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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  September 26, 2022 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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thank you, trey. fox news alert now. crime taking shape as one of the voters' top issues with six weeks to go until mid-terms. brand-new hour begins now. hope you enjoyed the weekend. dana has the day off today. she is back tomorrow. julie banderas is carrying the load today. how are you, kid? >> only by you. good morning. good to see you. i'm julie banderas. thank you for watching. a new poll finds 69% of voters consider crime one of the most important issues. crime actually ranks higher than abortion on the list of voters' biggest concerns. >> bill: in pennsylvania democrat john fetterman, republican dr. oz hitting one another on their crime policies campaigning to became that state's next senator. nate foye watching it from the newsroom in new york. good morning. >> bill: a new poll has fetterman up by five points. dr. oz is focusing on crime to
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close the gap. crime is a problem in philadelphia. oz is there right now. this is a live camera in philadelphia. oz is receiving the official endorsement of the city's largest police union after he received the unanimous endorsement of the pennsylvania state police union. he will take this stage, speak soon. we'll keep an eye on this. but he says if fetterman wins this race people in pennsylvania will be a lot less safe. >> he is the most pro- murderer candidate running for office. certainly the most radical in the contested senate seat. if he really believes that 1/3 of prisoner should be released and getting murderers out of prison before they serve their time. >> fetterman believes over 1,000 second degree murderers should be released from prison if they didn't take a life.
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these brothers were granted clemency and release from prison after being convicted of second degree murder. they maintain their innocence and let fetterman to take this shot at oz. >> what does it say about a person's character if they will fight to make sure that innocent men will die in prison versus a man that will fight to make sure that they are able to get back with their families? that's the choice. >> crime in philadelphia continues to be a big issue. under d.a.larry crassner. this right here is a gas station this weekend. 100 people ripped it apart but nobody was arrested after this. retail theft in philly up 54% this year. you can expect crime to be a big issue during the candidate's debate october 25th, two weeks from election day. the conditions surrounding that debate are very much being worked out. >> bill: if it happens, if it
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happens, when it happens, a lot of people will be watching. nate foye in new york. thanks. >> two races in georgia are hotly contested. stacey abrams is in a rematch with incumbent republican governor brian kemp. senator warnock is in a nail biter with nominee herschel walker. rich edson is following it live for us in washington this morning with the latest. good morning, rich. >> good morning. it is one of the closest senate races in the country. the polling over the past few weeks shows this contest is tightening. senator warnock, democrat, trying to hold his seat against former football star republican herschel walker. if neither secures at least 50% of the vote in this one it goes to a runoff. candidates are scheduled to debate in savannah october 14th. warnock wants to increase police funding for local departments that passed the house last week.
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warnock has been attacking walker on abortion. walker has said he wants a total ban, says he supports lindsey graeme's proposal to outlaw abortions after 15 weeks and calls warnock radical on the issue. abortion is also playing into georgia's governor race. governor kemp signed a law in 2019 that bans most abortions after heart activity is detected. that's as early as six weeks into a pregnancy. democratic challenger stacey abrams says the heart isn't mature enough at six weeks. >> the heartbeat, it is a manufactured symbol designed to convince people that men have the right to take control of women's bodies. >> polls have shown governor kemp widened his lead but it remains within single digits. former president trump targeted kemp after the governor refused to work to overturn the 2020 election in georgia, a state
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president biden narrowly won. abrams and kemp ran against each other four years ago when kemp was secretary of state, or right afterwards. abrams refused to concede the race after losing by fewer than 55,000 votes. they have agreed to two debates next month. >> thank you. >> candidate biden didn't spend a dime or day in the rio grande valley or any where in texas once there was a homestretch of the general election. you have to be locking arms with the people you want to fight for and serve and his votes that you want to win. >> bill: that's a democrat -- a democratic candidate for governor o'rourke calling out president biden and other democrats for ignoring latino voters. want to bring in a texas republican running for office in a new seat, texas 15. thanks for coming to the program. nice to sigh. you have beto saying one thing.
