tv FOX News Sunday FOX News September 11, 2022 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
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a divided nation seeks to remember the lessons of 9/11. we take pause this hour. big changes ahead for the royal family after the death of the queen. >> queen elizabeth was a life well lived. a promise with destiny kept and she has mourned most deeply in her passing. >> a nation mourning queen elizabeth after her unprecedented 70 years on the throne. as tributes pour in, questions
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arise about how the new monarch will reign. u.s. ambassador to the united kingdom joins us to talk about the legacy and her special relationship with the u.s. then, from ground 02 shanksville to the pentagon, america pauses to remember a nation under attack and how it came together. ♪ [applause] the days and weeks that followed. two decades later the country faces a red-hot political climate leading to midterms. discussing the state of democracy with senator tim scott who will share his call for unity in america and with john tester, chair of the veteran affairs committee was led efforts for combat victims. only on "fox news sunday". plus, the latest on the special master fight between the department of justice and president trumps legal team. what it means for the
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investigation into documents held at mar-a-lago. five times world series picture on his work of supporting our nations heroes. all right now on "fox news sunday". ♪ hello again from fox news in washington. today, americans mark 21 years since the deadliest terrorist attack on american soil killing nearly 3000 people and countless others and its aftermath. this is a live look at the pentagon where later this hour president biden will pay tribute to those lost on 9/11. mourning queen elizabeth the second to die thursday at 96. a live look at buckingham palace where britain's are marking their biggest change in seven decades. the queen stood in solidarity with the united states during the darkest days during 9/11.
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the grief is the price we pay for love. in a moment we will ask u.s. ambassador to the united kingdom about the relationship between the u.s. and the uk. we began with martha maccallum in london with the end of an era with the world longest-serving monarch. first to eric shawn live in lower manhattan. hello, eric. >> good mourning, shannon. twenty-one years. it seems as if one day has not gone by. we gather here at the former ground zero, the tribute museum a memorial to honor and remember. there is the familiar sights and sounds that we have seen over the last decades. the government officials, the survivors, the first responders in the family members of the victims honoring those that were killed here by radical islamic terrorism. there will be, as always the four moments of silence when the two jetliners hit both towers
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and windows to towers crumble to the ground. there will be the reading of the names of the victims that is ongoing right now. killed by radical islamic terrorism. vice president harris, attorney general garlic dark year to honor those that died in to remember vice president harris has arrived down in washington. vice president -- first lady will be marking the ceremonies in shanksville, pennsylvania. the decades have not diminished our memories or for many the pain. the taliban has taken over afghanistan in the biden administration killed al qaeda leader in july. the threat remains that the philosophy is still with us.
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tonight, the tribute and light will soar into the sky. the two gleaming towers of light that evoke the vanished towers to remind us all, not just of what we lost, but the threat that still exists. shannon. shannon: eric shawn reporting from new york. thank you so much. we turn to the anchor of the story. martha maccallum. good to see you. martha: good to see you, shannon congratulations on your inaugural program. i wish you a long and happy tenure in this spot. we are covering this story all throughout the days to come. the funeral scheduled. one week from monday. i am reminded of septembersepte, 2001 when the queen and a typically sort of wise and gracious move took that moment to allow the playing of the u.s. national anthem, the
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star-spangled banner outside at buckingham palace for all those that were gathered. an extraordinarily moving moment brits had tears streaming down their face. it was really typical of her grace and understanding of the moment. i think that is why people talk about her integrity, her dignity , examples like that that build together her reputation. we started the day with her exit from the gates, a favorite home of relaxation for her. a place where she had gone since she was a little girl with her sister margaret and the parents. she cherished her ability to be free there. to walk the highlands to go hiking and all of the activities and barbecues on the sides of the river that she loved to have with her family that extended all the way through the summer. she worked until the very end.
