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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  October 25, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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♪ ♪ >> hello, everyone, i am kaylee mack and we are 14 days from the election as i sit with my cohosts emily compagno and harris faulkner also leslie marshall and brian kilmeade. as we begin where you think we began with a high-stakes midterm election 14 days from today, candidates and some of the most closely watched races are facing
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off in there one and only debates like tonight. the pennsylvania senate matchup is in the spotlight. it is a race that could determine which party controls the senate. polls show only single digits separating john fetterman and dr. all is. and federman's campaign is trying to lower expectations about his performance tonight. reminding the media he is recovering from a stroke and was never much of a debater even before that. and that he lacks his republican rivals experience in television. meanwhile, in florida, governor ron desantis faced off against his democratic challenger, charlie crist, last night. chris came out swinging, but desantis gave it back pretty good. watch. >> why don't you look in the eyes of the people of the state of florida and say to them, if you were are reelected you will serve a full four your term as governor, yes or no? yes or no, ron? will you serve a full four-year term?
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>> we did not agree to the candidates asking each other. >> i know charlie is talking about 2024 and joe biden but i want to make things very, very clear. the only worn out old donkey i'm looking to put out to pasture is charlie chris. >> quite a moment, i had the same reaction, emily. and brian we also know him as a chameleon because he was republican, than independent, then democrat but this stuck out to me from nbc, florida democrats are fretting over ron desantis is popularity among latinos saying they are boosting his chances of becoming the first republican governor in 20 years to win miami. he is ahead by double digits and basically every poll, this would be enormous. >> you know what i think it is? it's performance. is not that he has a right message or is so charismatic or has this new gel. he goes out and turns around the economy, he opened up the schools, he made sure people were listened to, he took on corporations like disney and he
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got rid of the woke attitude that is infiltrating a so many school systems. also he is beginning to consolidate his panic about. it's not usual for a republican could to win over for the cuban community but it is for the puerto rican community and others involved to acknowledge other aspects, it's not a holistic get one vote get them all. so i think it is on performance, they like the way he is leading the state. while keeping taxes low and attracting businesses and especially in miami, my goo goodness, that places pulsing with business opportunities and entrepreneurship. >> kayleigh: he has a 56% approval among latinos. we talk about all the time of this couch come you see in nevada, south texas, florida, this community is changing who they are voting for. >> harris: and we talk about it all the time because it is such a huge loss for democrats, that voting bloc. and they really have kind of misinterpreted as ryan has said.
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what the difference is and the nuances are among those amenities of color, right? they look at them as a single voting bloc and they are not as we are not as we are also of color. i do think this is about the big loss for democrats and republicans can start to take advantage of that. i would say, though, in miami it may be something else. desantis means that. when he was pressed last night i watched it live, by the way come on my phone, i couldn't put it down. that part where he called him the old donkey or whatever? the audience i am like my boat e was vibrating from the sound of. but what he said was when chris came after him that you were getting rid of elected officials and d.a.'s office is in everything, soft on crime come you can't do that. he said but i have done it. and i would do it again. and that is what i think people like about him in miami. when he says he is going to do it, he is going to do a. when he said he would reconnect centerville in less than 60 days and get them what they needed, chris tried to take advantage
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and say his policies set up sent to bell, these are the policies that put it together was the s sky. >> brian: and you know what else is impressive busy depths things and on the pulse committee doesn't get polls and asked, do my coming act, it's the opposite. >> kayleigh: so true, everyone has been waiting for this moment, just one debate, people have asked in a cbs poll i looked at we don't care about federman's location or where he lives or his residency. we don't care about his health, oz's residence yesterday. let's focus on the issues and what voters want to focus on. crime periods i have trick or bites i want to play from john fetterman. the first one we have heard about morgan freeman let's take a listen on his view of criminals and murderers. >> for kept ohmic skeptics or those who are not familiar with the state of affairs in
