tv FOX and Friends FOX News October 26, 2022 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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is. >> debate playing out across the country last night. >> pennsylvania senate candidates dr. oz and john fetterman go head to head. >> i have had a stroke he has never let me forget that. >> john fetterman trying to get as many murderers out of jail as possible. >> traded jabs about crime. >> still waiting on kathy hochul to talk about locking up criminals. >> anyone who commits a crime has consequences. i don't know why that's so important to you. >> a grandfather getting emotional describing what it was like getting shoved on to subway attacks in new york city. begging mayor eric adams to do
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more to combat crime telling the "new york post" everybody is talking the talk but nobody is walking the walk. >> falsely labeled a covid denier. levi's management gave her a choice, shut up or leave. >> and that made me all kind of things they deemed unemployable. >> favorite sports team, right? >> yeah. >> what team is that? >> the rams. >> i'm going to take to you a ram's game. >> oh my god. >> we are going to go see them. >> oh my god. >> we are going to take you in the stadium for the experience of a lifetime. ♪ >> lawrence: 13 days out until the big midterm election. good morning, welcome to "fox & friends." there's a lot going on. a lot of spirited debates last night. in new york. we got pennsylvania,. >> ainsley: and got michigan. you no he what's interesting. we might not know the results the day after the election because some of these are so close. >> lawrence: they are expecting
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a runoff in georgia. if you are just tuning in this morning i'm in for brian kilmeade along with ainsley and steve. thank you all for having me. >> steve: thank you for joining us. >> lawrence: three pivotal debates in the books. >> pennsylvania senate candidates and the nominees for governor in michigan and new york squaring off on stage. >> steve: meanwhile, kevin corke is joining us from d.c. with the post game wrap up. hey there, kevin. >> good to be with you, steve, ainsley and lj good morning. a very busy night for politics across the country with key midterm debate duals in new york and michigan. in particular. let's begin in the keystone state democrat and recent stroke survivor john fetterman sadly struggled throughout his matchup against tv savvy dr. oz. so much so, in fact, one critic said they should have used the mercy rule and called it a night after about 20 minutes. here's a sample. >> you shouldn't shown up on the
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campaign trail and not answered voters once from the campaign trail. haven't answered questions from media. this is the only debate i could come to get to you talk to me on i had to beg on my knees to get to you come. >> now, to be clear, dr. oz didn't throw all strikes during the debate. but at times his opponent still struck out. like this walkback of fetterman's anti-fracking past. >> i absolutely support fracking. >> you have made two conflicting statements regarding fracking. in a 2018 interview, you said, quote: i don't support fracking at all. i never have. but, earlier this month, you told an interviewer, quote: i support fracking. >> i -- i do support fracking and -- i don't -- i don't -- i support fracking and i stand and i do support fracking. >> painful indeed. meanwhile over in new york. g.o.p. congressman lee zeldin continues to close the gap on kathy hochul who actually
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wondered out loud why zeldin was so concerned with putting criminals behind bars. >> that's amazing that we are going to be able to go through the entire crime conversation of this debate and we're still waiting for kathy hochul to talk about actually locking up criminals. >> anyone who commits a crime under our laws, especially with the change they made to bail has consequences. i don't know why that's so important to you. all i know is that we could do more. >> i don't know why that's so important to you. meantime, over in michigan, another g.o.p. gubernatorial candidate, tudor dixon hammered gretchen whitmer for her handling of the pandemic and school closures. >> i worked closely with my republican and democratic governors and kids were out for three months. >> i'm pretty sure i just heard an audible gasp around town when gretchen whitmer said sids were out of school for three month. you know better because your ones are the ones desperately behind. the test scores show she is being dishonest about this.
