tv FOX and Friends FOX News October 18, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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being essentially an uber driver runninger randz for illegal immigrants that came here across our border illegally how offensive it is to the american people by not putting us first but illegal immigrants first ahead of those. >> carley: congresswoman nancy mace thank you for being here. it. >> thank you. >> carley: with that "fox & friends" starts right now. bye-bye. >> debates in very close races. >> republican governor brian kemp and stacey abrams went head to head. >> the most dangerous things facing georgia is four more years of brian kemp. >> ms. abrams doesn't want to talk about her own record. >> not to declare a state of emergency over the migrant crisis fearing it would make the look back. multiple city officials. >> fox has obtained surveillance video capturing what dhorts say
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likely gabby petino's last day alive before her remains were discovered on the 19th. >> implicating president biden in shady business dealings. >> chuck grassley indicate documents indicate chuck grassley aware of hunter biden's business arrangement and may have been involved. >> that's good. scott puts it down. that's good. the kick is good. and the chargers win it in overtime i want to put on my my, my boogie shoes austin texas, capital of texas according to reports. good news is we are now heard on klbj so lawrence baines johnson picked up the radio show. the station he used to own. i guess he sold it when he died.
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>> steve: lbj owned a bunch of them. lady bird johnson after he passed ran the radio empire of theirs. >> brian: good news for lbj and his legacy i'm now on the station. >> steve: ainsley is off today and in the center spot we have rachel again. >> rachel: happy to fill in for ainsley. >> brian: watched you on the town hall with stuart varney. >> rachel: we had him on the show. we did the town hall and he forgot my name. he went uh, uh and sean said rachel campos-duffy. will he was a little nervous. that's what i chucked it up to. >> steve: her husband oh her name rachel campos-duffy entire name like a brand name. >> brian: now ready to go with this show.
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we assume you are a live audience out there just not in our studio. >> steve: that's right. you want to know about what happens three weeks from today. trust me. because today, three weeks from today, the midterm elections officially occur. >> brian: man, a lot going on last night. candidates, key races in georgia, ohio, utah, all debating on stage. >> rachel: that's right. and kevin corke live in washington with all the highlights. >> good morning to you steve, rachel and b.k. as you know it's that time of year. it is time to make your voices heard. that's right. time to get out and vote. in fact, it's already begun all over the country several states beginning this week. if you look carefully at that map, you wills in the ohio is among the states where ballots are already being cast which means debates like last night j.d. vance and tim ryan take on outside importance especially on
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issues like jobs, the economy and border security. >> you cannot honestly pretend to be a defender of border security when you have voted for amnesty multiple times in the congress. you cannot pretend to be a defender of border security whether you have voted against border wall funding multiple times. >> well, that got a lot of ooohs from the crowd. >> over in utah republican turned democrat-leaning independent evan mcmullen was booed at his debate with g.o.p. senator mike lee. >> senator lee, that was the most egregious betrayal of our nation's constitution in its history by a u.s. senator, i believe, and it will be your legacy. senator l is still casting doub. [boos] >> please. >> well, there's a lot of that meantime while that was all going down across the country, over in the great state of georgia stacey abrams and
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governor brian kemp squared off. >> how many sheriffs statewide have publicly endorsed your campaign? >> mr. kemp, what you are attempting to do is continue the lie that you have told so many times. i think you believe it's the truth. i support law enforcement and did so for 11 years. >> ms. abrams refused to answer the question so i will let you know that the answer is brother. no sheriffs are endorsing her statewide because of her distances on wanting to defund the police. >> well, and speaking of georgia, fresh off a very solid debate performance, herschel walker seemed to suggest in his chat with our sean hannity that no georgians don't have to send raphael warnock back to washington because the truth is, once he is there he will just do whatever joe biden and nancy pelosi tell him to. >> he has voted with it him 96% of the time. he either is a rubber stamp for joe biden or he has no clue of what he is doing. everyone said joe biden is headed in the wrong direction
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with me and heading in the wrong direction as well. >> keeping a very close eye on it. and speaking of and perhaps the most significant and maybe even best sign that democrats are a little worried over in georgia, former president obama will be campaigning in the state for top democrats on the 28th of october. could be too little, too late, either way should be interesting as we get close to the midterms. >> brian: key is with georgia you don't get 50% of the vote we will have a run off so here we go again. >> all the way into december and next year and it could be weeks. it's really complicated and the truth is it's a little unsettling for the rest of the country because we would like it results. we would like to know what happened. and unfortunately we are probably going to have to wait, guys. >> steve: kevin corke live in our d.c. bureau. according to the real clear politics average brian kemp is up by 3. is he going to be joining us two hours from right now. although the trafalgar is an
