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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  January 20, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PST

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serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to. ♪nothing is everything♪ now's the time to ask your doctor about skyrizi, the number one dermatologist prescribed biologic. learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪ ♪ ♪ high and low ♪ if i had my way ♪ never let you go >> ainsley: that is glens falls new york. they still have the christmas tree can you see it in the middle of the lawn. >> brian: might as well leave it up all year.
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>> ainsley: a lot of people will because of the epiphany. >> ainsley: i can't take my garland down yet. i still have my garland on the fireplace so pretty. >> steve: particularly when it's snowing and looks so beautiful. that's up the interstate where we are sitting. >> ainsley: you said it might snow this weekend. >> steve: might sunday night. stay tuned. darn it. >> brian: might have to get to work early. >> ainsley: dawn, i'm sorry, i'm trying. >> brian: if they ask you to come in and you say no and you can't get in, it's really on you. >> steve: you know, that was back in the day when we all had the only way to do the show would be in the big studio. now we have these little vans that travel around and can park in your parking lot. >> ainsley: sorry, i can't make it to work. send a van to my driveway? >> steve: it was a year ago right now today when i had covid and i was stuck at home and once
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i was past the contamination zone, i did the show from the driveway for three weeks. it was great. >> ainsley: those vans, i think they have made so much money because of covid. they take these vans and outfit them and put a studio inside them. there is one chair. there is a little desk, then the camera right behind the driver's seat and a camera operator. he pulls up in front of your house. and then you get inside. what i loved about it is during our -- we had our three hour show it. would park right outside of my apartment. when you had a segment and then you had a segment right after that i had a little bit of a break enough time to run upstairs and say hey to my daughter give her a kiss and go back down. and sometimes she would come back down with me and watch our show a little bit in the van. >> steve: indeed. it's really cool. anyway, we are all here on the couch today because we have got lots to talk about. >> ainsley: president biden says that he has no regrets about how he handled the classified documents found at his house in delaware and former -- and the former washington, d.c. office.
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those remarks come as the secret service said they are ready to hand over names of people who visited his delaware home if congress asks them. >> brian: maybe the guy who rebuilt the corvette. peter doocy joins us from the white house with more. peter? >> peter: white house plan we keep hearing about over and over that they are going to wait until after the special counsel makes a decision about what happened to talk more about this has been derailed. because president biden is defiantly defending himself after a reporter asked him if he has any regrets about waiting until after the midterms to come forward with this information while he was touring california flood damage. >> i will answer the question but here's the deal, you know, quite frankly bugs me is that we have serious problem the american people don't don't quite understand why you don't ask me questions about that. we found a handful of documents that were filed in the wrong place. enough to regrets. i'm following what the lawyers
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have told me they want me to do he said no there there. shortly after biden left the v.p. office. the inner circle got together what the hunter biden lists university of delaware meeting at the house. okay. let's do 10:00 a.m. on tuesday at the lake house. i hope this gives everyone plenty of time to drive up to delaware. please let me know if this is too early. v.p. asked me to check with you all, thank you. >> whenever classified documents are found anywhere they shouldn't be, that's an issue. we need to find out how the documents ended up there and is there any risk that they were exposed to people that didn't or shouldn't have had access. >> peter: democrats are concerned as well. schiff doesn't have subpoena power anymore. jim jordan does. >> i think everybody is surprised every response we gotten from the white house. everyone is sprichessed how this whole thing has unfolded.
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i still don't know the answer to why they were looking in the first place. what prompted them to go look on november 2nd. one thing about the president's claim that these files were just misfiled at his office in penn biden center or at his house in delaware. remember, a u.s. attorney from illinois was probing this in private before the press knew about it. before the public knew about it for several weeks. that u.s. attorney finished his investigation and gave it to merrick garland who looked at all the facts of the case and still decided that there needed to be a special counsel. back to you. >> steve: exactly because ever the parallels to trump. although details are different. peter, so, this is new. i mean, the white house from the podium she, the press secretary will not answer anything. and joe yesterday just read off a statement as he has in the past. you got the only errant detail out of him and that was that the documents were in the garage next to the corvette. but, here's the thing.
