tv Americas Newsroom FOX News January 16, 2023 7:00am-8:01am PST
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many believe section 230 needs to be revised. >> content moderation is something that we need. the standards should be that section 230 or whatever the law is should be interpreted to permit publication consistent with other laws. >> the supreme court hears the case next month. changing section 230 has bipartisan support. expect this to be only the beginning. >> mike: we'll follow it. thank you very much. >> dana: this is a fox news alert. customs and border protection sources tell fox news the number of december migrant encounters at the u.s. southern border will exceed 250,000 for the first time on record. officials have not yet released the official total. welcome to a new hour of in us news. i'm dana perino, good morning, mike. >> mike: great to be with you. i'm mike emanuel in for bill
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hemmer. eric adams visited the border over the weekend and his city has received buses full of migrants in recent months. former acting dhs secretary chad wolf calling on the federal government to do more. >> it's clear they don't have a good handle what's going on but also clear the rest of the world knows what most americans know which is that border is wide open. >> dana: former chief is standing by. madison is standing by how it is affecting american cities and griff jenkins is in eagle pass, texas along the border. how do things look this morning? >> good morning. things are not slowing down in the slightest bit. if we can go to our drone right now high above eagle pass, the bridge connecting to mexico, you can see some national guardsmen repairing some fencing and barbed wire sections where they are trying to keep these numbers down. as we can show you, there is
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more migrants coming all day every day. we have had at least three groups coming so far. it comes as cbp sources tell fox news we'll have a december of more than 250,000 migrant encounters. that has never happened in history, dana. the secondest highest -- the highest on record currently is may of last year 241,000. we were able to speak with congressman represents this area, representative tony gonzalez yesterday he came down to the river to see it firsthand. a little of what he had to say. take a listen. >> that's what i worry the most. everyone starting to get numb to it as if the numbers are okay. it is not okay. or laws are broken and immigration system is non-existent. >> take a look at this drone footage we shot yesterday morning of a large group, 150 migrants in this group from the countries we've been seeing
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regularly, ecuador, cuba, columbia, a few from peru. there were also three migrants, one from senegal, two from western african countries that speaks to the mix of the countries coming. we know there was more than 140 different countries along the southwest border this fiscal year so far. we went up into kinney county where a rancher recounted a harrowing experience she had with migrants trying to break into her property. take a listen here. >> nobody wants to hurt anybody but it is just me and my daughter. i will shoot them if i have to. it's scary. it is frightening, you know. i feel we're losing our country. >> the kinney county sheriffs arrived and took the migrants into custody but just a part of this crisis that is continuing to spiral out of control. obviously you have now got mayors visiting places like el paso. many of the residents and border
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officials here in the del rio sector in eagle pass hope that some will come here as well to see just how bad it is getting as we head into a new year. dana. >> dana: another year and it is still happening. thank you. >> mike: major american cities including new york, chicago and washington are paying millions to shelter migrants crossing the border. eric adams paid a visit to the border in el paso this weekend said the big apple is at a breaking point over the migrant crisis which would cost the city upwards of $2 billion. madison from fox business is live in new york city with the details. good morning. >> good morning, mike. thousands of miles from the southern border cities are being crushed by the migrant crisis like here in new york. the row hotel completely rented out to migrants. the city spelling millions at a
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time where migrants are coming in by the hundreds every single day. the problem seems to only be accelerating. as we have touched upon a u.s. customs and border protection source saying 250,000 are expected for the first time in history in december. the cities already are feeling the difference. friday new york city mayor issued an emergency aid request saying the cost to handle asylum seekers is approaching the $2 billion mark. double what the office had initially budgeted. on the trip to the border adams made it clear he expects help. >> we are not pointing the finger at el paso, we're not pointing the finger at houston. we are pointing the finger where it should be pointed, our national government. this is a national problem. we must be real immigration reform. >> of course new york city is far from the only city
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struggling with this. in denver they have roughly 2.5 million allotted to deal with the influx of migrants. they have already spent 1.5 of that 2.5 million and 500,000 of those dollars went toward buying bus tickets for the migrants to travel to other cities around the u.s. including right here in new york. mike. >> mike: calls for action from the federal government growing louder. >> dana: let's bring the former acting ice director. here we are 2023 and well into the year. this is not changing. it feels like there might be something afoot when you have mayor adams going to el paso on behalf of perhaps not just new york city but other mayors to say we have to do something more. do you see a silver lining? >> you have an agreement that an uncontrolled border with thousands of people coming every
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24 hours is a burden not only on the countries sending them and the pipeline countries like mexico or border communities but every community in america. the mayor has pointed out it is a burden because the border is out of control and talked about pointing the finger at the national government. this was a decision that this administration made to flout the law and ignore what was going on on the border they made choices about the migrant protection program and stop building the wall and what the immigration policy would be and they are all the wrong choices. now we see the largest surge ever. 250,000 migrants across the border are just encounters not counting all the drugs or the people who were trafficked or the people who evaded law enforcement at the southwest border. this problem gets bigger every single day. >> dana: call for number two. migrant encounters. the numbers are stark. 2020, 458,000.
