tv FOX and Friends FOX News April 13, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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california, out of massachusetts, out of new jersey, out of new york. out of, you know, any state that you feel doesn't make sense. i'm sitting in tennessee right now. we don't have any state tax here. >> todd: my guess is o'leary is not going to move oil refinery to california or new york. maybe texas. we will see. "fox & friends" begins right now. >> ashley: have a good day. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i want something just like this ♪ ♪ i want something just like this ♪ >> ainsley: good morning, seattle, washington. darker there because they are hours behind us and it's only 6:00 a.m. on the east coast but it's a beautiful picture of an american flag with the city in the background. >> brian: sounds like you are
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yelling a little. so excited. >> ainsley: waking you up this morning. >> steve: good morning to all the people there in seattle if you are sleepless in seattle. we just had a little team work here. while ainsley was looking at her information, i actually placed the coffee order. >> ainsley: thank you. i just put it on my apple pay. >> steve: thank you. >> ainsley: the order is in if you want to pick it up for us it's 885. >> brian: that will be good. >> steve: "fox & friends" runs on dunkin'. >> ainsley: dave, put the camera down go get what's really important our coffee. >> brian: some guy in the hard rock is going to leave the hotel and go over. >> ainsley: he doesn't know what location. >> steve: gee i wonder what location is close to where we are sitting. >> ainsley: send one over quickly. >> brian: do we have a big show. mighty revelations. >> ainsley: "the washington post" article. >> steve: "the washington post" has done some great journalism hand has connected some pieces and that's where we start today. we begin with new information about the person who allegedly is behind that massive pentagon
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intelligence leak that has sent shock waves around the world. >> ainsley: a source telling the worries that the leaker works on a military base and shared hundreds of classified documents with a group of about 12 mostly boys and men, friends of his online. >> brian: yep, no tranche is coming in as well. lucas tomlinson is live with the latest. >> good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. get to the blockbuster report in the "the washington post" which says, quote: a man behind a massive leak of government secrets that has exposed spying on allies revealed the grim prospects with ukraine's war with russia and fires young charismatic gun enthusiastic who shared highly classified documents with a group of far-flung acquaintances searching for companionship amid the isolation of the pandemic. young man who claims to be online friends with the leaker who went by the initials o.g.
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>> he is not a russian operative. he is not ukrainian operative. i will go as far as to say is he not each on the east side of. and he claims that he any russian operative or pro-russian is gatt gore rickly false. he is not interested in helping any foreign agencies with their attack on the u.s. or other country. >> and now even more classified documents have been discovered by the "new york times" from that online gaming chat room. this time showing alleged infighting between russia's federal security service accusing the russian military of, quote, obfuscating russian casualties in hawmples have will demand accountment for the millions of dollars of weapons and ammunition going to ukraine. john kirby acknowledgenning the following to our ceiling peter doesy. >> there is a small u.s. military presence at the embassy in conjunction with the adjunct attache's office to work on the material going in and out of
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ukraine. the united states will not have troops fighting war in ukraine. moments ago peter interviewed karine jean-pierre. >> doj is reviewing these documents. we cannot speak to the validity of these documents. dod is certainly has -- they have announced they are taking streps to further restrict access to the information. let the doj move forward in their process. >> senate will receive a classified briefing on the leaked documents next week when they return to town. >> brian: lucas, how is this playing in the pentagon? what an embarrassment that it happened and "the washington post" and "new york times" doing a better job investigating than our deeply embarrassing for the u.s. government. 300 million americans with clearance. are. >> steve: the primary source for "the washington post" story is a
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minor child. it's something under 18. >> ainsley: had to get permission from the mom. >> steve: it was corroborated by another kid. so there are all these kids in this chat room, certainly. >> brian: can you imagine? >> steve: just had 25 people in it. and it was all about guns and games and god. and so the leaker the guy who took the pictures apparently works on the military base. probably a contractor. he met this kid, who was the primary source when met o.g. when he was a teenager. they were a bunch of kids. talk about things they watched. watched movies together. talked about arms and munitions and stuff like that. what was eerie, this particular source said is that o.g. would be able to forecast things -- he would tell the group hey, this is about to happen. and next thing you know it would happen.
