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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  March 24, 2022 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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america. they are seeing the failures. they're seeing the migration. outward migration across the states. and you look at that that is devastating out there. >> carley: midterm elections to the nato summit to the war in ukraine this show has covered tall. certainly a busy day. "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ [explosion] >> todd: today marks one month since the full scale russian invasion. [siren] >> president biden and fellow nato leaders arrive in brussels for a high stakes summit. >> president putin has made a big mcstake. >> ukrainian forces are incredibly holding their ground. >> russian losses may be as high as 15,000 troops killed.
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[explosion] >> every free person on the planet must stop russia. >> the united states, officially declared that russia has committed war crimes. [gunfire] >> nato needs to defend and tell him what will happen if you use chemical weapons. we need to tell china if you help putin you do so at your own peril. ♪ >> steve: good morning, everybody. it is thursday, march 24th, 2022. it is 11:00 in the morning at nato headquarters in brussels where right now president biden is meeting with fellow convened about an hour ago. >> ainsley: talks one day after accused vladimir putin of committing war crimes. >> brian: mike tobin live in lviv with the latest on the ground there begin with jacqui heinrich are with the president
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live in brussels. jacqui, so far, what do you think? >> it is just getting off the ground here steve, ainsley, and brian, good morning. by my count, president biden was the only world leader who did not stop to speak to press on the way in. here is british prime minister boris johnson for contrast. >> i think it's very important that we work together to get this thing done as fast as possible. the harder our sanctions, the tougher our economic vice around the putin regime the more we can do to help the ukrainians, the faster that this thing could be over. >> the allies of several objectives today. we expect president biden to announce new sanctions on moscow including on more than 300 members of the russian parliament. allies are also discussing ways to reduce europe's dependence on russian gas and avoid triggering
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a recession as a result. forming a coordinated response to china in the event that they fulfill russia's request for financial aid and military help. discuss troop presence along the nato eastern flank and provide ukraine with chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats as well as cyber defenses. >> today we will discuss allied support to ukraine. we will also address nato's efforts to strengthen our defenses now and for the years to come. we are already doing more on land at sea and in the air. this is necessary to respond to new security reality in europe. >> president biden and nate and secretary general spoke to the concerns yesterday. he said it would totally change the nature of this conflict. it would have far reaching consequences and likely a major topic of discussion right now. the nato alliance has already
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pushed the limits of economic sanctions and also military support short of engaging in direct confrontation with russia. which leaves this group with a relatively short list of deliverables, the summit does allow nato the space to gather the heads of state and move in a coordinated fashion which president biden has said with one of the strongest tools that the allies have against vladimir putin who believed that the west would be far less aligned than they have been. steve, ainsley, and brian. >> steve: jacqui, have a question for you. we saw the president arrive in motorcade a little more than an hour ago and they went in and posed for family picture. now they are in the big meeting room with all the leaders. do we know when the president of the united states is going to be speaking? i know the press has only been given limited information about the play of show today and we don't know exactly what he is going to be doing. >> yeah. so there was a brief photo spray off the top from the secretary general. he gave very short remarks as
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you just heard a soundbite of a few moments ago in my piece. we got some video pumped out. there was a moment where we could hear what french president macron was saying. we have not seen or heard any video coming out of this many radio. the press does not have access to to know what the president's remarks were to this group. the president will give a press conference later on today. that's going to be 8:00 local time my time. so do the math. we are five hours ahead of you guys in new york there. but, between now and then, we don't have a clear idea of whether there will be any other formal remarks or if we will hear fromfully other leaders in the meantime. >> i believe president zelenskyy is going to be able to address nato which is going to be fascinating. >> ainsley: one month since the invasion. >> brian: the thing sustaining the russian economy are fuel purchases from europe. that's what's doing it. flat out. so the french, for example, say by the end of 2022 we will find some place to buy it.
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do you think the president has plans to press europe? because every day this war goes on, more and more people are dying. >> well, i don't know if president biden plans to push any european leaders to break ties with russian oil and gas. i know that finding a way to reduce their dependence on it is sort of one of the broader goals of this conference. we heard the german chancellor olaf schultz say i believe it was yesterday that they plan to reduce their dependence on russian oil and gas but cutting it off right now immediately would trigger an economic recession across europe, which is a major concern for this group. so, finding replacement for that energy supply is a very big objective here. and we know that president biden's critics have pushed the u.s. to step up its domestic production and, you know, become a net exporter -- a major exporter of especially lng
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liquified natural gas to sort of mitigate this issue that they are having overseas. we don't have any plans right now that the administration would call on, you know, domestic producers to do that. they believe they have the resources if they want to step it up on their own. >> brian: canada can help too and we could do it if we choose. >> ainsley: thanks, jacqui. we will check back in with you. in ukraine the reason for this emergency nato summit, today marks one month since the full skate russian invasion began. the tide is turning as they push back russian forces outside of the city of kyiv and deliver a massive blow to russia's naval fleet. mike tobin is live in ukraine with the latest for us. mike, what is the latest? >> well, the latest is that blow to the naval fleet, ainsley. good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. ukraine claims that they have shot the largest naval vessel shot yet during the course of this are with a. black smoke billows and secondary explosions can be
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heard reason napght from the port of berdyansk, that is one of the sea. just left of the city of mariupol. berdyansk is one russia claimed control of early in this war. the ship is one of russia's alligator class tank carriers, the name is orsk filmed offloading armored personnel carriers. the ship was hit with a tack tackle ballistic missile. city of mariupol reveals miles and miles of scorched earth. having countered some 9300 dead. the u.n. says the death tolls will be dramatically higher when the smoke clears and make an accurate assessment. despite the indiscriminate pounding of that port city. ukrainian fighters are hanging on and still resisting. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy gave address in english. he encouraged people all over the world to protest. >> the world must stop the war
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so your understanding come from your offices, your homes, your schools and your offices. come in the name of peace. come with ukrainian symbols to support ukraine, to support freedom. to support life. come to your squares, your streets, make yourselves visible and heard. >> a humanitarian disaster is shaping up in the town of chernihiv northeast of kyiv. 150,000 people still strapped there a bridge blown up. cut off from drinking water. they don't have gas or power in a town. a human rights chairman for ukraine said the people in that town are held hostage. steve, ainsley, and brian? >> steve: they are, indeed. mike, it's interesting. you said that the ukrainian navy, essentially, by mr. up that ship that had offloaded the armored vehicles a couple of days ago. it was in his address, his taped address saying to the world
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please gather together. he said one of the things he is going to call for when he speaks to nato later today is he needs tanks, and he needs antiship systems. so, obviously, it's not hard to do the math. if you have got ships sitting out in the sea pummeling your city, it's time to take out the ships. >> certainly this one was in port. this had been seen on russian tv offloading armored vehicles a day or two earlier. they were able to pinpoint the location of this. and they used one of their tactical 3w4reu678s. ballistic missiles. if you have a location you can arc a missile down in there and get it apparently that's whassmentsd we will see how the details all wash out. but the ukrainians claim they got that ship. it's about as big as a football field. it had the potential to offload a lot of armor. do you see particularly in the towns of mariupol and odesa that the navy has been firing, lobbing artillery from the sea into these particular towns.
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>> ainsley: how many ships does russia have in the black sea? do you know that number? >> i don't know that number. but they have inyearsed the number of ships particularly in the black see, not necessarily as many in the sea of as solve. it seems they are having difficulty bringing in supplies they increased presence in the black sea. >> steve: they have about seven in odesa. >> brian: mike, real quick, this number that they put out, according to unnamed nato source that the russians have 40,000 killed, captured or missing. we haven't lost that number of 10 to 15,000 deaths in 20 years in afghanistan and iraq. how confident are new that number? >> that's the tough one.
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the unnamed nato official who gave that figure out said he basically used an algorithm to look at the losses in the big picture and extract that number. certainly the russians have taken substantial losses and there is substantial blow to their morale. it also looks like they are having a difficult time getting resupplied. you know the russianst are having a hard time and taking a lot of losses. that number may be a little high but they are losing a significant section of fighting force. >> brian: amazing. >> ainsley: all right. mike. thank you so much. we saw zelenskyy in mike's piece was he in a column i saw columns outside [inaudible] i assume that was pretaped so the russians wouldn't know where he is when they see that interview. he said people matter. he said freedom matters. peace matters. though affects people all over the world. go to your offices. go to your homes and schools and universities and stand up for freedom. he is doing a fabulous job. we didn't know his name before
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all of this happened. now everyone around the world knows who he is. we asked in a fox news poll about his job responding to this russian invasion. 76% approve of him. 19% disapprove. he won his election by 70% in the country of ukraine which is incredible. he was a comedian and actor and now he is the president those numbers for people in this country. meanwhile how do you feel about joe biden's response to what has happened? a majority of americans disapprove of what is going on. when you look at some of the other questions we asked it sounds like people feel like we should be sending more military support over there. not asking for boots on the ground. that majority say that's the last thing we should do. so, it will be interesting to see what joe biden proposes later today. nato is currently behind closed doors regarding new sanctions. he also is talking to them about what to do if there is a cyberattack on any one of them
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and what to do if there is chemical warfare unleashed on somebody. >> brian: they lost a key official yesterday. this guy has been around since the 1990s. yeltsen, one of the few of these russian officials, one of the few that went from yeltsin and putin. they show a video of this guy going to the atm and leaving with his wife. they believe he is now out of the country. they lost an official, which is really going to break john kerry's heart. evidently he was in charge of their green technology. so he decided he wants to go to another country. we heard 14,000 russians that i know where this is going. they went over to turkey. and over 100,000 they say since this whole thing started have took their visas, taken their passports and tried for another country. the sanctions have hurt but the ruble has somewhat stabilized down 30%. the central banks got hurt. the thing that is sustaining russia right now is oil and gas exports. and right now their oil, russian
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oil is at $30 a barrel. the world is like at 90 to 105. >> steve: fire sale prices. >> brian: fire sale. every day that those sanctions are looser is more people who are going to be dead in the streets in ukraine. and i just hope they sense the urgency in suits what they should have in their mible mind is the rubble. these russians are reducing these cities to because they can't take them. they are doing things that are absolutely barbaric that we thought were for al-qaeda and isis. this is a modern army targeting hospitals, preschools and theaters regularly. they say in mykolaiv, which is that major city outside of odesa, the block to keep them from taking odesa on a land war is taking 100 bodies a day into the morgue. 100 bodies. they are just saying because of
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being voluntarilied. they can't see the enemy. >> steve: germany, the leader there said we have got to be cognizant of if we get the cord today we will be in a deep recession. what the nato leaders are doing are trying to figure out how much pain are we willing to take? that ultimately is what it comes down. to say. >> ainsley: i talked to someone from poland yesterday for a very long time to get an education what the culture is like and how they are feeling. she said that there are little children that are coming to the border of ukraine and there are people there with big vans and they are grabbing these kids and selling them into the sex trade oligarchs so wealthy in russia
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when have sanctions they don't feel the punch they are so wealthy. take out $500,000 yacht they don't feel it because they go and buy another one. they have so much money. they will rob people of their businesses to take money because he is a dictator. she said the people who are affected. we have to have these sanctions but the people who are affected are the poor people of the country. people are calling on france to close down some of their businesses as we have done. mcdonald's closed down, pizza hut closed down and many of the restaurants are closed there. >> brian: real quick on that the daily a popular podcast put out. we didn't hit them right. there are promising things that we're beginning to freeze assets around the world because we never had this type of cooperation. maybe thereby different this time. let's hope. just ahead, sparks fly as republicans push jayhawks on her step down or thepresident will .