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2021, 1.7 million. 2022, 2.3 million encounters not including the gotaways or drugs or human trafficking as you have been saying. we'll see if there is anything that can actually be done. i do wonder, though, if the mayors of this country, if they start to feel the pressure, that the border states were feeling, that if they can ban together to see if they can actually get something done. they will be in washington, d.c. on thursday as a group. do you have any inkling from ice about perhaps something that could be changed in terms of policy that will try to get this done and get the border more secure? >> surges like the ones we saw the last two years and the ones previously have only been ended in two days. significant detention. people held until they can see the judge or migrant protection protocols. the remain in mexico program, safe third country is in u.s. law. this add inis trigs could enact that policy across the board now
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with an agreement with mexico. we made an agreement on some just this last week when the president was there. why can't we make another agreement with them on migrant protection protocols? it's what the mayors should ask for and minimize the problem everynight. >> dana: you also have the fact that all of these states -- let's go to the l locations. you see your constituents in the grocery stores and the hospitals and schools under pressure and our laws and compassion say that children have to be educated. i just wonder if there is perhaps now pain has been spread around a little bit if there could be a difference. if you could do one other thing what would that be if that were to -- if you had a magic wand as the president asked the people in el paso. if you did, what would you do?
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>> we have to enforce the border. we have to build more barrier and sufficient detention for the people eligible for an immigration hearing and want to claim asill emotion. let's keep them in custody until they see the judge. a lot of resources and he can call. the only way it's been solved. you need a consequence. people are being incentivized. all the people coming to new york, denver and chicago are being released at the border encouraging more people all over the world to come. what about the migrants in the pipeline in the legal immigration pipeline? they are taking their time and waiting for the rule of law to play out in their case and they see thousands of people coming illegally every day. >> dana: they have been hurt the most. the ones doing it legally and following the process have been hurt incredibly. all right. ron, stay in touch with us and we'll have you back soon no doubt. thank you. >> thank you. >> mike: special counsel robert hur begins his first full week
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investigating president biden over the discovery of classified documents at his delaware home and the biden penn center office in washington. it was announced over the weekend even more classified documents were discovered on mr. biden's property. david spunt is live at the justice department with the latest. good morning. >> hi, good morning to you both. not an easy job for newly appointed special counsel robert hur. he is investigating the president of the united states to see if perhaps a crime was committed. over the weekend we heard from the special counsel to the president richard saaber announced he discovered an additional five documents happened around the same time the attorney general announced the appointment of special counsel hur. the documents were discovered on the delaware property of the president and the revelation has even some of the president's biggest defenders asking and answering tough questions. >> is it possible that national security was jeopardized here?
