tv Americas Newsroom FOX News October 11, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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ambulance in the city responded after a call about an unconscious child there. when first responders arrived, the monitors on their bags alerted them to carbon monoxide. parents have been notified and all in stable condition, guys. sending it over to you. scary situation. >> thank good lord. >> see you tomorrow. >> bill: that's new video of the russell missile barrage on ukraine. escalation and fighting prompting the g-seven to hold an emergency virtual meeting happening as we speak. ukraine wants more air defenses. president zelensky is attending that meeting making his plea. developments as we get them inside of "america's newsroom." first, however, mid-term forecast coming into focus. the clearest glimpse yet what to
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expect november 8th, exactly four weeks from today as we say hello. i'm bill hemmer. got your election red on. >> dana: exactly. i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." we love the mid-terms and catch you up on these latest ones. a couple changes you will want to know about. the latest forecast shows the republicans taking the house and win 231 seats. it could swell to as many as 246. >> bill: best case for democrats is 220 seats, about where they are right now. that would be enough for a razor thin house majority. >> dana: the senate is anyone's game. we have 47 races going democrat, 49 republican. that means it all comes down to the four toss-ups we've been talking about, arizona, georgia, nevada, pennsylvania. >> bill: the nationwide conversation is shifting. majority of independents say they're more focused on the
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economy than voting rights and democracy. a trend that would favor republicans. >> dana: alexandria hoff has more from washington. the numbers just out. alex. what do we know? >> we're to the point where individual candidate strength carries a lot of weight. the ability to stick to messages and quirks will make all the difference in the highly competitive races. both parties have to use the tools to win over independents. the largest number of americans at 82% rated inflation as their most important issue. crime, 72 elections. all of these jobs and immigrations are g.o.p. led issues and top abortion spells to bad news for -- 67% gave preference to the economy. toss-up races power ranking shifts three districts towards democrats and two towards republicans. personalities coming into play there. you have republican in rhode island who appears to have a
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shot at winning the open seat. a moderate who earned praise from denny hoyer. leaning d to toss-up. in ohio's 9th district scandal plagued the republican. a little bit of shifting there. personalities in the fight to control the senate. all eyes on arizona, georgia, nevada and pennsylvania. no evidence at this point to determine any shifts in the four critical seats. the senate remains a clear toss-up with the forecast expecting republicans to take 51, democrats 49. you have to remember that comes with a two-seat margin of error for both. 28 days out but millions of americans are already having their say. absentee voting start evidence in florida, georgia, ohio, and pennsylvania. you know the power rankings are revving up with speed, too. we'll have the next forecast out on tuesday. >> bill: thank you, alex.
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want to draft a little bit off what alex was reporting. republican advantage in the house on the house side senate we'll talk about later this morning. majority is at 218. republicans 231 right now. depending how it may or may not shift over the next 28 days we should see. here is the problem for democrats in this race when it comes to the house. here is the republican in red, democrat in blue. all these you see here, come on, let's go. all these you see here in yellow are the toss-ups and clearly democrats have to defend many more seats in the cycle than republicans. giving republicans an opportunity here to do quite well. let me come here and show you just a little bit of the flavor we're picking up from so many of these house races and why they are shifting and what's happening. in michigan there is a congressional house seat that we believe is too close to call but we're shifting it slightly lean
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toward democrats. hillary schult is the democrat here. abortion is a big issue in michigan. a statewide referendum the first part of november that could have an influence and effect on turnout and why we get the shift toward the democrat there in that district. on the east coast rhode island. surprised a lot of people. there is a republican running in house district number two allen thong, a former mayor of cranston, new hampshire, running a very good campaign. we're shifting it to republican. if he were to win it would be a good indicator that republicans could be on the roll they're expecting. in texas a lot of toss-up races in texas. one we've shifted toward republican and that is may rah flores who won the special election along the gulf of mexico. we believe immigration is a
