tv Fox News Live FOX News October 16, 2022 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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>> new fox news poll show 78% that the condition of the economy is only fair or poor. this as the biden administration faced a tough week of inflation news, only 3 weeks away from the midterms. welcome to fox news live. i'm mike emanuel. president biden now back from a trip from the west coast where he touted massive spending package as many americans are worried about filling up at the gas pump and heating their homes this winter. fox team coverage with alexis mcadams in new york. but let's start off today with lucas tomlinson live from the
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white house. hello, lucas. >> lucas: according to same fox news poll, only 33% of voters say they would vote to reelect president joe biden should the election be held today and on fox news sunday the house republican whip gave the following explanation why that is. >> they are furious with biden and pelosi's far-left socialist agenda that's led to increase spending and increase inflation, just the cost of everything that you buy when you go to the grocery store. >> the new fox news poll says the majority of voters, 51% say their financial situation is worse now than it was two years ago since president biden took office. only 15% said it was better. 33% said it was the same, back in may 44% said they were worst off, republicans will be sure to pounce off this number and ronald reagan asked during debate with jimmy carter, are you better off than you were 4 years, when it comes to issues of the economy and inflation, president biden not scoring
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passing grades in that category. only 35% approve of how he's handled the economy. only 29% approve of how he's handled inflation. over 60% disapprove the way he's handled both on fox news sunday biden top economic adviser spoke to shannon bream. >> we have unemployment 3 and a half percent. there's no recession that would prevail with that kind of unemployment rate. lucas: bernstein also says the strategic oil reserves that are in texas and louisiana are now just more than half full, the lawest level since 1984. the white house also saying president biden has no plans to meet the saudi crown prince. he meets him at g20 in indonesia next month, mike. mike: lucas tomlinson, many thanks. rising crime taking center stage as key issue in new york governor's race republican candidate lee zeldin done is apparently gaining on democrat incumbent kathy hochul as shootings like the one that killed a 15-year-old on a new york city train grow more and
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more common. alexis mcadams has the latest from the big apple. hi, alexis. >> crime in new york city and specifically here into this last number that we got from nypd is up more than 31% over the past 5 years. so that includes murder, rape and robbery and crime is top priority for voters across the country and here in new york. take a look here. in latest college poll, democratic governor kathy hochul is leading lee zeldin done by 1g likely voters that lead narrows to just 8 percentage points. there was a drive-by shooting right in front of house in long island. his daughters were inside but they were not hurt. today on sunday morning futures lee zeldin done said if he's elected he's going to declare a statewide crime crisis, listen. >> people want to save the state, they want to save the new york city and they're tired having to wake up every morning and read all of the headlines of a rising crime in their own
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neighborhood. place where is they used to feel safe. >> head lines like this, yesterday nypd arresting kiandre for murder, shot and killed a 15-year-old boy riding on the subway out in queens. according to a fox news poll that just came out inflation and crime are top issues in the midterms, 89% of voters across the country are concerned about inflation and 79% say they're concerned with higher crime rates. those are pretty big numbers there and they trust republicans more than democrats to handle according to poll. the senate race between democrat john fetterman and republican memet oz is growing closer. mike: for more on midterms, jonathan cott, chris coons and
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capital council, gentlemen, welcome. let's dig into some of these numbers. issues that people are extremely or very concerned about, inflation higher prices 89%. higher crime rates 79%. political divisions 74%, russia-ukraine situation 73%, abortion policy 71% followed by gun laws, border security and climate change, election denial, voter fraud and covid. jonathan, how do you assess those numbers? >> look, i think people are concerned about issues that impact them on a daily basis. higher prices cause people concerns. it means they have to make choices, what are they going to buy this week and how are they going to spend their money and i think one thing the biden administration and democratic candidates needs to do is go out and say they understand what's -- what's going on, they understand what voters are concerned about and show them what they've done to help them. those things aren't going to take -- aren't going to take
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effect overnight but over the longer the they are going to lower prices, gasoline prices and food prices, it's just not going to happen overnight but they have to tell them they are working on it and they actually have a plan to help them as opposed to their opponents who basically just say we can't have more of the same. >> the american people are anxious about the economy and about their neighborhoods and it's going to translate into change votes at the ballot box this november. people are going to vote for something that they don't have right now and that's going to bode well for candidates that are positioned like that, like mr. zeldon in new york and others but i think what we are seeing with the electorate is just that this is an off-year election for the president who is unpopular and republicans are going in to this last few weeks with the momentum. now we will see if that momentum can really be translated into votes on the ground.