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>> i don't think we can exclude the possibility without nothing more of the facts. i would like to know what the assessment is from the i.c. >> january 9th news of the classified documents found in early november finally breaks. one more document is found at his home by his personal attorney and five more documents were found january 12th in wilmington and over the weekend on saturday he sends out an email announces those additional documents that he found on thursday the 12th. >> it's an embarrassment, no doubt about it. is there more to it? i doubt it. we'll find out from the special counsel as he goes about his business. >> republicans pushing for the visitor logs in wilmington as peter doocy said the last hour the white house now confirming there are no visitor logs for wilmington. the white house touting the fact they have visitor logs for the
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white house, something the predecessor, donald trump administration did not do. visitor logs for wilmington, something that apparently doesn't exist, mike. >> mike: david, thanks very much. later this hour we'll speak with former f.b.i. assistant director chris swecker about the disparity between how former president trump and president biden are being treated over found classified documents. >> dana: a warning some viewers may find this video very disturbing. it shows the moments just before a plane crash in nepal. the most deadly in that country in decades. we have the details on this tragedy. businesses nationwide are struggling to fill job openings. how experts say the labor shortage is affecting consumers. before we begin, i'd like to thank our sponsor, liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance,
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>> dana: heart wrenching video shows the airlines flight that attempted to land at a newly opened airport in a tourist town when it crashed in nepal. 69 of the 72 people on board were killed. four people are still missing and feared dead. the cause is under investigation. just last may 22 people were killed when a passenger plane also crashed in nepal. >> mike: businesses across the country are struggling to fill job openings. experts say a labor shortage is ultimately affecting consumers. rich edson is live down the hall in washington. good morning, rich. >> good morning. labor shortages from the upheaval of the pandemic have
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fed to supply chain problems. business staffing and higher prices for consumers and helped workers negotiate better salaries. percentage of working-age americans in the u.s. labor force is a full percentage point lower than before the pandemic. >> we're seeing the historically high openings across the spectrum. certainly in things like leisure and hospitality, and low wage service workers but also in manufacturing. we have really high levels of job openings compared to the available unemployed workers out there. it is a system-wide issue and there is not an easy, quick fix. >> last month powell said there was a structural labor shortage with more than 4 million fewer workers available for demand. responding to that robert wright, the secretary of labor in the clinton administration said there is no labor shortage.
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there is a shortage of jobs paying sufficient wages to attract workers to fill openings. conservatives have blamed government action, the pandemic era. >> so you've got a lot of people sitting on the sidelines because frankly they are flush for the moment. what we have to hope is that once they run out of money, they will start concluding it is better to work than not to work. >> the white house is examining government intervention on childcare, housing and workforce training to help get americans back to work. >> mike: thanks very much. >> dana: a new "wall street journal" survey shows economists still seeing a recession coming this year with higher interest rates despite easing inflation. 3/4 of respondents said the federal reserve would not get a soft landing. let's bring in taylor rigs on
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the fox business network. good to have you at fox. thank you for being here with me to help explain all of this. call for number one is the survey of economists saying there will be a recession. i see business leaders are mixed. some think it will be a sharp recession, a tough one rick others say not so bad. >> most of the economist we've speaking with are hoping it will be mild. if there is any good news, of course recession is never good news, but if there is any good news from that mild recession nowhere near the recession we all experienced in 2008. leverage levels are better, consumers, balance sheets at home are in better shape than they were back in 2008. recession is also difficult if you are the one losing your job. if it's mild it may be just a few quarters, a couple months hopefully you can come out on the other side. but inflation has just been the
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story and the reason we might go into a recession. that really has to tamp down on all the price increases we see. >> dana: when you see businesses doing significant layoffs in the financial or tech sector. does it give you an indication of what's to come or is that in the past? >> what's interesting, that has been the classic leading indicator and yet we haven't seen the layoffs, announcements, goldman sachs, sales force, financial and tech sector. we haven't seen it show up in the data. we talk about the jobs data. we have the first friday of every month is the employment numbers. and we're still growing jobs. so we haven't quite seen that. but you are starting to see a slowdown in other areas of the economy. housing certainly has been one of them where you are really starting to see it. the manufacturing sector, you are starting to see a little rollover in that data. so in many respects you could
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say -- >> dana: america will have a debate about the debt ceiling. it is coming. kevin mccarthy is the new speaker and what he said over the weekend. watch. >> what i really think we would do is treat it like we would treat our own household. a child you gave a credit card and they kept hitting the limit you wouldn't keep increasing it. what are you spending your money on? how can we cut out items? every government has to do this. let's sit down together and look at the places that we can change our behavior? >> dana: how are business leaders looking at this debate that's to come on capitol hill? >> economic story and a policy story. from the economic story it is a little more arbitrary. we've raised the debt ceiling 100 times since 1960. many economists aren't looking at this as a arbitrary number and raise it and spend the money. the policy story which you are more familiar with than i am has been a big one. what it means politically and