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he became essentially a god to all these people. the kid said o.g. was like a an uncle or father figure. what he wound up doing is type out stuff he had seen, classified stuff, but it was taking too much time. he said if you guys aren't going to comment on this, i'm going to stop doing it. he didn't stop doing it. instead, he just started taking pictures of it and that is how the whole world now saw it one person in the group broke the code. >> ainsley: how did he get his hands on this classified information especially if is he a teenager working on a military base. >> steve: he is now in his 20's. >> ainsley: he claimed he spent some of his day inside a secure facility that prohibited cell phones and electronic devices. but these documents were full of what they call intel speak. for instance, noforn meant information in the document was so sensitive that it must not be shared with foreign nationals. so he said that he told for
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hours writing up classified documents to share with the group on discord so he could basically interpret the intel speak for all of his friends to read. >> brian: so they get 27 new pages now out there that the "new york times" found. and they reinforce how deeply the american spy agencies have gotten into russian intelligence. there's no human intelligence. it is it electronic intelligence that they have been able to hack into. it chronicles the guesses that vladimir putin personally involved between the wagner group and the regular military. it talked about the battle over casualties. how many actually were in russia. how many aren't. it talked about a lot of their ineptness. also, how the russians managed to hack our smart bombs, make them dumb bombs so as we lent them to ukraine, sent them out on targeted they were going to hack them and bring them to heel. obviously that's not great news. something they better learn from. we are getting the inside source on wars, operations, communications.
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that might be intriguing and i get it. it's fascinating. i understand it. but for america, it could not be worse. and where is our president? he is on a family vacation in ireland. here's mike turner from the house intelligence committee. >> there certainly is as the cia director was saying concern what else is out there. because usually someone just take a handful of documents. we will have to learn as this goes on whether or not we have additional vulnerabilities that we have to address. this is espionage. if it's an american and they are a traitor they will be brought it justice and we will continue the search so we can plug this leak and keep our secrets safe. >> steve: the guy was divhot a hacker. he was a leaker. really what he was doing, this o.g. character and i'm sure once the fbi sweeps him up and we learn more about it, we will know more. but essentially that of what he was trying to do. he had these 25 young men and boys in this group and he would lecture them about what's going on in the world. there was just one -- the code
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of the room was you cannot share. you cannot tell anybody about it. and nobody did. because he was showing off what he knew about the u.s. intelligence agency. transports interesting. this particular kid, who spoke to the "the washington post," they said they don't blame o.g. for the leaks. they blame the kid who then put it on another youtube page for a youtube star called malwow they blame that kid not the guy who worked as a military contractor. >> ainsley: this started back in 2020. and it was two dozen mostly boys and men as we said earlier. they said this group was a refuge for them during the pandemic. teenage gamers that were locked in their homes. members were swapping memes and osceola jokes and idle chitchat. they prayed together. the o.g. was smart and lectured
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them about world affairs and sensitive government operations. he was reporting top secret information about the movement about our political leaders. tactical updates on our military forces and insight into foreign government efforts, according to the article. to say interfere with our elections. >> brian: how did we know that china was about to give lethal weapons to china? they found about it. there was intelligence bouncing around. we don't know that they actually did. how did we find out egypt was going to give russia arms. they were able to get that information from satellites, perhaps. but doesn't seem to have human sources. terrible judgment to think let's just keep it on discord. it will never leak out. this guy got a military clearance with that type of judgment. meanwhile, still ahead on this show, california senator dianne feinstein is asking to be temporarily replace ad on the judiciary committee after a month long medical absence. now members of her own party want her to resign. >> steve: plus, joe biden's new rules for the road. the toughest measures ever on new vehicles in the push to go
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green. our next guest is a car dealership in new jersey, who says customers don't want to buy electric, and he's going to tell you why when we roll on. live from new york city, look who else is coming up today on "fox & friends." ♪ out of my mind ♪ get into my life ♪ or...your eyes feel like they're getting kicked in the backside, it's not too late for another treatment option for thyroid eye disease, also known as t-e-d. to learn more visit treatted.com that's treatt-e-d.com.
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>> brian: i think she has alzheimer's. >> ainsley: shingles. >> todd: not clear what it is beyond things geles. we will get to that now. the 89-year-old senator turns 90 in june asked to be temporarily replaced on the judiciary committee as she faces calls to resign due to her health. dianne feinstein releasing a statement that reads in part quote i plan to return as soon as possible as soon as my medical team advises it is safe for me to trial. in the meantime i remain committed to the job and continue to work from the home in san francisco. the democrat has been absent to the senate since she went absent for shingles. leaving judicial nominees in limbo. feinstein failed to vote in 60 of the senate's 82 votes so far in 2023 and hasn't provided a timeline for her return following unspecified medical complications. her vote matters a lot for the dems who hold a razor thin margin in the senate prompting two house democrats to call for her to step aside.
