tv Fox News Live FOX News August 28, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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eric: top stories we are watching this hour. mar-a-lago intelligence hearing. that will come later on this week but down at the border, texas governor greg abbott sending more bus loads of migrants to new york city. hello, everyone, welcome to fox news live. i'm eric sean. arthel: hi, we are, i'm arthel neville. another big story we are watching, eric, the fallout from president biden's student loan handout and why critics say it will do more harm than good. but first new legal action over the unprecedented mar-a-lago
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search. federal judge announced preliminary intent to appoint independent special master to handful evidence in the case this after heavily redacted affidavit was released. eric: live team fox news coverage, alexis mcadams on the migrant buses that continue to arrive from the lone star state. we will have a report from the white house and the president's student loan decision to have relief for student loans for many people who make under $125,000. alexander hoff on the next steps on the intelligence material that president trump had stashed at mar-a-lago. hi, alexandria. alex: plenty of steps to come. the director of national intelligence has informed lawmakers on house intelligence and oversight committees that her office is conducting an assessment of how classified documents were handled by former president trump. of course, this does come after friday released of redacted
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affidavit used to obtain search warrant on the former president's home. 15 boxes of documents were turned over by trump's team. according to the justice department, highly classified records were found mixed in with unrelated notes, magazines and newspapers. some of it the department argued could have compromised foreign relations and human intelligence sources. >> the department of justice had probable cause vetted by a judge that donald trump was obstructing justice and in violation with the espionage clause. this is about our national security. alex: but if this was known or suspected earlier this year. republican senator roy blunt wants to know why he and others weren't notified. >> i head the intelligence committee that i've been on in my time in the senate and the house, why haven't we heard anything about this and, in fact, that the administration was concerned that there was a national security problem. alex: small victory for the trump legal team came yesterday when judge issued noticed of
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intent. the judge ordered to provide under seal a more detailed list of what was seized. trump's legal team argue that is some of the item taken may have been protected by executive and attorney-client privilege. eric: congress asking if they were jeopardized. alexandria, thank you. arthel: we will bring in matthew whitaker, former acting attorney general. do we have the attorney general, there you are, sir, good to have you. let me start here, do you think a special master should be assigned to review the documents collected from mar-a-lago? matt: i do, the real reason we need that is because after several steps into the investigation, we need to bring confidence not only for the american people, but, you know, the fbi needs to, you know, sort of have some credibility in this
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investigation and a special master that's well qualified that will be an independent third party, arm of the court to look through these documents to see what's there i think is important and i only have to point to the passports being grabbed as part of this search warrant. arthel: right, you, of course, you know better than i do that things like the passports will be collected if you're doing a -- you're grabbing whatever is in the boxes. i don't think the president knows what's in the boxes. that's return today him. i want to get to the fbi and your thoughts on the fbi in a minute but first i want to ask you your thoughts on director haynes assessment of potential risk to national security opposed by former president trump storing those secret documents at mar-a-lago. will this provide questions to many questions swirling around the case? matt: dni has important role on whether or not documents were
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protected and what kind of potential damage they could have done if they were released as an important piece. the thing i worry about is brief to congress, you have members of the intel committee that have been notorious leakers including adam schiff and i'm concerned that this is going to politicized even more this case when it should be above politics and just, you know, ultimately be about the facts and circumstances. arthel: who bears the burden of proof at this juncture and why? matt: well, there's no criminal case. it's integrity issue, arthel. the fbi needs to demonstrate and they haven't yesterday that they are playing it by the rules and they are not putting their thumb on the scale of justice. arthel: why do you say that because from what i understand in the process thus far and, please correct me if i'm wrong, the ag says you have paperwork that we want to have back because it belongs to the united
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states, to the government, to please give it back, trump's -- former president trump's people say, this is what we have, take it, thank you very much. they come back, doj says you didn't give us everything. we are showing up and we are going to do -- provide a legal search of your home. matt: yeah, well, there's a couple of, i think, issues in what you just described. one is the department of justice could have done a less introssive means to obtain documents. it's been 11 months since the president left office and 18 months since the documents have been at mar-a-lago. i don't think the circumstances necessitated the execution of the searching warrant. i think there could have been other ways to resolve this matter and i think the other thing is i read the unredacted portions of the affidavit it appears to me to be a very much discussion and disagreement about documents with the federal archives and the issue of
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classification appears to be, you know, a pretext for that. arthel: what is the responsibility of the former president and his legal team? matt: well, obviously there are federal laws that -- that are applied here to presidential records, legitimate disagreement and then on the classification the president and his team have said publicly that these documents that were at mar-a-lago had been declassified previously and so, you know, this is all going to resolve ultimately and we will know all of the facts but everything that i know in my experience as attorney general and having sat in the chair is an execution of searching warrant of mar-a-lago is draconian step in resolving the issue. arthel: look, there are people who work for the former president who said that they were not aware of any process that the president, you know, sort of had a magic wand, if you will, and order to declassify a lot of documents. for the sake of time as you
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mentioned, there are lots of leaks in everything these days unfortunately and this is playing out in the court of public opinion. so it makes a bit of a circus of this. please underscore the nature of the investigation, the allegations, the laws that potentially have been broken and the possibility of human sources having been compromised. matt: yeah, i think these are issues that are being talked about but in this case, you know, there was no evidence that any of these documents ever were taken out of the containers they were in and by that i mean boxes. again, as i read everything, as i pay attention to the leaks which i think are just absolutely unnecessary and the fbi and doj shouldn't be playing case out through leaks. arthel: the former president, he asked for them to make everything public too, release the affidavit, i mean, so, you know, both sides are playing.
