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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  November 8, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PST

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joe biden will be the face of this. >> ainsley: everyone go out and vote. we have special coverage that begins tonight at 6:00 p.m. has all of those polls will be closing. we will get results and martha will be on and so will brett ten until 5:00. >> brian: karl rove to brit hume who >> bill: tens of millions casting their ballots. finally, america, you have arrived on the 8th of november, 2022. talking about it for months. >> dana: we knew it would get here eventually. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: i'm dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." a long time coming but this is what will happen. great special conch at 6:00 p.m. to get all your questions answered. president biden has -- an
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election by crime and -- >> bill: polls are open in 40 states. voters wasting no time making their voices heard. states in three of the country's high stakes races, pennsylvania, georgia and florida in the south. >> dana: the president has remained bullish on democrat chances. last night there appeared to be a crack in that facade. watch here. >> president biden: i'm optimistic. i'm always optimistic. >> will democrats win the house? >> president biden: i think it will be tough and i think we'll win the senate. the house is tougher. >> bill: kellyanne conway, brit hume, shannon bream, martha maccallum and mike rowe with analysis coming up shortly. >> dana: look at this here. we have karl rove, lucas tomlinson and kelly o'grady.
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let's get to pennsylvania right away. more than a million people have already voted. bryan llenas is outside of philadelphia. all eyes on pennsylvania tonight. >> no doubt about it. happy election day. good morning. dr. mehmet oz voted just after 8:00 a.m. in huntington valley with his wife, lisa and swarmed by the press. this message to voters on election day. >> i'm proud of how i've run this campaign. pennsylvaniaians are sending a clear message to washington. less radicalism and more balance. i encourage everyone to vote. it is your duty. >> his opponent democrat lieutenant governor john fetterman cast his ballot this morning in braddock. he was with his wife. he didn't take any questions. last night he reassured voters he is fit for office despite suffering that stroke. >> every day i feel better and better. by january i will be even
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better. [cheers and applause] >> but dr. oz will still be a fraud. >> election officials warn delays in ballot counting could leave this race undecided for days especially because of legal battles over undated or incorrectly dated mail ballots. currently undated or incorrectly dated mail ballots do not count following a recent court decision. but last night the fetterman campaign filed a lawsuit arguing that not counting these ballots violates civil rights by disenfranchising voters over a meaningless mistake. not the day the voter submitted it but the date and time the board of elections receive it. ballot counting in philadelphia. 3500 voters in philadelphia alone have been told they made mistakes on their mail-in ballots leading to long lines
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there. pittsburgh voters trying to fix their ballots before it's too late in a race this close, the issue could potentially invalidate thousands of votes that could affect fetterman particularly because 70% of those 1.4 mail-in ballots are for registered democrats. one other thing we could expect philadelphia mail-in ballot counting to take longer and they will double count the votes to make sure nobody double voted in this election. >> dana: thank you. stay close by. meanwhile president biden making his closing argument to voters in deep blue maryland yesterday and firing back at claims this election is a referendum on his policies. lucas tomlinson is live at the white house this morning. good morning. >> that's right. president biden heading out last night to neighboring prince georges county, maryland, a democratic stronghold and he mentioned maga more than crime and made his final pitch to voters saying democracy remains
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on the ballot. >> president biden: folks, there are more than 300 election deniers running on the pub call ticket this year. this is one of them. he is trying to deny your right to vote and trying to deny your right to have your vote counted. >> biden flew to a university 20 miles away from the white house to stump for a democratic candidate for governor expected to win by 30 points. 30 points, dana. biden appeared to forget his name. >> president biden: of course, we have that next governor. what is his name wes more. >> critics have accused biden and fellow democrats of ignoring the issues voters care most about. economy, inflation and crime. biden said at a fundraiser in chicago friday in democrats lose the house and senate it will be a horrible two years. not a single republican in the house or senate voted for the 1.9 trillion covid relief bill
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which many experts say sparked the country's current inflation crisis which remained at near 40-year highs all year. the massive bill would not have passed if the gop had won the special election in georgia last year and the white house is remaining mum whether president biden will hold a day after election press conference. we'll have to see. >> dana: looks like a beautiful day there. >> bill: tie game is what we start later tonight. 50 democrats, 50 republicans. 51 in the senate. that's where we begin when the coverage continues. we'll kicks off at 6:00 east coast time. house side the margins now. 218 for a simple majority, dems have it slightly at 220. republicans 212. key indicators early in the night and frankly, i can point to 10 or 12 or 20 or 30 early indicators. just give you a few basic one. virginia has been talked about so much. these are the key races you'll