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we learn details about her final days. she had dinner with family on monday evening. tuesday we know she met with liz. on wednesday her doctors told her they did not want her to take part in a virtual meeting with the council. we also know that in the past she said she wanted to work until the very end. when i stopped, i dropped and she did work until that very last moment. we have that wonderful picture of her smiling. a beautiful aerial shot of her casket as it travels through the country side. one just last thing. rent charles at buckingham palace. the crowd you see on the right-hand side of your screen. meeting with the representatives of the commonwealth about the future of his leadership. trying to cement those relationships which have been
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under quite a bit of strain in recent years. >> a big part of the conversation moving forward. thank you very much. we will stick with you first continued coverage for days to come. welcome to "fox news sunday." >> thank you very much for having me. >> i want to reflect back on the moment that martha brought up. we in the u.s. are remembering 9/11 today. the queen 600 years of tradition and protocol to do this at buckingham palace. ♪ i remember being so touched by that appetite it happened. it still brings a tear to my eye how much he meant us here in the states.
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>> iron member that day also. i am a new yorker. i was in new york that tragic tragic day. i want to give my condolences to the families of 9/11 today. i do remember that moment. i was there. it showed the queens kindness. a very kind and sensitive woman that loved america and i think america loved her right back. it is amazing being here during this. i got here a couple months ago and she welcomes me to buckingham palace with a huge amount of kindness. care deeply about this special relationship. i have been an ambassador before and i will tell you this relationship is strong and really it is the number one relationship, quite different than we have with other countries. >> she serves a dual role.
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also head of church of england. her statements very personal about our faith. christianity today talking about that, part princess and part pope. diplomat and disciple. her majesty the queen was a calm that carried on. stabilizing her nation and the commonwealth during terminal choice periods of historic change in technological advancement. seventy years time. how much the world has changed. what kind of legacy do you think she leaves behind? >> in terms of the seven years, if i could comment on that for one minute. her first prime minister was winston churchill. born in 1874. her last was liz trust or in a 74. it is really quite incredible. i am the second female ambassador in london. the first after 50 years. when i think of what a role she
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played as a woman 70 years ago, it is why i think that there is so much respect and admiration for her. >> i know that you were there during the jubilee. it seems such a gift that while she was alive and well enough to see the great law, the great respect, the tributes pulling out to her at that time, we also think about, more recently, we saw her smiling and more open. we think back on the 2012 olympics and the fact she was part of the opening ceremonies the video that portrayed her, parachuting out of a helicopter with james wants. it was kind of cheeky, a lot of fun. >> i only met her once, saw her one. credentials at buckingham palace it really was a fascinating experience, obviously. the hottest day in london
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history so they could not send the horse and carriage as they usually do. the audience was, you know, very policy oriented. very substantive because she cared a lot about the issues of the day and was very well-informed. she was very happy i had my dog with me. we had a chat about that. she just had a wonderful sense of humor. i commend you for doing it, her sense of duty. her sense of duty to a country and an institution for 70 years. you just do not see that much anymore. i think even her last meeting, she met with liz trust to ask her to form a government three days before she died. fulfilling her commitment to this country. as long as she lived, she would serve. i find that so admirable and i just have so much respect for her. >> very inspiring.
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threading this very careful needle to be apolitical in the uk. she -- in a way her son found typical to deal. her personal views on the important political questions of her rain. it remained unknown for many years after events and sometimes to this day, ambassador, we still do not know how she felt about some of the hot button issues. king charles said he will change away he has supported progressive issues. moving forward now as a monarch. how important to her legacy was it that she was able to be atypical on tough challenges. >> i do think it was very important. she was a stability, dignity and a beacon of hope. difficult times over her 70 years. she was not one party or the other. she was not politics.