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pennsylvania, i reference a cultural touchstone that most have seen. the shawshank redemption. and i say who thinks morgan freeman should have died in prison, you know? and no one says yeah, he should have. then this is what it looks like in pennsylvania. >> kayleigh: till the murderer is morgan freeman, a fictional character or guess what, he may be a grandpa or grandma, take a listen to this. >> some people in the public think you are talking about a bunch of hannibal lector is in prison and they are not. they are like a grandfather, they are like your grandmother. >> kayleigh: let's talk about grandma because ten days ago federman had a vote, foxnews.com put out the piece about john fetterman about one of the people he wants to revisit the case, her name is brandon mills, she is serving a prison sentence of 5.5 years at least after using scissors, differences are colored by the way and knives to attack her housemate in 2021. they reportedly found her sitting on a couch at the resident is holding knives, the outlet noted after disobeying police commands to put it down
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she started stabbing herself in the chest and had to use a taser to subdue her. my grandma doesn't do this, but to federman this is just gra grandma. >> emily: the problem with federman is that reality is a totally different experience than what he is living in. he says well the tattoos of the names of crime victims in my body but voters don't care about his tattoos. what they care about his real life and the real-life the pennsylvanians are facing as reflected in the poll that they care about crime and inflation. and what matters to them are federman's actions. so his votes to commute sentences, to reduce parole to get out of prison, to totally change the reality facing these criminals because he calls them grandmothers and grandfathers end in vandalizing them as such, that is what is going to resonate. his campaign can soften all they want tonight, i would think as a pennsylvanian i wouldn't want them qualifying performance i would want a candidate that says i will be super strong and
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that's why should vote for me. the fact that they are coming out have time saying he's not really good at debating anyway just so you know, that's the last is the last thing that will instill confidence in this man, but the bottom line is his votes are atrocious, horrendous, when he says everybody knows the cultural touchstone, whatever one knows is reality the real stories coming out of prison in the criminal justice system there, and a horrifying situation in pennsylvania and other democrat lead cities and counties and states is reason enough to go to the polls and vote for anyone but federman. >> kayleigh: and emily, leslie out on the couch knows that it is very separate. federman has voted more than any other member on the parole board to let people of life prison sentences out. that is very different on the first step act. >> leslie: here is a problem pay when you look at the polls, first of all federman's leading and not within the margin. >> kayleigh: single digits.
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>> leslie: still leading by 6%, 2 i would agree with you on issues but as far as that is what the campaign should be about and look i'm a democratic strategist not a republican strategist. if i were a republican strategist i would be telling dr. all tonight to do exactly what emily just said. because his popularity, his approval rating is not good. this is a problem for him. it's not just being an outsider as many view him in the state of pennsylvania. it's the personal attacks as a doctor on federman's health, and like you said, that's not what people want to -- >> kayleigh: what about voting to let the murderers out? we put of the pictures and told their story to think that will help them? >> leslie: no, what i am saying is he is 6% ahead, okay? >> kayleigh: single digits. >> leslie: but why? because everyone is focusing on the personal attack. people aren't focusing on the issues that matter to the voters. obviously these issues don't matter perhaps as much just like a debate doesn't matter as much. the people are pretty much set on who they will vote for, you
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know this, it will change a vote or two but tonight people will say ola, federman is not fit for office, he will read this and people that love him will say we have no problem with that, he is doing really good and he will be better and he will be great by the time because this is the sea that could determine the balance of power in the senate so i don't think the debate sadly will matter tonight and federman is doing in a sense of herschel walker said who said look, i am not as bright or great at debates et cetera. >> kayleigh: i think it will -- >> harris: but wait with your percentages i want people to really understand. last hour we looked at several polls. we do the politics average on that. federman is up by one percentage point. and cbs news battleground tracker pole can't test stats from the most recent polling having them it barely two just under two. federman was up by five points last month.
