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tv   FOX Friends First  FOX News  April 3, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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faof teaching about order in a different way. it is about rules, obeying rules to protect notob onleyy yourselt your family and your home in your country. and i'm very excited about that. anybody who wants to get this book can go to brave books.com. >> steve: i've got to say the american club awesome sauce, thank you and see you next sunday on "the next revolution" and it will be televised. >> like a bomb or something when i was inside. i could hear trees breaking hitting the sides of the wall. it felt like the building was going to pull apart. >> todd: we begin with a fox news alert. another set of storms to impact 48 million people the central part of the country this week. it comes after 32 people were killed at a major storm that unleashed 7 of 6 tornadoes over the weekend. >> ashley: more than 10,000 people in arkansas waking up in the dark as we brace for this new round of potentially
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devastating storms systems without power. 5,000 flights already delayed today with 800 canceled. we have a live report ahead. >> todd: peppers to another fox news alert, former president trump to arrive in new york city this morning with his arraignment at manhattan courthouse tuesday. you are watching "fox & friends first" on monday morning, i'm todd piro. ashley strohmier in for carley shimkus. more on what happens next. that is right former donald trump preparing for his arraignment tomorrow in new york city sing overnight "i will be leaving mar-a-lago on monday at 12:00 noon heading to trump tower. tuesday morning i will be going to come to believe or not the courthouse. america was not supposed to be this way. >> let's take a look what we can look for tomorrow's the president's arraignment. to arrive at the county criminal courthouse 11:00 a.m. several streets are expected to be closed around 1:00 p.m. as arraignment is set to begin at 2:15.
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this could all be as finished as soon as 2:30. the former president will speak tomorrow night back at mar-a-lago. here is trumps lawyer on what we can expect from the legal team inside the courthouse, listen. >> we will dissect it and the team will look at every potential issue that we will be able to challenge and we will challenge and i very much anticipate motions. there is no law that fits this. >> we are learning the judge at the mall's arraignment prepare to slap a former president with a gag order. the source of site "the trump legal team thinks manhattan judge who take unprecedented step of silencing presidential front runner with an unconstitutional gag order tomorrow breaking the order could trigger a fine of $1,000 and prison sentence as as much as 30 days. meanwhile lawmakers and officials coming forward to slam the charges against trump entirely. former u.s. attorney bill barr
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said this case has no legal basis. >> it is the very essence of the abuse of the prosecuted function which is pursuing a person rather than pursuing a real crime. and i think the american people see that. >> trumps legal team don't expect the former president to make a perp walk but it is unclear at this point whether he will take a mug shot, todd, ashley. >> todd: brooke, thank you very much. splintered joe manchin stop by a number of shows to express his docs on the former presidents indictment. listen to this. >> it's very sad for america. no one is above the law but no one should be targeted by the law. let's wait and see what comes out next week. i would hope and pray it ever comes forth that they do due diligence and understanding the role of the law is that basically no one is above the law but no one should be targeted by the law. and we just got to make sure
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that we understand that we have to come together. >> ashley: we will bring in mark smith constitutional attorney and former member of president trump's transition team. thank you for being with us this morning. you have been and have been going to but you said it is going to be "logistical nightmare." explain to us why that is and how much this will cost taxpayers. >> in new york city, lower manhattan come up which is nothing but a series of large buildings including many court houses, federal courthouses and state court else's. the only way to get the president of the united states from midtown manhattan and trump tower to lower manhattan is probably to spin tim $10 million to prevent people from coming in the area. remember these are busy core else's. thousands of jurors, lawyers, judges, the press coming into the buildings, you have to shut that down just to get the
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president in the courthouse. it will be a mad house tomorrow morning. the people will pay the price of the taxpayers because it will cost $10 million to get the president down there what appears to be $130,000 issue. >> todd: the liver you get manhattan, that is sure logistical nightmare right there. as to the law you heard in brooke piece, check a peanut, they will file a motion to dismiss as soon as they can review the indictment. based upon what we know right now, should that motion to dismiss the granted? >> well, it is impossible to know for sure until you see the indictment, which apparently we will see tomorrow morning. but it sounds like the real deal. remember, we were talking about something seven years ago. right off of the bat a possible statue of limitations defense and apparently the underlying charge is potential federal crime. but the federal prosecutors have
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looked at this and passed on it. so is they were even a crime under state law? we will not know for sure until we see the indictment. but obviously a strong motion to dismiss here, but of course, we have to wait to see the indictment to be sure. >> ashley: this potential gag order, obviously i am not a lawyer and i don't know how this works but when i heard that, i thought little strange but her .it is supposed to be in order o get over that. but a practical matter in fact, gag orders normally speaking a gag order is meant to protect defendants sixth amendment right to a fair trial. in this case, the gag defendant. >> ashley: my question to come is this shady or just procedure in new york? >> keep them in mind the purpose is parties from talking about a criminal case so the american pc
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or potential jurors won't find out about it and be biased in terms of the outcome. but here, that is not a concern. everyone in america has paid attention to the details of this donald trump saga. keep in mind, also, the purpose of a gag order in free speech is to make sure the criminal defendant has a fair trial under the sixth amendment. but presumably president trump will not ask for a gag order pure the people that will ask for it is the government district attorney and possibly the judge will impose it and the criminal defendant would not want to. but remember the bill of rights is to ensure that the individual criminal defendant has a fair trial. if that individual doesn't want a gag order, it seems a stress to grant one, especially where you are dealing with the president of the united states, running for the white house. really wants to talk about this on the campaign trail.
