tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News October 29, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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[laughter] somebody brought licking as well, and licking's really hard to control. pete: so they say. will: what are you doing? are you questioning my ability to discipline dogs? pete: rachel, you should chime in,you're a pet parent, are you doomed to have undisciplined kids when you're a real parent? if. will: is skippy undisciplined? rachel: no, it's not. i have disciplined kids, i have a very unkiss palined dog -- undisciplined dog. pete, when i have a lot of kids and you're working hard, i just don't have time to do the dog. [laughter] he kind of just does his thing. pete: we moved to tennessee with two cats, and we only have one now. the tennessee wilderness got ahold of stormy. it was either a coyote, a hawk, a snake, a raccoon or a fox.
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so rest in peace, stormy hegset- [laughter] will: i grew up living in the -- rachel: ray did you name your cat after stormy daniels? pete: no, but it works nicely like that. we were going through a "star wars" -- they were very brave in new jersey, they thought they were that brave in tennessee, and it didn't work. will: we lost a lot of cats and dogs to the wilderness in texas. pete and i are here in new york. rachel not in the wilderness, but on the border of texas today hosting "fox & friends" from the southern border. rachel. rachel: that's right. i am here in del rio getting a feel for how the people in this community feel which i think is going to resonate in many of the elections coming up including the congressional election between cuellar and cassie here, and we're going to have her on, cassie garcia, in just a little built. but he's a package i want --
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harris a package i want to show you guys. i went up in a helicopter with captain oliveras. take a look. about 200 migrants have just turned themselves in to the border patrol. >> we continue to see a significant increase in mass migration, but also those illegal immigrants are being smugglinged. we have seen a dramatic increase in high-speed chases. it's all, again, for profit. and they continue to exploit these immigrants, these vims that are trying to take advantage of the fact that there's so many people coming across, they use that to exploit the vulnerables -- vulnerabilities. rachel: there's nothing like getting a bird's eye view. >> these helicopters are being used every single day on a constant basis, day and night. especially when you're getting large groups, 200 plus every single day. rachel: how many more trips are you doing now between last year,
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last two years versus now? >> the flight hours from 2020 were just under 400, and since then, so 2021 we averaged just under 2,000, and we're on track to beat or surpass that this year so far, and it looks like we may have a group here just off our right-hand side walking that dirt road. just want to make sure the agents are aware there's a group of about 6-7 walking the live drag -- river drag road. these large family groups, they come in in such great numbers. but we're also working the ones that try to evade and elude officers, and we're picking up those groups. every shift we average 20-30 -- >> we just heard one of the troopers stopped a car, there was two illegals in the car. rachel: lieutenant, who controls this river in. >> well, when we talk about who has control, operational control
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of the river, the mexican cartels. rachel: how long have you been on the force? >> 20 plus years. rachel: over the past years, have the cartels gotten more stronger in. >> they have. right now the border crisis is, by far, the worst we've ever seen. record number after record number. not just mass migration, human smuggling, the number of deaths, fentanyl across our border, the number of unaccompanied children. it's frustrating when you see little kids, children coming across unaccompanied, because there's no telling what those children have experienced especially in the hands of these dangerous criminals in mexico. and then again once they get here, where do they end up? at least on the stateside, we don't know where they end up. rachel: we've been told that our government can't keep rack of at least 40% of them. >> of course of course. why is nothing done being to
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protect -- being done to protect these children? designate them for what they are, foreign organizations, but for some reason they fail to do that. i think now the american people are starting to see that they need real solutions. they want something done by our government, but nothing'sing being done right now, and we continue to see these numbers increase drastically every single month. rachel: pete and will, i think, again, what's important as you see all these resources, you know, how much more use these helicopters are getting, you know, national guard on the border right now. but again, none of this is used to deter peel. yeah, they're catching some of the terrorists who are coming across, but for the most part this is a processing operation. it is about the federal government understanding that more people are coming across, inviting more to come across with their policies and expanding and spending more money and processing more of them, getting them out of detention centers and getting them into the interior of the