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is he wrong, by the way? >> look, that's just one of the issues is biden has not come down here. the czar kamala harris has refused to acknowledge the illegal immigration that is happening at our borders. you couple that along with bad economic policy that has affected americans and democrats and republicans alike. people are moving to the republican party. they are looking for answers and they are looking for a plan. the g.o.p. has given a commitment to america. >> bill: so just to frame this right. in one weekend, in one state you have two democrats of national prominence, o'rourke losing most of those elections, and gavin newsom, the california governor, was in texas also criticizing his party. listen here. >> these guys are ruthless on the other side.
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where are we organizing bottom up? where are we going on the offense every single day? they're winning right now. the democratic party has to assert itself much more aggressively. >> bill: all right. so i guess, you know, newsom might be running for president. what do you make of the fact in one weekend two democrats are down there saying a similar message being critical of their party and leader? >> one thing is i want to agree with governor newsom. not only where are they but where have they been the last 100 years? we have not seen any change, good change here in south texas that has been under democrat control over 100 years. and that's why i know this november people are going to vote for myself, monica de la cruz for texas 15 to give conservatives the representation they deserve. which includes faith, includes their family, and includes love of country, hard work, protecting our values.
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>> bill: so you are running in the new seat. it is a sliver of land that runs through the rio grande valley right at the border. the border is hot because republicans think there is fresh ground to gain some votes down there. tony gonzalez is a republican. we heard from two democrats. here his district is just to the west of yours. here is how he framed it. >> we will be winning races that no one thought we would win before. how will we do it? by leaning into our conservative values. this is just the start of the future of the republican party. i'm excited to be part of it. >> bill: so many of you believe that the hispanic voter is ripe for the republican party in the 23rd, 28th, 15th. those are all the districts that line that border. gonzalez's district runs for 500 miles along the border. he is in a tough re-election fight. your new map, however, favors republicans by three points. seems to me you can win that.
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can you? >> absolutely. we're going to win it because i am representing the true values of south texas, which again includes hard work. the radical left has moved so far away from the core values of hispanics. and let me give you just one example. this latin x garbage they are shoving down our throat. they are taking away our vote. hispanics are walking away from the party by thousands. you'll see november show many republican wins down here. >> bill: hispanics voters not satisfied checks in at 72%. wow. that's a big one according to our polling. we'll see how it goes.
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monica de la cruz, election is six weeks from tomorrow. we'll see how it goes. thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. >> make sure you have medication, water, food that you can sustain yourself with for 3 to 4 days. >> florida governor ron desantis is scheduled to speak in an hour as florida is bracing for a category 4 hurricane. what needs to happen before expected landfall on thursday. we'll ask the miami mayor. >> bill: rihanna has a big gig coming up. she turned down a few before, not this time. we'll tell you the accepted invitation that came in this week. >> okay. nascar driver going ballistic. oh my gosh, on an opponent. that's not sportsmanship throwing punch after punch through a car window. what started it? >> trying to go after the driver
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>> the talk made headlines around the world. >> it was unfathomable it happened on the talk. >> 16 minutes past the hour. illegal immigrants charged in the deadly hit and run of a
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sheriff's deputy struck and killed by the suspect driving a front loader. desantis wanted an investigation how the man was hired without proper paperwork. we're on the story out of eagle pass, texas with more of an exclusive video of smuggling at the border. good morning. >> we're learning more about that migrant who crossed at least two times into the united states illegally. one of the times he crossed where i'm standing in eagle pass, texas. now he is behind bars. look on your screen. the mug shot we got in from the sheriff's department in florida. that's the man held on $500,000 bond and charged with leaving the scene of a fatal crash. after investigators say he ran over a sheriff's deputy with a front loader truck and took off. the deputy was killed. he was a 19-year veteran of the sheriff's department. right now his family is grieving as police try to figure out how
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this man was ever -- approved at the construction site. the deputy was there to patrol the area. when he got out of the car the man ran him over and hid in the bushes for nine hours before being arrested. >> he has no qualifications to drive a front loader. what he said what he told those people is back in honduras he worked construction and he knows how to operate this thing. so they said go ahead. >> this comes as smuggling cases are surging at the border. the new dash kam video shows a illegal immigrant fleeing from police. in the back of the truck seven migrants each one jumping out of that truck as the troopers chased them down. listen. >> do you have an i.d.? not with you? >> no.