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if you were to gag him from being able to talk about this, guess what, you're implicating political speech which the corps protected by the first amendment. >> todd: they were as your political interference right there. there. your election interference. what does the timeline look for this case going forward past tomorrow? >> this is a case that will go on for many, many months, may be well over a year. keep in mind, whatever happens every step of the way, todd, a series of appeals. so former president trump will file his motion to dismiss and that will likely take months for the trial judge to make that decision. when he makes that decision, guess what will happen? no matter who wins, they will be an appeal taken peer that will go on for who knows how long. these things don't move fast in the new york state court system. we could be looking at over a year before you see a trial in this case if you ever get to that point. so i think the big thing here,
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of course, president trump is going to be campaigning for probably a year for this is hanging over his head. so, it is really unprecedented and kind of shocking, if you think about it. >> ashley: to your comment about a fair trial, do you think you will get a fair trial in new york city? >> i think it will be difficult for him to get a fair trial in new york city. the good news is the trial takes place in manhattan, which means manhattan voters and in some ways, that is helpful to him because in manhattan, you have a large number of professionals who i think who might be favorable to president trump. but it is very difficult to say, you find manhattan jurors a little more conservative than new york city jurors as a whole. but again it will turn how jury selection process goes down and who gets to sit on the jury. odds are, it is difficult to get a fair trial in a county overwhelmingly voted against president trump in the last election. >> todd: trump trying to move
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the case to staten island, obviously. much more conservative area that went for trump pretty hard-core. that does not look likely to happen. interesting point you mention on manhattan, lower manhattan. we will see. >> ashley: we appreciate your time. >> thank you. >> ashley: former governor asa hutchinson amounting to honey 24 bed and wasting no time on trump's upcoming arraignment. watches. >> he should drop out of the race. do you believe he should drop out? >> i do, first of all at the office is more important than any individual person. so for the sake of the office of the presidency, i do think it is too much of a sideshow and distraction and he needs to be able to concentrate on his due process. >> ashley: hutchison says he doesn't like the idea of the charges brought against trump in new york, but that the presidency and our justice system need to be respected.
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>> todd: tax returns revealing the nonprofit paying out six figures to michelle obama's former per host with rumors marco could consider a run for political office. just unclear. the foundation by the duchess and prince harry paying $110,000 to public relations firm before the first lady as well as hillary clinton. former presidential candidate john kerry. he is also, political rumors began in 2020 when the runaway with california governor gavin newsom followed by 2021 letter to congress calling for -- >> ashley: a fox news alert, millions of people in a dozen states bracing for a new powerful storms this week. it comes after a massive system spawned 76 reported tornadoes that left at least 32 people dead. >> todd: in need of vocal tracking the latest from l.a., . forecasters are calling for
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parts of the central u.s. to take cover once again from that upcoming storm system that could be life-threatening. coming days after a series of storms ripped through the central part of the u.s. from catastrophic tornadoes that left behind a swath of death and destruction. at least 32 people died after buildings collapsed and trees fell on homes with people inside in 11 states across the midwest. families still reeling from losing loved ones right before their eyes. state leaders spend time touring the store to make storm damage and now resources for recovery efforts. >> yesterday i authorized a state disaster proclamation form impacted counties across the state. this will facilitate the delivery of resources to these communities, th who have been affected. >> meanwhile thousands are left to pick up the pieces of their
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lives and try to move forward. >> this started shaking the house and i grabbed her. the roof was ripped off of the house. we were laying there glass flying and everything. >> so scary. and now meteorologists say people in the central plains and upper midwest need to brace for more peer they are telling folks in chicago, st. louis, kansas city, missouri, arkansas, oklahoma to get ready for more tornadoes, hail and severe thunderstorms. they also predict major snowstorms from coast to coast, including the west coast into the rockies and nevada and colorado. in so far today, there have already been more than 100 flight cancellations and more than 6,000 delays. nearly 50 million people could be impacted over the next couple of days, todd and ashley. >> todd: it is a wild storm.
