Skip to main content

tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  April 28, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT

7:00 am
like this one from axios saying the gdp has silver lining. it's not all bad news. >> if you add it all up it's very bad. if you take certain pieces and forget other pieces and only look -- it's kind of silly. >> shannon: what do you make of this number? we've been told the economy is righting itself and we'll avoid a recession. >> they have been bringing the interest rates up and inflation, which is down from as high as it has been with biden is still 3 to 4 times higher than when he walked in the door. inflation is bad. every day the dollars in your pocket are less valuable every day that biden has been president and it continues to get worse. >> shannon: the white house will have to deal with these numbers, which the public does not have confidence with them on the economy. thank you for your time. >> good to be with you. >> bill: it is now 10:00 here in new york. fox news alert now on some
7:01 am
shocking video showing a migrant squeezing himself through a border fence into the u.s. and you can ask yourself whether or not this is just a preview of things to come real soon 13 days and counting. new hour starts now. dana has the day off. i'm bill hemmer. shannon, you are back with us. >> shannon: always my pleasure to be with hemmer time. thank you so much. for dana today. officials expect upwards of 10,000 migrants to cross into our country daily, every day when title 42 ends. it is coming up on may 11. chaos is already beginning to unfold in el paso where migrants packed the city streets in high speed car chases take place on a nearly daily basis. this situation is no better on the mexican side of the border where thousands of migrants have set up camps waiting to cross as biden administration officials finally lay out a new asylum plan. >> bill: making migration more
7:02 am
safe, orderly, humane. >> the whole model is to reach the people where they are to cut the smugglers out and to have them avoid the perilous journey that zoom do not make. we're beginning in guatemala and columbia. we're beginning at the level that i described and we will scale up. >> bill: will this plan work? any hope? nate foye is live in brownsville, texas, where he has been at his post all week. nate, hello. >> the long-term effects of that plan remain to be seen. in advance of title 42 ending in under two weeks we expect bigger numbers than we've seen since being here. every single day this week just in the rio grande valley sector agents have processed over 2,000 migrants every day. take a live look at the fox news drone as the action is continuing this morning. right now we have about 300 migrants being processed and you
7:03 am
can see there are a lot of resources this morning. more than we have seen in previous days. they're either cleaning up. we're seeing them doing some landscaping work. either cleaning up from all the migrants that have been here or setting up and clearing things out for even bigger operations in the days and weeks to come. 2600 migrants processed yesterday and a city commissioner in brownsville says the city has never seen anything like this. but just across the border from el paso we're seeing even more migrants. look at this next video. migrants are sleeping on the streets outside shelters there and an estimated 35,000 are waiting in juarez and new video showing how one of the migrants got into the country. the group helps the migrant slip through a hole in the border fence in el paso. this is before border patrol gets there. he squeezes through to the other side and then crosses the highway and runs away to evade border authorities. we also have new video of a
7:04 am
texas dps chase. look at this in high -- the illegal migrant in the car did not run away and was apprehended. back out here live again you see a lot of action behind us right now. border patrol just released the new numbers from the past week. agents have apprehended 51,000 migrants just in the past seven days. those numbers expected to skyrocket as we lead up to the end of title 42. >> bill: a busy week coming up. want to bring in lawrence jones, host of "cross-country." nice to see you and good morning to you. part of the plan when this expires in 13 days, migrant processing centers in latin american deport ineligible requirements. no reentry for five years if not. legal migration will expand. broad strokes on that. what do you think? >> it will cause more people to
7:05 am
come across the border. the problem with the administration there is a fundamentally misunderstanding how border security works. they believe if they simply improve the asylum process it will stop folks from coming across the border or they may go to a port of entry. that's not what is going to happen. if you don't surge resources to the border immediately right now you have what is it, 25,000 people that are waiting to come across? you thought the haitian crisis was big. it is going to be more of those once they repeal title 42. the administration will say it was a pandemic measure. that's true. what are you going to replace it with? this plan is not going to be sufficient. >> bill: chad wolf on fox business yesterday and how he sees it. watch. >> there is no strategy, no leverage, no big agreement with the government of mexico to figure out what is going on and to solve the problem. they've been at this for two years and have a failed strategy. >> bill: others may argue there
7:06 am