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country. i think it's really important for the american people to understand what is going on here. this is not about securing our border. nothing is happening here to stop them. it is all about a processing. pete: you're -- it's a great point, rachel. and over your all shoulders, the beautiful state of texas, and it is texas having to do the job that the federal government not only won't do, but is helping to facilitate the illegality. texas dps, you mentioned the national guard, that's the governor and the lieutenant governor saying we're going to do the best we can to stand in the gap. by the way, they're the ones you went with, because border patrol these days can't talk. because if they did, they'd call out what the federal government is doing. rachel: but, again, the national guard is not doing anything to stop it. pete: they can't. rachel: their just -- they're just literally on the border. they'll call the border patrol and say, hey ors, come here, there's people here. one of the things that you realize when you get over hear
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is the lack of transparency and what is being done by the federal government to make sure that we don't know what's happening. the only reason we know anything that's happening there is because the state of texas is using their resources to help us see it. but for the most part, what is happening is they see people, they call the federal government, the border patrol, they collect them, they process them and then on our taxpayer dollars they fly them out or bus them out of texas, and that's what's happening. will: i was trying to find -- we can't show the inside of "the new york post" anyway, but there it is, look at that, $4 billion border budget, that's how much texas itself has spent in the latest new york post. on border security, texas spent that much. did you have -- did they land the helicopter early for you in you said you got sick up there. [laughter] rachel: no, they didn't, but i'll tell you, i was looking at -- lieutenant oliveras had a coffee cup, and i kept looking
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at it going i might have to use that cup if they don't land soond. [laughter] -- soon. but it was really great to get up there. they're trying their hearts out here in texas, but their hands are tied by the federal government. this is absolutely intentional. and as i mentioned in the other segment and we had all these people that we interviewed yesterday in the town hall, i asked them, is this pg intentional? and every single one of them white, hispanic, democrats, inagain, republican all raised hair hand. pete: will and i are starting to feel quite insufficient. from oil rigs to helicopters, you're out there doing that stuff, and we're just on the couch in ties. will: right. good job. [laughter] it's true. let's move to this, house speaker nancy pelosi's husband paul is recovering after yesterday's hammer attack, and we're learning more about the suspected intruder who was reportedly looking for the
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democrat leader. mark meredith has more. >> reporter: san francisco police say friday's break-in and assault inside if speaker pelosi's home was intentional and was not a random act. early friday morning 42-year-old david depape allegedly broke in through a back door and was shouting, where's nancy? the speaker was in d.c. at the time, but her husband, 8 the-year-old -- 82-year-old paul pelosi was inside. he was reportedly speaking in code so as not to alert the assailant for help. prompting police to arrive moments later. police say when they got there, they found both pelosi and the suspect fighting over a hammer and even witnessed the suspect striking pelosi at least once. depape was taken into custody, he is expected to face a lot of different charges including attempted homicide, elder abuse and burglary. paul pelosi was treated yesterday for a skull fracture
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and injuries to his right arm and hand. he is expected to make a full recovery. and in the wake of what happened in san francisco, we've heard from a number of different politicians including president biden. he's among those calling for the political rhetoric to be toned down. >> too much violence, political violence. [applause] and what makes us think one party can talk about stolen elections, covid being a hoax? it's all a bunch of lies. >> regardless of what branch of government you are, what your party is, what your ideology is, there's just no room for any of this type of violence or even threats of violence as part of the process. >> reporter: so far investigators are not releasing what they believe the suspect's motive was, but it appears he was posting about multiple conspiracy if theories online, and this morning the speaker is back home in california. she has canceled plans to be here in washington tonight so she can, obviously, be with her husband.
