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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  June 6, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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>> dana: the race for the white house getting wider. three more republicans adding their names this week to the list of candidates seeking the white house while president biden keeps his campaign under wraps and out of sight. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. bill hemmer is off today. welcome to you. >> bill: thanks for having me. a great hour ahead. i'm bill melugin in for bill hemmer. right now republicans are just getting started on the road to the white house as president biden sits back biding his time waiting to see where the republican race is heading. the white house is using its pulpit to praise the president while he avoids the campaign trail. >> this is the president, if you look at his track record more broadly. if you look at what he has been able to do.
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he has been able to push forward and get done historic pieces of legislation. he has gotten more done than any other president. >> senator tim scott running for the gop nomination is here and joining us next. first peter doocy live on the north lawn. >> democrats at the highest levels in town are starting to suggest today that the biden 2024 platform doesn't really matter that much because they think whoever the republican nominee winds up being is going to be easy to beat. >> we'll see what alternative emerges on the other side. an extreme alternative. we want to protect and strengthen social security and medicare. the other side wants to end those things as we know them today and they will continue to try to do that. >> bill: chris christie entering the race today. chris sununu dropping out with a warning in the "washington post" to others trying to dethrone trump in the primary saying. too many other candidates are
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simply running to be trump's vice president. that's not leadership, that the weakness. every republican attack on president biden is wrapped up in talk about his age. that is something white house officials can't do anything to reverse. so instead they are trying to argue that he is as sharp as anyone in d.c. >> something that i think that was said a couple days ago, a huffington post headline. after calling him senile republicans claim he outsmarted them. >> the president is trying to follow the clinton, bush, obama reelect model. you don't campaign at this point in the cycle and then you go on to win. but if you are keeping score at home, aside from some fundraisers there have been no campaign-style events for this president on this the six-week anniversary of his re-election
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campaign announcement. >> bill: rfk is out there doing interviews all over the place. peter doocy live at the white house. talk to you soon. >> he is one of these guys like clarence thomas, black republican who believes in pulling himself up by the bootstraps rather than understanding the systemic racism that african-american face in this country and other minorities. he doesn't get it, neither does clarence and that's why they're republicans. >> dana: joy behar attacking tim scott on the view saying he doesn't get systemic racism. he went on the show yesterday to sit down with the hosts and address comments head on. >> you have indicated that you don't believe in systemic racism. what is your definition of systemic racism? >> let me answer the question that you've asked. >> or does it exist in your mind? >> let me answer the question this one. one of the reasons why i'm on the show is because of the comments that were made on this show.
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the only way for a young african kid to be successful in this country is to be the exception and not the rule. that's a dangerous, offensive, disgusting message to send to our young people today that the only way to succeed is by being the exception. >> dana: senator tim scott seeking the gop nomination for president. do you wish joy behar had been there yesterday? >> absolutely. when you have someone that says that, the way she said it and what she meant was african-american conservatives have no clue what it means to be black in america. a young lady, white lady wearing black face and saying somehow complimentary to black people. she is inconsistent with reality. more important both clarence thomas and my story have things in common starting in poverty and tragedy. broken pieces made whole? how?
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this country affords anyone to rise to the level of their character, integrity and grit. we want that story to be told to the american people. kids trapped in paveer tee today need to know you don't have to be the exception. you are the rule if you will work hard, you will be lucky. that's where opportunity comes from. >> dana: that's what parents want for their kids. do you think you made a difference yesterday in trying to broaden the audience and get people to understand you are tim scott, an individual, you happen to be conservative and [but that is not what defines you. >> one of the things that we as conservatives have to do is go where we aren't invited. spend time selling our message of conservatism to people who may be inclined to say yes to our message but they've never had a messenger show up. >> dana: where might you go aside from the view? >> i did a town hall in an african-american church to have the conversation about why it is that we can believe in the future of this country working together.
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i will do an event in a brazilian church coming up in the next few months. my goal is to go throughout the country. if you want to be a different kind of president you should be a different kind of candidate. >> dana: did you have anything -- sometimes when i finish a white house briefing that night i would be in bed and think i should have said this. do you have any moments on the view? what would you like to have said? >> i asked during the break lets dive into why america is not systemically racist. why my grandfather was making in the jim crow south and when my mother was born and compare it to my generations as an eighth grader a race riot at my high school. four years later i'm president of student government. why can we measure change in this nation? we lean into the fight together. we're willing to address the challenges and the inequalities of this country together.