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outlier of polls right now. it shows that kemp is up by 12. it's interesting. the university of florida u.s. elections project says that so far 2 million americans have already done some early voting. 15 million have requested ballots. the turnout so far is higher than normal. >> male: -in ballots will account for 25% so far the number one state leading the number of early voters is the state of florida. >> rachel: i'm an old fashioned person i think voting on election day is a wonderful, unifying civic ritual. i wish we had less early voting and we actually had a federal holiday. that said, 2018 broke 100 year record for midterms and now on pace to break that record in this midterm people are voting as if their life depended on it and i think their lives do depend on it. that's why people are excited to
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vote in this 2022 election because so much is on the line. >> brian: flipping around and watching almost everything i can no one thinks democrats have momentum. i don't think anyone does. there is a fear they might have peaked in august and late july because of the dobbs decision because of abortion. look, everywhere you go. one or two might be changed but it is the economy please don't tell me you are going to run on that democrats. inflation, unless you are pro-inflation have trouble staying on the subject. pro-democracy. spin it democracy in balance. abortion and immigration are tied according to the latest poll. the thing that's moving up rapidly is illegal immigration thanks to republican governors being overwhelmed in their state mostly mostly abbott kemp doing it a little bit as well as desantis they have made people pay attention.
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76% of the illegal immigrants coming to new york are in our shelter system. if you are a politician who has a counter narrative to what's happening right now. you definitely have a lot of people listening. everyone was focused on georgia. that is where -- that's where sean hannity was last night. what i think is pretty astounding too, because you have a lot of these first time candidates like dr. oz and herschel walker people in the begin were hesitant. they are not now two very impactful senators showed up to back herschel walker last night. one of them was tim scott. who would like another african-american, needless to say, to keep him company in the senate. listen to what his take on the herschel that he knows last night, a fellow running back. >> here's the truth. what herschel represents, what i represent is not -- it's not about me and herschel, it's about every single young man, young woman who happens to be a person of color who is
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conservative leanings, they want to say to those young men shut up. they want to say to the young ladies, you be quiet because if we can lose if they can cut our throats unfortunately it means every other young person will be silent wee will stand up and fight for those judges. we will not back down. we love america. [applause] [applause] >> rachel: so many people who watch our network have been told to shut up and the democrats have vilified them. but there is a very special punishment, we're going to have david webb on the show later on. he knows it. a very special punishment liberals have for minorities like myself like herschel walker and david webb who dare to step
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out of that ideological box. i think that's very interesting that's what tim talked about definitely something i feel. people like me are existential threat to the left because their entire platform is based on victimhood and grievances if you have people as you see in southern texas and arizona a lot of hispanics breaking away from the democratic party and looking to the republicans because they see them as the party of parents and families and faith and value. i think it's a makeover for the republican party from the corporate reputation they had before about being just about taxes and corporations. will. >> steve: sure. everyone will have a different reason for voting the way they do ultimately three weeks from today. the 538 poll gives democrats a slight advantage to win the senate at 64%. but we told you yesterday about the "new york times" poll, the
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"new york times" says that the republicans right now in the generic poll are leading the democrats 49-45. of the people who responded the "new york times" poll says for 44% of the people who responded the number one issue is the economy for people like you and all of us on the couch, you are looking at the pry prices of everything these days. i heard hillary vaughn on tv last night she is new hampshire covering the candidates. for loot of people it's a choice between heating and eating. i was grocery store yesterday i was looking for a low carb bred. the bread guy was right there. he said it's right there. took it down and said i hope you liked it. i said i do too because it's 6 bucks. and do you know what he said? putin price hike. and then he burst into laughter. like that's going to be the joke for everybody.