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so, yeah, i don't see 6 anywhere. i know you can find an outlier but that gets averaged in and it's 2% or under, it is squeaky tight, leslie. >> brian: and i think it does matter. if he can't do the job he can't do the job. >> harris: do you think it matters he will need a monitor? >> kayleigh: we have to run but i think a lot of voters will say i will not vote for the guy who will let motors out mike murderers out of prison and that he supports the agenda and next upt inflation? the big backlash over the president's claim that it is the democrats who are the fiscally responsible party, right, that'c next no upfront costs at all. let us get your family security of cash in the bank. i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uhhhh... here, i'll take that. [woo hoo!] ensure max protein, with 30 grams of protein,
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>> kayleigh: president biden putting a new spin on the issue driving voters to the poll this election cycle, the economy. inflation has been a real
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problem for him, presses as that might have gone up dramatically on his watch. latest inflation numbers showing prices jumped 8.2% year-over-year last month. but during an appearance at dnc headquarters yesterday, biden claims it's the democrats who are the fiscally responsible party. that republicans will tank the economy? watch. >> president biden: we, the democrats are the ones that are physically response book, let's get that straight now, okay? we are investing in all of america. reducing everyday costs while also lowering the deficit at the same time. republicans are fiscally reckless pushing tax cuts for the very wealthy and exploring the deficit that is making inflation worse. >> emily: leslie, his hyperbole is difficult to stomach. when he calls republicans fiscally reckless when it is his party and his administration that has rented money and pumped
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money by the millions and billions into programs and theaters that have been wasted, fraudulently obtained, stolen, inefficiently up the mic distributed, and they continue to take taxdollars and spread id like butter. but i will leave my hyperbole aside for the second with my next sentence. just to say don't you agree it as a result of his policies and has of ministrations policies the administration's policies well before hooton invaded and the global crisis he keeps 22? it started with him? >> leslie: i wouldn't say that although i wouldn't agree with what the president said that democrats are more fiscally responsible. i don't think politicians are fiscally responsible and both sides of the aisle. i will say i am not a top economist for the top economists i've interviewed from both sides were nonpatterson have said even though you have the american rescue plan and even though you
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have infrastructure which was a bipartisan piece of legislation with a big price tag take it as well. they say the democratic policies and biden administration policies will contribute to the inflation rate by a maximum of 2%. the reason i say that it's because can't just blame it on the biden administration you have to look at the feds. there is definitely certainly a global issue in my party is not that powerful that they can affect an international inflation rate in an international economy, 3, putin invading the ukraine and the weather certainl fy had aneds, w and not aggressive enough to act with regard to inflation when they knew it was coming. >> harris: to think, first of all, david asman fox business and i just talked in depth about this, the inflation rate was 1.41 biden inherited it from former president trump. by november of that year, 2021,
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it was 7.9. the war didn't start until february. >> leslie: it's not just the war. >> harris: the war shouldn't even be a calculation then. it was cooking almost as high as what we have now at 8.1 or 2 which is a 40 year high as it was in november of 2021. you cannot even fathom anything other than these policies getting us there because nothing else had taken hold yet. >> leslie: i'm just looking at economists who are experts in money and i am not. -- >> harris: lockdowns and businesses going under and all of that in the pandemic. all biden has said is how resilient we are as an economy. he blames russia, he blames all of these other things. but when you look at it, you have to look at his spending. you have to! the first round because we had to. >> leslie: let me ask you, can you name one politician left or right that has ever said economy is bad it is on me? nobody. >> harris: yes!