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, dishonest to get into these schools to get these schools back on track. >> dixon noted that for a lot of kids, out of school for more than year. meantime take a look at power rankings as you say republicans still leading the way in the senate forecast 49-47 for toss-ups. they could be ahead at least in three of four of those, too. as for the house side. comfortably ahead are the republicans with a pretty sizeable margin. 216 to 186. 33 toss-ups. again, the majority leaning to the right. and clearly the electorate, guys, is very engaged with more than 7 million votes already cast for the midterms so far. that means if you haven't voted. get out there. steve, ainsley and l.j. back to you. >> thanks, kevin. >> steve: you know, it is so close in pennsylvania, and that really was the big debate last night. it was the first time they had been on the stage together it's just one two weeks before the final votes are tallied and, you
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know, to your point, we may not actually know two weeks from today. mr. fetterman, i mentioned this in the first hour, mr. fetterman came out, first things out of his mouth were good night and it was down hill from there. they were close, statistically within the margin of error of each other in the polls going into it and after that debacle for him. i think he lost the race last night because people will be shocked at how hard it was for him to answer simple, basic questions. >> ainsley: this race is so important it. could balance the power in the senate. this is what some of the articles are saying. speech and hearing problems were evident. missing words, pausing awkwardly. relied on closed captioning so he could follow the conversation. stumbled over words and some of the headlines also say the same thing. >> lawrence: philadelphia infirier john fetterman's performance center stage in the lone senate debate against mehmet oz.
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verbal struggles in debate with oz. politico says fetterman struggles during tv debate with oz and axios says fetterman painful debate. guys, this is just. if did you go back even before he got the nomination. he just disappeared. people are saying where is john fetterman it's okay. it's okay. people insiders, democrats, they said nothing is wrong. and then we find out well, he actually did have a stroke. >> steve: not okay. >> lawrence: which is a serious medical mishap that happened. the condition. but, y you he didn't take the te to say you know what? i'm going to step back and allow another candidate to step forward. and now we realize he didn't want to debate. he is still recovering based on what we saw is there but he doesn't have the courage just to step back and let a candidate get. in and i just think it's sad. it's sad for the country. it's sad for his family to have
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to experience. this also not strong on the issues as well. is he getting hit with a double whammy. not strong on the issues and has a serious medical condition. you got to ask yourself is power more important than taking your health seriously. >> steve: balance of power in the senate. the democrats would do anything to hang on to that but, whatever genius in his campaign said, you know what, two weeks before the election, let's have you -- let's put you out on tv on a stage against the guy who has been on tv 20 years, whoever thought it was a good idea for him to debate while they were so close, and fetterman has been ahead the whole time. you know, is he just a little ahead of oz right now. that person should be accused of political malpractice. >> but if i'm a voter and i live in pennsylvania. i would want to see how well he is doing. i would want to see the debate. i think that's fair to the constituents. i think candidates everywhere should debate. >> steve: a lot of candidates this time out are not doing it.
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they only agreed to one here in new york state. the headline is give them zel. and the "new york post" is very definitive both michael good win and the "new york post" editorial page both say that mr. because, when it came to crime an the economy and things that people care about, he has got answers where she is pretending everything is fine and she was taking that track until last week when a poll actually showed him ahead. next thing you know she comes out the next day with a tv commercial saying she would like to see 1,500 more overtime shifts and 50 more psychiatric ward beds to which lee zeldin said look, we don't need more overtime. the current cops are working way too of the way it is. we need more cops and 50 beds? come on. we need 5,000 beds because the mental health issues in this town regarding criminals is through the roof.
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>> ainsley: crime is what everyone cares about here. when he says i don't understand why this is so important to you lee zeldin. >> steve: locking people up. >> ainsley: it's important to everybody in this city. this is what we are all talking about more so than the polio vaccines that they had talked about. crime has surged 36%. since they introduced these cashless bails. and and 40% of those who have been arrested and then let out while those cases are pending, they have recommitted crimes. 40% of those. so, crime is very important to all of us. and he -- i thought he did a great job. >> lawrence: especially when i have people making comparisons to new york city and the purge becauses criminals feel emboldened. >> ainsley: they do. and they're arrested and say we know we are going to get back out. >> lawrence: that's exactly right and start to champion d.a.s. not just crime a major issue in this country it. ask schools. everybody remembers of the person who locked down schools. look at this exchange during the debate. >> the truth is that she changed
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over to the department of health and human services and forced them to close down schools and the last time i checked they do report to the governor's office. she had all the power in the state to say no we are not going to have our schools shut down. we are going to make sure our students are back in person learning. just like other states, we are in the bottom 10. ninth from the bottom. that's where we are right now. that's how devastating the education system is in the state of michigan and no matter how many times we called her out for that and asked what her plan was to get these students back on track, she just diverts the blame. she won't talk about it. she doesn't have a plan. >> lawrence: that was ainsley's interview with tudor. >> ainsley: this morning. >> lawrence: last night during the debate a heated exchange between the schools. and looks like gretchen whitmer tried to really create some distance between her closing -- >> steve: i didn't clean the schools closed. >> every state did that. it wasn't just michigan. >> ainsley: she said in an allergy this morning she said well, that was just what i was responsible for.