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republican senate candidates' response coming up on this thursday episode of "fox & friends." ♪ ♪ my asthma felt anything but normal. ♪ ♪ it was time for a nunormal with nucala. nucala reduces asthma attacks it's a once-monthly add-on treatment for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occured. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your asthma specialist about a nunormal with nucala.
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>> ainsley: the confirmation heating up today democratic senators as well. >> brian: guy never heatside griff jenkins he tends to be even tempered. you have been well-equipped to ask questions yesterday.
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hey, griff. >> they didn't call on me. i wish they would have. so today is the final day of hearings for judge jackson. to be clear we won't hear from her. she is done testifying. today will be outside onces like the american bar association who clearly supports her. gave her a well-qualified rating. there will also be some witnesses who oppose her nomination. as you mentioned, steve, if the past couple of days are any indication we could be in for more scrutiny of her record particularly when it comes to things like light sentences for child predators. >> the government asked for enhancements related to prepubescent children? why didn't you apply the enhancements as they were asked for. >> senator, i have answered this question for many times from many senators already asked me so i will stand on what i said. >> you have nothing to add about why these crimes, why these images in your voodoo not signal an especially heinous or egregious child pornography offense? >> judge jackson says she
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regrets some republicans are focusing on a small subset of her record as democrats came to her defense with some of the fiercest fireworks flying between the senators. >> if i had information that's sketchy at best that somehow you had done something wrong i promised i would share it with you. i would not disclose it at the last minute of the last day of the hearing. >> senator, she has had nothing to do with the prior hearing. >> no, i'm asking her. >> you won't let her finish her response. >> about what y'all did. >> in there senator graham talking about what that committee did to justice kavanaugh. now, things kick off in just under three hours at 9:00 a.m. ultimately we expect the judiciary committee to vote on confirmation in early april. and while many g.o.p. senators are expected to vote against her, there is a chance she could pick up one or two. we will find out. steve, ainsley and brian? >> steve: griff, there was a heated back and forth between dick durbin and the republicans.
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durbin who is the chair made it very clear he will not make public those pre-sentencing reports of the child porn cases because there are names in them. the republicans said you know what? we can redact all the names. we can do it in a classified setting. but durbin said this has never happened before and we are not going to do it now. right? >> well, and, you know, this all comes down to who holds the majority. and clearly we're not going to see it even though there was a valiant effort perhaps by republicans to do so. durbin making it clear. and now she is done. if she sales through this saltse larger senate vote it goes. republicans tried but looks like will ultimately failed in trying to get things like that released to the public. >> steve: yep. all right. griff, thank you very much for the live report. >> ainsley: she said non-citizens should not be able to vote. >> steve: illegal migrants because they are not citizens. absolutely. and she is right. she quoted the constitution. >> brian: when it comes to that
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very interesting. she is going to recuse herself when it documents that equal opportunity case when it comes to ivy league schools and harvard the haitian community saying they are it. >> steve: she said that's my plan to recuse myself. >> brian: carley shimkus great town hall you did yesterday. >> ainsley: that was good. >> carley: i spoke to ukrainian americans and we will be playing some of that later on in the show. got their insight and how they feel about ongoing war such a huge ukrainian american population in new york city. start with a fox news alert. five people, including three children hospitalized after a shootout at arizona outlet mall. police say the shots rang out after a man with a handgun got into an argument with a group of juveniles. none of the injuries -- none of the victim's injuries are life threatening. los angeles police putting out a
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stern warning saying wearing expensive jewelry makes you a sitting target. lapd put out this statement saying over the last year there has been a marked increase of armed robberies involving victims wearing expensive jewelry while in public. if it is visible, it can be a target. lapd's stern warning comes as city crime has risen 18% in robberies and 44% in armed robberies since last year. tributes are pouring in for the late madeleine albright. the first female secretary of state who passed away yesterday from cancer. president biden released a statement calling her, quote: a force for goodness, grace, decency and freedom. she served under the clinton administration, flags at the white house flew at half-staff in her honor. madeleine albright was 84 years old. and what a life she lived. >> steve: a life of service. thank you, carley. >> carley: you are welcome. >> steve: still ahead on this
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thursday, as president biden is meeting at this moment with nato leaders, a former nato commander shares while the u.s. and our allies need to respond to russia with force to defend ukraine. >> ainsley: republicans are more interested in the november midterms than democrats are congresswoman elise stefanik on her party's efforts to turn out the vote. ♪ get your personalpoints plan! i'm james corden and i'm here to tell people that ww is getting even more personal. keep on shopping, ignore us. i've lost like 28 pounds. you look great! i love that my clothes fit better, but i just love ice cream a little bit more than that. the new ww personalpoints program is particular to you. so what kind of foods do you like?
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>> brian: fox news alert now. president biden now addressing world leaders but it's behind closed doors after arriving for this emergency session in brussels. so, what does the president need to say? what does he need to get? retired general flip reedlove knows all about it he served as nato supreme allied commander. would you say, general, it's great to see you -- this is impactful moment for nato that we have witnessed in a generation? >> it is. you know, brian, after 2014, the first two attacks into ukraine, we made the largest changes in nato's readiness in the history of nato and now we are at a another pointed just like that. solidarity on our approach is number one on the list today. >> brian: if you were sitting next to the president and the president leaned to you general, what should i ask for? what should i do? what should you tell him? >> well, as we have seen a couple of the nations are starting to think about things that are outside the framework that the president wants.
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some of these possible multination efforts for relief. they have to sort that out how we approach this because there is going to be growing pressure for that. in the future. >> brian: right now, you have cities holding out no food and water. getting aid to them on the ground is not working so we got to come up with a plan c. you sense they feel that urgency? because we have the money. we got the aid. we got to get it to them. >> that is a problem. as you have heard over the last several days. even though we are pushing both military aid and others, it's not getting there as quickly or as neatly as we want. and you saw the russian attack and seize the buses and the trucks trying to be used yesterday. this is a big problem. >> brian: let's bring to you tactics, outside kyiv the russians know they can't encircle the city. they actually probably can't take the city. they are digging in outside the city. what else can you tell me?
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>> actually, we are watching an interesting development on the west, 14r50eu9ly northwest side of the city. people are beginning to call it the bucca pocket. a large formation of russians are about to be completely encircled by ukrainian forces. this is going to be an interesting problem for russia brian brian start pressuring them. see the buck can a and see the shades. so, if that holds, a lot of worry now black sea they are fortifying the roads. mykolaiv is holding out as long as they can. they are begging for harr poons to take out the russian ships we got to get it to them and keep that port open food supplies and weapons to ukrainians. what do you expect to happen in odesa over the next few days? >> well, and brian, the harpoons, our government said are probably not going.
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you heard, brian. them talking about that. john kirby in the past days. but hopefully at nato we will talk to the norwegians and the poles who have some missiles that would do really well there we need to give them the ability to defend that port from the sea and help mariupol who are being shelled from the sea. this is a key point of the bacialghts the southern part. >> brian: he could stop talking after -- if he takes odesa and stop talking and say i'm just taking this and many people will say okay, let's talk about it he will take it as a win. general, real quick, what about about these intercontinental ballistic missiles that the north koreans shot off first time since 2017. what's your main worry about that? that could reach our shores. >> well, certainly. and guam for sure and other places where u.s. forces are. so this is a big problem. and we see this more than once in history distracted or focused somewhere else, north carolina a
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begins to act up because they believe our attention will be divided. >> brian: real quick, can ukraine win? >> well, let's don't count them out. they are doing a superb job with what we are giving them. we need to push harder now to get full delivery to those forces in the field. >> brian: i just hope they see that urgency behind closed doors and that military mind, not the diplomatic political mind, there is an urgency. i hope they have switched to that footing because the ukrainians certainly deserve it. general, thanks so much. >> thank you. good to see you guys. >> brian: all right. appreciate it meanwhile a 4-year-old abandoned by human smugglers at a river bank. the young girl rescued by border control seen a massive strike in just one month. tom homan outraged. he want to talk about biden policies how it made everybody more vulnerable.
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steve 34-year-old girl abandoned on river back by human traffickers. look at that image. second child found alone on the border the past month. after the record of unaccompanied children in custody rose to 295 per day in january to 520 a day in the following month. here with reaction retired ice director acting ice director and fox news corroborator tom homan, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> steve: these cartels don't care whether the kid is 4 oyears old or 40 years old. it's just a paycheck for them. >> cacialghts are back in business under the biden administration because you opened the border. border patrol 9500 saves. the number of dead migrants
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found in the united states all-time high. more migrants have found in the first year of joe biden than i have seen any year of my career. one county sheriff found over 120 in his county alone. that's ten a month that's one county of texas. not counting the rest of the counties, arizona, new mexico, california. look, i will say it again, under president trump, the people can think what they want about him. they say his policies are inhumane. when he moved illegal immigration 83% declined. when it was at 35, 40 year low because of his policies, how many women sexually assaulted. how many children didn't die. how many pounds of fentanyl didn't get across the border that killed our americans. 100,000 fentanyl deaths under joe biden because the border is open and the border patrol is overwhelmed. >> steve: i think the average american, you know, over the last month during the war they haven't really thought much about what is going on down there. when they think about migration policies of the united states, i think the average american would like to open our doors to people from ukraine to figure out how to get here.