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because that's what the administration wants you to believe if you can't blame donald trump, can't blame covid, blame putin. >> brian: say this about donald trump's candidates tudor dixon and carrie lake, herschel surging again and dr. oz, not many people think he does not have momentum. only thing i would say for democrats, like tim ryan, the on people who get up and say they stood up to their party is kyrsten sinema and joe manchin. they can say i pushed back. tim ryan can't say anything. when he got in took a run ten speaker and after that he has just knuckled under. now is he trying to rewrite himself i think the people of ohio are smarter than that. >> steve: according to the brand new poll tim ryan is hind j.d. vance by two points. to answer the question how was the low carb bread. delicious? >> rachel: worth the 6 bucks?
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>> steve: it was a lot but regular bread is 5 bucks. >> brian: zead carbs. >> steve: they figured a way. >> brian: no flower? >> steve: all sorts of stuff in there. i don't ask questions. it's delicious. and it seems natural. >> brian: presliced. >> steve: it is presliced. they have a machine. anyway, thanks for joining us on this very busy tuesday. coming up. brand new video showing gabby petino's final moments, remember this story? will this help us investigate what finally happened in the hours after she went into that whole foods store. >> brian: scientists develop a hybrid strain of covid. isn't that how the pandemic got started in the first place? i will tell you why they created it and why we should all run for the hills. ♪ i want to bang on the drum all day ♪ personalized financial advice from ameriprise
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apes rapes fox news has obtained surveillance footage of what authorities say was likely gabby petino's final hours before she was murdered. need inside a whole food stores. they roamed the aisles the day she was likely killed. gabby petino was just 22 years old. boston university researchers creating a hybrid coronavirus strain in a lab. it's a mix of the original strain omicron variant. forces the finding of other similar research performed by other including the fda.
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echos the experiments in wuhan china that have feared to have triggered the covid-19 pandemic. boston university say the new study is meant to help fight against future pandemics and it is pier reviewed and reviewed by boston public health commission. new developments in the hunter biden investigation just grassley say new whistleblower documents reveal president biden's business dealings in a letter to merrick garland and others grassley writes these documents also indicate that joe biden was aware of hunter biden's business arrangements and may have been involved in some of them leaked emails show russian oligarch who reportedly invested 40-million-dollar to his rae company on top of 3.5 in consulting fees. to monday night football we go chargers get overtime win against the broncos thanks in
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part game winning field goal to hawk kings who injured his leg earlier in the game. here's what he had to say after the final whistle i to the so much it be thankful for. so when something like this happens i'm left either way to be on the good side of that is obviously a feels a lot better. >> chargers defeating the broncos 19 to 16 overtime and a great comment from the kicker there. dustin hopkins. >> brian: finally a good game on amazon. pretty hideous game. and carley you are still going to be breaking down the thursday night games friday morning? >> carley: play by play? next hour. >> steve: fantastic. thank you, carley. >> carley: you are welcome. >> steve: behind us is sixth avenue. you can see the taillights. people driving up toward central park. underneath sixth avenue is the subway. so far this year there have been
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nine people murdered yesterday the very latest on the murder elks press as so many people refer to it, a 48-year-old guy apparently accidently bumped into somebody. knocked that guy's cell phone onto the tracks that guy started yelling at him. there was a scuffle and next thing you know the guy pushes him into oncoming train and he was killed. they apprehended the suspect but at this point he has not been charged yet they are trying to figure out whether or not it could have possibly been an accident. >> rachel: if it was an accident he probably wouldn't have snuck on to a train and he tried escape and they caught him on the train. >> rachel: also if something accidently happened you stay there. >> brian: crime in new york city and think it's out of control, maybe four blocks away you might have been around saturday morning 3:45 and seen the smash-and-grab in the jewelry
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store where they took $500,000 in about five minutes. maybe, as you know a man, you are in queens last night and watched a man get his order screwed up so he burned the place down. maybe you were in chelsea where a mad man with 12 prior arrests choked a woman, pushed a baby carriage shoved another lady and held on to her. he wants cops to show up so he can get killed by her. again, 12 prior arrests. this type of stuff was not happening for the past 12 years. it is happening now when the former police captain became mayor and by the way we never hear from the police chief. we thought this stuff was going to slowly go away. it hasn't, but, if it can't go away. what's the second best thing you can do. tell everyone it did. >> sure, absolutely. the video we showed you of all the police that's what we thought we were going to wind up with this new mayor. instead, the police only show up after there is something honorable that has happened and then there was another story, and i know we're about to play the mayor saying look, it's not really crime city.
