tv FOX Friends First FOX News February 22, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST
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>> what would your reaction be if the da decides against bringing any charges? >> i will be sad if nothing happens. this was too much. too much information, too much of my time. there was too much for this to just be, okay, we're good, bye. >> if just a perjury charge, he will be happy if something happens. >> see. >> todd: breaking right now, multiple explosions rocking -- the "wall street journal" reporting chinese president xi jinping is preparing to visit russia for a summit with putin very soon. you're watching "fox and friends first," i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier, in for carley shimkus. an act of defiance against the
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west and there are serious concerns relationships could deteriorate further after russia decision to suspend participation in the last arms control agreement between the world's two largest nuclear-armed powers. lucas tomlinson is live in washington with the latest. good morning, lucas. >> lucas: the last treaty between the u.s. and russia limitting number of deployed nuclear warheads to 1550 and putting minimum number of launchers between both nations. here is president biden in poland to putin. >> president biden: never be able to ease people's love of liberty. brutality will never grind down the will of the free and uk ukraine, ukraine will never be a victory for russia much >> lucas: here is russia's president speaking on the same
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day, part of a two-hour address to his nation. >> what's important is that our relations have degraded, responsibility for that is fully on the united states. they can't be silly people, they want to deliver strategic defeat. regarding this, i have to say russia suspends its participation in the new start treaty. >> lucas: the republican chairman of the house rememberas committee saying all options must be on the table, including deploying nuclear forces, must accelerate efforts to modernize our nuclear system, some date back to the '50s. deploy nuclear weapons in the land, air and sea and u.s. deploys 70% aboard ballistic missile submaen radios. china foreign minister says we do not -- the u.s. should
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seriously reflect on what it has done, stop fanning the flames and stay true to promoting peace talks as china has been doing. here is donald trump former defense chief, chris miller. >> with russia focused on u.k. to the west right now, i got to think the chinese communist party is licking their lips going, we couldn't ask for better. you know they have serious limitation on natural resources and it all lies to the north. it is a little bit of an off-the-wall answer, i think the chinese are playing the long game. >> lucas: china was never party to the treaty, u.s. has no arms treaty with china right now, who are expected to double nuclear stockpile in the next decade. >> ashley: thank you, lucas. larry kudlow says president biden's lack of strength on the world stage is a threat to global security.
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listen to this. >> one key lesson we learned from great ronald raying knowa, my former boss, peace through strength. right now we have neither peace, nor strength. to be sure, after joe biden's catastrophic withdrawal from afghanistan, biden has not launched any new shooting wars, but he bringing the u.s. deeper into the ush radio-ukraine war. he's spent roughly $113 billion in the last year and more on the way, if he has his way. during the reagan tax cutting economy, the economy was growing 5% annually for seven years. today the bidens who favor redistribution, satisfied with economy barely growing above 1%. reagan boom doomed soviet communism. the biden slump encourages our enemies, russia and china.
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that is why i say that today we have neither peace nor strength. >> todd: let's bring in foreign policy expert and editor-in-chief at the foreign desk. lisa, great to have you. this "wall street journal" article is concerning and unsurprising. china's xi jinping planning russia visit as putin wages war in ukraine, that is the headline. in case there was any question about the russia-china alliance, the fact the two countries are coming together, xi will meet with putin. he says his goal, in quotes, calls nuclear weapons not be used, but what is the real goal of this meeting, lisa? >> it is no surprise, they are growing much closer together and add iran's regime to the list, as well. these are our enemies, growing closer and finding new alliances, trying to evade u.s.
