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tv   America Reports  FOX News  June 8, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PDT

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>> there's been lawsuit over yelp. that's happened on yelp. >> it's nasty, nasty, nasty, but all is fair in love and war, that's the whole point. >> word of mouth. >> the restaurants say if you really love us, post a review. they want the real people to post. >> thank you for being on with us, kevin, always such a joy. tune in tonight when our "outnumbered" co-host harris falkner hosts at 8:00 p.m. here is "america reports." >> john: difference between restaurants and television, our competitors love us. moments from now, president biden will hold a joint news conference along with the prime minister richie sunak, frustration of a lack from him.
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>> and raising concerns about his age and ability to endure a grueling election cycle. we will watch the news conference live and dig in. >> fog, the smell, the smog, it's -- it's like out of like a disaster movie or something. yeah, it's really surreal. >> this is unbearable, and seems like apocalyptic. >> definitely have a headache, it's pretty hazy out here and my eyes are burning a little bit. >> john: people living in the northeast reacting to surreal scenes of smoke-filled cities as smog from raging canadian wildfires drifts to the united states leaving more than 100 million americans under air quality alerts, and the hazy conditions could be sticking around into the weekend. john roberts in washington, and good smoky thursday afternoon to you as well. >> aishah: coughing here and there. this is "america reports,"
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thanks for watching. time lapse video showing how the new york city skyline changed over the span of a few hours yesterday, the skies turning the orange-tinted color. and to put it in perspective, the big apple experienced the worst air quality in recorded history, and the threat of compromised air quality now pushing west towards pittsburgh, and the ohio valley. also down south towards the mid atlantic and smoky condition is causing delays at some of the busiest airports. >> john: more where the smoke is headed next, but begin with nate foy, live in jersey city today, you have the view across the hudson to manhattan. how is it looking today? >> well, it's still dangerous out here, but better in new york city, we are technically in jersey city, the worst is in
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central and western pennsylvania, but if you take a look across the hudson you can still see the smoke lingering over new york city and ask my photographer mike to pan up. one thing we did not see yesterday, john, is clouds. and we can see that today, so that's obviously a sign of improvement. but new york city mayor eric adams said to expect conditions to worsen throughout the day, many more people are wearing face masks and you played sound from people yesterday dealing with some health impacts, from breathing in all that smoke, and that's something that new york governor hochul talked about an hour ago. >> this has a cumulative effect, especially for people who insist on being outside day after day, at some point it's going to have an effect on them, i believe. so it's perhaps a little early to have a full assessment of the health impact. >> and john, of course travelers are being impacted big time. this is a live look at philadelphia international airport where flights have resumed but ground delays
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continue at new york's laguardia airport, as well as newark international airport in new jersey. you remember from yesterday, about this time conditions reached their worst in new york city and as aishah just said, set an all time record for the worst air quality in the city's history. but take a look at where we stand today. new york has been downgraded to the unhealthy category whereas new jersey, maryland, delaware, all in the very unhealthy category and you see again pennsylvania getting the worst of it today with hazardous air quality and entertainment and sports continue to be impacted. the yankees do plan on playing a doubleheader after cancelling last night's game, but they are going to, and the phillies will make up their game at 6:00 p.m. tonight. and john, where you are, the washington nationals canceled their game and here in new york,
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horse races at belmont park have been canceled today but the big race, the belmont stakes for now is still set to happen on saturday when all this smoke is expected to clear off. >> john: as are some lacrosse tournaments supposed to take place this weekend, affecting our family. nate, it does not look like anything out of a will smith movie today in new york, things are looking a little better. >> certainly an improvement, for sure. >> aishah: the stuff is coming from the canadian wildfires, the smoke smothering the east coast and tracking alerts, washington, d.c., philadelphia, as unhealthy air quality worsens day after day. some fire departments are giving out masks and warning folks to stay inside. fox weather's steven morgan has the latest on where this smoke is going next. steven. >> aishah, when it comes to the mask, i'll tell you what, a
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reason why they are still handy today and it's because of the fires in canada. they are still burning. when we look at these, 100 acres or so, we have more than 200 fires currently burning. when we look at the fires collectively through the country of canada, more than 400. 9.4 million acres have burned so far in canada, but that smoke goes -- it has to go somewhere. our atmosphere is treated like a fluid, so as far as the wind patterns are concerned, we have the surface smoke, that has created the pollution and unhealthy for us as humans to breathe and also have the high altitude smoke, and that has kept temperatures acts cooler. we have a blocking pattern, an area of low pressure in the atlantic. when you look at the streamlines you can see the overall circulation, and what that's doing is that's keeping the smoke funneling into the northeast and it's going to continue to do that throughout the afternoon. now, the worst of it as nate had mentioned is out in new york,
