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tv   FOX Friends First  FOX News  February 16, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST

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[laughs] a flying squirrel that's it for us tonight don't forget to set your dvrs seo we stay connected "the ingraham angle," remember it is america now and forever i'll see you on instagram giving you an update about the old leg i know you want
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the on the books to keep our borders secure. it's very frustrating. i mean, we are losing countless lives every single day. we have people out there that don't have access to resources don't have access to treatment. san francisco needs to start thinking not only about housing this legislation to help people. but also they need to start thinking about. ah! focusing on how to get people also into recovery and creating more facilities to do
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so. but i do believe the start of starting to combat are open air drug market would be to pass this legislation. it's a two pronged problem. obviously individuals like your son need the help, but there's a way you can cut it off at the source and at least san francisco the people that were speaking about in office. they are thinking about doing something. you really wish the biden administration would have done something at the start, so this wouldn't even be an issue. tanya tillman, we're praying for you. we're praying for your son. best of luck. thank you so much. i appreciate it problem university of delaware twice for classified documents belonging to the president. that's according to fox news sources, who say the bureau is still parsing through the files founded biden's alma mater, and to determine if any are classified after documents were discovered in both his wilmington's home and the pin biden center. the president's legal team has reportedly been cooperative with the investigation. but the white
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house declined to comment, referring all questions to the justice department. meantime republicans vowing to investigate million dollar donations from china to the university of delaware and the university of pennsylvania. this after university of delaware started receiving anonymous chinese donations after the biden domestic policy institute open there, including one for $5 million back in 2018 , both schools maintain there is no connection between the biden institutes and these chinese donors. former house speaker newt gingrich says these foreign donations are a major cause for concern. listen . the biden team, both of the university of pennsylvania, which got over $62 million from the chinese communists and at the university of delaware, which got at least $26 million from the chinese communist when people like secretary of state bank blinking was being paid a million dollars a year to run the penn biden center. was that
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chinese communist money? truth is, we don't know because both those universities in violation of us law. don't report it and aren't their books aren't open and you can't follow the money . no wonder no american trust this government because it either lies is utterly confused or is stunningly ignorant. you get to choose which of the three boxes you like more? into calling you out, provided administration for pushing a narrative that the chinese spy flight was blown off its original course. u. s officials say it's possible to craft was aimed for guam and hawaii but was blown off course by wind. senator marco rubio says that narrative is hard to believe. listen i do not believe that it feared heard that that's showing the chinese talking point, and maybe some people are saying that now the administration because they don't want to hype tensions any further, coincidentally, over some of the most sensitive u. s facilities right in the middle of the country. that's just not a coincidental path. meantime we're learning. white house
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aides are weighing whether to have president biden addressed the public about the latest series of unidentified flying objects that were shot down last weekend. u. s officials have said they do not believe they were used for foreign intelligence but didn't rule out any possibilities that does include ufos. could speak on the objects as soon as this week. he should have spoke on him when it happened, i agreed, but regardless, this is going to be magical tv if it happens, just get your popcorn. welcome to chicago, where homeless camps are taking over o'hare airport. just imagine walking through this while you were headed to baggage claim we've got a live report next still in america. and if you want to save money, just skip breakfast . stroh that's a new tip from the media to help you make ends meet in joe biden's america we're talking about it with. yep, you guessed it. jimmy fallon. let me just say jimmy fallon's topics today are hysterical. you're gonna want to keep it right here on fox and friends first all morning
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el paso police with two suspects in custody in connection to shopping mall shooting that left one dead and three wounded. a flood of 911 calls came in at five oh 5:00 p.m. when shots near the food court and off duty police officer working at the ml responded and was able to arrest one of the suspects just 3 minutes later. details what led to the shooting remain unclear, but the officials say the mall is an active crime scene. two victims in critical condition and the third not yet released. gathering in michigan state university for a vigil honoring the lives of three students killed in monday night's shooting. the basketball coach among those who spoke and urged the community to express their emotions during this difficult time. >> emotions are different for each and every person. i cry in front of my team, i cry on national tv. don't be afraid to show your
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emotions. we all processed trauma in a very different way. i'm just glad we are all here together tonight. >> todd: michigan governor gretchen witmer in east lansing. the suspect anthony had to fire arms and multiple magazines on herb his person with a felony gun charge and 2019 against monday shooter is defending the decision allowed to own a gun. it is standard practice for first-time gun owner to plead down to a misdemeanor and most people charged with carrying a weapon don't go go on to commit murder. alexandria verner, arielle anderson, brian fraser killed in monday night shooting. the travelers are calling this vote don't make disobedient scenes and homeless camp sprawled out from the front door all the way to baggage claim.