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>> exactly. ukrainians probably a population that deserves asylum in this country. but, if you look at what is happening on the southwest border now. central american surge, the data already shows 9 out of 10 central americans who claim asylum at the border never get any relief from the u.s. government because they either don't show up in court or they clearly don't qualify. but they are clogging up the entire system of countries that actually need our help, that actually are refugees that need our country's help. >> steve: you have been involved in testimony before a federal judge who on tuesday in ohio took a look at what the biden administration was doing and said, hey, you cannot be that flexible in interpreting whether or not somebody should go back. why don't you go ahead and explain because this is a real brushback from a federal judge saying joe biden, you can't do that. >> i have written more
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affidavits suing this president from texas and arizona and florida than did i my entire career. i hate to say that because that's what we have to do. his policies are abolishing the ice. the judge said secretary mayorkas in his memorandum the small portion of alien population he prioritized is forcing ice agents to violate the law because the law clearly says in the statute you must detain those convicted of certain drug offenses, those convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude and those with final orders. secretary mayorkas memo says you are not going to do that. the judge says you are to stop doing this you are violating the law. and i have said it from the beginning, they want to abolish the ice. that's why they had historic low on illegal deportations under joe biden. historic low. >> steve: we have heard from you. we did reach out to the dhs for a statement on this case. we have not heard back from them. i don't think i'm going to hold my breath. >> i wouldn't.
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>> steve: tom, thank you very much for joining us live today. >> thank you, sir. >> steve: quarter before the top of the hour on this thursday. carley joins us with news from iowa. >> carley: i certainly do. we begin with a disturbing crime. two 16-year-old boys are accused of using a baseball bat to kill their spanish teacher in iowa. the teacher's body was found dumped in a park under a tarp wheelbarrow and railroad tires. investigators say one of the teens bragged about the murder on social media. it's still unclear if the boys will be tried as adults. so far no motive has been disclosed. watch this. body camera video shows the moment a police officer is attacked at a salt lake city city airport. a bystander then quickly jumped in to help. police say the suspect attempted to rush paparazzi the t.s.a. check point. when the officer tried to stop the suspect scuffle broke out. assaulting a police officer. all right, did you hear about
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this? three house democrats are pushing for $300 a month stimulus checks to help americans pay for gas. and in california governor gavin newsom is proposing $400 gas debt cards for all californians with a registered vehicle to eads pain at the pump ahead of summer travel. it comes as the average price of gas in los angeles hits a record high of over $6 per gallon. those are your headlines, steve, over to you. >> steve: are those cards to buy gas or vote? >> carley: maybe a little column a, column b situation, steve. >> steve: all right. because we are hurting. thank you very much, carley. >> carley: you are welcome. >> steve: meanwhile, a fox news alert. the deadly storm system spawning tornadoes across the south is heading east putting 50 million people at risk of severe weather. and in los angeles, we showed you yesterday at this hour some of the devastation. now drone video just absolutely terrible as crews are combing through the rubble.
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let's check in with senior meteorologist janice dean for our fox weather forecast on this thursday. j.d.? >> janice: good morning. we are still assessing the damage from the multiple tornadoes that we saw through texas, louisiana mississippi and alabama. even the florida panhandle. crews are going to be out there. we will be able to give you a little bit more of an assessment throughout the coming days. deadly tornado outbrackets. outoutbreaks.northeast as well e wintry weather. not the severe outbreak that we have seen over the last couple of days but we could see isolated storms from florida up toward the mid-atlantic and then still cold enough for snow over the great lakes and the northeast over the next couple of days. yes, say it ain't snow. winter weather advisory for all of these areas with measurable snow over the next couple of days, remain cool for the northeast and very warm across the west, california, you could break some records this weekend, thursday into are friday where temperatures are going to be 25 to 30 degrees above average. we will continue to keep you up
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to date, steve, we are back to you. >> steve: inside because it's pouring outside. >> janice: keep the hair in place. >> steve: completely understand. mine hasn't moved since 1984. just saying. coming up on this thursday, president biden is telling dr. oz to resign from a federal health advisory committee or joe biden is going to fire him. lara trump reacts to the president politicizing health coming up. plus, crime in l.a. is so bad, cops are telling people don't wear your nice watch in public or somebody could hit you and take it. more coming up.
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dr. oz fires back after he is told to resign from a committee. >> i just received the letter on your screen not on behalf of president biden from the white house requesting that i resign from the president's council 40s fitness and nutrition. beyond sad that joe biden would politicize health. the doctor asked to resign is dr. anthony fauci. >> ainsley: here to react is fox news contributor lara trump.
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good morning, lara. >> good morning, ainsley. >> ainsley: what is your reaction the letter is only three sentence resign if you don't resign at the end of today which was jed he received the letter. thin are effectively terminated if we don't hear from you by 6:00. >> well, this is not surprising for the biden white house. obviously they only want to prioritize things that make them look better, right? you have dr. oz, arguably the most famous doctor in america. he has been around for decades and herschel walker sitting on this council for sports and nutrition. it is sad that you would ever see health and sports politicized but, of course, don't put anything past the biden administration so you have herschel walker a sports legend on a sports council and if these councils mean anything, ainsley, what do you want these two individuals to sit on then? the only problem is that herschel walker and dr. oz are both republicans, high profile
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republicans running for senate in very important states in the state of georgia for herschel walker and the state of pennsylvania for dr. oz. so, obviously the priority is not doing what's best for this council. not doing what's best for the american people here by having multiple viewpoints. they want them off of there because the priority for the biden administration are these midterm elections, don't forget, coming up in november of this year. a midterm election whereby the way the democrats are well under water. they know that the american people are not buying what they are trying to sell in every poll. it becomes clearer and clearer that they're losing support from the american people and it is going to be an uphill battle for them. so what does the biden administration do? they try to get them off of this council. their term by the way runs out at the end of this year anyway. they would be off at the end of 2022 but at a time, ainsley, where we have record high inflation, people can't get their basic needs met in
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america, obviously the sky high gas prices that keep going up, unsustainable for people, we just talked in the last segment you had tom homan on to talk about the fully open southern border that is yes still open and still a problem. don't forget, america, this is where the biden administration's policies lie. it's an optics for them, trying to make themselves look better and try to do everything they can to salvage these midterm elections which i don't think they are going to be able to do. one more thing, ainsley, i will go ahead and agree with dr. oz, if there is any doctor that is under the purview of the government that needs to go, it is dr. fauci, he has been wrong on everything. >> ainsley: he says, dr. oz says it's sad that biden would make an important issue like health political. he makes a good point there, doesn't he? >> absolutely. you would think that you would, again, want multiple viewpoints. people who are on both sides of the aisle. you want the beth minds together to decide things, yet, that is not a priority for the biden
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administration, they only see things through the lens of politics and it is so sad because you would think this could be a great council, but, unfortunately, they politicize everything and they are trying to kick off two great americans who could add a lot to that council for at least the next several months here. >> ainsley: thank you so much for coming on, lara. >> thanks, ainsley. >> ainsley: you are a welcome. still ahead a generous response at the pump. chicago businessman giving away $1 million in free gas. triple action kills weeds, prevents crab grass and feeds your lawn. all three,in just one bag. i like that. scotts turf builder triple action. it's lawn season. let's get to the yard. (johnny cash) ♪ i've traveled every road in this here land! ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ crossed the desert's mountain air, man. ♪e ♪ of travel i've had my share, man. ♪
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♪ [explosion] >> ainsley: today marks one month since the full scale russian invasion began. [explosion] >> steve: president biden is meeting with nato leaders at emergency summit. >> there are 30 heads of state that have gathered. >> we are united in condemning the kremlin's war. >> forces are incredibly holding their ground. [explosions] >> ukraine claims they have shot the largest naval vessel yet during the course of this war. >> russian losses may be as high as 15,000 troops killed. the u.s. has formally declared war crimes by russia. >> it is not only bar crimes. it's crimes against humanity. >> the world must stop the war.
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freedom matters. it people matter. ukraine matters. ♪ >> all right. right now, president biden meeting with nato leaders in impactful emergency summit in ukraine and brussels belgium. >> steve: today's talks come a day after accuse russian president and vladimir putin and the russian army of war crime. >> ainsley: mike tobin is live in lviv with the latest on the ground. jacqui heinrich live in brussels. good morning, jacqui. >> good morning ainsley, steve and brian. president biden did not stop to speak to the press on his way in. there are 30 heads of state that are now gathered, discussing ways to help ukraine. to punish russia and also to deter china from aiding russia in this war. u.k. prime minister british prime minister boris johnson said a major objective of the meeting is to ready nato allies to prepare if russia attacks any
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nato country. chemical weapons should they be prepared to act. >> the eating is vladimir putin has already crossed the red line into barbarism. i think it's now up to nato to consider together the appalling crisis in ukraine. the appalling suffering of the people of ukraine and see what more we can do to help. >> the allies of several objectives today we expect president biden to announce new sanctions on moscow including more than 300 members of the russian parliament. allies are also discussing ways to discuss europe's dependence on russian gas and avoid triggers a recession. china in the event they fulfill russia's request for financial aid and military help. also be discussing increasing troop presence, especially along nato's eastern flank and ways to
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provide ukraine with defenses against chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats as well as cyber defenses. we are determined to continue to impose costs on russia to bring about the end of this brutal war. we pay tribute to the great courage of the ukrainian people and the ukrainian armed forces. fighting for the freedom and their rights. we also recognize those in rugs who are bravely speaking out. >> nato alliance has already pushed the limits of nic sanctions and military support short of engaging, of course, in a direct confrontation with russia. so this leaves this group with a relatively short list of deliverables. but the summit does allow nato the space to work together in a coordinated, cohesive manner. president biden has said that is among the greatest tools this alliance has against vladimir putin who believe that the west would be far less aligned.
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ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy. joyed conference. repeated calls for a no-fly zone, planes and of course more weapons. he said this summit will show who is a friend of ukraine and who has, quote, sold us out and betrayed us. now, the president, president biden is also meeting later on with the g-7 leaders. that includes japan, which is a nato partner but not a nato member. and the prime minister of japan is going to announce new sanctions against russia today and also humanitarian aid. and then he plans to go back and pressure india and cambodia to take greater action to side with ukraine and not to help russia in any way, especially when it comes to evading sanctions imposed on them. steve, ainsley and brian? >> ainsley: thank you, jacqui. in ukraine earlier today the ukrainian navy taking credit for destroying a russian black sea fleet vessel. >> steve: this comes as today marks one month since the invasion started.