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matt: are done to help the leakers. i would love transparency. i would love more out there and i think president trump would too. we can't have selective leaks that only help the department of justice. arthel: i understand your point quickly and they are telling me to go. but this is serious. this is very serious and for this to be, you know, just sort of played out in the -- politicized as everything is and i think we have to just step back and be patient to let this thing play out fully and completely so we can have proper answers an not speculation. matt: right, but the doj took unprecedented step that made it more serious than it otherwise should have if it had been resolved outside of the public interest. arthel: all right, well, we will leave it there because doj said they tried to do that but former president trump says they didn't. there you have it. that's where we are going to leave it, matthew, but you have a very expert perspective on
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this and we will get you back to discuss this with us. matthew whitaker, take care o. eric. eric: democratic candidates across the country especially those in tight midterm races, they are breaking with president biden over plan to forgive $10,000 per student in college debt for those making less than $125,000. among those candidates is tim ryan, he's running for the senate in ohio. >> i think a targeted approach right now really does send the wrong message. there's a lot of people out there making 30, 40 grand a year that didn't go to college and they need help as well which is why i have been proposing tax cut for working people that will affect everybody and with the student loan piece you could very easily allow them to negotiate, renegotiate down the interest rates. eric: but supporters of of the president said they will give relief of those suffering under the crushing debt. lucas tomlinson live at the white house on the north lawn to
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the president's college loan executive decision, luck's. lucas: congressman tim ryan, small and democrats speaking out about the president's plan, other democrats are taking a victory lap citing the high price for college. >> it is not fair that the cost of education has gone up so dramatically over the last ten years, 20 years, where somebody who went to college 20 years ago maybe paid, you know, 500 bucks a quarter for a state university is now paying 20, 25, 30 thousand even just to go to a community college. lucas: estimates vary widely on how much it would cost the american taxpayer. the white house $240 billion. some policy wonks in dc think it could cost twice that amount and the university of pennsylvania says it could cost more than a trillion dollars. democrats say publicly they do
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not support relief plan and all running in close races and swing state this is fall. gop put out a new ad saying the plan isn't fair and fox news sunday senior adviser to committee responded. >> biden is right, you should take my tax dollars to pay off your debt. my family will figure out how to get by. >> this is about helping working-class people, 90% of this benefit will go to people who earn less than $75,000 a year. so those plumbers and electricians, police officers and teachers, that will help their children reach the american dream that they want. lucas: president biden is off to ohio, last week tim ryan was nowhere to be found. arthel: another bus full arrived from the texas border this
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morning. governor greg abbott has sent more than 1500 migrants to the big apple and it's taking a toll on the city's shelter system. let's go to alexis mcadams live in new york city with the very latest on this story. alexis. alex: hi, arthel, this weekend alone more than 120 migrants have been dropped off here in new york city. today another bus pulling into the new york city's port authority shortly after 8:00 o'clock this morning. that's the bus we are talking about there pulling right through times square and near port authority. we are talking about 125 people in total from this weekend. 25 migrants walking off including ten men, eight women and eight kids. yesterday two buses bringing 96 more migrants into the big apple according to latest numbers also from the city but according to the city they are telling us more than 7,000 asylum seeking migrants have arrived from trust-mexico border since april. as the city says they are running out of housing options.