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we need to be voting now and we need to have a good turnout on election day in order to win some of these close races. mike: all right, also from fox poll, certain they will vote this year, democrats 65%, republicans 70%. jonathan, what's your take on that one? >> i think overall voting is always down in midterms, it's a shame in this country that we don't have 90% turnout at elections. i disagree with that, i think democratic voters are energized to special elections upstate new york and referendum in kansas. i think democrats are going to turn out their voters in the last couple of weeks i think republicans will as well and that's why i think democrats need to make sure they're energizing voters and telling them, look, we've had some historic accomplishments in the last two years, give us a chance to keep building on that momentum and we will have more accomplishments in two years. >> you're nodding. >> i'm nodding because i think we are in for historically close races this election cycle.
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both parties are energized. democrats have abortion and republicans have the economy and it's all about who is going to do a better job of turning out voters on election day and leading up to election day. mike: okay, on inflation from the fox poll, your families had to cut back to afford necessities a lot or some, 71%, that's been rising since march, what's the impact of that on the upcoming midterms, jonathan? >> the races will get to state by state and tim ryan is going to tell people we just passed a bunch of bills that are going to bring manufacturing jobs back to ohio. he has to sell that and say, look, you will have better high-paying jobs and we are working on these things and in georgia raphael warnock has a great ad how he's work today help peanut workers. if voters are going to the election and have hard time paying for gas or food that day, that's going to be front of mind for them.
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we have to make sure that we can tell them what we are doing to change that. mike: 71% tightening the bell to afford necessities, your thoughts? >> i think like i've said is the dominant for the election. you know a lot of us have talked about and said abortion is a big issue or trump is a big issue or any of the long lists that you mentioned earlier, mike. but it's really going to come down what i think all of us have said that what affects your pocketbook, your stress on your 401(k) and in an off year election for the president i think it means the net benefit will be to the republican party. mike: i will squeeze for the fox, national economic conditions, getting better 21%, getting worse 73%. how troubling is that? >> i think it's troubling for people, they are having a hard time affording their bills but i would point out this didn't start the day that joe biden
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came to office. this started because we had a historic pandemic that shut down the economy. donald trump appropriated and advocated for billions an trillions of dollars for spending. that led to it. joe biden is trying to build our way out of this, fix it but make sure that the people struggling the most are getting the benefits and over time those policies will take effect and they'll start seeing it. >> both parties are going to be challenged in this election to find anything positive to talk about because our country is under so much stress and indeed, the globe is under so much stress. the democrats have some accomplishments that they can go to their voters to talk about but at the end of the day republicans have this atmosphere of anxiety and -- and worry about the economy and that's really taking over to the whole political dynamic at this point. mike: all right, former president obama was on a podcast with some of his former aides and called out buzz-kill democrats and cancel culture.
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let's play it. >> sometimes people just want not feel as if they are walking on egg shells and they want some acknowledgment that life is messy and that all of us at any given moment can, you know, say things the wrong way, you know, make mistakes. mike: how is that resonating, jonathan? >> he's 100% right. the democratic party has stop segmenting in voters, voters want the came thing. we want a better country, better future, better-paying jobs and we want to make sure our kids do better than we did. we need to stop micro targeting 3% of the country and he's right. stop walking on egg shells, shoot from the hip, say what you want and that's why people like joe manchin is very popular. mike: buzz kill democrats and cancel culture.