is a strategy. >> they made it very clear they want the people to come. you have to remember after you get the asylum, there is a pathway to citizenship. again you will hear congress talk about that, hear the senate talk about it. this is campaign season. the folks up for grabs is the latin community. i find the new plan suspect. >> bill: let's move to the american northwest. portland, oregon defunded the police by $15 million. you spoke with the mayor, ted wheeler there on your show on saturday night. want to roll a clip of this and you can explain what you had to talk and how he defended all this. >> we definitely have significant challenges here in the city of portland around homelessness, around criminal activity, around liveability. these are some of the same issues exacerbated in large cities across america. >> bill: a little bit of an
7:07 am
appetizer, let's say. you were in portland yesterday. >> i was invited to portland by the citizens there because crime is out of control, you have homelessness that is out of control there. they allow people to openly do drugs in the city. there was this whole plan that if you decriminalize the drugs there, it would cause the folks to get help. they invested $1 hundred million per year. the money is not for treatment facilities anymore. they haven't been housed. so now you took the criminal element out of the drugs but you didn't get the people help so it's spinning out of control. the question you'll see on the show at 9:00 p.m. saturday that i pose to the mayor, you have people that are flocking here in portland from all over country because they feel they can get away with doing drugs and criminal activity. do you feel like this experiment failed? you have to listen to hear what he said. >> bill: i'll watch it for sure. lawrence, they call it cross-country for a reason. you are on the road.
7:08 am
you have have been to seattle, portland, san francisco. los angeles. you live in new york. >> live in texas, come to new york. >> bill: sorry. been to chicago. >> yeah. >> bill: does a city have it worse than others? and if so, how would you describe what you see there? >> i say portland is the jewel where all the experiments for the progressive movement are there. i believe that all the other states modeled themselves like portland. if you have this dream. so if it's not working in portland, it won't work in any of these other cities. >> bill: but they are trying. >> one thing i will say about the folks there. they are trying, some of them. what i will say about the folks in portland, the very progressive and liberal. these are the people i talked to. they believe in this ideology but they also told me it is just not working. we have immense compassion for
7:09 am
the folks that are addicted to drugs, homeless population, but we can't live this way. and i think that's what the mayor has to respond to. now, you will see later on in the interview he does not like fox news. he does not like our coverage. but as i told the mayor, i only come where i'm invited. the people are calling for help. are you the leader there. i appreciate the mayor for coming on. >> bill: he said yes to you. see you at 9:00 eastern time saturday night. thank you, lawrence. back to d.c. >> shannon: first republican bank under growing pressure. experts warn we could be seeing shades of the 2000 # financial crisis if it fails. will the federal government need to step in and should it? connell mcshane has details. >> you hear history rhyme if it doesn't directly repeat. back then in 2008 there were questions and lehman brothers and happening in the middle of a
7:10 am
presidential election. many point to john mccain's decision to suspend his campaign to work on that crisis as a decisive moment in his loss to barack obama. experienced market watchers remember something else. >> people from high are telling us don't worry, everything is okay. if you go back then all we kept hearing were things like don't worry, the housing market never goes down, sub prime lending is contained. all is well. then all heck broke loose. >> when it did, the government stepped in. the term bail-out was part of the vernacular. signature valley bank and signature bank have failed and the government responded. new questions this week about first republic bank had the market veterans wondering if maybe things are starting to rhyme as another presidential race heats up. >> everything we have seen is it and we go farther away from it, i don't think it has much of an
7:11 am
impact. but if first republic goes out and if a few more go out, you can bet your bottom dollar the republicans will be yelling and screaming. >> quick to point out wall street is nowhere close to as vulnerable as it was back then and we're more than a year away from the election. that said the parallels at least are starting to raise eyebrows. >> shannon: the world is watching. thank you very much for getting us an update. >> bottom line is i have an awful lot of work to do i really do. only in america does the next election start the day after the last election. >> we need to take our country back and need the majority in the senate. that's the sole reason i'm running. >> bill: this race and state just got very interesting. in west virginia it's officially on. republican governor jim justice announcing his run for the senate in 2024 putting joe manchin on the defensive and we'll see how that goes,
7:12 am
shannon. >> shannon: ed sharon on the witness stand with his guitar in hand saying he did not copy another musicians famous hit. his explanation for the two songs next. we start with sustainably grown cotton from the rich red soul of north alabama, here on our family farm. then we partner with family owned mills from maine to mississippi to manufacture our cotton into quality american made fabrics that become our heirloom inspired bedding, towels, blankets and apparel. experience our 100% american made luxury linens for yourself. go to red line cotton dot com and receive 15% off your order with code fox news. my name is brian delallo. i teach ap and honors economics in pittsburgh, pennsylvania. financial well-being to me is knowing that i can be free to do the things that i love to do.