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that's what makes america exceptional. >> dana: let's talk about the race. rnc has debate requirements out there. you have to get 1% support in three national polls and 40,000 unique donors. do you qualify at this point for that debate? >> yes. >> dana: so when you think about getting on that stage, you have chris christie, for example, who wants to get in today. his goal to try to get on that stage and take down president trump. governor sununu declined to get in the race. then he wrote this in the "washington post." i'm not running for president. beating trump is more important. no one can stop candidates from entering this race. candidates with no path to victory must have the discipline to get out. everyone polling in the low digits this winter needs to hang it up and head home. >> i agree everybody has the opportunity to run and should run. i will focus that america can do for anyone what she did for me. creating opportunities and protecting america is why i look forward to being on the stage
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and having a conversation with the american people how you can be optimistic, positive and yet a strong willed conservative. that message, i believe, will continue to resonate. >> dana: he says beating trump is more important than anything. >> i think beating biden is more important than anything else. the truth. president biden has failed at his job. you can't trust him on spending giving him an unlimited credit card between now and the time he leaves office is a terrible decision. leading to 16% inflation. devastating, parents like mine who spend another $5 hundred a month just to be break even under this president. we can do better. we have been better. >> dana: you have to take on the other candidates before biden. one other one. former governor nikki haley appointed you to be at the u.s. senate. why would you be a better president than she would be? >> i think the truth of my life disproves the lies of the radical left. someone who lived on both sides
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of the track and had an opportunity to a, start with a miserable beginning growing up in a single parent household mired in poverty nearly failing out of school as a freshman because i felt this country wound afford me that opportunity. the victim mentality i had to deal with allows me to overcome the challenges of today. >> dana: you know her story, right? do you think she feels the same? she talks about her dad being basically discriminated against and her having to watch that. she would say -- she doesn't say she is african-american of course but had similar challenges. >> growing up with a father without a father is a different experience than many people have had. unfortunately it is with three out of four african-americans have today and four out of ten white kids have today. understanding that this country works for those who are at the bottom just as well as it does for those at the top is a message we should talk about. i would say from a policy perspective having had the privilege of writing the tax
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cuts and jobs act on the personal side of the tax code, providing two plus trillion of tax cuts is an important ingredient to being successful as president already having done so as a legislator. i go back to d.c. and back on the road in south carolina, iowa, new hampshire and on the road. >> dana: do you like eating the food on the campaign trail in iowa? >> if all my suits fit i do. >> dana: you look trim. thank you for coming on. we love having you in studio and we appreciate it. tim scott, everyone. >> bill: great interview. top suspect in the 2005 disappearance of teen natalee holloway faces extradition to the united states this week. van der sloot's lawyer is putting up a fight to try to stop the transfer. charles watson is joining us with the latest. charles. >> good morning, bill. we have been in contact with his attorney who tells us he has filed a habeas corpus petition with the courts in peru to try
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to prevent that government from sur ending van der sloot to u.s. authorities. dutch embassy officials visited van der sloot in prison and saying he would not get a fair trial extradited to the u.s. he is refusing to sign his emergency passport while his legal representation petitions the court in peru for a hearing to stop this temporary transfer. the development coming hours after the head of peru's prison system told the associated press that van der sloot would be turned over to interpol on thursday and later put on a plane headed to the u.s. the dutch national is charged with wire fraud and extortion related to a scheme to take $250,000 from the mother of alabama teenager natalee holloway in exchange for what prosecutors say turned out to be false information about
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holloway's whereabouts. they want to know where she is. >> there is overwhelming evidence which was put together in 2010 when he extorted natalee's mother. if he would just tell the truth and bring closure to this family, i think it will be a lot easier on him and it may be a negotiation tool, as i said, for him for a lesser sentence. >> yeah, hallway's body hasn't been found since she disappeared in a 2005 trip to aruba. van der sloot has been the prime suspect but not charged with her disappearance. we're checking in with his attorney and officials down in peru to see if this haab -- --
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we'll know you'll keep us posted. thank you. some top immigration officials are heading for the exit as lawmakers on capitol hill put failures at the border under a micro scope. plus four female athletes who had to compete against biological males in high school sports are back in court. what they're saying now as the legal battle gets a new hearing today. >> all the work i put in to get to those state championships to be in the running to win and to have that taken away by a male time and time again was devastating and hard to get back up after that. . fortunately, you've earned the valuable va home loan benefit. the newday100 va loan lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value, not just 80%. and with home values near record highs, that could mean a lot of money. let newday turn your home's equity into cash.
