tv Americas Newsroom FOX News July 7, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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hey yeah. as evan waits for his next day in court, his parents say they understand the conviction rate in russia as just about 100% so they don't have a lot of hope right now that he will be freed anytime soon, but they were given some relief when they got to physically see and speak with evan at his last pretrial detention hearing. it's even harder now to leave him there. then it was the first time trying not to think about anything. it's just very hard. that was part of a new interview evans family did with the wall street journal who employs evan, his parents say when they saw him. he appeared to be in good spirits and strong despite his tough circumstances. now just this
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week, u. s ambassador to russia than tracy was granted access to evan for the first time in nearly three months. we're also learning the kremlin may now be signaling they're open to the idea of exchanging evan for one of their own in a prisoner swap , but evan's parents and sister danielle, say right now, the only thing that relying on is president biden and has promised to do everything he can to bring evan home. i have amazing support. um. i have amazing parents just knowing that our government is doing everything in their power right now, um and. that just everyone wants to help and is thinking about him. and i just know that we're not alone in this. now we got a chance to speak with one of evan's colleagues this week at the wall street journal, and they like the u. s government say that there's no way he was doing any form of spying any form of espionage. and they are
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right now pleading with anyone in russia that has control over evans released to not only free him to get him home, but they told me that they want to get them back to work and back to where he belongs, and that is in the newsroom. bill aisha. jeff paul live for us from london. thank you, jeff. thank you. jeff. emma tucker was on fox and friends a bit earlier. today she is the editor of the wall street journal. here's a statement from the journal wall street journal reporter evan boskovitch was wrongfully detained by russia on march 29 falsely accused of espionage. dow jones the wall street journal in the u. s government vehemently denied the allegation. and we stand with evidence loved ones and seeking his immediate release. remember what he was doing? he was about 1000 miles from moscow to the southeast, writing a story and considering a story on the russian economy, and that was when he was picked up and arrested and he has not been free since that time, and we are all praying for him and we are all thinking about his family were also thinking about paul whelan and his family. he is he needs to come home as
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well. so a lot of pressure on this administration, i think it's going to have to be a prisoner swap. we'll see about that. i mean, that is their play. but anyway, they put it out in the public and make sure the pressure is out there. that's what a lot of this is about. so evan hang tough on that about it. meanwhile back here at home now, with dnc push to revamp the party's primary schedule could lead to some early losses for the president. new hampshire democrats are so far refusing to give up on their first in the nation status, which could hand the primary to robert kennedy jr. in fact, joe biden might not even be on the ballot. is that possible? josh crush our editor in chief with us now, sir. good morning to you. what do you make of this? how's that going to go, josh? well bill. this is sort of the law of unintended consequences for both the white house and the democratic national committee. they thought new hampshire was not diverse enough. they tried to move it to second or third place on the primary calendar. but not only did they receive the opposition of almost every
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in new hampshire have, how much does this really matter? well look, biden is going to be the democratic nominee as long as he runs, but symbolically, this is damaging. president biden is 80 years old, and there are a lot of questions, including among many within the democratic party about whether he has the stamina of the health to serve in in office until he's 86 years old. so we see the poll of the fox poll shows. you know, there are a lot of alternatives whether it's rfk jr. marianne williamson, winning about a quarter of that democratic vote, so do not compete and to get ahead. headline that you're not even contesting the first in the nation primary. it's not
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a good look for the white house, and it could do some symbolic damage as these concerns build up closer to the campaign. you think about this and this could all backfire on them. and then you have to ask yourself. did you think it through? and it it may be a clear example where they did not last comment on that. yeah yeah, i mean, look, the democrats had a desire to they pushed south carolina to the front of the line. they wanted to have a state that gave joe biden the nomination in 2020. they wanted a state with a lot more diversity to be representative of the party. but look, whenever you kind of make a big decision that disrupts the state of play, they're going to be a lot of angry democrats is going to be a lot of people that lose out as a result, and new hampshire is not taking this lying down. i think something a little bit more significant problem for this campaign might be bebe h factor. a new people out, says that around half of americans say they prefer someone in their fifties, um, to be the president, um can i ask you,
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though, if donald trump wasn't a factor in this right if he wasn't running, wouldn't this be a no brainer for democrats to find somebody else? yeah are you sure? i think you're right in that biden wants to run against trump. trump wants to run against biden and the party bases are kind of relying on the familiarity of that match up, even though many many voters as you note want new blood they want younger faces to represent both parties going forward, so we have this sort of paradox in our politics in that we are looking at the likelihood of a possible biden trump rematch, even though many , many voters, especially those in the middle one is a younger faces and perhaps more moderate voters want to see younger candidates run in both parties. >> bill: jewish insider editor in chief, which i do believe is a new gig. congratulations on that and come on back soon. thank you, josh. >> thanks. >> bill: the investigation into that bag of cocaine found inside the white house on sunday expected to end next week.