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i do think listening to the king's remarks the other night, his mother would have been proud. they were filled with service and duty and dignity. he will have to chart his own course. he is obviously a link to the past and a bridge to the future. i have been so impressed with him in these last few days. >> we mentioned just months ago she had the joy of the jubilee and our people they are celebrating but also mourning her. can you give us a sense of the transition and how people are dealing with that in the uk this mourning. >> it is very sad. when her death was announced i was at winfield house. the home of the u.s. ambassador care. staff both uk and american staff there. when it was announced, immediately, everybody really burst into tears. somehow, there was this sense
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that even though you knew it was coming, somehow it still seemed too soon. i think that the country is heartbroken. she also, because 70 years, she has touched so many people. she cared about her people. everybody you meet has a story. i was there when i was 12. i shook her hand. i saw her four months ago up in scotland. so, you know, it is very personal. very personal for this country and i absolutely understand it. i have respected her as a woman for a very long time. i feel a bit heartbroken myself. shannon: ambassador hartley, thank you for your time. please let folks know our hearts thoughts and prayers are with you folks. >> up next. national unity, is that possible
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shannon: a day each year when many americans reflect on how unified we felt as we face terror. unity appears to be in shorter supply as a polarized washington rushes into the final two months of midterm elections. we will talk with john tester of montana. first to jim scott. america, a redemption story. welcome back to fox news sunday.
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>> congratulations on your inaugural show. it is about time you took the lead here and we are excited to see you doing it. >> let me ask you about that book. unity is a big thank. president biden committed early on in his presidency. this is more like the sound he has been giving us lately. extreme republicans just do not threaten our personal economic rights, they embrace political violence. a professor said this on his blog. we are experiencing a near total failure of leadership in our country. politicians on both sides are fueling rates for personal and political advantage we have been talking about the unity we felt in the wake of 9/11. thinking we can get to some kind of unity. >> the good news is america always comes together after the crisis. the aftermath mentality.
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the most unified time i've seen in american history. you look at south carolina. this state came together. african-americans and whites and hispanics auletta bridge. 20,000 strong showing the unity of our state. i believe that we are the most exceptional people on earth that we do unify after the crisis. the question is, can we have a type of leadership that unifies us without a crisis? what we have not seen from the biden administration is that type of unifying message that people rally around spirit why would we have a conversation about putting the burden of the most affluent people with student loan debt on the back of the least fortunate. those that never went to college. why would we have a conversation about a 0% inflation when in fact it is 8.5%. why would we have the president of the united states deliver a soul crushing speech that was
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unnecessary, polarizing and inflammatory. we have done better, we will do better and that is why elections have consequences. shannon: let's talk about the midterm spirit research has out new polling that shows for registered voters caring about very important issues to them. the economy is at the top of the list. among a key constituency, they are getting killed among women. skeptical female voters stand in the way of gop senate. chances of retaking the senate majority are diminishing thanks to abortion. you are pro-life. you signed on to brief which ended up overturning roe v wade. what do you think about the possibility that that may cost you now. federal judges. any second thoughts? >> none at all. i actually think that the momentum is heading in our
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direction. you look at the polling. gaining ground steadily for the last two or three weeks. jd vance in ohio is gaining ground. doctor oz in pennsylvania gaining ground. we are in a pretty solid position with ted but. here issues that matter to the american people. the economy, inflation and gas prices are the top three issues. without any question, the social issues present an opportunity for us to have a conversation with the american people about what matters to them and how we should approach at issue. i can tell you how not to approach the issue. when secretary yellen told me that black women living in poverty could increase their labor force participation rate by having abortions. that lacks moral clarity. it was absolutely a harsh comment that was unnecessary. send me the wrong message that abortion should be the first option for those living in
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poverty. i was stunned. the issue is important. how we handle it is more important. shannon: you handle a number of the senate races. no doubt there is been controversy there. gop candidates being nominated there. even the senate minority leader there had this to say. candidate quality has a lot to do with the outcome. what you have to say for those that say republicans have nominated people that will have a hard time getting through the general. >> the players are on the field. eight weeks away. the last two minutes of the fourth quarter. who we have on the field is who we will play. i am excited about the candidates that we have overall because i do believe it gives us the opportunity to win back the majority. return sanity in washington which will reverberate around the country. >> i want to ask you about your passage in a book. you talk about a difficult conversation you had within president trump.