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what it means in terms of trying to rein in spending. the penn wharton budget model showing by 2050 we could have 225% debt to gdp. that's a big number. that's the long term structural issue we deal with right now. it leads to printing money, more inflation, devaluing currency. none of that is good. those are the long-term ramifications. the here and now may not be so bad. policy is another story. >> dana: you'll help us understand each other as we go through it. taylor riggs, great to have you here. the big money show debuts on january 23rd at 1:00 p.m. on fox business network. thanks, taylor. >> mike: how pub -- republican
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>> dana: new house panel on the weaponization of government looking into how the d.o.j. handled the classified documents cases linked to president biden and former president trump and whether the department puts its thumb on the scales in those cases. aishah hosni has the story from washington. good morning. >> good morning to you, dana. we knew this was going to happen. judiciary chairman jim jordan on sunday morning futures confirmed it saying federal agencies are just creating a double standard for republicans and committing election interference. >> 2016 they spy on trump's campaign. 2018 the mueller investigation,
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2020 suppress the hunter biden story. 2022 they raid the president's home but don't tell us about joe biden's issue prior to the election. maybe the f.b.i. should stay out of things. >> that's why the subcommittee on the weaponization of the federal government will look into the biden docs and have subpoena power over agencies. democrats say republicans will obstruct justice by launching investigations during a federal investigation. >> i think congress ought to handle both situations the same way. that is we have to get a briefing from the intelligence community about risks to national security of where the documents were and what they contained but congress shouldn't try to interfere with the investigations. >> first we have to get their committees in order. a handful of top house republicans are actually here in washington during break for about three days this week to finalize committee assignments including which nine republicans
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and six democrats will sit on this powerful new panel. dana. >> dana: they are sitting on pins and needles waiting for that. they want to get started. >> mike: joining me now is chris swecker former f.b.i. assistant director. welcome. you have described in a fox news digital piece the kid gloves treatment d.o.j. has given president biden. i recommend reading it. i tweeted it out this morning. for those who haven't read it make your case to the audience. >> it is inescapable the difference -- start with hillary clinton and transition to the bidens. the difference between how they are treated and how anything related to trump or even republicans in general are treated. i'm not trying to get political. i look strictly from a law enforcement professional with a lot of experience with the f.b.i. if you look at the contrast swat teams, dawn raid, search warrant, go in forcibly remove
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and cut locks on a locked closet that had already been examined by the government lawyers and reviewed by them and every opportunity to take them when they wanted to and didn't do it. now fast forward and have the biden situation here where we've got evidence sitting in a garage next to his prize corvette and evidence popping up everywhere. when i say evidence i mean documents. these are all crime scenes. you have to get fingerprints to determine who has handled them. dna to determined who handle them. did they have the requisite jackets, how accessible were they and how secure was the house? allowing them to send their lawyers out to the houses and the office to take these document out at their leisure and provide whatever they feel like providing to the government, they have tampered with the crime scene and made it nearly impossible to go in forensicly and determine who handled the documents and how
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they were stored and how they were moved. >> mike: tim scott was dana's guest last hour. >> how obnoxious are they really? they suppressed the information before the election so it wouldn't have impact during the election. that sounds like a little bit of engineering from my perspective. the second thing is the stench of hypocrisy coming from this administration is making the american people sick. >> mike: what about the timing issue? was this slow rolled by the feds? >> there is no doubt about it. if they truly learned of this in november there should have been an open investigation right away. instead of allowing like kilometer and bidens allowing them to parse out the documents or whatever it is the government needs the make their case, instead of allowing their attorneys to decide what to hand over and how to handle it. they should have done a consent search. if the bidens had nothing to
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hide he would have had no problem allowing f.b.i. agents to come and search the residence. they can have the lawyer follow them around if they want to. simply like they did with hillary clinton saying mother, may i have these documents we'll take whatever you decide you want us to see, and under the conditions that you allow, that's not how you conduct criminal investigations. it's like saying to a drug dealer hand over what you think is evidence to us. >> mike: counsel to the house democrats for the first trump impeachment wrote based on what we know now, biden is unlikely ever to face charges whereas trump is at high risk because of his obstructive conduct and other action. they have special counsels and documents in common but little else. is that analysis correct in your view? >> it is spot on. the sad part about this is the special counsel is a member of
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the club, d.o.j. club, someone around for a long time, plays the game. i don't -- i hate to be a cynic here but i don't see the same type of aggressive investigation like with trump. the f.b.i. needs dynamic leadership that gets them back to what they should be doing, gangs, organized crime, counter espionage, white collar crime. the things they're so good at. >> mike: chris swecker, thanks so much for your time. >> thank you. >> dana reads sports. >> dana: my partner bill hemmer probably still in shock over how the bengals defeated the ravens in the wild card game in cincinnati last night. >> hubbard, the cincinnati kid.