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i was responsible for just three months of closing down the schools. but, the department of education, is that what she said? they are the ones that shut down the rest of the time. but she is their boss. >> steve: exactly if the state of michigan. meanwhile, let's talk a little bit about the state of the union. the 39 of the united states is going to be giving comments today about inflation because the democrats have decided with 13 days left, you know what? inflation is really impacting people. maybe we shouldn't base all of our hopes on whining on abortion. because that is back firing. and the numbers are back firing on the democrats as well. because, look at this. the number of adults and in many cases adults with children who have moved in with family and friends, look at that close to one in five americans is living with their adult, with their children. as opposed to about 10% just a
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year ago. and this is the jaw dropping thing. the number of americans who are currently living paycheck to paycheck. close to two thirds of all americans are. and for penal who are -- the american dream is to be able to make $100,000 a year. half the people making $100,000 a year are living paycheck to paycheck because everything is so damn expensive. >> ainsley: how hard would it be? i understand a lot of people graduate from college and move back in with mom and dad until they can get their first job and feet on the ground. many of them have kids and now being forced at an older age to move back in on with mom and dad. shawn da has three kids. had to leave las vegas because her rent went up 24%. she moved in with her mom in michigan. rent is up 25% compared to before the pandemic lawrence lawrence you know, we go to these diners, we will being in paye tomorrow. you hear these stories every
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single week we have to sell our car. we were doing good in the past. i have decided to sell my car so i can now pick up my daughter and we are car pooling. i just have to sell my house. i'm living paycheck to paycheck. you hear it here. every single state i find it so fascinating and now we have the polling. the support. these people weren't -- not that i thought they were. these people are really in hell right now with what they are dealing with. it's not just florida. it's not just in texas. it's not just in pennsylvania and detroit. it's every single state. >> steve: absolutely. it was about a month ago. i was down at the villages doing a diner segment. at r.j. gators and some of those people are already retired. one of the other polls inflation is crushing the retirement plans of americans. right now 55% of americans say they are behind on saving for retirement and they -- a majority of them are blaming inflation. and ultimately inflation currently, it has been estimated
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is costing you and all of us an $445 a month. now, think about that. over a year. that's close to $5,000. if you didn't get a $5,000 pay raise in the last year, you're $5,000 in the hole. because of the cost of everything. that is why with less than two weeks before the election, suddenly it looks like the republicans are going to have a really good night two weeks from last night. >> ainsley: yeah. my sister's rent went up $300 a month. she is a school teacher. that's a lot of money. >> steve: because the landlord, the cost of insurance is going up. the cost, obviously, of mort garages you would think that it has been financed. >> ainsley: my sister is dog sitting and baby-sitting on the weekends and trying to tutor now to make up for that increase in rent. >> lawrence: where did we go wrong? we were just talking about record wages for people and people were getting their second
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businesses and second locations in their business restaurants and now all of the sudden things have changed. >> steve: so much has changed because of the cost of oil. just think about the strategic decision by the biden administration on day one cut the cord on the keystone and don't punch any more holes in the ground. had we expanded domestic oil production, we would not be feeling the pain at the pump and at the grossry store that we are today. >> ainsley: we all know that. >> steve: we all know that. >> ainsley: chance to vote in 13 days. ains. >> lawrence: carley knows it too. >> carley: we are going to get to more headlines starting with tragic news out of orlando, florida. a high school quarterback is killed while helping a driver who is stuck on the side of the road. authorities say 18-year-old nic minor was struck by a passing vehicle. minor's classmates say he will always be remembered as a leader on and off the field. god bless him. a great grandma is being hailed
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a hero for stopping this mugging in oakland. you can see a man snatching an 82-year-old's purse before whipping her to the ground. but that would be thief ran off after 76-year-old miss fay ran out with her cane. >> she saved my life. she saved my future. >> something that i knew was necessary to do. and she is my neighbor as well. stranger i would have did the same thing. >> we love you ms. fay. her message for the thief is simple. go get a job. hillary clinton is already looking past november 8th and making some pretty inflammatory remarks about 2024. >> right wing extremists already have a plan to literally steal the next presidential election. >> clinton's bold claim comes as the supreme court hears a case about the role of state legislatures in federal elections.