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the tragedies they are, the comment that he made. i always believe that there are moments in life when you must speak out. i knew it was dangerous to take on president trump. i often tell people if it is not absolutely necessary, do not do it. for me it was a moment of absolute necessity. you talk about being summoned to the white house. going there to talk with the president. ultimately, there was a positive outcome to that conversation. it begs the question, do republicans now need to be having difficult conversations with the former president about things he has said and done in the last couple of years and how it's affecting your ability and the elections. >> america redemption story, telling both sides of the ledger. certainly that charlottesville comments by the former president was something that i believe was very difficult. we had a good conversation. i am not sure we got to the same side of the issue, but we did get to the same side of the solution which was helping people that were hurting.
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helping people are marginalized communities. today i think we need to have hard conversations with the american voters about not red or blue solutions, but about american solutions. let's have hard conversations about the fact that in america, a good education is the closest thing to magic. that is why 67% of democrats, 68% of independents -- agree that quality education is necessary for the furtherance of the american dream and harder hit communities. tough issues tough conversations about the future of america not the future of republican or democrat, we would actually earn the respect of the american people. they let the voters make their own decisions. >> a time in a place to have important debates and conversations. thank you. cowboys up against the box tonight. any game predictions?
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>> i am going to pray for a successful venture for dac prescott. my teams have gotten used to saying wait till next year. shannon: i know all about rebuilding. i am a seminoles fan. thank you. we will see you again soon. >> goodwin last week against lsu. shannon: i will take it. john tester joining us now. i want to start where did with your counterpart. what the president has had to say. for many, that speech, not just a one on the first but there been a couple since then, the final reputation of bidens pledge to be a unifier after highly partisan and divisive action. what do you say to tens of millions of americans who feel like they're old president has labeled the pilot extremists or even semi- fascist.
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>> i live in north-central montana. many of my neighbors, friends, relatives are supporters of the former president. i can also tell you they are not extremists, they just believe in the policies that the president had. i don't think that those are the people the president is talking about. he's talking about the people that actually do support the president. thanking violence is a way to solve problems. it is not. you just have to look back as far as january 6 and see what happened there where folks came to washington, d.c., brought here by the president, ended up in a really bad situation. that is kind of how i look at it. i don't think he is casting all republicans in that case. he specifically says the ones on the fringe that he is talking about. >> what about when the press secretary was pressed on that. she said he is speaking for the majority. 51% of americans, that leaves 49% of americans.
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disagreeing with the majority position, does that make you an extremist? >> i can tell you there are plenty of republicans in montana and other places that are very concerned with the direction the republican party has gone. i think maybe that is what the press secretary was talking about. >> let me ask you about this. deep into the midterms now. critical race in ohio. campaigning as an independent. then he went on to list the things that he agreed with president trump about. so, you have set out there they are places where the democratic brand is toxic. what did you mean by that? >> people like tim ryan who is by the way one heck of a good candidate. a heck of a good candidate. talking about things that mean the best for ohioans and what he can do when he gets that the united states senate to move the ball forward.
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there are things that i disagree with with national democrats on. i am sure that there are things that tim ryan disagrees with. i think that that is healthy. its healthy we have the conversation. i think that some of the things that tim said just now i agree with. some of the things i disagree with. we have to have those conversations. that is why the senate is supposed to be the greatest deliberative body. tim ryan is one heck of a good candidate. he has one heck of a race, good race ahead of him. let the best man win. shannon: energy is critical in montana, obviously. talking about the president's policy. bidens radical energy policy is reality defying. a fiction causing unnecessary hardship and costing americans dearly. does that track with how you see the energy policy?
