tv Americas Newsroom FOX News April 12, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT
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the man accused of breaking into nancy pelosi's home in san francisco and attacking her husband with a hammer. we'll have more on those stories throughout the hour. first the biden administration in damage control after spilling a trove of top secret documents giving america's enemies access to highly sensitive classified information. seriously harming relationships. i'm dana perino. >> bill: hump day. i'm bill hemmer. a major impact from this document leak spread on social media. revealing top secret information about the war in ukraine, everything from u.s. efforts to support ukraine to classified intel gathered on the involvement of key allies. defense secretary lloyd austin saying everything possible is being done to find the source but they do not know the source
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and plug the leak. >> we take this very seriously and we will continue to work closely with our outstanding allies and partners and nothing will ever stop us from keeping america secure. we will continue to investigate and turn over every rock until we find the source of this and the extent of it. >> dana: this comes as top congressional leaders gain access to classified documents found at the homes of former vice president trump, pence and biden. >> bill: congressman jim hines joins us in a moment. first to chad pergram who leads our coverage live on the hill. >> good government is apparently no better at keeping secrets than a click of students in junior high. top house and senate leaders demand all member briefings about the latest batch of documents which were leaked. the pentagon and the intelligence community want answers. >> deeply unfortunate leak of
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classified documents is certainly as intense as anything in that now part of the in box as well. we need to learn lessons from that as well about how we can tighten procedures as well. >> american spies have failed to patch intelligence from possible leaks. this is especially acute as so much information is now stored electronically. plus more tech workers have access to files. g.o.p. lawmakers worry about something else. >> there are supposed to be three branches of government. what happened there is a fourth branch, the government bureaucracies and no oversight of this bureaucracy. it gets worse every day. >> if data is classified, why is it showing up everywhere? lawmakers like to criticize the intelligence community for lack security, but intelligence experts say lawmakers share some of the blame. >> i am increasingly dissatisfied with the oversight from both -- from the
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intelligence committees. they seem to be willing to give everybody a lot of money and they are reasonably supported and they do oversee. this kind of stuff has happened again and again and again. >> the leaking of information could be a byproduct of 9/11. agencies were urged to share information after those attacks. >> bill: chad, thank you. chad pergram on the hill. >> dana: connecticut congressman jim hines is the ranking democrat on the house intelligence committee. take a listen to secretary blinken who was trying to explain what they are doing from the state department point of view. >> we have engaged with allies and partners at high levels over the past days, including to reassure them about our own commitment to safeguarding intelligence and, of course, our commitment to our security partnerships. >> dana: how do you describe your level of concern about the scope and scale of this leak? >> well, it's very high, dana.
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and this is perhaps as concerning an event as i remember. i have been doing intelligence work since the snowden days. this is really concerning. it could have a real effect on the battlefield today. it could mean dead ukrainian soldiers today and the loss of intelligence collection that has allowed us to support the incredibly courageous ukrainians and as you just showed the secretary of state, we rely on our allies for intelligence sharing. without the u.k. and canada and other allies trusting us it is hard to do a good job. we have to say this is enough as overseers in congress. coming on the heels of finding documents -- we have a culture problem if we regain the trust of allies amongst others. >> people look on the outside don't have a lot of information about how the intelligence
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community works. they are left with two observations. one, this was out there months ago. why didn't anybody see it. for lloyd austin to say we have no idea who is source was you are left scratching your head wondering well, what sort of capability do we have? >> yeah, the fact that they don't know today i'm confident that we will get to the bottom of who leaked this information. this wasn't a sophisticated operation. i haven't been briefed on the ins and outs. somebody folded up pieces of paper and stuck them in the pocket and photographed. not exactly advance spy trade craft. how in the world did that happen? there are larger problems you pointed out. intelligence is only valuable inasmuch as it is shared. the more you share, the more risk there is that somebody leaks it and i would add that there is probably hundreds of thousands of people in the government with security
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clearances. we will need to look at this. this can't continue to happen and we clearly need to tighten up the system where we keep this information safe. >> bill: who would you forbid or keep away from classified information if that's the case? >> i want to wait to see what this particular case was driven by. it doesn't look like a terribly sophisticated operation. documents -- top secret documents were found in two ex-vice president and one former president's private residences. to me that says that the process inside the white house and inside the vice presidential mansion is not what it needs to be when there is a transition. this is not hard stuff. put somebody who knows what the clearance levels are looking at boxes that leave the white house. there are simple fixes like that. much more challenging problems. to answer your question we need to fall back on the need to know principle.