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now they their talking point essentially is it was filed in the wrong place. it was a clerk call error. and then also they did a big takeout in the "the washington post" where they essentially said and kathy chung, joe biden's long-time assistant, who no longer works at the white house. she feels terrible that she may have inadvertently moved or stored the classified information. so they are building it up not to be a national security thing but a clerical error. >> peter: and, right, so who do you blame then? you are blaming the people doing the clerical work. and there are no accusations yet from the special counsel from the white house but somebody is putting names forward in the press. looking for a fall guy or fall gal it sounds like. >> ainsley: i don't think donald trump actually walked out of the white house with boxes. someone else did it for him and there is no fall guy there. >> brian: we actually see those pictures of looks like intecious or young staffers with stacks of
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boxes ready to get on over to mar-a-lago. thanks, peter. if you look right now, the president of the united states feels as though it's not a big deal people's business. according to the people. he has got 40% approval rating according to reuters. dropped precipitously. >> ainsley: almost his lowest. >> brian: how is biden handling the classified documents. only 22% think appropriately. so not good. and when you talk about kathy chung, who is his chief of staff, yeah, she feels bad. she said possibly her role in packing it up at the biden center. but no one explains what is going on in the garage and the other room and the other room in his house. >> steve: because she had nothing to do. >> brian: nothing to do with that there is no explanation. by the way, he has ad-libbed twice it seems. where no regrets and corvette garage next to my locked garage, not like they are on the street, i don't think his law team. by the way he has a law degree. i don't think his legal team thinks that's making anything
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better. >> ainsley: did peter report on this? i want to make sure the audience knows. this secret service says they did collect on guests with regular access to the house. they are prepared to provide that information about vetted guests if congress requests it. >> steve: peter didn't contain that in this report. he talked about it yesterday. we have been saying that all along. because of we have all been to areas where there is secret service protection. and while, once again, this goes back to the white house lawyers. the statement they put out is the white house does not keep logs of the people who go into the delaware house. that's absolutely true; however, the secret service says, okay, give us a list of who we can get through and now that list does exist. that's something ken cuccinelli former dhs acting deputy secretary knows all about. he also, in his career during the trump administration, had a lot of top secret classified documents and he says what the white house is putting out right now, not sense call. >> it is not a character call
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error and a top secret document, for instance, has its own cover and backing. i mean, if you pick it up. if you were putting it in a file, you'd see the top secret covering. that's what the covering is for. so, it's pretty screamingly obvious and the no regrets, i mean, reminds me of the tattoo commercial. no regerts. this explanation is silly given how these documents are handled day to day every single one separately and is taken care of on its own. so this isn't a casual thing in the white house any more than it is out at the department's like homeland security where i was. >> brian: really flies in the face of what joe biden told scott pelley on "60 minutes" when he was so -- he was ridiculing the former president to the degree he was doing it. and now he says he has no regrets about doing the same thing with classified documents?
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the total of which his team can't even tell us how many documents it is. they said well, we just kept hands them over. we don't know how many documents. it's over 20. >> ainsley: he said donald trump was irresponsible. i guess biden is irresponsible. too. >> brian: reregrets that donald trump did it? >> steve: here's the thing the biden administration and, you know, there are spinners and everybody else, trying to say look, yes, donald trump and joe biden. when they left office they both had these confidential, classified documents. but, donald trump was willful. knew what he was sitting on where joe biden it was a clerical error. they are trying to say look. they are a completely dinner. >> brian: nobody buys it. >> steve: listen, that's what they are spinning. >> ainsley: it doesn't matter. if doesn't matter. he had classified information where it wasn't supposed to be. >> brian: it's a bad spin. >> steve: even one is too many. meanwhile, it was two years ago today. >> ainsley: did you see the date on our crawl it said january 20th. what did you think of? inauguration.
