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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  November 15, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm PST

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eliminate cheating, i will immediately deband voter id, same-day voting and only paper ballots. [cheers and applause]. >> sean: the president a nowing that he is in, he is running for president for 2024. we'll have continuing coverage on the fox news channel. let not your heart be troubled. laura takes it from here. ♪ >> laura: and as sean said, president trump continues to speak. he spoke now almost for about 57 minutes or so. 2024 is off and running. we're going to dip back in and see what he's still saying. >> by 10:00 in the evening, no complaints. you had a winner, you had a loser. the loser went home, the winner, is a friend of mine, nice guy. but he was happy. but there was no complaints. and if there is a complaint you check it out and you can fix it very easily. you can find out what's going on.
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no, paper ballots, same-day voting, voter id. so simple. and, and we want all votes counted by election night. cause chase. >> they spend all of the money for machines and all of this stuff and they end up two weeks later three weeks later, by that time everyone forgot there was even an election. it's horrible. and this doesn't happen, i said it before, it doesn't happen in third world countries. they do better than we do, it's horrible what's happening with our election and election process. and i'll get that job done. that's a very personal job for me. i take that very personal. but this is just the beginning of our national greatness agenda. and what peace what we call it, a national greatness agenda. because our country can be greater than it ever was.
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our country was great. our country's not great anymore. our country's a laughing stock right now. but our country can be greater than it ever was before. by a lot. there will be more, much more to come in the months ahead. there are so many things we can do. many of them are not even hard to implement. the journey ahead of us will not be easy. anyone who truly seeks to take on this rigged and corrupt system will be faced with a storm of fire that only a few could understand. right? i happen to have some children in the front row, i think they understand. in fact, my one boy, stand up, eric. [cheers and applause]. >> i think he got more subpoenas
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than any man in the history of our country. so unfair. al capone, you all heard of the great gangster? al capone got far less, billy the kid got almost none. jesse james, no. eric trump got more subpoenas. >> laura: we're going to go back to president trump when news warrants. just one week after the 2022 midterms and look at this we're already gearing up for 2024. so let's play the moment where former president trump officially announced his third run for the white house. >> in order to make america great and glorious again, i am tonight announcing my candidacy for president of the united states. this will not be my campaign, this will be our campaign, all together. >> laura: and he officially filed his 2024 candidacy with the federal election commission just minutes before his remarks, ones in which he touted his
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previous successes without much of his usual ad libbing flare. >> we turn the page on decades of globalist sellouts and one-sided trade deals lifted millions out of poverty and together we built the greatest economy in the history of the world. for the first time in memory, china was reeling and back on its heels. you've never seen that before. the first president to do it for that long a period. [cheers and applause]. >> the world was at peace. america was prospering. and our country was on track for an amazing future. because i made big promises to the american people and, unlike other presidents, i kept my promises. >> laura: joining us now is ben demen itch fox news trip toran editor at large at the spectator former congressman byron donald and senior fellow victor davis
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hanson. congressman, let's start with you. some are suggesting this might be too early to announce. people are wondering about that. your thoughts tonight. >> i think when you get in a race, you get in a race. the president has been thinking about this for quite some time and he says we're not going to wait we're going right now. take a back drop forget the midterm elections put that aside. america is struggling and of all the people who know what to do we know donald trump can get the country back on track. he did it once he can do it again. the timing is up to him because you know he's been thinking about this for quite some time he's decided to set the pace for the '24 elections. >> laura: ben the congressman mentioned the i had in terms but here's donald trump touting his endorsement success. >> i do want to point out that in the midterms my endorsement success rate was 232 wins and only 22 losses. we elected a group of incredibly talented america first leaders who will be stars of our party
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for many years to come. >> laura: ben, those numbers, i believe, are correct. obviously some high profile losses as well that people tend to focus on. will voters buy that? >> i don't think that they really laura and the reason is that so many of the endorsements that donald trump made were for these outsider candidates who were lacking in political experience who ultimately ran into, i think, a really tough storm. so many different things that went against them, expensive primaries, not having enough money to be on air earlier, infighting between the different republican leadership within these senate fights in particular and i think at the end of the day people are generally disappointed a lot of republicans are disappointed with the outcomes here at the same time i do think what you heard from donald trump tonight was very serious and somber about the nature of the country. he said repeatedly that this was something he felt he had to do and he felt compelled to do it giving the nature of the challenges facing the country and he's not wrong when he says that. we see so many concerns that are
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very real and significant on every kitchen table across the country and the question really is whether republican voters in the primaries trust him to be the one to offer the best answer. >> laura: victor, today on the hill, mitch mcconnell, we are waiting for him he doesn't like to speak much but when he does speak people list and this is what he said about the midterms. we underperformed among independents and moderates because their impression of many of the people in our party in leadership roles is that they're involved in chaos, negativity, excessive attacks, and it frightened independent and moderate republican voters. >> laura: victor, your response to that given where the party is today and the lack of success in campaigns that mitch mcconnell himself funded with the senate leadership pac money.