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law enforcement official said to be -- says since it was found in a high-traffic area, the culprit may never be identified. one republican lawmaker demanding answers on that. griff jenkins has the story that seems to shift by the day. griff, good morning. >> it does, bill. good morning. it has been five days since the bag of cocaine was found. still no suspect or suspects have been identified and you are right, we're not likely to get any new details until next week. we're learning more about the area where it was found. it is a more high secure area where people who have high clearances like secretaries and staff from d.o.d. and d.o.j. would pass. this lack of information and the rumors and changing story has led many to speculate including former president trump who took to truth social writing this. does anybody really believe the cocaine found in the west wing of the white house very close to the oval office is for the use of anyone other than hunter and
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joe biden? well, the white house refusing the shoot down the speculation. a spokesman in a gaggle invoked the hatch act to dutch questions over trump's accusation. >> i don't have a response to that because we have to be careful about the hatch act. >> now, lawmakers are starting to weigh in. michael waltz of florida who worked in the bush white house had this to say. >> set aside this cocaine, a white powder that could have been anthrax or some other weapon of mass destruction gets that close to the heartbeat of our government, that is a massive security failure. >> this as senator tom cotton sent a letter to the secret service writing if the white house complex is not secure, congress needs to know the details as well as your plan to correct any security flaws. there will be a couple of opportunities, bill, for the white house to weigh in. we know karine jean-pierre will
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brief at 1:00 p.m. today. president biden at 3:30 this afternoon will give remarks in the east room about his plans to lower healthcare costs. see if he gets any questions there. out in iowa, former president trump has a rally. i suspect he may weigh in as well. >> bill: nice to see you on the north lawn. thank you. >> aishah: you're feeling it out there. blistering heat wave in the u.s. showing no signs of letting up. hot and steamy weather baking people across the country. triple digit temperatures in some places could stretch on through this weekend. >> bill: we've been warned, right? >> aishah: you have been warned. >> bill: new details on a child's book author accused of murdering her husband. where she got the fentanyl that prosecutors allege she used to spike a cocktail. plus this. >> ways to also express the way we feel about the moment in
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terms of just having language and a connection to how people are experiencing life. >> aishah: what is she talking about? you tell me. critics are pouncing on vice president harris again for her latest hard to decipher remarks. >> bill: woke politics costing another company a pretty penny in backlash. abby and dagen why consumers think they've had enough. ♪ ♪ ♪ credit cards. those balances can sneak up fast. even worse, the interest rate on credit card debt has gone up to 22% and for late payments as high as 30%. that's over three times the rate on a newday 100 va home loan pay off those high rate cards and other debt with a lower rate home loan from newday. you can save $500 every month.
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>> aishah: california governor newsom is taking his battle with florida governor ron desantis over migrants flights to the next level. his state attorney general and texas sheriff writing a letter to the d.o.j. wanting the justice department to get involved and urging criminal and civil investigations into these migrant flights. the letter accuses desantis of using false tactics to coerce migrants to board those planes. newsom threatened desantis with kidnapping charges after he threw three dozen migrants to sacramento or not.