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but it has shifted off to the west. we have a slightly more easterly component with the wind today so that's changed who is seeing the worst of it. so, who is seeing the worst of it, d.c. at least today compared to yesterday. we have a worse air quality day in d.c., holly park, virginia, delaware, philadelphia woke up to hazy skies. as far as that orange hue, that's the only wavelength when we look at visible light to reach the surface so we see the orange and the red skies, that visibility has been compromised, talking about those ground stops, ground delays that have been at airports this morning in philadelphia, newark, laguardia, we had the ground stops briefly yesterday. visibility is still compromised, two miles, that's it. on a clear day you are looking at ten miles. and here is the biggest component. talking about the area of low pressure, keeping that smoke there in canada and shifting it farther to the south, going to
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continue to see that occur, eventually, an area of high pressure has brought some pretty warm conditions through the plains into the 90s, that's going to slide off to the east. we need something big to kick this out of here and really to drift the smoke. the fires are, unfortunately, not going to stop, but the smoke drifting more so into the atlantic. we'll wait for that to happen and once we get that southerly wind by the weekend we should see some improvement. smoke has been stubborn, it's been around a couple of days. >> aishah: we are hoping it does not turn into the summer of smoke. thank you. for continuing coverage, tune into fox weather, download the fox weather app, it's free, foxweather.com, and use the phone to scan the qr code. >> john: even the underground parking in this garage -- >> aishah: the whole garage was smoked out, it's now coming indoors, why i think they are
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cancelling shows in new york. just not worth it. >> john: a little change in the weather pattern will blow it somewhere else. good news for us, bad news for others. the prime suspect in the 2005 disappearance of natalee holloway will land on american soil later this afternoon. joran van der sloot is being extradited to the united states after last ditch appeals failed to keep him in peru, he's serving a prison sentence for an unrelated murder. live outside the courtroom in birmingham, alabama. ted, you are on the ground, set the scene. what's the anticipation of joran van der sloot finally coming to the united states to face at least some form of justice? >> john, i got to tell you, it's high tension in the air here in
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birmingham, alabama. because for the first time joran van der sloot or a convicted murderer, and yes, the prime suspect in the disappearance of natalee holloway in 2005 is going to be on american soil. and he is going to for the first time, john, face american justice, and this is all that beth and dave holloway have wanted since 2005, since their child went to aruba and did not come back to this area here in birmingham. >> john: we should point out, ted, when he faces a judge, potentially a jury there in birmingham, it's not going to be for a charge of murder or anything related to the actual killing of natalee holloway, it will be for extortion and wire fraud for allegedly trying to bilk the holloways out of a quarter of a million dollars for
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information on where their daughter's body might be. now, those charges, i think extortion carries a one-year prison sentence. wire fraud, potential 20-year prison sentence. might that be enough to convince joran van der sloot to come clean on what happened with natalee holloway if he is offered some sort of plea deal? >> you know, john, you make and bring up a very interesting point. i think that if the authorities make that offer, offering him some kind of immunity to bring some conclusion to what happened to natalee holloway in 2005, joran van der sloot may very well take it because as you said, he was temporarily extradited here to the birmingham, alabama area, meaning that he has to go back to peru and serve the remainder
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of a 28-year prison sentence and then he would then be brought back here to serve any prison sentence that he was given. so it would not surprise me if joran tries to make some kind of a deal while he's here on american soil. >> john: do you have any idea, ted, what the holloways might be thinking here, are they seeking justice on this extortion and wire fraud charge, or are they merely trying to get some closure here for what actually happened to natalee and what the circumstances around her disappearance and likely death were? >> john, i have not spoken to the holloways but i would have to believe that it's a combination of both. they want joran to be held accountable for the death of their child. they are also, i'm sure, very upset that he tried to bilk