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>> yeah. well, i mean, he may have a point but what are we going to go back to romneyism and mccainism? the republicans hadn't won 51% of the national vote since 1988 so there were problems and when he looks -- i mean that's one criticism of the midterm obviously but there were so many other force mull pliers laura. they got outspent. they got completely surprised by the mail-in ballots and they had warning in 2020. i don't know why senator mcconnell put so much money in alaska when he could have helped blake masters. there was misallocations of funds. trump made a good point when he said we're not just critics. we're going to give you positive solutions and he tried to do that for most of that hour but but that was one of the criticisms, they had good criticisms of the open border and gas and inflation and crime and everybody said and, and, what are you going to do about it and they fell silent.
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nobody had a contract for america's specific agenda. i know they didn't think they wanted to do that because they would be open to criticism but that was a big mistake because the narrative was they're negative they're insurrectionists they were negative where they could have been more positive. tonight he was much more somber and soft spoken and he did things that people that tried to address a lot of criticisms of him. he said get out and vote for herschel walker just don't be critical and he had sort of a softer tone for most of the speech. i think that was in reaction to a lot of the criticism. i think he had to go out and announce now because people told him if you don't the snowball effect of desantis is going to just increase. so it was either now or never i think >> laura: byron, when you think about it, the status quo won out with these leadership elections, and it often happens that way, so both mccarthy is reelected, he gets the speakership and mitch mcconnell and i believe the rnc, ron a mcdaniel will
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hold that as well. your reaction to just that after the midterms, is that the right course? >> look, i think we've got to have changes because the reality is, in this midterm election we missed the moment. nobody can deny that. and i don't want to get into the finger pointing and say oh, donald trump did this or this candidate did that. where was republican leadership in some of these races? when you have people like mehmet oz in pennsylvania who didn't have money for five weeks because he went through that tough primary? where was the senate leadership fund to be there behind him as opposed to john fetterman doing whatever he wanted unopposed. we have to start getting into e. i agree with victor. the day of romneyism that day is over. >> laura: when mcconnell, i don't mean to dwell on mcconnell but when he says basically the party is mean and it's attacking and negative and the tone is bad and it's chaos, how is that different from what any pundit on msnbc says every morning? >> there's a fundamental problem with mitch mcconnell's approach, one it's old, old faked says you
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can wait until after labor day to spend money and also very vindictive. he spent money trying to stop don bolduc and then pulled the money when don bowl dick said something not nice about mitch mcconnell. that ace not how a you achieve majorities. they either exist to put republicans in a position to be in majority or they exist only to backup what mitch mcconnell wants and i think unfortunately this cycle proved without any shade of doubt that that's the actual reason why they exist. >> laura: yeah. victor you mentioned the desantis snowball effect but tonight fox is reporting that the florida governor delivered the key note presentation at the republican governor's association annual meeting. now, according to our source, he got a really warm reception from an audience that's apparently very energized about the idea of his applying his strategy from florida to battle ground states across the country. and then asked if desantis mentioned the former president,
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sources said trump was not a topic of conversation tonight. ben, do you think that will be the strategy going forward? i'm sorry, excuse me, victor. >> yeah, i think so. but i think all of us are tired of people telling us that this candidate shouldn't have run or that candidate shouldn't have run. let the people decide. if they're bad candidates the people are responsible for it. they're informed voters. so we're going to have a primary. that's what it's designed for. my only caution is, i wish at some point the people in this race would say, if i'm not successful, i'm going to support the victorious candidate. because they did that, they had said that on the stage in 2000, as you remember, laura, in 2016 with the presumption that donald trump would never get the nomination and as soon as he did, a lot of those candidates backed out. so i would like to see both of them, and whoever else join say and you know what? we're a unity party, may the best man or woman win and whoever wins we're going to