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it hit on my east coast and my brother had to go to his basement. anita thank you. in last week's blackhawk military helicopter crash, they now know what was the cause of the collision. among the nine soldiers killed in that crash >> night vision goggles. >> it was an accident. >> we believe our lord jesus was with him. >> we know where he is. >> safe. he is safe. >> todd: salinas family said david always wanted to serve his country purity was only 23 years old. the cause of the crash is to under investigation. 25 train cars he reeling in montana were some smashed into a local river. what we know about the crash and the threats to the public. >> ashley: and oil prices are soaring after opec announced
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major production. how this will impact you in your wallet? we have everything you need to know when the president of the u.s. oil and gas association joins us next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> todd: a train in northwest montana derailing and toppling 25 cars ants spilling unknown contents into a nearby body of water. officials say th did not appearo be toxics on board. the montana braille investigating the cause of the derailment, ashley. >> ashley: after opec announced surprise cuts made through the end of the year. tim stewart is the president of the u.s. oil and gas association and joins me now. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> tell us why americans should be so concerned about this? >> potential instability caused primarily in the u.s. by the banking system right now. i've always wanted a crisis in
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$90 but basically the reports are saying this production cut is in response to the united states. they were not -- strategic range. in that it seems like opec is telling the administration this means the crisis will go up. you have seen them jump over night. we are headed back into the summer and fighting a situation where we might see crisis exactly similar range where they were last summer and it's problematic for everybody. the two as you said coming into spring and summer, traveling, vacations, it is already rough as it is. how rough are you talking in how much will it go up? >> you know, i think the price is the $90 range. we have seen it go up 80% overnight. the sad thing, compare the length of time opec, between all
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of the members may 1st to december 31st. the same number taken out of production that the u.s. needed to put back to filled the strategic petroleum reserve. we don't have a lot of options in her ability to increase production is constrained by issues and ongoing supply chain issues. the administration doesn't have a lot of options right now. one thing they could do is embrace to incriminate in releasing proposal the house passed last week. to embrace that and that will give us flexibility, i think. >> ashley: is there anything else that you mentioned not so tied to what opec is saying and what the saudis are doing? >> you know, that is a great question. last week one of the ceos of the major companies said look, the global and market factor solutions back in the 70s when opec ruled the markets and none of us want to be there. from the administration's perspective i guess, they can
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renew a new policy with the saudis. but otherwise, let's work together and get this done. >> ashley: right now the national average for a gallon of regular gas is $3.50 this morning. this morning, i filled up for $3.57 and always a smidge higher in new york. how much more can americans take of this? simply has to give because when you look at it, guess has not come down. it is still low, it is not high. where does this end? >> unfortunately we are not where we were at last summer. but we see the same mistakes lester this time. again from the u.s. perspective, $90 is high. the last thing as a producer to increase something nobody can afford. from our perspective, the show producers with getting error rigs up and running, we are doing our best but frankly, the regulatory and other challenges will be difficult. >> ashley: so the u.s. oil and
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gas association which you are president of his pushing back against this ongoing campaigns, which is the gas stove saga to band the gas powered stoves. tell us about this hands off my stove campaign. >> right. it is going to be interesting. this issue has resonated with people. our kitchen is a home where we gather, feed and it fills like the government kick down doors. and people really resonate with them. it used to be that the gas prices but now they are unhappy about the government to take their stoves away. they don't care the way they make pasta or environmentalists. what they care about is intrusion into their personal space. this is very, very personal thing to them it's about choice, freedom, and it's risky. hands off my stove. we are gathering together people and showing them how to fight
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back. so our ability to take that fight to the the local officials who are driving this had to give them information. they have two things, this is a stupid idea to ban gas stoves and homes and residences. so you have to show how stupid that is. and point out, we will call it hypocrisy. it is interesting, stacey abrams is an example. she is getting paid big bucks for poor and moderate income families that gas stoves is bad but she has a gas stove in her home. entering to show people where to go for information and organize and fight back. the two so augment this gas stove bailing conversation popped up, a big push for kathy local in new york but the nonprofit group is fighting back free energy "we are defending the rights of cooks and homeowners from elitist policymakers and politicians who think they have the right to tell you how to make your dinner.