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speak to a massive travel hub calling the crowd out of control and warning they don't feel safe. marianne rafferty joins us with the details, marianne. >> good morning ashley and todd appear the homeless probably in the airports with vagrants and baggage claim, homeless camped out near baggage and exit doors have passengers on edge and worried about the growing problem and whether or not they are saved the world's third largest airport. one passenger says, i flew back to o'hare terminal last week and never seen such a homeless problem in package in the 50 years i've lived in cook county. it is not even that cold out. aggressively hit up with, "do you need a ride and baggage?" it is dystopian. downplaying the issue by calling it a common occurrence all airports and saying in a statement caa is aware of the population of unsheltered individuals at o'hare international airport. it is a common issue when
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temperatures drop in the winter months. chicago alderman says it is time to put an end to homelessness and out-of-control crime in the city. >> we have to fight back for the city because we can't allow what is happening here to be the mainstay for every neighborhood in every iconic partnership in chicago overrun by the homeless and overrun by the gangs and criminality and what should be a welcoming city to all good law-abiding people that want to make this home. a recent poll of chicago voters say crime and public safety is the most important issue to them with criminal justice reform 13%, economy and job 12% fully by education and immigration at 6% each and change could be coming as the city gets ready to elect a new mayor. northwestern university showing a tight race between lori lightfoot and third place
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with 14%. the challenger in the late 19% and 12% with 20% saying they are undecided. ashley, todd. >> ashley: marianne rafferty, following up on that poll and the mayoral race coming up, talking about this is until blue in the face and people decide to elect someone different to change the way their city or state is run. nothing is going to change. but with that being said, from a personal standpoint, i would not want to walk through that. i already feel uncomfortable in the airport. there is a lot of people. it is weird time so when you see this, you see these images and you think, would i feel safe? would he think anything would happen to my luggage? people slumped over and janitorial staff that called the police according to the one report, called the police and say these homeless people are walking up behind them in the
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middle of the night harassing them. we can't do anything until they physically do something so be careful. the police's hands are tied but recently chicago was given $60 million in the u.s. department of housing and urban development. so, where is this money going is my question? there is a clear problem with homelessness all over the country but you mainly see it everywhere. it is really, really bad in these liberal states. when you see $60 million going to chicago to combat this, you wonder where the money is going and what are they doing with it because nothing seems to get better. they can relocate them, but apparently they have to accept the help. i understand they are up against challenges, but you know, when post reached out to mayor lightfoot's office, they said homeless encampments at the airport are common in the winter months yet the numbers have
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increased 53% for homelessness at o'hare airport. so, the lack of action is now effecting not just people in chicago but people traveling through chicago, traveling to chicago. i don't know what she is doing but the mayoral races coming up in just a couple of weeks. she might be making tiktoks i don't know. it was 52 degrees in chicago yesterday and it's not even that cold. what are they doing to solve this problem? i would argue nothing. dispute still makes me when i don't understand that notion of homeless people are always in airports. i'm 44 years old, breaking news i've never seen. and i was commuting back and forth and so that is a horrible one. two lenses jumping off of what you said is this a dystopian world that we want to live in that the far left seems to advocate for? is this what you want, these scenes on your screen? do you know a liberal city like
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chicago was going to elect a democrat? that is clear at this point, but how can residents vote for lori lightfoot as that democrat when you see scenes like this, when you see what has happen under her watch and a plethora of areas, not the least of which is record crime that you have seen under her watch? there was a second aspect to this that it was a little bit more big picture than chicago. you, i know, study security, terrorism because you are married to someone focused in that area. this is the softest part of a very, very main target, which is an airport. this is what they called the soft part of it. you have to think if you are trying to protect an airport on the whole and you have these kind of distractions, because ultimately at this point that is what this has become the sole part of the target. think what that is happening to the target on a hole. an entire airport more vulnerable to a terrorist attack
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or horrific incident. that should be stopped by the federal government right off of the bat because this is a federal airspace and in chicago. airports are controlled by the feds. in other this shouldn't happen and it's happening and it is ridiculous. >> ashley: they can't stop that then what else can they stop? it is scary. the biden official charged with two separate accounts of luggage. theft is back on the street without bail. sam brinton nonby an error was released on one condition that he doesn't interact with his victims and charged with stealia woman's luggage worth more than $2 million from a minnesota airport and december. that charge prompted las vegas investigators to reopen a case with theft of a suitcase in june. that bag was worth $3,000. brinton was to appear in court in december but the date was changed and legal team's request. facing ten years in prison for a felony theft and grand larceny.