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unite behind them and that would be something to see and witness. >> laura: byron that is a great point because the democrats, no matter what happens, no matter how bad things get and they've gotten pretty bad policy-wise for the democrats, obviously inflation, crime and the border. they are united. i mean with the exception of of the squabbles of the squad every now and then. they remain united but we have the senate minority leader taking shots at the party two days, seems like two days after the election, a week after the election. i thought that was odd. >> not just now. go back to the comments of how we have bad candidates. timeout i never heard bill belichick talk about his players even if they didn't match up with players on the other side. i never heard phil jackson say that or joe torry say that. you can't have that in a leadership position. you're either all in or you're all out and if you're not going to be all in we don't have time for that today because the democrats are united and right now they're pushing the pace that's leading this country to a downfall. we have to reverse course. we need to do it now. all the little side stuff just
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put it aside. the country comes first. >> laura: yeah, ben, you don't hear schumer talking about his candidates. >> no. >> laura: or his party in anything other than a positive forward we're marching together we're going to have a great time it's going to be a great america. you hear that repeatedly from him. >> it's basically a sham fight with the squad anyway in the sense they have pulled the party so far to the left but also to your point, this circular firing squad thing that happens among republicans, it's absolutely hurting them. i think it hurt them significantly this cycle in ways we are going to continue to learn as we look forward. to byron's point, the fact is that we don't have time in this country to allow the left to continue to press the way that they are pressing on these critical culture war issues. they essentially take away from this election that they were vindicated. that all of this trans agenda stuff, all of this crt stuff and the aggressive things they're doing through their schools they feel we can get away with it now and we don't have the time for that. as a country we should not accept that and unfortunately that's a consequence of the
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mistakes republicans made. >> laura: victor, and to ben's point, these issues did motivate parents across the country to vote in school board elections, house elections in california and out in long island. lee zeldin made a lot of these points in his campaign, especially about crime. so these issues are kitchen table issues for americans all across this country. >> the problem's not with the people, they're enthused. they had more national republican votes across state lines than democrats did. the problem is in the leadership. if mitch mcconnell had just said i disagree with donald trump he has candidates but we're all republicans and we're going to support everybody and the people who are divisive is the president of the united states not me not donald trump not us when he calls us semi fascist and unamerican he could have put all that focus on that rhetoric on biden and give positive corrections instead he
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downplayed the candidates, he was playing games and allocating money depending on his future career as senate majority leader. so he wasn't uniting the country. the people are there. it's the leadership. and if you keep doing the same thing over and over and over again and you lose, then you better try something new. and they had the votes but they didn't have the leadership. >> laura: mollie hemingway's point last night i think his popularity rateeries like 7%. >> so unpopular. >> laura: great to see you tonight thank you so much for being with us >> we have a lot more to get to here on ingraham angle lots to get to. >> just a short time ago the republicans won back control of the house of representatives and it was with a great trump-endorsed candidate congressman elect kevin kiely who is a fantastic person.