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>> once the migrants get into the united states some are being smuggled around the country on private airplanes. look at this. friday texas dps found 19 migrants on that proverb ott plane out of mc allen, texas. they stayed at a stash house. the fourth bust at a private airport in texas in a month. a lot of unanswered questions who is chartering the planes. we're told by forces that they believe it's the cartels that are taking more and more money from migrants and then letting them go on the private planes if they want to go from houston or mcallen to other states across the country. >> bill: we start a new week on the border.
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>> why did she even keep talking? house speaker nancy pelosi getting a not so warm welcome as she makes a surprise appearance this weekend at the global citizen festival in new york city. a festival. supposed to be fun. i think that's what it means. she took to the stage in central park where social media videos appear to show she was booed by those in the audience. she briefly spoke about carbon pollution and climate change. joining us now with reaction jimmy failla, host of fox across america. so yeah, she really broke the mood out there. >> a general note to politicians every where. nobody wants to get a lecture on pollution while getting polluted in the audience of a concert. the only green energy they cared about was what they were smoking. let's just be honest. the thing about new yorkers specifically is they always know a fraud when they see one. she has the authenticity of a
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$five role ex you buy if time square. she extended proxy voting until late november saying it's too dangerous because of covid to be in congress in washington. here she is in central park where covid isn't the top 20 germ you might catch at a festival. >> bill: she read the room wrong. >> this is a crowd that is there for -- >> bill: it was saturday night. >> in the middle of central park. they don't care about any of this. she might as well have started a let's go red sox chant. nobody is there for that. >> bill: rihanna accepted the invitation to perform at the halftime at the super bowl. your reaction. >> to put it in terms it's raining so much hypocrisy time to open an umbrella. she turned down this gig in 2019
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trashing the league at the time with a pretty interesting quote. i wouldn't dare do it for what, who gains? not my people. i couldn't be a sell-out or enabler. here she is, now what has changed? did the person who sang we found love is singing we found cash. here we are. >> she is a great performer. she hasn't put out music since 2016 and not performed since 2018. >> maybe a comeback, maybe a marriage or baby involved i believe. the big change is that jz took over the halftime show. he is fantastic. the point of the protests was not to make entertainers richer but to deliver something for the black community. they haven't done that. she has just walked away from that and back on stage. >> bill: cheers to the freaking weekend. did you see this nascar? guy is trying to punch out a
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car. martinsville, virginia, grady is the driver taking it out on callahan's car. here is how it went. >> we have trouble, a major fight going on down here. i mean tempers have flared. we have all kinds of stuff going on. >> bill: grady trying to go after the driver of the 41. >> bill: the issue. hard to punch through the net and steel. the buffalo bills. what the nfl does they put a camera in the booth to get the reaction from the offensive and defensive coordinator. this is the offensive coordinate for for the bills when they lost. here is what happened. >> the clock is at three. they won. >> bill: man. wait for it. >> oh man. come on. >> bill: ken dorsey wanted to win this game. they lose 21-19 and he took it out on the tech team.
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>> he can't smash tablets. he didn't have the status of tom brady. i feel for him losing to the dolphins. this is the 3-0 last time. it has been a minute. this fight -- this aggress is intense. as for the nascar aggressive. i'm not impressed. driving a taxi in new york for a long time you find out what you are made of. that guy punching the frustrations of a man making mulls of dollars. >> he is not stuck in traffic. >> a man making a million a race are not like a cab drivers. the cabbies go harder than that nascar. we'll outdrive and outfight you. bring it on. >> i hope he is properly punished. >> i hope so. >> thank you. >> our commitment to america
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will help widen that margin. the president and his administration weren't worried about the commitment to america they wouldn't be talking about it so much. >> republicans hitting back after democrats slammed the post mid-term agenda. a former biden staffer is warning about what will happen if the mid-terms is a referendum on the president. plus nasa is about to perform a critical test, pretty cool. that could save earth one day. how it involves a harmless asteroid billions of miles away. >> the new one you're tracking. how big? >> it's what we call a global killer. nothing would survive. not even bacteria. >> the united states government asked us to save the world. anybody want to say no?