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you know who benefits? joe biden and donald trump. why is a presidential candidate in the tit-for-tat with somebody not running for president? just move on, talk about the economy and the president. >> bill: my point is it's still going on every day. all over the country. 20 minutes past the hour. we're learning more about a chilling case of a utah mother who wrote a children's book coping with grip and is accused of poisoning her husband. officials say they know who sold her the lethal dose of fentanyl. we have the follow up in l.a. what did you find out? >> i don't think this woman looks like a killer but this utah mother is accused of poisoning her husband to death by lacing his drink with fentanyl that she bought from her housekeeper. this is 33-year-old corey and her late husband, eric found dead at the foot of the couple's
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bed last year shortly after corey handed him a moscow mule allegedly spiked with fentanyl. police accuse the mom of buying some 30 fentanyl pills twice from her house speaker telling the former drug dealer she wanted some strong drugs, that michael jackson stuff. he had five times the lethal dose of fentanyl in his system. she gave her husband the cocktail and then found him dead. a year later she published a children's book, are you with me, about losing a loved one. consider the timing here. according to court records corey bought $9 hundred of fentanyl from the housekeeper saying she needed them for a friend. three days later eric gets ill. tells a friend he thinks his wife is trying to kill him. she buys $9 hundred of fentanyl.
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two days later eric is dead. housekeeper yet to be charged. not only did she tried to become a sole beneficiary of his life insurance policy, prosecutors say she stole hundreds of thousands of dollars from his company and is now suing to get ahold of his entire $4 million estate managed by the sister. needless to say things contentious there as a family claims she kills eric and tries to get all this stuff. the next court appearance is september 1st. >> bill: another bizarre twist on that. william la jeunesse in los angeles. aishah. >> aishah: ben and jerry's at it again. they posted this tweet claiming that the u.s. was founded on stolen indigenous land and calling for its return. that sparked calls for a boycott on the ice cream company and ben and jerry's parent company stock lost $2 1/2 billion in market
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cap value. let's bring in fox nation horse abby hornacek and dagen mcdowell. call for number one. this is how companies profits have taken a huge hit after they've gone woke and you can see 2.5 billion. bud lite, we watched that happen live. target, north face and it goes on. there has been a shift in people. used to be you could get away with this and people roll their eyes and move on and keep eating ice cream. people have had enough. what has changed? >> just out -- to be fair, that's market value so that's how much the stock fell. and yesterday the stock -- an anglo dutch giant fell as much
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as the market yesterday. so it was kind of >> bill: 130 billion went to 128 billion. >> however, they knew when they bought ben and jerry's 23 years ago what they were getting with this uninformed moralizing. they have lots of issues, shall we say. in this day and age, if this ben an jerry's is going to preach hard truths let's start about obesity is our business. we are a problem not a solution when diabetes is plaguing the united states and the world. they should start there. uni lever has had problems with them in the past when they refused to sell ice cream in the israeli settlements built on the west bank and tried to cover that up, do some restructuring
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at uni- lever, and then they sold the brand to a local israeli licensee who started selling the ice cream again and ben and jerry's sued them. this is a problem. buy local. >> bill: cookies and cream? >> i don't like ben and jerry's, there is too much stuff in there. people are-up set about this because uni leaver is selling one of their companies in russia. they pay 331 million in taxes to the kremlin. to dagen's point, this isn't too surprising. the history of the company has shown their true colors. back i think it was 2006 a big issue with about 600 workers in india getting mercury poisoning and history of sexual harassment. if you are going to buy ben and jerry's it's the culture they
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have. >> bill: you get what you get, right? what was kamala harris up to in new orleans? >> i honestly don't know. let's watch it together. >> bill: the sound bite people are trying to make sense of and brit hume calls it word salad. roll. >> culture is -- it is a reflection of a moment in our time, right? and in present cultures the way we express our feeling about the moment. and we should always find times to express how we feel about a moment that is a reflection of joy because -- you know -- it comes in the morning. [laughter] >> i think she was trying to be positive and send a positive message. i watched that a few times now. >> bill: it was pure poetry.