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250,000, 25,000 going to peru and killing a young lady there. i'm sure there are mixed emotions but i am elated and i think the holloways, and i didn't speak for them, are exuberant that this man, this convicted killer is on american soil for the first time and maybe, i have to tell you, john, there may be some other charges, i believe, that may very welcome out of him being here on american soil above and beyond extortion and mail fraud. >> john: that's an interesting twist, we'll keep watching it. it is going to be a very emotional scene there in birmingham, alabama, as all of this unfolds. ted williams setting the scene on the ground. good to see you, thank you. >> aishah: sources are saying ukraine's long-awaited offensive has begun and a front line
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soldier says russia is using drones to push back. trey, where is the fighting mostly taking place? >> aishah, good afternoon. two sources familiar tell fox news that ukraine's highly anticipated counteroffensive is now underway. the largest known push is currently into ukraine's zap -- region, and some of the tactics they are facing, says the russians are using drones to identify ukrainian positions and implementing an artillery technique called bracketing to hit advancing soldiers. newly supplied western weapons are the first line of offense for the ukrainians who are working to liberate new territory. the ukrainian military has declined to comment on the offensive. the ukrainian president visited
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kherson that continues to evacuate nearby residents from floodwater that spread after the dam was destroyed earlier this week. as evacuations were taking place, the russian military fired artillery shells into various residents areas. this type of shelling has been ongoing since the start of the war and not linked to the counteroffensive that began this week. earlier this year we visited the southern front lines. soldiers have been preparing for this day for months, widely seen as an opportunity for ukraine to show their nato allies, including the united states, that all the money and weapons are put to good use. >> aishah: thank you so much. >> john: a live look at the white house where president biden is about to hold a joint news conference with the british prime minister richi sunak.
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we will ask mollie hemingway, and remembering one of the most in influential christians in our nation's history. pat robertson passing away at the age of 93. we'll look back at his life and legacy.
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>> john: legendary christian broadcaster pat robertson has died at the age of 93. a look back at his life and legacy. quite a life it was and quite a legacy he left.
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>> absolutely, absolutely, john. pat robertson was one of the pillars of the evangelical community, and said his influence cannot be overstated. death announced by the christian broadcasting network which he founded in 1960 and transformed it into an international ministry. came into millions of living rooms daily through "the 700 club," even while taking it on the road. >> god knows you by name, he knows who you are, he knows where you live, he knows everything about you. and he loves you. >> robertson's other enterprises, regent university, american center for law and justice, defends first amendment rights of religious people and operation blessing, humanitarian organization. made a run for the presidency in 1988 but lost the republican nomination to george bush who he later endorsed.
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in his campaigning, he helped make religion central to republican party politics through the christian coalition. there were controversies, he felt compelled to apologize to israel about remarks he made for sharon's stroke for giving up gaza. >> my zeal, love of israel led me to make remarks i can now view in retrospect inappropriate and insensitive because of your father's illness. >> robertson died at his home in virginia beach. he was 93. no cause was given for his death, john. >> john: lauren green with the latest on that. thank you, we look ahead to the funeral as well. aishah. >> aishah: fox news alert, just moments away from a white house news conversation with president biden and british prime minister rishi sunak.
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these events are rare occurrences under the biden administration, raising some conditions about a lack of access to the president as he runs for a second term. let's bring in now mollie hemingway, a fox news contributor, i think facts are good, let's put up this graphic here for anyone that might be questioning or talking b you can see here when we compare biden's press conferences to that of obama's and trump's, he is far behind. it's not just trump, it's his predecessor, democratic predecessor as well and interesting to me how much this white house leans in on social media apps like tiktok, they are trying to get after the younger generation, but they are bypassing the press here. >> not just the decrease in the amount of press conferences, there's not the same level of press availability you saw for the previous two presidents, every time they were walking to
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a vehicle or in or out they would be asked questions and answer them, it's a bigger situation than the lack of formal press conferences. >> aishah: and you could hear them, too, biden, it's so hard for the reporters to get what he said. >> particularly difficult during covid when he was masked and he's not the clearest communicator. but this is also an administration that does not have to communicate as much. they have a friendly press corps seems to be willing to carry a lot of the messages, adopt the language, not be anything like they were with the previous administration in terms of how they handle the press secretary, they are very gentle, helps get the message across. >> john: even though they have the availability, typically it's only two questions per side. but biden did take a shoutout question, so kind of did three. more concerns about biden's age, listen to what karl rove said this morning with his whiteboard. >> biden's problems are that large number of the american people, 65% of them think that