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sanctions, particularly after biden's trip over to ukraine. from the perspective of putin, he's a grand dictator. this is putin's world, we all just live in it. he's watching the united states grow deeper into their commitment to the ukraine war, billions of dollars and then the u.s. decided to send tanks and train ukraine's military and this, going over there and calling this provocation. he will pull out of the start treaty and say there will be more in the future. and of course, meeting with china, the achilles heel of the united states. if we're sanctioning russia, why were they allowed to buy weapons from iran or get weapons or other parts from north korea, or grow closer to china. we're isolated our enemies, but not to the point we're
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diminishing them, we are allowing them to grow with our other enemies. >> ashley: the white house is condemning putin's decision to pull out of the start treaty you were talking about. take a listen and we'll talk on the other side. >> the announcement by russia it is suspending participation in the start is deeply unfortunate and irresponsible. we'll of course make sure we are postured appropriately for the security of our own country and that of our allies. >> ashley: without this peace treaty between the world's two largest nuclear arms powers, how much could this destabilize the entire world? >> yeah, the world just became a much dangerous place in the last 24 hours, for sure. russia came back on pulling out of the treaty and said, this doesn't mean we're going after this part of the treaty, meaning we're not going to throw away the entire treaty, we will abide
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by some of it. there has to be consequences to our actions. when biden goes to ukraine, this is action putin decides will be the one-up on biden's trip over there. of course, he knows the united states now scramble, as we are and to call this unfortunate and irresponsible, doesn't really cut it. the united states will scramble to get back into the treaty, he knows the biden administration is all about treaties. he's read them well and it shows what a grand leader and dictator putin is, he knows the weaknesses of the biden administration is playing them out nicely. >> todd: in summary, president biden says nato is stronger than ever. is that true, lisa? seems you have number of nato countries that are not paying their fair share, after trump got them to pay their fair share, it doesn't seem to me
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stronger than ever, what do you say? >> no, it is not stronger than ever. like you said, for decades, countries have not been paying their fair share or believing in nato or its role on the global stage. right now, you have a divided map for many reasons. how to curb russia, curb china, curb iran's regime. you have european union not wanting to curb or get involved in a lot of global crisis. you have the biden administration getting involved and basically waking up the beast, but not being able to curb these enemies in a way that is meaningful and really curbs them. president biden had the opportunity to sit with xi jinping a few months ago, they had a three-hour meeting, none of this was brought up. biden left there giving them a pat on the back, saying they are not going to invade taiwan.
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is that true? it is growing more heated. now they are becoming closer to china. these nations know what they are doing, they are not afraid of nato or biden. in the united states, we do not want war in ukraine, we are rooting for the biden administration and want them to stand tall on the global stage, that reflects our nation. the same time, the optics, we can't control our own borders, look at our southern border and biden is trying to control ukraine's border. it looks a little silly and putin is picking up on these weaknesses of the biden administration. we have a huge hazmat crisis in the country and biden hasn't addressed the issue. yet again he's with zelenskyy visiting ukraine and walking through the damage in his country. putin is exactly picking up all these weaknesses, pointing them
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out and trying to make a pariah out of him. >> todd: turning to this, documented gang member wanted in el salvador, deported for the third time. he was flown back to el salvador and turned over to local authorities last week. he has illegal lee crossed into the u.s., been apprehended and deported two times before and expelled under the trump era title 42 policy. title 42 could be ending soon, biden is announcing new policy to limit asylum at the border, making migrants automatically ineligible for asylum. governor greg abbott is warning migrants, don't mess with texas. >> we're sending a message today, if you're thinking about crossing the border into the state of texas, you're picking
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the wrong state. >> todd: cbp reported 156,000 migrants crossed the border into the u.s., most ever in u.s. history. >> ashley: and vivek ramaswamy launches his claim for president, the woke ceo announcing his candidacy on tucker carlson last night. >> we have celebrated diversity for so long, we forgot the ways we are the same as americans, bound by a common set of ideals that set this nation into motion 250 years ago. i'm proud to say tonight, i'm running for united states president to revive those ideals in this country. >> ashley: the third republican candidate to throw his hat in the ring for 2024, alongside former president trump and former south carolina governor nikki haley. vivek ramaswamy will join "fox and friends first" later this morning. less than a week from the chicago mayoral election and
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lightfoot is doing major damage control over this comment. >> any vote, any vote coming on the south side, for somebody not named lightfoot is vote for garcia. if you want them controlling your fate and your destiny, then stay home. don't vote. >> ashley: she said, don't vote, that is not all. wait until you hear about her latest scandal involving chicago pd. >> todd: and there is this. >> takes our entire community to combat good violence in our city, especially when it involves children. we have to find a way as a community to reclaim our young people. >> todd: a georgia mayor taking a stand against youth violence, after nine children, including a five-year-old boy, are shot at a local gas station. that mayor joins us next.
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covid that he caught on the job. marianne is live in l.a. with more. >> marianne: mayor lori lightfoot getting hit from all sides just a week from chicago hits a mayor. polls showing lori lightfoot in third place with 14% behind the top two candidates, paul dallas, former ceo of chicago public schools leading 19 percent with garcia trailing. lori lightfoot denied benefits to the officer. he is on kidney dialysis and is the brother of mendoza, who is blasting lori lightfoot. >> not in my wildest dreams did i imagine his case would be denied. you can imagine my shock, disbelief and frankly disgust when my brother's claim for duty disability benefits was denied.
