attorney general, one of my colleagues to sit down and discuss this issue. we have invited secretary mayorkas to sit down and talk to us and the biden administration has essentially told us to pound sand. they refused to meet with us and
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talk to us. arthel: why do you think that is? >> i think that president biden or whoever is talking into his ear piece has been basically captured by the far left, by the progressive left of this country and i think they are trying to mick as many radical changes as they can. i think at one point we said, you know, we said that they were trying to abolish ice but i think at this point what we are seeing a progressive dream where they are trying to essentially abolish the entire southern border and they are overwhelming the system and so it's chaos. it's problematic and we know americans are dying as a result of the failed policies, arthel. arthel: definitely -- go ahead, i'm sorry, finish. go ahead. >> it begins with we have to enforce existing laws. before we start talking about different theories about how we move forward and possible statutes, we aren't enforcing existing laws and why aren't we enforcing title 8 and why did we stop building the wall, there's all the other issues, why did the biden administration
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unilaterally illegally withdrew the -- >> you did say that you think it's illegal that they withdrew the rule. you will argue your case before the supreme court. i have to believe, i have to believe attorney general that you can call some of those -- the progressives that you called out and asked for a meeting because there needs to be a conversation because this is out of control and partisan bickering is just ridiculous. it's really crazy, we can't get anything done. i have to go because i have people in my ear telling me the wrap. ag brnovich, you have to get something done together. eric: daytona 500 start in under 90 minutes. we are live on the ground. a...
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that was not the case in southern california where a police officer was killed and another critically injured after huntington police beach chopper crashed. that chopper was responding to disturbance in nearby newport beach. nicholas villa was killed in the crash. fellow officers are honoring him during police procession, villa was a 14-year veteran of the police force and you know this is just another reminder of the sacrifices that our law enforcement officers across the country undergo. it happens far too often. we need to remember and honor them as they protect us. arthel: absolutely, eric. we are going to take a break but we are back at 3:00 p.m. eastern with a special edition of fox news live. right now mike emanuel is up
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next. qulipta™ is a pill. gets right to work to prevent migraine attacks and keeps them away over time. qulipta™ blocks cgrp a protein believed to be a cause of migraine attacks. qulipta is a preventive treatment for episodic migraine. most common side effects are nausea, constipation, and tiredness. learn how abbvie can help you save on qulipta. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition for strength and energy. woo hoo! ensure, complete balanced nutrition with 27 vitamins and minerals. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. ♪ ♪ to be a thriver with metastatic breast cancer
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means asking for what we want. and need. and we need more time. so, we want kisqali. women are living longer than ever before with kisqali when taken with an aromatase inhibitor or fulvestrant in postmenopausal women with hr+, her2- metastatic breast cancer. kisqali is a pill that's significantly more effective at delaying disease progression versus an aromatase inhibitor or fulvestrant alone. kisqali can cause lung problems, or an abnormal heartbeat, which can lead to death. it can cause serious skin reactions, liver problems, and low white blood cell counts that may result in severe infections. tell your doctor right away if you have new or worsening symptoms, including breathing problems, cough, chest pain,
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a change in your heartbeat, dizziness, yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, tiredness, loss of appetite, abdomen pain, bleeding, bruising, fever, chills or other symptoms of an infection, a severe or worsening rash, are or plan to become pregnant, or breastfeeding. avoid grapefruit during treatment. ask your doctor about living longer with kisqali. mike: president biden meeting with his national security team today after his stark warnings that he's now convinced vladimir putin has made his decision to invade ukraine in the coming days. welcome to fox news live, i'm mike emanuel. we have fox team coverage with mike tobi anymore in poland and steve harrigan in ukraine's capital. good afternoon, mark. mark: good afternoon, the white house says it continues to push for a diplomatic deescalation of tensions between russia and ukraine and this week it feels like it's been
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