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significant issue for voters in that part of texas and gives flores and advantage so far. there is a lot of data out there. we'll move forward a little piece every day for the next 28 days over here. >> dana: you know who loves data is karl rove. he is with us. what do you think of our power rankings a month out? >> i think they're pretty spot on on the house. i'm sort of in the 20 to 25 range which would put us at 233, republicans at 233. 231 is a reasonable guess. i thought the examples you showed today are pretty good. the district in michigan is held today by peter meyer, the son of the family that did the famous grocery and home services stores in the upper midwest. he was defeated in the republican primary by john gibbs. meyer is likely to hold a seat
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won by joe biden by nine points and it will be tough for the republicans to hold it. on the other hand a friend of mine, allen, he was a very popular mayor of the second most populous city in rhode island. i hate to say this, it's cranston, rhode island. he has been a very popular figure there and really an-out standing possibility to become the first republican congressman from new england. today the republicans have no members of the u.s. house from new england. he could break that barrier. >> dana: top voter issues. economy 84%. education, schools, 77. inflation, 76, crime 69. abortion is an important issue for some voters. in the case of very close races undecideds if that was the issue the democrats might hold on. james carville warned this about democrats running on abortion. a lot of consultants think is
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all we run abortion spots it will win for us. i don't think so. it is a good issue but if you sit there and pummeling you on crime and the cost of living, you have to be more aggressive than yelling abortion every other word. how has that issue played out over the summer and now into fall since is dobbs decision? >> it is interesting. james carville, a more centrist democrat and bernie sanders are out with warnings to the democrats don't just run on abortion. here is why. take a look at the gallup question. what party will do a better job of handling the problem you think most important. 11 point advantage to the republicans. the largest republican advantage since 1946 when it was 17 points. then if you look in the detail about it, abortion is the most important issue to 4% of the electorate. it was more important in the immediate after math of dobbs
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but it's a sign that the abortion issue is not enough to run on. in 2014, there was a democrat mark udall of colorado who made the entire race about abortion with his opponent cory gardner. the denver post reporter picked up the chant that udall was talking so much about the issue of abortion that maybe he ought to restyle his name as mark uterus and it became a campaign sort of meme and the denver post eventually endorsed gardner, which was very unusual for the post. largely because all udall was talking about was abortion and gardner was talking about other issues that were important nationally and to colorado. >> bill: if i could ask you a question on the senate. the way i see it. i think the easiest way for viewers to follow this is if oz
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holds pennsylvania and if ron johnson holds wisconsin and if vance holds ohio, you still have to win one other race in this country. maybe it's nevada, maybe it's georgia. how do you explain it? >> i think that's right. i would add one more to that list. i feel better about j.d. vance. i'm involved with a group spending $35 million on his behalf. i would add north carolina. i think the democrats are getting desperate and haven't been playing in north carolina. the senate super pac is spending money there. if republicans hold those, that gets them to 50 and all they have to do is pick up one, either nevada or georgia or both. and as you say, arizona may be in the mix. colorado may be in the mix. there will be a surprise in the election, a surprise in a governor's race and house races and senators races. i would say that's a good way of looking at it.
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>> dana: i was curious. quickly, karl, do you think the republicans should put more money into the senate race in washington state? that one is pretty close. >> well, there is one poll showing it close, a lot of polls not showing it as close. we have a suburb candidate there, tiffany smiley who is terrific. it is a blue state. there they have an all-candidate primary. she got 38%, patty murray 54%. that's an uphill climb. if somebody can do it smiley can. one of the best candidates we have in the field. >> bill: nice to see you. we'll talk 1,181 times more in the coming months. >> looking forward to every one of them. >> bill: as we are as well. stark warning on the economy. jamie dimon said the fed waited too long to fight the fight on inflation and now the country is headed for an eventual
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recession. >> inflation, which is changing the effect -- nobody told you about, it's rates going up more than what people expected already and more from here. q.t. that we've never had before and the war likely to put the u.s. in a recession 6 to 9 months from now. >> bill: he said the war there. he said four things. runaway inflation, unknown effects of tightening which we haven't been used to for the entire world for some time and also russia's war in ukraine. >> dana: that mostly has to do with energy. we had our guest yesterday who said hold on because these prices are likely to continue to go up. we'll follow it for you. that will be an issue going into the mid-term and the recession is 6 to 9 months from now. >> bill: 3.92 for gas. biden took office it's 2.39. people vote on that. >> dana: numbers are stark. >> bill: fox news alert.