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>> steve: joe biden was inaugurated as our 46th president, one of the big problems for him has been the border. they made a decision to change everything donald trump did in stopping people and now it's pretty much a revolving door down there. it's easy to get. in kamala harris was at a green energy unveiling of something called 10 west yesterday. a big power line, essentially between arizona and california not too far from the border. why wasn't she at the border? why didn't she make a little detour? she was asked by a reporter there. ask her this. you came to arizona. you decided not to visit the border? can you tell me why? >> i am here to talk about what we are doing bringing down the cost to american families and creating jobs. let me say on the border, that it is one of our highest priorities. >> do you have any plans to visit the border in arizona? >> i have visited the border. i will not on this trip. i have and i will again. >> ainsley: and i will again. >> brian: once. zoom call with somebody else.
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>> ainsley: she was hesitant to say that but she said it. >> brian: last night another time we featured the same thing. tucker last night had a farmer on from arizona who, by the way, if you look at the stats according to the agricultural committee, most of the in this country comes from arizona. if had lettuce last night thank arizona. if you didn't or it was too expensive, thank the border. because if you are somebody who gets anywhere near the crops and you go walking through these farm lands, which is right on the border, it immediately con tan united states it and unable to sale. the same way if a coyote comes through. did i not know that alex an arizona farmer for 75 years. he says is he one of the young ones is at the border says this is out of control. listen. >> over the last two years, it's just been death by a thousand cuts. it's been a slow trickle. and we're seeing it every day. it's hard for us to do our jobs when we take food safety at the
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utmost for what we do. any time anybody enters our field, we have to cordon that off and flag it. and we don't harvest that area. just like if a coyote enters our field. we can't harvest that area. so, when there is 20 people, 30 people, sometimes there is 100 out there, about a quarter mile down, it's been insane to watch for the last two years. and it's something that we need help down here. >> ainsley: he lives right on the border. he said that the open borders a glorified travel agency. >> steve: here's the thing. if farmers and other businessmen are made a business decision to allow them. in the federal government owes them relief and owe them money for the lost crops. they owe them money for the break-ins if it's provable that there were migrants in the
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country illegally. >> ainsley: should pay their fences. >> steve: it's just not fair. >> brian: to two senators, both democrats who should be going to bat there for some reason the people of arizona put katie hobbs as governor who will do nothing for the border and has helped take down the storage containers. >> steve: they don't think it's as big a problem as we do. >> brian: unbelievable or he does. he says his family has been in the business, i should clarify for 75 years and he is one of the youngest ones because they go back generations. >> ainsley: look at bail reform in new york city. how in the world could anyone think that is okay to let repeat offenders out over and over again? sometimes 100 times. j upside down world. remember when we posted that story top 10 repeat offenders. they have 100 different crimes on their list. on their rap sheet they keep getting out. >> what about the guy who burned down christmas tree last year. >> i don't understand why these people are voted into office because they continuously make the situations worse and worse. >> lee zeldin got close but not enough. >> meanwhile, turn from politics to crime.
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alec baldwin the actor now facing criminal charges for the shooting death of that cinematographer on the movie set of his movie "rust." >> brian: new mexico district attorney set to charge the star with two counts of involuntary manslaughter by the end of the month. >> ainsley: todd piro has the details. >> todd: if convicted those charges could land baldwin behind bars for up to six and a half years. district attorney mary carmack al tease, after a thorough review of the laws state of new mexico i have determined there is sufficient evidence to charge alec baldwin and other members of the "rust" film crew. on my watch no one is above the law and everyone deserves justice it. all began in october of 2021 when police say baldwin pointed prop gown at halyna hutchins when that gun went off. striking her in the chest and grazing another crew member in the shoulder. according to the affidavit the actor was allegedly told by crew members that the revolver was
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not loaded. baldwin has also repeatedly claimed he did not pull the trigger. >> it wasn't in the script for the trigger to be pulled. >> well, the trigger wasn't pulled. i didn't pull the trigger. >> so you never pulled the trigger. >> no, no, no, no, no. i would never point a gun and 3u8 the trigger, ever. that was the training i had. you don't point a gun and pull the trigger. >> i feel that someone is responsible for what happened and i can't say who that is but i know it's not me. >> baldwin's claim directly contradicting an fbi forensic analysis which says the gun could not have been fired without pulling the trigger. >> definitely believe he pulled the trigger. the fbi lab report confirms that. so, definitely the trigger was pulled. >> mr. baldwin had a duty at -- at the base level to never hold a gun and point it at a person while pulling the trigger. but he also had a duty, as an an e. actor and producer on that set to have the bullets checked or to check them himself to make sure that they weren't live.