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elon musk reportedly pledging to close his purchase of twitter by the friday deadline set by a delaware state court. bloomberg is reporting helping the tesla ceo putting together the final credit agreement before sending musk the cash. the news comes as twitter workers are mocked as entitled for calling the potential sale reckless in an open letter. those employees say his plan including layoffs quote threaten our livelihoods, access to essential healthcare and the ability for visa holders to stay in the country they work. in those are the headlines, guys. controversy with the twitter folks over in california. it. >> steve: new sheriff in town. >> ainsley: we love ms. fay who went after the guy. go get a job. >> carley: took her cane out and said get out of here. scram. >> go get a job. >> skedaddle. >> lawrence: reminded me of my grandma.
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>> ainsley: would have used more than a cane. >> lawrence: yes. >> steve: different kind of a story. >> ainsley: and wouldn't have gotten in trouble. in texas. she has done it before. >> steve: one thing sticks out following the disastrous national report card on education. we will tell you who is not failing our kids. you are going to want to hear that. >> that's right. >> plus, less than two weeks out from the midterms, big debates happening across the country. our political panel breaks down the winners and the losers. that's next on "fox & friends." ♪ psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting get checked for tuberculosis.
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♪ >> ainsley: one thing stands out as we digest this week's damning report card on education. students enrolled in catholic schools had no change in a key test score. many attributing that to in person learning. laura is a mother of two. who switched her daughters to a catholic school during covid, simply because they were open. good morning to you, laura. >> good morning. >> ainsley: tell me what you were sayings in your children when the schools closed down you have first grader and 3rd grader. third grader was in. >> she was in kindergarten when the pandemic started. >> ainsley: that march we were all terrified. again you went to the summer and came back schools were still closed. >> exactly. she was still virtual for first two months. doing all the virtual sessions and doing all of the schoolwork. her education was stunted she was stuck where she was in march of 2020. she wasn't progressing from a math or reading perspective. and emotionally she was not doing good either.
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she was sad and lonely. she didn't want to interact with her friends when she saw them on the street she would shy away. it wasn't working for us. >> ainsley: that's the age when he they're learning sight words and learning to read. you need to see your teacher's mouth. many of them were covered up with masks. what did you do that october. >> i reached out to the open catholic school i heard they were open five days a week and praying they had a spot. luckily they had a spot for both my older and younger daughter. i remember when i asked my older daughter do you want to switch to this school have you never been there. never stepped a foot inside do you want to go there. opportunity to go there and she said is it open? i said yes. she said i can actually go there she said yes. >> can i go now. no, it's 4:00 p.m. we can go tomorrow. we switched her and moved my younger daughter a few weeks later and been there the past two years. >> ainsley: first test she took she made a 60 on it and now you have started seeing massive improvements 90 percentile. >> when she transferred the students in the classroom were
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learning subtraction from 20. she was still adding to 10. so she was seeing things she had not been exposed to yet because she was so far behind having to learn virtually for so long. >> ainsley: if you had not put her in the catholic school she would be really far behind right now. >> exactly. >> how about your little one started in pre-k. >> i could see the difference. she wasn't exposed to the virtual learning she was too young when that happened. i can see that she has been able to flowsh because of that also because of the rigor and the education that we have at our school. we have small class sizes. we have teachers that go above and beyond on a regular basis. they just truly care. and they are just outstanding. >> ainsley: you know, it's interesting. the catholic schools when you look at the fourth graders with that national report card. math scored 246. public schools the matt grade was 235. 11 points lower than the catholic schools. why do you think that is? >> i think it's because they weren't in the classroom. especially at that young age. you know, maybe students in high school can learn virtually, college, that's fine. the younger kids they really
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need to learn those foundations. impossible to learn it on zoom. >> ainsley: you are a great mom for being able to do it. my heart goes out to all these moms who can't afford private school and didn't have those options because those kids are so far behind. >> i agree. >> ainsley: thank you for coming on. >> thank you. >> debate night and facing off votes. reverend sean degraff, sean duffy and tammy bruce have analysis you won't see anywhere else that's next.