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if you need to know to do your job you get access to it. if you don't need to narcs you are just somebody adding to the risk that the information gets leaked. >> dana: you have been able to have access, i believe, to these documents that were found at the residences. is there anything you can share with us about the level of security that these documents should have been under? >> i actually haven't. my understanding they were available to those of us in the leadership of the two committees but i haven't had access to them. i can tell you there was plenty of stuff that should not have been out in the wild. we shouldn't get into the business of saying this is slightly dangerous or more dangerous. it is all classified because it could put the united states national security in danger. the lesson i draw. i will look at the documents. the lesson i draw is how in the world to prevent it from happening again? we have a process problem. i suspect it is when there is a transition when the vice
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president or president is moving on we have a process problem that shouldn't be that hard to fix. >> bill: thank you for coming on. please come back, okay? some might be wondering why the coincidence, right? we've been waiting for the gang of eight to get their intel briefings about these documents with trump and biden and pence and apparently it is happening now. that took longer than a lot of people expected. meantime you have this story out there. why is that? >> dana: you think they are connected? >> i don't know. why is that? we're not talking about the gang of eight anymore. if they want to talk to us we would be more than happy to have one of the eight on the air. >> dana: always welcome. >> bill: the family of the shooter who killed five in a louisville bank are speaking out saying their 25-year-old son had mental health challenges but claim there were no warning signs he was capable of this shocking act. garrett tenney back on the scene live in louisville for more on fallout today.
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good morning. >> good morning to you. the gunman's parents say there weren't any warning signs one kentucky lawmaker says that before the shooting the suspect either texted or called at least one person to tell them that he was suicidal and planned to hurt others. he also mentioned that statement his parents put out in it they say in part no words can express our sorrow, anguish and horror at the unthinkable harm our son inflicted on innocent people, their families and the entire louisville community. while our son had mental health challenges that we were actively addressing there were never any warning signs or indications he was capable of this shocking act. that statement comes hours after police released body camera video and shared more details how the shooting unfolded as well as the bravery officers showed. after the gunman shot his co-workers police say he went into the lobby and set up an ambush waiting for cops to show up. officers corey galloway and nicholas wilts took fair as soon
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as they pulled up. wilt was shot in the head. galloway was grazed by a shot. minutes later it was a injured galloway able to take the suspect out. both officers are being praised for their bravery that likely saved lives. >> officer wilt was a brand-new officer. he was going based on two things. his training and character. you will see that he never hesitates. even after getting shot at. this young man went back into the line of fire in order to protect others. >> this morning we're told officer wilt remains in critical but stable condition. doctors have said each day that goes by is an encouraging process for that young officer. also today officials are planning to release the audio from 911 calls that came in the morning of this shooting. we'll keep you updated as we learn more about that. >> bill: our best for that cop and his family and his health.
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garrett tenney in louisville. thank you. >> dana: driving tech city is a hot bed of murder and theft. graphic videos catching recent violent attacks in san francisco. residents and stores fleeing for cover. will the city be able to rebuild? >> bill: increasing pressure to be inclusive. if budweiser is paying a price for its new ad campaign. vy is a. and if you've made the deployments and you've been the wife at home, or you■ve been the spouse at home, you understand what i'm talking about. your spouse has earned the right to apply for a va home loan. the newday 100 loan allows you to borrow up to 100% of your home's value. so if you're in a situation where you need some help financially, give us a call.
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>> all of a sudden there is like -- you couldn't drive. all the streets were filled with fire trucks and police and you could see it, the whole sky was red. it was pretty bad. >> dana: a new jersey resident talking about a large wildfire in the state. 200 homes and buildings around the town of lake hurst and
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manchester have been evacuated. the fire is only 10% contained. no word on what started it. no one has been hurt. >> bill: you can get ahead of the game. start writing the mother's day card now. a new survey showing 68% of parents are sacrificing their own savings to support their adult children. younger generations facing a mountain of loans and high interest rates are letting their parents foot the bill. co-host of the five jessica tarlov and tyrus, good morning. percentage of parents who say they sacrificed saving, 43%. emergency savings 51%, paying down their own debt 49 reaching a financial milestone of 55. this is no good. >> this would never happen in my household, never. no. you got yourself into it, get yourself out. stop the steal, mom and dad. we had to go through it.