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>> todd: and a professional armorer telling fox there is no reason this should have ever happened. >> there is no reason under any circumstance that a live round should ever be in the atmosphere of a movie set for any reason whatsoever. there is protocol in place to make sure it doesn't happen. as far as him think that he didn't fire the weapon, well, we all know that in order to discharge a weapon, one in good working condition, you know, there are different mechanisms in place and one of which is the mechanism of the trigger that has to be pressed. >> todd: but baldwin's legal team is blaming the crew member who allegedly assured him that the gun was not loaded saying, quote: this decision distorts halyna hutchen's terrible death and miskaren of justice. had no reason to believe there was a live bullet' in the gun or anywhere on the movie set. relied on the professionals with whom he worked who assured him the gun did not have live rounds. alec baldwin and the film set armorer are expected to be
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charged with two counts each of involuntary manslaughter by the end of the month. back to you. >> brian: they say the armorer gutierrez reed believe the colt was loaded with dummy rounds. retrieved the firearm and called out cold gun and ended up having real ammo. if you look at the video on "new york times" today. they have the video of him being interrogated that day of the shooting. and he is asking alec baldwin is it -- he goes can you find out if it was a real bullet? because the other guy that was shot said if we could find out the bullet came through his shoulder, did he not know the day of the shooting that the bullet was live. so, i do believe he is honest when he says inadvertent. >> todd: brian, to that point the law really does place an extra emphasis on statements likes that that happened immediately after the incident before there is any time to really craft the story. so, to your point, that could have a lot of weight. >> steve: stand by for the charges being filed. thank you very much, todd.
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let's move now to carley and news from idaho. >> carley: we are now learning idaho murder suspect bryan kohberger reportedly visited the restaurant where two of the four victims worked before the killings. madison hogan and xana kernodle were once servers although it's unclear if they ever waited on or interacted with kohberger. reports also say kohberger followed madison, xana and kaylee goncalves on instagram. meanwhile an idaho court is extending a gag order prohibiting law enforcement officials and the victim's families from revealing information about the case until the jury reaches a verdict. a supreme court probe fails to identify whoever leaked the draft decision that ultimately led to the reversal of roe v. wade. a report released yesterday says a forensic analysis and multiple interviews were conducted. and the report indicates how easily confidential information could have slipped out. meanwhile, the fbi is now
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offering a $25,000 reward for information on the two vandals behind a string of attacks on pro-life pregnancy centers in upstate new york back in june. now to some football. mattress king of texas mattress mac is betting 2 million bucks on the cowboys to beat the san francisco 49ers this sunday in the divisional matchup. the payout would be over $3.3 million. and eagles fans are gearing up for a huge playoff weekend. the rockies statue is now rocking a jail in hurst, jersey. ahead of the divisional matchup against the new york giants. catch that game at 7:30 eastern on saturday only on fox. and watch the cowboys face the niners on fox on sunday. a lot to look forward to this weekend, guys. if you are a football fan. >> steve: big fox weekend. >> carley: bingo. >> ainsley: imagine the giants playing the cowboys. >> that would be quite the game. >> brian: against the world in new york.
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>> ainsley: still ahead, things are getting egspensive are you looking for a solution. >> steve: yes. >> ainsley: why a chicken coup. some neighborhoods can you have them only four chickens. >> steve: rent a chicken. >> ainsley: rente kn a chicken,e eggs. go for ten runs. run a marathon. instead, start small with nicorette, which will lead to something big.