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a fantastic person. and i'm very happy it was his vote that did it. >> laura: and we are happy that kevin kiely is joining us now from california. kevin, apparently ap has still not officially called this race but it is a done deal. your reaction tonight to being lucky number 218. i'm so thrilled about this. >> thanks laura. it's been called by the decision desk so very excited to come in and push us over into the majority and bring some new leadership that is greatly needed in this country. the house of representatives is the part of our government that is most responsive to public opinion. that's the way our framers designed it the way our constitution is designed. so by electing a i knew majority in the house the american people have said we need change and i'm excited to get to work with the new majority to deliver that change you'll be shocked to know
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eric swalwell another california congressman had a slightly different take on the midterms. >> the voters clearly rejected chaos and that's what if republicans ran on, and they awarded competence and we ran on the infrastructure bill, the chips act, the rescue plan, and that frame worked in our direction. it was really a win for democracy. >> laura: sexual well's using the same line asthma con about thingsment kevin, your response to that. >> well, no, i mean, clearly what we've seen is there are record levels of dissatisfaction with the american people right now when it comes to the economy, when it comes to the absolutely open border, when it comes to rising crime across this country and assault on parental rights. americans are registering levels of dissatisfaction we have not seen so by electing a republican house they have sent a signal. so i think now when you have a
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democrat led senate and the biden administration administration in control of the white house, the house of representatives is now the vehicle for effectuating that change. what you're going to see is, you know, get into it right away, get inflation under control, get crime under control and to use the oversight powers the subpoena powers the ability to question members of the administration to get to the backs we're putting that to use immediately which nancy pelosi's congress has steadfastly refuseded to do the last two years. >> laura: all right kevin thank you and congratulations again maybe this is the beginning of something really great in california >> the story of paul pelosi and his attacker gets a little weirder by the day and now there might be a media coverup component to all of this. and speaking of twisted story lines we're learning more about how involved the if he said were in january 6th. both those stories in moments. careful now. nice!
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♪ >> after a knock and announce, the front door was opened by mr. pelosi. the 82 year old did not immediately declare an emergency or try to leave his home but instead began walking several feet back into the foyer toward the assailant and away from
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police. it's unclear if if 82 year old was already injured or what his mental state was say sources. >> laura: that bombshell report about the attack on paul pelosi was quickly wiped from all nbc platforms shortly after airing earlier this month. and in its place now sits an editor's note that says this piece has been removed because publication it did not meet nbc news reporting standards. well, also missing from nbc is veteran journalist miguel almager who hasn't been seen on the network in nearly two weeks. the daily beast reports that he was suspended pending an internal investigation. so now our questions. what standards did this report not meet? was it because of an unreliable source or is that what some are suggesting? and if so, why the cloak and dagger routine about all this? why not just say it publicly. joining me now is charlie kirk
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founder and president of turning point usa. charlie this is an odd turn on this story. what's your gut given what we know so far. >> story's so bizarre. usually when journalists botch stories they get awards and honored they don't get suspended. i was thinking to myself where are the people suspended saying the virus came from the himalayan mountains from a bat or wet market. or the hunter biden laptop or the covington kids stories. or all these stories that journalists so provably got things wrong and there is no accountability yet this journalist who probably was saying something because he was informed or had some fact trail we don't know we could look at body camera footage get suspended immediately from nbc news? it's very strange because this idea of checks and balances in media it only goes one way. if you lie about trump, if you lie about anybody on the right, that's perfectly fine. you can mess up the hunter biden