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officials are continuing to ask the federal government for more resources. texas governor greg abbott's confirming they have bussed more than 1500 migrants to new york city since august 5th. the migrants board the buses at the tex-mex border and head to sanctuary cities like new york and washington, d.c. this morning texas lieutenant governor dan patrick telling fox news it's not just a problem impacting the southern border but the entire country. >> the blue mayors should feel this pain across the country that texas and our sheriffs and our law enforcement are feeling and maybe they can call their president and call secretary mayorkas and say, secure the border. alex: somebody reached to mayor's office for comment and that the press secretary detailing this. governor abbott admit today what he's been doing all along. texas has been helping send and coordinate buses to new york city for months contributing to more than 7300 asylum seekers we
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see enter our shelter system since april, that's just part of the statement. we will get to more on that later on but shows you, or they recall, the numbers that they throw out. you hear many different numbers from the city and you hear different numbers from the texas governor himself but we are trying to figure out exactly when more buses had come, they don't get a heads up here in new york but the city officials we've talked to say they expect to continue through months at least law governor abbott's november reelection campaign, arthel. arthel: alexis mcadams, thank you. eric. eric: promising rooky has been cut, that over gang rape allegations stemming from civil suit. the buffalo bills released punter matt ariza over claims that he and two former teammates allegedly raped a 17-year-old last year at halloween party in california. charles watson with the developing story. charles. charles: good afternoon, eric.
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former buffalo bills punter is not only out of a job but possibly facing criminals charges after unnamed 17-year-old filed a civil suit in san diego superior court alleging ariza raped her and names two teammates at san diego state, xavier lenard and liko and alleges the 17 met ariza at a halloween party in october last year while visibly intoxicated and goes onto claim that when the two were alone ariza told the girl to, quote, perform oral sex on him before leading that young woman to a bedroom where the suit claims they raped her, gang-raped her as she went in and out of consciousness. buffalo brandon bean says the team found out about allegations against ariza in late july but the organization appeared to back rooky punter after officially naming him a star
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last week, a decision the team may be regretting and questioning why the bills didn't do sooner. >> second-guess whether that was the right move and we will definitely look at that going forward if the situation or similar situation happens. >> we try to be thorough and thoughtful and not rush to judgment and i would say it's not easy. you're trying to put facts around a legal system, you know, sometimes with limited information. charles: an attorney representing the victim in this case say it is bills ignored concerns when they came to them in late july and accused the organization of being enablers and writes in part in a statement, the buffalo bills had no choice but to cut the young punter after so badly botching their response to our claim. on friday araiza released
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statement in his defense, the facts of the incident are not what are portrayed in the lawsuit or in the press. i look forward to quickly setting record strait. the lawsuit in question does also say, eric, that police have phone calls between the victim and n this case and araiza where he admits to having sex with her and tells her to get tested for suv -- and that this case is certainly being looked at for criminal charges, eric. eric: thanks so much. arthel: eric and charles more concerns of china's growing influence after u.s. coast guard cutter was not allowed entry into a port in the sal month san
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islands. china recently signed a security deal with salmon islands raising fears. eric: back here at home another migrant bus arriving in new york city earlier this morning. as they arrive in the big apple, it turns out that the number of migrants are going to the border and the number is actually down. how can that trend continue. brandon judd president of the national border patrol council on what the biden administration needs to do, brandon, will tell us straight ahead. ♪ ♪ ♪ i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks.
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arthel: the humanitarian crisis at our southern border keeps fueling drug smuggling concerns as cartels take advantage of the flood of migrants seeking entry into the u.s. matt finn live at the southern border in eagle pass, texas with the very latest, matt. matt: hi, arthel, our sunday crew has seen 100 plus migrants in eagle pass, texas, same spot yesterday, same drill, 100 plus migrants that we saw illegally
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cross into the u.s. this is not a culvert operation. the migrants are being welcomed into the united states. anyone who comes to eagle pass, texas and see this happening and we want to keep you updates from law enforcement here on the ground. u.s. border patrol agents say they foiled a dangerous smuggling attempt in carizos, texas, a handgun was recovered as well. 3 migrants and the driver were taken into custody and we have done many ride-alongs with law enforcement here and we see migrants crammed into what is often being called load cars in the del rio sector another load car. troopers attempt today stop the car for routine traffic car and driver refused to stop and eventually hitting a pole and crashing french in front yard and driver arrested for human smuggling. law enforcement tells us and we have seen it with our own eyes and feel they are being stretched too thin. >> we have two jobs.