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staying in an apartment, top ram en will keep you going until you figure it out like we had to. >> bill: no bail-out. >> bail-outs, banks, children. this is america. >> bill: jessica, is there a bail-out in your family? >> she is fully dependent right now and we're comfortable with that. it will be a while before we have to have the talk about it. circumstances are a little different in terms of what's going on in the economy versus when other generations were coming of age. you have this convergence of bad economic conditions and helicopter parenting. parents don't want their kids to leave. people enjoy it. everyone has become part of this happy unit. what i'm concerned about, though, is parents retirement. what happens then? do they fall back on the kids? >> bill: it's a dodge, tyrus. >> i'm not judging her. i'm saying i have dreams of a
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naked fish room one day and that will be the rooms my kids have. they have to go. get out into the world and figure it out. the world needs ditch diggers. i love you, see you at christmas and thanksgiving but figure it out. >> dana: in some cases you have parents -- grand parents saying i will help pay for school. either student loan so you can pay for maybe daycare or tuition because people are concerned also about the schools. >> that's the case. >> dana: whose fault is that? >> you want me to say the democrats? no, it is really tenuous times. covid put everything in such perspective. everything you thought that was going well is not. the place you live, the schools you attend. your job. >> bill: kids help their parents, too. don't lose sight of that. let's talk about bud light. >> dana: bud light.
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the mulvaney protest. bud light decided to do the ads with a trans activist. this is justice kendall editor of the beer industry trade publication. the boycott of bud light has more legs than most. it start evidence as a conversation as social media and breached into mainstream media. anheiser-busch said this about mulvaney. from time to time to produce fans and brand influencers. this can was a gift to celebrate a personal milestone and not for sale to the general public. i doubt that mulvaney drinks bud light. what do you think? >> they are trying to walk it back. this is not a boycott. this is we needed feminists to get involved because mulvaney is a performance artist. i said a million times what he is doing is woman face. he is playing a stereo typical character of women that i've never met. not dumb, not bubbly, none of that stuff. it wasn't a boycott.
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in this case feminists have to be men. we have to get involved. you want to attack beer and so we said we won't buy it. this isn't woke stuff. woke you go broke, woke lives on twitter. real people got involved. we won't buy your beer anymore. >> the woman who runs marketing for anheiser-busch, the brand has been in decline for years. bud light is the best selling beer in the country. >> it's a different kind of decline. sales in general are down with beer as people expand to other beverage choices. why she was making this choice will not help her case as this continues. we'll wait for the numbers to see what the decline looks like. it is interesting to see the reaction to this. we will boycott them and they show all the cans of the other beer companies with the pride flag on it. corporate america stands up for
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the lbtgq plus community. it isn't like bud is alone. other major beer companies do this as well. maybe not with mulvaney of the face of it. they are supportive of everybody in the country. >> dana: the issue is the individual who is doing this. he is not representing trans people. he is not. i refuse to believe that just like -- this -- i'm glad to say people saying it's not okay. pride flag on a beer can but if you put a person making fun of gay people as the character doing all the flamboyance and stereotype with beer.
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>> dana: despite the major american -- the recent trend shouldn't come as a surprise. companies are looking to raise their corporate equality index score. that is a tool used by environmental, social and governance advocates to promote inclusivity. madison will explain. >> the score is a public symbol that grades companies on inclusivity. the ceo is run by the human rights campaign the most powerful lgbtq lobby in the world equipped with millions in funding from soro's money. there is a reason why bud light isn't the only company that we're seeing partner with influencers like mulvaney with the cei score.