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russia unleashing an all-out assault in ukraine. zelensky turning to the west for help. the message to world leaders he is making as we speak. >> dana: the f.b.i. getting involved in the search for a missing toddler. why a text received by the child's babysitter is raising concerns. >> experts sounding alarm bells on the border. the cartels cause a threat like isis and al qaeda. >> it is an absolute dereliction of duty, if you see a problem and if we agree that we need to address it, then if you are a leader, participate in a solution. no, he's seizing the moment with merrill. moving his money into his investment account in real time and that's... how you collect coins. your money never stops working for you with merrill, a bank of america company. ♪ ♪
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pennsylvania. a concern report. we're not quite sure how it's going to how it will turn out. multiple kids have gone to the hospital after every allentown ambulance is in use, a quote, allentown, p.a. have a carbon monoxide leak at a day-care center called the happy smiles center, allentown, pa. at least two dozen kids are hospitalized based on that early reporting. we'll say a prayer for everybody in the allentown, pennsylvania, to get it worked out and fast. >> dana: zelensky addresses an emergency g-seven meeting this morning as russia escalates its rocket attacks on civilian targets in ukraine. putin versus playground. peter doocy live at the white house as this escalates and gets more dangerous, peter. >> dana, white house officials have been primarily blaming putin and this conflict with ukraine for rising energy prices, so there is greater
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urgency now that opec is also cutting production and there will be fewer barrels of oil per day on the global market. urgency to save lives and prices. we expect to hear something about that when there is a read-out of the call underway for more than an hour now. we're also hearing the russians, russian allies may be figuring out ways to poke back at the u.s. as there is a pro-russia hacking group taking credit for some disruption to u.s. airport web websites. >> we're grateful no airport operations were affected or no safety put at risk. we'll take it seriously. we don't understand fully who is behind it and what the motivation was. certainly what level, if any, kremlin officials were aware. we just don't know. >> amid reports that some putin advisors in russia are pushing back on him, dismayed by a lack
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of progress in ukraine, putin has backers. on his own security council the former president is calling on putin to do more to dismantle the zelensky regime in ukraine. >> what you are seeing before your eyes here is his attempt to defeat the ukrainian people. he is attempting to crush their will and their support. obviously when he fired 84 missiles on monday morning in 24 drone strikes it was a huge step in that direction. >> president biden says we again call on russia to end this unprovoked aggression immediately and remove its troops from ukraine. that is a call he has made many, many times but putin has not listened. dana. >> dana: i see the landscapers are back today. >> it's not landscaping. it is like a big vacuum. they are doing something under the driveway and it is vacuuming
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would be the operative word. >> dana: vacuuming in the swamp. all right, peter great, thank you. >> bill: thank you, peter. lieutenant general keith kellogg, co- chair for the center of american security at america first institute, fox news contributor. welcome back. what are we willing to give ukraine in terms of air defenses? >> yeah, bill, thanks for having me. look, it's something we should have given them over 200 days ago. the system we should give them now is the national advanced service to aramis ill system. a small system that takes two operators but a great slant range, 50 miles, radar that picks up well beyond that and designed against drones and cruise missiles as well. why it's taken us so long to provide them air defense against their cities makes no sense to me. they hit 11 cities the other day designed to terrorize the civilian population of ukraine. that's what zelensky is talking
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about and what putin is trying to development i don't know why we didn't give them the defenses earlier than we're trying to do right now. i keep asking myself what is the strategy here? what is the endgame that biden wants to get to with putin and helping out zelensky? we don't seem to give them the means they need to defend themselves or to prosecute the attack even more fully. >> bill: three points on this. there were dozens of cruise missiles fired just 48 hours ago. ukrainians knocked a lot of them out of the sky and a lot of iranian drones were launched and many knocked out of the sky. they have the capacity to knock some of these more fierce missiles from the sky. the kremlin said if you give them the anti-air systems, it will not change their objectives. it will just prolong the war. that's the message from putin. putin's message on monday was the following. a sound bite from that that came out of russia. >> if attempts to carry out acts of terrorism on our territory
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continue, russia's response will be harsh and we correspond to the threat made against the russian federation. no one should be in any doubt about that. >> bill: he is saying if you hit me i'll hit you, general. >> yeah, bill, that's right but you don't fight a war with half measures. you go all in. look, what people need to understand, we're a proxy to this war for anybody to deny that, it is absolute foolish. so if we actually are a proxy and we have to go all in and support not troops, but with the equipment that zelensky needs to win. he can win as long as we give him the equipment. you want to reach a point with putin either terminates the conflict or loses. he loses if we defeat the russian army in the field and biden should pick up the phone and tell putin this is what we intend to do. we intend the ukrainians to take back all ukrainian property to
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include crimea. you either negotiator escalate. we're prepared to go either way. you put him in a position that he has to react to you. we should never be reacting to putin. half measures give us that, where we react to them instead of having them react to us. i think it's a mistake. >> bill: we'll see what comes out of the g-seven meeting happening now. great to see you. thank you for coming back here general kellogg, thanks. >> dana: two republicans headed to battleground georgia to boost senate candidate herschel walker falling in the polls as he faces controversy. a race that could determine the senate majority candidates in ohio facing off in a fiery debate and tim ryan tried to separate himself from the white house. >> always express a level of frustration with the national democratic party. most people are still living paycheck to paycheck. if you are talking about issues other than their pocket book you look disconnected.