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when i became to the job was security, now we have immigration. two jobs. deputies to take care of both things. matt: we will be here at the border throughout the day this sunday. stay with us, we will keep you updated, arthel. arthel: understaffed and overburdened. matt finn, thank you very much for the report. eric. eric: the number of crossings has actually fallen since cpb, down 7% from july 2021 to last month and trend from last month to june, well, that was down nearly 4%, but apparently what is not down the number of drug seized. nearly 200 pounds of fentanyl were seized earlier this week in arizona. authorities say that that amount is worth over $4 million, in fact, a sheriff in texas calling on the white house to get the drug crisis under control saying, quote, it's quite frankly a tsunami of debt that is crashing into the united
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states over our southern border you don't secure the border it's going to continue. brand own judd knows a lot about this firsthand. he's on the front lines, president of the national border patrol council. we talk about migrants but how about the flow of deadly drug? >> that's the most dangerous part of border security when you look at this. but you have to understand that it's being fueled by illegal immigration. cartels flood our resources and take us out of the field and create gaps and that's when you get your fentanyl into the united states, the dangerous drugs coming into the united states. we have to get illegal immigration under control. if we get that under control we can go after the cartels and go after the profits and go after the drugs coming across and everything else that's dangerous that they cross the border from mexico into the united states. when in asylum. we believe in legal immigration. this is illegal immigration that we are talking about and we have to get it under control but it just from the time that i have seen what i'm currently seeing,
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i just don't see that this administration has any political will to do what is right by the american people and get the border under control. eric: what do we need to do? you've got to stop catch and release. we continue to release people into the country, if people violate our laws and we reward them by releasing them into the country, they will continue to come and that's the problem. we have seen this time and time again. 25 years in the border patrol has shown me over and over again when we release people, when we give them that reward, they are going to continue to come. the moment we stop doing that, that's when they stop coming. that's when the cartels were not able to go throughout the world and advertise their services and when they can't do that, then we can go after them and we can go after their profits. eric: why won't that catch and release be stopped, it was for a while but seems to be continuing in terms of giving people these desk appearance tickets and trying to process them yet they are spreading out across the country. >> i believe the white house has
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way too many activists and political positions. when you look at political appointees in doj, they come from activists background. they want open borders and they have shown that time and time again. they push for that. when you have activists that are in political positions, political appointee positions both in the white house and dhs and that's when you can expect this. until this administration realizes that they have to do what's right by the american people rather than special interest groups, this is going to continue. eric: finally some say look, we have the apprehensions in record level and we see the trend going down a bit even though it's still high, they say, look, the system is working, the biden aadministration is apprehending people in record numbers and shown that they are being taken to custody and the policies of this administration do work and that's -- that shows that this is actually working because they are apprehending so many people. who you what's do you say to those claiming that?
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>> that's absolutely false. you have to look at the got away numbers. look at the got-aways, the drugs on the streets, all you have to do is talk to any police officer right now and they will tell you there's more drugs on the street than ever before. more got aways than ever before. nothing is working on the border today. eric: live in eagle pass, texas, that's right there in the rio grande and potentially you can see how easy it is to just cross right over, just walk across the area. it is a very dangerous journey, it is a very dangerous crossing especially going through the hot desert and hot temperatures and what people desperate that want to come across the country want to do, national border patrol council brandon judd.