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>> brian: mike tobin has been there almost the whole time lviv. ukraine is where we have them now. hey, mike, one month in, some gains and there is a lot of cities that have been rubled. >> well the ukrainians have made some gains on the ground. the big gain they are talking about today is ukrainian forces claim they have shot the largest russian naval ship hit yet during the course of this war. black smoke is billowing, secondary explodes can be heard from the port of berdyansk. berdyansk is a town to the west of mariupol. it's one of the first towns that russian forces claimed they had control of after the start of the invasion. this is an alligator class tank hauler, about 310 feet long. it was shown on russian state tv just days earlier offloading armored personnel carriers, ukraine claims they hit it with a ballistic missile. shaping up as humanitarian disaster located north of kyiv a town dragged into this conflict
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as russian troops moved south towards kyiv early in this war. they are now without power and gas. water is rationed after a bridge in the town was blown up. civilians are now isolated. refugees who made it out before the bridge was blown up describe what life was like inside concern kyiv. >> i had to leave because everything was destroyed. there was no gas no electricity no water in the city. our cities are dying. my son had to stay? chernihiv, i could only take my daughter me. it hurts a lot. now we have nowhere to go. our whole neighborhood is destroyed. everything is completely destroyed. >> the situation that mariupol violent and bleak. miles and miles of scorched earth and blown out apartment buildings, unable to oust the ukrainian resistance from mariupol. russian portions have opted for indiscriminate long range fire. civilian casualties in the
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thousands. russian forces are in the streets of mariupol but they still face stiff resistance from the ukrainians that remain. steve, ainsley and brian? >> brian: do you have any idea why harpoons can't get delivered? you can get javelins and shoulder-fired missiles but for some reasons harpoons weapons to take out ships aren't allowed in? >> well, not necessarily not allowed how are you going to get them down to the area where they will need them? you see a lot of the access, in fact, all of the access for the weaponry for ukraine is coming from the west it would have to travel all the way through from the west and make it all the way to the south where they would need to use them. >> brian: you don't think there is anything coming in the port city of odesa? >> well, it could go in through odesa, too. the fights last hasn't made it all the way to odesa. in fact it seems that the fighters trying to make it past mykolaiv have been repelled that could be one avenue to do it.
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but, you know, as far as the harpoons, there is not a lot to talk about. not a lot of traffic. >> ainsley: there is conversations about large convoys on the border. they are trying to get food and supplies into the country that people have donated. but they aren't able to go in because the russian troops won't allow them to. and we are hearing that some humanitarian aid workers are going over the border. they are grabbing some of those items and backpacks and bags and get them across the border. they need the trucks in ukraine to feed these people but the russians aren't letting them. >> sure, if you put it in backpacks and things like that, that's a drop in the bucket. they need a tremendous amount of aid. and we know that some of these aid convoys that are trying to get to places like mariupol, at least according to the ukrainians, that they were stopped and the drivers were taken into custody along with the aid workers. so, you have at least from the ukrainian side a lot of accusations that the aid is being stopped, that this is siege warfare. they are making the people suffer until the leadership
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can't take it anymore. >> steve: those drone images are really something. >> brian: fall apart. >> steve: mike, thank you for the report from lviv. let's take you back to brussels. nato headquarters. we have told you that currently, the leaders are meeting behind closed doors; however, just a little while ago, apparently mrf ukraine, did address the gathered group there. and he was talking, essentially, about -- he was describing to those gathered around the big round table about all of the things that have been destroyed in his country, about the schools, and about the infrastructure and about how the russians had within able to take the nuclear power plants. and he is obviously calling for the world leaders to do something and help him. and that follows on what he said in that video where we showed you earlier he was outside the presidential offices in downtown kyiv last night asking people to gather in public as sign of
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solidarity. and now in brussels, the world leaders are gathered in solidarity to show that ukraine, we have got your back. >> ainsley: and in ukraine, down at the port city of odesa, there was a video that was circuitingg social media yesterday. they are rocking out to bon jovi, listen to this. ♪ be it's my life ♪ it's now or never going to live forever ♪ i just want to live while i'm alive ♪ it's my life ♪ >> brian: beautiful port city. this place where people vacation. it's a place, destination for all of europe. and they realize they are next. big story by josh rogin of "the
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washington post" today he talked to three mayors in the region and they're bracing for an attack. they got two bridges in we listed the city there. mykolaiv that are ready to blow should they not be able to defend them. but we know this, they only took one city in the south. you see where odesa is right below kherson. protests every day, rubber bullets to disperse the crowd. not having a easy time of it if the ships start coming in, and they have an amphibious landing, they are going to come against road blocks, some of those sand structures that you see these people putting together now. because you want to stop them from the south so they can go straight through and try to take kyiv from the other side. or they recollected take odesa and just hold it and say, look, we took crimea, we took the donbas region and then we took odesa. you guys are landlocked. whatever you have want, you can keep it. now we are taking our natural boundaries again. and that's where nato forces have to be looking to hold and
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repel what they have there. they got to get these -- all they have to do is get these guys harpoons and blow up the ships. what is taking so long. i do not understand it i saw griff's report last hour. >> we still haven't gotten them these kamikaze drones. what is taking so long, guys? we are supposed to be great at this. >> steve: people of ukraine they are at the mercy of the world as they await things and so the images from odesa where they are loading the sandbags to bon jovi who is singing "it's my life" is very personal. bon jovi saw that after it was retweeted by the former ambassador to austria, and bon jovi wrote this is for the ones who stood their ground odesa, ukraine. and i don't know if you noticed it or not, but there was somebody who was actually there on drums. so he was playing along to bon jovi. >> ainsley: i saw in another video it has anywhere language. whatever the name of the band
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written on the front of the drums in their native language. when that ambassador posted the video would someone show this to bon jovi, please? and bon jovi responded. >> steve: absolutely awesome. meanwhile, let's talk about what's going on in another town by an ocean. that is los angeles. we showed you a couple of days ago the images of the burglars or robbers because they had sledge hammers they knocked out the plate glass window at beverly hills jewelry store right there. they stole between 3 and $5,000 worth of expensive jewelry. >> ainsley: in the middle of daylight. >> steve: absolutely. by the time the owner came out, the owner was coming out with his gun, they had already jumped into a stolen car. this is such a problem. think about it, l.a. is a very showy town. if you have a nice rolex watch or something like that you are going to wear it maybe you shouldn't because the cops say you will be a target. >> ainsley: look at this video,
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we walk by jewelry stores after they close. they take out all the jewelry right behind us is the -- they empty the cases. they empty the windows because they don't expect someone to do this in the middle of the daylight. >> brian: the lapd is hamstrung by idiotic mayor, i guess they believe in redistribution of wealth. says this over the last year there has been a marked increase of armed robberies involving victims wearing expensive jewelry. here is a warning to them. if it's visible, it can be a target. you know that expensive jewelry, leave it where it belongs in the safe in your house that's why you bought it you don't want to be able to wear it and have someone steal it from you. >> ainsley: robberies up 18%. robberies with a firearm are up 44% in that area. if you read the article, this says the victims are being targeted based on high end jewelry and high end cars. they will follow these victims home and target them. one victim was pistol whipped and the other had their rom election and their phones stolen at gunpoint. talks about how another one
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broke-talks about the jewelry store. someone was driving an expensive car and they followed that person home and stole $3,600. >> steve: so the lapd now has a follow home unit to follow some of these people who might be following some of the people who are going to try to hit somebody over the head to steal their -- >> brian: the way it's working organized crime hiring guys to smash the windows and get the stuff and sell it on any site they want. crime is okay in los angeles. finally in new york they are wising up and prosecuting everything even people jump in the turn styles. that's the new message, hopefully they will get the message because they are destroying that state. >> ainsley: you grew up here. remember when we were growing up my parents always said if you go to new york don't wear any jewelry. >> steve: put your money in a money sock. >> ainsley: zipper so they can't reach in there now we are bang to that in l.a. >> brian: travel with the biggest strongest guy in your class. >> ainsley: learn karate. >> steve: meanwhile, 7:15 here in the east. new york lawmakers along with
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our own janice dean gathering in new york city to mark two years since disgraced former governor andrew cuomo directed thousands of nursing homes to readmit patients with covid. i know that doesn't make sense but that's what happened. >> ainsley: janice became one of the most outspoken voices pushing who hold cuomo accountable after losing look at them in-law twos years ago michael and dee from covid-19 in one of these facilities. >> brian: cuomo said he did nothing wrong. janice joins us now on the latest with the mission. focus on the harassment and things like that. this is the real egregious action. >> janice: the state comptroller just came out with a report last week stating that he did hide the numbers by at least 50%. so we have had three investigations now proving that the governor put 9,000 covid positive patients in nursing homes and covered it up. >> brian: who is tom. >> janice: the state's comptroller a democrat. he spent 18 months auditing
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nursing homes and the numbers three now separate investigations have proven that this governor hid those numbers illegally. >> ainsley: just to cover up for cuomo. >> janice: cover up the numbers if you see the timeline he was trying to sell a $5.1 million book. if we can show he was doing that to profit that is a criminal act. >> steve: plus, at the time, he was trying to make it look like andrew cuomo was that he was doing a better job than donald trump. everyday genomic would be on the television early morning or late afternoon i'm doing a better job than everybody else. turns outs he wasn't. >> janice: he was celebrating himself and winning emmy awards and propping up. march 25th is when the order went in place for 46 days to put those covid positive patients in a nursing home. we went to albany yesterday i want to thank assemblyman ron kim and sue serano bipartisan to
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talk about march 25th now being named as a remembrance we care remembrance day because our governor said at one point we don't care who cares? they died. >> ainsley: when your in-laws die coming up on two years end of april. >> janice: end of march mickey and dee we lost her from contracting covid separate alzheimer's. she died in the hospital. her number wasn't counted as per the governor's ruling we lost her near easter. >> brian: op-ed. title of the op-ed what happened in 2020 with covid. this is a new york nursing home should be considered a catastrophic event you expand on. that was it isn't just cuomo, right? what about zucker? >> janice: health department. >> brian: had to be working with them. >> janice: need to get the former health director on the stand with at least nine employees with the health department that quit. why did they quit? so the op-ed talks about how i do the weather, when we forecast
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the weather, we warn people in advance. and we do what happened afterwards to show that if a storm comes in to neighborhood we know what to do to prepare. why don't these lawmakers do exactly the same thing as the meteorologist? >> steve: learn from your mistakes essentially. >> janice: right. >> steve: read janice's great op-ed on the pages, the digital pages of foxnews.com. thank you very much, janice. >> janice: thanks, guys. >> steve: we're coming up on 7:it 0 lehr in the east. carley joins us with other headlines. >> carley: i certainly do. woman charged with fatally shoving an 87-year-old broadway vocal coach on a manhattan sidewalk reportedly had a reputation for her anger. lauren is the wealthy daughter of assess pool mow pool. say she was a quote bully with a short temper. she something held on manslaughter charges.