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>> i don't know, your guess is as good as mine. >> todd: hundreds of palestinian residents demanding answers and accountability about the toxic train disaster. pete buttigieg and the rail company no-show at last night-night's town hall. speed to take a look at this the train car still in one woman's backyard. she is going to join us next from others in the community just wanting to know if it is safe to go home. (dog barks) ♪ silverado zr2, trail boss, and custom trail boss. because adventure is everywhere.
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♪ ♪ speed when we are seeing shocking video of a fatal military helicopter crash in alabama yesterday. take a look a black hawk helicopter plummets from the sky killing two crewmembers from the national guard who were on a training flight. no injuries reported on the ground and no one on board survived. the cause of the crash remains
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under investigation. in the meantime ohio residents gathering to demand answers on safety following the toxic train crash in east palestinian. >> ashley: officials from the train company and the federal government were noticeably absent from the meeting. the mayor said he didn't hear from the white house until this past tuesday. brooke singman joins us, good morning. >> ohio residents demanding answers last night at a town hall events with toxic chemicals that has devastated these palestine. hundreds of people into a high school gym what health risks they faced as the city's mayor expressed his own frustration with the lack of aid for his town. listen. >> we are trying to get information. everybody is concerned, but you know, the epa, the people they are working with trying to get back into their home safe. >> ashley: what ohioans really
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in want to know they biden administration in transportation or a secretary know where to. >> i don't know. your guess is as good as mine. yesterday -- >> secretary pete buttigieg was on twitter and passing it on to the trump administration, "we are constrained by the law by rail regulation like the rule drawn up by the trump administration in 2018 because of a law passed by congress in 2018." we are using the powers we do have to keep the people safe, but safe is the last thing east palestine residents feel. >> for about 15, 20 minutes i had a sore throat. i vomit within 10 minutes of leaving my home. the air is terrible. the kids his friends lost cats, you know, their pets have been sick. >> i had a cloud of something
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down in there that put me in the hospital, i went to the hospital. >> the railway operated at the train that crashed was another group notably missing from the meeting. they refused to send a representative citing safety concerns sharing this statement reading, "unfortunately we are increasingly concerned about the growing physical threat to our employees and members of the community around this event stemming from the increasing likelihood the participation of outside parties." we will not be in attendance. the environmental protection agency administrator expected to be in palestine today and hoping to get more answers than they did last night, todd, ashley. >> ashley: brooke singman, thank you. we will bring in shelton walker, james wise, erin and erin's mother kathy. thank you for being with us this morning but shall become i want to go to you and i want to bring up that photo because they are train cars but it's up to the
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back of your property. you can see there are trampolines, kids toys, obviously, i'm taking that as you do have children. but one thing you said, you have been woken up in the middle of the night because they are working at night but not working in the daytime. who are you talking about when they say they? three times to don't like talking about the train company or the epa? >> whoever is back there, the train company, the epa, there are a lot of people back there. they work all night long. now that we have more media coverage it is not as bad as it was, but the smell is so bad at night. >> you said security are they living you back there and close enough to what they are doing? >> no, i can get to my property and that is all they will stop anybody that tries to go back
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there. speed to the police, the epa? >> i'm not quite sure who. they have hired security and it is not our police department. i don't believe it is epa. they have their own security. >> ashley: shelby, tell me how your family is doing. are you feeling ill at all? >> we have noticed a sore throat and very irritated eyes. it is just headaches, i think, is the worst. upset stomach. so, we do have -- [indistinct] >> ashley: at least you will get looked at by a doctor, erin before i come to you i played this sound bite from governor dewine saying the air is safe. >> we brought the scientists in and the people and to test the air throughout this period the
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air has been good. we now have results back from all of the wells and all the wills indicate testing was negative. it is clear. the water certainly can be consumed by residents. >> ashley: okay, shelby and kathy that was playing that airs around 3:00 p.m., 3:00 and 4:00 hours eastern time. that was your governor saying no one from the train company, the governor mike dewine did not show up and know pete buttigieg and no ohio senators. is that concerning point they did not show up to this meeting, to this town hall but yet they are telling you everything is safe, the water in the air? >> absolutely. i think it is ridiculous that they didn't come. governor dewine said himself he would drink bottled water if he was here. so you sit here and tell me the water is okay for me and my children and okay to consume if you are telling me to drink
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bottled water at the same time. my houses on the creek coming from the palestinian with dead fish. in my water too. >> ashley: ohio epa said they test the five wells that feed into the water supply and there were no contaminants, yet, they are saying it is safe to go home, these dead fish but drink bottled water. how is it safe to go home if you see the fish floating around? have you thought about this yourself? >> yes, right past my house and nobody has tested are well water. we have asked them to test and we can go but haven't heard anything. >> ashley: they never responded? they answered that they would get back to us but we haven't seen anybody, and actually do it. >> ashley: are you guys afraid to take a shower or drink your water? what are you doing right now?