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>> i didn't know what he was referring to. i think it's self-reflection. maybe you're walking on egg shells. i'm not. most political figures today don't walk on egg shells and they say what's on their mind. that might be part of the problem. i will go for a little bit more diplomacy and more straight talk like we see in some of the more independent members of -- of the political realm these days. maybe manchin comes to mind. mike: all right, terry, jonathan. today on fox news sunday shannon bream speaks to white house council economic adviser jerry bernstein and interview with steve scalise of louisiana. you can catch it right here at the top of the hour and don't miss the big midterm show hosted by dana perino tonight at 10:00 p.m. eastern right here on the fox news channel. closing arguments a for igor
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danchenko and four counts to the fbi can come after that. alexandria hoff. alex: originally 5 counts but one tossed out by the judge on friday over technicality and that was late blow to special counsel john durham who has been working on the case for 3 years. he had alleged that igor danchenko lied to the fbi speaking about the steele dossier which was aimed at destroying then candidate donald trump. since the exchange was by e-mail and not verbal, the charge was too weak and the judge agreed. faces 4 felony counts for providing false statements to the fbi. the prosecution has expressed if he had been truthful about motivations of sources than the fbi would have known to approach the steele dossier with appropriate skepticism instead the fbi used the dossier as basis to secure a warrant to wire trap trump campaign adviser
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carter page. former acting attorney general matt whitaker spoke about what he sees the fbi's role is in this. >> they didn't seem to have the intellectual curiosity to get to the bottom of allegations if they were true or not but at the same time they wanted it to be so true that they offered a million dollars to christopher steele to verify the content of it. alex: that part was exposed on tuesday and prior to 2016 election christopher steele was offered a million dollars by the fbi to prove that his claims against trump were true. steele fail today do so. so while this is danchenko on trial, much of durham's focus has been on problems within the fbi. mike: alex and roy hoff in dc, thanks a lot. the world health organization warning tough winter for ukraine more on that and the latest military moves on the ground next. ♪ ♪
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hello, trey. >> mike, good afternoon, ahead of winter ukrainian officials are trying to find balance between liberating new territory and addressing the needs of the civilian population. res dentes of izim line up to receive humanitarian aid while winter months approach. recently liberated area is without power and heating as ukrainians return to their homes. we try to prepare firewood, we warm the windows, maryam says, we cover everything. i want to warm up. eastern ukraine is bracing for continued fighting in the coming weeks but civilians are finding it difficult to get by with ongoing shelling and lack of resources. >> where should we leave, we don't have any money, it's our 7-month without a job, without anything one woman says, now it's the second month without power or gas. near the town, soldiers that
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freed the area from russian occupation now try to help their fellow ukrainians but with limited assistance flowing to these frontline areas they face an uphill battle. just a few town asway intense fighting is ongoing to reclaim territory. the frontlines now stretch more than 1500 miles. overnight an inside attack in russia's region left 11 soldiers dead and 15 others injured, russian state media says shooting occurred on military base filled with new recruits. today ukrainian troops fired into russia targeting airfield event highlighting expanding capabilities of ukrainian military, mike. mike: trey yingst. thank you very much. joining me live in the studio is former u.s. ambassador to ukraine john herps, welcome. >> thank you. mike: we are looking at the map,
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the red areas are secured by russian forces or where they are advancing and blue areas where ukrainians have done counteroffensives, where are we in this war, sir? >> where we are is moscow has now failed 3 times since the big invasion in february. first they failed in march to take kyiv and kharkiv and north, northeast. they were going the take donbas in april. ukrainian shut down offensive by mid july thanks to high mars and other equipment that we sent. mike: okay. >> finally they launched counteroffensive in late july and took back territories such as you see on the map up in the upper right, the blue areas in kharkiv region and then also in the city near the river. mike: calls for peaceful area zone around the nuclear operation. your thoughts on what we are looking at here. >> well, if you are talking
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about first kharson and trapping russian forces and good chance they'll take the entire right bank and be right opposite to the city on the left bank. but the russians are actually putting more forces there now although props not enough to stop this counter offensive. mike: interesting. >> you talk about zaporizhzhia up here where you have the nuclear reactor, largest nuclear reactor in ukraine. the russians have they've controlled it now for months. they have launched rockets from right around if not inside the reactor. and essentially daring ukrainians to shoot back, the ukrainians have been reluctant to do that for very obvious reasons. we had agreement which brought ian to inspect reactor six weeks ago unfortunately the inspector did not stay because if they did