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♪ >> steve: well, we have been talking about this for months. now the midterms are less than two weeks away and candidates in three states held important debates last night. in pennsylvania, dr. mehmet oz and john fetterman debating for the one and only time. here in new york, lee zeldin surging in the polls finally met the governor, kathy hochul. and in michigan, tudor dixon the republican and gretchen whitmer squared off for a second time. how did they do and what does it say about the future in screen left fox news contributors reverend jacques degraff, sean
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duffy in the center square and tammy bruce as well. good morning to all of you. >> good morning. >> steve: can i see the hand? we are going to start in pennsylvania. can i see the hand of the people who think that john fetterman was -- should have gone on the stage last night. does anybody think he should have gone on the stage. >> for the sake of the election and for the people of pennsylvania, yes. >> steve: do you think that he has medically recovered from the stroke? >> well, and on that issue, the people that love him should have kept him from -- once he had that stroke a few days before the primary, they should have admitted the seriousness and they did not. so that was misleading originally in the beginning. so, at that point, they should have -- because there were options at that point during the primary. >> steve: sure. >> that they didn't that was the mistake. we see it with president biden. this is clearly not the option for the people of pennsylvania. >> as a candidate he would have better off not going to the debate stage. >> as a candidate yes. >> poor performance worse off in
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the polls than he would have been had people guess about his health. >> steve: jacques, the first thing out of his mouth was good night. >> it was a good night. >> steve: he should have ended it right there. >> in fact he was his own worst enemy. i think he and his people would objectively come to that conclusion. but he still had to come. i agree with tammy that he had to come because that's what democracy is all about. you have got to show up. >> steve: sure, regardless of his medical condition, people really care about his policies. and here he is, where he got caught on the fact that he is a flip flopper on fracking. >> i have always supported fracking. and i always believe that independence with our energy is critical. >> i meth must correct the record. >> just a second, mr. dr. oz. you are saying tonight that you support fracking that you have always supported fracking, but there is that 2018 interview that you said, quote, i don't support fracking at all. so how do you square the two?
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>> >> i do support fracking. and -- i don't -- i don't -- i support fracking and i stand -- and i do support fracking. >> steve: jacques, that's a problem. >> it's a problem if you say i always supported fracking. if you say i have evolved and change my mind, new information. but when you say i always supported and in a robotic fashion, that's a problem. >> steve: all right. just a show of hands. who thinks, you know what? let's do it this way, who is going to win? >> fetterman. >> i think oz is going to win. >> well, oz. remember, early voting started. but i think oz gets it. >> steve: okay, let's see. meanwhile, here in new york. the governor squared off against lee zeldin, here they are talking about crime. >> a governor cannot fix global inflation. but, what i can do is put more. >> cashless bail. we need to repeal cashless bail. the halt act.
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raise the age and less is more. we need to make our streets safe again. i'm running to take back our streets, and to support unapologetically our men and women in law enforcement. >> can either work on keeping people scared or you can focus on keeping them safe. anyone who commits a crime under our laws, especially with the change they made to bail, has consequences. i don't know why that is so important to you. all i know is that we could do more. >> steve: sean, new york is a big issue, has a big issue with crime. people don't feel safe outside of this building. shy has just pretended it's not a problem. >> she didn't have a response to crime at all. fee focused on january 6th, abortion and donald trump. those are issues that don't effect everybody's lives in new york and that's why she failed. >> this is why debates are are important. she confessed. i don't know why you care about this. that's the disconnect. lack of understanding of people's lives that hurt her. >> i think kathy hochul came at a time under great duress.
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passed a budget on time. she served her constituency. the problem is going to be who people are listening to. i think independents are going to break her way in the next 13 days. >> steve: all right. very good. we are going to continue the conversation with these three in just a moment. we are going to take a look at our fox news power rankings and make predictions for the midterms coast to coast with this panel when we return in a couple of minutes. you are watching "fox & friends." ♪
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tudor dixon faced off for second debate last night. we're back with our political panel. tammy, what did you think about that. >> i think that tudor dixon people needed to see her. always this argument that the new don't know enough. they can't handle the pressure. she delivered. there is also a difference between this attitude you see it with hinojosa. you see it with mitt member of they're above everyone else. they are the masters of the universe. they know best. and then sometimes they make things up. and i think the people saw that in that debate last night. >> steve: sometimes they make things up. [laughter] >> i never made that up. >> i thought it was interesting. because people are concerned about the national issues and whitmer has been lock step with joe biden on issues that have caused inflation, crime, border, and i think that resonates with voters still in michigan even though they are national issues. >> steve: reverend? >> tudor dixon comes from the crowd that stormed the capitol in michigan. i think voters will remember that i think sean is right that biden is on the ballot
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everywhere across this country. i think that's the real story. i think the only lock that we are going to talk about today is whitmer. >> steve: take a look at the fox news power rankings. the power ranking show that the republicans have the advantage that you can see right there 233 to 202. best and worst case scenario for house republicans and democrats. democrats best case they might wind up with 219. looking at the next one there you go. best case for republicans 24 #. when it comes to the power rankings in the house then as you can see republicans 216 and democrats 186. and let's look at the power ranks for the u.s. senate right now, fox news has got 49 for republicans. 47 for the democrats. and that, tammy, let's talk a little bit about that. because the balance of power really hangs on what happens in those four toss-up states right now. ultimately, at the end of the day, two weeks from today, who are we going to say won?