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>> marianne: lightfoot calling the accusations lies. >> what little i know about her, she cares deeply about her family, but making up accusations and suggesting somehow i acted inappropriately, she's not entitled to her own facts. it is not lost on me, this is a press conference at city hall a week before the election, you can draw your own conclusion about why that is happening. >> marianne: lori lightfoot is taking heat for telling voters if they are not voting for her, they shouldn't vote at all. she is walking that statement back. >> any vote coming out of the south side not voting for lightfoot is a vote for garcia. if you want them controlling your fate and your destiny, stay home, don't vote. >> if i said anything other than
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everybody everywhere need to vote, i misspoke in the heat of a campaign rally. >> marianne: lightfoot said she believe the race will come down to herself and valez and she will beat him in a run-off. >> todd: i was told republicans are always trying to suppress the vote, it sounded like lori lightfoot there. interesting. thank you. nine children, including a five-year-old boy, shot outside a gas station in columbus, georgia, and local officials are fed up with youth violence. >> it takes our entire community to combat violence in our city, especially when it involves children. >> we were so fortunate and grateful to god we didn't have anybody lose their life. we have to find a way to reclaim our young people. >> ashley: you saw mayor skip henderson of columbus, georgia, speaking and joining us live. thank you for being with us, i
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wish it was a better topic. when you look at number of kids committing homicides, it was up 30% in 2020 and homicides by groups of minors up 66%. how do we get here and how do we solve this? >> you know, ashley, thank you and todd for having me on this morning. i would rather join you on any other topic than this because events of friday night in columbus, georgia, were horrific. i think it coincides with the dissent gragz of the family and our police chief and i both were talking from a perspective of getting the entire community involved. i talked to a group of business leaders yesterday and shared it is time for the community to make a choice. you are either in on this or sit on the sideline and complain. we have to got to find a way to
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put fences around young people and get them on the right path at an early age. >> todd: young people are committing crimes, 400,000 juveniles arrested nationwide in 2020. a lot of crime is committed against other juveniles. can you imagine a time kids were more at risk than they are this day and age? >> it is hard for me to imagine there being more difficult time to be a young person, frankly. when they get ahold of a gun, they are not capable of making a decision. if they are in conflict or argument, their first reaction is to pull the trigger and our sheriff tells us he will see kids so tough with gun there hand, crying wanting their parents because they made a decision that affected the victim of the gunshot and their own life.
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>> ashley: mayor, what about town halls, would that make any headway in your town or policing or what base how we can get the kids and really it starts at home, how can we get them to do better raising kids and making them want to do the right thing? >> i think it is a lot about, a lot of focus on opportunity. we do have a number of meetings with different areas of our community. we have been putting $750,000 a year into local grants for any organization or program that has a core mission to reduce crime. we've been doing that for 12 years and entered an agreement with the national organization cure violence. they are about complete with hiring interrupters or community advocates and we have met with individuals who focus on the health of children, both
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physical and mental because there is severe mental health issue that is evading our young people. it is going to take a number of different efforts on a number of different not fros. we continue to fund our police department, if young people refuse to take advantage or make a conscious choice not to take advantage of the opportunities available to them, our mission changes. identify them, lock them up for as long as we can. >> todd: there need to be consequences, need to be teeth behind the arrests. mayor skip henders know on, we appreciate your time. the head of the epa and ohio governor sharing a glass of tap water in east palestine, where residents have been waiting for weeks for action from the white house. >> ashley: meanwhile, transportation secretary pete buttigieg is not sure when he will make that trip. >> are you going down there at all? >> yep, i am.
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>> when are you going? >> i'll share that when i'm ready. >> thank you. >> ashley: it is almost like he made the decision on the spur of the moment, yep, i am. we'll get live reaction from east palestine residents after this. your life the way you want it? what would it look like? i've had great success as a small business owner, and i can show you how. because of the success of my bestselling book, blue collar cash, i've created an online course called a path to a successful life. get my books and course for just $99. and if you do it now, i'll double it so you can share it with a friend or a loved one. go to blue collar cash dot com slash fox today.