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>> i've been very clear. i would like to see a generational change. we need a new generation. the last two congresss you voted for nancy pelosi and joe biden 100%. you consistently tow the party line. >> bill: the senate candidate debate. congressman tim ryan trying to distance himself to president biden but he voted for him a lot. he is in a tight race for d.j. vance. mark meredith was watching last night and has the follow-up today. good morning. >> good morning. democrats face an uphill battle in ohio. a state the former president trump carried twice. last night we saw the author fo
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crisis? >> i think everybody is to blame. coming out of a pandemic is a problem. the question is, will we sit around for another ten years and point fingers? >> vance had no problem pointing fingers. he accused ryan of being a career politician and vance supports a minimum national standard when it comes to abortion restrictions and tried to pin the issue on ryan. a debate in ohio after a 10-year-old girl had to go out of state to get an abortion due to restrictions. vance said that girl should never have been put in such a position. >> why was a 10-year-old girl raped in our community, raped in our state in the first place? the thing the media and congress and ryan they talk about this all the time. the thing they never mention is that poor girl was raped by an illegal alien.
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somebody that should have never been in this state in the first place. >> too soon to tell whether or not the debate changed minds. one more debate is next monday in cleveland. the race coming down to the wire. >> bill: nice to see you mark meredith in washington. >> dana: mark penn and kellyanne conway former advisor to president trump. great to have you both here. the race people are watching closely. our fox power rankings have it as a lean r and karl rove was on saying he believes that vance is going to win in ohio. mark, what do you think about the race that tim ryan has led and how he did last night in the debate? >> i don't know. it is always bad when you throw your own party overboard. that's a fundamental sign of weakness. look, i think today people know that senators don't do much independently. they basically 99% of the time vote with their caucus. if it's a debate here between
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ryan voting 100% of the time for pelosi and vance voting with trump, trump won the state twice. it does seem to me pretty hard on the basis of trying to abandon the democratic party late to really change the natural course here. there are a lot of other good races. i continue to give this one to vance. >> dana: kellyanne, the issues are still on the ohio voter issues same as most people in america. economy 84% . inflation 76%. education and schools 77. that's very high and crime 69%. so you see that scraping up into this race as well, kellyanne. >> the issue set is very clear. when people like tim ryan run around saying i'm for women's issues and only talks about abortion he is leaving out education, inflation, rising costs, rising crime which women are talking about. all issues are women's issue.
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j.d. vance won the night handily like masters won the night against kelly in arizona. now you know why so many democrats are dodging debates. for all the hemming and hawing about i'm worried about democracy. they go back to january 6th. democracy necessary estates that you debate your opponent. give the voters their choices. they deserve to see people. tim ryan called for generational change when he standing next to vance who represents generational change. tim ryan has been in congress for over 20 years and ran for president against joe biden. like others got 0 electoral votes. he ran against nancy pelosi for speaker. tim ryan made a second mistake. i don't want joe biden to run in 2024. while joe biden is the president i will vote with him 100% of the time. tim ryan voted against the bush
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tax cuts in 2003. 15 years later he voted against the trump tax cuts. he has voted against tax cuts for people in ohio and voted for the runaway spending. see a liberal reliable vote. mark is right. trump won the state twice by eight points. you see tim ryan trying to distance himself from joe biden and you see vance having won the primary because of donald trump's endorsement. he is embracing the former president. you have a democratic congressman distancing himself from a sitting president. we've probably never seen that before. >> dana: he is not the only one distancing. we showed a clip of slotkin in michigan in a tight race. very smart and articulate person. she comes on the show and engaging in debates and trying to have an independent minds. she also called for generational change but said however, if biden is the nominee in 2024, yeah, i guess we'll go along
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with it. any last thoughts on that? >> well look, your best answer in things like that is let's get through this race and deal with who should be the next presidential nominee after that and stand on the democratic record of fighting the pandemic and fighting for women's rights and fighting really for getting things to people like prescription drugs. i think candidates are much better off fighting on those planks than they are throwing their own president overboard. i thought it was true when al gore through clinton overboard and generally true when loyal democrats do that in the last minute of a political race. >> dana: what do you think the conversations are like inside the white house as the president will turn 80 and that will be a milestone on their own. they don't expect to have a big birthday party or anybody. they want to showcase his accomplishments. what conversations are happening inside the white house or the east wing, the private family quarters of the white house about running again?