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the russians would be reluctant to conduct funny business from the area. this remains a dangerous spot without question. mike: we heard talk about them bracing for a very cold winter in ukraine. you know ukraine and the winters there. is that part of putin's strategy to try to freeze the ukrainians? >> putin's strategy from the very beginning of the big invasion in february was to impose major suffering on the ukrainian people, to break their will and to force them to have the government in kyiv basically surrender and the tactic has failed and has done made ukrainians even madder because they understand if putin wins in ukraine, he will go after their lives as ukrainians. the former president of russia says the goal of this war to destroy ukrainians and they are fighting for existence as ukrainian people. so the attacks on infrastructure, the bombings, murder of thousands of ukrainian
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civilians delivered shelling only makes ukrainians more determined. like like let's show one last map. the bridge, the critical bridge between crimea and the strait here. your thoughts on that. >> the bridge that the russians build the straits of kerch has been essential for civilian supplies in crimea but more importantly for military supplies. the attack on the bridge a couple of weeks ago has made it much more difficult to -- so this was a -- this helped putin deal with critics and effort is too weak. high altitude antiaircraft
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offenses. mike: how are ukrainians doing? >> they are doing pretty well. >> they have gotten -- we are expecting the weapon systems. and far more of ukraine would be under government of kyiv. mike mining one-on-one interview with former israeli prime minister only fox news channel. suspected serial killer in
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mike: suspected serial killer has been arrested in connection with 6 murderers in one shooting in northern california. police say wesley brownly was armed and ready to kill when he was arrested. william live with the latest details, hi, william. >> good morning, mike, for me and good afternoon to you. ballistics on the gun that he had on him when he got arrested and second evidence that they found in this guy's house. why? because wesley brownly we are told was wearing a mask during the killings. but as of right now police are convinced this is their guy because he was, quote, out hunting more victims in this neighborhood when they made their arrest at 2:00 a.m. on
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saturday thanks in part to a tip on crime stoppers that this might be their guy. >> they can breathe again, there's the collective sigh if you will. i've been a resident any whole life here. this is the single most proud i've been of my community and city today. >> we watched his patterns and determined early this morning he was on a mission to kill. he was out hunting, he was wearing dark clothing and had a mask around his neck. he was also armed with a firearm when he was taken into custody. >> so police say brownly's home under surveillance and when he left that night surveillance team followed and moved in when they realized that he was looking for another victim. over the previous shootings, there were 7, six were in the same area of stockton. the other one was in oakland. four involved homeless men. ballistics show the same gun was used in each and records show
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brownly had priors in california and arizona. the da charges says -- charges are pending and arrangement is tuesday. >> this crime was solved because we are stocktonnians and don't cam to our house and bring this terror. >> what police are and atf are going to do fire gun and imprint it matches those recovered from the scenes and victims. tuesday we will find out what the search warrant uncovered after the arrangement, back to you. mike: we will follow it. william, thanks very much. new report showing police officers are becoming targets of violence 56 officers have been killed by gunfire this year. up 14% increase from last year. earlier this week two officers in connecticut were killed while responding to emergency call and another severely wounded. state police are calling the
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incident a deliberate act to lure law enforcement to the scene. more than 235 people have reportedly signed from the cook county illinois state's attorney office since july 2021 and some who have left blame kim fox's leadership and soft on crime policies for their departures. chicago attorney andrew joins me live to discuss. andrew, welcome. >> thank you. mike: let's start with statistic from the chicago police department crime, total crime up 38% over the past year, what's happening to the great city of chicago? >> we are on a slippery slope to becoming the next cleveland or detroit and whole heck of a lot of blame to go around. you have mayor lightfoot who has basically not really prosecuted the looters, you have kim fox who has 25% less murder convictions versus predecessor in the previous year. you have jb and the illinois
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legislature that has ended cash bail which is flooding the streets with criminals, so there's a mr. president of blame to go around but kim fox is a big part of surge in crime. mike: do you find folks are leaving the city in big numbers? >> oh, absolutely. slowest growth large city in america. we obviously lost a congressional seat in the 2020 census, people are fleeing the city. until you get crime right in the city and you keep your citizens safe, no city is going to survive and unfortunately that's what's happening to the great city of chicago. mike: andrew, what kind of high-profile mistakes has kim fox made in your view? >> well, look, everybody talks about the high-profile blunders, the jussie smollett and black eye to her office and black eye to the city, but there's also the day-to-day blunders, the morale in the cook county state attorney's office is very low, they are not prosecuting the bad guys and to add all of that the
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criminals are flooding the streets so there's a lot of different blame to go around but kim fox deserves the biggest chunk of that blame in my opinion. mike: you're obviously there an attorney in chicago, you must have friends that work in the ie state attorneys office and what do you assess the mass exodus from the state attorneys office? >> because there's a lack of leadership at the top with respect to kim fox. it's shocking to me that she won reelection a couple of years back. it's bad morale which causes people to lev and it's even hard now to recruit people there and it's all kim fox's fault. mike: we see violent crime up and all the murders every weekend in chicago, feels like there's random shootings or crime related activities throughout the city. what's it going to take for there to be change? chicago? >> i think change in leadership at cook county prosecutor's