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>> i look back as far as where we are putting more gas and oil and renewable energy in the pipeline. truly all of the above energy policy. this is positive. i've said many times we cannot just shut the spec it off. it will take some time to get it done. in the meantime, we need to start that transition. we are putting out hundreds of billions of dollars every year in disaster. just had one of the driest years ever. one of the driest years ever. costing taxpayer dollars. does that mean we should just shut off carbon -based fuels? we can't. we cannot afford to do it. we have to figure out ways to do both. >> back out past by the way with the vote from joe mansion. we have federal government funding running out september 30. i don't think any of us think a big deal will get done before
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them. does this side deal now which joe mansion had which would expedite leases and permitting get tied into that funding bill? it is taking heat from both. i will not vote for a political payback scheme. senator bernie sanders calls it a disastrous ideal. my guess is if it is on our cr they will have to eat it if they don't like it. >> i was referring to the house. >> opposition in the house, to. >> here is what i think. i think there are things we can do on the permitting process that will make it more streamlined and allow for more production that makes sense for this country. i think that there are just going to be a few piece of legislation that went between now and the election. if this is what we have to attach it on, so be it. we can set it aside and do it as a standalone, let's do it that way so we can have the debate.
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i have not seen the language on the permitting stuff so i cannot tell you if i am for it or not. there are permits we can do with permitting to make it more streamlined, to make it more energy in business friendly. we ought to take a look at that while we protect our environment shannon: something that may be tied potentially to this funding measure, marriage equality. there is a question about -- this is forcing republicans to vote against something. government funding all tied together. hugh hewitt wrote about elections. calculation is by schumer even if he cannot find the 60 votes he needs it's always better for his party if it is caught trying to pass the measure. no state legislatures even making a peep about this issue. is this a cynical political ploy >> this is a bipartisan effort. democrats and republicans doing it. i think it is to add certainty.
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business needs certainty. it is why we need, by the way, to get the appropriations down by the end of september. it does not provide the kind of certainty that we need in this country. and provides a certainty for folks that are married and protects religious liberties which i think is really, really important. i do not really have a problem with it at all. by the way, it is done in a partisan way. >> critics that worry does not have enough protections. all the cases i have followed, they have another one this fall where people do not feel protected. >> there are bipartisan conversations going on right now to make that crystal clear. i will support it. >> like my mother, you majored in music. elementary school music teacher. you played a trumpet. we've got one here if you apply one forest. no, i am kidding. we will not do that to you.
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[laughter] >> 9/11. twenty-one years ago, one of the worst things to happen to this democracy happened. a time when people came together. we need more that. we also need to remember the first responders that ran into those flames, ran into those buildings. former president trump in the justice department awaiting a critical ruling in their high-stakes document. we will bring in our sunday group on the legal and political risks facing both sides. ♪
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president biden laying a wreath as we remember the events of 9/11. editor-in-chief of the federalist and fox news white corresponded peter ducey. great to have you with us on this busy sunday mourning. want to start with the midterms. how the democrats got their groove back. changing the midterm dynamics. what are you watching for, jonathan? >> very unusual circumstance where you are sort of weighing
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history against this, well, unprecedented set of circumstances. history that tells you the opposite party the president will gain substantially. an average of 25 seats in the house. going back to the 50s. i think it even goes back further than that. you also have jobs. this huge supreme court decision. one thing i find really difficult with trying to gauge the abortion issue is, it is not visible. you do not have a convening power. it is very easy to see energy on the right because you have donald trump. i was at his rally in pennsylvania. they are not stadiums full of suburban women. it is just fused. we just do not know. we have that, we have inflation which is still very high.