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he is too old to be -- to effectively serve another four years as president, and look at that, 69% independents feel that way, 73% of white with no college degree, even 41% of democrats, 47% of blacks and 75 both of hispanics -- >> john: facts are good things and there is karl rove with facts about democratic voters and american voters in general think biden is too old to run for a second term. >> a lot of people thought he was too old to run for his first term and in large part, we no longer run elections the same way and democrats have done a very good job of making sure that regardless of what the opinion is of the people, that they get balance from the appropriate people into the ballots box. he could do that again. he was completely in his basement as they said during the last campaign. he was not out there communicating with voters or engaging with people and no barrier to his election. >> aishah: what the white house or the campaign wants, he said
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that before, i want to be that, this is not word for word but the sort of boring president you don't have to think about, don't have to watch headlines about all the time. on the trail, mollie i wonder which battleground states are going to want him to visit. this was a big issue during the midterm cycle, very rarely did we see democrats inviting the president to campaign for them. >> that's true, he has problems, we don't have conventional elections anymore. decades ago, charismatic leader would signify interest in the american people, but the ballot harvesting operation which democrats have invested in for decades, it matters less and less and whether they can get ballots associated with named individuals into the ballot box. that's what democrats want, the biden operation, even if they don't want him to say too much
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on stage. >> john: republican candidates like nikki haley are trying to tell voters and targeting independent and not democrats, could be consequences to a biden second term. >> let's be very clear. if they think it's going to be president biden, a vote for president biden is actually a vote for president harris. we are running against kamala harris, make no bones about it. the "new york times" knows it, every liberal knows it, they know that it's kamala harris that's going to end up being president of the united states if joe biden wins this election. >> john: does that appeal to independent voters. >> very smart argument to make. even as low as president biden's ratings are, kamala harris's ratings are lower and he struggles to articulate a coherent thought, she struggles even more. she has very strong reactions from voters. wise to remind people if anything happens to president biden, given his age or other circumstances, that they would be left with kamala harris and so i imagine a lot of candidates will be making that point. >> john: thinking about the
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passage of time, and passage of time, with the passage of time is it any better for her? >> she's had a few years to work on her messaging and we are still getting that circular talk. >> aishah: stick around, we might bring you back in for the bilat. >> john: investigators say they have found human remains after two months of searching for a missing minnesota mom. what led to the finding and who they have arrested. >> aishah: president biden vo -- veto a bill on student debt. jonathan turley how he sees it in the supreme court. >> we don't believe one person with the stroke of the pen can wipe away 500 billion to a trillion dollars worth of student loan debt. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uh... here i'll take that. -everyone: woo hoo!
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>> john: and let's take a live picture inside the east room of the white house where you see the american and british flags, and two podiums because the president, joe biden, and rishi sunak, who is the new prime minister of britain will be appearing for a joint news conference. if this goes like just about every other joint news conference we have seen between the united states and britain, it should be two questions aside, so we will keep an eye on that, and bring it to you live just as soon as it happens. >> aishah: federal indictment could be looming for former president trump. his lawyers have been notified he is now a target of special counsel jack smith criminal probe into alleged mishandling of classified documents. griff jenkins is live here in washington with the latest on this, so what are we learning, and do we know how likely it is that trump will be indicted? >> aishah, good afternoon, that is the operative question indeed, and i doubt anyone outside of the prosecutors or grand jury may know the answer.
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target notification is a routine part of criminal investigations at the discretion of prosecutors, in this case special counsel jack smith. fox news has confirmed it came days ago and smith may be close to deciding whether or not to bring charges. former assistant u.s. attorney andy mccarthy had this reaction. >> the grand jury is merely looking and it's not clear whether he'll be charged or not. when you get told you are a target, it's a virtual certainty you are going to be charged. >> this comes after trump's legal team met privately with smith at the justice department on monday, unclear what transpired in that meeting. now we are watching for any decision from the federal grand jury here in d.c. we have also learned smith impanelled a second grand jury in miami, if any crimes such as obstruction of justice were committed in florida. they heard testimony from a former trump spokesman.
