tv Fox News Live FOX News October 8, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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family. our producer breanna given. giffen, she's the glue to this broadcast and so many big events like this and the super bowl and so much more. a great life ahead of her, i'm sure. very lucky guy. i'm sure she keeps her mine in the forest. he doesn't need to be reminded. alicia: a massive fire ball engulfing two sections of the kerch straight bridge and destroying the only direct road connecting rye mia to the russian mainland. russian officials claiming a ukrainian truck bomb was behind the black. welcome to fox news live, i'm alicia acuna in denver. molly: four years after russia seized crimea from ukraine. we're on the ground in kharkiv
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with the latest. trey. >> reporter: molly, good afternoon. a massive explosion early this morning destroyed the only bridge between russia and crimea. the blast and subsequent fire decimating the car and train sections of this bridge. spend large pieces of concrete plunging into the water below. three died after a truck exploded adding an official investigation is underway into the owner of that vehicle. >> investigative actions being carried out at his place of residence and everything is being studied. >> reporter: russia used this bridge as a main supply line to support the southern offensive in the region and destruction is viewed as significant intelligence in ukraine and the war rages on in the eastern part of the country and russian forces fired on the second largest city overnight and the missile strikes damaged one of
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the city's medical centers in a nonresidential building. blasts with the windows shaking and the city tonight remains on edge for the possibility of more strikes. molly. molly: trey, i want to get your insights in the wake of this massive bomb that hit this very symbolic bridge. how are people there in the region reacting to this massive explosion and the hit to the bridge? >> reporter: they were celebrating and the telegram channels and many places where the ukrainians get their information about this war were cheering on the intelligence agencies in this country because they understand how big of a military achievement this is. that territory is not controlled by the ukrainians. it's controlled by r russia. so the ability for the sbu, the intelligence of ukraine to get a truck bomb as the russians say onto this bridge and detonate it causing this much damage is a significant achievement from the perspective of the ukrainians
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and this war continues and major cities are getting hit by russian fire, it is a motivation for those soldiers on the front lines, many of whom we met earlier today who say they are willing to fight until this entire country is liberated. molly. molly: trey yingst, thank you for your reporting. alicia. alicia: the highest chance of armageddon in decades and we're live from wilmington, delaware, where the president is spending the weekend. hi, lucas. >> alicia, social security not clear what the re--- it's not clear what the response would be if there was a strike on ukraine and president biden sounding alarmed about that and speaking at a democratic fundraiser saying "we have not faced a prospect of armageddon since kennedy and the cuban missile
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crisis and i know a guy, vladamir putin and i spent time with him and he's not joking with he talks about tactical use of nuclear weapons for biological weapons and the white house secretary walked back those comments. >> we've not seen any reason to adjust our own nuclear posture or indications they're preparing to use them. >> reporter: alicia, russians enjoy tactical warheads and the warheads the u.s. dropped on japan where 15 and 21 kilotons respectively and many consider those tactical nukes today and russia has 2,000 of these nukes and can launch from jets, short range ballistic missiles and same type of missiles russia is firing in ukraine today. the u.s. has far fewer tactical nukes in the inventory and only 100 currently deployed to europe today spread across five bases, turkey as well.
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here's nikki haley's reaction. >> as a leader, one, don't rile up americans and calm them down and let them know you've got it under control so it makes me worry if he's ready for this. >> reporter: here at home, many economists say the economic picture looking grim and u.s. economists saying u.s. employers lost 30,000 jobs last month and time retailer is supposed to be hiring people ahead of holiday rush. that's a 70% increase over a year ago. alicia. alicia: lucas tomlinson traveling with the president. molly. molly: a cooling labor market from the jobs report and opec is announcing major production cuts prompting concerns about possible impacts on gas prices, and the global economy overall. joining me live to weigh in on all of this, republican congressman from wisconsin and ranking member of the house select committee on the economy brian style. thank you for joining and yous we have an e -- us and we have
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an enormous amount of ground to cover. there was a press gaggle on air force one and karine jean-pierre said we're having steady growth and all these things impacting the economy here in america. your thoughts. >> a lot of alarm bells going off and gas prices moving up, groceries less affordable to families, and the biden administration wants to keep their head in the sand as to what americans are feeling every day. it's more and more difficult to afford the things your family needs. we need to put a check on the biden administration, run away spending, energy policies that are trying to make us dependent on foreign sources rather than domestic production, and have far too many workers finding themselves on the sidelines rather than back to work. we have to get serious about getting inflation under control. the administrationments to ignore all the warning signs that are coming but i'm very concerned about the path we're headed on.