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and of course, how to argue in your kitchen, pay your bills, like you said everything happens in the kitchen. tim stewart thank you for your time this morning. >> thank you. >> ashley: of course alejandro mayorkas dismissing push to impeach him and still won't say there is a press. >> do you feel what is happening for the borders of the crisis? >> i view it as a significant challenge. >> why won't you say crisis? i have tremendous faith of the people in homeland security. >> ashley: if you think that is bad wait until you hear the rest. >> todd: evan, we are talking to one of his friends and fellow reporters about what this is about and what happens next. don't though anywhere.
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for the borders is a crisis? >> i view it as a significant ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term
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♪ ♪ >> todd: homeland security alejandro mayorkas now pushing back against g.o.p. efforts to
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impeach him. >> ashley: he is still refusing to call what is happening at the southern border a crisis. alexandria hoff has more from washington, alexandria, good morning. >> good morning ashley, todd. the first to call a significant challenge rather than a crisis. that is how he phrased it in an interview in "60 minutes." do you feel what is happening at the border a crisis? >> i view it as a significant challenge. >> why won't you say crisis? you know what i have tremendous faith and the people of homeland security. the crisis speaks to me of the withdrawal from our mission. >> ashley: the way that the mission is going right now from october to february this year, 1 million border encounters more than 2022. in fact in total fiscal year 22, last week, alejandro mayorkas hammered in the house and senate with a number of republicans calling for quit or be fired.
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secretary mayorkas was asked about that. >> congress seems to be more interested in impeaching youth and passing immigration reform. one member of congress said he would like to arrest you for negligent homicide for the deaths of people from fentanyl. >> disregard that type of rhetoric. i'm focused on the mission. i'm not going to resign. speak with a crisis is not easing up. fox news bill melugin sharing this video what appears to be aa flotation advice drifting down the rio grande at eagle pass. it is so hard to see. the texas national guard rushing in to help this child but unfortunately we are told that little boy who wasn't rescue. nikki haley alongside congressman tony gonzalez will head to the u.s.-mexico border near eagle pass and san antonio. according to italy's campaign the first trip to the border since 2024, guys. >> ashley: it is tough to see
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these images been incredibly hard to see the little kids being abandoned that one last week. this is getting ridiculous. alexandria, thank you. a hotel worker in manhattan suing the city officials after allegedly being assaulted by a migrant. the worker is albanian immigrant was left in the face by a migrant staying at the ny maa hotel. she is filing a nicholson gnomic negligent suit against the city saying they did nothing despite claims of harassment and claims from the suspect. migrants have been spread out across new york city and various hotels after the city became a hot spot for sanctuary. the ongoing migrant's to cost $42.2 billion. >> todd: secretary of state antony blinken demanding russia free "wall street journal" reporter evan who was detained last week on espionage allegations.