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trump reacting on truth social, i've assumed i've been a target of the weaponized doj or fbi, and comes as a separate counsel is investigating president biden for mishandling classified information after documents from his time as vice president were discovered at his wilmington delaware home. as for what's next here in washington, the grand jury here, we have observed the jurors arriving at court today, we know they went to lunch, they have gone back. we are waiting to see if any news comes out of here or in florida. aishah. >> aishah: tracking it all, thank you. >> john: bring in jonathan turley, g.w. law professor and constitutional law attorney. trump said he was notified there is a criminal probe but denied that he has been told he is going to be indicted, he said no
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one has told me i'm being indicted and i shouldn't be because i have done nothing but i've assumed i'm a target of the weaponized doj and fbi, starting with russia russia russia hoax s and witch hunts. typica, weaponized doj and fbi, congress is investigating it and when you take a look at the differenc the way that trump is being treated on classified documents versus biden, there is room there for somebody to complain about. >> well, we know there was bias at the fbi and there's concerns that there still is bias. we had people who were removed from their position because of clear and open bias against trump. i think what the other side would say, even if there is the
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bias that president trump laid himself open by fighting over these documents, and that's going to really be worked out as we see any possible indictment. as a criminal defense attorney i must tell you, i would put the likelihood of indictment high. if i was seeing this profile for one of my clients, i would tell the client to be prepared for an indictment. what is in that indictment will tell us a great deal, whether they are charging obstruction but also whether they are going to charge the addition of possession of classified documents. to charge trump on possession would sort of paint him in a corner with regard to president biden. if they decide to not charge him with possession, might be taken as an indication they are trying not to indict president biden. >> john: so if you were a betting man, would you bet it was the obstruction charge, the possession charge, or both? >> i've always said that the obstruction charge coming out of mar-a-lago is that torpedo in
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the water that i would be watching for. you know, in new york with this -- with the state charge, alvin bragg fulfilled trump's narrative, that is a political prosecution. this is a standard fair, one of the favorite charges of the department of justice. they bring it a lot. and they tend to win on it. and so i would take this as a very serious issue. on the possession question, that's going to put them, create precedent not just legally for other cases but specifically for another special counsel who is looking at president biden. >> john: so the precedent has been set, donald trump is the first ex-president to be indicted, but he was indicted at the state level, was not at the federal level. indicting him at the federal level, according to mike pence, would be a whole different ball game. listen to what he said this morning. >> i hope the doj thinks very
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carefully about the prospect of an indictment of the former president of the united states. only serve to further divide our country and it would send a terrible message to the wider world. >> john: so what do you say about that. on the local level, if you are a critic you can put it down to an overzealous prosecutor, but the doj, it's the white house and the federal government of the united states. does it become a different animal. >> john, this is a very fast pace. i think that the concern for the department of justice is that if they indict trump they need to have time to convict him or get this case well down the road before the election. i think it's pretty wicked from this point on. if he gets indicted, he can run on the fact that he can pardon himself. for people that really want to stick it in the eye of the establishment, the election could be partially on whether to
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basically eliminate this prosecution by giving trump the ability to pardon himself out of it. he can't do that in new york, he couldn't do that in georgia, but he could do it here and i think the department of justice is trying to get this thing on the road before that election approaches. >> john: that would be an interesting campaign promise. elect me president, i'll pardon myself. >> pardon in every pot. >> john: count on you for the james patterson twist every time. appreciate you coming on. >> aishah: a live look inside the white house east room where as you see there, the podiums are set up and we are expecting president biden to hold a joint news conference with prime minister rishi sunak of the united kingdom. we'll be keeping an eye on that for you there and live when it happens. >> john: florida governor ron desantis firing back to newsom over policies on sanctuary
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so thank you. we hope you like your work. (♪ ♪) >> these sanctuary places are part of the problem. if there is a policy to have an open border then i think the sanctuary jurisdiction should be the ones that have to bear that. >> aishah: ok, florida governor ron desantis arguing that sanctuary states like california, new york, should bear the brunt of our open borders. meanwhile, california's governor gavin newsom not backing down from his threat of possible
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kidnapping charges after florida sent two plane loads of migrants over to sacramento. art del cueto is joining us live now, thank you for the story that continues to heat up day after day. i want to play the quick sound bite from newsom, doubling down again on the kidnapping charges and then your reaction on the flip side. watch this. >> human beings, used as pawns for a guy's political advancement. that's pretty sad and pathetic and so i take this very seriously and as i said, we are not martha's vineyard, this is california, fourth or fifth largest economy on planet earth, we mean business. >> aishah: he says human beings are being used as political pawns. art, is that what's happening here? >> the -- this administration in office are the leaders of using these individuals as political pawns. you know, when they sit there
