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tv   Cavuto Live  FOX News  October 29, 2022 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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the hiring process used to be the death of me. but with upwork... with upwork the hiring process is fast and flexible. behold... all that talent! ♪ this is how we work now ♪ >> you know, the more we learn about this attack on paul pelosi, the husband of speaker of the house nancy pelosi, the more we realize how close this was to something that could have been quite, quite tragic. right now, he's still in a san francisco hospital recuperating. we're told that he had some swelling of the brain and we don't know a whole lot about this. they're not sharing much information about this. nancy pelosi is with him right now.
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christina coleman has more on what we are finding out the day after. christina. >> hi, neil. yeah, paul pelosi suffered a skull fracture and serious injuries to his arms and hands, but fortunately is expected to make a full recovery and underwent successful surgery yesterday to repair the skull fracture. house speaker nancy pelosi arrived at san francisco general hospital to be with her husband last night. and she flew in from washington d.c. after the attack. the suspect 42-year-old david depape broke into the pelosi's san francisco home in the upscale neighborhood. a family member travelling with the house speaker says the suspect was trying to tie him up until the house speaker got home. and shouting what is nancy? where is nancy. she was not home at this time. and san francisco's d.a. says
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by making a phone call he likely saved his life. officers witnessed the 82-year-old paul pelosi get attacked with a hammer. >> mr. depape immediately pulled the hammer away from mr. pelosi and violently attacked him with the hammer. the officers immediately entered, tackled the suspect, disarmed him, took the hammer away from him and took the suspect, mr. depape into custody and we also know based on our investigation at this point that this was not a random act. this was intention al and is wr wrong. >> now, police have not stated a clear motive for the attack. fox digital reports that depape has ties to a radical nudist activist and a disturbing online presence that involves blogs under his name that include online posts about pedophiles, big brother
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censorship, anti-semitic contact and mentioned q-anon and vaccine conspiracies. president joe biden commented on it and about his condition. >> when i spoke to the speaker, she says he's doing okay, he went to the hospital and was operated on and he seems to be coming along well. he's in good spirits and the whole family is there. >> every person of good conscience needs to clearly and unambiguously stand up against the violence in our policies, regardless what your politics are. [cheers and applause] all of us. all of us together as amer americans. >> the fbi and capitol police are assisting with this investigation. depape was booked in the san francisco jail on a number of felonies included attempted
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murder and as of now his arraignment is scheduled to take place on tuesday. neil. neil: christina, thank you for that. we appreciate the update. and former secret service agent, dan, there's so much that's not adding up here and maybe you can help me with it. you know, information is spotty. i understand that, but what do you make of what you know right now? >> good morning, neil. thanks for having me back. basically we have 535 members of the house and senate combined and we have about 2,000 capitol police officers, so clearly there are not enough capitol police officers to protect every single member of the house and senate when they leave the capitol. once they're outside the capitol, very few of them receive protection from the dignitary protective service of the capitol police. only house and senate leadership receive protective details and the families receive nothing.