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and calls to release another imprisoned american paul will in. >> ashley: but rushes defending the arrest saying the journalist was caught red-handed trying to obtain secret information in the light of the established facts of the elite illegal activities of the u.s. citizens, his fate will be determined by the court. >> todd: "new york times" reporter michael joins us now. thank you for being here and what was your reaction when you heard what happened to evan? >> a mixture of shock and confusion and all of us know evan who has been a reporter for "wall street journal" in moscow. he has done stellar work in one of the few reporters that has come back to russia since russia invaded ukraine february 2022 and doing incredible work since then under increasingly difficult conditions. and for russian foreign ministry
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to accuse him of espionage is absurd. >> ashley: michael do you believe whatever he was working on is behind his arrest? >> i can't say i know what evan was working on at the moment he was detained. but i think whatever that was is beside the point. russia has a history of detaining people, detaining americans for use in its own geopolitical policies and bargaining trips with the west and the united states. so whatever he was detained for was the work he was doing. >> todd: any sense what he could have been caught "red-handed" doing? or another example of vladimir putin's hosted on the world stage for a while a while now? >> i have no idea what evidence the russian government plans to use to make its point. they haven't revealed anything so far. and again, evan has been in that country for years doing
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reporting. he published his reports, most recent report was published on march 28th, which i think is days before his arrest. so, there is nothing to these allegations. the russian government has provided allegations that kept him hidden away in a prison in moscow without providing information about his condition or what it is he is up against. >> ashley: what did you make of the state department demanding the release of not only evan but paul from prison? do you think the united states carries any weight with this? >> i think the united states is going to have to open up whatever avenues it has to communicate with the russian government to try to negotiate the release of both evan and paul, which i know they have been trying to do for years now. and if you will recall, there was another case of a basketball player brittney griner from
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earlier last year and her release was negotiated. so unfortunately, we see this repeat itself again in russia with the russian government seizing americans and use them to a bargaining. >> todd: it works for "the wall street journal." the editor in chief on the call between the united states and russia. speak with the fact that antony blinken spoke to his counterpart today is usually reassuring. we haven't been able to get any messages to him. we haven't heard anything from him. there's been very little information. >> todd: michael, knowing russia as well as you do, how does this all end? >> it is really hard to say at this point. in the past, we know that russia has insisted on carrying out persecution.
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since this is espionage case, this prosecution trial will be held behind closed doors and we will probably know very little about it. and they will seek a conviction and he will face up to 20 years in prison. under the charges he is facing and what kind of negotiations might be going on behind the scenes between the united states and the russian government is going to be unknown to us. unfortunately, we will have to wait and see. we put in pretrial information until may and i can only assume there will be some kind of trial of prosecution down the road. but i'm afraid we have a long wait ahead of us and he will be stuck in that prison for a long time. >> todd: i fear you are right. thoughts and prayers with evan because people like you, michael, you are doing the work to let us know what is happening in other parts of the world. it is braver can we appreciate what all you are doing.
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let's get him home, michael schwirtz, thank you so much come appreciate it. a new poll shows half of americans say they think a college degree is a waste of time. we are talking to three students on why they are rejecting higher education and charting their own path to success. >> ashley: and then there is this... >> can i ask you what you identify as? >> identify? >> i identify as an american. [applause] >> not an african american? >> ashley: turned upside down, the lawmaker stood up for his identity as an american and will join us next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> todd: missouri state representative justin hicks, a black republican fending off questions about ethnicity from democrat lawmaker because he backs a bill against eei, diversity, equity and inclusion. take a listen to this exchange. do you agree with this dei bill? >> yes i said i am okay with the bill as it stands currently. >> can i'd ask you what you
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identify as? >> identify? >> ethnicity? i identify as an american. [applause] >> not an african american? are you african american? >> todd: representative hicks, the american in that video joins me now. thank you for being here. what were you thinking about being yelled at by a fellow state rep? >> good morning. what i was thinking, i was thinking this is actually ridiculous being question on race by itself. and the legislation we were introducing is solely to ensure that the states with business with preferential treatment to individuals based on their race,, national or general together and that we are actually giving funds to different vendors and staffing based on merits and with the state believes is appropriate. >> todd: let's get into the bill behind that you did exchange that you just
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mentioned. it says the following no funds will be for staffing, vendors, programs associated with diversity, equity, and inclusion or diversity and inclusion belonging. why did you vote for that though? why did you determine this bill is necessary? >> so, i determined this bill is necessary because by itself on its face, what adventures it does is ensures the states signed the budget and not in the business of doing funds for funding dei programs but promote preferential treatment to certain groups when we are all equal, equal under the law. that is why i supported this legislation. >> todd: fat line "i am an american." why do they want to inject race into everything. a response from that woman when you said i am an american, which is a factual statement and something we should be proud of.