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outpace another invasion of russian tanks. >> brian: not going to like this. it looks like the pentagon has decided not to send tanks to ukraine and because of that, germany won't send their tanks to ukraine. let's bring in general jack keane retired four star general and fox news senior strategic analyst. are you disappointed in that decision, general? do you understand why we don't want to send the abrams tanks? >> yeah. well, the pentagon's view, i believe, is that the abrams tank it weighs 80 tons. it can't cross bridges. it's logistically challenged a gas guzzler about 3 miles to the gallon. a significant maintenance challenging. all that said though, give the ukrainians this main battle tank if the united states is doing it, it's sim loc symbolically se stage who have main battle tanks also. fortunately ukraine stepped up
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and pledged to give their main battle tank challenger. what they need is the leopard tanks germany has and do other nato countries. but they can't export it without germany's permission. germany wants the cover of the united states giving main battle tanks before they do because they fear that it's an escalation in the mind of the russians. that is completely unfounded. and i think that germans have a right to be criticized for their reluctance to step up here. but the united states should set an example. despite the challenges with the abrams tank. give them the tanks. >> no kidding. i don't know what the germans are doing. they fired the defense secretary. i thought that might have been for the good. so far not so. the cia director williams burns was in country briefing zelenskyy on all the intention that we have on what vladimir putin has. but we understand the wagner group is leading the charge 50,000 mercenaries.
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how much damage are they doing? how are they effective and what is ukraine's move to counter it. >> a couple things. first of all, the russians have made a decision to conservative their battle strength. so they have been in defensive positions for months. along the 1300 kill meter frontline. wagner group is an organization. it's state-owned enterprise. private firm organized largely in the past with previous russian soldiers. now they are actually using convicts. that's how desperate they are. and they have been conducting some modest attacks. the wagner group can win a battle but they can't win a war. they are not going to be decisive. they get a lot of media attention in russia and outside of it. but, what putin is looking for here is a protracted war. he wants to settle in to this. he is going to mobilize 500,000 more troops this year. he thinks over time he can outlast the ukrainians and outlast the political will of
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the yalts and the europeans. that is where he is. conversely, brian, zelenskyy and his generals believe this is the year to retake the rest of their territory and they want these tanks to breakthrough that defensive line. they know full well that the russians manning, morale is low, training is poor. and the fact is they are very vulnerable to an offensive operation run by the ukrainians. >> brian: general, if i was to give you 20 seconds, how do we make everyday unpleasant for vladimir putin. he seems to be weathering the sanctions. >> keep taking territory away from the ukrainians is the best -- taking territory away from the russians that is the answer here. the sooner we end the conflict in favor of the ukrainians, the suffering and the hardship stops. that is what zelenskyy has been preaching for months, a
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protracted war extends the suffering, cripples his economy, destroys his physical infrastructure. that is a horrific future for him. >> brian: a lot of pledges from major firms to restart building ukraine as soon as this ends. general jack keane we'll watch closely. appreciate it. >> yeah. you have guys have a wonderful weekend. you and your team. >> brian: coming up at 8:00. jim trusty donald trump's attorney. what is the difference between these two document cases. greg norman has a tv deal and warning from tiger woods that there will be no merge are between golf bodies as long as greg norman is running liv. we will talk about what greg norman is going to say about that. dana perino is going to be my first guest and janice dean a one-on-one about her brand new book that is already a best seller. 8:00, repeated is 1:00 on fox nation on saturday. a lot of show left on this show. 90 minutes if you are keeping score. rachel campos-duffy three names
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one woman is live at the 50th annual march for life with mississippi attorney general lynn fitch. rachel? >> rachel: yes, we're going to have the attorney general lynn fitch, she is right here. we are going to interview her on her thoughts, the decision, the march, and what the next steps are. ♪ dancing is everything. soccer is the best. but her moderate to severe eczema could make it hard for her. my skin was so itchy. and my outfit was uncomfortable. now, my skin's not as itchy. now we're staying ahead of her eczema. there's a power inside all of us, to live our passion. and dupixent works on the inside, to help heal your skin from within. it helps block a key source of inflammation inside the body that can cause eczema. so they can have clearer skin and less itch. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems
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♪ >> ainsley: today marks the 50th annual march for life. >> steve: first march since the supreme court overturned roe v. wade last summer. >> brian: mississippi attorney general lynn fitch helped reverse the decision. she joins us from the national mall in d.c. along with "fox & friends weekend" co-host rachel campos-duffy. rachel? >> rachel: good morning to both of you. what an honor to be here with lynn fitch the woman who argued before the supreme court and had this decision overturned. she is, by the way, a single mom of three. attorney general, what does it mean to you to be here and actually really, before that, when you were arguing, did you think it would come out in this direction? did you think you could win the whole time? >> what an amazing day. >> rachel: right? >> we're here to celebrate oh my goodness 50 years later actually celebrating. it was such an amazing time. as we got the case, we prepared in the argument. we knew there were thousands of people already rallying outside, praying, supporting.