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back to you. rachel: thank you, mark. fascinating hearing the president talk about lowering the rhetoric as he hiss the rhetoric -- he raises the rhetoric and blames people who question the election basedded on the fact that the fbi already are admitted that they interfered with the election by suppressing the laptop. not sure where he was going with that. but i'll tell you this, as a former pows of a member of congress, ever since michiganly giffords and the -- gabby giffords and the shooting of steve scalise on the baseball field, there have been calls for better secure at the homes of members of congress for quite a while. i'm surprised that someone was able to enter into the pelosi residence. she was the former -- she was, is the speaker of the house, and so you would psalm that there would be extra security there. she's also wildly well hawaii, so i'm sure she has her own security personnel there, so i'm
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surprised about that. but listen, the attempts on the lives of members of congress and their families is a real thing. our family had death threats as well, and that's something that needs to be addressed. buts it is not a partisan issue. there are cases on both sides, and i will note that one of the things that joe biden did not mention is the fact that there are still protesters outside the homes of our supreme court justices. and we know there was an assassination attempt on brett kavanaugh. so i think joe biden's remarks are really unfortunate. pete: yeah, you're right. no bail, by the way for the nudist radical who, with mental issues who attacked paul pelosi. for them they'll get locked up. for you, that guy might be let out the next day. it is, as we mentioned, the last ten days before the midterms, and the parties are making their closing argument. joe biden and barack obama were on the trail yesterday talking not a lot about finish can't talk about inflation, crime or education and the lunacy being taught there or the border as
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you featured, rachel. they're talking about something else. they're talking about abortion. jen psaki, you know her as the former white house press secretary now-msnbc host, went and did some door knocking to see what voters are talking about in pennsylvania. she got a little bit of a surprise. here's what one of the voters said to her. >> [inaudible] what do you care about? >> as a mother of four children, the jobs. they say that all these jobs are out there, but they don't want to pay enough for you to actually live off the jobs, you know? i'd like there to be the, you know, more jobs available with the flexibility to be able to actually work and take care of your family. >> not the answer you wanted. will have. will: abortion still may be the number one issue for democrats approaching these midterm elections. if it's not, they try to tie it
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into all thish shaws that are number one like the economy. here's what jen psaki had to say. it's not surprising abortion rights were only one of many priorities of people who answered the door in braddock, but worries about childcare, health care and economic opportunity can all be tied to abortion rights and how a woman's right to choose can affect her life, the lives of her children and her partner. rachel, you pointed this out earlier, stacey abrams pointed this out. economics, childcare, anything they can tabak to abortion -- can tie back to abortion. pete: kill the baby, and your life is better. rachel: yeah, that's exactly right. stacy antibiotic wraps, katie porter, aoc, they have all been tying abortion to the economy. what they're saying is, yeah, we destroyed the economy. the answer isn't to fix the economy, to unleash energy and be energy independent again, the
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answer is for you just to kill your baby. it's also a highly elitist argument and really reveals who these people really are. they're losing hispanics. and so i have a couple of tips for the democrats. one, stop reminding his fannics that you're -- hispanics that you're a pro-radical abortionist because they don't like it. and the other pro tip is stop listening to aoc when it comes to these issues whether it's the green new deal or aborg as your primary -- abortion as your primary closing argument as you end this election that you're clearly going to hughes. they keep listening to this very young, radical socialist, and she's really driving this party in a big way. and i think that they're, you know, at some point they're going to have to wake up and say we need to talk to real people like the lady at that door who said, excuse me, we tear about inflation -- we care about inflation, jobs and our families. but their answer is don't have a
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family if you're poor. pete: i was making that face because -- i made kind of a weird face when we came out of that. i was watching the footage of joe biden and kamala harris. it's all so awkward and so bad. is your argument for john fetterman? let's call in the national guard, anybody, because that's a terrible closing argument, terrible candidates on the wrong issues. rachel, as you pointed out so well. we've got more news this morning as well including this: the world series, the phillips -- phillies taking game one in houston thanks to a few kind souls, some young fans are getting to experience the fall classic for free. connell mcshane is live at minute maid park ahead of game two tonight in houston on fox. good morning, connell. >> reporter: good morning. it was such a great game last night. and to your point, these types of events, the world series, they're a lot of fun because they're so important to the young fans. this 13-year-old boy you're about to meet, his mom surprises