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see later tonight in prime time. the reason we've he selected these races is either they are a toss-up or they have republican or democratic leaders running for re-election in the seats. three if virginia. watch those carefully. one area you may not. virginia closes at 7:00 and so does the entire state of indiana by 7:00. a district in northwestern indiana here, it is a democratic district. watch the margins. republicans really like their candidate. we'll get an early indication whether or not there is strength there for the republican party on a night like tonight or whether or not democrats are holding their own. clearly without question whether it's house races, governor race or senate race, the state of florida holds a ton of drama tonight. those are all the key races on the board and we'll see which way they break. florida doesn't close officially until 8:00 because the panhandle closes late. during that 7:00 hour with
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florida counting so quickly we'll get some indication from those house races how they are going early in the night. >> dana: someone who knows about florida closing in the panhandle an hour later is karl rove. >> i'm going back to 2000. >> dana: she remembers the phone call saying the polls stay open until 8:00. good to have you. what do you look at on a day like today that those viewers at home should pay attention to? >> i'm sort of with bill. i'm looking at the early results in indiana, kentucky, virginia comparing what they are today to what they were two years ago to begin to get a sense of how big the swing is from the democrats in 2020 to the republicans in 2022. so i'm spending a lot of time in the early ones taking a look at comparing the early vote in pennsylvania by county. early vote in those three districts in virginia, 2, 7, 10. how the vote is coming in in
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indiana one but the rest of indiana and the rest of kentucky, which a lot of those come in at 6:00. even though they aren't competitive races that indiana one i start to look at 6:00 in the non-competitive races how do the results compare to two years ago. >> bill: you look at percentages. is the republican strength or weakness and democratic strength or weakness. care to share from the white board? >> what's important here at the last that we don't have a good sense of from the returns until we get everything in? what is going on now is the independent and swing voters who are still up for grabs are making a decision. am i going to vote or not? if i'm going to vote, who am i voting for? look at the final messages of each party's candidates. the republicans are emphasizing the economy, crime, inflation. according to a new
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abc/"washington post" poll republicans are better able to handle the economy by 14 points. 20 points on crime, 12 points on inflation. interesting to me threat to democracy, the democrats have only a three point advantage. it is a reminder if you say our democracy is at stake, some people look at that on the center and right and say you know, one party government isn't helpful or going too far to the left is unhelpful or, you know, doing things like giving away a half a trillion dollars in student loan forgiveness is a threat to our democracy. the democrats don't have a big advantage. they have a 13-point advantage on being the party better able to deal with abortion but gallup says only 4% consider that to be the most important issue. as we go into the final hours and people are showing up to vote, they have to -- the key voters today and yesterday are going to be the people who are up for grabs who either are weakly linked to their choice or haven't made up their mind. first decision do i vote. second decision who do i vote
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for? closing arguments for the republicans strikes me as better. >> dana: john fetterman, lieutenant governor of pennsylvania running against dr. oz. you heard from bryan llenas was reporting in regards to this lawsuit that fetterman has filed against the state supreme court who basically said that you cannot count ballots that are not dated properly, not signed properly, and they are already going to court to fight that? >> full disclosure. i helped found on organization called right supporting the lawsuit that brought this about. in essence the state election authorities gave advice to the locals saying we don't care what the state law says if a ballot is not filled out properly, you are obligated to tell them it is not filled out properly, the voter and they have a chance to cure it or clean it up. but you ought to count those. and we went to court and pennsylvania supreme court said the law is the law. if you fill out the ballot
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incorrectly it ought to be set aside and not counted. what fetterman is attempting to do i don't care what state law says or what the requirements are for legitimate ballot anything that comes in as long as it is received postmarked by election day ought to be counted. the supreme court said no we'll require the law to be upheld. the law also says if the ballot is filled out improperly election authorities have to alert the voter to come in and vote in person or clean up your ballot before election day and we'll count it. fetterman -- i notice this morning the headlines in the newspapers were trying to count every ballot. no, what he is trying to do is say state law regarding filling out ballots doesn't matter. and the law should matter. that's what gives us confidence is when people follow the rules. >> bill: i wish we had you for 20 minutes. early voting in 2018 the last mid-term was 40 million. as of earlier this morning we're above 44 million. there is an increase.