7:13 am
i hope when i retire someday, they say, that guy made this place a special place to come to school and gave as much as he could to help the community.
7:14 am
- this is our premium platinum coverage map and this is consumer cellular's map. see the difference? - no... i don't see the difference, do you? - well, that one's purple. - exactly! that's our premium. - what does that mean? - i think it means it costs more. - for the same coverage? - that's what makes it premium! - that doesn't make sense, does it? - no... but it is premium! - i'd just go with consumer cellular. - thank you! - (whispering) they're the same. - [announcer] get the exact same coverage as the nation's leading carrier. starting at $20.
7:15 am
consumer cellular. ♪ zyrteeeec...♪ works hard at hour one and twice as hard when you take it again the next day. so betty can be the... barcode beat conductor. ♪ go betty! ♪ let's be more than our allergies! zeize the day. with zyrtec.
7:16 am
7:17 am
>> shannon: today nashville police plan to release the manifesto of school shooter audrey hail. authorities recovered it from hail's home after last month's shooting at a christian school. the 28-year-old transgender suspect was shot to death by officers that day. listen, bill, a lot of criticism we haven't had a look at this sooner. i don't know what the timeline
7:18 am
is. a lot of folks anxiously awaiting that. >> bill: apparently the materials they found are extensive. several notebooks and who knows what else they found inside the home. so we await on that. it has been several weeks. now 18 past the hour. give this a listen. check it out. >> i'm officially announcing my candidacy for the united states senate, and i absolutely will promise you to god above that i will do the job and i will do the job that will make you proud. >> shannon: republican west virginia governor jim justice looking the move from the state house to the nation's capitol setting up a potential showdown against joe manchin. let's bring in the panel. katie pavlich and jonathan kott. great to see you both on this rainy friday in d.c. interesting to read a lot of
7:19 am
d.c. publications and whispers and scuttlebutt like the dems aren't happy with manchin. this talk of repealing the inflation reduction act which his vote was critical. the deal he made to getting that thing across the finish line. >> joe manchin is a unique individual in d.c. he doesn't care about either party. he has said that to me repeatedly every time they would walk to a vote. if i said it was a party line vote he said i don't care. i'm a west virginia democrat. he is happiest when pissing off both sides and appealing to 65% in the middle. i think that's what he is going to do if he decides to run in west virginia. go back and show them what he accomplished for them and run a tough race. >> shannon: he might run a different kind of race. entering as a third party. he won't take it off the table. we keep playing the sound bite
7:20 am
of him saying i won't lose a race. he said any race i run. so that would be a headache for both parties if he decides to do it. >> bill: speculation he may run for president. highly unlikely given joe biden announced his re-election. joe manchin has been able to be a moderate democrat in red west virginia where president trump won by 75%. his inflation reduction act vote was a vote against west virginia in terms of energy policies. you have seen him backtrack and panic about the fact that vote is coming back to bite him and now he has this serious opponent. jim justice's approval in west virginia as the governor is 64%. joe manchin's approval in the 40s. disapproval rate is 53%. he has a serious problem on his hands. republicans have asked joe manchin to change party and encouraged him to come to the right side. he refused to do that and now he
7:21 am
has a serious challenger who could beat him for the senate seat. >> shannon: would he consider changing parties? >> no. he is a proud west virginia democrat. >> shannon: is that different than the democratic party on capitol hill? >> yes, he is different from the democratic party nationally. he is responsive to the people of west virginia and doesn't care about party labels. i think he is open to just talking to everybody. which is why lots of republicans really like him. i would point out jim justice has a problem with republicans. he has to get through a republican primary before he gets a chance to face joe manchin and he brought lindsey graham to his announcement which i have never considered this. donald trump called lindsey graham a progressive last night. if you try to win a republican primary in a state that donald trump won by 43 points, maybe that's not your best -- >> shannon: that situation is very confusing.