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>> bill: all right. welcome back. tensions were high inside atlanta city hall overnight as the city council voted to transfer $31 million to build a controversial police training
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camp known as cop city. the vote came in at 5:30 this morning after 13 hours of public comment in which hundreds of people spoke. mostly against the plan. the proposed project sparked several protests, some violent in recent months including an incident in january in which police fatally shot a 26-year-old protestor. >> dana: house committee demanding answers for ghs leaving law enforcement ill equipped to handle massive surges at the southern border. aishah hosni has the latest before the hearing on the hill. >> there are a lot of eyes and ears focused on the border today. two hearings taking place today. the first which is getting underway just right now is on staffing issues at the border. and this one is already underway. the key witness here is joseph, the inspector general of the department of homeland security
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and this is the first time we're going to hear from him since the acting director of ice, johnson, announced he is stepping down at the end of june. he is the second senior immigration official to retire since the end of title 42. u.s. border patrol chief ortiz also announcing that he is leaving last week. then at 2:00 the homeland security subcommittee looking at how dhs prepared or didn't quite prepare adequately for the end of title 42. the biden administration is touting a recent dip of encounters at the border but lawmakers will grill a homeland official on the biden administration's asylum rule. 18 states are suing over the circum veinings of lawful pathways causing it a big smoke screen and that make it that much easier for migrants to illegally enter into the u.s. we'll monitor both of these hearings. expected to be interesting in the next couple of hours.
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>> dana: no doubt about that: >> bill: joining us this for the border chief in arizona chris clem. thank you for your time today. >> i just want to start off by thank you so much for covering the border issue. it impacts every life in america and all sides it's so important and the coverage is appreciated. >> bill: big problem down there and you know it well. you were running the yuma sector and they had a massive fentanyl bust there. i want to pull up the photos. border patrol say they seized 190 pounds of fentanyl in a single bust in a vehicle at a checkpoint. to put that in perspective enough fentanyl to kill 40 million people. chris, your reaction to this. yuma sector is getting a lot of fentanyl busts. >> my first of all my reaction is outstanding work by the men and women of the u.s. border patrol in the yuma sector.
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it kept us up at night as leaders facing the migrant crisis we knew the cartels were directing the flow of people to get their poison across the border. we had to make all sorts of tactical operational decisions. we made adjustments to get the checkpoints open more and that results in more seizures. you know, i want to commend the men and women of yuma for taking care of business. we have to do more and a better job of it. this is the fishes step fighting the fentanyl crisis that has been impacting the united states for the last year or more. >> yuma sector has people coming in from all over the world. countries in africa and around the world. last year alone 170 countries from around the world showed up at the southern border. explain for the viewers. a lot of people might think it's mexican nationals, guatemala, people from venezuela. you have a experience on the ground in arizona. they are coming in from all over
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the planet, right? >> that's what -- you are absolutely right and one of the things that took us back. we had to make all the adjustments because we zeal with people from all over the world. there were times we would get daily and weekly stats that mexico and central america wound wouldn't make the top ones. how do we treat individuals with translation and customs and cultures? our agents had to be on the lookout for different indicators of what kind of trafficking may be going on. when they come from all over the world flying into mexico and flying up to the southern border and making the trek across poses a challenge. again, yuma stepped up. southwest border sectors and all the sectors stepped up to address this problem. it should have been addressed by policy from washington, d.c. >> bill: chris, thank you for your time today and thank you for your service.
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you put a lot of years in there at the southern border. we appreciate it, thank you. >> dana: thank you. a national report card finding a stunning turnaround in education in mississippi. why the red state is making big gains in the classroom. plus dash cam video from the michigan state police officers in pursuit of an s.u.v. wait until you hear the age of the driver behind the wheel of the vehicle. the u.s. constitut? turns out they didn't trust the printing of paper money, but they did trust gold and silver. article 1, section 10. gold and silver. good for the founders, good for me, good for you. rosland capital - is a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs, and premium coins, can help you preserve your wealth.
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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. 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. >> dana: check this out. a driver in a stolen s.u.v. leading police on a chase in michigan. the driver was just a 10-year-old boy who said he stole the car because he wanted oh visit his mother in detroit. after serving across multiple lanes the car was eventually stopped remotely and went into the guardrail. thankfully nobody was hurt.