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he said i feel your pain! >> leslie: i feel your pain is not it's not my fault. >> harris: you know joe biden -- >> leslie: biden said i feel your pain. >> harris: i feel what you're feeling, i know how you're feeling i want to make a better and this is what i'm going to do. do know what they study? they tatted a lie and put lipstick on the pig and called it inflation reduction act. it had nothing to do with reduced stomach reducing inflation. it reduces the deficit and that is a bootable thing but there is not a one-to-one match. cbo said it where it did not get the score out on the friday before they rammed it through over the weekend when they passed it. i could go on for hours like this, let's just call it what it is. he has to own it. he has to own it. >> leslie: i don't think you'll ever see politician -- i don't think you should first of all, and second notch is to i think, i know when you look at history there has never been a president of the united states that stood up and said my fault, my bad. >> brian: keep in mind australia has lower, china has lower inflation, japan is lower
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inflation, mexico is lower inflation. >> harris: that's right speak six countries in western europe i never want to take physical cues from. they have become slowly socialist and we want to move away from that. the u.k.'s in political turmoil, they are trying to break away from the e.u., what the experts say and i think you will ground this, leslie kumble got out of inflation last time is you cut spending at the same time you raise rates in the short term which is the quickest way to do it. it is not politically advantageous to do it without educating people yet. i think educating people on tightening their belts this way to get this goal, i think that would work. >> emily: and that whole point, every piece of that pie that administration fails and do the opposite of what would stimulate and depreciate inflation and appreciate the value of money like the keystone pipeline the common sense solutions because they are so, so addicted and connected to the curry and that favor and vote
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from the far left that they think they will do by committing to these policies, and that is probably why 3 out of 4 americans trust republicans on the economy on fiscal issues. >> kayleigh: let me translate the mind of a voter, leslie, if i may when they say pollutant price hike and it's happening globally this is what they hear appear in my car was totaled and you are telling me it's okay, someone's car was totaled in california, someone's car was totaled in florida, who cares? my car was totaled! so when the president of the united states says inflation is steady at a 40 year high, gas prices are coming down, they are still a dollar above when he took office, they don't care. it's an excuse. the reality is as we discussed yesterday, you have to take out a loan for school supplies. >> emily: i was just thinking i. i was at an event last weekend and every one said they were frightened because their 401(k)s were so depleted. how much they can't afford, however they looks different for them now at their kitchen table and in the refrigerator, at their bills, for their children
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come in every regard. yet that come of this president says we are the enemy. he continues blaming the average american and republicans for his failures. coming up, protesters heckled senator ted cruz on the view stomach to "the view" although he wasn't rattled the hosts are a different story. that and more next. ♪ ♪
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excuse me! ladies! excuse is! let us do our job! let us do our job! we hear what you've got to say but you have got to go. >> harris: wow. yelling at the people in the audience. who are yelling at you. a member of cruises' staff says one of the hecklers was cussing out the senator. that got bleeped. they cut to commercial and hecklers ejected. they seem stunned about what went down during the commercial break. >> they said in the entire history of the show they never had anyone do that, i think there were little rattled buried it was an interesting difference between politics and the media. i think they were more rattled than i was. i was like look, this is politics. they're just being knuckleheads. i sort of laughed and keep on going, that's just part of the world we live in. >> harris: leslie, what happen when they go low we go high?
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>> leslie: first of all, i want to say and i will get in a lot of trouble for this, i think ted cruz has cuts going on there. i give them props. i also want to give will be goldberg props because technically most of us would say climate protesters are left of center and they are screaming at a few people on the panel who they would normally think are on their side, like-minded, or about the same way. last i want to say because i know we don't have a lot of time in the segment, and i got in trouble for this too, i don't care if it's a women's march, man march, climate protesters screaming at "the view" march, it doesn't move the needle or change the issue. what does his legislation and how do you get that? you vote for people. historically in midterm elections, my party, democrats, don't show up to vote. i know we are seeing record numbers so far but we will have to see if democrats are the majority. >> harris: i think it's fascinating, leslie, you and i have known each other a long time and we often talk about far
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left in your party, they are the loudest. did you hear them? they are definitely the loudest but what you're saying is they don't move the needle and brandy were nodding in agreement. >> brian: climate activists, their anti-van gogh i guess into ruining great art, heckling letter a letter come i don't know who they are winning over but i would love to travel with them as they fill up their car at $5 a gallon gasoline andh they want to cheer for climate change. in the delusion i want to know who raised them and who educated them because they are not in the real world. >> harris: wow. >> harris: dumb x before they are driving a preis on. >> harris: not in california because you can't plug it in. >> brian: only between four and six on saturday. >> harris: emily, when you look at the vitriol and i think leslie is right near the party of civility and you have somebody go on the view and they get a taste of some of that vitriol, i agree.