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>> all right cook political report as has the rasmussen average have shifted the dynamic of what they expect for the republicans and the democrat. adding in possibilities for the republicans that lien democrat, went to toss-ups. toss-ups have gone to lean republican so there is this shift across the country. this has happened. shifted for cook political report upwards of 5 to 7 different seats. so, we're -- this is not over with. so, when we talk about the shifts of independents. we see that in new york and across the country. americans have decided. they continue to decide. that's going in the republicans' favor. we are going to see the higher end, i think, of what the benefit is for the republicans. >> momentum is on production' side. you are seeing the dam break. these are light numbers. steve, i think you are going to see a big night for republicans. and a wednesday morning, the 9th of november where you will see people won seats for the republican party that no one expected them to win. who is that guy? what were they running?
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we won't even know. >> steve: reverend, it seems like if the democrats did make a mistake, it was pushing too much on abortion and not enough on inflation. and the economy. >> hold victory lap. i think the democrats hold the senate. i do think that the democrats identifying their priorities as roe v. wade, climate change, and same sex marriage, i think that's not resonating in the base. we have got 12 days now to turn it around. and it's up to the democrats to sharpen their message. the base is not happy. >> you are not keeping the senate. >> sharp be the message in two weeks. this is done. >> steve: do you know how much a steak costs these days? >> that's how confident i am i'm going to win. i get a free meal. >> steve: this has been a great discussion reverend jacques degraff, sean duffy and tammy bruce. come back in two weeks. >> get those steaks out there. >> steve: sundayly carley is probably hungry as well because
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i am. >> carley: literally always. i will get on that steak bet if someone else is paying. how about that? all right. we have some more headlines to get to starting with. this president biden praising hyundai for breaking ground on a new plant in georgia. the show of support though comes after he if decision to move the all-star game out of atlanta in 2021 at the time the biden administration accused the state of voter suppression. even calling it jim crow on steroids. yesterday the white house asked to explain why georgia is now seeing record early voting turnout ahead of the midterm elections. >> i'm not going to get into specifics of what georgia voters are doing. what i am saying is that, you know, generally speaking, again, more broadly speaking, of course, high turnout and voter suppression can take place at the same time. >> carley: well, nearly 1 million votes have already been cast in georgia. so far. we are learning more about how first responders rescued five toutourists in arizona after thy were trapped 200 feet under
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ground. this video showing crews using a rope system to hoist everyone out one by one. they are all doing okay. deputies say they got trapped after the elevator broke in the hotel on friday. katy perry fans go into a frenzy after seeing video of her eyelid appearing to glitch out during a recent performance in las vegas. the pop star pressing her finger against her temple in what is believe to be an stop her eye from closing. fans questioned if it was a robot double performing in her place. joking she lost wifi connection. that moment going viral on the birthday singer's 38th birthday yesterday. interesting story in the video there, janice. over to you. ains. >> janice: do we know what happened? >> happy birthday to her. i hope she is okay. >> so do i. take a look at the temperatures. 64 here in new york. it's a little muggy. not great for the hair. because we have this cold front that's moving through. and this area of low pressure
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off the coast that's combining to make these muggy conditions and then the wet weather across portions of the northeast and the great lakes. so here's the deal right now. travel delays, of course you know what's going to happen so call ahead. check your air carrier. here is the futurecast. this should clear out by wednesday evening. thursday a better day friday. a better day for the northeast. but then we talk about our next storm system that originates from the northeast. dives in across the rockies. snow in the mountains, and then we could see the severe weather set up thursday through friday along the gulf coast. they need the rain but that stronger storms could bring some hail and damaging winds as well as isolated tornadoes. we will watch that fox weather.com for your latest details. steve, over to you. >> thank you very much j.d. >> janice: you got it. >> steve: coming up on this wednesday telecast, the value of your house dropping in a number of american cities. what's driving costs down and how this trend could spread to your town. fox business anchor and host of american dreams cheryl casone on
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closing due to safety and security concerns. the chain is scaling back business hours at other locations in the area to avoid crime. arrlast month 200 teens sacked a wawa and another team had a gun pulled on them. they will be offered positions in other areas. trouble at a drive-thru window at a mcdonald's in georgia. check it out. a customer having a meltdown sticks half his body through the window and begins chucking anything in sight at the workers. what? even tosses several trash cans. the suspect eventually took off before authorities arrived. what a situation there. lawrence, over to you. >> out of control. >> carley: out of control. it's insane. >> lawrence: thanks, carley. america's housing crisis are spacing a stunning downfall. more than 50 of america's metros stops. experts predicting the northeast will be next to suffer a hit.