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it's just in your head. a mad man randomly punched and choked a woman as she pushed a baby stroller in the park then he attacked a lady on a bench. he was arrested. he has been arrested 12 times before. one of the times he punched a door man, no bail. he has got a psychiatric history he appears emotionally disturbed. the city does not deal with the root causes. okay, there's the door. please don't do that again. that's it. don't do it again. >> rachel: i told you yesterday naked man on drugs right outlines of our studio. it's everywhere. mayor eric adams says no it's not it's perception. >> we are dealing with actual crimes. those eight homicides and dealing with the perception of fear that people are feeling that's the combination. deal with that perception and the actual crime. we can't get away from the fact that we have 3.5 million people using our subway system.
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we have to be honest about that. those average of six crimes a day is not giving the impression that our system is out of control. >> brian: lee zeldin gave message what people care about. yesterday again talking about crime. making it clear cashless bail has got to go. slowly but surely destroying every major city in this country trip we started the whole thing off. alvin bragg says look to remove him right away even though elected by the people. is he addressing the issues that people care about. where is governor hochul? invisible. she wants to run out the clock get as much money as possible and get four years. i have never seen anyone run and hide. no debates. one debate on new york 1 for one hour. new york runs a local cable outfit that would get almost no coverage. outside of new york city you wouldn't even see it. >> steve: if she can get away
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with it, she is trying to do of it the scale in new york city is crazy. nine people murdered in the subway. over the weekend, did you see this? apparently some guys went into a mitsubishi dealership over in jamaica, queens. they stole the keys to 20 cars over the next couple of days they stole 20 cars. the worry from the police is think are going to use these 20 cars as get away vehicles to ride around the city doing gunpoint robberies at smoke shops and on street corners so if a car pulls up to you on a street in new york city, you don't know if that car is stolen. you don't know if that guy has a gun 20 cars are missing and positive they are going to be used for a crime wave are just thinking it's bad it's not really bad. station cleaner says it's sad. it's the new normal. he has worked there for 15 years. he says i have worked here half my life. if it's not a subway surfer,
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it's a fight. if it's not a fight it's a stabbing or shooting. you can decide how want to believe. >> i hear you. >> just the facts, ma'am. >> brian: 26 minutes after the hour. still ahead a crisis coreup. the white house reportedly pressured the democratic mayor of el paso to declare a state of emergency over immigration to not declare a state of emergency over immigration because it would make the president look bad. will cain reacts to that next. >> rachel: plus, tim allen takes on woke twitter. the message causing a social media meltdown that's still ahead. le today.