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how was it stopped remotely? >> they have the on star? >> dana: that's very good in case your 10-year-old steals your vehicle. >> bill: we all love mom. >> dana: don't try that at home. watch this here. >> yeah, i raced against two biological males all four years of high school. i lost medal -- >> bill: a federal appeals court will rehear the case of four female connecticut runners forced to race against biological men. the court reinstating the challenge to connecticut's policy that let trends gender girls compete in high school girls sports after three-judge panel threw out the suit. nate foye is outside the courthouse in new york city with all the details. hi, nate. >> the interesting part about today's developments is the full
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court of 15 judges decided to reconsider that decision from the three-judge panel that ruled against the female runners back in december. neither side asked for another hearing so this came as a surprise but the lawyer for the female runners tells fox she feels pretty good about their chances as they prepare for oral arguments today. >> i think it's really clear majority of the second circuit court of appeals looked at the panel's decision where they said girls lost opportunities and their missed records didn't matter and decided that was not right and wanted to take a second and closer look at that. >> so, bill, the four women are suing the connecticut association of schools to have their high school records updated to what they would have been had the transgender athletes not been competing. they also want to overturn the connecticut policy that allows biological males to compete against females. one of the other runners on "fox & friends" this morning. >> i hope me speaking about it
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that it will help others speak up so we don't become sidelined. >> meanwhile on the other side of this case an attorney for the aclu writes in part quote under title ix all girls, including transgender girls, should be able to participate fully and equally in athletics in accord answer with who they are. we have reached out to the connecticut association of schools. so far we have not heard back. today's oral arguments are set to begin at 2:00 p.m.enter we aren't expecting the judges to make a ruling today. that will come in a written decision at a later time. send it back to you, bill. >> bill: it feels like more and more female agent lets are starting to speak out about this. thank you, nate. >> dana: you could call it the miracle in mississippi. according to a national report card reading test scores are soaring there moving the state from near the bottom to the middle for most exams. "new york times" columnist took a look at the turn around saying
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one pillar of mississippi's new strategy is increasing reliance on phonics and broader approach to literacy called the science of reading gaining ground around the country, mississippi was at the forefront of this movement. joining us now theary ca jones, president of the mississippi association of educators. great to have you here. we talk about this on "america's newsroom." it is an interest of mind. can you give people a description of the scope and scale of the problems mississippi was facing in terms of educating its young people? >> sure, thank you for having me. starting around 20 13shgs we were really looking at issues that involved our reading instruction especially with our elementary schools. what we did was started reaching out and using the fun for reading that focused on the five components of reading that allows our students in our elementary schools to learn how to read and to carry that over to other subjects.
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>> dana: what had happened in terms of getting away from phonics and returning to the science of reading? >> our test scores were low for years. we ranked lowest in the nation in many of our reading scores. starting around 2013 we started to research what helps to develop reading habits in our elementary schools and we started to implement that research. >> dana: i know that kristof said this is mississippi and has the highest child poverty rate in america. the state has no excuse, we can all do better. mississippi has moved from near the bottom to the middle for most exams and near the top when adjusted for demographics. now you have this opportunity for the students. do you have an example of a teacher or student feeling relieved about this kind of turnaround? >> actually i do. i'm a second grade teacher and
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currently have a rising third grader. my daughter has focused on reading this year. as a second grade teacher i was trying in the science of reading so i knew exactly what needed for her to be successful in second grade and as she moves to third grade. early intervention is key. working side-by-side with your teacher in the classroom is also key. >> dana: and do you -- now that people are hearing more about the mississippi story, "the new york times" did it. we are doing it on fox news and other people are focusing on mississippi. are there things you can do to help other states and here is what worked for us. baltimore, for example, is having a terrible problems with this very same thing. >> absolutely. i have had educators reach out to meet from delaware, nebraska, nevada as well as new mexico and what we've done here in our state we'll share that information. we don't want to keep it to
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ourselves. reading is important for not only for students in our state but across the nation as well. >> dana: what kind of difference does it make for a child growing up in mississippi to be able to have this kind of a basic level of education? >> one thing that we know once we have our reading instruction grounded, once we are using different strategies our students can use that in science, history as well as mathematics. >> dana: do you know what you have done here? do you feel good about it? >> as a second graded indicator i feel great about this. something we can be proud of. for so long we were at the bottom and now making tremendous gains and i can't continue to express how happy i am about this. >> dana: you are a remarkable person and hope to meet you in person one day. erika jones, we'll stay in touch. >> dana: thank you. he says beating trump is more
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important than anything, do you agree? >> i think beating biden is more important than anything else. >> bill: senator scott with us moments ago talking about his bid for the white house as the republican field grows bigger. cornell west entering the 2024 campaign as a third party candidate. how does it affect biden's chances in the general election? veteran homeowners making a big car payment every month? car loans can be expensive and the payments high. consolidate that car loan into a newday home loan and save hundreds every month.