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>> we do take showers. speed to write. james, over to you. go on, shelby or no, i think it was erin talking. >> i don't know what else to do as far as showers. i can't live in a hotel forever. so every time it is in the back of my mind when i'm taking a shower or bathing my child. there is nothing else i can do. >> ashley: i'm sure there is even more worry when it comes to your child having to deal with this and not knowing what to do. james you filed a class action lawsuit. what are you alleging in this? >> our complaint alleges a negligence of the railroad company. and like everyone else, we will try to find some answers for these people. they deserve answers. >> ashley: of course they do.
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are you wind palestine right now? >> no, i live outside of palestine in my office is in palestine. >> ashley: even though you have lived outside of it, they were a circulation that people could be worried about downstream of the water, the air quality there. is that your concern as well? >> i think a lot of people are concerned because we just have more questions than answers. it is my understanding that our senator jamie vance is coming to town today and so hopefully with the federal government if they t involved, we will get some answers. >> ashley: shelby are you satisfied what you heard last night at the meeting? were your questions answered like jane said or are they are more than answers at this point still? >> absolutely more questions.
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>> ashley: what questions do you have? i want to know what my future holds here. i don't want to be here with my children and grandchildren and i don't want to wait five, ten, 15 years to get sick. i want to know what to look for. i want to clean this mess up here they are not giving us cleaning tips how to clean our homes. we need to know. >> ashley: james, were you at the town hall last night? >> i was not. >> ashley: do any four with you know who went or knows an option? shelby, you went? >> we did not go. >> ashley: erin you did go? was there anything you said that you didn't know about before you got there or anything that struck you as, well met, they just didn't tell us? what stood out to you most in the meeting? >> a lot of it was just kind of repetitive that they have already mentioned. i did come to find warfel has
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money to relocate, which is news to me after contacting outside soil being tested. i'm sure that my house is deemed to not go back to as unsafe. >> ashley: to your point there come a lot of people and reports are saying that they are moving. but then you run into the issue, who was going to buy these homes in this town? have you thought about relocating at all and what you are going to do? >> i grew up here and this is my home. i want them to fix on the top end so that i can stay. so that we can potentially have the same future. but i want clarity that they are going to be okay. >> ashley: right, i can only imagine. i actually cannot imagine what you guys are going through a peer of this is story that i think will continue for a very, very long time. i just hope and pray to god it
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is not going to be as bad as we think because you guys do not deserve this. no one deserves this. my heart goes out to every single one of you and your families. i'm so sorry this happened to you. i'm so sorry that the people who are supposed to be representing you have not been there for you. you guys are better than that. shelby walker, kathy reese, james, we appreciate you for being with us. god bless you. so, journalists are teaming up against "the new york times." just wait until you find out why. >> todd: did you hear the president say this? >> movies, 500 charging stations around the world, i mean come around the country. it will take millions of barrels of oil off of the road. >> todd: joe biden following to slash oil production yet again but leaders in alaska are warning the white house to keep their hands off of a drilling project that will help our economy and create thousands of
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♪ ♪ >> todd: and then there were two nikki haley launching her
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2024 presidential campaign yesterday. she says she hopes to bring generational change to the republican party with her white house bid. >> i am confident the american people agree. we are ready, ready to move against day ideas of the past. we are more than ready for a new generation to lead us into the future. if you are tired of losing, put your trust in a new generation. if you want to win not just as a party but as a country, stand with me. >> todd: nikki haley join to comment on the left's reaction to her candidacy. speak with the thought of me getting into the race makes the liberals heads explode. i welcome because it shows we are doing something right. look at everything that is wrong in this country and tell me we don't need new leadership. the difference is we need new leadership. we have to leave the status quo.