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california congressman ro khanna stating it is time for senator feinstein to resign. we need to keep the country ahead of personal loyalty. while she has had a lifetime of public service it is obvious she can no longer fulfill her duties. dean phillips saying i believe it's now a dereliction of duty to remain in the senate and a dereliction of duty for those who remain good night. back in february, feinstein announcing plans to retire next year but at the end of her term. back to you. >> steve: the end of her term is 2024. so senate majority leader schumer says that he will ask the senate next time they get together to allow a democrat to sit in her place on that committee. she is not stepping away from her full job just the judiciary committee. >> ainsley: it's san francisco. even it if they replace her with a democrat and they have another election in november, the chances of it being a democrat are high. >> steve: it would be high. >> brian: with a democratic governor.
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i would say this, too. you can't get anyone nominated at 9-9 in committee. they want to jam these judicial nominations down the republicans' throats and can't do it with an empty chair there. >> ainsley: we wish her all the best she has missed a lot of votes. god bless her. >> brian: she used to be a voice of reason on international affairs. 17 minutes after the hour. here is ashley. >> ashley: start with a fox weather alert. the gulf coast under a flash flood warning with a strong system expected to batter florida with more tropical storm down powers. over a foot of rain at the airport. >> forced to shut down due to flooding. some travelers stranded in cars for over six hours as flooding blocked exits. streets looking like rivers and one man literally seen swimming down the road as a result schools in broward county remain closed. of course, you can follow this power line storm system by following the fox weather app. to any of your connected devices. a federal appeals court partially blocks a ruling that would restrict access to the
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nation's most widely used abortion pill. yesterday's ruling keeps the pill on the market. but the drug can no longer be shipped to people in the mail. last week a federal judge suspended the fda approval abortion pill about the drug's safety. jamie foxx is recovering from a recent medical complication. his data revealing on instagram my father experienced a medical condition, luckily due to quick action and great care he is already on his way to recovery still unclear what kind of medical issue fox is dealing with it was serious enough that the family took him to the office. and in baseball, unprior larry is hospitalized after being hit in the head by a ball during the yankees-guardians games watch. this will score for the yankees. the ball hits the umpire. oh no. >> ashley: the lead umpire told reporters after the game he was not aware he had even been hit. and in philadelphia, fans going
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wild on the fillies dollar dog night. this story again breaking out into a stadium wide food fight. citizens bank park sold 58 hot dogs that night. unclear how many were actually eaten. by the looks of it looks like none because they are flying in the air. >> brian: upset the fillies were playing bad or hot dogs were bad. >> steve: probably because they were cheap. >> ashley: somebody told me the hot dogs are not good. >> steve: it's philadelphia they want cheese steak. >> ainsley: how could a ballpark be bad? >> brian: ballpark franks plump when you cook them. >> ainsley: you either like them or don't. >> ashley: i would be flowing it, too. >> brian: you don't like it you can throw it. >> steve: githey didn't give it away you would have to invest a dollar in it. i'm not throwing away a dollar. just saying. >> ainsley: i love him. he has a big n nose.
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i saw back of his head in the crowd. >> steve: thank you for the update in philly. >> brian: the biden administration announcing the strictest limits on auto emissions ever to pave the way for more electric vehicles. >> ainsley: the goal is to have 67% of the new vehicles be electric cars by 2032. but, just 41% of americans say their next cash might be electric. >> steve: so it's going to be a tough sell. talk to somebody who is selling cars for decades. tom is the new jersey car dealer. >> hi, how are you. >> steve: he joins us. good morning to you. >> how are you doing? >> steve: todd, seems like every commercial on tv for a car is about an electric car. the big car companies you represent all of them. you sell all of them. they are trying to push evs, electric vehicles. so what's the reaction from your customers? >> you know, it's interesting. because while you are saying that, the car companies are trying to push ev. it's really the government pushing it. the car companies don't want it.