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chased by andrews, at the 30, the 20, he will score! >> dana: what i would have done to see bill's face during that one. with the game tied at 17 in the fourth quarter ravens quarterback fumbled the ball and bengals hubbard grabbed the ball and went 98 yards for a touchdown that sealed the victory. the heavily favored buffalo bills squeaked by the miami dolphins winning 34-31. the bengals face the bills next weekend in the afc division round. >> mike: american ally who fought against a taliban is sitting in a texas jail. as american honors dr. martin luther king, senior his niece reflects on how important his message is today. >> keep making big issues over
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>> mike: today the nation remembers dr. martin luther king, junior who would have turned 94 years old yesterday. charles watson is live at ebenezer baptist church in atlanta where dr. king was pastor. good morning, charles. >> good morning, mike. lots of celebrations going on around the country to honor dr. martin luther king, junior. if you live in atlanta the celebration has been ongoing for a week. culminating at ebenezer baptist
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church with the commemorative service. a list of notable participants include dr. king's daughter, atlanta mayor andre dick yens and yu landa adams and the senior pastor senator raphael warnock who extended an invitation to president biden. a first time a sitting president has delivered a sermon at ebenezer baptist regular sunday service. biden took that opportunity to the life and legacy of dr. king as he touched on our fragile our democracy was then and is now. take a listen. >> president biden: my message to the nation on this day as we go forward, we go together. [applause] when we choose democracy over ought accuracy, a beloved community over chaos and choose believers and the dreams to be
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doers, to be unafraid, always keeping the faith. >> further honor dr. king's contribution to voting rights and civil rights in the country the king center will hold a teach in and voter registration drive. in places like philadelphia dealing with gun violence volunteers today will focus on gun prevention and make gun safety bags hand out to the community. a lot of good being done in honor of dr. king today and all that he stood for. >> mike: charles watson live in atlanta. many thanks. >> dana: thank you, charles. afghan ally fought for years with the u.s. military. once biden pulled troops out of the country abadal had a choice to either flee his home or face torture and death. he made a difficult journey decided to go to the u.s. border but thrown in a detention cell. joining me is his brother, sammy, pleading for president
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biden to release him. sammy, you are a u.s. citizen. you are here, you are trying to work on your brother's release and you have had some recent help from congresswoman sheila jackson lee. she has written a letter to president joe biden which might get his attention. it says that when their service exposes them to credible threats we must redouble our effort to keep our word because doing so also protects our troops stationed around the world today and into the future. tell me more about this letter what you hope it might do. >> i'm hoping this letter reaches the white house and in particular president biden, since all we are trying to get his attention to this matter. me and my brother work alongside the united states special forces in different units and to prove my point i have my picture here. i worked for ten years providing
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service for department of defense in different units in different parts of afghanistan. my brother to show up into the united states borders and prove his point and showing that he served alongside united states special forces and being treated criminal and put in prison for unknown reason, defies everything i've ever known about america and how she treats its friends and allies. >> dana: how long has your brother been detained? >> he came to the southern border on september 30th, from there he was being transferred from eagle pass to del rio, texas and from there he is now transferred to eden, texas prison. >> dana: as i understand it, the
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other migrants who crossed at the same time were all released into the country. and they probably have court dates that they might come to in the future. tell me a little bit about the extensive background checks that you and your brother would have gone through in order to work with the u.s. special forces in afghanistan. >> exactly. i'm sure all the veterans who are hearing my voice and people in the department of defense, they know people like myself and my brother who we served both in different uniform. we had to go through thorough background check specifically my brother, who was an intelligence officer, his job was to provide intelligence, save his colleagues' lives and american special forces lives by providing accurate and on-time intelligence so the operation is