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we can debate whether or not it's significant or not. >> different conditions. between 2018 and 2022 a lot of states moved to a more mail-in ballot early voting procedure. some states already had it in place but elongated it, for example texas and georgia lengthened the period of time to vote early. new states started saying we'll put more emphasis on mail-in ballot. >> bill: is this a strong turnout, a mild turnout or can we say that? >> we can't say it yet. we have to look at the total of turnout. in texas we have a long tradition of approaching 2/3 of the vote in early. we have a very robust early vote and mail-in ballot program, it is below -- it is on a trajectory to be larger than 2018 but percentage-wise smaller. >> bill: rest your voice. you have a long day.
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>> dana: fun to be with you today at 6:00. >> bill: a lot of fun. >> dana: thank you so much. >> it's amazing that the road to the majority goes through virginia. and it goes through the second congressional district right here. >> bill: that was last night governor youngkin one of the most sought after surrogates this cycle. we'll ask him about the election. >> dana: voters heading to the polls in georgia. the money spent on ads there topping a quarter of a billion dollars. how it is translating into turnout. >> bill: part of our continuing coverage at the corner of 48th and 6th avenue. democracy 2022 kicking into high gear on today, election day in america. ♪ at red land cotton. our traditions are grown and sewn
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>> bill: georgia's senate race one of the closest and most expensive. quarter of a billion dollars on tv ads. if you're living in georgia and watching this right now, you have to be thinking the end is soon, honey, right? record number more than 2.5 million already voting throughout the state. fox business chief national correspondent connell mcshane live in nor cross, georgia, near atlanta. how is it going? good morning to you. >> good morning, bill. funny you mentioned people would say that. i was talking to a guy and he said if i never see an another political ad in my life that's fine. we've seen ebbs and flows at this location where we are. people come in behind me. an i.d. check at the table cross referenced on a tablet.
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then they go to the blue booths in the background, touch screens are there and that's where they vote. print out the ballot, take it to a scanner and that's the process. when we've observed that, that process seems to be smooth sailing. 2 or 3 voters rejected but each time it happens they simply went to the wrong location. now as i said we did have a chance to speak to some of the voters. moments ago we ran into this young woman voting for the very first time. >> i think it's more important that people do the research on the people instead of going in and being like my mom is a democrat or republican and going in and voting for whoever. that's not what matters. it is the issues that they are actually talking about. >> the big political question here today is whether the republican herschel walker can turn out enough of these in-person voters to defeat senator raphael warnock. we'll keep an eye on the governor's race as well. rematch stacey abrams and
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governor brian kemp. i understand governor kemp is voting this hour himself. in terms of the timeline what to watch here in georgia. it will be important. polls close at 7:00 p.m. this evening. we know and have been reporting over 2 1/2 million people voted before today. most of the counting officials tell us they say they should have it done by 5:00 p.m. tomorrow. maybe that speeds things up compared to what we've seen in the past. but also the thing to remember is even if it does, we might not have winners declared in one or both races. you have to get to 50% in this election. if you don't get there we have a runoff and we're back talking about georgia once again, bill, on the 6th of december. things seem to be going well in the early voting in gwinnett county. >> bill: nice to see you. >> dana: we have a little bit of new video in for you now. j.d. vance, the republican senate candidate in ohio, he is
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just voting. he is in a town that bill knows well in cincinnati. a great little american town. that's a long-fought primary on the republican side of things up against democrat tim ryan. the race has been neck-and-neck but i believe am i correct that vance has the advantage here? >> bill: he has the advantage going into election day as he gets ready to cast the ballot in cincinnati, ohio, a day i'm sure all these candidates have waited for for so long and worked so hard. and whether it's vance or tim ryan they don't sleep. they're going. >> dana: they're worn out indeed. he voted just now in ohio and we'll keep watching ohio tonight and we have the best person possible to do that. it's not just the house and senate voters will also elect governors in dozens of states. our next guest isn't on the ballot but crisscrossing the