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uplifting and empowering us. my solicitor general scott stuart and i were in there arguing. it was amazing. we felt so good and so uplifted. >> rachel: now you are here at the first march for life in the first post roe v. wade era. what does that mean to you. >> it's incredible. it's surreal. >> this is a god case. god had given us this time to be here to celebrate. now we think about what do we do next step? so we argued empower women and promote life. that was the nexus. >> rachel: right. and you were telling me that you just jump right back into action because there is more work to do. explain the work that you're doing specifically in mississippi. >> well, you know, after the dobbs decision came down, it really propelled us into new postures to what should we do? we asked the justices for this job. they gave it to us so here we are. so what are next steps? we're working with our legislature. we are looking at different ways to increase workplace flexibility. >> rachel: yes. >> quality and affordable child care for everyone.
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women to have resources and tools and upskilling. we're working on child support enforcement. because, the father should be equally responsible for their children for far too long women have born that burden. so we're working very diligently there. we're also working on adoption and the foster care system. which is broken. >> rachel: it's totally broken. >> we want to make sure we are making that connectivity for these children. we are failing them right now. >> rachel: there is a lot of pro-life work yet to do. i think that's the challenge is to say roe v. wade it was a wonderful victory. let's celebrate but left of center let's get back to work. really quick, your thoughts on the fact that they're now saying they can't find the leaker at the supreme court? >> yes. i mean that was horrific that we ever had a leak. the institution of the united states supreme court. i think we have got still find that i think they need to continue to be diligent. we need to find that leaker it might continue if we don't set that precedent that you are not allowed to leak from the united states supreme court.
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>> rachel: lynn fitch, what an honor to have you on "fox & friends" this morning. >> thank you. what an honor to be on with you. thank you. >> rachel: back to you guys. >> steve: thank you very much. great guest. still ahead on this friday, geraldo rivera is still here. his soft on crime policies keeping criminals on the streets not in jail. >> ainsley: but, first, tucker carlson is calling out permanent washington for focusing on the classified documents but not the other disas terse facing the country. >> no one outside washington cares or even understands the issue. and, yet, it is classified documents not our open borders that the justice department is punishing joe biden for. >> ainsley: but will cain and pete hegseth won't let the president off that easily. they're here next. ♪ ♪ ♪ trelegy for copd. ♪ birds flyin' high, you know how i feel. ♪
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♪ >> tucker: one of these disasters the fentanyl epidemic the crime in our cities, invasion underway texas, arizona and california, all of those don'tly concern americans. how many voters do you think are lying awake right now worrying that public officials might violate some obscure federal classification law? none. not a single person. no one outside washington cares or even understands the issue. yet, it is classified documents not our open borders that the justice department is punishing joe biden for. why is that? what is going on here? it's simple. washington is protecting itself. >> steve: there you have got tucker carlson calling out what he refers to as permanent washington for its focus on joe biden's document scandal and ignoring issues impacting people everyday in the meanwhile. >> ainsley: the weekend team is here to react with will cain and pete hegseth and they join us now. hey, guys.