7:22 am
>> the reason why manchin is in this position he broke away from his moderate as voting the sole person on capitol hill who got the inflation reduction act and blowing through what it's going to cost. we knew it would do that in august. there is a video that will be used on the campaign trail joe biden giving joe manchin the last pen to sign the legislation. it made it a serious race. >> shannon: estimates showing that there are estimates even higher than what they thought the cost of some of the green and other things would be for this recent legislation. so yeah, does senator manchin mount any real effort at repealing it? is it talk? is it going to the poll numbers? >> if it keeps going the direction and the administration keeps ignore his intent when he wrote it, he is open to doing anything. i think they should take him very seriously but he will have
7:23 am
to go home and tell the people of west virginia what did it. there will probably be 10,000 jobs created from the inflation reduction act in west virginia before he has to face voters. i this i -- i think that will be the message he runs on. thanks, guys. bill. >> bill: thank you. one to watch. world renowned singer ed sheeran is taking the stand in a copyright infringement trail saying parts of his song "thinking-out loud" and denies ripping off marvin gaye's hit let's get it on. how did it go? >> i don't think we would have expected his next performance to be in federal court. that's what happened yesterday. he is being accused by the heirs of music writer ed townsend for stealing from the song "let's get it on." let's listen to the song that he played in court.
7:24 am
♪ ♪ i will be loving you ♪ >> let's take a listen to "let's get it on." ♪ let's get it on ♪ . >> the defense for sheeran is arguing those two songs sharing a cord sequence does not amount to copying because many songs do and why you get so many song match-ups. joe bennett, who i spoke to who studies music composition to present evidence in lawsuits strongly agrees with. >> on a musical level, at least, in my opinion this case is entirely without merit. they aren't is same cord series. there is a difference in the second cord. that cord sequence is common and used by lots of people.
7:25 am
they did not invent in back in the 70s. people used it before and since. >> ed sheeran will continue his testimony on monday. not the first case brought against him in terms of copyright. he records every single one of his writing sessions so that if and really when a lawsuit comes up in the future he can present video evidence and say i didn't copy. >> bill: did he do that before this one? >> this is back in 2014. another trial a couple of years ago. it is within the last couple years but these songs are from the beginning of his career. >> bill: pretty close. >> very close. cord progression isn't copying. there are only so many chords in music. >> it would be fantastic to be a jury on that case. >> shannon: a sign of the times. growing concerns that artificial intelligence could launch nuclear weapons. what lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are doing to try to
7:26 am
prevent that from ever happening. tom cruise like you have never seen him before. ♪ lately? get ready for a shock. the rate on credit cards is now over 22%. if you want to save hundreds of dollars every month, pay off the balances on your high rate cards with a lower rate va home loan from newday usa. and get the financial peace of mind every veteran deserves. no one takes care of veterans like newday usa. living with diabetes? glucerna protein smart has your number with 30 grams of protein. scientifically designed with carbsteady to help you manage your blood sugar. and more protein to keep you moving with diabetes. glucerna live every moment
7:27 am
when you really need to sleep. you reach for the really good stuff. zzzquil ultra helps you sleep better and longer when you need it most. its non-habit forming and powered by the makers of nyquil. every day, more dog people, and more vets are deciding it's time for a fresh approach to pet food. they're quitting the kibble. and kicking the cans. and feeding their dogs dog food that's actually... well, food.
7:28 am
developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food. (music throughout) get the royal treatment. join the millions playing royal match today. download now.
7:29 am
7:30 am
7:31 am
>> bill: 10:30 in new york. another freight train derailment in wisconsin. two rail cars washed ashore after going off the tracks near the mississippi river. bnsf railway saying all crew members were accounted for and on one received a medical evaluation. a mess there. hazardous material believed to be batteries were on board but no threat to the public. that was wisconsin again. >> shannon: the rise of artificial intelligence prompting lawmakers to introduce a bill designed to prevent a.i. from launching a nuclear weapon.