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country alongside republican candidates. glenn youngkin's win last year may be a sign of things to come tonight. thinking back to the virginia election in 2021, did the issues that help propel you to victory in virginia, have those had a hangover effect? are people still feeling that from last year and could it portend for what the results would be tonight? >> absolutely. exact same issues. what voters will reflect across the nation is that they're frustrated with inflation. the silent thief is stealing hard earned americans' money. crime is still at the top of the list, as well as education. folks don't trust the education that their children are getting. these are the exact same issues last year and we're seeing them again and compounded now that every state is a border state. in the fentanyl crisis and
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national security issue at our borders is affecting americans all over the country. i think what i have heard as i have had a great opportunity to campaign across the country with great republican candidates and incumbent governors. republican governors have out performed democrat governors, economic growth, safety, education, standing up for the rights that we know and need to protect. i think every state is saying we want a republican governor. i think we'll see so many states that have had long-time democrat governors all of a sudden flip. i have my eyes on new york and oregon as the bellwethers. those will be tight races. get out and vote. it is time to express dissatisfaction and hope for a different future. >> bill: want a play a clip as we watch j.d. vance in cincinnati. kevin mccarthy was in your state last night. virginia two, southeastern corner. mccarthy believes that the republican wins and the republicans have taken the
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house. clip from last night. >> kiggans, you know what? this is the number one race i will watch tomorrow night because when she wins, we win the majority. >> bill: here is what i found about 12 months ago compared to joe biden 12 months prior to that. 02, 07, 10. you won district two by ten points. you lost district seven by one to joe biden, which means that's the reason it's a toss-up. you lost district ten by two points, that's the margins we watch tonight. those voters who voted for you a year ago as dana was pointing out, they still live there. do they still have the level of motivation? >> yeah i think they do. i would just ask you to go back and check your numbers on the seventh. i think we one that last year.
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i think that vega will win tonight and kiggans will win in the second and cao is coming up on the outside. we have great candidates. the fact that people are unhappy. they have seen the federal government, not just drive bad policies but then when we have bad outcomes like inflation and crime and schools that aren't delivering, they double down. so here we are in the second, which is the home to the largest naval base in the world, and the veterans and military folks are coming out saying wait a minute, we believe in peace through strength. we want a congressional candidate and our next congresswoman in jen kiggans to reflect that in her leadership in washington. i think second will be a big statement and reflect a big trend across the nation. >> bill: by the way for viewers at home. all these districts, a lot of
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them are new with subtle changes but significant changes governor, you would admit that as well. this says biden would have won the new district by seven points in 2020. you would have won it by six points in 2021. point being either way either argument you want to make, it is a coin toss in that district on paper. final thought on that. >> it is. so get out and vote. this is a moment to demonstrate that hope is not a strategy, we have to do the work. and the rallies that we have had in the second, seventh and 10th have been huge. enthusiasm has been overwhelming. we have great candidates. this is the future of the republican party. vietnamese refugee who served his country in the navy. vega, who was born from a salvadoran immigrants and served her community in law enforcement and jen kiggans who was a navy helicopter pilot and a nurse. these are great candidates who
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will go to work for virginians and that's what people are looking for, results. that's what we proved last year. folks wanted change. when you deliver results they will encourage you to please do more and that's what i think we'll see across the commonwealth tonight. >> dana: thank you for joining us today. it is a busy one for you. appreciate your time. >> bill: thank you, sir. >> god bless you, have a great day. >> bill: we're living at polling sites across the country. this one is phoenix, arizona where the sun has come up now. the footprint center in phoenix. we'll take you there live in a moment coming up right after this.