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>> good morning. >> good morning. >> pete, you want to go first? i'll start with you. your reaction? >> pete: you know, washington, yeah, does not corner the market or have an a monopoly on many things. they don't have a monopoly on intelligence or talent or wisdom or certainly beauty. washington, d.c. has a monopoly on information. on secrets. on things that the average americans don't have access to. so, when it comes to -- so they tafeign a lot of outrage on a document being misplaced. secret in washington classified information is traded all the time especially to reporters for people's own interest or they pay attention to certain things but not others like, you know, where's the footage for the security tapes on january 6th or who leaked the document at the supreme court as you just talked about? they play a shell game of own benefit to access to information and real scandals like the
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debacle in afghanistan or border or our drug crisis or crime, things that people should be able to solve they on solve themselves of and don't try to tackle. managing the information means imagining access. access to big salaries, corporate boards and that's good for republicans and democrats. >> steve: will, piece makes a lot of good points in washington, d.c. it seems like the administration put some talking points out to mainstream media and that's exactly where it goes. >> will: it's surprising steve, ainsley and brian, this one, this story as tucker referred to it last night as it traffic ticket is the one that commandeers the attention of the mainstream media. cnn is now covering it. and seems to be the driving purpose of, again, yes, what he refers to as permanent washington, something that i share in that belief that there is always something that remains, we can change the ticket. we can change the president but there is an everlasting intelligence apparatus that
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remains in washington. a bureaucratic apparatus that remains. why do they care about this traffic ticket and my answer to tucker last night. my answer to you this morning, my answer to america is joe biden has used -- he has served his purpose. he has been the useful idiot. that purpose was to defeat donald trump the biggest threat to that permanent washington establishment in i don't know a half a century. now joe biden looks to be unelectable. embarrassing to the democratic washington. if he can't be their place holder served his usefulness. must find somebody else. sell him down the river on the traffic ticket of classified documents. there must be somebody else to carry the shield forward in to 2024. >> brian: he is supposed to announce after the inaugural if he doesn't pull that off see what happens. yeah, the -- yeah, the state of the union. >> steve: he has been inaugurated. >> brian: in a few weeks, never know. what's coming up on your show,
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pete. >> peter: what's coming up on the weekend. >> will: i have the list, pete? >> pete: i will take the first three and see if you note last two. melissa earhardt. kevin mccarthy. >> katie baf pavlich and joey jones. >> will: they gave me the list i thought they therefore gave me the job. they didn't trust me but gave it to you. >> hey you too, save the arguing for tomorrow. okay? >> okay. will. >> janice: i'm going to be on "fox & friends weekend" as well tomorrow. >> ainsley: yea. >> janice: they should have my bittle picture. i will talk to the management. take a look at the maps because we have a storm system that's going to move across the central u.s. cold air in place. snow storm developing for the rockies and the midwest and then we also have the potential for some snow downwind of the great lakes and then the interior sections of the northeast where we have, yes, a coastal storm
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that is going to creep on up this weekend from the gulf coast up towards the southeast and the northeast. okay. you know i have -- i am the storm, it has been out and a best seller. wohoo and we are going to do signing next week. this one is happening at long island university. brian kilmeade told me is he going to come out and introduce me. sign up for this event it is free, free, free of charge. you just have to go to three door's books.com and you can sign up for that and join me on long island university. brian kilmeade, i hope that you knew you were going to be introducing me. >> brian: janice, you told me thursday. it says wednesday on the screen. >> janice: it's wednesday. >> ainsley: can do you wednesday now? >> brian: i guess. so let me check it out. let's find out. regardless, it's going to be a big hit. long island university where i once attended. >> janice: i love it. thank you, brian kilmeade. >> steve: in the meantime for everybody else go pick up "i am the storm" wherever you buy books. >> thank you. >> brian: talk to her on one nation saturday night at 8:00.