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molly: switching to opec, biden made his plea in july and did biden prevent the 2 million-barrel a day cut and should or can the u.s. do anything in retailuation? >> the biden administration made a mistake by going to saudi arabia in the first place less than three months ago where bind should have gone was to north dakota, west texas to find a domestic supply of oil and natural gas and energy that the united states needs. instead the biden administration went to saudi arabia and what did we get? a 2 million-barrel per day production cut, prices are moving up and here in milwaukee, we just saw prices tick all the way up over 4 to $4.19. families can't afford that and biden made a mistake going to saudi arabia and we're paying the price for the weak administration. molly: gas prices are something americans and american voters heading into the midterms will notice. staying on this issue for a moment. issue with opec+ aligning with russia over the interest and
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simon johnson wrote in the la times this week, the likelihood of russian defeat in ukraine increasing daily with ukrainian advances will change the global picture of oil considerably and opec members need to decide what side they're on and the big headline for today and the bridge explosion and they're highlighting the impact of that is opec making a bad choice here. >> opec has always been in the business of higher prices and pulling back the production and the key cards to play and making money and appears like russia and it's at the expense of american consumers and this is why it's all the more important that we have a domestic supply of energy here in the united states. we're also seeing that not only from a economic standpoint but a national security standpoint and we can see clearly the challenges places like germany
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are facing and finding themselves dependent on foreign oil and jeremy's case it's russia. we need a domestic supply and the bide administration moving us in the wrong direction and going to countries like venezuela to find a source of oil rather than investing here in the united states of america. alicia: none of the president's comment that our country is as close to armageddon during the cuban missile crisis as in the 1960s. this is a reference to putin's escalation and the threat to use nuclear weapons and biden made these comments at political fundraiser and the word armageddon is a scary word and disconcerting from the u.s. president and this president had his words walked back, rephrased and softened by white house safers and your thoughts on president biden using his
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assessment and at that level of risk and what the heck is he doing with the fundraiser and spending the week in delaware and having conversations with our two bad options and spoke and wrong things by going and being on vacation and what is a very serious foreign situation. alicia: that's in the same wheelhouse and more developments on a front and kim jong-un wants to be seen as a nuclear state and road regime is conducting a flurry of missile tests in recent weeks and major escalation that he's taking advantage of a situation unfolding globally and global energy challenge and situation in ukraine and should the united states and our partners take
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care not to be too distracted. >> we see a lot of global actors taking advantage of the fact that the united states is negotiating from a position of weakness rather than from a position of strength. they see biden as week following the botched evacuation of afghanistan. that's one of the reasons that putin invaded ukraine. it's one of the reasons we see north korea acting out in the manner that they are. they believe biden is weak and that's with stemming from the beginning of his administration and botched evacuation of afghanistan and we're paying the price globally for the position the biden administration put the united states of america in. alicia: congressman bryan steil for covering an enormous ground of information. alicia: democratic congressman from massachusetts and house transportation and infrastructure committee and
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serves on the house financial committee. thank you so much for being here as you heard your colleague on the other side of the aisle. he took a few punches there at the president and your party. let's begin with energy. i want to start by putting up a tweet that you sent out at the end of last month. it reads "democrats are not going to budge. we are dedicated to a 100% clen energy future and my generation from both sides of the isle should come together and we're the last one from which clean energy independence is a partisan issue. with that comment in mind and the fact that opec is planning a drawdown, a pullback on production in november. the president is planning to tap into the strategic petroleum reserve and white house making overtures towards venezuela, is right now a time to be calling for this as opposed to domestic
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production. >> yes, it is. president biden inherited a situation in which countries like russia, saudi arabia, iran, and venezuela have outsized international influence because of their fossil fuel reserves. i don't want my kids to inherit a geopolitical situation in which those four re-seems have outsized influence. we need to have domestic clean energy security. i actually agree with much of what hi colleague from the other side of the aisle said. but what he's missing is that by doubling down on oil addiction, we actually exacerbate the systems that leverage and that improve the influence of countries like saudi arabia have. we are creating more jobs in this economy right now from clean energy than from t fossil fuel energy and by doubling down, we can leave a planet with cleaner air and cleaner water for children. the energy reserves and both parties agree on that and they