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ceos of the nation's largest airlines are asking the biden administration to drop all federal mask mandates on planes. the request also includes predeparture testing requirements for international travelers. covid-19 cases have fallen sharply since january. the cdc continues mass transit mask mandate until mid april. inflation is taking a toll on tipping. the "wall street journal" reports gratuities bruit shop cafes and quick service restaurants are taking a hit. the change in consumer habits come as prices rise in covid restrictions are scaled back. during the peak of the pandemic americans were tipping an average of about 30% for deliveries and other services. that number now going down as prices keep on going up. >> steve: one of the reasons for that people were tipping more because they were giving people cash. whatever the change is, keep it. >> carley: people felt bad for restaurant workers. >> ainsley: need to tip more.
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>> carley: brian is a good tipper. >> brian: aim a great tipper choose me. >> ainsley: iowa farmer warning the u.s. is turning into a third world country under biden's watch. it listens, learns, adapts and anticipates your every need. with intelligence... that feels anything but artificial. the eqs from mercedes-benz. it's the car electric has been waiting for. why is guy fieri in the neighbors' kitchen? it's slider sunday! sliiiiiiiiii-der sunday! these chicken parm sliders on king's hawaiian rolls are fire! slider sunday! i want that. everything's better between king's hawaiian bread. mmm!
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>> we need leadership like when we in the former administration that's going to step up and get results. we are just not seeing results. you know, the united states is not ahi world country and that's what we are evolving into. we can't get supplies. >> steve: that was an iowa farmer blasting joe biden and his administration during an agriculture forum this week. jim boyer the farmer says the president should do more to help
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farmers struggling with high fertilizer and gas costs as well as shipping. and jim boyer, that iowa farmer joins us live right now from west des moines, jim, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. >> steve: you guys are getting hammered from every which way. >> yes, sir. i mean, we look at our input. we call them input costs. so it's the cost of what it takes to produce a crop. and in some areas, especially on the energy side, agriculture is very energy intense. so our -- you know, our tractors run on diesel fuel. we heat our livestock facilities with propane. we have seen those costs double. so we were looking at just $2.20 for deville in 2019. now looking at close to $5 a gallon. it's huge.
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>> steve: this administration concerned with the green new deal. have you quarter of a-million-dollar tractor. the administration, you cannot drive because it needs a little $40 gizmo because of the supply chain issues you can't get. yes, on our tractors we have a diesel exhaust system where it's supposed to clean up the exhaust. there is a sensor in there that costs about $40 to replace that sensor. they are on back order. i'm being told my my implement dealer it could be a 4 to 6 week wait. there is not just one of them in the country. so i don't know if they are sitting on a ship outside of l.a. or if they are still in china or where they're at. we just can't get them. so i have a piece of equipment that is collecting dust in a machine shed. >> steve: do you know what you? would think that maybe the department of agriculture you know what? since you can't get those things right now, take them off, you don't have to use them. instead it's like hold the phone, you will have to use it
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jim, when it comes to the prices, you know, we are all going to the grocery store and we cannot believe. i was in a grocery store yesterday and a pound of bacon was $9. i know you are a pork producer. how much do you make? what is your take home on one pound of pork? >> well, currently the market price is telling us a pound of pork is worth about a dollar a pound. i understand that prices, you know, that the manufacturers have to put their cost on that, too. but there is quite a disparity there. >> steve: okay, before you go, jim, just imagine you were sitting across the table from joe biden. he needs -- you know, he is not talking to people like you. he is talking to his advisers. what would you say, jim boyer, to the president to make america's farmers lives much easier? >> well, i guess i would say, mr. president, that your policies and your leadership style is not only hurting yours
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and the democrats' poll numbers but it's hurting american farmers. it's hurting americans. my ancestors came from a lot of farmers ancestors came from overseas. they came to this country because they realize that this was a land of dreams. this was a land of opportunities. and that fertile, midwestern farm ground has raised many generations. and i just ask the president to make sure that he doesn't squander those opportunities and those dreams for our next generations. >> steve: well put. jim boyer, thank you very much for joining us today from west des moines thank you for joining us, sir. >> thank you, steve. >> steve: coming up, a new fox news poll reveals republicans are more interested in the november elections than democrats. i wonder why that is. we will talk to house republican conference chair elise stefanik on how this could help the republicans take back the house
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>> brian: midterms months away. brand new fox poll looking at shows republican voters are much more interested in this year's elections than democrats. will this give the g.o.p. an edge in 7 or 8 month? how do they sustain this money turf congresswoman elise stefanik thanks for joining us. >> good to be with you, brian. >> brian: how could you describe the mood at the conference? >> it's very optimistic for our prospect to win back the majority and save american america. we know we have a lot of work ahead to address the crisis after crisis on far left government whether it's inflation crisis, the historic prices at the pump. people can no longer afford to fill their cars or pay for home heating bills or whether it's national security crises with the war in ukraine or the skyrocketing crime crisis. the american people know that they are looking for a different direction. and what are they seeing from the democrats? doubling down on their failed
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policies. house republicans are unified in providing an alternative and an agenda to help save our country. >> brian: right. coming out against smash and grab. that is a difference from democrats who seem ambivalent about it take a look at some of kevin mccarthy's priority if you guys take the house you most likely would be the speaker. jobs and the economy. big tech, censorship and data. future of american freedoms. energy crime conservation. healthy future and china accountability. is that the order of importance? >> you know, i think they are all important, brian. and i get asked this a lot by the media which issue do you think is the most important is. i would say that when i talk to voters in my district and across america, people are feeling the page of inflation. they are feeling the pain of the price of energy, which is higher than it's ever been before because of the failed policies of joe biden and house democrats. so i think we need to address that immediately. that means reigning in reckless trillions of dollars of nancy
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pelosi reckless spending as speaker of the house. we are committed to doing that. that's hurting families and seniors and young families. prices have skyrocketed. there was recently a headline in the "new york times" saying that seniors are choosing when to have hot showers and, you know, limiting their meat for their meals. that is not who we are as the united states of america. we have to do better. but, in addition to the economy, crime, safety and security impacts every neighborhood across america. when you don't feel safe, you are not going to be able, to you know, invest in economic opportunity, travel, all these things that are important in this country when you don't have the basic safety and security. >> brian: all right, so, if you look at the house dems, a lot of them are running for the hills like you guys were a couple of years ago. 23 are not seeking re-election. 8 seeking another office. so there is some vacancies there and some opportunity. do you guys have an individual plan and a national mission? are you -- you at the point now
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on a conference like this and retreat like this where you are zeroing in on districts? >> absolutely. we have a plan both district by district but also nationally to win not just a small majority but an historic majority. as you mentioned, the number of retirements is over 30. it's at historic high. that usually is an indicator that they are running for the hills. they do see that this is going to be a losing election. so they can retire or they can lose as the nrcc chairman likes to say the head of the national republican congressional committee. in terms of district by district focus hold each democrat incumbent accountable failed record of voting 99% of the time or greater with nancy pelosi, which has led to these crises that are impacting hardworking families across this country. we also have ethical scandals of numerous house democrats, if you think of tom mall lou ski in new jersey we will make sure the voters know the truth about not only the failed policies who they elected to office before on
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failed policies. >> brian: brian you have to figure if you take the house the nancy pelosi won't stick around in minority role. you never know. i imagine that might be a motivating fact for for republicans. elise stefanik. >> it is a motivating factor. thanks, brian. >> brian: have to hold it there. elise, thanks so much. appreciate it. she is now among leadership. a lot of pressure on her shournldz. still ahead, as russia's invasion of ukraine marks one month. carley shimkus sat down with ukrainians right lehr here in the united states get their thoughts on war, vladimir putin and u.s. aid still ahead. >> if one of your brothers was a serial killer and you knew that he was a serial killer, would you think taking away his credit card or his cash is going to stop him from killing? he is going to continue killing. before treating your chronic migraine, 15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more, you're not the only one with questions about botox®. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine
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>> it has been a month now since
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the biggest test of full-fledged war that was started by russia against our country. there has never been a black month of this magnitude since the second world war, such destruction and such war crimes. >> ainsley: that's president zelenskyy earlier this hour receiving a standing ovation from the swedish parliament as he was pleading for peace. >> steve: is he busy today. ukrainians are listening to his message abroad loud and clear as they mobilize against russian portions as their fight to keep their country and culture alive. >> brian: is he motivating citizens. that's what he is doing. carley shimkus spoke with some of them during a visit to the ukrainian museum in new york city. carley, a lot of ukrainians are here. >> carley: yes. that's right. it was an honor to speak to them. a massive ukrainian population here in new york city. you are will to hear the perspective many solve the community leaders about their
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thoughts on the course of this war. vladimir putin, and much more. watch this. >> our city has the largest ukrainian population in the world outside of ukraine. so this war is impacting all of you. jason, how is it affecting you? >> frightened, concerned, i'm angry, just wish this war would end. >> like a lot of people in this room, we are here because our refugee forefathers came here, whether that's my father who came from a displaced person's camp. so, for us, it's all personal. >> carley: we are surrounded by ukrainian art and artifacts at a time when vladimir putin wants to wipe ukrainian people and culture off the map. beautiful ukrainian cities that have turned to ash and rubble. >> there is a widespread effort on the part of putin to destroy and deny the identity of the ukrainian people.
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and cultural heritage is a testament to that identity. and it's also a vector of peace for our collective future. >> one of the reasons was the museum is really exist because ukrainians have been fighting to preserve their culture for generations. >> i think we are seeing exactly what's happening in those areas like mariupol in terms of how putin going to try to control ukraine. he is not going to try to control all ukrainians. he is either going to drive them away ship them away or bomb them away. >> carley: why do you think vladimir putin chose now. >> he wants his place in history books greatest czar ever. >> he under estimated that ukraine has a young president with no political experience. and he thought he could roll him over and the entire country and he has been proven wrong. >> to add on that point, i think he under estimated the impact of a new generation of ukrainians who have only grown up in an
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independent ukraine. >> carley: jason, i want to get you in on this, what more do you think the united states should do? >> we are all brothers and sisters in this world community. if one of your brothers was a serial killer and you knew that he was a serial killer, would you think taking away his credit cards or cash was going to stop him from killing? he is going to continue killing. >> i don't think putin is going to be able to control ukraine. he may be able to occupy ukraine but i don't think the ukrainians are going to allow them to control them or their land. that's why ultimately i do believe that whether it's through insurgency or army or help from america, the ukrainians will prevail. >> carley: that's right. that's the thing. can you capture a city but how do you control a country when the people want nothing to do with you? so their perspective is, i think they speak for a lot of ukrainians is that the country will prevail. it's just a matter of is it going to be a week or a year? and brian i know you talk about this a lot.