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laptop story. but if you maybe get something wrong which we don't know if he got anything wrong by the way laura because no one's talking about it then you go into suspension and into the media equivalent of the witnessness protection program. >> laura: he's been at nbc as long as i can remember, 15 years or so, been there quite a while. i think he's -- he seems like a professional guy but again i think people have problems with sometimes reporting is that when it's just a clear, you know, mistake then just say what the mistake was. >> yeah. >> laura: but they don't do that and the bodycam footage wasn't released and surveillance video wasn't monitored and people start doubting it. as you said the report might have been totally wrong and then there's nothing to it but that's why there's a problem here, i think, for a lot of people watching this. charlie i want to move off though because obviously this attack and the media narrative that took off after gives
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dhsecretary mayorkas license to say something he did today. >> domestic violent extremist particularly through lone actors or small groups loosely affiliated are spurred to violence by ideologies of hate, anti government sentiments, personal grievances and other narratives propel gated on online platforms. >> laura: charlie is this more of a justification to censor information both on line and just in regular news reporting? >> yes, and i hope the new republican congress makes it a top priority to actually check and balance may orkas and what the department of homeland security is not doing about the invasion happening and what they are doing to our own citizens. it's interesting when he talks about the narratives of anti government. he's alluding to conservatives
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he should say it. the media never go back and mention the assassination attempt against lee zeldin or kari lake running for governor of arizona getting suspicious packages. always one direction and yes this is going to try to be a continued narrative to use the national security that was once used against domestic terrorists to be used against our own citizens. >> laura: charlie thank you. speaking of twisty stories the information about january 6th gets murkier. last thursday we told you a man who served as the oath keepers number two was secretly reporting to the fbi for months leading up to january 6th. tonight we're learning he had some company. the new york times says the fbi had as many as eight informants inside the group known as the proud boys in the months around january 6th. well, luckily fbi director chris wray was testifying at a house hearing today to help clear things up, right?
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>> there's a suggestion, for example, that the fbi's confidential human sources or fbi employees instigated or orchestrated january 6th that's categorically false. >> laura: did you have confidential human sources dressed as trump supporters inside the capitol on january 6th prior to the doors being open. >> again i have to be very careful -- >> it should be a no. >> laura: what a joke. joining me now author of january 6th how democrats used the can't toll protest to launch a war on terror against political thought. julie how long can wray and the fbi keep this going, this trickle out of information. first it's none then it's one then it's eight. >> well, they can't because now what's happening is the trials are underway. so the -- >> laura: trials of. >> of the oath keepers, that trying has been going on since the end of september so doj is forced to produce this evidence and now the preparation for the trial of the proud boys which starts on december 12th, the doj
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has tried to conceal the information about confidential human sources from the defense team since last year. they produced over 500 pages, heavily redacted pages related to the number and activities of fbi informants embedded in that group. and so now christopher wray is on the hot seat again. you saw how defensive he got. laura, the answer should have been no. why didn't he just say no? of course there weren't fbi assets dressed as trump supporters in the capitol before it was a breach. >> laura: just like this nbc story they should just say he didn't have enough sources. he only had one source our rule is two or three sources so it wasn't a reliable source but they say nothing and that's what gives people pause about all of these things. >> well, and it should laura because as you and i have talked about on numerous occasions this also happened at the same time that the fbi concocted and executed the whitmer kidnapping plot that involved dozens of
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supervising agents, undercover agents informants who tried to make it look like white supremacists domestic terrorists like christopher wray was talking about today loyal to donald trump tried to kidnap crotchen whitmer right before the 2020 election. this was all happening at the same time. cannot be a coincidence. and when you have an fbi that is clinging to a narrative that is false, we know from whistle blowers that they are asking agents to falsify data to bolster this domestic terrorism narrative and now you have all the information about these informants, i really hope the republican congress really gets to the bottom but exposes all of this wide open. >> laura: julie great to see you. thanks for staying on this >> now in moments a brand new feature on the ingraham angle, mr. fetterman goes to washington. plus we tried to warn you, the longer the war between russia and ukraine drags on the greatest chance the us gets dragged into it. tonight after russian missiles
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reportedly landed in nato member poland killing two it might be closer than we would like. details in moments.