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nike, and kate spade are being called out for woke advertising to boost their ceo score. money plays a big role. companies with high cei will garner investments from firms that heavily consider esg. >> this is something that these corporations felt forced to do because of things like the corporate equality index. if bud light does not spend a certain amount of money they will get dinged by the humans rights campaign and will have a lower corporate equality index. >> the goal is for that perfect score. last year the human rights campaign foundation identified 842 businesses that met all the criteria to earn a 100% rating. all those companies available online for consumers to scroll through and see. >> dana: thank you. >> bill: we're awaiting what could be a major update on the trial with the man charged with breaking into nancy pelosi's home and attacking her husband. a big milestone for the actor
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but at the end of the day, you know you have a team behind you that can help you. not having to worry about the future makes it possible to make the present as best as it can be for everybody. >> bill: the man charged in the attack on paul pelosi due in court today to set a ditty for trial accused of breaking into the california home of nancy pelosi and hitting her husband with a hammer. claudia cowen is live outside the courthouse in san francisco. claudia. >> he already has a trial date in federal court. today he'll find out when he will stand trial in state court including attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon
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stemming from the october bludgeoning of paul pelosi that happened in front of two officers. they captured the moment depap swung a hammer in pelosi's head and leaving him with a fractured skull and other serious injuries. he broke in through a glass door. the court released his confession during a taped interview with police laid out his plan to kidnap them house speaker nancy pelosi and then he apologized for not going further. the 42-year-old facing kidnapping and assault charges in federal court. a trial there is set for october 23rd. the state's case is expected to go first. starting sometime this summer and that's when we'll hear from paul pelosi.
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at recent public appearances he has worn a hat and gloves to hide his injuries. the 82-year-old hasn't spoken publicly about the attack. eventually he will have to when he testifies as both a victim and a witness once the trial begins. that is also when we'll finally hear what the defense strategy will be here in a case where the evidence of guilt against the defendant appears to be overwhelming. back to you. >> bill: we'll wait and see what happens. thanks in san francisco. >> dana: san francisco also making headlines for its out of control crime surge. the city is reeling from a string of attacks including the deadly stabbing of cash app founder bob lee and graphic footage showing the beating of a former fire commissioner leaving him with a fractured skull. let's bring in tracy mccray from the san francisco police officer's association. mayor london breed wants people
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not to jump to conclusions. watch here. >> i want to start by, you know, making it clear that, you know, both of these cases, the information is still not yet public. they are under investigation. when some of the facts in many of these cases come out people will be surprised. >> dana: do you think there is a lot for us to know outside of what it looks like to be random acts of violence? >> i mean, not really. it is every day something off the wall, whether it's crime, whether it's stores closing, happening in san francisco. so what are people left to think when you see such graphic -- especially with the fire commissioner getting bludgeoned really almost getting killed. what are you supposed to think, you know? >> dana: when she says more information will be coming out and many people will be
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surprised, i will remain engaged in the story and if i'm surprised i'll report back. tanya was on jesse watters show last night. a resident and frustrated with the situation. i'm sure you hear a lot of this. listen. >> we should stop enabling our people from using drugs and get them into treatment. we don't have enough police to keep our city safe. they are allowing people to steal from walgreens, from safe way. you can walk in, steal $5 hundred or $700 of maryland and not go to jail. >> dana: we also heard yesterday whole foods after one year of having one of their stores down on market street, a great place for people to go in the city, used to be the place to go, after one year whole foods said they had to close their stores because of rampant homelessness and crime. >> that store was ground 0.
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right next to that free space where you go in and smoke your dope and lay out and do whatever you want and walk across the streets to whole foods and clear them out. that store is closed. safe way is closed because of theft. people feel like they can walk in and take and do whatever they want. that woman is correct in we shouldn't be allowing people to just constantly use drugs. they say san francisco is in the doom loop. they with a doom boom because this is happening unchecked. nobody wants to do anything about it. the homeless industrial complex is ripping off billions of dollars from the city because they have no -- they don't want to solve this issue. so who is left out? the poor workers, right? the vendors, store clerks, the people who stock the shelves, right? they lose their jobs because stores are closing.
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>> dana: do you ever consider leaving? what about police officers? >> i don't. i know many of my friends don't because we still believe that the city will change its course, you know, rise like the phoenix again. let me tell you, when you are working an obscene amount of overtime just to provide the basic services that this city needs you get frustrated. i am frustrated with the local politics. just the overall, you know, do as i say, not as i do kind of bull you know what they keep throwing out. it is very frustrating. at the end of the day i was born and raised here and i want to see it turn around like many of my colleagues. we'll just keep, you know, pushing the envelope saying what we need to say. i want to be part of the solution, yeah. you can't turn this around without us, the cops, right? without city workers who want to stay and do their job. >> dana: hopefully they will give you a call.