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it's not really financially doable in terms of anything, to numbers of bodies, to protect the families. neil: no, i can understand that. i guess what i'm asking in a simplistic way, should it be different for higher ranking members, the speaker and extended family and-- i can see those who are protected on site in washington or when they travel and it's very expensive and cumbersome let alone unwieldy times 535. is that worth looking at? >> well, families fall under the umbrella when they're with the protectee. so paul pelosi if he was in fact with her, with the speaker, then the capitol police, they're going to watch out for him, too. unless the speaker is with him, then that's not going to happen. in terms of setting up details
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for the families of the leadership, it's not really viable. it's-- i don't see it happening and quite frankly, it's not something that the american taxpayer should be footing. neil: you know, i'm wondering, too -- you've seen a lot in your years doing this, people talk about particularly violent at times or extreme, tense times. i get that, but i'm old enough to remember what 1968 was like. of course, that was a violent year and americans were sharply divided over the vietnam war. it was the year that bobby kennedy was killed. it was the chicago riots outside of democratic convention, martin luther king had been killed. we saw it four years later with the attempt on george wallace's life. so we're not strangers to this. it has happened before. do you worry that the political temperature gets such that we revisit that? >> well, neil, you've pointed out quite accurately that
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there's a great deal of history when it comes to danger to political persons, to candidates. absolutely nothing new. i mean, you can go all the way back to when teddy roosevelt was running for reelection with the bull moose party after he left office the first time as president. neil: that's right, very good example. >> he was shot. so, it goes way back. there is no absolute answer to stopping it, but i really do believe that people like the pelosis and the higher ranking people that are more of a higher threat really should probably think about private security or at least setting their house alarm at night before they go to sleep. this individual broke into the house and apparently, no alarms went off. it's hard for me to believe that there is no house alarm at the pelosi residence, so, that would have helped a great deal. and i think they're probably
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capable of hiring private security or at least asking san francisco p.d. to keep an eye on the place when he's there and she's not. neil: i didn't think of that. or the alarm thing. you raise a lot of good points. you always make me think and forgot how good you are at history. so i'll have do my homework next time i have you on. thanks to dan emmett, a former secret service agent. you might have heard that there's an election in 10 days, what's at stake and who is at stake. you wouldn't believe the number of foreign players who are as well. gillian turner on that. >> neil, the secretary of homeland security is now warning that china, iran and russia are working overtime to try and hack the coming midterm elections and americans voters across the nation need to be aware. in their cross-hairs, he says, are voter registration data bases. >> there are three, i would
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say, primary threat factors here, all of which we are alert to as are our state and local partners. one is, of course, the cyber security threat with respect to those elements that are connected. voter registration data bases. >> earlier this month the fbi released a bulletin seeking to reassure voters the elections are secure, but acknowledged the same threat mayorkas is highlighting voter registration information or managing nonvoter registration processes continue to be a target for malicious threat actors. the fbi briefed g.o.p. and democratic state party headquarters about the accused threat they face from chinese hackers in particular, revealing they've been directly targeting their campaign operations. mayorkas has been warning from
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beijing, moscow and tehran for weeks now. >> russia, iran, china, the misinformation pre and post-election to undermine the integrity, the perception of the integrity of the elections and sew further discord in our country. >> the intelligence industry believes that it's elevated as a result of the biden administration's support to ukraine during the ongoing war and the cyber intelligence tells us that it's been degraded since the start of putin's invasion. sources tell us that the community is expect today release a new threat assessment and doubling down on this morning any moment now revealing the nature and extent of the threat from china in particular. neil: thank you very much for that. gillian turner in washington. we're still having the questions not answered regarding paul pelosi, but we
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talked to the former secret service agent and says it's unwieldy and quite expensive if you do this protection, spread it out to 535 members of congress including in the u.s. senate at a time when threats are real. sean duffy served in congress and knows about the threats and had several himself. he respects on that and what can be done after this. no, he's seizing the moment with merrill. moving his money into his investment account in real time and that's... how you collect coins. your money never stops working for you with merrill, a bank of america company. this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. promises of all shapes and sizes. each, with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you.