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>> laura: tonight we're kicking off the first in a series we'll call mr. fetterman goes to washington. newly elected senate members had their orientation and pennsylvania's john fetterman was almost unrecognizable in a suit. now, the massive marion et was greeted as a concurring hero by his new masters. >> whoa. why are you in here? >> laura: but it wasn't all breezy as shrek mace his first trek through the senate he was asked about his trademark look. when the reporter tweeted he didn't get reply to the question they came in and said he's still recovering from a streak and has
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problems with auditory and the way you yell won't work here. but beyond the pesky reporters fetterman has another potential challenger to keep his eye on and it's one of his closest friends, well, his wife, gisele. during the campaign there were suggestions she was really pulling all the strings because she gave speeches, did interviews and some even mused that she was angling to replace him if he should win. well, tonight we have our hands on two pieces of evidence that show that she might be slowly pushing him out of the frame at least. now, the first picture shows them posing in front of his new office. as you can see his right arm is chopped out. not terribly egregious, come on. until you see part of a larger narrative developing. the next picture shows the fettermans with fellow pennsylvania senator bob casey and his wife. as you can see here, the top of his head is cut off.
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so how long until he's cropped out of the pictures completely? okay. now, we're going to continue to monitor this in our ongoing series mr. fetterman goes to washington. until the next episode >> now, the ingram and has said for months the longer the rush ukraine goes on the more precarious the us would find itself in and last week seemed like the biden administration was finally a agreeing. there was the news the biden officials were pushing for a peace deal behind closed doors. that was a first but it might be too late. today we are he told two missiles launched into nato member poland killing two people and now an article four is a meeting of all nations about a response. joining me is chris bedford editor at the common sense society. chris, things have escalated it seems quickly here. this is insane at this point. >> they have escalated.
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now, the most recent reporting from the reporter who broke this story is that it looks like these missiles may have been shot down by ukrainian forces and landed in poland but either way this illustrates the extreme danger of the situation here. for months and months and months, and you've been talking about it, the biden administration and european leaders basically claimed don't worry the adults are in charge this sort of thing can't escalate out of control while at the same time putting u.s. advisors in bases and other native allies like poland being right on the border in a dangerous position and war gets extremely dangerous. war gets sloppy. people can get hurt and these things can spin out of control. when they spin out of control with a nuclear power that's a massive threat. the united states right now is not in a position to fight china a real threat and deal with serious war with russia which it looks like at some point could possibly be drawn into despite at least a little bit of restraint shown so far today. >> laura: biden was asked about the missiles tonight and this
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was his response. >> mr. president is it too early to say whether this missile was fired from russia? >> there is preliminary information that contests that. i don't want to say that until we complete investigate. but it is -- i -- it's unlikely in the minds of the trajectory that it was fired from russia. but we'll see. >> laura: first of all chris biden does not look great there. but do you get the sense that this is going to hasten the administration's push perhaps for a peace deal or some type of agreement given how close we could be to the edge here? >> his look there certainly didn't inspire confidence in his strength but at least his answer was a little more calculated than maybe when he pushed earlier for regime change of vladimir putin. i've heard from folks i've been talking to around dc that some
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of the military officials who are less spay the war have rested back control of the strategy for some of to the state department people who are much more spay regime change in russia just like the last couple wars the united states entered that's one where the people in dc haven't actually thought of an end game. what happens if putin is destabilized and embarrassed in front of his right flank what happens if he's undermined and potentially loses power. maybe that's something we don't want and it's not good for ukrainian either and we should want peace. as long as they continue to fund the war ukraine seems content to continue to fight it and we have situations like today. >> laura: chris thank you >> now with pelosi's political future is in flux a new heir apparent coming up from newt gingrich. stay there.