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#1 prescribed for td. learn how you could pay as little as zero dollars at ingrezza.com. >> brian: welcome back. did the white house urge the democratic mayor of el paso to not declare a state of emergency over the city's i object credibly overwhelmed migrant drivers? appears so. city council member claudia rodriguez telling the "new york post" the mayor told me the white house asked him not to. "fox & friends weekend" co-host will cain joins us. will, we get this story yesterday that the mayor of el paso is going to stop sending, perhaps, buses to new york city. where did that come from? now we know. >> we know being pressured by democratic politicians at the highest levels. mayor eric adams is asking to stop. this is apparently to the "new york post" after mayor eric adams gave the democratic mayor of el paso the green light to send those buses. but, even higher up, we now hear
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from it's not just one by the way, brian, several different sources. several different public meetings inside of el paso city council gatherings that the white house told the mayor of el paso hey, don't declare a state of emergency. we will keep, in essence, funding you. we'll keep giving you the benefits that you would under this program. but it will look a lot better for everybody if you don't declare the state of emergency. for what it's worth, according to records, brian, the city has spent something like $8 million on dealing with this illegal immigration crisis. homeless shelters and dealing with all these people now just walking across the border because the rio grande is fairly dried up. walking across and turning themselves in. and they have only gotten $2 million reimbursed. seem to me if the city of new york, you were just talking about, can declare a state of emergency, it might be an emergency as well in el paso. >> brian: this is what the mayor said. i don't bow to pressure from any side. make city best interest of the city of el paso.
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see the video, you understand what life is like there it is absolutely out of control. care more about politics people that put new office. look at what they sent to new york city, 11,000 plus from el paso gone to new york city. 3168 have gone to chicago. governor abbott, who is getting all the negative -- getting all the barbs from this mayor and from the president, he sent 3,300. and about 1,000 to chicago. so, the more local you get, the less political they usually are. when are we going to get a politician with backbone? >> that's an interesting question. the more local you get, 9 more tethered to reality that you are. one way to get a politician with backbone and, you know, brian, i don't want to pretend like this is a modern day invention but politics has always been about manipulating not reality but what think about reality perception of reality. i listened to you talk about the
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mayor of new york talk about the perception of crime. not the reality. not what you are living with the quality of life issue on the streets of new york, but the perception of crime. we see the white house try to manipulative how we think about gas prices, right, by talking about the mode the most common price instead of the one we always used the average gas price. month after month ignoring that the entire economy is sitting on the precipice and here we have the illegal. don't declare a state of emergency, that's bad for perception. when do we get a politician with backbone. one who believes and knows he can actually change people's lives for the better reality not perception. >> brian: get someone who is competent. another story out, politico, chris ima imagine news the cpd commissioner imation moving up. this administration does not have a good story to tell. will, thanks so much. great to see you. >> thanks, brian.
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abrams campaigned to be joe biden's running mate. she supports these policies. >> steve: there you have got georgia governor brian kemp and democrat stacey abrams facing off last night in their first debate rematch since 2018 as early voting kicks off in georgia as of yesterday. let's talk to our political panel. we have got here screen left. you have got fox news contributor david webb. center square former nassau county executive lauren kern and republican strategist joseph pinion. good morning to all of you. >> good morning. >> laura, let's start with you. what did you think about last night. stacey abrams currently is behind in the polls. did she distinguish herself enough to make it count. >> i think she did. i think the tone in this debate was really interesting. especially in this political season. they didn't treat the public like morons. i would say both of those candidates spoke very meaty issues. they spoke very articulately about them. you could tell who thought what
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about what. and not taking the voters for granted. to say me, it was actually very refreshing in tone because they also kept it respectful. yes, they were spirited and yes they were sharp. they didn't take gratuitous digs just to get the headline. >> steve: how very un2022. >> i loved that. >> steve: joe? >> i think that to her credit stacey abrams did make some points that i think will resonate with the broader audience talking about things like the chinese invasion here when it comes to the buying of farmland that is critical to us being able to feed our own citizens. >> steve: um-huh. >> other things would leave people scratching their head when she tries to pretend she was not in support of the three must dangerous words uttered in modern politics defund police. when she tried to sit there and act if she was not the ringleader for some of the machinations that you saw in the 2018 midterms where i call the first deniers this ever came on the scene. those are the things that i think most georgians would recognize stacey abrams trying