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>> thank you. arthel: four people were killed including suspect in shooting in texas this morning. houston police say the man set fire to multifamily residences and as people went out he fired at them with a shotgun. according to police chief, hpd began receiving calls around 1:00 o'clock in the morning and when officers arrived tat scene they killed the gunman. the motive in this case is unclear but officials say he may have been recently evicted. eric. eric: it's been 50 years in the making but in less than 24 hours, nasa will take another giant step sending a spacecraft back to the moon. yeah, we are going back. so what can we expect with all of this excitement at it builds this afternoon. back at cape canaveral, another moon shot for america.(ste ♪ ♪
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arthel: two u.s. navy ships are making their way through the taiwan strait today, the uss tom and the uss chancellorsville on what the navy calls routine transit that can take up to 12 hours. this is the first passage by american ships since house speaker nancy pelosi's visit to taiwan last month which led an aggressive beijing to ramp up naval drills in the strait. eric: ukraine says russian rockets and artillery came dangerously close to europe's largest nuclear power plant that, of course, raising new fear that is fighting in the area could damage the plant and potentially cause a radiation leak but the united nations is sending a special nuclear team this week to try and prevent a nuclear disaster there. alex hogan live in kyiv with the latest. alex: there's special concern
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after increased fighting outside of zaporizhzhia power plant but the residents who live nearby it's also a major concern for them and now they are taking it into their own hands. today residents in zaporizhzhia lined up to collect iodine pills out of the fear of potential for a nuclear disaster. meanwhile as we pass the 6-month mark of the war, the military aid packages from the west have made a tremendous difference in helping ukrainian troops fortify positions. new footage of military equipment like the howitzer from germany. >> we are currently deploying it in our battle. we have had training abroad. alex: britain's royal navy is training to use mind hunting underwater drones to clear waters which will be specifically useful near main port of odesa, altogether six
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drones. millions of children will head back to class for the first time since the start of the invasion, this past week we visited a school in irpin near the capital where every window has been blown out by russian shelling. typical normal prep representatives from every region have gone through war safety training of what to expect in the event of a russian invasion. >> every teacher will be familiar with instructions on how to act in a particular situation. when there's an air alarm and how the talk to children when their parents arrive. alex: picture back to school normal training like fire drills, kids here are also learning bomb safety drills, so they will be going to the bomb shelters with their own designated spot and also going there every single time they hear an air raid siren one we
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heard in the capital moments ago. eric: such a heartbreaking reminder of the violence and horror brought by vladimir putin. alex, thank you. arthel: well, nasa is getting ready to return to the moon with its uncrewed spaceship, pace craft, the most powerful rocket launches tomorrow on a month-long stress test around the moon. jonathan siri live near the kennedy space center in florida. tell us all about it, jonathan. jonathan: you mentioned the most powerful rocket. it is behind me on launch pad 39b, if all goes well, it will lift off some time during a two-hour window starting at 8:3. humans have not been to the surface of the moon for 50 years but nasa hopes the artimus mission will pave the way to return. that's generating a lot of
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enthusiasm. 200,000 spectators are expected to show up to watch monday's launch of the most powerful rocket in nasa's history. >> we have seen the space launches and numerous rocket launches but not this close but we want to be here to this one because it's going to the moon. we haven't seen in a long time. jonathan: nasa officials say that the unmanned flight to stress test to launch system or sls rocket and what you would do if astronauts were on board and making sure that ryan heat shield can withstand 500,000 degrees fahrenheit temperatures as they return to earth atmosphere at speeds close to 25,000 miles per hour. the uncrewed mission will carry 3 mannequins equipped with numerous sensors to measure g
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fours and radiation levels that real astronauts might experience on this space flight. >> that's what a test flight is all about. you test to see what is and is not right before you put humans on the top of that rocket. jonathan: so if all goes well with artmus1, two years you are to see an artmus mission too carry astronauts in lunar orbit and after that future will carry astronauts down to surface of the moon, arthel. arthel: all right, jonathan, thank you. eric. eric: really exciting, back here on earth in california, have you heard about this, the state is moving to ban the sale of new gasoline cars by 2035. so we will be driving around electric vehicles 50 years from now or less? we will ask an expert straight ahead here on fox news live.