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i think senator cruz means it when he says you have to go everywhere and good on him for doing that. >> emily: i wholeheartedly agree. i don't think anything is gained from staying in your petri dish in the safe zone enough that we comment on all the time. being negative for our country, right? especially as an elected official you were present every constituent in your constituency. you are present every american, every texan, every whatever it is. and being that i am someone that sees a president who clearly does not represent me and seems to blame me in fact for half of the things going on in this country, i would love to have someone who said i see you and i will listen to you i am here for you on this network too. have you ever been at a kids birthday party or something where a child is acting up and being really terrible and you meet the parents later and you're like oh. don't make sense? >> harris: don't mix before the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. >> emily: my point is when you go on that show are people constantly shot over each other and don't listen and disrespect each other, where there are a lot of things i come out of that that make people feel really
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unwelcome, very unheard and unable to articulate their point i am not surprised that the audience members felt it was the perfect forum for them to act out like that. >> harris: i will say this, we have democrats coming on this network for example and we may have a lot of disagreements, but they keep coming back. like leslie. >> leslie: every 13 years so i guess i'm okay with you guys. >> harris: when i had senator all mentioned we had a tough go but he said he would come back and it was nice at the end and that's how it is supposed to be, right? always welcome to come on. i think to a testament of what we do at fox, we continue to ask. even when the question is no, eric adams of new york was breaking the city with crime. anyway -- >> kayleigh: wasn't at the view that called ron desantis a homicidal maniac and he said that i'm not coming out because he listed a research document of all the horrible things they have said? my friend was the ted cruz staffer there, i worked with him, steve guessed, he said they definitely shouted f you. i think it is right the hosts
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will rattled. the crowd members shouted f you and we see this on the left and we thought at the desantis debate, buck sexton said several people had to be ejected from we saw this at aoc rallies, you've unleashed a beast on the left and you have put it back in the bottle. >> harris: even the candidates are doing it, ryan we had to [bleep] him beat him several times. beat him several times. it's a wake-up call, the nations test scores for math and reading boat why did it take until now for the warnings on the consequences of school shutdowns? next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> kayleigh: there is growing concern for our children as the new nation's report card card shows the covid pandemics steps any impact on students. it was entirely predicable. in the largest education department analysis of test scores, reading scores fell enough to erase three decades of gains and math scores saw the biggest drop ever among fourth and eighth grade students nearly every state. after two years of warnings and protests over school touchdowns and remote learning president biden's education secretary now has made this admission. >> if this is not a wake-up call for us to double down our efforts and improve education, even before the pandemic, i don't know what will. i am calling on all leaders throughout the country to look at this as a call to action, to invest in education so that we don't go backwards. >> kayleigh: right off the top here, brian, if you let me come i want to play this quick sound
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bite, jay tapper seems to think there was never a discussion about school closures let's take a watch. >> i have to say i'm surprised that there hasn't been -- a national conversation about the damage done to kids because of these school closures in the virtual learning and everything because, i'm not saying there should be a national do over, but we can't just pretend fifth graders who now seventh graders, that didn't happen, you know? i feel like there should be -- and not with the blame game, look. it happened, people did it, it was criticize the school closures, the virtual learning, et cetera, but here we are. there needs to be a bipartisan movement, you know? >> kayleigh: here's the problem, brian, july 9th, 2020, let's take a watch. there was a national discussion that you might've missed, jake. >> now, if democrats have their way children will not have access to schools at all. that is not acceptable to president trump. the data is clear, sustained
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school closures hurt students with fewer resources than most. as you can see in the three scenarios mapped on this graph, if students return to school in the fall, the disparities are far less then if they were turned in january of next year or the fall of next year where disparities in learning are enormous. >> harris: drop the mike! he had to grab it i heard it. a >> brian: and they would've pushed against you and said hey, closing the schools, excuse me, kayleigh, what about getting kids back in schools? but everybody was like know the pandemic is here, hide the goods in the closet, put three masks on them until we get a vaccine, the teachers are afraid to go back and you are pushing in the president is pushing, there is a downside to locking them away, but we are also seeing more flu now, some weird viruses popping up that kids are having some respiratory illness? >> harris: many things on the rise. >> brian: maybe that's
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related, at least be humble enough to admit you are wrong and we are trying to get the discussion going and people would shut you down and say you are being callous these kids are at risk, it drives me nuts. they should be a national movement to get tutoring with the money we set aside not haphazard, everyone equal. >> harris: do know i love about what you said? you said "what we did with the masks and everything else" and no one was having open discussions about what the other options were. outside their republican party. then it was a line down the center of the country and it became politicized and hinged on what people thought was best for children. in 1918 with the spanish flu they didn't do that to the kids. people got sick, we lost 50 million people across the world. but this isn't how we were positioning. we put their education and their safety together and we somehow made that work. >> brian: and how they all have to get vaccinated and can't go to school with the cdc.