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to rewrite history on his or her own terms. >> steve: david, is he absolutely right. a lot of politicians do you have ammunition? what do you think about last night. >> interesting thing that i do is i run the text, the transcription of the debate. i get both the text and the words. stacey abrams attacks and denies. she is a grifter gone from being worth about $300,000 to millions. how did she do that? what did she deliver in that time? remember the major league baseball, right, when she wanted them out and georgians lost over $300 million. her defund the police policy she still supports with the organizations that she is on the board of or helped support. so she stands there and tells georgians i'm for this. but, someone a tacks and then denies, rather than putting forward an actual solution of what she said last night. she may sound air indict and nice. you are not wrong about the way they presented the tone. it's not enough to swing georgia voters, especially independence
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who tend to lean reasonable and right in georgia if you look at their history. >> steve: laura, i know she did try to redirect attention to abortion and other things. but the number one issue to everybody across the entire country, whether you are in georgia or, you know, pennsylvania, pennsylvania, arizona is the economy. and ultimately, i think brian kemp was very effective in tying her to joe biden's policies. and rite now the democrats are under water when it comes to inflation. >> and he really pushed how he reopened the economy before anyone with covid. really pushing economic development. >> steve: brian kemp in georgia? >> yes, exactly he did that. the other wild card in this was shane hazel the libertarian. in a way he made both of other candidates abrams and kemp look conventional not necessarily in a bad way but more like the grown ups in the room which i'm sure would help either of them with their base. >> i think that's a really good point. georgia is used to conventional
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politics. you are right. georgians have voted historically for what they know, who they know, and the person they like along with the policies combined. and this is where kemp has an advantage, even as detractors will tend to lean towards him because it's working. he reopened the state. he is going to give them a tax break as a result of being reopened. and that's something that abrams was against. >> steve: okay, joe? >> i think to that point, you look at what happened here with this bidenflation that is destroying america. people living on fixed incomes. they can't afford to keep a roof over their head. can't afford to keep food on the kitchen table. the notion that stacey abrams is somehow going to be a champion for the middle out robust recovery that americans are in desperate need of today is a fairy tale the likes of which most georgians are not going to buy particularly for her support for all things biden. >> steve: lightning round, today marks three weeks away from the midterm elections. just one word answers, who will win the u.s. senate?
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david? >> toss-up. >> steve: that's hyphenated. okay. >> 50/50. >> steve: seeing a trend. >> i have to plug shamelessly here, republicans. only because i think we are going to beat chuck schumer in about 21 days here. [laughter] >> steve: thank you lauren and joseph. >> thank you so much. >> steve: exactly a quarter before the top of the hour. carley joins us with more supply chain problems. >> carley: yeah, steve, that's right. got update on the baby formula shortage right now. not good. families in the u.s. still struggling to find formula nearly one year after the nationwide shortage began. according to a survey from the u.s. census 1/3 of households had trouble finding formula last month. comes as abbott nutrition issues a voluntary recall of its ready to feed baby formula due to caps that may not have sealed completely. jury deliberations are underway in the trial of russian national
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igor danchenko who served as the primary informant for the debunk fiance. delivered the prosecution's final rebuttal saying, quote: let's talk about the elephant in the room, the fbi. the fbi failed here on a number of occasions. durham says danchenko lied to the fbi during its trump-russia probe. and the online application for student loan relief is now live. but some borrowers are ineligible to benefit from the new program. in late september, the biden administration altered the guidance to exclude borrowers from the federal family education loan program that change was made after several states sued to try to stop the loan handout program. those are your headlines. janice, over to you. >> janice: thank you, my friend. it's beginning to feel a lot like christmas. let's take a look at the maps. because it's cold. it's getting colder. look at that the temperatures. 12 in fargo. 30 in marquette.