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including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal, cancers including lymphoma and skin cancer, death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq, as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. disrupt the itch and rash of eczema. talk to your doctor about rinvoq. learn how abbvie can help you save. arthel: california regulators approved a plan to ban new sales of gas-fuel cars by 2035. joel is here, presidential fellow of urban futures at chatman university and author of the coming of new fuelism, global to the middle class. let's start, joel, by looking at the rollout timeline. it's going to start in 2026, right, 35% of the new cars,
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suv's and small pickups will be sold in california will be electric. in 2028 that quota will increase to 51% and 2030, 68% of all new car sales will be zero emission, all electric and the quota will reach 100% by 2035, so do you foresee any problems or road blocks with this plan or is this doable? >> sure, there are numerous problems. one is obviously state of california people run the regulatory regime don't have any interest in economics and how things might look like. for instance, if you restrict the number of gas-powered cars, guess, what the gas of gas-powered car wills go up and also have a big-class problem, basically electric cars are very expensive. now you can make the point that maybe in the long run they may be cheaper but the purchase prices is very high. so when you take a look at where
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you see electric cars today, it's in wealthy neighborhoods on the coast. arthel: i have to jump in -- i do have to jump in, in california you see a lot of people, kia, hyundai, toyota, there are lots of affordable electric cars out there right now but i want to say this, joel, that california ranks ninth in the city's with the most power outages. critics say this plan will overtax california's grid. do you think california can improve or fortify its electric grid in 13 years? >> well, first of all, you know, a, there aren't a lot of affordable electric cars that work very well and because there's such a demand for the components i think that they are going to stay pretty expensive and the other problem is you want to go all electric and not just in cars but they want to go all electric in heating and cooking. the problem that you have is that that means electricity but
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what california has been doing, we have been decommissioning gas plants, decommissioning nuclear plants and we don't have a grid that is reliable enough for right now and you are going the greatly increase how much you are going to to put into it and in a way governor newsom is already in the dilemma that's quite clear because he just decided not to shut down the last nuclear power plant. arthel: i'm going to roll through, joel, because i have to keep moving. by the way, i want to let everyone know that the rules are for new cars. you'll still be able to drive around in your current car. >> oh, yes. we will look like cuba, have old cars on the road. arthel: listen, virginia is on attract to adopt california restrictions, massachusetts likely to follow. how would this faze out like
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texas, texas is largest oil producer. >> electricity will be very, very expensive. that's going to affect prices that are -- that maybe say hey, we want to adopt regulations. when push comes to shove, i'm not sure they are going to want to do something different because you can cut emissions through lots of different technologies. there's no reason to just pick one technology and say this is the only way. what that will do is increase the price of that technology because there's no competition. arthel: it's the push me, pull me kind of thing and you do one thing and there's another cause effect. >> exactly. arthel: we will have you back because this is in the works and supposed to start in 2026. we will talk about it then.
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>> california's job is to keep the rest of the country entertained. [laughter] arthel: i don't think likes that, joel, but you got the last word on it so we have to go to break. thank you so much. we will be right back. of wheels. nice try. really? this leon's paying for his paint job on the spot... and this leon, as a chase private client, he's in the south of france, taking out cash with no atm fees. that's because this family of leons has chase. actually, it's león. ooh la la! one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. ♪ my name is austin james. as a musician living with diabetes, fingersticks can be a real challenge. that's why i use the freestyle libre 2 system. with a painless, one-second scan i know my glucose numbers without fingersticks. now i'm managing my diabetes better and i've lowered my a1c
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eric: this coming wednesday marks 25 years since princess diana was killed in the car crash in paris. reports say her sons prince harry and william will not give >> they have not talked f face o face last summer. the family turmoil regarding prince harry and megan did not stop the two brothers from memorial at the palace in hon or of princess diana, harry was 12 year's old and william was 15 when their mom died in the tragic death crash 25 years ago. the daily mail is reporting that prince william and harry have decided not to mark the 25th anniversary of princess diana's
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death together. two reportedly have agreed to ending public events together that commemorate loss instead they will grieve privately. last week harry spoke about the upcoming anniversary of his mother's death. >> i wanted to be a day filled of memories of incredible work and love for the day that she did it and day to share spirit with my mom and family and my children that i wished could have met her. every day i hope to do her proud. christina: flowers are expected to be layed in mass in honor of the late princess diana. >> i think people felt that she was like family, that she cared. you knew every detail of her life. i was in all the press all of the time. you felt very much part of her life in a way. and so when her life was snatched away, there was this
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big void. christina: princess dina was only 36 when she died. eric: so touching and so many still feel it. christina, thank you. arthel: princess diana two ford escort sold in auction for more than $850,000. she used the black for a few years and put less than 7,000 miles on it. princess di owned the car beginning in 1985 and seen driving it with prince william in the backseat. so sad it still breaks your heart even today. she was a special soul for sure. what a light. eric: you can't believe it's been 25 years and to be killed at such a horrible way with the drunken driver. arthel: but her spirit. let's focus on positive spirit. let's focus on positive spirit. we are back at 4:00 eastern,s. please join us. yay!!! ensure max protein,
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>> this was one of those proposal where is a whole lot of people, including people like chuck schumer, elizabeth warren wanted us to do much more. there were some as you said, a couple of my contingency who wanted us to do less. i think he got it just right. i think this was a goldilockses moment. mike: gene on media buzz with the man howie kurtz, president biden facing criticism and questions following his student debt forgiveness announcement. the white house project it is plan wil
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