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him with tickets. check out the raw emotion here. watch. >> why are you crying? >> because. >> why? >> [inaudible] >> where are you going? >> the world series. >> i'm crying too. are you happy? you're excited? >> reporter: yeah, he's happy. great stuff. you know, the tickets are just so expensive to these games. we looked at the secondary market, it's like $500 -- 1500 plus on average for one ticket. so knowing that, alex bregman, he heard about the story of a young boy who was trying to raise his own money to go to the games the old-fashioned way, with a lemonade stand. watch. >> i heard y'all had a lemonade stand this weekend. how'd you do? okay? >> yeah. >> who's your favorite player? >> alex bregman. >> somebody wanted to say something to you. >> i wanted to say that we got you two tickets to the world
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series. can't wait to see you there. >> reporter: young ely must have loved what he saw early on, kyle tucker with two home runs in the first three innings, and houston was up 5-0 at that point. but the phillies, this is what they do, they came storming back. the game was still tied in the bottom of the ninth. the phillies' right fielder makes a sliding catch, literally saving the game. the astros would have won with it right then and there, but instead the phillies win it. this time an opposite-field home run in the tenth running -- inning, just over the wall in right field. so the phillies come from 0- 5-0 down to win game one 6-5. just remarkable stuff for those young fans and everybody else. game two will be tonight, having
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a tough time topping that on fox, but a pretty great start to the world series, guys. will: good stuff, connell. thank you so much. coming up, the latest covid report that says the pandemic most likely originated in a lab in china. a chinese virologist joins us next. plus, virginia governor glenn youngkin will join us live, so don't go anywhere. ♪ ♪
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♪ pete: a new senate health report committee -- health committee report, excuse me, says the origin of covid-19 was, quote, most likely leakedded from a wuhan has been are. the report reads in part, quote: the hypothesis of a natural zoo nottic origin no longer deserves the benefit of the doubt or the presumption of accuracy. the virus was most likely the result of a research-related incident. here now to discuss chinese virologist dr. limeng yan. this report saying what a lot of us have suspected for some time. what do you think?
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>> thank you for having me. first, i want to appreciate the health, education labor to publish this report because it's very important. this take a lot of effort. they are very great because i can't tell you how much revenge chinese companies -- for having to truth. and i can tell you i is have met the team twice in the past year. i appreciate their efforts, and this verify my work from the beginning of the case. this is a very good promotion. process. pete: so it's a courageous report. the chinese communist party will hate it, your right. they'll go after the people who were willing to publish it. and it's also the opposite of what the world health organization said last year. still pushing the idea that it wasn't a lab leak. is that how it's going to be, truth tellers in america point
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out the reality, but the international community are going to continue to peddle to china? >> if you know how much influence the chinese communist party have to infiltrate d.c. and also manipulate to all the world, then you won't be surprised about w.h.o.'s worth. and what i can tell you is big part of this report is they changed the word accident to incident. this is a very important change because this -- the direction can for further investigation. whether it was intentionally released out of the lab and launched the pandemic. and as i always tell this is intentional release from the gunning in i wuhan -- beginning
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in the wuhan, and what i can tell you more is people's liberation army, ccp -- and xi jinping approved the plan by himself. now they're enjoying the trophy, and also i need to tell you all these things can be verified. so ill like to provide my help and evidence for the further investigation. pete: yes. well, thank you for speaking out. and you're exactly right, understanding the depth of how compromised international organizations are and some folks in our own country helps you unwhy they'll continue to -- understand why they'll continue to peddle a lie. north carolina republican richard burr helped release the report that is trying to tell the truth. doctor, thank you for your courage as well. >> thank you. pete: appreciate it. coming up, comrade ocasio-cortez calling out her own party for richly ignoring the latino vote. that's next.
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♪ ♪ if. rachel: democrats are scrambling ahead of the midterms, so much so that even congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez is calling out her party for not following through with latino voters. >> we've never tried as a party. the democratic party has not tried in terms of latino electorates. that lack of clarity makes it hard to win people over. rachel: all right. so she's saying that the democrats are not -- well, let me first introduce our guest. former mayor of dell rio bruno lozano and congressional candidate cassie garcia. bruno, you are a former mayor in this lawyer. she's saying they just didn't reach out, but you did, they ignored you. you called them after the del rio e crisis when the haitian migrants were under the bridge. you were screaming for help.