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>> kayleigh: the data was always there. >> emily: and the coverage was always there but the left-wing media has a deaf ear to anything coming out of this network, to everything coming out of your former bosses administration. the worst part about this is because of the apologist left-wing media for the democrat platform and for their anti-trump obsession, it was to the detriment of our children because the entire time we were warning them, the entire time president trump and that administration and all of us and so many people desperately committed to actual education of children, to the actual health of their children were sounding the alarm but because it came out of certain demographic, that media wouldn't have it. so the fact they say it never happened to -- >> brian: does he believe th that? >> emily: it speaks about his and volumes about him rather than those of us were talking about it and it's shameful. >> kayleigh: leslie is the marginalized students and marginalized communities for the moat which is the saddest part periods before it always is. it's very sad. listen. i have a 14 and 15-year-old now and a couple years ago, two
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years younger than that. i member being on fox and my dining room and my kids screaming, mom, and the internet it's going out! so i want to talk about the damage and the therapy for the parents as well, not just the children. all joking aside, the children definitely, my kids and somebody could suffer during that time, as our grades go down for both of my kids during that time. i think it has lasting repercussions. but when i look at it, it wasn't just democrats, it was governors in red states and blue states saying shut down. >> harris: because the cdc recommended it. public schools mandated it. that was a line. >> kayleigh: desantis, abbott, red states governors kept the schools open. >> brian: don't forget cuomo. >> emily: where is he now? >> kayleigh: squatters move into their newly bought home and now they are refusing to leave. , so you only pay for what you need. contestants ready? go!
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>> democrats fearing a red wave are brushing new messaging on the economy will any of it matter for american voters? many of which are now living paycheck to paycheck. as they struggle to pay for skyrocketing food and fuel prices we will ask our econ panel in moments, plus preview of tonight's big debate for the pennsylvania tenant mike senate race and dr. nicole saphier
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looks at the booster for those five and up, she says the science doesn't support it, watching for the president to speak in a white house press to my press brake, briefing, join john and me as america reports at the top of the hour. >> harris: a maryland couple bought a home at an upscale suburb and were just days away from moving end. squatters beat them to it. now the group is refusing to leave the five-bedroom home, the realtor confronted the strangers and tells fox they were refusing to budge. >> it's just a nightmare. they came up with some type of print out lease saying the previous owner gave them that permission, it was so far-fetched from the truth. the listing agent informed them they were trespassing. it was illegal for them to be there and the officer should've move them at that time. they are protecting the criminals and not protecting the actual ones that need to be protected. >> harris: we will do a quick round here, emily, the law. >> emily: those sticky part
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about this is generally speaking squatters fall under several wall rather than criminal elicits trespassing which she brought up however, you have to prove a lot of things before they can be evicted in that way. it is messy, is expensive, and in places like california if the squatter has any evidence of an oral agreement they were supposed to live there in exchange for work, they are straight up protected by tenants rights. the bottom line is -- >> harris: a written agreement though? >> emily: get an alarm, keep the lights on, get a doberman, put a foul smell around there, whatever you need to do to keep people out because it will cost you thousands of dollars to prove those people should never of been there in the first place. >> harris: foul smell, okay. brian? >> brian: i am not for the squatters. i will come out desperately against it. i wish people their integrity but i see this so often, people that buy rentals, buy houses to rent as an investment, there was a problem with tenants mike let alone when you buy a house and squatters go in and refused to
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leave, i don't know how where these people are from or who ras them either. but to go in there and live a life thinking any moment a couple come in or an irate owner will come in with a gun or weapon and end of this right there. it's unbelievable this happens. i don't advocate it but who knows what will happen when you cut into someone's livelihood? before my husband is indian and his family is from india. his grandfather's home there, we wanted to sell it and we went in and there were hundreds of squatters. we ended up having to sold the home for pennies on the dollar because nobody would buy it just to get out of the house and the squatters and with the first thing i thought when i saw the story was when did we become a third world country? we are not a third world nation obviously. this is happening in maryland in the united states, it's crazy and i'm glad you shared the laws because he didn't know what they were. >> emily: that's why they are the way they are because they stem from where its adverse possession and you have a piece of property and you build a home
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overnight it is yours. because the laws are so old that's why legislators need to change it, to your point it's also so much pattern sweeping the country it's an epidemic and its not okay. >> kayleigh: i will spice it up by saying the pro squatter thing. i mean they had a bevy of fast food and a black lab, they said beware of dog. they we had a $30,000 sports car. >> harris: there you go. or you could do the bad animal smell that emily was saying. [laughter] imac house and no one will squad added. space five the mike to mike "outnumbered," more of it, next. ♪ ♪ veteran homeowners, prices are going up fast. the grocery store and the gas station alone are taking a big chunk out of our paychecks. fortunately, you've earned the valuable va home loan benefit.