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nobody has figured out how to make money on this venture. ford is losing billions of dollars. the consumer is not buying into it. they are coming into the showrooms. they are afraid of them. know one knows the life expectancy of the battery. they have range anxiety. the infrastructure is not in place. there is no place to charge your car. if you are going down the highway and you pull into a rest area, and someone is charging, you have to wait 15 to 20 minutes for them to charge their car. it's a big problem. >> ainsley: tom, you mentioned people coming into your dealership worried about the battery life. what if you did have to replace the battery. i know these cars haven't been out there long enough where these batteries you are probably seeing them dying. what's the price of the car and what's the price of the alligator. >> the average electric car 50 to $60,000. the replacement of the battery cost is upwards of $40,000. and, you know, when that battery goes bad and the consumer has to come out of pocket, it's going to be a problem. and, you know, the next issue is
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no one knows what the trade-in value is. you know, of the consumers don't want to buy the used cars coming back in because they don't know the life expectancy of that battery. you could buy a car and it has 60,000 miles on it and you know what the life expectancy of that car is. you can know what the service records are on it. no one knows how far to deal with the whole battery situation. this is the government. this is the democrats pushing an agenda for their own purposes and, you know, it's interesting because 80% of the lithium to build batteries comes from outside of the u.s. so now we're going to rely on outside countries. >> brian: china. >> china, again, right, china and russia and ukraine for us to get the lithium to build these batteries. when we're trying to become -- >> brian: tom, the thing is, from the emissions demands that were announced yesterday, do we have a choice? if the government is going to have -- be all over our tail
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pipe, is our choice going to be electric or walk? >> well, you know, listen, ultimately, they will have to back down because the manufacturers can't produce enough of these cars. the consumers don't want them. the infrastructures is not in place. you know, it's actually comical because you have to burn fossil fuel to make electric. so, you are pouring emissions into the atmosphere as you are creating electric. so i'm not so sure where they are going with this and what the agenda is. but it's clearly a democratic agenda and i think this is not going to stick. i think ultimately electric cars will be a part of the marketplace but i think they are going to be like hybrid and diesels a percentage. >> brian: that's what everybody has the hybrids. that's what they are doing in japan and south korea. >> correct. >> ainsley: depends on where you live if we live in city and apartment buildings you park your car out on the street or maybe garage if you can afford it? >> right. >> ainsley: they don't have the charging stations. where do you do this? >> brian: golf carts for
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everybody. >> the consumer that buys electric vehicle has to spend another $5,000 and then get an electrician in their house to hook up charger. cost prohibitive for the consumer. it is -- you know, i don't want to say it again, but it's democratic 101. they are crushing the consumer. >> ainsley: only 5.8% of the new cars sales in 2022 were electric vehicles. >> brian: nine years 67% of us. good luck, tom, keep telling the truth. >> thank you, good to see you. >> brian: by the way, when this is announced the president is out of the country telling irish children about jesse holmes. more fallout from the leaks of classified documents on social media as we learn the people behind the release may have worked on marital base and still be there now. kurt volker joins us to talk about the national threat and the international fallout. the future is here. we've been creating it for more than 100 years, putting the most advanced technology into people's hands.
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that contain digoxin or if you have liver or kidney problems. side effects may include headache, common cold symptoms, diarrhea, nausea, urinary tract and upper respiratory tract infection. ask your doctor about gemtesa. more time here, less time there. brian brian explosive new report in the "the washington post" leaker of secret documents who goes by the abbreviation o.g. on the chat app. discord works on marital base. comes after the latest leak u.s. special forces are on the ground in ukraine. >> there is a small u.s. military presence at the embassy in conjunction with the defense attache's office to help us work on accountability of the material that is going in and out of ukraine. so, they are attached to that
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embassy into that defense attache. >> peter: for clarity they are in the embassy in ukraine but they are not fighting? >> that is right. they are not fighting on the battlefield. we are not providing enabling support on the battlefield. >> brian: that was not known. here to react kurt volker former ambassador to nato. i know you are not only in our nation's capitol but you have the sense of how these leaks are reverberating in other capitals. how damaging is this? >> well, i don't think it's that damaging in terms of the content. there is very little that has come out so far that we didn't already know. you know, we knew the russian military was in a shamables. we knew the ukrainians were low on ammunition. some of this is a few months old as well. so operational plans keep changing. so i don't think it's damaging in that way. it is embarrassing for the united states we can't keep secrets. that is troubling.