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you even told me you i went to the white house and begged for help at an event that that you were at and no answer. >> i think it's just really remarkable that these statements are being release now at a pivotal moment in latino voting history. and i think part of the problem is also that la knee know -- la latino voters are a very diverse group, and many of us are different generations into being american and americans first. so i think it's just an interesting point that she's trying to make now. rachel: yeah, it's fascinating. you told me you were at an lgbt elected official event at the white house, and you tried to bring it up, and they still weren't interested in what you had hat to say -- had to say. so they're not listening. so now they're tying, they're talking abortion, cassie. they're closing their argument in this election on abortion, and they're saying that the economic issue is related to
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abortion, the inflation and so forth. how ghoulish and elitist is it for them to say that the answer to the economic rows -- woes that they created are abortion? >> that's right. rachel: and how will they play? >> so as the wife of a border patrol agent, i grew up in the valley for 37 years, and when i talk to voters, they're talking about the economy, they're talking about an unsecure border, they're talking about four of the nine counties in this district do not even have a doctor. this district is 70% hispanic. people are just, they're trying to make difficult decisions whether to put gas in their car or food on the table. i don't care if you're a democrat or republican, at the end of the day, securing the border shouldn't be a red or a blue issue, it's a red, white and blue issue, and that's why come this november we are going to see a red wave, and i can't wait to be the first hispanic female to represent this great district.
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rachel: if it goes the republican way, you may see the entire border except e for one district represent ared by hispanic republicans. you're a democrat. what's the message that you have for the democrat party? >> i think they need to read the writing on the wall. @, you know, when i was in washington, d.c. to bring up this point, these issues ask talking points, it seems like they were taking notes and not taking consideration as to what's happening in realtime. and as cassie just mentioned, i think the problem and the rhetoric is urban elitist versus rural americanss. we have border issues going on, but the reality is many communities are small town cities, but the problem and the thing people don't focus on is the economic, what the economic boom is for border communities. what do they think it comes from? they don't just come from ocean ports, they come from land ports. if we're not securing this border, it's going to be catastrophic for the economy to come. rachel: great point and clear that you understood your role as
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a mayor. cassie, last word, i don't have a lot of time, but i'd like to get one last word from you on what could be a revolutionary election in terms of the hispanic vote. >> you're absolutely right. henry cuellar's been in office since i've been in kindergarten, and people are fed up. people are ready for a change. again, it's not about republicans, democrats, it's doing right and serving this district, and i can't wait to be the voice for the people of district 28 and serve them honorably. we have to secure the border. i met a mother who lost her daughter to fentanyl three days ago. she was 17 is years old. rachel: that unites voters and, certainly, the border issues are not partisan in south texas, and that is something that i walked away with understanding very clearly. you guys are incredible voices on this issue, and great advocates for your community. thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. rachel: you got it. thank you, bruno and cassie. up next, virginia governor glenn
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behind -- will: the nation's latest report card shows charlie kirk may be right. and the impact of school lockdowns has become a major concern among parents heading into the midterms. our next guest prioritized getting students back into the classroom, virginia governor with glenn youngkin, and he joins us now. governor, great to have you on the program this morning. you heard that sound bite from charlie kirk. do you think that education and still the impact of covid lockdowns will be playing a big role in the midterms here just less than two weeks away? >> well, first, good morning, and i'm hear vote -- here voting early, and i ask everybody to cast your vote. please, participate in this democracy. and, yes, the education issues are on the forefront of parents' minds, of grandparents' minds, of aunts and uncles' minds. we've seen just a tremendous loss in learning. the nape scores came out this week, and what we saw in those scores was just a horrific drop