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♪ >> give a warm drag race welcome to the speaker of the house, nancy pelosi. >> oh, my god! >> can i get an amen? >> amen. >> you've got to be ready to throw a punch for the children. >> it was about the children. the children, the children, the children. >> but to be clear you're not
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taking any arrows out of your quiver, you're not ruling anything out. >> good morning. sunday morning. >> laura: we're going to miss her. as we reported earlier tonight the house officially flipped. the gop won its 218th seat. now in anticipation of this, we have just learned that nancy pelosi is ready to move on from her leadership role, according to the publication puck. she believes that hakeem jeffery's will be the next leader of the democratic caucus. now, that's kind of sad because it means that we'll get fewer moments like the one we just played from old nance and maybe just more vitriol instead. >> the threat right now in this country to the american people are extreme maga republicans. that's the threat. that's the problem. that's the crisis that we
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confront. >> laura: joining us now newt gingrich former speaker of the house and fox news contributor. newt, i guess the maga republicans, according to mr. jeffery's, they are responsible for inflation and high crime and an open border. >> well, look, first of all, for any democrat from the party that represents big cities to talk about threats without talking about the murders, the rapes, the carjackings, the robberies, that their big cities actually have encouraged by releasing people back on the street is nonsense. second, i would argue the greatest threat to america's future is the collapse of our public schools under the domination of the teachers unions so that we're not going to be able to compete with china or india or anyplace else if we continue to produce children who can't do math, can't read, can't write, and are prop began dazed
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into worrying about their gender in the third grade. it's a crisis. so i would be glad to talk to him some day about the real threats and crises. but let me just say i am so thrilled that kiffin mccarthy's going to be the next speaker. i regard the handing over of the gavel, which probably won't be by pelosi. i think she'll leave by by hakeem jeffery's or whoever it is the handing over the gavel from a left wing democrat to a conservative republican is the biggest single outcome of of this election and a great victory for conservative values. >> laura: now, newt, the coast saw some progress to republicans. the fact that we were able to flip some seats in california, we just had kevin kiley on, he was the 218th seat, we had the seats in new york, lee zeldin helped with that. how important is it for republicans going forward to really work on building out some support in new england, the coast, mid atlantic and also out
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in the pacific northwest in california? >> it's very important. look, i think we need a very thorough evaluation of what worked and what didn't work. we should have won the senate seat in nevada. we should have won the senate seat in arizona. we should have won the senate seat in new hampshire. and i think mitch mcconnell has a lot to answer for because in those three places, the mismanagement of the republican establishment cost us at least three senate seats and you could toss in dr. oz. i love the fact that you're going to follow the whole process of fetterman coming to washington. and we'll see how he evolves and how he changes, you know, in between periods of marijuana and whatever else it is he does. but the republican party and kevin mccarthy's really taking the lead, look at the victory in oregon, look at the victories in
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california and new york and florida. we're right at the edge of breakout. we've gained seats in the house in 20, we've gained seats in the house this year despite the failure of the senate team, despite what happened with governors. and i think that, with the right approach in the next two years, we could have an amazing 2024 by meeting the needs of the american people and drawing the contrast with the failures of biden and the big government socialists and the woke democrats. >> laura: but, newt, when mcconnell was asked about this today, he said the republican party, according to moderates and other independents, has become known as the party of chaos and attacks and negativity. and that was the reason that there was some failures in the midterms. your reaction to that from mcconnell. >> i think mitch mcconnell, more than any single person, cost us control of senate. he spent $4 million attacking
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don bolduc with despicable ads. bolduc was a private who became a general. he had five bronze stars. he was a courageous leader and he was smeared by mitch mcconnell's staff. mcconnell pulled out of nevada three weeks before the election and i think cost us nevada. he pulled out of arizona. fact is, mitch mcconnell runs a mitch mcconnell pack and then raises the money as though he's going to fight for control of the senate. he's fighting for mitch mcconnell, not for the republican party. >> laura: all right, newt, it's so good to see you tonight. no better person to talk about all this than gingrich. up next, bond villain or head of the great reset? the last fight will tell you coming up.
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>> laura: what is the global itch head of the world economic forum doing at the g-20? we'll let him tell you. >> what we have to confront is a
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deep systemic and structural restructuring of our world. and since it takes some time and the world will look differently after we have done this transition process. >> greg: transition process, klaus schwab. well, rejected. up next, gutfeld. ♪ ♪ >> greg: happy tuesday, everyone. i have to say, this is the best-looking audience we have had so far. [cheers and applause] >> greg: yeah. yummy. there's more 10s than in the

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