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thank you for coming on our show. tracy mccray in san francisco. thank you. >> thank you. >> bill: good luck to you. time for some hemmer celebrity news. let's break it up. jerry renner walking the red carpet for the first time since he nearly died earlier this year. he was at the new series renovation, he had a cain. he needed that. remember in the hospital? all the selfies he sent out? he made a recovery after a near-fatal crash that involved his snow tractor removal around lake tahoe area. >> dana: he did it in order to save his nephew and said he would do it again. >> bill: very good recall. apparently no organs damaged. a lot of broken bones and an eye that popped out and went back in again. >> dana: all right. it is still morning. we wish him well. news here. senator tim scott taking a major
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step toward running for the white house. what he is saying today about his decision to launch a presidential exploratory committee. plus crime spiraling out of control in chicago but democrats are looking past all that choosing the windy city to host their presidential convention once again as they set their sights on shoring up support in battleground states across the midwest. pay off your car loan. consolidate your debt with a va home loan from newday. after advil. back to work. what about your neck? it's good to go. before advil. advil dual action fights pain two ways. advil targets pain at the source,
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>> we combated the wins and intensity of the claims. our efforts were successful. it did not get into the residential area as far as the fire is concerned. >> this business owner had been given an order to clean up the property. the order was ignored. that business owner is fully responsible for all of this. >> bill: this is quite a story. ongoing, richmond, indiana near
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the southeastern part of the state. that was a update last hour. look at the video from yesterday. this is a fire at a recycling plant more than 2,000 people who live near the area have been told to evacuate, leave their homes, stay away for some time. huge fire broke out yesterday sending a big black plume of smoke in the sky. people outside the evacuation zone are advised to keep windows closed and pets indoors. the wind was blowing yesterday. checking the wind earlier today. not as strong today which would be good. they will fight this thing until they can put it out. quite a blaze right now in richmond, indiana just west of oxford, ohio, home of miami university. now you know. >> this is a land of opportunity, not a land of oppression. the drug of victimhood being sold by joe biden and the radical left is wrong.
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we believe in the power of individual responsibility. i couldn't be more excited. >> dana: that's south carolina republican senator tim scott on "fox & friends" this morning announcing he is launching an exploratory committee for a 2024 presidential run. the move by scott a rising star in the g.o.p. and only black republican in the senate joined the growing field of republican candidates seeking the white house including governor nikki haley. >> bill: chicago taking that kind of town for democrats. it's been chosen to host next year's democratic national convention despite the surge if crime. the windy city beat out atlanta and new york city. chicago held their last convention there in 1996. martha maccallum anchor of "the story" is here now. we've been reporting on the city for years now. smart move or not? >> when you look at the last two presidential elections, biden won in wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania.
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those were all trump states the last time around. it was i think one of the biggest stories of the trump win in 2016 that he won a lot of those blue collar and rural voters and obviously this had been the foundation of the democrat party for generations. they lost that. so can they rebuild that alliance with blue collar workers, with rural voters? and they had some success during the mid-terms and in this wisconsin judicial election recently. so there is a lot of element here and issues that will be very fundamental. everybody wants that midwest block. you have to have it to win an election. >> dana: the state of georgia has been something that democrats have had some success in especially a few senate races. have they given up in georgia? >> you know what? i remember doing coverage together of the last election and you were very focused on georgia and what it signified that biden won in georgia.
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you have the strength of brian kemp in georgia. two gubernatorial elections. interesting that they'll split the vote. a conservative governor and more liberal senators. in massachusetts and new jersey where there was a little bit of political diversity. >> bill: david axelrod said trump penetrated a firewall in the upper midwest and captured the presidency in 2016. biden seized it back in 20 and he means to keep it. illinois is a blue state. that's the problem. you go to wisconsin what republicans are doing. maybe you consider minneapolis. maybe detroit, michigan. a battleground again. they made their call, chicago it is. last night on tucker he talked to president trump about current president joe biden's future. kind of an interesting answer. roll this. watch. >> do you think biden will stay in the race?
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>> look, i watch him just like you do and i think it's almost inappropriate for me to say it, but i deal with other people. i don't see how it is possible. it is not an age thing. there is something wrong. i don't think he can. >> bill: too time we'll find out whether its correct. >> an interesting answer. he is talking not about age. he pointed out that bernie sanders is a similar age or older and that he sees him as very sharp. he sees himself as very sharp. he is only a few years younger than the current president. he is raising questions that we've seen over and over again in polling. people who are concerned whether or not this president, including democrats. i think it was a diplomatic answer in many ways. and i think it is something that's on a lot of people's minds. >> dana: tell us diplomacy in terms of the royal family.