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in reading and in math. here in virginia our fourth graders were last in the nation in the amount dropped, three times more than the average in reading, and we're tied with maryland in math. this is wholly unis acceptable. it's reflective of bad decisions made prior to the pandemic by the previous administration but worsened to such an extraordinary degree by draconian lockdowns, as you said, and trying to convince parents and kids that watching a screen, a 14-inch screen is a quality education. we've got a lot of worked to do to help our kids catch up. we're on it in virginia, but i think vetters, parents going to concern voter, parents are going to express loudly on november 8th. will: and those test scores back up what you had to say. those test scores down dramatically. really quickly as a follow-up to that, governor, so much about politics is timing. i think if many are have point out democrats thought abortion
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would be the issue they could run on in this midterm election. there was, perhaps, some enthusiasm or heat on that topic, you know, in the early parts of the summer with the supreme court decision. it seems to have subsided, and people focused on other issues. i'm curious though as we talk about crime and immigration and those types of issues, does crt in our education system, something that was so key in your election, you hit that at just the right time, is it still? i know we talked about it, but do you think it is still an animating factor for so many voters out there? >> well, the broad issue is that we've seen our schools let down kids and parents. and it is, it has been presented in a variety of ways. at the top of the list is pushing parents out of their children's lives and, in fact, trying to replace them with politicians, with bureaucrats. and parents are seeing this. and so step number one is to recognize that parents matter,
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they have to not only have a seat at the table, but the head seat at the table in their children's lives. what's being taught in school continues to be a major concern to parents. we need to teach our children how to think, not what to think. we pushed hard in virginia to make sure we get divisive concepts out of schools and, oh, by the way, focus on how to read, math, science, history. the revisiting of curriculum priorities is critical. parents are expressing that loudly. we're seeing the results of the distraction from those most important things in all these test scores. the combination of all of this is a recognition that parents and families are coming together, not republicans versus democrats, but americans. in virginia we said it very loudly last year, parents matter, education matters, and i think this is going to be a top issue in november. will: well, it should be. i'm glad to hear that it still is, and you put it perfectly right there are, parents being at the forefront of their children's lives. really quickly on monday you'll
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be in new york campaigning with lee zeldin. what will you be focus on on monday? >> well, first of all, supporting, supporting a great candidate in lee zeldin. and, of course, new yorkers are seeing the exact same thing that virginians saw which is when they sit around their tables in the evening and talk about the the biggest issues, it is runaway inflation that's making it almost impossible for ends to meet. that silent thief of inflation is stealing even's hard-earnsed money -- everybody's hard-earned money. but crime in new york is at the top of the list. will: no doubt. >> and we have to recognize that we have to back the blue, we've got to have prosecutors prosecute, and that's what lee zeldin stands for. and, by the way, no one is forgetting the fact that schools were locked town for an extraordinary period of time. so these are the absolute issues on the ballot just like they were in virginia. will: all right. governor glenn youngkin, thank you for being on the show morning. >> thank you. have a blessed cay. will: huge show tomorrow on "fox
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pete: we're back with a fox news alert. the department of defense announcing just moments ago, this is brand new, the oldest inmate at guantanamo bay has now been released. they say the 75-year-old was sent back to his home country of pakistan. he's accused of being an al-qaeda sympathizer and was captured in an fbi sting operation in 2003. he was suspected of financing al-qaeda but was never charged. finish i believe there are about 20 inmates left at gitmo. will: all right. for the last 345 days, through the blazing summer and frigid winter, pastor corey brooks has been living on a chicago rooftop speaking out about the violence plague his city. now with $20 million raised, he's about to transform the area and coming down right now as ceo of project hood, pastor corey brooks, along with political