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25 in minneapolis. 37 in chicago. and with the window chill, my friends, below freezing. below zero in fargo. 25 in st. louis. 29 in nashville. 70 -- oh my gosh, up to 90 million impacted by frost and freeze alerts. in some cases we are going to set records, potential record lows for parts of north carolina, kentucky, tennessee, atlanta, georgia. this is a big deal because it's cold as far as south as the gulf coast and then we have got the snow for the great lakes. interior northeast. some areas across the u.p. of michigan getting close to 2 feet of snow. that's like a harsh reality for october. and then that snow threat is going to move across the eastern great lakes and the interior northeast. i know, crazy, right? it happens though. here is your forecast today. country cooler than average. florida 88. miami, the northwest still very warm and southern california. but the rest of the map is pretty darn cold, steve doocy. over to you.
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>> steve: janice, you jumped over two other holidays. you cut right to christmas. we got to get through thanksgiving and halloween first. >> janice: for me every day can be christmas. >> steve: i like that idea just not christmas weather. thanks, j.d. >> janice: see you. >> steve: i like christmas. tim allen controlling twitter with this simple question. who is the face of woke? fox news anchor julie banderas on the social media meltdown and she has a new book coming up next. ♪ come on to me ♪ boom, crash ♪ the sound of my heart ♪ the beat goes on and on and on and on and on on ♪ boom, crack, make me feel good ♪ boom, crack, make me feel good ♪ come on to me. especially when you have metastatic breast cancer. when your time is threatened, it's hard to invest in your future. until now. kisqali is helping women live longer than ever before when taken with an aromatase inhibitor or fulvestrant...
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easy for them. we regarding children for not completing tasks and giving trophies for not winning. and grow up lazy children. this is a story about a little girl whose father and a father-figure and mother figure are so important in a child's life to encourage her children to keep pushing forward even when things get tough. because in the real world everything is not easy and it shouldn't be. you should earn it. >> rachel: building a fantastic call for the. because we are your family, by missy robinson. this is a series of books. and the father-figure is so prominent. the mother figure is so prominent. such reassuring forces in the lives of the characters. and such a fun read. wwhy don'tyou read an excerpt. >> cool. this is on brave books.com. my book was the september month book. so basically this is a story about a little girl who she is basically building a for the. remember when our kids actually
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played outdoors and got a mix between three little pigs and field of dreams if you build it they will come. in her head fantastical. not impressive to her friends. a little down and her father builds her up and tells her to keep working. here is part of that barbaro. in the morning fiona took her father to see the mansion but the rain had washed it all away. fiona's eyes filled with tears. i did what you said look all my hard work was for nothing. her father held her little paws in her big ones. your work is never for nothing, sunshine. keep your head up. keep working hard and i know you can build a fort that's even better than before. fiona dried her eyes and set to work. and you have to pick up the book to see her final fantastic call castle that she created after. >> rachel: such a great story with such a great message.
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such beautiful illustrations and also, again, this towering strong father-figure that really gives her that reassurance. >> brave books.com is where you can buy the book. you get a subscription and a special. so the october month author is bethany hamilton. surfer who lost her arm in the shark accident. awesome book about overcoming fear. if you buy just today if you buy, if you subscribe to the monthly book -- it's called the freedom island series you get my month for free and get her book. >> rachel: encourage you books for children that are valuable and have a good message. so important. all right. thank you, julie. so great having you. >> great to be here. >> coming up, new whistleblower documents claim president biden was aware of hunter's business arrangement. and may have been involved in some of them. the explosive new claims and calls for special counsel to investigate today.
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on stage. >> j.d. vance, with all due respect is a fraud. >> tim ryan would be is a failed leader and would be a failed senator. >> pushing el paso's mayor not to declare a state of emergency over the city's migrant crisis fearing it would make the president look bad. the "new york post" is reporting that mayor osuer leaster told multiple officials directive. >> boston university scientists have now created a new covid strain that has 80% kill rate.
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