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haven't heard from her in a couple of weeks. she suggests her former boss is a liability for democrats in november. james freeman assistant editorial page "wall street journal." hello. just want the read it. if it's a referendum on the president, they will lose and they know that. >> yeah, i think she understands the history and understands the current polling. the president's polls have improved but still lousy. she is, i'm sure, well aware of 2010 barack obama in the white house lost more than 60 house seats, lost the majority. the next mid-term 2014 republicans took the senate. i think she understands this has to be different from history. this has to be not a mid-term about the president's party, which it formally is. >> i wonder if democrats running for office the more they distance themselves from the president possibly the better they'll do considering the economy and biden's approval poll right now at 39%, dismal
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for a president. what would you say about the most important issues facing voters right now and party trust when it comes to economy, 84%, education 77%. inflation and crime high up there, too. all issues right now democrats aren't really succeeding at. >> the economy is the big one. it tends to be the way it is in most elections. education that usual slay a big democratic edge when it is top of mind. this time not so much. we saw the gubernatorial election in virginia. you look at the parent anger over the endless shutdowns, pushed largely by what you might call the democratic machine teachers unions, etc. you look down that cluster of issues that are most important and it suggests, like the history, republican edge. >> bill: back to this approval number. he is at 39%. in that abc/"washington post"
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piece. it shows any time a president is below 50% it tilts heavily to the opposing party. if you are at 39%, six weeks and a day out, logic would tell you, james, that this could and should be a wipe-out in favor of republicans. >> that is certainly what those numbers say. it is what history says and even beyond the headline, it's not just voters moving away from the president, obviously not doing well with independents. republican-leaning voters. most of the democrats polls in the voter say they don't want him to run again. see not on the ballot this fall. if you think about the energy in your party, the enthusiasm of people to vote in what is essentially a referendum on the president, it's not good. >> i want to touch on what you mentioned earlier about angry parents. i'm one of them. when it comes to education, for example.
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democrats usually do poll highly on education. it was democrats that, in fact, wanted the schools to close down and shut down and why, in fact, now we have fourth graders, 9-year-olds in math testing the lowest test scores that we've seen in decades. the democrats are not owning it. that is the issue across the board because the democrats aren't owning any of it. the economy, crime, every single democratic-led city is led by a democrat not even taking responsibility on crime. >> i think they can try and say they don't own the shutdowns but they do. and it goes to their allies in the teachers unions as well. they had a pose for much of the pandemic era that we want to open schools, we really do. we just have to compile this list or comply with this long list of expensive, unnecessary changes and then we can open. of of course, we saw what happened. massive funding in schools that remained closed for months and months and understand what we
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should have known at the start of the covid era in march of 2020. and some of us were saying it then but look, children are not at great risk and schools are not the super spreaders of some hysterical reports. >> bill: on the topic of schools, big race in ohio, ryan against vance appears to be really close. over weekend he was campaigning with randi wine garthner in ohio, ahead of the big teacher's union. great to see tim rian in ohio. what's interesting about this when it comes to schools. the republican governor, mike dewine, is running for re-election and appears to have the advantage and will probably win. sometimes popular governors can pull a senator across the line in a tight race. but dewine was on that shutdown