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♪ ♪ from no drill mud flaps and water-repellent seat protectors, to our laser-measured floorliners, weathertech has everything you need. order yours today at weathertech.com. the ultimate protection for your vehicle. >> all right. we're happy to report that it looks likes paul pelosi will be okay, but he did get severely, brutally attacked as police said. he's still at a hospital recovering and we don't know the nature, or the degree to those wounds other than reported swelling on the brain that was being treated. we just don't know so we're not hazarding guesses on the treatment, but we hope and continue to believe that doctors say he will be okay. nancy pelosi is with him, but it does bring up an issue
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that's come up again and again in this environment with attacks on politicians tend to mirror what's going on in our country with the rising crime wave itself. sean duffy is with us, the former wisconsin congressman, served eight years in congress. i thought of that, it's a long time and a kid now, a young guy now. it's always good to see you and i was watching your better half, rachel campus duffy this morningen and she was reminding on fox and friends, you're quite familiar with this and how scary especially when it involves your family. i wonder what the solution is. we had a secret service agent on. that's a big, expensive deal if you want to widen protection for folks. what do you think? >> yeah, i don't think we need protection for every member of congress especially when they go home. there are certain times when my family received threats or my
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wife did or my kids. and when that happens there need to be resources to come out and provide some additional support and security to members of congress, but every member doesn't need a security deal likes the speaker or the leader of the house. but i think what's important, neil, is the fact that like the president says, everybody needs to condemn violence and not just outside of politics, but specifically inside of politics and i think you've seen republicans come out and without reservation, condemn the pilots against paul pelosi. no one should be threatened physically with violence if you disagree with him politically. i don't know what the purpose behind this attack was. but i also think we need democrats to come out and say, you know what? we're going to condemn those who are protesting outside of supreme court justices homes. we're not going to blame the democratic party when steve scalise is shot and almost killed. and you can't blame one party
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for the violence that happens in the country and i wish i had more democrats condemning the violence in the streets in 2020. and especially against politicians because you play this out, neil, and just because we disagree with someone on the political front, we're going to, you know, try to personally harm them or their family? that's a bad future for this country and we have to come together as one american family and condemn all of it. neil: i also worry about, sean, i'm hold enough to remember 1968, hold enough to remember when you live in a divisive environment, of course, the vietnam war and protests and what have you, but it escalated and we all remember the 1968 democratic convention, coming closely after the assassination of bobby kennedy, which came, two months after the assassination of martin luther king. we remember four years later the attack on george wallace. they're indiscriminate and random, but brutal and i know
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what happens when the tenor and the rhetoric gets extreme. i'm not linking the two, but i worry, what about you? >> i think you make a good point. i was five years away from riding my trike and i wasn't born yet. neil: rub it in. >> to that point, maybe there seems to be, you can tell us this, there seemed to be unified rejection of that violent. neil: good point. >> and rejecting that for political purposes, we have to come together and say listen, this doesn't have this place. you don't want to go serve and have your husband or wife threatened. one thing i'm concerned about, capitol police normally protects the home of the speaker and leader. they don't come home one day and do a mini sweep of the residence. i have to imagine there was some presence at the home of the pelosis. i don't know, was that security
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called off? was it pushed back? the question also asked, i mean, they're very wealthy people, where was the security system in the home? those details we don't know yet, but it's going to come to light as we go through the next coming days and questions on those who have targets on their back, how do we protect them. someone like aoc, i disagree with her until the ends of time, neil, i don't agree with her politically at all, but she has a right to be safe. she was elected by the people of her district. her fiance has a right to be safe and no one should threaten them violently. they should engage in this arena of debate and conversation and that's another point, neil. if we don't talk to each other. if we can't have a free flowing conversation where people can express their ideas and they tamp them down because one side is saying, your ideas are violence, your words are violence, well, then you start to see people act in really, nonproductive ways like this. debate is always the best form to let out energy, to let off
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steam. neil: right. >> you don't allow that in society and bad things can happen and bad ideas can enter people's minds as a point of retaliation, which is never good. neil: but your point about maybe rethinking whether they-- those higher up in congress or higher up like the cabinet officials and all are given more protection at their homes. i guess that's being debated as we speak. that's where you would limit it, people high up, not everyone? >> no, i would say the homes, even when the speaker or the leader or the whips are gone should still have protection because they come home to their places and families are there who are targets. but i think you need to have a force within the capitol police when members are, it could be a week's period of time, could be a couple of months where someone is getting higher threats to them and their family, got to be able to send a force out to protect the families during high risk times, but not at 535 members of congress do not need protection of seven days a week throughout the year.