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>> brilliant biden white house. the biden plan b seems more cognitively impaired than he is. i have say that kind of half joking. >> bill: the truth is that when she was trying to explain things in the past she sort of has gone round and round and round trying to express her point. >> she has had so many moments you can pick a favorite. she should start wearing a rubber band like to snap out of it, right? but this feels like a deep discount meditation retreat. like i have this coupon at my yoga studio and this should be free. i can't believe i paid to see this. >> bill: a reflection of joy because, you know, abby, it comes in the morning. >> if you get a good night's sleep it does. i think kamala harris is like
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ben an jerry's. she doesn't really know what she is saying and it is a skill to be able to take information and present it in a concise way. aishah, you do it well in d.c. every time you give a report. the more you talk, the more people are straining to listen but i can't make any sense of that whatsoever. >> bill: the more you talk the less you say. >> she doesn't know how to memorize. memorize some note cards and sunny hostin is on stage with her. she doesn't prop her up and intervene? she knows how to interrupt. that's her job on "the view." >> bill: we got it. thank you, ladies, have an awesome weekend. 28 past. we have a reflection of the job market a moment ago added 209,000 jobs despite the federal reserve interest rate hike, solid number but it missed the mark. what does it mean for your money? larry kudlow is looking at the numbers. update on madonna, reports
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they have waffles! and splendid pools. cannonball! book direct at choicehotels.com. >> bill: stock market is open, 9:33 in new york trading lower now. reacting to the junes job's report. we were under the mark expected. hiring cooling down a bit as the economy added 209,000 jobs. weaker than expected. larry kudlow is the host of kudlow on fox business. good day to you. good morning, sir. going through the numbers trying to figure it out . a huge payroll drop yesterday that stopped out at almost 300,000. some people are saying it's a fluke. this missed the mark. we had two revisions that were lower for the previous two months. your evaluation of this is what, larry? >> yeah, look, bill, you had the
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adp report, a private payroll was up almost 500,000. i kept saying that number last night that it's a fluky number, not reliable and sure enough, today's number was much lower. incidentally, with the downward revision. your 209,000 payrolls is the softest number since december of 2020. but, bill, you have to add in the revisions, okay? you lost 110,000 jobs in the prior two months. so actually the june number is only up 99,000, and that's a picture of a weakening labor market, which i might add goes hand in hand with a recession that's developing in manufacturing and production, contrary to what the president keeps telling us.
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the numbers are down. business equipment is falling. when you see the business side weaken, fall, and so forth. that's a leading indicator of recession. it is not the consumer side that leads when you have down turns, it's the business side. my point is these were very soft numbers and on the wage side if i can add to that, wages -- average weekly earnings up 3.7%, up 3.7% for the month of june, average weekly earnings. that is again below the inflation rate. the average hourly earnings 4.4% is even with the inflation rate. so real wages are still sloping down on a trend line. this is a very soft and disappointing report. the trouble is -- the fed is going to tighten any way.
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larry, take the temperature for us, scale of 1-10. are we a 5, 7 1/2? what are we? >> on jobs or economy, bill? >> bill: the economy. >> the economy has been very soft for a while. look, the last six quarters, okay, all of last year plus the first half of this year. we don't know what the second quarter was exactly. i'm going to pencil in 2% what the atlanta fed gdp is saying, okay? the growth rate is only 1.3 for gdp. 1.3 for the last six quarters, 18 months. the inflation rate is still running 4 to 5%. it's a very poor economic performance. real wages continue to decline.