7:32 am
we have the story from capitol hill. >> a vision of sky net and terminator. everyone is talking about a.i. the reason that elon musk was on the hill this week and now some bipartisan lawmakers trying to put up guardrails when it comes to this technology. so democratic reps joining republican representatives in introducing the block nuclear launch by a.i. act. a lot of words there. it is important. senator markey is introducing companion legislation in the senate as well. lawmakers say this bill would codify the defense department's existing policy to insure that no federal funds can be used for any launch of a nuclear weapon by an automated system and keep a human in the loop here that would have to inform and execute any decisions by the president. most lawmakers like the idea but because it ties up federal
7:33 am
funding not everyone is quite ready to vote in favor of it just yet. >> i am checking with the department of defense and military leaders to make sure that some of the language in the bill wouldn't unintentionally harm our military readiness. >> we need to think more about what is happening sooner than that. >> when you see folks big a.i. prop proponents warn it maybe a problem it's a big wake-up call. >> bottom line there are a lot of lawmakers believe they are behind on this and something has to give. shannon. >> shannon: it may kill us, okay, aishah, good luck on the hill today. >> direct and to the point. >> bill: colorado republican ken buck and democrat ted lu.
7:34 am
it is insane you need legislation to consider this but that's the world we live in. it is 2023, a.i. is coming. what can you do? >> well, a.i. is here and unfortunately congress hasn't been really looking at the issue for a long time. i think what is absolutely essential and i'm glad that ted brought this bill to me and included me in this bill. we want to make sure there is a human in the process of launching a nuclear weapon if at any point in time we need to launch a nuclear weapon. you see sci-fi movies and the world is out of control because a.i. has taken over. we will have humans in this process. >> bill: congressman lu from stanford. 36% of surveyed a.i. experts worry about the possibility that automated systems could cause nuclear-level catastrophe. now, 36% is a little too high. you want that sucker at 0, don't you?
7:35 am
>> thank you for your question and let me first say what an honor it is to work with ken buck. we came in 2015 together in freshman class and have worked on a number of issues. working on this issue to make sure when the department of defense has a class of automated weapons, which they do now, we never let a.i. take control of automated nuclear weapons because we always have to have a human in the loop. you are right. we can't have a 36% chance it could happen. it has to be a 0% chance. >> bill: i don't know how much you talk about this or lawmakers are clued on the house or senate side. elon musk met with chuck schumer the other day. did you learn anything from that, congressman buck, about what elon musk might have been trying to tell our government? >> well, elon musk and chuck schumer are not close, dear friends of mine but i know from public reports that mucke is
7:36 am
very concerned about a.i. and concerned the government play a role in putting some boundaries around a.i. this is just the beginning of one thing that ted came up with. there are a number of other things we're discussing and hopefully we'll start moving through committees and have hearings on them and invite elon musk to testify publicly about his concerns. >> bill: that would be good and others, too. i know you guys disagree on some purposes for government. republicans traditionally don't want more of it. democrats the end to say we need more government. there is a suggestion, congressman lu, that washington needs to create a new division of government like the fda to oversee food. do you think a new division of government is necessary to look at artificial intelligence to do it the right way? >> i think it's too early to tell. we don't know where a.i. will
7:37 am
progress in 5 to 10 years and why i work on legislation now to create a bipartisan blue ribbon commission to look at what kinds of a.i. we might want to regulate and how we might go about doing that. >> bill: congressman buck, what do you think about that? do we need it? >> well, i don't think we need it at this point in time and fool hardy to put something up without knowing why we're creating an agency. i do think there are government agencies that have jurisdiction. there maybe too many of them just like the department of homeland security we may have to find an agency that brings in some of these different functions. >> bill: this thing is coming fast. chatgpt changes every day. gentlemen, thank you for your time and please stay in contact with us. thanks for coming on today. the democratic congressman lu and republican buck from colorado. thank you, gentlemen. 22 minutes before the hour. tom cruise taking on a new role. here you go.
7:38 am
shannon, you'll like this. late night host convinced the top gun star to take a stab at musical theater. they surprised an audience in hollywood production of the lion king. you judge for yourself on this. ♪ >> bill: i think he did all right. >> shannon: everybody thinks cruise takes himself too seriously. i love it. we should see more of the from him. >> bill: you know how much i love celebrity news. >> shannon: it is what you feast about. >> bill: like you and the nfl
7:39 am
draft. >> we're all talked out on our best hobbies for today. i loved it. thank you, bill. target hitting back against rampant shoplifting in a democrat-run cities. the steps one store is taking to protect its merchandise. snapchat facing dozens of lawsuits alleging that the social media giant is connecting their kids to deadly drugs. >> we think it was xanax that they believe laced with fentanyl because when i found him, he was gone. home insurance options. cool. what do we do now? we live. save time and money with progressive's home quote explorer. what you do afterwards is up to you.