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not necessary. and it costs way too much money, but when you do need it you want it and you want the capitol police to have their resources available to come to your community and provide that protection. neil: and you hit the nail on the head, everybody should bring it down a peg or two. and you should see the nasty e-mails, you don't-- >> everyone loves me. neil: i can't believe you must have been 18 in congress. good to see you. >> thank you, neil. neil: sean duffy. there's a lot going on in the country besides what's happening on this side of the border. you should see the threat from the other side of the border and people finding creative ways to get here. nate foy is there at eagle pass. nate. >> and neil, migrants continue crossing illegally in staggering numbers, once they get to this side, human smuggling continues to be a big problem and we took a ride
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along with the kenny county sheriff's office this morning and wait until you see the staggering frequency of the human smuggling in these texas communities. t fees if she overdraws by $50 or less. and, kyle, well, he's keeping calm with another day to adjust his balance if he overdraws by more than $50. overdraft assist from chase. make more of what's yours. becoming a morning person starts the night before with new neuriva relax and sleep. it has l-theanine to help me relax from daily stress. plus, shoden ashwagandha for quality sleep. so i can wake up refreshed. neuriva think bigger.
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>> all right. well, crime isn't going away and neither is the mess at the border, still getting messy. some would say messier. for those trying to sneak into the cover, a lot more clever, dangerously so. nate foy is at eagle pass, hey, nate. >> yeah, neil, the border communities are getting hit from all angles. large groups continue to cross the rio grande behind me to turn themselves into border patrol and then the migrants they don't want to get caught, going through private ranches to avoid the check points and cases of human smuggling as
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well. that's what we were looking at when we took a ride along with the kenny county sheriff's office. how often the stops and busts are happening. 6:38 this traffic stop turned into more. six illegal migrants and one bailed out and ran away. the driver is a u.s. citizen and now is charged with six counts of human smuggling. just 35 minutes later in the same town, same sheriff's office, deputies found another human smuggler. take a look at this next video. again, the smuggler had six migrants and this time in a pickup truck. the driver was wanted for parole violation and he will also be charged with six counts of human smuggling and those are just two more examples that our roving photographer found this morning while riding along with the kenny county sheriff's office. take a look at the large groups going across, and take a look at this. this large group in normandy, texas, 17 miles from where i'm standing right now.
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a lot of cubans and colombians, men, women and children and a lot of single adult men and getting word a group of over #00 migrants -- 200 migrants, and we'll see if we can get that. the next issue is the drugs. in tucson sector, border patrol agents assisted local law enforcement 3 95 fentanyl pills and they've gotten pounds of fentanyl. the border patrol chief just released new sta particulars from the past weeks, seven sex offenders, three felons with guns and one convicted murderer arrested while trying to enter our country illegally in the past week, we'll send it back to you. neil: how can anyone ignore that. thank you, nate foy at the
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border. and art is joining us. probably asking that. the national border patrol vice-president. good to have you back. i guess none of this is a big surprise to you. we're not seeing any concerted effort out of washington on it. what happens? >> right now it seems they're ignoring everything or they're saying it's not happening. you just heard the reporter earlier, the chaos that's going on. i can tell you out here in tucson, it's very much run by the drug cartels, seeing so many drugs coming across our borders and we're leading the entire country when it comes to got-aways and counties in arizona having car chases constantly, individuals are ramming into u.s. citizens, hurting other people. the cartels and the drug smugglers work hand inhand, done a great job of recruiting young kids, having them go down to the border, pick up carloads of people, smuggle them and
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refuse to stop and all the while, we have politicians that are turning a blind eye, that are not caring and they don't have any political will to say this has to stop. look, the drug smugglers, the human smugglers, they do not care what side of the aisle you're on. they don't care whether you're a republican or a democrat, they just want to bring their product across and hurt americans lives. neil: that's a good point. drug cartels don't care about that. you're a customer, bottom line. and i look at the shot at the border. when you mentioned drug cartels and trying to get the product through individuals to get into this country, do they track those individuals then to keep track of where they are in this country? >> during the obama administration was when we had a bunch of the unaccompanied juveniles that came across. all of those juveniles are full