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school band wagon early. a lot of people did not like it during the early days of the covid pandemic. i just -- are you able to size up how this union tour plays for voters in ohio? >> that is complicated and dewine more of a centrist republican on a number of issues. has differences and running a lot stronger so far than vance. i would say that picture you showed is kind of the problem with the ryan candidacy. he is presenting himself as the moderate midwestern guy when he ran for office 20 years ago. he has the buckeye foobl -- he has become a partisan left wing democrat when you look at his voting record. i think that will be the problem for him. >> 100% with democrats, right? >> voted for build back better the big version, not just the
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one that gotten acted. the super sized one. voted for the american rescue plan. we see how that turned out with inflation. now he is on the other side. he won his 2020 congressionaa se used to. he is moving away from the voters there and obviously vance is a first-time candidate. >> bill: good race, awesome to watch. james freeman. >> in a first of its kind mission nasa is taking aim at an asteroid millions of miles away from earth with the goal of changing its course. today's dark mission is designed to test planetary defense systems. jonathan serrie with the details. it's pretty cool. >> this will be so cool to watch and if it works, scientists will have a new tool to save humanity from the fate of the dinosaurs. it is called dart, double
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asteroid redirection test. it launched aboard the spacex falcon nine rocket beginning a ten month journey to an asteroid. this computer simulation shows what to expect tonight at 7:14 eastern time. it will slam into the asteroid at 14,000 miles per hour sending photos back to earth on the way. a tiny companion spacecrafts photographs the after math. >> we're going to point the kam are and take the most amazing pictures of the asteroid we'll see for the first time. we don't know what the shape is and then impact, loss of signal and we'll celebrate. >> scientists expect the impact to change the path around a larger asteroid. neither asteroid poses a threat to earth. if today's crash test is successful scientists will have demonstrated a way to protect the planet in the event we
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discover other asteroids on more ominous paths. >> as a scientist i hope to be surprised by the results of the experiment. as a plan tore defender i don't want to be too surprised. >> in hollywood films scientists blow up asteroids using nukes. in real life they believe it will leave a damaged core surrounded by debris and gravity would eventually bring it together. a better way is to give the asteroid a little nudge well in advance and they will test that theory tonight, julie. >> a little budge, all right. thank you so much. >> bill: u.s. condemning iran's crackdown on protestors after the death of a woman in police custody. will the people in the streets make a difference this time? plus vladimir putin threatening to use nuclear weapons as ukraine makes more gains on the battlefield. what is the status of the war now? general jack keane is on that next.
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>> we have communicated directly, privately at very high levels to the kremlin that any use of nuclear weapons will be
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met with catastrophic consequences for russia. that the united states and allies will respond decisively and we have been clear and specific about what that will entail. >> the u.s. saying it will respond decisively if vladimir putin uses any nuclear weapons as ukraine continues its offensive to retake more of its territory from russian forces. let's bring in senior strategic analyst general jack keane. great to see you. let's start with the biden administration's response. they say they will respond decisively if putin would use nuclear weapons, the fear of the world. because vladimir putin is getting more desperate and continued territory gains by ukrainian forces what do you make of the adminisadministrati response? >> putin has to know that there will be catastrophic
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consequences. likely we would not respond with a tactical nuclear weapons ourselves. secondly, i don't think we would send ground troops in there, either. maybe except some special operations forces to do a specific mission. but i think that's even remote. the most likely response is devastating air and missile attack on russian forces. so what would actually happen and our nato partners would likely participate. nato cannot stand a nuclear bomb going off in europe with radiation spreading and not respond to that. so it's essential that they do respond and it's essential that putin knows they are going to respond with this. so here is putin. he wants to use this bomb to end the war if he is going to use it. i think the possibility of him doing this is remote because there are so many negatives against him in doing it.