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i can almost f feel the kisses. egg prices aren't so excellent with shoppers shopping for answers. one husband and duo who brings the chicken coop to your backyard. >> ainsley: husband and wifey de duo? ♪ntal odontal disease, and i just didn't feel well. but then i found clearchoice. [ forde ] replacing marcia's teeth with dental implants at clearchoice was going to afford her that permanent solution. [ marcia ] clearchoice dental implants gave me the ability to take on the world. i feel so much better, and i think that that is the key.
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♪ >> cheaper by the dozen? not exactly. prices on eggs continue to rise for a carton but some are finding excellent solutions. instead of the grocery store, you can now have a personal chicken coop in your backyard. you could wake up to that sound every day. actually not those are roosters. co-founders of rent the chicken jen thompkins and phil thompkins husband and wife join us from pennsylvania to share more on the growing trend. good morning to both of you. >> hey, good morning fox and friends. >> good morning fox and friends. >> steve: it's great to have you. phil, first of all, you know, over the last couple of weeks, and we're going to put up the price increase for large white grade a eggs, the price of eggs has sky rocketed. why is it so high? >> oh, absolutely. yeah, i mean, there's a lot of reasons. the cost of feed has gone up. the cost of transportation. and, of course, there's fewer chickens out there laying eggs in the market.
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so everywhere that you see, i mean, even this half dozen eggs right here i have at the store, it's crazy. i mean half dozens might go $5 a dozen, almost $10. it's nuts. >> steve: it is nuts. and also we should point out because of bird flu a lot of producers have had to kill off all those birds they never go to market and don't lay eggs. >> yes. >> steve: but jen you guys came up with this idea, rent a chicken.com. how does it work? >> yes, so rent the chicken.com, we provide an opportunity for folks to try out having backyard hence without the long term commitment. we will bring a portable chicken coop to your backyard with 2-4 egg laying hence for about six months. two chickens lay about a dozen ex a week four lay about two dozen a week and they come with chicken friends, that's us so
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people aren't alone in this new venture. >> steve: that is fantastic. phil when i was a kid growing up, we lived in the country and we had a hundred chickens so i get what you're doing. so who -- of the people watching right now, who is the perfect for? obviously you can't have neighbors that hate chickens, for one thing. you've got to ask everybody. but who is this good for? >> this is great for all people. not only empty nesters, people with kids, people without kids, people that are just looking for a change in their life. chickens can be used as therapy birds for veterans suffering from ptsd. it also helps empty nesters just get out of the bed appear go check on their chickens. so it really is for everybody. >> steve: i get that joke about empty nesters, chicken nest. [laughter] >> steve: jenn, people might be freaked out about holding a
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chicken. you're doing it right there. what's that chicken's name and it's not hard to hold them or wrangle them or manage them is it? >> no, not hard. if i did my homework i would remember this chicken's name but it was early this morning and i picked her up. she looked camera ready so i snatched her up and i'm just holding her like a football. but i do not throw her like a football. >> steve: that's a good idea. listen i think there are a lot of people across the country saying you know what? i think that would be fun for me and my family to do to take care of the chickents. there will be no roosters crowing because these are all hence. more information go to rentthechicken.com and find out how you can do it. jenn and phil thank you very much. excellent interview. >> hey, thanks, have an excellent day. >> steve: thank you very much guys. >> all right coming up on this friday, seven jumps over seven continents in seven days. stay tuned. ♪ dreds for safe driving with liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need! whoo!
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right away to get your copy, and let's stop the great reset. nicorette knows quitting smoking is freaking hard. you get advice like... just stop. go for a run. go for ten runs. run a marathon. instead, start small with nicorette, which will lead to something big. ♪ ♪ working 9:00 to 5:00 what a way to make a living. ♪ barely getting by, it's all taking and no giving ♪ >> steve: okay, good morning everybody, live from lexington, virginia, it is a beautiful day. 45 degrees right now there and they're going for a daytime high of 54. you know, she's got our hours kind of backwards. we kind of wor

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