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god bless mitch mcconnell and joni ernst and democrats who are saying ukraine can win this we need to look at this conflicted and that mentality and give them the tools to be able to do it. >> ainsley: one young man is right they under estimated zelenskyy and the lady behind him said they have gotten a taste of independence and they don't want to go back. >> carley: that's exactly right. >> steve: how can we help? >> carley: help by going to ukrainian museum.org and also, of course, red cross. we have raised fox viewers over $12 million. >> brian: by the way president zelenskyy's remarks just coming in now. he did not ask for a no-fly zone from nato and membership. get more details in a moment. >> ainsley: thanks, carley, welcome. >> steve: perhaps some new alliance we haven't heard about. a dozen minutes before the top of the hour and fox news weather alert. that deadly storm system has spawned tornadoes all across the south and now it's heading to the east putting 450 million
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people at risk of severe weather today. meanwhile in new orleans, crews are still combing through the rubble and there is plenty of it look at that check in with senior meteorologist janice dean for our fox weather forecast on this thursday. >> janice: it's devastating footage coming in from the new orleans area. we had so many reports of tornadoes over the last couple of days. look at this. 118 warnings since wednesday and over 40 confirmed tornadoes, including that deadly one that moved through louisiana and just caused catastrophic damage. the storm is out of the south. but it is moving across the mid-atlantic and parts of florida. so parts of the southeast and then up towards the northeast where it's cold enough for snow, yes, it's happening over the next couple of days we could see measurable snow for interior sections of the northeast through the weekend and the cold air is going to hang around so winter weather advisories are posted for the next 48 hours or so. and there are your current temperatures so cold air across
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the rockies and you can see where that front is ahead of the front. that's where we could see some of the stronger storms and also dealing with potential record highs heading into the weekend for california. so lots to cover and don't forget fox weather.com for latest forecast details and those watches and warnings as they come in throughout the day. all right, steve, ainsley, brian, back to you. >> ainsley: thanks, janice. >> janice: you are welcome. >> ainsley: gas give away is kicking off in chicago. hear from a generous donor who helping to relieve the pain at the pump. look, and feel better... by treating the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms... develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur.
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>> ainsley: illinois' gas prices hovering. -- some of the highest prices are in chicago's neighborhoods. to ease the burdens on our families there, our next guest is giving away a whopping $1 million in gas today and this is giving -- he gave away $200,000 last week, humanitarian and businessman dr. willie wilson joins us now. good morning, dr. wilson. >> and good morning. how are you doing? >> ainsley: i'm doing well. this is such a happy story and so generous of you. why are you doing this? >> well, i have been poor before
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myself. i have been a share cropper down south and i hate seeing people struggling. i was at the gas station fill up one day it cost me $75. the next week i came back and cost me $106. people ask me for gas money to get to work and to get to the day care center. so i thought that i would try it. and $200,000 and put out there. i feel a little bad because some people didn't get a chance to get gas. so i decided i would $1 million, which is today. free gas. >> ainsley: we are seeing it behind you. i know that gas stations just opened up for this free give away. how does it work? how do you make sure it runs properly? >> well, we have -- working with the chicago policemen. thank god for that cook county police. as well. and we have 250 people that we paid to make sure that they pumped the gas themselves and helped direct traffic as well.
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and we just go and do -- try to do good and hope it comes out the right way. a lot of families -- that's about as much as i can say. real organized so far today. nothing happening. so it's going pretty good. >> ainsley: what do you say to the critics? last week there were some criticizing you because they said it caused traffic jams and gridlock? >> well, i think [inaudible] they should try come up and putting a million dollars and give people some free gas or they ain't got a million dollars give $20 worth of gas to help their neighbor. people are struggling. family jobs and things of that nature. i think that when he -- those ball games or bears games, they don't talk about the traffic then. hundreds of thousands of people there. they don't talk about traffic
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there. >> ainsley: doctor wilson. >> i think it's -- >> ainsley: this is your personal money. it's a lot of money. congratulations on your success. what inspired you to do this? >> i have been poor. and i hate to see people struggling. we gave away last year something like 4 or $5 million to the people to live on the streets. churches, homeless people. paying people's taxes. we went to new orleans four or five months ago. we took a million dollars down there and give it away. it ain't just chicago, you know? >> ainsley: yes, sir. you are a good man dr. wilson. thank you so much. i understand there might be a third give away if this one goes off successfully. thank you, god bless you. thank you for what you are doing. it's amazing. >> ainsley: stick around, lindsey graham is here. his thoughts on president biden's nato meeting and confirmation hearing for judge brown.
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shot the largest naval vessel in the course of this war. >> russian losses may be as high as 15,000 troops killed. >> the umass as formally declared war crimes by russia. >> is not just war crimes. describes against humanity. >> the world must stop the war. these matters, the ukraine matters. >> ainsley: ukrainian president zelenskyy morning i don't leaders that russia threatens the freedom of not just his country but all of europe. >> president biden meets with nato allies today to discuss the ongoing global response to russia's war on ukraine. >> brian: live with the latest on the ground across the country. we are going to begin with jacqui heinrich's who's traveling with the president and his live in brussels. >> good morning.
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ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy and address the 30 heads of state delivering a forceful message in a bit of a critique. he said that budapest memorandum didn't work. it was a 1994 agreement where ukraine gave up its nuclear arsenal, the third largest in return for security assurances. russia, the u.s., and the u.k. all signed that agreement. zelenskyy basically saying, what are you gonna do for me now that we are left defenseless? he is asked of 30 were in that room to send him 1% of their tanks, their planes, and also ship an antimissile system so that he can protect this country saying that ukrainians have shown their strength. they've shown that they are standing alone against russian aggression. listen. >> i'm sure you understand that russia doesn't want to stop on ukraine. he wants to go further against the eastern members of major baltic countries of poland, that's for sure.
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will nato stop the worrying about how russia will react? who can be sure? >> the allies have several objectives today. we expect president biden to an act or sanctions on moscow. there are reports that the u.s. will also commit to taking more than 100,000 ukrainian refugees. allies are discussing ways to reduce europe's dependence on russian gas and avoid triggering a recession across europe as a result. there's pressure for the u.s. to make up for the e.u. imports and natural gas. u.s. producers are already near capacity. finding ways to surge that product to europe is not a challenge. there are also forming a correlated response to china in the event that they fulfill the request for financial and military helper they are discussing increasing troop presence across a dose eastern flankers working to provide ukraine but the but defenses against chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear
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threats as well as cyber defenses and continued threats from russia. >> today, we will discuss allied support ukraine. we will also -- efforts to strengthen our defenses now and for the years to come. we are all doing more on land, on the sea, and in the air. this is necessary to respond to new security reality in europe. >> president biden is also meeting with the g7 peer that includes japan. japan, of course, is not a nato member country, but they are nato partner. the japanese prime minister is excited to announce new sanctions on russia as well as humanitarian assistance for their plans for him to go back and basically pressure india not the side with russia in this war. you will remember that india recently bought russian oil at a very deep discount. that is one of the objectives they are trying to tag down today. >> before you go, i know that
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when president zelenskyy spoke to nato, he did not ask for a no-fly zone. two things he really liked. today's unity day. he knows they can't give it to him. they are all trying to be on the same page say we are all together against you, mr. putin. >> that's right. i think what he was really trying to drive home is that this threat does not stop at ukraine's border. you can very easily find yourself in poland on the receiving and back of what they are experiencing in ukraine. i think if that was something he was really trying to drive home and basically, also saying, why are we so concerned about how russia is going to respond. he was touching on this narrative from specially from the president's patron announce crickets who are afraid of how russia is going to be responding to this. it has been pushing the u.s. to be more decisive in implementing sanctions or any other measure
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that they might take arming the ukrainians. he's trying to draw those points home that we need to be standing up to russia more strongly and not worry about what putin's got nothing about it. and also drive home the fact that other eastern european countries could soon be experiencing what they are experiencing in ukraine. >> the ukrainian navy has taken credit for discussing -- >> ainsley: it comes one month since the full-scale invasion started. >> steve: hit that russian warship. but there's just a couple of days late. i think on monday it was full of armored vehicles if they would have been able to get it that, boom. they could've wiped out 200 humvees or something. >> the fact that it was put on russian tv very well may have given away the location of that
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ship and encourage the ukrainian striker to update you on that strike of the russian naval warships, ukrainian military channel says several ships were hit in the port. the initial report said that ukrainian forces had 310-foot long tank collar. multiple explosions and multiple booms of smoke will resulted. as disordered put a ship called the -- is currently on fire. and to other ships. they were damaged and both have pulled out of the fort. that information is coming from the ukrainian military channel. it could amount to a significant counter strike. the first notable counterstrike on russian naval forces. just east of that court has been subject for two weeks now the unrelenting pounding from the sky. civilian galaxies are to best account. president zelenskyy is 100,000 civilians are still trapped.
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zelenskyy is calling on citizens of the world to take to the streets in protest. >> the world must stop the war. your standing comes from your offices, your schools, and universities, and the name of peace. calm with ukrainian symbols to support ukraine to support freedom, to support life. make yourselves visible and heard. >> the town is shaking up as a humanitarian disaster. this town northeast of kyiv was pulled into the fight as russian forces moved down from belarus toward kyiv. that's where american james hill was killed. a single bridge allowed to marry terry and aid in water. that bridge has been blown up. the chairman for human rights of ukraine says that people are now held hostage. steve, ainsley, brian.
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>> brian: he came in to help us out here. we can cohost. on for ten hours this week and recovered. let's talk about what's happening overseas beer the president arrives in brussels and did not make any public comments behind closed doors. what has to happen to give the ukrainians, and is that nato truly has their back? >> there is something that won't happen for germany joining sanctions on energy because germany is so dependent still on russian energy. you still have european nato members all the way back to ronald reagan warning them, don't do norge stream 1 pretty will be depended on them. the alliance and the call for sanctions is limited. even emmanuel macron in france while the one talking to vladimir pruden. of the russians won't take phone calls right now. >> we haven't said that he had for "the washington post" is reporting that our military leadership is attempting to reach out to russian military leadership and they will not take our phone calls. >> steve: we've done this throughout history.