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need a clean energy for a healthier planet and more secure world. alicia: doesn't the united states stand a chance of cleaner fossil fuel production and other countries especially when talking about places like venezuela? to quote, one official talked to you a couple years ago on this and a barrel produce second-degree a barrel produced and if you're concerned about the overall effect of production on the climate, does it matter if it's produced in venezuela versus the united states where we actually have a chance of a cleaner future with that? >> what matters is that we need to start investing in our own energy reserves that are not fossil fuels and 2.5 degrees of celsius and this planet is much less habitable for our energy and less influence over what foreign nations are doing and
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ggeothey are pal and improved be create good american jobs and all these things are in the world states and i don't want the president ten years from now to have to worry about what countries like iran and saudi arabia and russia are doing with their oil supplies and we want to leave a future for our kids of clean energy security. alicia: with the president tapping into the strategic petroleum reserve once again, isn't that an acknowledgment of the need for fossil fuels? >> right now the united states is clean energy and that's the objective that we are sailing towards and we're going to have to tack left and right and there's no question that the fossil fuels are needed and that's why the democrats passed the reduction act and what was included with it and clean energy investment in history and
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we're going to train people to work in energy sectors and help rejuvenate huge chunks of massachusetts, solar battery technology and we're talking about fastest growing fields of the future and i want americans to lead the way here. alicia: i want to ask you about something else because you led a bipartisan letter to janet yellen calling for a cap on oil prices. can you discuss the strategy behind this? >> yes, the objective is twofold and lower gas prices for western consumers in europe and the united states. two, to asphyxiate the kremlin karma sheen with putin waging war on ukraine. thanks to president biden's superb leadership in response to russian invasion of ukraine, we have been able to support them with economic and military shipments as well as punish the russians with sanctions on their central bank and on their commercial imports.
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the last remaining critical element is the price cap and if discussed and exposed it would deprive the critical input of hard cash. alicia: on the topic of russia, the president used the term armageddon when we ferring to the situation with -- referring to the issue with russia and the white house haase to walk back on that. is it responsible to use the term armageddon when we have not changed our position on nuclear weapons? >> the president was using offhand hyperbolic flourish and describing a real issue and a dictator backed into a corner because he's losing that war in ukraine and skiing acts of desperation in his nuclear stable rattling and underscore there's minnesota no change in the -- been no change in the underscoring and the cutbacks on
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production. it's a sign of vladamir putin losing this war. we need to double down on our support for ukraine. we're going to stand by them with this winter to come. alicia: democratic congressman jake auchincloss, thank you for coming on. molly: a state of emergency declared over the amount of migrants coming into the city and more buses from texas arrived early this morning. jeff watson joining us live with the latest. charles. >> good afternoon, new york mayor eric adams declare that had a state of emergency and helping with the large groups of migrants being bu bussed from te southern border into the city daily and six buses of migrants a day and our cameras were there as our buses arrived at port
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authority and adams says more than 17,000 migrants have been sent to new york city since the spring. many of those buses have been charted by republican governors in both texas and arizona seeking to pressure the biden administration into changing border policy. adam says it's causing a crisis in new york shelter system with asylum seekers amounting to about 20% of shelter population and the agencies are now working together to build migrant housing quicker but the major says new yorkers could end up paying a billion dollars for a problem he says they never asked to take on. listen. >> this is a humanitarian crisis that started with violence and instability in south america and it's being accelerated by american political dynamics, thousands of asylum seekers have been bussed into new york city and simply dropped off. # # # >> they're accusing
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governor greg abbott of using migrants as a political pawn and el paso has been overwhelmed by border crossings and has bussed 7300 migrants to new york city since the end of august and it's more than the state of texas alone. the mayor of el paso said look, we need help with the migrants as well. they're not coming to el paso, molly, they're coming to america. back to you. molly: charles watson covering this on going story for us. we appreciate it. alicia: we are learning new details about the legal status and background of the men arrested for deadly knife attacks on the las vegas strip this week. the details are next.