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>> why wouldn't he run again? incumbent presidents have advantages. he wanted to be president multiple times. we don't need them to skip the 80th birthday party to know joe biden is 80. he is every minute of 80 every day. we have had so many failures on his watch. i think that whoever the republican nominee is put especially if its donald trump. the choice between life under trump with 2.50 gasoline per gallon, 1.9% inflation before covid and the list goes on and on versus what we see under biden. i don't see any evidence this white house has honest conversations with this president at all. we did. they're called private and tough and respectful but we had them and this white house never admits that for the home team. they lied to fox news peter doocy in the briefing room and i don't know that anybody is
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candid enough with joe biden not only his health and acuity. his approval ratings are very bad for a sitting president. >> dana: thank you, both. >> thank you, dana. >> bill: smart folks and they dive into the data which is very important. >> dana: it was mostly about the senate and biden. in the house something interesting happened today. a big cash gap between republicans and democrats on the house side. so on the official party side. the nrcc and congressional leadership fund at 240 million on hand as of their last feelings filings. >> 29 days out the candidates' message and campaign matter the most. money can play a difference if one of the debates you have a viral moment or the october surprise and need to push back. now democrats are asking the white house for biden to give them more money.
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>> bill: watch it in the closing days. >> dana: watch it. >> bill: a lot of republicans we came out of the primary fights and haven't had a chance to frame our opposition. all that is happening right now and the money helps do that. a frantic search for a little boy who vanished from his playpen a week ago. something gave the babysitter an uneasy feeling hours before he was reported missing. a sunken world war ii boat emerges from a lake that may have a connection to a former president and d- day. how about that mystery, miss perino? those loans are not cheap. neither are cash advances from your credit cards. call newday. you may not realize it, but one of the lowest cost ways to get money is to use your va home loan benefit. the newday 100 va loan lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value at
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fanduel and draftkings, two out of state corporations making big promises. what's the real math behind prop 27, their ballot measure for online sports betting? 90% of profits go to the out of state corporations permanently. only eight and a half cents is left for the homeless. and in virginia, arizona, and other states, fanduel and draftkings use loopholes to pay far
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found and she is safe. police say it appears 14-year-old chloe campbell ran away from home and not held against her will. she was found monday at a home in thornton 30 miles southeast of bolder. she took considerable steps to avoid the law but she is okay. >> dana: the f.b.i. has joined the search for a missing toddler in georgia. the 20 moll boy's mom said she last saw him wednesday morning in his playpen at the family home near savannah. charles watson live in atlanta with more. what do we know? >> good morning, dana. police say while they consider this a missing child case they are beginning to explore the possibility of a criminal aspect in the disappearance of 20-month-old quintin simon. 40 f.b.i. agents are coordinating with local police in the salve anna, georgia area
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in hopes of finding him. monday investigators conducted a second search of his family's home where they had previously served a warrant to search the pool and pond. the child's mother and her boyfriend reported last seeing the toddler in their home near savannah, georgia wearing a blue sesame street shirt and black pants last wednesday. four hours later his mother reported him missing. police would not say whether or not quintin's mother or family members are cooperating with the investigation. >> we want to make sure we get it right and do it as professionally and expertly as we can so if -- and i say if we have to prosecute anyone in this case, that we've done it right. that we don't lose evidence in an hearing. >> those comments follow claims from a babysitter who tells
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local tv station that she was supposed to look after quintin and his brother the day he went missing but says she got a strange text 30 minutes before quintin was last seen saying her services were not needed that day. dana, there have also been reports that there have been legal disputes within the family concerning child support and eviction notice between quintin's mother and the child's grandmother, who is the legal guardian. police have not named any suspects and they have not indicated that they plan to file any charges just yet, dana. >> dana: let's hope for the best here. charles watson, thank you. >> bill: from los angeles city council president martinez resigned on monday after audio surfaced of her making racist remarks in a 2021 strategy session. martinez is heard referring to a child as like a little monkey and saying this kid needs a beatdown.