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>> brian: we have special forces on the ground. looks like the russians doctored the documents after they arrived on telegram and decreased the number of casualties and make it seem like nato is fighting there. spain is denying this. the u.s. just denied it. what's the truth? >> well, the fact is we really don't know who leaked these documents and why. we're getting that one story today of, you know, some guy named o.g. in a military base. who is that person and why did they do this? there is still a possibility of a foreign motive behind. this and what the russians are trying to do is to put out information that discredits ukraine and their military capabilities and so that is a constant thing that rickenbacker has been doing will also done through these leaks. on the presence at the embassy i think it's terrific that we have people there. i would be concerned if we didn't. we do have to keep an eye on what we are providing ukraine and give them did good advice and have our own eyes and ears on the ground. >> brian: you have to be able to train people.
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the ammo is not coming quick enough. russians using a lot more than ukraine is using. seems to be a constant complaint even behind the scenes about things arriving when they're pledged. where are the germans? what about the u.s.? are we doing enough? >> no, we're not doing enough. we keep setting artificial limits on what we are willing to provide. for instance, the range of the artillery shells that we provide. we limited it to 80-kilometers. recently gave them something that will go 150. we have 300-kilometers in the inventory. we have access to defense articles including some aircraft that the ukrainians could fly that we're not using they are in a desert in arizona. these are things we are not doing that we could do. you are right with about the european allies. they have underinvested in defense in decades. they don't have much to give. what they have been giving is slow. >> brian: ambassador, dialogue shows that the polls are trying to get joe biden to pick up the
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phone and call the south koreans to give some ammo and support to this effort frustration that he is not. bring us behind the scenes without doing what o.g. is doing. >> there was in that trove of documents an indication that in fact the south koreans are looking at providing ammunition to the ukrainians, 330 rounds of artillery shells. that would be a very good boost to the ukrainians in the context of a spring offensive. but i do think that the u.s. has to establish that the goal here is for ukraine to defeat russian under the circumstances portions as quickly as possible. cheapest and fastest option and save more lives that way. and until we do that. until we do that we keep dragging it out and not taking some of those leadership steps like going to other countries and pressing them to do more. >> brian: decision to be on a 7-hour flight and see the damage done to our allies and others, and not to pick up the phone and try to work the lines and work
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relationships to let them know we're at least trying to find out where the genesis of this leak is a questionable decision by the president. he needs to get on the phone. >> yeah. if we want our allies to be all in, we have to be all in. >> brian: ambassador kurt volker you are all. in thanks for providing insight as you go back overseas. thank you. >> appreciate it, brian. thanks. steve. >> brian: coming up straight ahead arnold schwarzenegger thought he terminated a pesky pothole driving. officials say he made a mistake. the pavement pushback next. work from home could cost you your job. as companies turn to remote workers abroad. steve moore domestic and he will talk to us next. ♪ ♪
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the all-new chevy colorado. made for more. ♪ ♪ >> steve: outsourcing could be the future of remote work. the "wall street journal" reporting that companies are responding to labor shortages and rising wages by moving some jobs abroad. steven joins us now from the heritage foundation. >> hi, steve, good morning. >> steve: this is the way this "wall street journal" story goes. an employee asked their boss hey, you know what? during the pandemic can i work from home? and they go, you know what? a light bulb went off in my head. yes, you can work from home but why would i pay you american wages when i could hire somebody from india and pay that person much less and so that is the new trend. people are outsourcing jobs to
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other countries because work from home works. >> yeah. steve, we have -- look, i'm in favor of allowing people to work remotely and covid has changed the way we work as americans. but, come on. people have to get back in the office. in washington, d.c., here, where i live, you know, people don't realize the federal government it's until very, very recently has been completely remote. and the government buildings have been shut down. i guess most people didn't realize that because the government doesn't do much of any value. we have got to start getting people back to work. right? we have got to get them back in the office. and you see more and more firms. even the technology firms in silicon valley are saying hey, folks, you have got to get back on the job and back in the office. if it they are not going to come back in the office, you are right. a lot of the these companies are saying there is a worker in india who is remote, too. and he can do this job. >> steve: sure, absolutely. a word to the wise would be if you have got this idea i'm going
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to ask my boss if i can work from home, they might actually allow somebody to work from home in norway or another country. steven, i know you also wanted to comment about our last segment about 20 minutes ago and that was we had a new jersey car dealer on. he said he can't selleck trick vehicles. now, essential liver what you are saying americans have a love affair with their cars. that's just part of their culture. and my first car was a 1969 mustang convertible. and do you know what? it burned gasoline. and only 6% of americans today. 6% are buying these electric vehicles. i'm not against electric vehicles. i want to make this crystal clear to your viewers. this is a plan and the "wall street journal" talked about in this morning, though is a plan, a devious and sinister plan to force people to buy electric vehicles because the car companies cannot comply with
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these new regulations. there's no way they can do this. so this isn't about cleaning up the atmosphere. this is about a radical climate change plan that is going to force people to buy cars they don't want to. i think the biden people have really stepped in it on this one. as i said, people don't want the government telling them what kind of car they can buy. >> steve: but, stephen a presidential election is coming up, and, by doing this, joe biden can appeal to his environmental green flank and say look what i have done and they goal. [. [applause] [bravo, four more years. >> yeah. except that, steve, i want to say this again. they want to go from 6% of americans buying electric vehicles to 67% over the next 8 years. americans are going to have a fit over this. they are going to be so angry about -- look, there's a lot of reasons people don't want to buy electric vehicles. you know, people can't afford them, steve.