7:40 am
7:41 am
7:42 am
our customers don't do what they do for likes or followers. their path isn't for the casually curious. and that's what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it's what they were born to do...
7:43 am
it's what they live to do... trinet serves small and medium sized businesses... so they can do more of what matters. benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter.
7:44 am
>> bill: a target store in san francisco looking more and more like fort knox putting more
7:45 am
merchandise under lock and key. they keep all items like deodorant and other things under lock and key. san francisco 2023. >> shannon: it would take a while to get shopping done. a group of 60 families is suing snap chats with linking kids with drug dealers. despite they are a goofy app for kids to use and send each other pictures its known use as an open air drug market. joining me now one of the families taking part in the suit. they lost their son, samuel, to fentanyl poisoning two years ago. welcome to you both. we can only imagine the pain that you've gone through and you continue to go through.
7:46 am
i have to tell you by reading about your story, doctor, you guys were doing everything right. you were having conversations with your son about drugs, you were testing him, and yet you say social media allowed something to slip through. >> yes. before sammy died, i thought exactly that. what i was worried about were nude pictures or, you know, something like that. i had no idea that snapchat's algorithm was pushing drug dealers to my kid and that he could get drugs through snapchat. that they would solicit him and he could get them delivered to the house as easily as he could get a pizza delivered. i had no idea. they were not only drugs, they were fentanyl-laced drugs and that's what killed him. >> shannon: to help other parents, very courageous you are out there raising this alarm and involved in the lawsuit. i want to put up so parents will
7:47 am
know the emojis and different things i had no idea about. they describe different drugs that are available using a combination of different emojis, you can see those an additional grouping that is a dealer's advertisement. it has various things including money bags and an outlet like a plug. that's the signal. samuel, what kind of tools would have been helpful for you as parents who were very much aware and engaged on this issue before you lost sammy. >> we're pushing for sammy's law named after our son that would require for parent monitoring software integration on platforms like snapchat that have minors on it. instagram's instant messaging. anything with kids on it these platforms don't allow for the safe software like bark that will alert a parent if the word
7:48 am
suicide is typed or a drug emoji in use. they even call the police. >> snapchat says the fentanyl epidemic has taken the lives of so many people and we have great empathy for families who suffered. while we don't comment on active litigation this amended filing is riddled with false claims about how the snapchat app works. ongoing efforts to aggressively combat drug activity on our platform and shut down drug dealers and our team members statements. your response to -- their response to you. >> there is only one number that matters, that's the number of kids who are dying from their platform. the rest of it is word salad and we don't care what other metrics they care to measure, they are treating us like a p.r. problem. all of their fixes can be jumped over by a 12-year-old in 30 seconds. so just watch the number of deaths on the platform and you
7:49 am
will see the crisis. as fentanyl pours into our country and into our communities, snap ink is the bullet that shoots the gun of fentanyl at our kids. >> shannon: kids are so savvy and beyond where most of us are getting around different protections and layers, doctor, a final word from you to young people out there who think it is a one-time thing and recreational and i will be fine. >> that used to be the base. unfortunately companies like snapchat are basically an accessory every step of the way from the cartels in mexico into this country, into your doorstep. so you may think that you are getting a drug that is xanax or something else and it is very likely to kill you now. all of these drugs are being laced with fentanyl. unless you get a prescription from a pharmacy with your name on it, you should not take it. >> one pill can kill.
7:50 am
>> shannon: thank you both for being willing to share your story the try to save other lives. bless you guys. >> thank you, shannon. >> bill: hunter biden is due in court days from now. a child support dispute continues. could it reveal some interesting facts about his finances? we'll take a look. two teachers go forward, they go public saying their school board forced them to deserve parents. at issue is their children's preferred pronouns and some stunning details in that story. and high rate credit cards, and save hundreds every month. moderate to severe eczema still disrupts my skin. despite treatment it disrupts my skin with itch. it disrupts my skin with rash. but now, i can disrupt eczema with rinvoq. rinvoq is not a steroid, topical, or injection.