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>> dana: big news in the world of sports. pga and european golf tours merging with the saudi funded liv tour. >> unlikely but maybe
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inevitable. it certainly is unprecedented. good news for players and fans. it is no longer so split. this is the agreement that will shake up the world of professional golf. the pga and the liv golf will merge with the european world tour to create a new collectively owned for-profit entity. the partnership with include investment from the saudi investment fund into the new entity to facilitate its growth and business. the pga tour and liv golf has been emotion broiled in lawsuits. this deal ends any pending litigation. the deal would also work with the players who defected for liv golf for bigger paychecks to reapply for pga membership. one of the most notable is phil mickelson. tweeted this. awesome day today. a landmark collaboration, seismic shift for golf.
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i say inevitable. remember back in the 60s the afl and nfl in football merged and in the 70s the same thing with the aba and nba. now you see it in the world of golf. as the pga commissioner said we have had two years of distraction. this puts it to an end. >> dana: thank you for giving us the big news. >> any time, thank you. >> dana: thanks, lauren. >> in these bleak times, i have decided to run for truth and justice, which takes the form of running for president of the united states. >> there you have it. progressive activist cornell west as a third party candidate for president. the left wing media personality is a long shot but his appearance in the campaign presents another speed bump for president biden and appears to be a clear attack on the president and the democratic party. west is running as a candidate for the people's party formed by
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a former staffer for bernie sanders. >> focus on the fact america can do for anyone what she has done for me. restoring hope, creating opportunities and protecting america is why i look forward to having a conversation with the american people. that message i believe will continue to resonate. >> dana: that was presidential candidate tim scott a few minutes ago on the show laying out his vision for the country coming off a con teishinous appearance on the view pushing back on the idea that the u.s. is systemically racist. kellyanne conway is here. your thoughts on his performance at the "the view" on the day we see another candidate get in today. mike pence former vice president tomorrow and the governor of north dakota apparently on thursday. kellyanne. >> yes. dana, thanks for having me.
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i think tim scott adds so much to the united states senate and the story of america and so much to this presidential contest. he is on track to be a happy warrior, if not the happy warrior doing the opposite of what the people running the super pac for desantis said they were going to do which is take on cultural war issues that taps into the anger of america. i think you have to have candidates who also appear to the better angels of america. a lot of americans feel enraged but truly want to be engaged. a big difference between those two. that's tim scott's message. i thought the way he carried himself in the view was perfect. i have been in the seat before, dana. i like that he just pushed back with facts and one fact he said to sunny hostin, the co-host of the view was you are saying that you and i are the exceptions, not a rule. what a terrible way to communicate with america's children that they can only get ahead if they are an ex caption.
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we have had an african-american president, two secretary of states and a vice president who is black. he hovers 2% in polling and he has a super pac that is important. >> dana: he told us today that he qualifies. he plans to be there. >> great. >> bill: we'll talk about the democrats, too. cornell west jumped into the race. an interesting question about his candidacy. she put up the question essentially saying isn't this candidacy more threatening the biden if general election with young voters of color than rfk junior in the primary? what do you think about that? >> the answer to that is yes, very likely amy walter is on to something and i'll tell you why. even if you don't become president you as a third party candidate spoiler can decide who is the president. it happened in 1992 when we had
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bush 41 as the incumbent and bill clinton, the arkansas governor got elected with 43 1/2% of the both. because ross porro got some of the vote. if you play to win and you are west and you are still not satisfied with the trajectory of the democratic party being progressive enough for you under a biden/harris administration you'll run to the left of them. number one. number two, he will make a play for people who fell forgotten and abandon by the democratic party and nobody is listening them and including them. i think he can do it from the left. last point on this, jimmy carter in 1980 won 36 contests but ted kennedy won 12 including california. ted kennedy did not concede the nomination to jimmy carter until
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august or so at the convention. carter came out of that very damaged and lost to ronald reagan. we have some precedent there that cornell west can point to as to what he is doing. i know him. he is a super smart guy and committed to the policies and principles he thinks more americans want to hear. >> dana: he had a hip video introducing himself to everyone. getting a little play. kellyanne conway, a pleasure to see you. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> bill: cancer experts are starting to notice a disturbing increase in colon cancer among young people. cases amongst the group could double by the end of the decade. dr. marty makary here to break it down. if you wanted to own a slice of television history, now is your chance to do it. we have the details coming up. [laughter] >> i'm jeffrey. this is hillary. >> nice to meet you. what do you do, norm?