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over the past two years, jersey mike's fundraiser for feeding america has been a huge success. their efforts helped provide more than 75 million meals, when people needed it most. but there is still work to be done. thank you, claire. this year, we'd like to invite you back to jersey mike's for another special weekend. come in november 19th and 20th, where 20% of all sales will be donated to feeding america, helping families in need. together, we always make a difference. (vo) with verizon, you can now get a private 5g network. so you can do more than connect your business, you can make it even smarter. now ports can know where every piece of cargo is. and where it's going. (dock worker) right on time. (vo) robots can predict breakdowns and order their own replacement parts. (foreman) nice work. (vo) and retailers can get ahead of the fashion trend of the day with a new line tomorrow. with a verizon private 5g network, you can get more agility and security. giving you more control of your business.
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so it's time to make the most of it with kisqali. because when you invest in yourself, everyone gets the best of you. >> dana: control of the 50/50 senate is riding on just a handful of toss-up races, one of them is in arizona where inflation is a concern and 1.5 million people have already cast their ballots. kelly o'grady of fox business is live in phoenix, the highest inflation in the country and where polls opened 90 minutes
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ago. inflation, is that top of mind there? >> oh, absolutely, dana. it's still early but folks are trickling in all morning long and telling us inflation, rising prices is the number one thing driving them and getting them motivated to come out and vote. phoenix has the highest inflation in the country. look at these numbers. cpi data shows that as of august the average for a u.s. city was 8.3%. phoenix topped that at 13%. since i've been on the ground we hear countless stories of folks having to decide between paying for gas, groceries, rent. voters can expect economic relief if they are elected blake masters telling us it is a white house problem. >> inflation came from joe biden's white house and his policies that mark kelly has rubber stamped. surrendered our energy independence. >> democrat mark kelly touting
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his record of pushing for solutions. >> we've increased oil and gas leasing. leases available in the gulf of mexico. i pushed the administration. oil and gas companies are not stepping up and taking advantage of these leases. >> g.o.p. candidate kari lake cited immediate solutions she plans to enact. removing grocery and rent tax and extensive relief will be tough while president biden remains in the white house. polls close at 9:00 p.m. eastern. the first update we can expect is around 11:00 p.m. but we could be waiting to friday for the full picture. election officials are asking for patience in arizona but both sides say they expect a victory. >> bill: let's bring in juan williams. fox news political analyst and kellyanne conway, hello to you both. nice to see you in person. "politico" today. no one has more riding on the
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outcome than joe biden. throughout all the head winds he faced in the two years and one day since he got the president see he had house and senate majorities and leaders backing him up. now the back stop is seriously at risk, end quote. juan. >> i think two things to consider. one is he had a very narrow margin. clearly 50/50 in the senate. and not much more in the house. and got a tremendous amount done legislatively. we can go through the checklist. without that where does he go? i don't think i stand alone saying republicans are likely to take control of the house tonight. so with kevin mccarthy under the influence of a lot of far right wingers, freedom caucus types in the house, exactly what can you expect if you are the president of the united states? the answer will be not much. so i think as a result, he has to hope he holds the senate and can still deal with judges and i think he has to intend to make a
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very clear statement about getting republicans back on their heels about support for ukraine if they intend to pull out that money he will punish him for it. lastly he will make a big deal about that he is the one taking on russia and the chinese. so he will move more towards foreign policy and away from the legislative agenda. >> dana: interesting kellyanne how president biden campaigned as a moderate guy. then the democrats won the two georgia runoffs and meant that he had a democrat majority in each place. juan mentions a lot of accomplishments. but those accomplishments with all the spending became their biggest vulnerability that led to inflation which is what everyone is voting on today. >> that's right. i'm puzzled why democrats aren't running on that? what's the point of spending your political currency on crazy votes like that and spending money on things we don't need and not bragging about it and
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having joe biden and kamala harris stand next to you saying we worked together. not a single republican voted for it. i think juan just made joe biden more relevant on your program than he is going to be. you see a lot of people in the democrat party getting blind quotes about how ineffective he has been. he said i will pass the bat onto my female vice president, you can elect her. nobody wants her around. they've even stopped calling him the gaffe machine. the "washington post" said he keeps on repeating lies. these are not gaffes or slips of the tongue. he actually said he traveled 17,000 miles with xi from china but said it dozens of times and in a joint session and a white house tweet. dana you know the white house press secretary can clean it up.