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grown adults now. no one in the administration knows where they're at or where they've been. and i'm going to tell you, the in the future those that have gotten away and then those asking for asylum in the united states, no one is going to know where they're at. >> that's scary stuff right there. thank you very much and for all of your men and women, you deal with a lot of politicians, but your immediate concern is dealing with incredible numbers. from the national border patrol, thank you, sir. >> there are a lot of economic statistics that we follow for a living, what i do on fox business if you don't get it, you should demand. you're very smart. when amazon makes a comment about the consumer, and amazon came out with numbers that disappointed wall street this week, but it's what the cfo said about the consumer being pinched. that was quite telling because
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>> you know, october might be a scary month for stocks, in fact, this is the anniversary of the 1929 stock market crash, when the dow lost 10% of the value and that week a third of its value. who is arguing about the past and history. this month is proving to be quite the winner, but before we get to that. let's get to the numbers that have been deciding a lot of
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this. and ironically, most of them haven't been great. they just haven't been as awful as some had feared. susan lee has more on that. >> it's been a brutal week for technology stocks, worst week on record for meta formerly known as facebook. and amazon saw the worst since 2016. some of the report cards, some of of the earnings didn't match wall street expectations. $580 billion in value being wiped off the book during thursday afternoon before friday's slight rebound. in terms of permanent wealth. mark zuckerberg losing 100 billion in the last months and that's the worst since we've seen in bloomberg since 2022. and apple tim cook says the same thing, it's a challenging environment with the strong
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u.s. dollar and for the first time interest rates are no longer zero. tim cook telling me it's a challenging environments and there's no doubt about that and that macroeconomic effect obviously is what's driving the strong dollar and of course, money weakness and currencies in most spots around the world. so that's big. alphabet cfo telling me the same thing earlier this week, that we think that the macro environment is challenging, it's complicated with exchange for an important factor and additional head wind for a pullback. we can't paint all technology stocks with the same brushment and social media like google and meta that depend on advertising spend. they'll be challenged much longer and yet amazon saying the holiday shopping period may not be as strong. and microsoft's slowest growth in half a decade. apple has outperformed. meta down 70%, apple down 14%. but it's also important to note
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in these record report cards, all of the companies are slowly hiring or outright firing and laying off a percentage of the work force because of the unknown fup future for the foreseeable future in their view. >> thank you very, very much. here is the irony in what susan has been pointing out. it's been an awful year and many of them cut in half or more and i think in the case of meta. down 79%. the fact of the matter is, they put in a very good week after some disappointing earnings. so much so that we decided let's look at october. since this is the rockiest of all months and it tends to be for stocks and we discovered that it's actually done pretty good. the nasdaq not only finished the week on the upside for the entire month to date, we're up about 5%. we're up about 9% for the s&p 500 and look at the dow. up ahead 14 1/2%. so, what does this october tell
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you on this, the anniversary of the october 1929 stock market crash. i discovered that, i remember it so well -- no, i did not. some of you are thinking, yeah, you look old enough to have covered that. scott martin, a puff of parent's eyes and even the '87 crash and we've also got emily roland with us, john hancock management. both combine their ages and they're not close to me, but anyway, i have to move on. [laughter] >> scott, october, what it's telling us thus far. because, it's putting in heady advances here, now, i don't know if they last and i don't know if this is a head fake or what they call a dead cat bounce. what's going on? >> markets are heading off, let's say, neil, that negativity and i think it goes to show you sometimes when sentiment gets so bad and so negative and so clear, the market's going to take another dive down, usually it does not.