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32-year-old yoni barrios went on a stabbing spree with a kitchen knife and he thought someone laughed at him and let out his anger. since that dead aattack, we learned barrios is in this country illegally. an eye source tells fox that he's a guatemala national and he's here illegally. regardless of the citizenship status, his office is considering whether to seek the death penalty based on the evidence in this case. >> i'm not thinking about deportation but thinking about filing very serious charges based on the evidence. >> also telemundo reports he was outside of city hall in downtown los angeles asking for help shortly before the attack and barrios went to las vegas to stay with a friend and the friend said he couldn't stay at his place and he caught a bus to the strip and around 11:30 thursday morning in broad daylight, barrios is accused of
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stabbing eight people along the vegas strip in that unprovoked attack killing two of them. the police report states that he approached a group of four show girl impersonators and said he was a chef and asked to take a picture with them holding a kitchen knife and stabbed two of them. one of them, a 37-year-old digiovanni was killed and a 39-year-old also killed. he's scheduled to be arraigned on tuesday and facing two counts of murder and six counts of attempted murder with a deadly weapon. molly. molly: christina cole man with the really awful details. thank you so much. molly: the victim in town for
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family weekend at mris where his son is a student. nypd identified four members of the green goblin gang and they attacked a pair of 19 women and and full body and the the gang seen punching and robbing the train passengers and all four identified suspects have prior criminal histories. ericere subject of the show inventing anna is out of prison. she was in ice and serving four years behind bars for a lengthy scamming spree. sorokin found guilty of conning hundreds of thousands of dollars from new york socialites and banks. molly: thousands of home owners have roof damage around fort
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meyers, florida and they're getting a helping hand from operation blue roof. this is a partnership between the u.s. army corp. of engineers and fema. we have fox weather's will nunly in front of the first home in fort meyers that will receive a free roof. will. >> reporter: molly, good afternoon. with showers in the forecast, the need for protecting the roofs in this area is great and that's where the u.s. army corp. of engineers is stepping in and mobilizing right now to help that problem. the roof behind me, the blue tarp is part of operation blue roof. the crews just stepped in about an hour ago to work on this home. already they have it covered and they've been able to get some of the debris and old shingles off the >> get that cover in place. it's meant to be a band-aid essentially and something to protect the home best as they can and there's a waiting list for weeks and months to really have an overhaul on a lot of the roofs and, boy, is there a demand. i spoke with the corp. a moment ago and say nearly 17,000 homeowners have signed up to
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receive this assistance in the fort meyers area and incredible work they have ahead of them. i spoke to the homeowner here receiving this very first protective roof cover here. she road out the storm in the home and she says she's never going to do that again first of all. but she's grateful for the help. take a listen. >> the wind was just whooping like it was a tornado. whoop and then it'll come to my front door and hear that pop. i was praying to the lord. please, keep this door. just got to work together to get everything back to help get things back to normal. >> reporter: there are multiple installation teams working throughout these harmed counties trying to get the roofs established and they take about an hour a piece depending on the home size to get them completed and if you want to join the waiting list and know someone in the area that needs this assistance. find us on foxweather.com and lead to all the resources because they're accepting sign ups for the very important
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program. molly. molly: this is incredible. they're working fast. will, this is a special time of material they're putting -- type of material they're putting on the roof. >> reporter: this isn't your average backyard tarp and fiber reinforcement and this is a second they brought to me and it's meant to protect from the heavier rain and winds and give a more protective cover but this is just a band-aid till the real work can happen with replacing the work in its entirety. molly. molly: 17,000 on the list. incredible. will nunley with the latest, get the latest by downloading the fox weather app. go to foxweather.com or scan the qr code now and it's a great wap and works well. it's awesome. alicia: with just a month till midterm elections, we're hearing from a small panel of business owners in pennsylvania and weighing in on highly contested senate race, next.