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very unpopular president but yet his party is doing quite well in the generic ballot. it is pretty weird, actually. it is beyond my analytical powers. i am sorry you had me as a guest. i am fairly useless. shannon: we have these pulley numbers all over the place. >> ducey is a genius. >> campaigning as an independent a couple democrats we caught up with yesterday in new hampshire. here is what they said. >> i think the president, it took too long to really begin to tackle inflation. >> i think the administration was asleep at the switch. understanding the emergency that existed with inflation early on last year. >> i was displaying at the white house? >> it is interesting. tim ryan, part of his complaint
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was i think we need generational change and joe biden said he would be the bridge to the next generation. there are very long bridges. when you look at clips like that i think it says a lot about the president schedule. not going to places that are strategic for 2022. he's going to ohio, pennsylvania, pennsylvania, pennsylvania, michigan. places that may be beneficial to him if he runs again in 2024 which he says he intends to do. >> yes, he does. the vice president talking about this abortion. the integrity of the supreme court. here is what she says. >> this court took that constitutional right away. and we are suffering as a nation because of it. that causes me great concern about the integrity of the court overall. >> the chief justice spoke out
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not specifically addressing the vice president but people can say what they want but simply because people disagree is not the basis of questioning the legitimacy of the court. >> you see in the polls that there is a fading trust in the court right now, shannon. i think this is a shock for lots of people. the history as the court has always been seen as literally balancing scales of justice for the american people. it undermines basic trust in american institutions. that is also going down at this moment. that is troubling. without the law and without the court, upholding the law, where we going as a country? i think the vice president is on target. if you take away rights, if you take away abortion rights, if you transfer abortion from a constitutional right to murder, then, you know, you have women that will be put in jail for committing murder. shannon: a lot there.
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never a constitutional right to an abortion. no state laws that prosecute the woman. the doctors, yes. just so we are clear on that. >> the court left the doctors with ethical and legal issues with a viable pregnancy that woman says is no longer viable. what is a doctor to do. >> the state is now trying to figure that out. molly. >> democrats are focusing on abortion because they don't have anything else to run on. the general mood of the country's people are very frustrated with the direction of the country. the border is bad. foreign policy is not going well. i do think that it is important for republicans to push back on some of this misinformation and disinformation being spread in the media. it does enable americans to have a say in abortion in a way that they could not under roe v wade. a majority of americans think that abortion should be a legal or illegal some circumstances it three out of four believe there
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should be restrictions on abortion. 63% believe abortion should be illegal after 15 weeks of pregnancy. i think that republicans are shying away from the issue when it fact they should be hitting hard and understanding that the moderate viewpoint is something enable through this dobbs decision. >> how those poll questions are asked. all of those things make a big difference. thank you, panel. thank you for being in. one of the most iconic moments in america's long recovery after the 9/11 attacks. game three of the 2001 world series yankee stadium. we will ask some of the players they are what it meant for
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every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified. a live look at the pentagon
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where president biden is about to make remarks. we also remember the moments of national unity that came in its wake including a return to the national pastime. packing yankee stadium for game three between the new york yankees and arizona diamondbacks. president george w bush carrying the weight of the nation. you will remember throughout that ceremonial first pitch. joining us now with his remembrances of that first day, all-star andy pettit. great to have you with us. what was that moment like? >> it was incredible. just to be part of that. the anticipation to wait and see
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the president up close and personal and to come to yankee stadium. he came to the dugout with us. derek jeter telling him you better throw a strike or they will boo you. he got his arm loose and threw a perfect strike. it was a surreal moment. just a real proud moment to be part of that and obviously bn american. shannon: the yankees, you had been on the field and you talked about what it meant to go back at that time when we were grieving so much as a nation. give people time to be unified over something. a couple hours break from the grief we were experiencing. are you worried some aspects of sports have gotten to political? are we missing that opportunity to bond in that same why now? >> i think so. sports has always been something that is unified. always talking sports around me.