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to your points of october and typically a rocky month to use your words, this october looks pretty smooth and i think it's because of the fact that the market has gotten ahead of itself when it comes tt negativity in the economy. so one of the things out there, too, neil when it comes to consumer numbers and susan lee talked about it in the package there, some of the big tech spenders and advertising dollars that are flying up. the economy has 99 problems and i think the consumer is definitely one, but if you look at halloween spending being the second biggest spending holiday ahead of christmas or after christmas, rather, number one on pet spending by the way with respect to that, holiday spend, i think you actually have a chance to see the consumer rally into the end of year given that things were so negative throughout the summer. neil: well, i agree with you on that. reese's peanut butter cups would have to get to an amount where i would say no mas. i wonder if we're dismissing the strength of the consumer or
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putting off this news of, you know, pent up buying union record airline bookings and crowded planes and crowded hotels, crowded theaters. i understand the prices are going up, i'm not oblivious to that. but the consumer certainly has a funny way of showing it. what do you make of that? does it offer you hope or we're on a tight string here? >> listen, the consumer, neil, is okay for now, but let's just think about what's changing on a year over year basis. massive, massive stimulus in response to covid, made the economy look a lot better than it actually was for a couple of years. so you had businesses and consumers adjust to that. you know, businesses ramped up hiring and ramped up investment and created job openings and consumers were just turbocharged with cash and they spent aggressively. now, one-time stimulus like that just isn't sustainable and now businesses and consumers
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are sort of adjusting the other way. you could hear it from businesses, you know, susan covered a lot of that, the consumers now are-- they're really not willing to absorb higher prices quite as much as before. they're contending with a lot of problems here, we have still elevated sticky inflation, higher commodity prices, higher interest rates and those things are challenging the consumer and i'm still buying the reese's peanut butter cups and put them in the freezer. neil: definitely the freezer. let me ask you this, someone who is leary the markets and brand new and seeing this popped up and it might be short-lived. what do you tell them? >> a lot of this is about rates and the bond market sort of holding the stock market captive right now. one of the big reasons that we've seen the big declines in the bear market play out. it's the massive backup in
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rates and given hawkish fed and elevated factors and the rates come down a little bit that's providing relief for the markets, but that only works until it doesn't. and we think that rates are ultimately going to move lower as we head into the global recession, that by the way, we haven't had yet and earnings adjust lower and stock prices are likely to see volatility here and we wouldn't be calling the all-clear yet. neil: a side point on that, scott. we don't have much time. for people weathering the blow of technology holdings tumbling, they've never sold and they say i might as well hang in there, what the hell, i'm just going to hang in there and hope for a turn-around. what do you tell them. >> i say what the heck, too. companies with pricing power and emily is right i love the reese's things and known to overspend at restaurants, especially taco bells, people are hanging in there and spending on things maybe they
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shouldn't, but they're going to hang in there further because they like to eat food or at least i do. neil: vices have their value. >> and i don't and it upset some people. neil: it did, beginning with me. [laughter]. neil: thank you, emily, you were great and i appreciate it for guidance to step back and see this. everybody has been focused on the world series, me, i have no interest in this, philadelphia and houston, and no offense. and then they said fox is covering this, and i said oh. after this. veteran homeowners. are you applying for a car loan or a personal loan somewhere? those loans are not cheap. neither are cash advances from your credit cards. call newday. you may not realize it, but one of the lowest cost ways to get money is to use your va home loan benefit. the newday 100 va loan lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value at
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>> the greatest world series ever and it's coincidental that fox is, well, covering it and
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that connell mcshane is there, chief correspondent. connell has been in the war zones, poland, ukraine, and you're going to the world series for a reward. he deserves a break. connell, i caught the super fascinating world series opening game and seeing houston leading and i wake up this morning and apparently didn't end the way i was seeing it. what happened? >> all kidding aside, neil. this keeps up like it was last night. this might be the best world series of all time. and right, a mad house and what a great atmosphere to your point. houston is up 5-0, and philly comes back 5-5 in the fifth. check it up. tie game. bottom of the night, phillies right fielder castellanos, a terrific catch my castellanos