7:51 am
it's one pill, once a day. many taking rinvoq saw clear or almost-clear skin while some saw up to 100% clear skin. and, they felt dramatic and fast itch relief some as early as 2 days. that's rinvoq relief. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal, cancers including lymphoma and skin cancer, death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq, as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. disrupt the itch and rash of eczema. talk to your doctor about rinvoq. learn how abbvie can help you save. if you're on medicare, you should know president biden has capped the cost of insulin at 35 dollars a month. dec
7:52 am
7:53 am
7:54 am
7:55 am
>> bill: vladimir putin with a new and brutal assault on parts of ukraine. drone strikes and missiles across the country. 19 people killed as a result. russia's first large-scale assault in more than a month. what's the biden administration's plan next sew we'll find out when benjamin hall sits down with secretary of state antony blinken.
7:56 am
an exclusive interview airing at 6:00 eastern time on monday on bret baier. where are we headed next in the war? >> shannon: he has been on the front lines of many different wars and understands how the world works. fantastic the secretary is sitting down with him. >> bill: looking forward to seeing that monday at 6:00. hunter biden expected to settle a child support dispute in arkansas involving his 4-year-old daughter. david spunt has more on this. >> his dad is setting his sights on a second term in the oval office. hunter looking at a courtroom ordered to appear in person in arkansas for a child support dispute with his former girlfriend. she says her 4-year-old daughter is his 4-year-old daughter.
7:57 am
dna test showed that child is hunter's, biden and roberts agreed on childcare payments but she believes he is not paying enough. hunter's team wants to delay the hearing but the judge said no, he must be there in person. what sets the story above the child support dispute we may find out more about his finances. he has been under federal investigation since at least 2018. we know u.s. attorney in delaware is looking his tax affair and overseas business dealings and lying on a form to purchase a gun. his attorneys were here in washington to get a status update on an investigation. representatives from the attorney general's office was there. hunter has been seen in public with his dad recently tagging along on the trip to ireland. to be clear, it's possible hunter may not see any charges at all. prosecutors merely weighing the possibility of charges at this point. >> bill: something to watch coming up on monday. nice to see you, david, at the
7:58 am
department of justice. >> shannon: california school district requires teachers to accept a child's gender transition and hide it from their parents allegedly. some teachers are pushing back by filing a lawsuit. william la jeunesse is live in l.a. with details. >> this is an issue that parents need to know about and districts are struggling with. should teachers tell parents if a student is struggling with their gender identity? 6,000 schools say no. that's the debate here. two san diego middle school teachers claim the district and state require they withhold from parents that a child is going by a different name or gender while in class. according to the lawsuit, the policy violates the teachers' religious beliefs by requiring they use any pronouns or gender-specific name requested by the student while reverting to the legal name when speaking to the parents in order to
7:59 am
actively hide information about the child's gender identity from the parent. these kids are aged 10 to 14 in the district which allegedly quietly imposed this rule two months ago and refused comment. they say the policy is mandated by state law which says the right of transgender students to keep their status private is grounded in the california's anti-discrimination law. disclosing that without the student's permission may violate the student east right to privacy and harassment. teachers claim the policy violates their own catholic and religious beliefs. big picture. these parent exclusion laws are happening across the country. typically the parents are unaware unless they ask. back to you. >> shannon: william la jeunesse, thank you very much. >> bill: before we step out, how about a little before we go, huh? you want some of that?
8:00 am
okay? what is -- i was waiting. i didn't want to rip you off and make sure you saw that. "fox news sunday" what's shaking on sunday for you? >> shannon: we have ronna mcdaniel. folks saying they may or may not show up for the debates. and we have democratic senator chris van hollen to talk about the president's re-election and debt ceiling showdown. >> bill: enjoy the weekend, shannon. good to be with you. thanks for being here today. gillian turner now is in for harris. >> gillian: thank you. fox news alert straight off the bat today. president biden's job approval rating is hitting an all-time low the same week he kicks off his re-election campaign. i'm in for harris today. the voters put his rating in the low 40s. the new poll shows his latest approval at 37%. prior to this week the

106 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on