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and they talk about sanctuary cities it's what they have asked for but now the reality, wait a minute, i've changed my mind. and kidnapping charges, focus in on the cartels, the stash houses in california, the coyotes that stash individuals and detain them and don't release them until family members pay the fees that the smuggling organizations are charging the families to bring them into the united states, and then he needs to ask the question, why is this caused? it's because this administration created that magnet, because individuals like him saying hey this is a sanctuary city. he needs to look at himself where we have a problem and go after criminals detaining the people and holding and kidnapping holding them as ransom until they get their money. that's where he needs to focus on. >> aishah: a serious problem at the border, absolutely. hard to argue kidnapping when florida just released all the videos of the migrants partying
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on the busses on the way to private jets, signing waivers, they are saying nobody forced them to go, how is this different -- this is a question i've asked over and over again. how is this different from the flights in the middle of the night the biden administration sent to new york, sending migrants to new york and other parts of the count mr what, they're being moved. what's the difference between the biden administration doing it or governor desantis picking up the tab? >> well, the difference is that these individuals are going to point the fingers where they want to point them and their own agenda. go after the individuals that are not their friends or not aligned with them politically. that's the difference. but again, who created it, who created this mess to begin with, we didn't have this mess when the last administration was in charge. the last administration knew what they were doing, they dropped the numbers, you know, to lows that we had not seen
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forever. the border was more secure. this administration from day one created that magnet by saying hey, i'm not going to turn anyone away. the sanctuary cities continue because they aligned with the administration saying come, we have the sanctuary cities. they need to point the finger at themselves. >> aishah: and what's so crazy about the story, it's a federal problem, now you have states like new york fighting among themselves. take a look at the map here, eric adams basically suing different counties, 30 state counties over this standoff of migration, and many of these are red counties. at the end of the day it's on the federal government, right? >> it is on the federal government. you have to see who created the mess. like i said, i've been screaming until i'm blue in the face. this administration created this mess and now you know they are turning away from it, and the people that cheered them on are now seeing the reality but they are not pointing their fingers in the right direction of who
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actually caused the mess to begin with. >> aishah: art del cueto, we love hearing from you. come back soon. >> john: a group of parents who say their goal is simply to take part in the child's education now labelled a hateful extremist group. who is doing the labelling and why they are doing it. >> aishah: the main suspect in natalee holloway's disappearance on his way to the u.s. right now to face extortion and wire fraud charges. trial attorney mercedes colwin will explain what it could mean for the holloway family's pursuit of justice. around here, we like to keep things simple and honest. sure do. that's why at progressive, we show you rates from other companies, even if they're lower than ours, so you can choose what's best for your family. comparing rates used to be a hard day's work, but not with autoquote explorer. -need me to help again? -no. so join us and taste why progressive
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>> john: the left leaning civil rights group the southern poverty law center adding the parent tl rights group moms for liberty to its list of hate groups. molly line is live in boston and moms for liberty is not alone, correct? >> that is right. the southern poverty law center has put a slough of parental rights organizations on the newly created list they put out as part of the annual report on hate and extremism saying moms for liberty is seeking to undermind education and the parental rights group has been
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lumped in with other organizations labelled as anti-lgbtq, anti-immigrant on a hate map. >> absurd, we are moms and dads and grandparents, aunts and uncles, very concerned about the direction of the country and we are very concerned about the failure that we are seeing in america's public schools. >> the law center touts legal advocacy in right for civil rights, family research council has launched a petition calling to investigate the center and moms for liberty, the non-profit with chapters across the country has pushed in the past to remove books they deem to be controversial or not age appropriate but are very politically successful, a number of presidential white house hopefuls that will be coming to their su met the end of june and vivek ramaswamy will be at a town hall with moms for liberty in new hampshire today.
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john. >> john: molly line there, nice clear sky in boston behind you there. it's a picture, but the air is pretty good in boston today. >> aishah: still waiting to hear from president biden as he hosts the british prime minister at the white house. we'll take you there live once the press conference gets underway, it is a little behind. and secretary of state antony blinken says the entire house foreign affairs committee can see the documents on the disastrous u.s. withdrawal from afghanistan. the panel's chairman, texas congressman michael mccaul threatened him with a subpoena. and dan hoffman, brian kilmeade and mercedes colwin are also on deck. straight ahead. man, this aint messin', it's perfectin'! with marinated chicken and double cheese. sweet and savory... ...kinda like you and me, chuck. bye, peyton. try the refreshed favorites at subway today.
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>> john: a live look at the white house we are expecting any moment now president biden and british prime minister rishi
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sunak to hold a joint

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