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analyst gianno caldwelling. good morning, gentlemen. >> good morning, will. pastor brooks, i have to ask you, how does it feel to be coming down off the roof? >> man, it feels so good -- >> i'm sure. >> -- to finally be coming down to sell celebrate not with just our community, but all the fox viewers. we would not be at this point if it were not for fox and all the viewers who have helped us tremendously. >> and now we're in the area where you're going to break ground today. >> that's right. we're going to be breaking ground. 89,000 square feet of building is going to be built. career trades, entrepreneurship, businesses, wintrust bank, urgent health care. so much stuff is going to be going on. young people's lives are going to be transformed -- >> yes, sir. >> -- and we're super excited. >> yes, sir. now, these are the plans. this is what the fox news viewers across the country have been investing in to prevent
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violence in chicago. this is such a massive property, what you're going to be building out here. can you walk us through some of the pictures that we're seeing right here? >> these are the pictures that a lot of the fox viewers -- and let me just say this, gianno, christian conservatives across america and on fox have helped us to this point. a center where we're going to have trades, where we can teach people how to work with their hands, responsibility of getting up every day. it's going to be awesome. we've got businesses, entrepreneurial businesses, we have got a theater and, you know, a swimming pool. you know, in our neighborhood there's not any swimming pools. >> right. >> and so children are going to be blessed, adults are going to be blessed, it's going to be tremendous. >> and i want to tell you as someone whose family has personally been impacted by the violence, as everyone knows, my brother was murdered just miles from here on june 24th. it feels really good to be here to support you because what you
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and this work and the viewers across the country is going to prevent another christian from happening. i'm so thankful for that. >> absolutely. we want to make sure that young people like your brother get the opportunity to live the american dream, and we hope and pray that on the south side of chicago it starts right here at project hood. >> what's the web site? raise 15 million more. >> project hood.org. we can build debt-free, i believe we're going to do it. project hood.org and, again, thanks to all the american people, fox and all the viewers who have supported us. it's been a tremendous blessing. ing thank you so much. >> no government help. this was done because of you all. thank you so much and back to y'all on the couch. pete: amazing. pastor brooks, a real world hero, for sure. real quick -- >> thank you. pat: concern. pete: -- what are you going to do with your first moments down off the roof in. >> i'm going to spend today celebrating. we're going to do a ceremony, you know, breaking ground
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ceremony, and i'm going to enjoy the harvest fest with the kids and eat a couple of pieces of candy, just a couple. [laughter] pete: you have earned it. awesome stuff is. gianno, pastor -- rachel: thank you, pastor. gianno, thank you. we have the best viewers -- pete: we really do. rachel: we absolutely saw the best viewers. pete: thank you to him and the generosity of all of you out there. all right. from pass pastor brooks and the seriousness of his cause to a puppy halloween parade because this is "fox & friends," after all. [laughter] ♪ now, there's skyrizi. ♪things are getting clearer♪ ♪i feel free to bare my skin♪ ♪yeah, that's all me♪ ♪nothing and me go hand in hand♪ ♪nothing on my skin♪ ♪that's my new plan♪ ♪nothing is everything♪ achieve clearer skin with skyrizi. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin
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monster. what dog doesn't like cookies? [laughter] will: his name is jerry lee. >> and the best part is it's nice and run. then, 44 days, liz truss didn't make it, but guess whose eyes are on, king charles -- will: this is flap jack. rick: and boyfriend, by the way. >> probably should have brought some bacon. we have will, and he is dressed from a character like "star wars." those costumes are great because you can use them again on may 4th, may the fourth be with you. and he also had a little help from these calming shoes. okay, next up, who doesn't love tucker? he is with us in spirit. we have tucker carlson -- [laughter] will: this is tuck orer. >> right. and his companion because, guess what, guys? we are ready for the midterm elections. got that have an elephant.
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the elephant in the room is the elephant, right? last but not least we're getting ready for christmas with our gingerbread man. isn't he adorable? is. pete: oh, man. rick: charlotte, this is amazing. >> thanks so much. happy halloween, everybody. pete: more halloween tomorrow, i think. are have a great saturday, everybody. rachel will be here. rachel: bye, everybody. ♪ neil: now on to the doggy eat dog world of politics. see what i did there? ten day toss go, candidates are stepping out and a record amount of money is pouring in. more than 13 million americans have already made their voices heard in early voting, even more today in new york and new jersey and now the rest of florida where early voting is now officially underway. but first, we are learning more about that attack on pau
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