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me now as a father, just being able to get together with my kids. anybody, any kind of sports that goes on. big games, people get together. talking baseball, talking football, talking sports. in the sense of 9/11, what an opportunity that was. the way that everyone rallied around us. rallied around us as a team. a friend of mine said it great. growing up, we all want to be part of a team. whether you're part of the yankees are the mets at that time are you are just a fan, what 9/11 did was made us feel like we were all part of the same team. as we move forward of course we need to remember for sure, but continue to try to unify our country and try to unify each other and i think baseball and sports is a great way to do that. >> it is a gift. we so appreciated those that
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went back out there to give a separate can hope and inspiration. you are doing that now for first responders. remembering those heroes. tell us about your work with tunnel to towers. >> during my career, i always loved doing the military stuff with our veterans and when we travel to baltimore going to walter reed and stuff like that. during covid, watched more news than i probably should have. was not a whole lot to do other than watch tv. just cap see notes tunnel to tower commercials. just really reached out to frank i wanted to be part of it. help them financially. of course, now able to do some add commercials to them. they are doing wonderful things. they have done a wonderful job of not forgetting what is happened. not forgetting the people that i've lost lives. the wives that have lost their
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husbands. continuing doing stuff for our that's. they are just doing wonderful things. tampa building a neighborhood down in tampa for catastrophically injured military people. it is been awesome to be part of it. >> we are glad to see you in that role as well. thank you for all you have done. thank you for your time this mourning. >> thank you very much. fox news sunday viewers know a lot of talented folks have sat in this chair. we will take a look back and talk about what is ahead for "fox news sunday".
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the show hit the campaign truck went on the road to the midterms of one of the most to ever. we wanted to take a look back at some of the years of the biggest moments. star the very first week. fox new cheap political anchor bret baier broke huge news on the president of biggest agenda item. >> i cannot vote to continue with this piece of legislation for it i just can't. >> you are done. this is a no. >> this is a note for correction the president plans to republicans responsible. >> totally different for americans if republicans win back the majorities in the house and senate this year? >> we will make sure joe biden is a moderate brickwork's high stakes of the high courts. >> it is probably going to be close to 50/50. >> you support the fact that they will carry out the will of the people in georgia and put that law at a six that we can ban into effect? >> i would reject the notion this is the will of the people brickwork to try get washington off its talking points so we
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could get more to the point brickwork so would you propose something like that in election year? >> a corset democrat talking points but. >> no it is in the plan. it is in the plan. >> but here's the thing about reality for a second part let's talk about reality. >> senator it's not the democratic talking points. it is in the plan. >> we came back during the pandemic brickwork look at this everybody together. this is wonderful. i repeated wanted to follow the science and now were told not exact. there were dissenting views on the science you were called out. >> what we have to deal with understand number one, science evolves right? >> recovered war. is that the sign after that phone call yesterday at that time is running out for diplomacy? >> is certainly not a sign things are moving in the right direction. >> have we done all we can? >> not remotely. and tragically europe is on the verge of war pre- >> russian forces advanced on the capitol, thousands of
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siblings are fleeing their homes. >> a lot of people he seen that homes are now are stuck in their bomb shelters for days and they finally had a chance to make a break for it. >> you've been to a lot of war zones for us and for others. put this in context. >> it is a movie i've seen before. it is a bad movie. >> i met with them many times. this is a different putin. >> was your this withdrawal a mistake? >> i advised against withdrawing. we gave it all up or back where we were in 2001 the progressive brought in her string is reporting from the country. >> across the brooklyn bridge you will enter the other half, brooklyn, a city in its own right. >> what can congress do for a nevada dad but is thinking about walking to work because he cannot afford gas? what you did call yourself a trumper, six years is not quite never very quickly became converted. >> does that hurt the party as a whole using words like that? >> it is conner's story hotel and how it needs to perk.
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>> you think 2020 witch and the governor's mansion? >> is not what we're doing this for. >> we did not always agree. wes i think you have a right to protest. >> in front of their house because her. >> have a right to protest anywhere in america. >> you think people have a right to show up in front of the house and try to intimidate a judge to change their idea question or. >> no pre- >> we look ahead to 2024 brickwork's have you met with donors and talk about 2024? >> i've met with note donors about my personal ambitions in that respect. >> i am just think sometimes it takes a woman brickwork's we look for moments to step back and reflect. >> do what is right. let the consequence follow. >> there've been times in my life when i have strayed from being a one 100% accurate or one 100% honesty. when i've done things for advantage or politics, i look back on the sings with great regret. and so i set the stage in my life, not doing that anymore. shannon: will look forward to press the nation's newsmakers the decisions that impact you
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