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the white house chief of staff can clean it up on twitter today. so i think they've put themselves in a terrible position not just for joe biden as an ineffective messenger but a message the democrats, juan, don't have a communication problem. they have a fact problem. they passed policies america rejacketed. >> i don't think that's true. the american people are supportive of things like lowering the cost of prescription drugs for seniors and dealing with climate change. infrastructure. we used to have, dana and i used to spoke about infrastructure, he gets it done. that's not the issue. i think the issue is, this comes back to messaging, kellyanne. right now republicans have had great success in this cycle with messaging. i think if you want to put it they pushed the fear button on crime and inflation. >> you have obama out there scolding that things will fall apart. >> those are issues that spur turnout in the democratic.
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>> those aren't issues at all. >> those are. the idea that donald trump launched an insurrection. these are things. >> where is that in the polls, juan? >> this drives democratic turnout. you saw what happened in 2020 when trump was defeated by joe biden. >> thank you for admitting it's why it was the closing message is to get turnout. not make people feel better about how economically depressed they feel and single moms are struggling and single moms who have a job, one of the fastest growing new homeless groups in our country and it's a disgrace. thank you foraging the guy who ran and won on hope and change is gloom and doom and sour and do you recall to get democratic voters. 50% disapproval of joe biden oh every issue. >> joe biden is moderate. compared to donald trump. >> donald trump you are obsessed with him. it's funny to watch, actually.
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>> if you are talking about turnout. that's the key today and every election. >> sure. >> the idea you are trying to turn out your base is not an error. >> dana: you can't win on a message if it's not backed up by reality and data. that's how it happens. that was fun. >> bill: we'll see you both tonight. i hope you are looking forward to it. i don't know. okay. thank you, juan. >> dana: great to have you both. republicans may be on the verge of winning back control of congress. how would president biden govern alongside a party he calls a threat to democracy. shannon bream is up next at kam answer make their voices heard. ♪ people have the power, people have the power ♪ ♪ people have the power, people have the power ♪ inspection. no upfront costs at all. let us get your family security of cash in the bank.
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>> bill: the winning powerball numbers for the record $1.9 billion jackpot are drawn following a delay last night. >> dana: something funny is going on. >> bill: find the numbers at foxnews.com. no word who matched all the numbers. the jackpot is estimated $1.9 billion as an annuity or $930 million for the cash option. the largest-ever lottery jackpot
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breaking the record six years ago of $1.6 billion. so you have a lottery worth a billion on a night where you have a full moon. >> dana: what do you think that means? >> bill: time to strike. >> dana: maybe. i think jesse watters bought all of us tickets. that might have been the night before. he says if he won he will give his two weeks' notice. we'll see. >> bill: is that a good thing? >> dana: no. >> bill: let us know, jesse. there is this, check it out from monday. >> what do you think if it is a republican controlled congress? what is your new reality going to be like in washington >> president biden: more difficult. >> dana: president biden how he would feel if the party he labeled as a threat to democracy wins control of congress in today's mid-terms. let's bring in shannon bream. there has been a lot of hype --
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hip -- that might have been too far. >> dana: president biden has dramatically raised the stakes for the mid-term elections declaring as part of the campaign's close that democracy itself is on the ballot. come january he may find himself needing to govern with those he cast as democracy's threats. they knew on january 20, 2021, they would most likely lose the house if not the senate. how could it be the end of democracy? >> that's historically the way it goes. any president will take some type of beating of some measure in that first mid-term election. they know that. i think as we have all discussed, when those two senate seats in georgia went into the d column, it seemed as if the president felt he had a bit more of a mandate than the margins in the house and senate would have
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dictated and was pushed left by many of the progressives, the squad, some of those voices that have dragged him there as the democrats through the leftist part of his party. and why we have this conversation now. if you don't vote for us it's the end of democracy as we know it. but yeah, he says it will get more difficult. republicans will be called obstructionists for two years and block everything he wants to do. they talk to them and say that's our job. we stop things and policy we don't agree with. >> bill: brian kemp in georgia running for re-election down there. it was. got the video just wanted to point that out to virus at home trying to track the candidates when he to go to the polling place. yesterday nancy pelosi spoke and a bit rare since the attack on her husband, paul. play a clip from her interview on cnn when she talks about her own future. >> i know there has been a lot of discussion about whether you would retire if democrats lose the house. i'm asking, have you looked ahead and have you made a
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decision in your mind whatever that decision might be? >> well, i have to say my decision will be effected by what happened in the last week or two. >> will your decision be impacted by the attack in any way? >> yes. >> it will? >> yes. >> bill: ten minutes ago we were talking about the effect of the outcome on joe biden and the house leader. >> you see her that emotional. very much in command and running things there on the house floor and as the speaker. to see that personal side of her has to be terrifying. she talked about getting the knock on the door saying something happened to your husband. he is in the hospital. that has to rattle you no matter how composed you are. she added to the comment saying we can't continue on this path and we want good people to run for office. the first time i have heard her express this may impact people who say i don't want this threat to my family. >> dana: she was expected not to continue on if they lose but now you're right.