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look! oh my god... oh wow. i want my daughter riley to know about her ancestors and how important it is to know who you are and to know where you came from. doesn't that look like your papa? that's your great grandfather. it's like opening a whole 'nother world that we did not know existed. you finally have a face to a name. we're discovering together... it's been an amazing gift. - here we go. - remember, mom's a kayak denier, so please don't bring it up. - bring what up? kayak? - excuse me? do the research, todd. - listen to me. kayak searches hundreds of travel sites to find you great deals on flights, cars and hotels. - they're lying to you. - who's they? kayak? - arr! - open your eyes! - compare hundreds of travel sites at once. kayak. search one and done.
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>> dana: breaking news here. not a lot of details. actor cuba gooding junior has settled lawsuit with a woman who accused him of rape. now jury selection was set to begin today in manhattan. that will no longer be necessary. the plaintiff had accused gooding junior of assaulting her at a hotel in 2013. the actor insisted it was cons consensual. it was settled today. >> bill: experts predicting colorectal cancer will be the number one deaths of people under 50 by the end of the decade. by 2030 colon cancer could spike by 90% in people ages 20 to 34. a young crowd. rectal cancer could increase
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124% in the same age group. what is behind this disturbing trend? joining me now dr. marty makary johns hob -- hopkins professor. >> there is an increase 13% of colon cancer cases are in people under age 50 and why the guidelines shifted. during covid the recommendation moved down to start colon cancer screening at age 45 instead of 50. an interesting study came out why we might be seeing an increase in colon cancer in young people? maybe environmental, the food we eat? this study looked at the millions of bacteria that norm le lie in the g.i. system and find that it was very different in young people with colon cancer compared to people who were over 65. we don't talk a lot about the
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micr micro biom affected born by vaginal birth versus a c-section. breast or bottle fed whether or not you took antibiotics for no good reason. it could save lives but rough on the micro biom and whether you eat whole foods or processed and it changes that and it may contribute to colon cancer. >> bill: disturbing number projections from the american cancer society. in 2023 there will be 153,000 diagnoses of colorectal cancer with nearly 53,000 deaths. that's filling up an mlb baseball stadium. for anybody watching now concerned about this and thinks maybe i need to get checked, what is your advice and the best way to prevent this? >> well, the temptation is to start colonoscopy screening very early but there is no good data
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to support starting it before age 45. now there is another way you can test for colon cancer, a dna test. commercial products like coal ogard allow you to test for -- the false positive rate can be high and you go for a colonoscopy. basic monitoring for symptoms. blood in the stool, weight loss unexplained. >> bill: thank you for your insight as always. thank you for joining us. >> dana: important to go and get those checks. bill melugin before we go some classic television memorabilia is going up for auction. perhaps you want that famous bar at cheers to show off for all of your friends. it could be yours. there is also johnny carson's desk from the tonight show set not a bad addition for your living room.
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talk about iconic. bat man and robin's costumes will go to the highest bidder. are you in the market? >> bill: i'm not but super interesting. how do somebody get this. somebody has been buying this up for the last several decades. wanted to start a museum. that didn't work out. >> dana: johnny carson's desk would be cool. if i had the money i would definitely get it for gutfeld. he would like it very much and put it up if his office or use it on the show on the exclamation point show. that's neat there. did you ever watch cheers? >> bill: i did not. >> dana: do you feel like you are culturally deprived because you haven't seen it? >> bill: i don't. >> dana: will you watch cheers on youtube? >> bill: i have six hours. i might as well. >> dana: it is a good show and today and yesterday good shows. bill hemmer is back tomorrow. >> bill: i loved it. great to be with you. >> dana: great to be with you as
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well. john roberts is filling in for harris faulkner taking over for us. i will see you on "the five" tonight. we'll talk about governor newsom going after ron desantis as if it will hurt ron desantis. i think it actually helps him especially in the gop primary. lots more to come on "the five" tonight as well. thank you everybody. "the faulkner focus" is up next. john roberts in for harris. >> john: i'm thinking you would look good in the bat woman outfit, dana. house republicans going on offense. they plan to hold a contempt of congress vote for f.b.i. director christopher wray. it is over that document showing an alleged bribery scheming involving president biden while serving as vice president. i'm john roberts in for harris this week. harris is anchoring fox news tonight. tune in later on today. the contempt vote is on the schedule for thursday comes after weeks of the f.b.i. refusing to hand

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