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officials the governor's office and mayor lightfoot. we are on pace for 600 murders this year which is absolutely incredible and until the policies change and until we have the backs of the police and until we stop flooding the street with criminals, it's only going to get worse. mike: do you find that law enforcement in chicago feels like their leadership just doesn't have their backs? >> oh, absolutely. and that's all -- that's all our mayor's fault because when looters hit the street he was more concerned about protecting the looters than protecting the police officers that were trying to keep people safe and it's a shame. mike: sounds like a difficult environment for businesses in the city of chicago to continue to operate, what about that? >> look at ken griffin, our state's wealthiest man $22 billion and picked up hedge fund and move today miami and ceo of mcdonalds, you have a run away crime problem. these are real problems, people are reacting by leaving and businesses are reacting by
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leaving as well. mike: it's sad because chicago is a great city but people need to feel safe, they want to feel safe and desperately want to be protected, so andrew stoltman chicago attorney, thank you as much your time today. >> any time, thank you. eric: teen overdose deaths are rising and experts slamming the biden administration for not doing enough to stop the flow of fentanyl into the u.s. jonathan has latest on america's opioid crisis, hello, jonathan. >> hi, there, mike, the florida department of law enforcement says it has disrupted a major fentanyl trafficking operation with connections to drug cartels in mexico. the fdle says it has arrested 24 people and they are looking for an additional suspect. inspectors seized 15,000 fentanyl pills and more than 38. authorities say the ring leader was a florida prison inmate who gave instructions from behind bars instructing gang members on
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the outside to trafficking drugs and weapons through complex criminal network. mexican drug cartels often obtained ingredients from china and then smuggled fentanyl across the u.s. southern border but it becomes a problem for the entire country so attorneys general from 17 state and guam have written a letter urging president biden to treat fentanyl as more than just a narcotics control problem. >> we've asked for fentanyl to be considered a weapon of mass destruction. that's important because this needs to get the resources of the federal government, too many people are dying and i want to stop that. >> the dangers of fentanyl struck woodland hills california that's where risa and john lost son kade after taking a pill laced with deadly drug and decided to go public in hopes of preventing this from happening to other families. >> these kids just sometimes make really bad decisions and it
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doesn't make them a bad kid. >> every kid needs to know that these pills kill, they are poison. >> according to the cdc, drug overdose deaths are now topping 100,000 annually in the u.s. and fentanyl and other synthetic opioids account for more than half of those avoidable deaths. mike. mike: >> jonathan, thanks very much. more migrant buses arriving in democratic strongholds while thousands more migrants continue streaming across our southern border. we will have a live report from eagle pass, texas coming up next. ♪ ♪ ♪
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mike: more migrant buses arriving in new york city and philadelphia this weekend and even more showing up at vice president kamala harris' front gate in washington, d.c. meanwhile florida governor ron desantis' administration saying they will continue to fly migrants who have entered the country illegally to democrat-run cities despite the cost. documents released friday show just two planned flights to delaware and illinois carrying 100 migrant will cost taxpayers nearly $1 million. a new fox poll finds the country split on the movement of migrants by border governors with 44% of registered voters approving and 50% disapproving. you are looking at live images of the southern border.
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the biden administration introducing a new program that would allow qualifying venezuelans to legally enter the u.s. and send those who cross the border illegally to mexico. griff jenkins live in eagle pass, texas with more. hello, griff. griff: hey, good afternoon, mike. and when we were in mexico yesterday we found venezuelan passports discarded on the mexican side of the river before they crossed perhaps likely because of this new rule and if you're looking live at our drone, the shot that you were just showing, half a dozen migrants that walked over and asked them and they said they are from nicaragua and cuba interestingly enough, mike. we haven't had a single venezuelan migrant at least in immediate area come in the many groups that we have seen throughout this morning. now, talking about this policy, the administration is drawing on an old trump era title 42 expulsion rule that currently sends mexicans and people from honduras, el salvador and
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guatemala back. now it includes venezuelans. let me show you excusive fox news coverage we shot yesterday of the. pulse of venezuelans. you can see on the bridge just above me, you can see the border patrol van meeting the inn mexican official van taking the venezuelans and transporting them. now let me walk you a little further to the next piece of video. this mike, you can see the venezuelans many of them in yellow shirts being transported from the immigration office just over in piedras negras to big buses and sent over to matamoros and that's why you have seen the migrants in matamoros and many traveled to get here. we caught up with some venezuelans what made the journey that were not aware and i informed them they weren't happy, take a listen to this, mike.