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we are on the same page. >> in this particular case, it would make sense to have that level of understanding especially if putin is doing things that are beyond what his generals and others -- he probably is telling them don't listen them to american. you don't want to hear their side of the story. joe biden from the outset that his goal was to determine this conflict. that did not happen. now there is a conflict. in my view, nato's view is to make sure that this does not widen into a wider article v nato fight. providing support to zelinski without triggering a wider war. not saying we were afraid of putin or we need to calculate but recognizing right now, it appears putin's aims are confided to ukraine. i want my stuff back. and this idea that it is just nato expansion is the only reason i don't think is true. >> this is going to be over in a few days. here we are a month later still talking about it. we have discussed for the last
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two days how they are pushing back against the russian forces around the kyiv area and some of the suburbs. do you think it's because he underestimated the leader zelenskyy? thought he was young, thought he was new, no experience? >> brian: underestimated the decades of experience that have led to a ukrainian identity. overestimated his capability. a massive modernization effort of the mechanized infantry and armor of the russian military. if you don't have the right doctrine or the ability to apply the way you fight with thanks, then you can quickly get bogged down. you become just a hulking target which is exactly what's happening. he didn't anticipate any of this. now he is stuck. keep them stuck they appear to ukraine win without creating a reason or excuse. again, it wouldn't be that we forced him. it would be an excuse for putin to say i wanted a larger or bigger or go nuclear. i love the fact that people talk
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about them winning. they should win. >> administration doesn't. mitch mcconnell is. some people are. what does when he look like? it doesn't mean they are going to completely repel the russian events. this isn't going to work. i can't get to kyiv. that changes his calculation. >> steve: one month ago today, he started the invasion. we were right. the sanctions did not stop him. you know what we were wrong about? a month ago after joe biden said, well, give the sanctions a month and we will see where we are. and we said from the scouts, they don't have a month. here we are a month later. ukrainian people have been remarkably resilient. we thought putin was 10 feet tall. it turns out zelenskyy's 12. he doesn't have as many toys. >> we are starting here indications and reports that there's more things happening behind the scenes in ways in which we are supporting the ukrainians that is publicly
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known. >> steve: the list of the equipment was not complete. >> let's hope not. i still believe as much as we look at those suffering on the ground and it is a humanitarian catastrophe and it is -- this is a family feud there with implications that are serious, but should not widen. it's our responsibility as leaders of the free world to assist the ukrainians in fighting their fight. >> republicans and democrats report assisting the ukrainians. they are all in on this unconcerned. >> ainsley: they are so strong. some of the women are actually staying to fight as well. >> brian: absolutely. this could lead to the collapse of completely of vladimir putin. he knows that. russian leaders don't go home with losses and keep their jobs. the head of the military is disappeared. it had six or seven general skilled in the front right now.
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the head of their intelligence agency is on house arrest. this article is growing smaller. i could also lead to a miscalculation from him which is a dangerous -- >> steve: putin at the same time as a couple -- meanwhile, we want to talk about this. domestically, you know, we have been talking for a while. of the cards seem to be -- themes seem to be a landing republicans and midterms. the republicans are meeting down in florida this week. they have made it very clear, given the fact that now, the hunter biden laptop has been verified by "the new york times," michael mccaul said this and wants to times yesterday. the press seem to discount the whole laptop issue. you're going to see a very aggressive oversight by republicans if we get there majority. it is generally something that we will be looking at. so, you know, obviously, this house is not going to look at hunter biden. however, if the republicans take over, they get a lot of stuff
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that they like to dig into. >> as they should. there's going to be a veto for two more years from about 322 until '24 pretty joe biden when he was vice president went to ukraine six times as much or more than any other country that he visited. we know hunter biden had extensive business dealings there and in china. we know we have a laptop that provides basic evidence of that. we know hunter biden did not pay his taxes because a lot of the money was overseas money. he is doing that while he is the son of the vice president of the united states. government and international relations became their business. it leads to a lot of concerns of people watching what's happening in eastern europe and say why my weight doing this or that? let's get to the bottom of that and find out so that we know. we deserve to know that as voters. >> i think is important. not the laptop -- peter talk about that.
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>> when you look at who made these deals happen, larry, that's even more alarming. in the case of china, we use a laptop to find out who actually made those deals happen for hunter biden and the biden family. i kids would say, who made it rain for them? we identified for chinese businessmen who made those deals happen. each and every one of them have links to the highest levels of chinese intelligence. >> steve: it makes you wonder by "the new york times" is verifying it. is it because he's about to be indicted and they are trying to get their history right with the story or perhaps "the new york times" saying, you know what? joe biden needs to go. we need a different candidate. >> it could be a little bit of both. you have been -- not telling them about it for years. it can't pop out of nowhere. also, they know that joe biden is not going to run for a second term. it is self-evident. kamala harris is not the person --
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off to a bed of a slow start. i would like to see a better first lap. >> no wonder wheel likes you. you have very good at this. >> thank you very much. >> she's in charge. >> she is in charge. that's true. just like ainsley is near. >> steve: pete, thank you very much. >> what she says behind your back. >> i am physically behind his back right now but i never say anything bad about him. >> that we know of. >> headlines right now starting with this. horrible story. several children are in the hospital after overdosing on sleeping pills in virginia. police say they were prescription pills given to the kids by a 7-year-old while their adult supervisor left the house to reporter store. for the kids age one, two, three, four were found
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unresponsive. two are still in serious condition. congers been chip roy post in this video as it shows the border patrol dumping around 100 illegal immigrants. our southern border is wide open and getting worse. a purposeful abuse of office by president biden and border secretary. los angeles police wary expensive jewelry says that wearing expensive jewelry is making you a sitting target. the l.a.p.d. put out the statement saying over the last year, there has been a marked increase of armed robberies involving victims wearing expensive jewelry while in public. if it is visible, it can be on target. the l.a.p.d. is warning, crime has risen 18% in robberies and 44% and armed robberies since last year. new york city mayor eric adams is to announce policy changes that will allow unvaccinated athletes to compete in home
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games. the move covers the barclays center madison square garden. in addition to pro athletes, he will lift vaccine requirements for msg and broadway performers. those are headlines. conflicted on that because it is a good move but it's also sort of like, what about the rest of the people? >> what about the cops on the firefighters? it is good that kari kyrie irving can play as opposed to sitting on the sidelines and watching his team play while playing in other cities. all the hard workers that make less money than these guys -- >> he was getting his millions of dollars and he wasn't playing. it's not like he was stopped from playing. >> a puzzling decision. thank you very much. coming up, a legendary kansas city barbecue owner is asking customers to stop ordering brisket. he will tell you why coming up next. >> all right, i will.
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>> a legendary kansas city barbecue joint considered by many to be the most famous barbecue restaurant in america is telling customers to do something about the high cost of its brisket. they are saying, order something else. look at that sign right there. urging people to try a smoked meat like turkey, ham, pulled pork, sausage, or ribs, instead of the brisket brood is an interesting strategy. right now, the owner of arthur bryant's barbecue in kansas city. good morning to you.
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>> good morning. how are you? >> steve: i'm scratching my head. you are telling customers don't order one of my most popular items, the brisket, because it has gone up in price from what to what? >> all right, so a couple of months ago, everything we do here is big. i burned ends are served at 12 ounces three quarters of a pound. a couple of months ago we were at $10.95. we went up $14.95. now we are at $17.95. as the price went up, so they customers being upset and rightly so. so i felt the need to protect my staff to try to educate the customer as to what the issue is. and the issue is, we think $17.95 for a sandwich is ridiculous but so is the cost that i'm paying for it. so i decided to put a sign-up to explain to customers what they can do.
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they can order other meats. they can call their congressmen. they can ask why things are the way they are. no one is making them order it. it is okay to order something else. the issue is supply and demand. >> steve: what you are trying to do is you would like to see every place in america that sells brisket to tell people, hey, don't buy brisket for a week or so. we will drive the demand down and the price will fall as well. >> edward be amazing in this country if everybody didn't drive their gas vehicles for one day what they would do to the price of gasoline. what we did is we did offer -- we do offer now a half-size brisket sandwich for $9.95 to our cost-conscious customers. so we are giving them choices, but the reality of the fact is
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that if you keep doing what you are doing, you can change things. >> if your brisket sandwich is $18, are people still buying it? >> they are. unbelievably. we have seen some easing since this has made the rounds in the media in the last week or so. my brisket purchases are probably down anywhere from 5-7%. prices have also eased too over the last several months. the problem with that is then spraying when we opened up all the country to the grillers and the smokers and demand will be high. i expect the prices to go back up again. >> you don't have to order their brisket. order something else. the secret is the sauce which is great. and my family ordered it online so we can have a little taste of kansas city whenever we are feeling lonesome.
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>> we appreciate that. thank you. >> once upon a time, it was the greatest restaurant in the history of the world. thank you very much. space out thank you. >> steve: all right, good enough. can you, like the place? i do. moving on. we are following a coupling of major stories. nato leaders meeting on the efforts to end ukraine's war with russia. russia's war with ukraine i should say his confirmation hearings come to end for judge. senator, lindsey graham was in it all yesterday. he's going to join -- ur windshi? safelite makes it easy. >> tech vo: you can schedule in just a few clicks. and we'll come to you with a replacement you can trust. >> man: looks great. >> tech: that's service on your time. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ we believe our military heroes deserve a company who will fight for them just as they do for us.
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>> brian: fox news alert now. president biden addressing world leaders behind closed doors as we speak. >> ainsley: what does the president need to say? let's ask air force veteran and senator of the great state of south carolina lindsey graham. good morning, senator. >> good. >> ainsley: you said if you continue down this road, you will regret it. justice will be delivered. what is the next step? >> what i would like from the president of united to say, i believe ukraine can win back. i'm committed to them winning.
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i will hold putin accountable. he needs to go. he's a war criminal on an industrial scale. have you ever heard this administration embraced the idea that ukraine can win? what does it take for them to win? more. i've been watching your show all morning. i'm having a hard time sleeping here. your show is good. if we had shipped antiship missiles, we should sink most of their navy. our opponents. just look at it this way. name one weapon system we give the ukrainians that they haven't used effectively. denying them is unconscionable. the reason changes every week. he's a nice guy. the days before that, and lead to world war iii. this administration when it comes ukraine is incredibly slow, incredibly indecisive. give them the est hundred.
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give them antiship missiles. but sanctions on the table so china and understand what comes their way. chemical weapons were used by the russian military against the ukrainian people. that will lead to a no-fly zone by nato. that's a war crime. if there's a nuclear explosion in the ukraine, than the contamination that would exist throughout europe would be considered an attack on nato by russia. if you are not that clear to putin, you're making a huge mistake. if we come out of the summit and we don't have clarity about chemical weapons and nuclear weapons and we don't mention winning for ukraine, then it's a big mistake. >> steve: do you think the president has to mention the remarks? does it have to come from other leaders? you need the president to say this? >> boris johnson is at this prevented the president the president of the united states to stop betting on putin winning. their whole strategy has been that we expect putin to win in a few days and zelenskyy in the ukrainian people out there on a
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wrinkle into the biden plan to end this warbird when i fear his is pressure on species by biden, germany, and others to end the war in a fashion that would make putin stronger. and others pressure being put on the ukrainians to do a peace deal. i think it would be dishonorable and make putin stronger. i would like to end the wall dolomite war. break the russian army. i think the russian army is on the verge of being broken and we can continue to help ukrainians with the weapons they need to take the fight to the russians. i would love to see in my lifetime joe biden vegan victory for ukraine. >> yesterday on the day before, you are on tv pretty much all day from sunup to sundown but yesterday was a second day of the confirmation hearing. as she is being vetted for the open post when he leaves and
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sometimes this summer. is an expert of you during yesterday's testimony. a lot of republicans talking about her record shows she is soft on crime and might be an activist justice. watch this. >> with one click, you can receive, you can distribute tens of thousands. you can be doing this for 15 minutes, and all of a sudden, you are looking at 30, 40, 50 years in prison. >> good, good. absolutely good. i hope you are. >> steve: sounds like, and it's really easy, when you commit that crime, maybe you shouldn't do as much time. that is our logic, and sounds like. >> let me tell you. it's not about the fact that every time she has the child case, she gives the lowest in this possible that others may appear the systems uses to impose the sentence itself.