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you go to the coronation. >> we'll be covering the coronation, piers morgan and myself. harry is attending bit meghan is not going and the children will stay back in california reported a few minutes ago. a lot of discussion about security. whether or not the family would have security they wanted. an jongoing issue when they gav up their royals. the decision had ramifications. when you cut yourself off from your job, you lose the perks that go with it. he has been very angry about that. it's an interesting choice to split up. right? >> bill: is this a compromise or a decision that meghan doesn't -- maybe she doesn't want to go? >> it's hard to believe she
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doesn't want to be in the limelight. she has had a difficult time the past few times they have come. their friend's birthday falls on that weekend. they had options. they could have all come together to the u.k. and he could have attended the actual ceremony. >> after watching the netflix series i thought it was over. the whole family. the damage is so deep. >> they are broken. the relationship between these two and the royal family appears to be broken. there are questions about the future. >> dana: you were so great during the queen's funeral. i look forward to this coverage as well. >> great to be with both of them and it will be spectacular. >> dana: and the kentucky derby on the same day. big day. great to see you. see you on "the story." another story from the southern border involving a very pregnant
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>> harris: the very next target is all of us driving what we want. biden administration is coming for gas-powered cars and historic new epa rules say you have to drive an electric vehicle very soon. this next hour will make that announcement official. we'll cover it as it happens. plus hunter biden's business associates made 80 -- 8-0 -- white house visits while his father was vice president. are you still buying biden's claims he knew nothing about it at all? we know the president can be a gaffe machine at times. allies are worried about what biden might say next especially while he is in the u.k. congressman greg steubey of the great state of florida. steve forbes and jason chaffetz. >> bill: see you in a moment. stunning images from the southern border.
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a man helping a heavily pregnant woman to cross a fence. eagle pass, texas today with more. >> that rather shocking moment happened not far from where i'm standing here at the southern border. the new video shows a man hoisting a young pregnant woman and boy over the barbed wire fence and the man kisses the belly and young boy goodbye heading back to mexico. we don't know for certain where the man went next. the mother and boy surrendered to the united states. in the video if you look closely in the brush there is a second man watching the process and facing those migrants. it is not clear what his role was in the scenario. because we see so many cartel-associated coyotes guiding migrants into the u.s. his presence begs the question
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whether he is a coyote. this pregnant woman is one of just 1.2 million migrant encounters at the southern border so far this fiscal year since october. we're waiting for the march numbers to be released. in december there was a record high 250,000 migrant encounters at the border that dipped down to 150,000 in january and february. now that we've hit the warmer months we expect those numbers to climb back up. we'll keep an eye on it from here at the southern border, bill. >> bill: thanks, matt finn in eagle pass. >> dana: a penny for your thoughts. how about $0.66? that's how much the u.s. postal service wants to charge you to send me a letter. they are planning to raise the price for a first class stamp an extra $0.03 from 63 to 66 starting in july marks the fourth rate hike in two years. they were $0.50 in 2019. do you still have stamps? >> bill: yeah. >> dana: i like to send a note.
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>> bill: people look at me when i fill out checks. what are you doing? i haven't fully transitioned in all that yet. you can pay some of them online. others you want to write out. before we go let's roll it. we have a lot to go. this is exhibit a, dana. >> 5, 4, launch for main engine start. we have the start. >> that was 1981 on this day the space shuttle columbia blasted off for the first ever u.s. shuttle flight operated by nasa today. someone else is at the helm today. billionaire space race is now available on fox nation. it dropped this morning. have a look. >> this is the story of cutting-edge rockets and very deep pockets. >> there is definite lay spirit of competition that has completely changed the game. three men with dreams to chase and money to burn.
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>> we put a billion in. >> we can have a base on the moon and mars. >> musk, branson, bezos. >> dana: if they called tomorrow and said you could go on a space trip would you go? >> 120%. >> dana: looks like a great show. "the faulkner focus" is next. here she is. >> harris: this is going next level very quickly. the battle between a liberal district attorney and the house judiciary committee's top republican. manhattan d.a. alvin bragg versus chairman jim jordan are going head-to-head over donald trump. im bragg is targeting jordan with a lawsuit and request for a restraining order. we know from his weak indictment
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