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here with more on the housing price plunge, host of american dream home on fox business cheryl casone and a cowboys fan. >> cheryl: and a big cowboys fan. >> lawrence: what's going on? >> cheryl: cheryl seeing the mortgage rate 30 sitting at 7%. doubled in a year that's a big shock. a family making 100 last year still making 100 this year. first time home buyers getting priced out. san francisco, seattle, san jose, those are higher priced homes. you know, a home in tennessee would be -- would go for say 300 grand, maybe over a million in places like california. plus, you have got taxes, plus you have got quality of life issues in some of these cities. we have to acknowledge that as well. so, that is kind of the perfect storm to see these prices fall. but, you know, 0% is a pretty strong drop. >> lawrence: negative 10.7% san jose negative 8.5.
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san francisco negative 8.2 in seattle and negative 5.8 in denver. >> cheryl: yeah. >> lawrence: is there a coincidence. a lot of these are more progressive cities? >> i think the heightened tax situation is the big piece of the puzzle here. goes back to also higher values. the other thing too about about large urban areas is gas prices becomes a factor. because say that you are low income or middle income buyer you don't want to have to commute for an hour to get to your job. not everybody is working from home. in fact, we are seeing more people go back into their offices. so your commute is going to impact it. there is a flip side to all of this. even though it maybe a lot of california northeast going to see declines i think he that's correct. a. agree with that analysis. on the other side though, tennessee, the carolinas, florida. and not just in the larger cities but in smaller markets which is where the show goes to that i do on fox business, those are where you're looking at,
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still, affordable homes and you are seeing actually prices still gaining. and it's because it's more affordable. 7% interest rate doesn't hurt you as much when you are only spending 200 or $300,000 on a home. >> lawrence: cheryl, you mentioned tennessee. we have a slide showing american dream home in tennessee, watch. >> we are currently living in california. i think the reason we decided to move from california to middle tennessee is the political climate of california was no longer in line with what our family values are anymore. >> and so that's why we repeally started thinking about where we need to go to find something just a little more suitable for us. i love the idea of country living. it's a slower pace. very traditional. >> lawrence: you get real with your people when you go out there and help them find their dream home. >> the stories. you know. and these are big life decisions that these families are making to actually uproot yourself
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california, tennessee across the country. but we are seeing that all over the country. and that's what the show really focuses on. i have got to say really quick. tennessee is a very hot housing market right now. i was looking at new data this morning. johnson city, johnson city, tennessee. year-to-year prices are up 27%. sales are up at a place like tennessee. it's a small community. people are looking for quality of life. and they are finding it in places like tennessee. >> lawrence: it's a beautiful place. >> it is. >> lawrence: you have a beautiful show. >> we also have texas which we love very much. >> lawrence: check her show american dream home on fox business prime. thank you, cheryl. supreme court justice samuel alito said the leaks made between the high interest, the fees... i felt trapped. debt, debt, debt.
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♪ ♪ >> it's playing out across the country leslie. >> pennsylvania candidates dr. oz and john fetterman john fetterman go head-to-head. >> and the statements on fracking. >> i don't support fracking and i stand but i do support fracking. >> we have to get the truth out here. >> governor hochul and challenger lee zeldin traded jabs about the crime. >> we are talking about actually walk there locking up crim
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