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these are $75,000 vehicles. come on. >> steve: no kidding. by the way, when he's not on tv, stephen moore writing podesta for fox news. check out his it's the left is hell bent on killing these great american citizen cities and yours as well. stephen, thank you very much. the first thing we talked about was people working from home. today stephen is working from home. thank you, sir. >> shhh, don't tell my boss that. >> steve: exactly. all right. stephen moore, thank you, sir. >> take care. >> steve: all right. it is 17 minutes before the the top of the hour. ashley joins us with news from this -- this is a crazy story that you are starting with. >> ashley: it really is a business represents music industry top stars person of interest after police found a woman dead into n. a bathtub inside a miami beach bathroom. this is will works with justin bieber, drake and more. reportedly told police she was s
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not in the room when she died. they found unknown substance at the scene. former president donald trump is back in the city today for another deposition. it's related to a fraud case being pursued by state attorney general letitia james and her office. this is unrelated to the charges brought by manhattan d.a. alvin brag. meanwhile trump is suing former lawyer michael cohen for a small $500 million accusing breaching attorney-client relationship. made false statements about him in books, on his podcast and in countless interviews. anheuser busch losing $5 billion in value since bud light's partnership with transgender influencer dylan mulvaney and shares of the company dropping 4% in the last two weeks. mulvaney defending the lucrative corporate deal claiming it's an easy target for critics. now, meanwhile vivek ramaswamy is capitalizing on the controversy. the republican white house
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hopeful joining in on the bud light backlash by selling bud right could you seys. now pothole saga. it turns out that the crater that the terminator star filled in was a service trench dug by utility company. so cal gas says the project set to be completed by the end of may. former governor of california took matters into his own hands because the trench screwed up several of his neighbors cars and bikes. i know we had all been waiting for update on that story, steve? >> steve: now we knew. they should have told him what that ditch was. >> ainsley: i don't think they responded to him. what do they expect? >> steve: he'll be back. ashley, thank very much. >> ainsley: you are welcome. out on the streets of new york city janice diehl dean. lovely day. 60 degrees in new york. >> janice: spectacular get close to 90 degrees. take a look at it here in the
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central park area it's 68 holy moly so we are getting there. and we are going to set some records if we get close to 90 degrees. this is 89 in new york. 83 raleigh. we are going to be warmer than atlanta, georgia. warmer than miami today. crazy, and then we have this cold front that's going to move through and bring the potential for showers, thunderstorms, and even some mountain snow. it is still april. don't get used to the warm temperatures. we are also talking about the extreme flooding across south florida. some reports saying over a foot, maybe close to 20 inches of rain in and around the fort lauderdale area. we had just incredible rainfall for a period of 12 hours see potential for showers. and severe storm threat from miami all the way up towards georgia where large hail, damaging winds and maybe some isolated tornadoes could move. in keep that in mind. i know, here it is. the spring warmth fading wawa across the northern plains and
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upper midwest. get those lunches done outside today and tomorrow because reality is going to set in as we head into the weekend in the northeast as well. a nice taste of it what's to come is kind of splendid. >> steve: exactly. let's go slow. we don't want summer all at once. >> janice: true. >> steve: thanks, j.d. >> janice: you got it. >> steve: more states taking action to stall the youth mental health crisis as they limit social media access for minors. how far utah is leading the charge to protect our kids coming up on "fox & friends." ♪ whoa! careful, babe! saving was definitely easier. hey babe, i think i got it! it's actually... whooooa! ok, show-off! help! oh! only pay for what you need.