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we have to leave the chaos behind, and with the start talking about the future. >> todd: nikki haley will join "fox & friends" this morning and she will use the word generational more than once. bracing for a major blow from the biden administration has the bureau of land management to reduce the number of drill sites at a major oil project in alaska. >> ashley: that project to produce 180,000 barrels of oil a day and create 2500 jobs but now all of that is in doubt. the vice president and ceo of alaska oil and gas association joins us now. biden made it clear in the state of the union address just a little over a week ago that america is clearly not ready for this green energy that they are proposing and that we have to drill ten more years. how and where are they talking about drilling and they keep shutting everything down? and now potentially to stop this project and what happens when this project gets shut down or
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dies? >> the question is called the willow project. as he stated, it would produce 180,000 barrels a day. if this project isn't approved and not allowed, it just forces our country to depend on foreign sources of oil. we have an american company wanting to invest american money and creating american union jobs to create american energy on american soil. this is a good project and it should be approved. >> todd: obviously your discussing ramifications for the entire country. for the people of alaska, what happens to the people of alaska that would have these jobs and all the industries that pop up around jobs like this if this project gets killed? >> the oil and gas industry in the state of alaska is the largest private sector employer. the number of jobs we create, the contracting jobs and all the jobs created around it, but most
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importantly, these projects are important to the north slope of alaska. indigenous people, the way this works, the national petroleum rreserve. and the revenues are split between federal government had a large portion goes directly to the local communities of the north slope. so when these types of projects do not get approved, it really hurts the local people the most. speak to what has to happen now that we know we have heard frome biden administration and bureau of land management looking to more or less kill this, what will have to happen to get this to go through? will that be loops and hoops to go through or is it cut and dry and simple and they have to sign off on it? >> so the bureau of land management as we said, they have actually approved a new supplemental eis that allows for three drill sites. that would work.
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now, this project originally started by drill sites. it has been belittled down to three. there is speculation the department of interior will reduce that even further. what is referred to a final record of decision, which could be issued as early as the 6th of march. so now, we are waiting on secretary haaland and her team. are they going to approve a plan that would work, the only bureau of land management has put forward or reduce the number of drill sites even further and make this project question marks me when the devil is in the details. but there is a much bigger picture and it is the future of american energy. here is what the president explained him that point yesterday. >> this is going to have a major impact on the environment and what we are doing specifically reducing carbon in the air as we began to move these 500,000 charging stations around the
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world, i mean come around the country. it will take millions of barrels of oil off the road. >> todd: taking barrels of oil off of the road takes food out of the mouths of people who work in the oil industry. kara mawhinney hear the president attacking your livelihood and livelihood of yor members right now, what is your? >> my reaction is i am confused by the president doesn't see a project like this as a major win. because we know we need more oil for the next ten, 20, 30, even 40 years. the american forecast shows t that. so if we do not produce that oil at home or those jobs at home, where is that we'll going to come from question market will come from countries that do not have the same environmental standards as we do. this project would use the most modern technology. it will reduce greenhouse gas emissions we know carbon is an issue and actually on the north
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slope, have the lowest greenhouse emissions and the country because we are already injecting methane back into the ground. so, we pioneer that technology here in alaska. so it makes perfect sense to approve this project because we need alaska soil to supply america's energy. >> todd: kara moriarty, thank you for your story. in the meantime take a look at this never seen video of titanic wreckage. can i sing the rest of the song? >> ashley: no one wants to hear you sing this morning. >> todd: a remote control exploring the bow and the deck of the ship when first discovered in 1986 and almost 13,000 feet below the surface of the atlantic ocean. and 80 minutes of tape and could've avoided the whole movie in 1987 if they played this. april 1912, and said ten tannic from england to new york city sinking the entire ship but i
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did enjoy these. >> ashley: are you talking about the celine dion? don't sing during the break either. >> todd: point taken. we have heard a lot of interesting things with white house briefings but this might be the best. >> i will tell you this, the president is the best communicator in the white house. >> todd: is she talking about this guy? >> two words made in america. >> it was kamala harris' birthday. happy birthday to our great president. what am i doing here? [laughter] >> ashley: here to respond, we have a big 5:00 hour. don't go anywhere. ♪ ♪
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>> todd: house speaker kevin mccarthy going to

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