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conducted successfully and they come back successfully. it takes a lot. my brother had to do everything in his power to make sure that the troops go on a mission and come back with success, not any casualties and lost in combat. so i'm sure everyone who hear my voice, they know how critical and how important his job was and in his duty he made sure that he provides every detail of the mission, every intelligence that was available to make sure that he saves lives. >> dana: and he did. sammy, sheila jackson lee is asking for president biden to pardon your brother. we will be in touch and ask the white house if they have received the letter, if they are going to act on it. it is a unique circumstance and
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one that needs to be dealt with. we understand the problems at the southern border more than anyone but in this case -- i will give you the last word. >> like you earlier mentioned, everyone else coming to the southern border without any vetting or background check are being let go to this country. and later the law enforcement deals with the crimes and drugs and everything else that follows with that type of policy. but my brother had to serve -- had to go through all these things basically. it's a complete disappointment and i'm pleading to biden and those who are in power to please step up. do the right thing and do what was promised to this man who fought alongside the very troops
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that you told him we will never leave our allies behind. >> dana: you are a wonderful brother and great guest. we'll follow up with the story. congresswoman sheila jackson lee pushing the biden administration as well. thank you for coming on today. >> thank you so much. >> mike: deadly tornadoes tear through alabama and georgia, several people killed, many homes destroyed. how the community is standing together to clean up and rebuild. >> like i said, just the outreach of the community was amazing to me. you don't know how many friends you've got until something like this happens. and i'm thankful. hey, man. you could save hundreds for safe driving with liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need!
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or want to shed those final 20, try golo for 60 days and never diet again. (uplifting music) >> harris: stashed like secret cash. actually not. biden's classified documents unearthed and igniting more and more criticism of the president and a growing scandal. some are asking when will there be an f.b.i. raid?
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and the national hockey league finding out florida actually is the state where woke goes to die. plus senator ron johnson taking on the liberal media for blowing off the hunter biden probe as purely political. his first interview since that tv battle. senator johnson, clay travis and others. >> dana: nasty with creating chaos. a string of tornadoes ripped through alabama and georgia. robert ray is live in griffin, georgia as people are picking up the pieces this morning. hi. >> good morning. yes, 33 tornadoes across nine states and unfortunately nine people have lost their lives. in griffen many neighborhoods look like this with piles of debris, wood strewn everywhere. you have a hobby lobby where the roof was literally ripped off.
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an entire strip mall destroyed. in selma, alabama, the historic town known for its civil rights movement with martin luther king's march in 1965, neighborhoods were toppled by an ef2 tornado and seven people lost their lives. celebrations over the weekend was mourning and picking up the pieces across that state and in selma. back here in griffin, georgia, 40 miles to the south of atlanta, you do see roofs and all this debris all over the place as you hear the sounds of progress already with trucks and heavy machinery picking up aaluminum and people's belongsing trying to get the down back. >> dana: you can catch the weather in your area, go to the
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fox weather app and scan the qr code right there or download for free at fox weather.com. i will tell you, mike, the fox weather app saved a lot of arguments on our trip. it was the most accurate and i knew when to tell him to wear a hat. >> mike: fox team doing a bang-up job. >> dana: thanks for being here today. harris faulkner is up next with "the faulkner focus." >> harris: we begin with a fox news alert. the worst possible scenario for keeping secrets, having the secrets spill all over the place. additional classified files found in president biden's delaware home and the house chairman of oversight says it is time to see all communications related to the recent searches. i'm harris faulkner and you are in "the faulkner focus." the search deepens after som
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