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one is what sullivan just said. and that would guarantee him losing the war if the united states destroyed his forces in ukraine. the second thing is he would expect the ukrainians to give up if he used a nuclear bomb. we know that for a fact that that's not going to happen. they are steadfastness would be increased. other he a nuclear battlefield. his troops aren't trained to deal with the radioactive nuclear battlefield. they would suffer significant casualties as would the ukrainians. there are a lot of negatives, julie, but you have to take it seriously. >> i want to get to what the administration is saying about north korea. american adversaries are continuing to test the will of the biden white house. north korea conducted fresh missile tests ahead of the vice president's trip to the mission. it speaks volumes. white house is talking tough on russia on nukes. what is the administration going to do and is doing about north
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korea? >> well, the missile firing really doesn't have much to do with the vice president. it is the fact that they're conducting exercises, the south korea's and united states naval exercises. we haven't done that since 2017. they normally fire a missile as a result of that. it is indisputable, julie, chynna and russia and others they thought they could take advantage. russia, ukraine, china, taiwan, iranians brandishing what they would do with a nuclear weapon and fueling the civil wars in the middle east. all have moved in that direction afghanistan after. i think it's appropriate to draw the correlation that they perceive this administration as being weak. >> all right. general jack keane. thank you so much. appreciate you having you on as
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always. >> great talking to you, julie. >> bill: chaos on the streets of the streets of tehran. violent protests over the death of a young woman in police custody. iran accusing the u.s. to try to use the riots to disrupt the country. >> no sign the protests are easing. tehran is striking out at the united states as well. violent protests spread against the government, all 31 provinces seeing unrest. 41 people killed. demonstrators and authorities step up actions and live fire ammunition being used against the crowds. internet service cut off. all triggered by the death of a 22-year-old woman who died after being taken into custody by the
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morality police for not wearing a head scarf property. claimed she was tortured. pro- government rallies were staged over the weekend in iran but anger is boiling over not just about social restrictions but the authoritarian government and other things. death to the dictators is a rallying cry. protests against iran over the weekend in europe as well as in the states. the regime charges the u.s. for supporting the rioting. the u.s. is considering returning to that iran nuclear deal at least one expert telling us right now might not be the time to give tehran more money. >> bill: nice to see you. >> florida governor ron desantis is set to hold a news conference on hurricane ian after declaring a state of emergency for the entire state. we'll speak directly with miami
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>> harris: if president biden and his party thought the winds were bring their way. voters trust republicans over democrats by double digits on nearly every single issue that's important to them. and that new polling also shows most democrats want joe biden to sit all the way down, don't run again. one long-time clinton aide says get ready for another round of hillary. oh wow. senator marsha blackburn of the great state of tennessee, jason chaffetz and charles payne at the top of the hour. >> bill: ron desantis scheduled to hold a press briefing on hurricane ian. the storm will be with us all
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week. it could hit the state later in the week. the miami mayor is francis suarez. good morning to you. briefly how are you getting ready and how is the state dealing with this? miami looks to be okay so far. good morning. >> yeah, so far so good. thanks, bill. obviously hurricanes are extremely unpredictable. it looks like we're outside of the cone of probability right now but it can change. we have a lot of experience with hurricanes over the years and so we always expect the worst and prepare for the worst. we're looking at -- we have flooding this time of the year. we actually have had flooding, believe it or not. we expect now given the current fore casts 4 to 7 inches of rain and focusing on the areas that will flood easily and also making sure our residents are prepared just in case the
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hurricane turns. it could be a category 2 to 4 by the time it hits florida. >> bill: a big part of job is getting people to listen and care so they do the correct prep in order to help the family and friends. i don't think the u.s. mainland has been hit for two years for a hurricane. i don't think tampa has been hit for about four years. you wonder the measure of complacency that might come with that, mayor. >> sure. we haven't been hit by a big hurricane since irrelevant may in 2017, 5 years ago. every time there is the first storm of the season people get apprehensive and we hope people don't take it for granted. if there is a near miss like this might become and people start to let your guard down storms that may come later in the season. if this is a category 2 to 4 storm hitting tampa the need to get prepared as quickly as
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possible. that's a massive one. >> bill: for all the information from the fox weather team and janice dean and everyone it is mid october so those gulf of mexico waters are not as warm as they would have been had it been mid august, a bit of a silver lining perhaps. right now how strong could the storm be, do you think? >> well, i've been hearing reports any where from a 2, 4. you know, we had a category 5 storm with 200 mile per hour winds and it leveled things. i would say be prepared for the possibility of flooding and for damage-related trees and debris flying and have evacuation plans in place and make sure your valuables are also stored in
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place and your family knows where you are going if you'll be moving. >> bill: we'll talk later in the week. thank you. >> get real quick before we go. i partnered with this awesome conservative children's book publishing company. pro- american, pro- american values, anti- woke, i love it and partnered with them. buy a book. "the faulkner focus." >> bill: here is harris, have a great monday. bye-bye. >> harris: the water is deep and looks treacherous for president biden and democrats in new key polling. turning this around might be rather tough with just 43 days to go until november 8th. i'm harris faulkner and you are in "the faulkner focus." president's approval rating is often a predictoror how the mid- term elections will go for the party in power. only 39% of voters approve of biden's job.

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