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snooze button. last but not least, if you hit the snooze button every morning you are not alone. hideously a new study finds six in ten people do it. women are 50% more likely to do it, according to the study and surprise, surprise, it's a habit most seen among night owls and get steps less during the day, they walk less. brian, we have to start with you. your alarm goes off every morning. >> 2:20. >> middle of the night at 2:20. do you hit the snooze? >> no, two separate alarms. my watch unpaired with my phone so when i shut off my phone my watch still rings so my life is really divided at this time. >> you sound like the most annoying sleep partner. kayleigh, my point, i feel it does not matter whether or not you hit the snooze, it's whether you and your partner do the same
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thing. the worst thing in the world, if you don't hit the snooze and your partner does, or vice versa, and one of you -- >> listen to the passion for this talk. >> i feel so strongly about it. >> 6:02, 6:03, 6:05, now the young 30s mom. >> i've been married 19 years, he does not hear the sound of my voice, the alarm, did not hear the babies when they were newborns, i don't know. i guess i -- i could do what i want. he gets up when he wants. >> the antidote, eye mask, earplugs, that's how you get through 6:01 -- >> i do sleep with an eye mask and earplugs, i think we have the same husband, my husband does not hear me talking, yes, i hit the snooze button. i hit the snooze button but i run 30 minutes with my dog down
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a really steep hill and back every day. i don't know about the steps. i'm not a morning person and when it's time i get the games begin after i hit snooze a couple times. >> games first thing in the morning. all right. well, coming up also, one person not hitting the snooze button, although we just learned you sort of did, is brian kilmeade. so many exciting projects going on. we love watching and supporting all of them, including a new appearance on kelsey grammar's historic battles for america. here is a clip airing tonight. >> if you think of the 13 colonies, new york was right in the middle. that's where the ports were, the deep ports, where the commerce took place, that's where the economy thrived, so washington got the best of his army on a high and went to new york to square off with the british. >> and brian is out with a paperback version of "the president and the freedom
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fighter" with a new epilogue. book or show? >> kelsey is unbelievable, the series he has, you talk about the battle of bunker hill, america would fight hard and the battle of brooklyn, able to go back to manhattan or washington would have been wiped out, revolution would have been lost, and tons of battles throughout the civil war. brand-new season tonight on fox business, another reason to watch. and with the paperback, i try to talk about frederick douglass, abraham lincoln antique race, how they brought us forward, and what happened if john wilkes booth didn't act, and where frederick douglass stood and they tried to take the statue down, successful in massachusetts, they took it down in rochester and thought they are trying to attack our history. i'll put news in a history book and where it's folly to judge
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people by our generation rather than the generations they were in. >> so smart. i get asked all the time about your books and for autographed books, people absolutely love your books for the right reason as you said because you are so informative, educational, apparently you don't sleep. >> briankilmeade.com you can get it personalized. >> we'll see up and kayleigh on fox nation. here is "america reports." >> sandra: thank you, team. fox news alert, two weeks out from election day and democrats are scrambling to change their messaging on the economy. this as millions of americans across the country are bracing for sky high energy bills as winter quickly approaches. >> so what is the answer? econ panel, james freeman and robert wolf here to weigh in on all of that. >> sandra: looking forward to that. control of congress

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