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♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ your heart is the beat of life. if you have heart failure, entrust your heart to entresto, a medicine specifically designed for heart failure. entresto is the #1 heart failure brand prescribed by cardiologists. it was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. heart failure can change the structure of your heart, so it may not work as well. entresto helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. and with a healthier heart, you can keep on doing what you love. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto for heart failure.
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platform is flooded with hate speech. >> i say, sir, that you don't know what you are talking about. >> really? >> yes, because you can't give me a single example of hateful content not even one tweet. yet you claimed the hateful content was high. >> that's a false. you just lied. >> meantime, npr telling musk that they will no longer be using his platform over fath fel hurt their accountability. the account was recently labeled as government-funded the billionaire now calling for the media company to be defunded. australian punk rocker nick is opening up about being a conservative. he says going to church and being a conservative is a modern way to mess with people and that brings him joy. cabe was considered a bad boy back in the '80s. he says he is more complete of a person now. those are your headlines. back to you. >> ainsley: thank you so much, ashley. prince harry set at the attend the coronation of his father king charles without his wife meghan after taking several days
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to rsvp to the invitation past the date that he was supposed to. buckingham palace confirming his attendance while adding the duchess of sussex will remain in california with prince archie and lilibet. >> good morning, garrett. >> good morning how are you. >> doing well. is she making a mistake not going. >> the general consensus is she is making a mistake. look, it has to be a pretty tense situation with the in-law's after the netflix series that she did with her husband. >> ainsley: and the book. >> i think -- and the book. and all of it, actually, there's a lot. i envy her being in that abby. let's bear in mind her children are using the title prince and princess off this country. i think a lot of people feel if you are a duchess and your children are prince and princess then showing up to the coronation of the next king is the respectful thing to do
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regardless of how difficult it might be. our decisions have consequences and little bit of awkwardness is par for the course, i suppose. also the general sense here, ainsley, i think she is going to find it quite difficult to return to britain. maybe she doesn't want to. but ultimately the sense could be if you couldn't make it to the coronation, what's a bigger event to come back for than that if that makes sense? >> ainsley: i know it falls on her son on archie's birthday. he will be turning 4. maybe they could have celebrated the weekend before. this is a big deal. he is becoming the king officially through the coronation. they waited nine days after the rsvp date to respond and, you know, we all grew up with grandmothers who said, you know, you have to rsvp by the date that was instilled by all of us. is he royal. for him to know these rules and still not, you know, not follow them, what do you make of that? >> well, look, ainsley, it's interesting you mentioned grandmothers because when i'm over in the u.s. i used to spend
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thanksgiving in tennessee and mississippi. i can tell you will not responding on time to rsvp is close to heresy. and absolutely there is definitely a sense that all the other heads of state, royalty from across the world. elected leaders from across the world manage to get back in time. archie's birthday didn't change. you know, they knew what they were because it was going to be on may 6th. why not respond in time? it looked rude and i think it created the impression, maybe incorrectly but who knows. it created the impression that maybe there was a list of demands or requests from the sussexs that weren't met and so ultimately one decided to go and one decided to stay. that's what it looked like maybe correctly. >> ainsley: how do you think so this all plays out? do you think that harry is regretting moving to the states or, i mean, he has pulled away from his entire family. that might work for a year or two when you first get married.
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the honeymoon phase is over. you miss your family. >> absolutely. and you know, my own family we had a bereavement just before commitment and it's really made me very conscious of just how precious family is. >> ainsley: of course. you don't get those. >> do you not get time back. tomorrow is is not -- moving awy from your family is tragic. a. >> ainsley: all the time and energy put into a child and leave and not want to talk to you again would be just devastating. thank you so much, garrett, for coming on with us. >> my pleasure, ainsley. >> ainsley: nypd welcoming a new member to its ranks. we will show you the crime fighting technology. there it is right there. ♪ mr. roboto ♪ fear not, i got you! who are you? i'm your fairy hotel mother. what is happening? let me help you pick a hotel you feel good about. choice hotels is a family of brands,
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there's a different way to treat hiv. it's every-other-month, injectable cabenuva. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete, long-acting hiv treatment you can get every other month. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by my healthcare provider, every other month. it's one less thing to think about while traveling. hiv pills aren't on my mind. a quick change in my plans is no big deal. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions post-injection reactions, liver problems, and depression. if you have a rash and other allergic reaction symptoms, stop cabenuva and get medical help right away.
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