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you know, we should be growing this great economy of ours. we should be growing 3, 4, 5%, okay? because we've had such slow growth for so many years. we should be blasting off if we would unleash the economy, you know, from all this spending and taxing. >> bill: all the smart folks say they see no pro-growth poll seals from this administration. president biden was in south carolina. he is going on tour and officials from the administration are trying to sell bidenomics. how will they make the sale, larry? >> it's a tough sale, bill. first of all, what is bidenomics? i don't know what it is. i can't figure it out. it is a lot of spending, a lot of regulating. it hates fossil fuels. it is a lot of taxing. it is not pro-growth.
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traditionally economists would say lower taxes, minimal regulations, limited spending would give you non-inflationary growth. that's what most economists would say frankly in both political parties, or they used to. you aren't getting that now. bidenomics is central plan, top down over regulation and overspending. 1.3% growth for the last 18 months? all right, with a lingering 4 to 5% inflation rate? you talk about making the sale, not even bill hemmer could make that sale on the campaign trail. great communicator like bill hemmer would have trouble making that sale. that's all i'm saying. >> bill: i gotcha. see you at 4:00, all right, fox business. make it a great friday. see you later. >> thanks. >> aishah: the biden
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administration is green lighting its largest off shore wind project and critics say it is a major threat to the environment off the new jersey coast. >> new jersey democratic governor phil murphy says it's a monumental win for the state. by 2025 could power up to half a million homes and create 3,000 union jobs in the state. the ocean wind one project is the largest approved wind farm in the u.s. it calls for up to 98 wind turbines hundreds of feet tall built just 15 miles off the coast of atlanta city. a lawyer representing environmental groups is launching lawsuits arguing the wind project is being built in the migration corridors of endangered blue and white whales and construction is rushed without knowing the exact impacts on ecological and marine
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life. >> the planet is not going anywhere. we don't need to build these things in the next year to save the planet. we can destroy the coastlines for the next 100 years if we leap into something and don't think about it. >> according, 45 whales washed ashore dead, three times the death compared to the same time last year. noad says there is no evidence to links it to off shore wind surveys. a congressman says we don't know about enough about the risks they pose to fisheries and not worth the negligible impact on climate change. he is calling for congressional hearings in early autumn and bring up legislation this summer. one other thing the bureau of ocean energy management says look, they will have steps to mitigate these environmental concerns like putting in vessel
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speed restrictions and clearance zones for construction and give money to fisheries. critics also say look at this beautiful shore. there will be permanent damage, an eyesore of having turbines out there to harm tourism. >> aishah:, the critics get louder and louder. >> bill: follow up on new reports about madonna. they say the pop star was revived with narcan after she was found unresponsive. she is being treated for a bacterial infection according to the hospital. narcan is commonly used to reverse a drug overdose. those reports also say in this case it was used to combat acute septic shock. reps say she is recovering but remains very weak and very tired, end quote. >> aishah: coming up artificial intelligence already influencing healthcare, but will it change what it means to be a doctor? our own doctor marc siegel with
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approval to a alzheimer's drug for the first time in 20 years. also the first green light for a drug that slows the progression of the disease as opposed to just targeting symptoms. it's leqembi and questions about side effect and how many patients have access to it under medicare. something to watch and we'll hear. >> aishah: artificial intelligence changes so many parts of our lives so quickly and healthcare is no exception. researchers say a.i. will change the future of medicine and that naturally has some doctors out there wondering what it means for treating patients? we're bringing in dr. marc siegel joining me now here to talk about this. good to see you, doctor. >> great to see you. >> aishah: i want to pull up this quote, "the new york times" did a write-up on this. it says perhaps being an expert doesn't mean being a fount of information but synthesizing and
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communicating and using judgment to make hard decisions ai can be part of the process, one more tool we use. but it will never replace a hand at the bedside, eye contact, understanding what it is to be a doctor. doctor, how do you think a.i. is going to change the doctor/patient relationship? how do you see it? >> i'm hoping it doesn't. i'm excited about it. first of all, in medical school, in my training, we're memorizing facts and we keep saying when we learn them in medical school and residency what will these be for? i am not going to be a surgeon. why do i need to know this? the latest work you set up in your brain for medical facts helps you later on. that's what a.i. is. it's learning through machine learning and will accumulate information that can be used later on. i view a.i. as a tool because i