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alicia: the battle for pennsylvania senate seat is heating up as democratic nominee john fetterman's lead over dr. mehmit oz is tightening. we have two business leaders to give us their take on the nominees. the owner and dr. oz supporter and scott eden owner of holy hound tap room and john fetterman supporter. thank you, gentlemen, i'm delighted to talk to you both. that's what's fun about covering politics and talking to real people on the ground and issues they care about. scott, i want to start with you. i want to give you each a chance to talk about your businesses and the candidate you're supporting and why. scott, go ahead. >> hi, we're in downtown pennsylvania and been here 11 years and it's a restaurant and
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craft beer tap room and have about 40 employees open seven-days a week it's a big part of the renaissance of downtown york, i think. molly: why are you backing fetterman? >> i'm backing fetterman for numerous reasons. but i've been a life-long democrat and i believe in the social issues that democrats believe in, but i also believe in a lot of the other pollicis that can affect my business positives tyly such as potential universal healthcare and food and beverage companies can be affected and self-employed people and other things would be issues on crime in downtowns especially and how that can be affected by senators or politicians. that's -- those are some of my -- a lot of it is also just
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personally library the senate helps confirm the supreme court and i feel like that's one of the most important decisions that are made by presidents and the senate. molly: a lot of people watching that one as well. warren, i want to bring you in a bit and a little about your business and why you're backing oz. >> well, i own a regional accounting firm in harrisburg, pennsylvania. 90% of our business is small business owners throughout the commonwealth. i support dr. o oz because he'sa small business guy and speaks small business language. dr. oz talked about background as successful surgeon and invention of heart valve that improved mortality by 41% but he lamented that it took the better part of fda to improve it and people lost their lives because
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they didn't have the heart valve and i understand that as a small business own i and talking to other small business owners, my client clients, what this current administration energy policy and economic policy has proven you can destroy wealth. businesses of 30, 40, 50 years, generational businesses are done, finished, stopped. we had a conversation with a business owner on thursday and his sales are down 75%. he says can you help me? ask there a way out of this? and there is. we have to change direction and our economic policy. molly: you're talking about something that a lot of people identify with and come up a lot in this race is health and healthcare. scott, this is probably something that you're affected by running a restaurant business. go ahead. >> correct. i would say majority of the people who work for me do not have healthcare. i pay for my own healthcare.
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at one point i did offer healthcare but except with the way the rules are now, you have to pay 50% of the premium for the employee but most of them aren't full-time anyway. a lot of people work less than 30 hours a week and short of the way it tends to work, at least in our business. you don't want to pay all those premiums if they're not working full-time. it becomes an issue for those people, and i do feel like most of the places in the world have better healthcare and lack of healthcare has issues with increased homelessness and increase in crime. molly: this race is tightening and dr. oz gaining ground with fetterman a little bit ahead. looking at important issues and voters asking what matters to them. inflation is a really, really big one. warren, you understand that
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people have things that they have to balance and this is a major, major hit to the american pocketbook right now, especially for families. i want to get your thoughts on this critical issue and why you're supporting oz on that matter. >> okay, there's two ways to put the brakes and fight inflation. one is biden and fetterman are doing it and making it so difficult for the average consumer to consume goods. raising inflation, stealing household income to prevent them from being able to consume. that's how they're putting the brakes on the economy. oz thinks we can do it differently. hit the supply chain problem. why is it at the border of california, they're not letting independent truckers in because they're 1099s? at what point does this become a national security issue and yet fetterman and biden allow fentanyl and our border patrol to be overwhelmed so they can't prevent these pills coming across the border to infect our
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communities. why is it that we're not hitting the supply side of the inflation problem? why is it only the consumer that's being hit. my daughter is 16 years old and just started driving. magically every time i get in the car, it's time for gas. the other night, 10:00 at night, i'm sitting there and we're filling up my daughter's car with gas and three cars pull in and out during that time frame. $2, $5, $12. molly: that's something a lot of voters can identify with and the gas price issue and we'll watch that closely in the weeks ahead inching closer to the midterm. warren and scott, thank you both so much for joining us on a saturday. giving us insights into what business folks are thinking about in pennsylvania here with would he bees to go. with weeks to go. alicia. alicia: griff jenkins joins us next from eagle pass, texas. hey, griff. >> reporter: hey, alicia, we're
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alicia: fox news griff jenkins is down at eagle pass with tony gonzalez. hi, griff. >> reporter: that's right. there's been 10 apprehensions since the new fiscal year began on october 1. congressman, your thoughts. why are you here today? >> this is the eye of the storm. you know, eagle pass has been nonstop chaos from day one. i did a ride along with the eagle pass police department, and what we were seeing is stash house after stash house and they're seeing an increase in the number of fentanyl related calls. this is happening all over my district but eagle pass is at the center of it.