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saves the game. if he doesn't catch it. instead the phillies win it. realmuto goes the opposite field and barely clears it in right. it's a home run and a dramatic 6-5 win. >> honestly, i thought i got enough of it, but i kind of had flashbacks of the play that tucker made on judge's ball the last series and once he ran back to the wall, please don't just catch it, i knew it would be close and i thought originally enough once i saw him running back to the wall, i wasn't so sure. >> it got out all right. and the fans back in philadelphia watching the game went nuts. it's onto game two for all of us. they when we stopped by the fox booth, they told us what they thought it would be to pull off the upset and defeat mighty is houston. >> for the phillies, they can match power in both areas with the houston astros if it's a
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short series. if it's a longer series, the depth comes up. and houston has depth, and winning 106 games. i think it comes down to the execution early. >> we're going to mark that down pretty good early execution for game one, the phillies and game two, smoltz joined by joe davis on fox. and the expert, such that they are, they said that phillies should come into houston and win at least one game. they've done that and for tonight, two. and as you rightly pointed out on fox. neil: they've slain a lot of giants. would you confirm, connell, we were talking about baseball here? indeed. all right. wait a minute, he doesn't want to entertain that which i admire about connell. be done with it, cavuto. taking a look at the battle for the big names showing up to help some of the big races. will it move the needle? we're on it after this. all across the country,
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>> all right. welcome back, everyone. you're looking at a event getting ready in detroit. barack obama is going to be there for gretchen whitmer, a pretty tight race there. as we were looking the prior hour, what big name helps helping other names to stay big or big themselves. and history bears out the sentiment on this, but not all the time. we mentioned barack obama when he's not on the ballot and campaigning for others doesn't help them on the ballot. so, how does this sort out today? are we seeing 10 days out any type of late momentum that bears watching like we had, for example, in 1980. a lot of people forget going
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into that wake, as hard as it is to believe now, i remember this because i'm so old, that ronald reagan and jimmy carter were essentially statistically tied. and we also had a notion, a couple of weeks before barack obama himself was elected, and that he had and john mccain were separated a little more than three points and ended up being a bigger gap than that, when all was said or done on election day. what is the read and momentum and what we have to watch for signs and the next 10 days. and back with us, a democratic strategist, noel, good to have you both back again. help me with momentum and where you see it. you've been through these type of races before. midterms, presidential elections and gubernatorial elections and off year elections. what did you look for? what are you seeing? where is the sendment building? >> well, obviously, you have to look at a couple of things here and if they are bringing out, you know, former president
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barack obama to rally the crowds, you've got to look at why. and a lot of that is because barack obama has got some great rhetoric, but you've got to ask yourself, is that rhetoric enough to make you forget about the crisis at the border, the number one issue, which is inflation? your rising heating costs that are going to be coming at you? and you know, rising crime? and you've also got to believe the surrogates that are trying to get momentum down when races come to the wire, i've seen this and you always pull your big guns, your most popular people when it comes down to the wire, but you've got to ask yourself. are you going to believe what you actually see when you go to the grocery store, when you fill up your car. neil: yeah. >> are you going to believe what barack obama is telling you to see? plus, you've got to look at the history. the democrats right now really don't have a lot of history. we're living in, you know, in
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inflation, so if they're trying to say, you know, are you better? no, you are not. so you have a chance with your vote to make it better. neil: no matter the big name. so, sara, let me ask you, sometimes a big name can work against you, you see whatever people think personally of barack obama, a gifted politician and gifted communicator and the candidate you're supporting isn't that, isn't that guy. so can it work against you? >> absolutely. you know, barack obama is a popular political figure that it makes sense to bring him in, because he's a rock star. you know, i'm willing to wait three hours in the rain to see him, but i absolutely hear you and like noel said, you know, it's not barack stepping in for other candidate. and i also think that republicans should be very careful how they want trump getting to their campaigns. you know that there's a lot of republican strategist praying
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to elon musk does not let trump back on twitter until after the midterm. >> to your point-- i'm rudy jumping on you, ladies. i kind of get your message here, and see how it sorts out and ultimately it's on the message of the moment and the message for democrats can be dicey. all right. we're going to get the latest on all of that in the next couple of hours here, but the fact of the matter is, it's 10 days away. moving his money into his investment account in real time and that's... how you collect coins. your money never stops working for you with merrill, a bank of america company. this holiday where can you save time getting everything off their wish-list... and even more time checking everything off yours? lowe's, actually. find everything you need and more this holiday at lowe's. becoming a morning person starts the night before with new neuriva relax and sleep. it has l-theanine to help me relax from daily stress. plus, shoden ashwagandha for quality sleep.
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