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i think it was a moment that all of us can have a little empathy for her and hopefully paul pelosi continues to get better. great to see you. thank you so much. >> i will check the powerball numbers. maybe i'll see you tonight. maybe i won't. >> dana: america votes in the mid-term election. tune in tonight and we have very special democracy 2022 election coverage. it will be anchored by bret baier and martha maccallum starting at 6:00 p.m. on fox news channel. >> bill: brian kemp cast his ballot. georgians voting in two of the more consequential races of the night. guy benson took the bold step of making predictions. the four key factors he is watching and coming up next as fox news democracy 2022 rolls on.
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my name is joshua florence, and one thing i learned being a firefighter is plan ahead. you don't know what you're getting into, but at the end of the day, you know you have a team behind you that can help you. not having to worry about the future makes it possible to make the present as best as it can be for everybody.
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every year we try to exercise more, to be more social, to just relax. and eating healthy every single meal? if only it was this easy for us.
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ballots. control of congress is on the line. guy benson has final predictions. gutsy, i think. good morning. what do you have? hello. >> i'm looking at four factors about how i think about this mid-term cycle. the race by race head-to-head match-ups in individual contests looks so-so, okay for republicans. second, the national polling looks better for republicans. ahead on the congressional ballot, a good sign for them. third look at professional prognosticators. that looks better for the gop overall. then crucially and fourth the fundamentals which you guys have been talking about, we all have for months. the fundamentals, so-called on the cycle are really good for the republicans and the opposition party given all the factors in the country. with all that being said i think -- we'll see what happens very soon. i think we're on track for a good to very good night for the republicans. think i they will probably end up where the democrats did in
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2018, 235 or so in the house. i do think they're slightly favored to win back the senate. 51 or 52 seats. we may have to get to a runoff in georgia to get there. they net one governorship. i cannot wait to have actual results to sink my teeth into as to all the pre-speculation. i'm offer it. >> dana: is there a particular race that are you interested to see how it turns out? >> i think on the house side one of the earliest states to close is virginia. there are three races virginia 2, 7, 10, a few people have pointed this out on social media. if republicans flip virginia two it will be a good night for them. if they flip virginia seven a great night for them. if they flip virginia ten katie bar the door it will be epic. on the senate side there are a few tantalizing ones out there. i watch pennsylvania so close, so much at stake. if republicans hold that seat with dr. oz i think they have
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the senate. they might have the senate by a couple seats if they win pennsylvania. >> bill: we keep this. thank you, guy, nice to have you on today and we'll see whether or not that all happens. >> dana: fun to be with you last night on gutfield. thank you so much, guy. >> bill: thanks, guy. >> dana: it all comes down to this. voters across the country heading to the polls for mid-term elections deciding which party holds power on capitol hill for the next two years and that will determine the future of president biden's agenda. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom." i'm dana perino. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer, good morning. >> dana: the first hour went by fast. >> bill: how did it go? >> dana: easy, smart, easy, smooth. >> bill: i voted early. went by my polling place this morning at 6:15. there was no one if line. >> dana: they already voted early. >> bill: that's the first time i've ever seen no one there. usually there is a lin

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