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i want to live in a world where you if go on the internet every time you push a button to get an image of a child being sexually exploited, your jail time goes up. in your world, she does not hold that against you. she refuses to enhance a sentence because the internet is being used. she refuses to impose a sentence based on the volume of material. i want to live in a world that every time you click that button, your jail time goes up. this judge refuses to impose a sentence consistent with that theory. it is not that she is soft on crimes at her sentencing regimes are irresponsible and there is no to tyrants. what she said was the tarrant, supervising a computer use of a child pornographer. >> steve: you voted for her once. will you not vote for her this time? >> i'm more convinced than ever
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that i demand by justice in every radical left-wing group chose her as their primary candidate. stay tuned. you will hear a response from senator graham about this judge. >> senator, thank you very much for joining is live. >> thanks, senator. great to see you. >> steve: back to work. >> brian: a convicted cop killer to speaker and what it told students will shock you even more. dana perino reacts next. have ad non-small cell lung cancer, your first treatment could be a chemo-free combination of two immunotherapies that works differently. it could mean a chance to live longer. opdivo plus yervoy is for adults newly diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer that has spread, tests positive for pd-l1, and does not have an abnormal egfr or alk gene. together, opdivo plus yervoy helps your immune system launch a response that fights cancer in two different ways. opdivo plus yervoy equals a chance for more time together. more family time. more time to remember.
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♪("i've been everywhere" by johnny cash) ♪ ♪i've traveled every road in this here land!♪ ♪i've been everywhere, man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere, man.♪ ♪of travel i've had my share, man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere.♪ ♪♪ >> ainsley: in new york cog who hosted a convicted cop killer for speaking event now facing more backlash for giving students permission to skip class because of the increased police presence unlike habits that they put according to the university provost, for some students have the event proceeds in person, the possible advent of large numbers of police on
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campus may be another record traumatizing event. some students may choose not to attend classes due to personal safety concerns. here to react as america's new room coanchor and coanchor of "the five," dana perino. >> why are they inviting them in the first place? why would you give students a day off at all? you know what happened yesterday in afghanistan? all the girls were told they could go to school. they show up it. at the doors they were turned away until they were told they were not allowed to go because some sort of bureaucratic issue about uniforms. here the students who have the privilege and the opportunity to go to a college class. they don't have to go for a day. it is excused by the administration because they might have a personal trauma because they want to listen to somebody who was a convicted cop killer. that's not how it was listed in the original description. it is something like, police prisoner. when he was in jail. and then, they are going to have
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police presence on there. the school has disavowed the event. they said they weren't a part of it. they have rescinded the grant that was part of it. there are some anonymous donors that they haven't -- anonymous donor paid the speaking fee of the convicted cop killer who served his time. he can get out and do whatever you want. isn't that remarkable? only in america could a convicted cop killer demand is speaking fee to go around the college campuses. >> is unbelievable why anyone would want to go hear him talk. the victim was killed two people. he's convicted. after fox news digital reached out to the university for comment, and announce the event was going to be virtual. >> everybody gets to skip class. speech of your book is out on paperback now. i'm reading the book. it is excellent great advice below what you said about your gratitude journal. to tell the folks at home about that. >> i feel that every student at stony brook college need to get a copy of this book.
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it's about how you if you are educated in america and a young woman today in the workplace, all you have to decide is how hard you want to work. in the book, i do advice about how to improve your career track. i also want to talk about live goals and advice. you do a ton of this, ainsley. i was listen to you because you have a serenity that surrounds you. that's the feeling that i'm always going for. when i realizes that having put into practice a gratitude journal where you write down and it becomes almost second nature to always be thankful for what you have, that actually leads to you being more resilient. as a person. if you are more resilient when you deal with the issues and disappointments that come with life and all the challenges, then you can be in a place of more serenity. it's a nice little loop. i wrote an extra chapter and hear about dealing with life and work it in a post covid world through the gratitude journal to me really helped. >> even if you are going through a tough time to write down the
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few things that you're grateful for, blessings in your life and focus on that. it's a great book. it's in paperback. it is not as expensive. it's affordable. what's coming up on his show? >> there's a lot of questions there. as a story that we want to talk to them about about the pentagon has reached out to russian counterparts. they had not responded. as a possibility there for conflict. want to talk to them about that. maria -- there's a story that the sanctions are starting to have a bite on the russian economy and will also have karl rove on the democrats midterm strategy that is right now not doing so well. >> you get a personalized copy of your book. >> you go to little point bookshop. you can go there. if you order it by may 1st, i will personalize it for your graduate or whoever else you might think about. maybe your neighbor, unities, your granddaughter or your daughter. >> thank you so much. we will be watching.
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we have a fox weather alert to tell you about for the deadly storm system is falling tornadoes across the south. and it's heading east putting 15 million more people at risk of severe weather. in new orleans, crews are still going through all the rubble there. that's checked with our meteorologist for a fox weather forecast. >> there's a tornado tally right now from texas to louisiana. mississippi, alabama, and louisiana just outside of new orleans. incredible catastrophic damage. of course, crews are on the scene and they are going to deem how strong this tornado was through this area and we lost lives. unfortunately, we will be following this not only today but through the weekend of this front moves through prayer we have a tornado worn storm right now north of raleigh. we are seeing some rotation on doppler radar. we will certainly keep you up-to-date on that. know what to do if you are in a watch or a warning. watch means that conditions are favorable for tornadoes. warning means they are evident.
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it's exactly where we have that tornado storm. snow again for the great lakes and the interior northeast. watching the system as we get into saturday and sunday in the cold air is going to hang around. wintry weather will too. back to you. >> new league, new rules. united states football league bucking the trend. how the rules differ from the nfl and why you might like them better. atic arthritis. it was really holding me back. standing up... ...even walking was tough. my joints hurt. i was afraid things were going to get worse. i was always hiding, and that's just not me. not being there for my family, that hurt. woooo! i had to do something. i started cosentyx®. i'm feeling good. watch me. cosentyx helps people with psoriatic arthritis move, look, and feel better. it targets more than just joint pain and treats the multiple symptoms like joint swelling
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>> great news for football fans. the brand-new united states football league is kicking off in less than a month right here on fox 43 games. the league will feature eight teams in a slightly different rulebook on annabelle. usfl head officiating. fox sports rules guide. great to see you. >> it's great to be here. we had a little false start yesterday, but we are here today. >> we had a problem with transmission. what's going to be different about this league size probably not knowing many of these players? >> i think this league is really going to be fan friendly. we listen to the fans for example. we listen to the players. fans said we want more kickoff returns. we are going to get kickoff returns. for god from the 25-yard line.
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they wanted a different overtime process. we are going to have a shoot out. a-please shoot out. the team if it is still time, we go to the certain death. we are trying different things that fans say they like pretty don't like the roughing the passer penalty. it's tough in real time but it's really not about beer the replays that are out of los angeles can overturn that. all personal files will be reviewable pretty try to put the interest of the players and fans that are naked traditional football. make it a little bit more fun in the little bit more fair. >> after you get a touchdown, you have more than just an extra point and a 2-1 conversion. what do you have now? >> if you want to kick off normally, you can. if you wanted onside kick you can. if you want to try a scrimmage play, and set up and i'm a fourth in 12 play from the
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33-yard line. if you make a first down in that series of the fourth down player, then you keep the ball. it's an alternative plan because onside kicks we know in the way that football is set up now, very difficult to recover and onside kick legally if you are the kicking team. you don't like that, we will give you a scrimmage play. if you make it, you get the ball. the other thing of course as extra points. you can actually get a 3-point extra point if you snap the ball from the 10-yard line and score. this becomes a 1-score game comes a 9-point game. it gives more interest in the fourth quarter. you can go from that three-point try and success and go to the fourth in 12 play, 33 and gave the ball. fun rule. >> we recognize these teams from the nfl. steve young all decided to go to the usfl instead of the nfl. that was a different time to
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compete. the same teams are back. you are just looking to get people more football in the spring, correct? >> absolutely. this is the new usfl. we have young players here in birmingham. it is so cool the players also do. they were actually on the field yesterday doing drills. these are next level players. they are trying to get to the nfl. that is their dream. i get a chance to live out their dream and they are going to do it here in birmingham. all the teams this year are going be here in birmingham, play here in birmingham and talk about fan friendly. it's $10 for a ticket. an adult he pays $10 for it to get can bring three kids 15 years or younger with them for nothing. it's going to be really cool april 16th he kicks off. i think it's going be phenomenal. >> a lot of people don't peek in college. sometimes you get better after you get out. if you don't make it in the league, there's nowhere to go. it's way overdue.
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you got michigan panthers, philadelphia stars. birmingham's sound millions. new orleans breakers and tampa bay bandits. all have a history looking to reclaim as fox is one of the owners of the league. if you are involved, it has got to be important. >> it's going to be fun. fox's super involved. when you watch the telecast you will think you are watching an nfl championship game. a number of cameras, the coverage, the technology that's going to be used as a little different can be really cool. >> i like your pullover. nice. mike's going to be in charge. more "fox & friends" in just a moment. hey you two, go outside and play. create a season full of playfulness. your happiest spring starts at lowe's. ♪
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>> it has been a fast three hours. we're back tomorrow. the latest on the president in poland. >> tomorrow is friday. this week flew by. >> dana: moments from now president biden will meet with g-7 leaders one month after russian president vladimir putin ordered his troops to invade ukraine. good morning i'm dana perino. bill has time off. i have trace with me. >> trace: i'm trace gallagher. this is "america's newsroom." new footage coming in overnight in what could be a major setback for russian forces. ukraine navy claims it destroyed a russian warship packed with ammo. the latest blow to putin's war and comes as nato leaders meet to form a united response against him and his in

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