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since the toxic train derailment in east palestine and the epa chief is taking matters into his own hands. >> todd: officials are going in resident's home and drinking their tap water to ensure safety. brooke singman has the latest. >> brooke: three weeks after the toxic derailment and biden's epa says they will take --
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that with biden and the federal government who has failed them from the beginning, the former president is expected to donate thousands of gallons of cleaning supplies and thousands of bottles of water to the community. ashley brooke, thank you with that. let us bring in these palestinian resident tommy powers who worked right down the tracks from the derailment. tommy, you heard in brooks piece there. people saying he had the time is in right yet for him to show up to
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your embattled town, saying when he does get there, his focus is going to be on train safety. look we all want the trains to be safe. but a shouldn't he be there? i don't know. three weeks ago and two shouldn't the focus be on getting you the help you need to survive? yes i totally agree with that. um the time is now, um so i feel like i don't know, just kind of feels like robert like profits over people and corporate greed is going on right now. so we need to tackle it head on and just get out in front of it. get on the ground. i'm trying to put myself in your position, and i'm trying to think of this as i would if i were in your position. three weeks have gone by. we're starting to see some progress from officials. but to me this looks like way
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it's a step in the right direction. um, but there is the immediate danger and then there's a long term danger. okay so we're facing two fronts here. so you know, we're all in fear because there's the immediate danger. and then what happens to 45 years down the road as well. so that's where all this fear is coming from, and people are just worried sick motions. it's all over the place to follow ups to that one on the immediate danger, will you if you did drink tap water , let's preface it with that. would you now run a tap and run a cup under there and drink it. um well, yeah. and now going to the long term impacts. i don't know what your financial situation is, but do you think you're going to stay in this town? and can you stay in this town? ah the thoughts definitely crossed my mind. right? so, um there's a just
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concerns as far as like my house like i just got over cancer. so i have four young kids look after in a way. so as cancer here and there, my mind goes there immediately and it hits home. i mean, for the initial time, we are a small-knit communities, we are staying to play and then make some long-term decision later in life. >> understood, we'll be praying for you and your family, the conversation should have been 2-1/2 weeks ago, i can't believe three weeks after we are still in the words phase and there hasn't baction and that is frustrating to me. you are in our prayers, tommy, best of luck.
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>> thank you. >> ashley: military families are being forced to turn to food pantries to survive new york city high cost of living. one coast guard wife says her children go without meat most weeks because they cannot afford rising cost of groceries. she says it is grossly more expensive here, military family no longer have family connections you can rely on for things like child care. when gas hit a high, we were cut back, we made the decision we were not going to drive the car and we were going to walk or hike. she is living in on-base housing with their three children and soon to be a fourth, i believe she is eight months pregnant. she's being forced to stay home because of massive cost of daycare. they have food pantry trips twice a month. reports it is helping 2300
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military families. so look, new york city, it is hard enough to live in if you are even making a wage that is supportable. new york city is very expensive. when you couple that with inflation or the hard times you have and having three and four children, you know, it's hard. i guess this does bring a whole new meaning to sacrifice for military families. you would think the biden administration would want american families to flourish when it comes to inflation with high cost of living in new york city, but especially military families. we're asking them to put their lives on the line if they have to go into war, but now we're asking them to cut back on food for their kids, saying you're not going to have meat at the table for your kids. it is heartbreaking to hear. when she talks about child care,
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i have many friends that just quit their jobs because they cannot afford child care. upward of $3000 per kid per month. it is cheaper to just quit. next point, there is a reason military suicide is up. there is a reason that they are turning to drugs and alcohol because it gets so tough just doing that job in the military and then now putting this on to where it is almost impossible, you don't have a choice when they move you from base to base, you have to do what you can. they came from, i believe, northern illinois. they have their own problems, but nothing compared to new york city. i feel for this family. really what can you do? >> todd: yeah, i can feel your emotion coming out on this story. the last story i read before going to bed, this upset me, i
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had trouble going to bed. where is cost of living adjustment when the federal government tells you that you need to move. where is the job placement and child care enhancements so the wife can continue to work and keep your kids in child care. if the government is uprooting these people, it should improve their quality of life. haven't we done multiple stories about hotels in new york city housing migrants, upward of 500 to 600 per night per hotel. these migrants have not sacrificed their lives for our country, they have not signed up at 18 years of age to say, i know i might die, this is in service 've my country. this is how we treat migrants coming illegally, we give thousands and give them food
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they throw away. >> ashley: this is pictures of the migrants' food being tossed in the trash because they didn't like it. >> ashley: you are here in america, being given free food and shelter and you complain about it, but you have military families whose kids are going hungry, it is infuriating. >> todd: rationing milk. these kids need milk and yet that family is rationing milk because they can't afford a basic human necessity. this is how we treat the people who offer to fight and die for our country. >> ashley: exactly, this is why it is important to vote and why your vote matters. students praising new university in austin, texas and so-called forbidden courses dedicated to free speech. >> there were so many different kinds of people like atheist and christians and republicans and
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democrats, discussing anything turned into this really rich learning experience. >> ashley: we'll talk to some of those students next. >> todd: georgia bulldogs are back-to-back college champions, for second year in a row, they are not getting a white house invite. tell you how the players are reacting to that snub. i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month.