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may not remember everything i learned in medical school. if i trust a.i. and i don't have a competition with it, it will remind me of things that i hadn't thought of or remind the patient to bring information to me that they hadn't thought of. all of that ups the game of medical encounters. but what you are pointing out is really important, it's doctors that have compassion, it's doctors that have bedside manner, doctors that have empathy. machine learning cannot have empathy. a.i. may pretend it's empathetic and teach it the words to use but it really isn't. the danger here is what kind of a.i. are we talking about? highly skilled or the same a.i. the public is using like chart gpt. i want it to be specialized a.i. for healthcare what we're seeing in radiology. it's changing radiology and cardiology looking at im pages over and over at lightning speed
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that radiologists can't do in the same period of time. they learn to rely on it but not replaced by it. >> aishah: patients are excited about that and helping doctors get through their workload when it comes to office stuff. i think the fear is this will limit one-on-one human to human interaction in the office. we get so little time with those doctors because you are dealing with nurses and things like that. are you worried about that, that this would shorten that amount of time? >> i love the question because you put your finger exactly on the problem. we're already without back to the patient writing in the computer. the head of scripps research in california thinks a.i. could be used replace paperwork freeing up doctors for the doctor/patient relationship. it remains to be seen. we don't want a.i. to fill the gap that you have described. there is not enough of us.
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so we need more doctors, more hands-on care and a.i. as a co-pilot, not a pilot. >> aishah: dr. marc siegel, i don't want a.i. to replace you. i think we'll keep you forever. thanks so much. >> you have me on speed dial. won't be replaced. >> bill: the fight over free speech in social media. what we learn about a judge's ruling and their ability to combat all sorts of crime. also, gone but not for good. president biden's student debt bail-out failed at first but is it making a comeback on the campaign trail? >> president biden: we put out a plan to bring relief to working middle class people with student loans. >> the supreme court was like sorry, bro. with bedding crafted from cotton grown on our family farm. we created red land cotton to give you the best farm,
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for desantis. it is an arm that focuses on parents rights. >> the mobilization of moms and grandmothers to protect the innocence of our children and the rights of parents. it should be up to the parents to decide what education they think are best for their children and government should again get out of the way. >> bill: she says the campaign has mobilized over a million mothers across america. >> aishah: go to college, get a loan, it's time you get ahead, they said. they are laughing at you. democrats in washington wasting no time turning up the heat with the goal of turning president biden's failed student debt bail-out into a top 2024 campaign issue. chad pergram is live on capitol hill with all of that. hi, chad. >> aishah, good morning. student debt is emerging as a 2024 battleground. democrats believe they can defeat vulnerable house
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republicans who voted to block president biden's forgiveness plan for student loans. democrats are targeting 13gop members in swing districts. mike lawlor is one of them and he defends his vote. >> in my district less than half of adults have a college degree. and to force them to pick up the tab for somebody else who was fortunate enough to go to college is not fair. it is not right. >> democrats believe the issue resonates with younger people who historically do not go to the polls. >> the democrats are looking at this as one of the issues that can motivate more democratic voters particularly the younger voters to turn out. that can make the difference. >> liberals are energized after the supreme court struck down the president's plan to forgive student loans. >> wiping out student loan debt and implementing tuition-free public colleges and universities
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so people don't have to go to debt to get an education. that is how we actually solve this problem. >> republicans ask why people who repaid their loans should cover the bills of others? aishah. >> aishah: chad pergram live for us. thanks. >> bill: federal judge's injunction is now being hailed as a free speech victory. members of law enforcement are warning it could hurt their ability to fight crime. interesting twist on that. brand-new hour begins now. dana has the day off today. summertime in the city and i'm bill hemmer. >> aishah: hot and humid, we love it. good to see you out there. i'm a aishah hosni the justice department is appealing the finding of government talking with social media companies. the white house said thi
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