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>> reporter: congressman, yesterday governor abbott was touting lone star and 337 million lethal doses of fentanyl heading into fiscal new year and better off or getting worse? >> it's getting worse. it's literally all hands on deck from local pd to the sheriff's, county sheriff's to the state. but this is a federal problem. you know, joe biden has caused this problem. we have kamala harris who's in texas later on today for a fundraising event. it's a slap in the face to the people that live along the boarder and there was a case i was listening and having lunch with a shall have from zavala county and a child in a baseball game got hit in the head and was supposed to get air lifted to san antonio for care but there were no resources because everything was put towards the migrants. >> reporter: we had yesterday, congressman, showing our viewers that a ambulances had to take
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ten nicaraguaen to the hospital because of a car accident and border patrol had to jump into action. >> every day americans are put last. we don't feel safe, we don't feel secure, our children are going into lockdown. we just started up school a couple months ago. a lot of my schools are going into lockdown on a regular basis. this is not normal. there's nothing normal about this. biden and house democrats have failed us. house republicans have a plan and our commitment to america and part of that is to secure the southern border. >> reporter: how will republicans, 9/11 you take the house and that's the only branch of government you have, how will you make a difference? the cartels, congressman, seem to have absolute control of this border here. >> right now, the cartel taken a smuggling industry to $13 billion and house republicans can do that with the power of the purse. i sit on the appropriations committee and they leave and hold this accountable anded
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administration to enforce the llaws. >> reporter: we've been reporting on a tiktok video and advertising for a driver to drive from mccallen to houston and $70 throw and cartel taken to social media. >> griff, the cartels are contracting out to gangs and organized criminals, and those gangs are subcontracting it out to every day people. that tiktok video may have been $70,000 advertisement but the cartel may be giving them 150 in order to do that. why? if something goes down, you're seeing every day people get impacted. i asked the sheriff the other day, what does a smuggler look like? he goes, tony, it's every day people now. just in the past month, they caught five national guardsmen that were caught smuggling as well. >> reporter: well, not getting any better here. congressman tony gonzalez meeting with business people and i believe a family member, a
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alicia: nationwide protests rocking iran for the fourth weekend in a row as a mother speaks out against official claims that her daughter fell to her death from a high building and insists the 16-year-old was beaten to death for protesting. kitty logan is live with more on that. kitty. >> reporter: hi, molly. yes, there are reports of yet more antigovernment protest across iran on saturday at least two people killed in those demonstrations, which are now into their third week. now, this video shows fema protesters dressed in black and chanting anti-regime slogans and happened at a school last tuesday and iran leadership facing the biggest protest in years sparked by the death of a 22-year-old woman while she was held in custody last month
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detained by iran's morality police that enforced a very strict dress code for women. iran state television released video on friday claiming to show masha and other women entering a room when she collapsed. the official cause of death was lack of oxygen to the brain, which the government claims was caused by a medical condition. her family have disputed this official account claiming she was killed by authorities while in detention. the mother of another teenage girl who died during a recent protest has also spoken out and she's accused authorities of murdering her daughter. officials say this young woman died falling from a building but her friends say they last heard from her being chased by police. now, the death of these young women has really sparked a very passionate response in iran. those protests started immediately after masha's funeral and they're spreading across the country and authorities have tried to crack
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down and thought dozens more may have been killed and perhaps hundreds arrested and the question s molly, whether the protests will continue to have momentum and what real lasting impact they might have on iran's leadership. back to you. molly: yeah, incredible bravery shown by the young women. kitty logan, thank you. alicia. alicia: america's crime crisis and the fight for parental rights in public schools are two of the hot topics in the midterm. our political panel joining us at the top of the hour.
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molly: you are looking live, the ninth and final bus migrants shipped from texas arriving right now. political back and forth with new york city leaders and leaders in the south continuing. man accused of killing two people and injuring several others in a stabbing rampage in the las vegas strip was in the united states illegally. sources are telling fox news the suspect is guatemalan national with prior criminal record in california. welcome to fox news live, i'm molly line. alicia: i'm alicia acuña. the man stabbed 8 peop
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