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in a statement on monday martinez said, quote, i take responsibility for what i said and there are no excuses for those comments. i'm so sorry. i'm resigning immediately as president of the los angeles city council. that democrat is out. >> dana: one of the things they were having a discussion about was about redistricting in the area and what the school distinct would look like. they are trying to draw some lines and a lot of hurt feelings and probably appropriate she took that action. also, this. republicans campaigning on immigration as they look to flip border districts that usual eye go blue. does this issue have traction nationwide. a what was it like sitting across from the serial killer, dahmer? >> was there any incident that you can remember? >> i don't know what started it to this day. the person to blame is sitting
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>> bill: netflix found itself a hit with a series on the serial killer jeffrey dahmer raising questions how he got away with murder for more than a decade and whether or not it romanty sizes his horrific crimes. nancy glass was the last person to interview dahmer before a fellow inmate murdered him in prison in 1994. here is a clip now from nancy glass's interview a year earlier in 1993. >> i had these obsessive desires and thoughts wanting to control them, to -- i don't know how to put it -- possess them permanently. >> that's why you killed them? >> right. not because i was angry with him
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or hated them but because i wanted to keep them with me. >> bill: nancy glass joins me now. good morning to you. disturbing story then and now. what he was trying to explain to you is that he psychologically felt a connection to them if he kept their human remains in his apartment and in many cases he would literally saw them to tiny pieces and store them in his freezer. you are sitting across from this man and thinking what then, nancy? >> well, bill it's a good question. thinking a lot of things. i'm thinking how terrifying it is that he appears completely normal. it would have been a big relief if he had been like charles manson or something and then you would say oh my god, i could have spotted that a mile off. you never would have spotted it. i was in communication with him and his family for two years. that's one of the things you think. the other thing you think is he
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talked a lot about being sorry and looking for forgiveness. b burt he was a psychopath. >> it was disturbing. never heard anything like it in my life. some of the neighbors made phone calls hearing noises throughout the night consistently and many believe he was racially motivated. you asked him about that. we have a clip on that from 1993 also. >> when it was revealed that most of the victims were black or homosexual, many felt that was why he went after them and why the police didn't seem to care when their families reported them missing. >> were they racially motivated? >> it was not racially or sexual preference. it was just to find an obsession with the best looking young man i could find. >> i don't know how the police explained it then. that goes to the previous
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comment about that controlling aspect here. and now families of the victims, they aren't happy with this piece that it is out there and a series that a lot of people are watching it. they believe netflix should have contacted them or the producers should have. what would you say to the family members asking those kind of questions? >> listen, no matter what, it isn't a good feeling for the family members. but it wasn't a documentary. it is a work of fiction. for example, this idea that neighbors called all the time. they didn't. that was not true. this is a mini-series by a producer and writer who do really great programming. and that's what they did here. they sort of combined a lot of different things that happened. there was -- depicted in this, however, is the case where the 14-year-old boy escaped and neighbors called and in that case that depiction was true that the police came and they --
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and jeffrey dahmer came out and said that's my boyfriend, please give him back to me. here is a picture of him and me. he took polaroids of the boy naked. there was another dead body in his apartment, bill, and the police gave him back. that's one case where it happened. but by the way, the reason he got away with it for so long was because he picked people -- it was really opportunistic and people without families and people who were homeless and people who would come back to his apartment for money. >> bill: there are many podcasts out there about serial killers now almost become a cottage industry on the entertainment side and a lot of people are drawn it to. i'm not one of them but many are. i don't hold that against them. do you think these series the end to -- >> they satisfy our curiosity
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like how could it happen? how do i avoid it? could i spot this? it seems bizarre. it's more about morbid curiosity that anything else. >> bill: i appreciate you sharing what you learned then. thank you, nancy, nice to meet you. >> nice to be here. >> dana: president biden's border crisis taking root in states coast to coast as migrants are shipped to all parts of the country and cartels flood the nation with deadly fentanyl. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. good morning. >> bill: good morning. >> dana: how are you? >> bill: red, white and blue today. a little bit. >> dana: always in my heart. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. good morning. the border crisis playing out an several fronts causing all kinds of problems. immigration becoming a big issue for the mid-terms. voters tryin
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