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>> i think the left has kind of lost basic reality on what is going on. we go beyond issues of race here in america. this is not an issue of race anymore. i think they look for words to divide us instead of unite us. i think that is what sets them off is the lines of the american first and not divide us based on race. that goes against what they believe in an altogether. >> todd: there is a subtext to the word american. when i hear the word american come i think meritocracy. the bill you are trying to book forward is meritocracy rewarding the most successful businesses with contracts. putting those two together, how do we get all of america back to this notion of a meritocracy? >> i think the way we get back there i think we have to start
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with taking race out of the conversation altogether. we need to do that. we are focusing on people's merit and character and what they have done as far as successfulness. we are not looking at arbitrary factors that really don't play into anything that actually are quantitative that are actually things we should be looking at when giving out money from a state level. because it doesn't matter what race you are, you can be successful or not. so overall we are all equal under the eyes of the law as i said earlier. this is why we have to look at it that way. we have to get away from looking at race, identity politics and look under one scope of what is best for the country and what is best for your state, and what is best for americans overall. >> todd: your response had a huge round of applause from your colleagues. had you r prepare that response for this moment or did that just
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come out? >> that just came out. i was taken off guard that she called on me over there and bombarded me with questions about my race. none of it was prepared at all. it was of the first thing that came to my head. because it doesn't matter about race. race has been an issue in my life. i have never thought of people on the level of race. i see people like people. >> todd: missouri state representative and american, justin hicks, thank you for joining us this morning. thank you, sir. >> thank you. >> ashley: it was an exciting night for country music at the 2023 music awards, but it was also very emotional as host and singer kelsea ballerini pays tribute to the nashville school shooting victims. >> three 9-year-olds, evelyn dieckhaus, william kinney, hallie scruggs, along
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with dr. katherine koonce, cynthia peak, mike hill locked into the covenant school and didn't walk out. i pray deeply that the closeness can soon turn into action like real action. >> ashley: and another emotional performance given by wynonna judge who paid tribute to her late mom with rendition of "i want to know what love is." ♪ ♪ lynyrd skynyrd was also honored by an all-star lineup of singers like paul rogers, bill gibbons who sang some of their classic kids. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> in the meantime shania twain spoke about what she hopes to see from a new generation of country music. >> pushing the agenda. >> i believe in an all-inclusive country music or family. >> ashley: and star-studded performances from country's biggest stars, carrie underwood and blake shelton, cohost gained ground, took home the top prize best video for their hit "thank god." >> todd: you know, ashley kaman march madness is coming to san diego state. face is uconn in the national championship and this comes after the aztecs 14-point come back over florida atlantic university on saturday. in the meantime, the lsu women's team went from 16-1 long shot to national champions bringing home the university's first national
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basketball ncaa women's title and went on 85-point victory over iowa. the tigers did not come without controversy. look at this, taunting the player of the year and clark putting up an impressive 30 points but struggling with fouls throughout the game. and the coach outfit is going viral. that is allowed! almost me when i'm doing sports. arriving in a sequined tiger pantsuit, must-see designed by -- former engineer who launched a fashion lead called "queen of sparkles." but stay on this for two seconds. i watched two seconds of this game and women's basketball is a violent game. >> ashley: i told you come i wasn't lying! >> todd: i was worried. i thought somebody was going to get hurt. it is like ballet. two and ask her don't like nascar, the 2023 season at
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richmond. >> side-by-side. first win of the season for kyle larson. >> quick pick stop for new jersey's teammate, josh. it is the 20th cup series win of his career. >> ashley: to wild video out of the big apple big apple, lightning striking the spire or world trade center sparking bright flashes across manhattan skyline. the video going viral on social media. slamming new york city saturday. luckily, no injuries were reported. even upstate, the wind 70 miles an hour and the sky was pitch black. it was scary. >> todd: obviously -- it was weird, nonetheless. >> ashley: a fox news alert
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set to arrive in new york ahead of arraignment tomorrow. >> todd: a live report outside of the court house he will appear the nation and brace for this unprecedented moment. tony here from creditrepair.com, helping people see the true cost of bad credit. what are you doing to improve your credit? should i be doing something? absolutely, unless you like paying thousands extra in high interest rates. did you know repairing your credit could save you
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>> todd: fox news alert, former president trump says to arrive in -- today. i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier in for carley shimkus. the former president will arrive at the courthouse at 11 a.m., his assignment will begin at 2:15 p.m. brooke singman is standing by with her analysis on all that. we begin with mad rin live outside the courthouse on how the city is preparing for

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