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>> ashley: the new university of austin launching pro free speech summer programs that encourage talking about taboo topics the school calls forbidden courses and students who took it are praising the program for dedication to fearless, open dialogue. arie is one of them and joins me this morning. thank you for being with us this morning. you go to a different college or university, but you did take this course, tell us what you took away from it? >> i think the really amazing thing about this course that stood out to me was the atmosphere to pervaded the whole course. everyone, even the instructors, had this charity, they heard
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everyone for what they were saying and were willing to talk past differences. we had cool conversations about topics we normally don't get to talk about today, things like religion, sexuality, politics and discussing things outside the normal two-party system. i think that stood out to me about this program being unique and full of people who thought the world doesn't have to stay the way it is, the future can be brighter than today and the way we go about making the future is by building things. they are trying to build a new university and i was blown away by the program. >> ashley: what happened in the classes when people disagreed? what was that atmosphere like? >> that's a great question. so all the classes were intentional about building structure to handle
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disagreement. i was in doorian abbott a class on global warming. before we had debates about policy or debates about evidence, we would sit down and study the evidence together or study the methods used or feedback and working from a place of shared understanding, a common framework and not speaking from a place of just opinion, but we were using our opinion and like the facts available to us and then when we disestablishmentarianism agree, we could grapple with the disagreement in a way more than talking over one another. >> ashley: the university of austin raised $100 million as of december 15th. they opened in november of 2021, very new place, very new university. who would you recommend take this course? >> i think that this forbidden course program opportunity is
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perfect for anyone who is excited to engage in a different space. if they feel there is something missing from their current high school or college, if they feel like they are shut out of conversations because the conversations they want to have, you are not expected to have in a classroom today. i think those sorts of students to apply to forbidden courses program. applications are open for this coming summer, they are due in a week and a half. >> ashley: you are a big proponent of it, did you ever hear of anyone you were in class with that didn't like it? yeah, you know, i think we're trying to be careful -- i say we, when all participants were together, we're worried about trying to make a space that was open for everyone because we want this university to succeed, as students we've bought into it, we were trying to make it fun and cluesive.
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the worry you will attract radical people to a project like this. i think we tried to make space for the quieter voices or people who felt boxed out of conversations and i think it was successful. >> ashley: you were cognizant of other people's views and opinions, that is what america is supposed to be. thank you, we appreciate your take on it. >> todd: the georgia bulldogs calling out the biden administration for failing to invite the team to the white house for a second straight year. what's going on? it is tradition for president to invite college football national champ, but the back-to-back champs checking their invite. the d lineman tweeting biden about the snub saying, no invite to the white house is crazy and there is bipartisan effort on capitol hill to get the bulldogs to d.c.
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georgia lawmakers wrote to joe biden saying we hope you will join us ineck are niezing the tremendous achievement of the university of georgia football players, coaches and staff who contributed to this championship season. crickets. you have raphael warnock, they want to get the dogs to d.c. college baseball, fun not allowed anymore. university of washington first baseman simpson ejected from this game for this celebration of game-tying home run. he flips his bat and trots the bases, rounding third, showing the label on the jersey and give teammates a hug and he jumped and high five in the dugout. there is the jump, he was ejected from the game and faces suspension for washington's next game. video going viral, social media trying to figure out what he did wrong, no idea what he did
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(birds chirping) well this isn't gonna work. try this. (celebratory choir sings) this... will work. scooore! pick up score! at walmart. ** >> todd: lori lightfoot's days as chicago mayor could be numbered as she sinks to third place. you're watching "fox and friends first" on wednesday morning, i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier in for carley shimkus. since lori lightfoot was sworn in, the city of chicago has crumbled under her leadership. crime is an epidemic with crime up 63% compared to this day in 2019 and murder in the city are up staggering 61%. >> todd:
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