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mike. >> do you know venezuelans are returning to mexico now? >> no. we did not know anything. >> they treat us bad in mexico. >> we have no one there. it's dangerous. >> so really interesting that we haven't had venezuelans come yet. this is the first big group we got before dawn, a 100 migrants and no venezuelans in that one so it's going to be something to really keep an eye on but it underscores just how much are overrun here in this ground zero del rio sector mike. there have been more than 19,000 migrant encounters since i have been on the ground for the past 16 days. there have been more than 3500 got aways, one drowning, 89 smuggling attempts have been and the migrants have been coming for more than 40 countries to include yemen, syria and iran. not just central and south america. in one final note, mike, if i could just hold up, i haven't done this today but i want to show our viewers the cover of
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the del rio eagle pass newsletter. the cover today on the sunday paper cbp agents find 400,000 in meth in a pumpkin covered at the port of entry just over my shoulder and below the fold, you see a kidnapping and undocumented nicaraguan man here in eagle pass and apartment kidnapped a venezuelan woman and 2-year-old and was holding her for some $50,000 ransom, fortunately eagle pass police were able to rescue her and put the nicaraguan and undocumented alien behind bars. mike: you spent a whole lot of time over the past co couple of years, we heard a lot of numbers. give us a context, has the situation gotten really much worse in the past couple of years? griff: here is the takeaway, mike. we came down here to start the new fiscal year because last fiscal year with more than 2 million encounters was
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unprecedented. they've never seen anything like it. well, this sector right now 16 days into this new fiscal year is up 66% compared to last year so the takeaway is things are not only as bad, they are even worse heading into new fiscal year with no end in sight whatsoever and the border patrol agents, texas dps and national guard folks behind me are absolutely exhausted because they've been at at it for more n a year and a half. mike: if you need to catch the train, you better hurry. griff: thank you. mike: legend angela was honored after the break.
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mike: that is beautiful, angela lansbury singing songs in 2002. lights across broadway dimmed at 7:45 p.m. eastern last night in honor of late theater, screen and tv legend, her stage hits included main, dear world, gypsy, light spirit and little night music among many others. the 5-time tony award winner died last monday just a few days shy of her 97th birthday. heavy rains showering parts of the country this weekend and nearly 200 million americans are bracing for a cold front that could bring record low temperatures adam klotz has the latest from the weather center. hi, adam. adam: ending the weekend at least with heavy rain and the winter weather will sweep in early next week. you see the southern tier of the country stretching from parts of
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the southeast, the ohio river valley and back across texas, back across the desert southwest at times heavy rain, thunderstorms activity there. one other little system that we've been tracking to the north getting up in the northern great lakes across up at times there's been snow with this system because it is the very leading edge of what's going to turn into some really cold air here over the next couple of days. this is the very beginning of it and you see a couple of spots now 43 degrees in marquette, 33 in fargo. it is going to settle down deep into the country and in the coming days we are going to see the coldest air we have seen so far this season and possibly some record-breaking cold temperatures. we've got frost and freeze alerts from the ohio river valley, the appalachian mountains all the way to west, the plains getting towards the west as colorado. some really cold air in large cold air mass. these are your early morning forecasted lows. pay attention to time stamp, monday morning, temperatures in 30's and 20's but just continues to dig deeper and
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deeper. so nashville suddenly 31 degrees by tuesday morning you get all the way deep into the south by wednesday morning back behind the system perhaps some spots getting to 26 degrees to windchill are down colder than this, so frig it air is going to be moving in and as a result we could be talking about record-low morning temperatures, wednesday morning is the coldest of it and you see some of these areas where you don't typically see numbers like this waking up at or below freezing across large portions of the south, kentucky, alabama, atlanta, all areas right around freezing so some very cold air on the way. mike, i promise fall isn't over but at least the next couple of days we will be feeling like winter. mike: 30 degrees in little rock, my friends in arkansas are not going the like that. fox news sunday with shannon bream, i'm mike emanuel. thanks for watching. have an awesome day. ♪ ♪ ♪ st
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i am shannon bream. americans will tell us who they want to run washington. >> we are in better position than any other major economy in the world for. >> president biden on a west coast swing to tout his work on the economy despite a series of negative reports this week. and had this message for voters reflects republican wins inflation is going to get worse. it is that simple paragraph spread is a fox news poll so americans are feeling the squeeze of inflation.
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