Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 16, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

6:00 am
♪ ♪ hard to say what it is i see in you. ♪ wonder if i will always be with you. ♪ words can't say - we're keeping the '90s theme of the djing on "fox & friends" going this morning. there's a shot of muriel's inlet, south carolina. glad to have you with us on the fourth and final hour of "fox & friends," will cain, pete leg
6:01 am
hegseth and kayleigh mcenany. kayleigh: i want george strait or something like that. >> i would go for that. kayleigh: you wouldn't apparently. >> i'm good with it. you're staring into a nice summer vacation. kayleigh: that's true. >> a little florida, little hawaii. >> that's right. >> they're very focused. kayleigh: sorry, america. >> like a lot off, they're looking to their vacation and we're always glad you're joining us on "fox & friends weekend." there's plenty going on around the world to include this. you know, for years we've covered the surge at the southern border. it's a number you provided. kayleigh: 2.5 million in a 12 month period encounters. >> that's not counting got aways, known got aways. we don't know what the actual number is. the biden administration has sent signal after signal that the border is open, after they denied it. after the title 42 poll is the s
6:02 am
changed, there's f another cara van forming, folks who want to come from venezuela. we have pictures of the cara van, hundreds from right now, likely growing in the process. there is as we mentioned growing docontroversy over the bouys beg put in the rio grande river because the federal government and border patrol can't or won't stop the illegal flow across the river. texas is trying to step in and install the floating barriers. we'll see if it has a deterrent effect on yet another cara van headed for our southern border. kayleigh: the incoming secretary on foreign affairs of the border bouys, here's what she said, we are sending a territorial inspection to see where the bouys are located to check out the survey to verify they don't cross into mexican territory. what's interesting is the way mexico talks to the united
6:03 am
states and in this case governor greg abbott. mexico at a very different disposition when former president trump was president, tough talks, tough actions worked and they're calling out the texas government. will: people don't like it in any walk of life, from an individual level, from a nation, state status of somebody stepping up to do the job you were unwilling to do. because it exposes their own unwillingness and incompetence. here texas is attempting something to try to stop this border flow. i think there's going to be a lot of valid questions about how this works, unforeseen consequences, but at least texas is trying to do something, trying to do something to stop what is an absolute crisis at our southern border. and again, whether that's the u.s. government or mexican government, people don't like people stepping up, in this case, the texas government. now we move to this. it's been a phenomenon at the box office, sound of freedom, earned $82 million at the u.s. box office, beat indiana jones
6:04 am
in the first date -- pete: the 4th of july. will: the 4th of july. it's wildly been criticized by mainstream media. i do have a hard time wrapping my head around this. i spoke to a film critic on the will cain podcast, help me make sense of headlines this like, washington post, c quanon and sound of freedom rely on tired tropes. rolling stones, box office triumph of quanon believers. pete: when you look at the facts of it, the film was based on a story that happened years ago a, it was produced years ago, well before any quanon conspiracy developed and then the film was produced and then disney which owned it sat on it for three years. so it just now comes out but it's based on work that had been done a long time ago. yet they frame it as if it's based on a boogie man recent
6:05 am
political phenomenon they want to make the bad guy. kayleigh: they're in half the theaters of indiana jones, yet beat indiana jones, it's a movie about the real life of someone who rescued children in horrific situations. my parents went and said they never have seen the theater so packed. you could hear a pin drop. people were cheering when the kids were rescued and staying through the credits to learn how to help kids in self trafficking. the united states the top place where this is happening, yet it's quanon guys, that's what hollywood wants you to believe. >> it's based in part on a real life character. it's a real life -- a real rescue representation of what he's been fighting against in child sex trafficking. kayleigh: yeah. >> and ferstgis, spoke to him earlier, one of the producers on the sound of freedom.
6:06 am
>> after playing for god for a miracle for this film, they sent an angel to rescue the film. millions of people are seeing the film, 5 million people showed up in theaters. i can't believe this is happening. i feel like i'm dreaming. this is the american dream. i'm hugging the american dream right now. it's all glory to god. this is miracle. this is amazing. i mean, first of all, i want to say this. i am very grateful to this nation for opening the door to my dreams. this nation has been such an amazing blessing in my life. this film is more than a movie, it's a movement. it's growing. no one can stop it. it's too late. no one can stop it. this is the people's movie. >> eduardo veristagi. rachel campos duffy texted us. he's a huge star in mexico. he started a movement. when you consider the fact that i believe donald trump will be
6:07 am
screening thi this film. it's reaching a level where you hear about this, you know it's going on, you hear it going on through the trafficking, but to bring it alive to people, to see it, emotionally connect to it, it takes the number of tens of thousands of kids or whatever the number is and makes it very real. can you imagine if it was yours? can you imagine the horrors of what's done to these kids which is what the film brings about and to think the largest and most powerful nation on earth either can't or more scarily won't do something about it because those in power are either looking the other way or not interested in addressing it. this film hits at the heart of it. kayleigh: the liberal media laughing at it. it's indescribeable what some of the kids go through. here's the media, it's quanon. >> that talks, if hollywood produced things that actually addressed problems we're really facing on real heros it would make money. >> it shows it can be done. you can have a movie that has a
6:08 am
message that has a positive message and it can be received in a capitalist marketplace with success. kayleigh: without hollywood. angel studios -- without hollywood. >> it shows inspiration for whatever you have out there, entrepreneurial instinct or idea you have, it can find success, being true to who it is. kayleigh: well, on to the success of john kerry or lack therefore. he's heading -- lack thereof. he's heading to china to convince them to reduce c o2 emissions. they build a coal factory every week. china, 11,472. you see the u.s., half that. we're the ones who are going to shut down the economy so china can keep emitting. it makes no sense. >> you put india in it, you're at 14,000, roughly. >> and that's a few years dated. >> metric tons. >> think about i john kerry is going over there, trying to get them to reduce emissions. xi jinping is going are we on schedule for our next dozen coal
6:09 am
fire power plants. are we keeping up with the develops in the nation. it's so offbase as china's military is preparing with more active rhetoric and war games around the capture of taiwan to consolidate more supply chains like microchips and the types of things taiwan has. we're running over there, saying stop emitting to the biggest emitter who has no incentive to do that. it's so off-base. it's unbelievable. kayleigh: john kerry, $18.7 million is the budget for his staff. we don't know what they do. 45 proposed staff members apparently. your taxpayer dollars paying for the paychecks of these people who are doing absolutely nothing. >> here is john kerry talking about his efforts in china on capitol hill on thursday. >> is he in fact effectively a dictator. >> i'm not going to get into -- >> but he does wield the power of -- >> he wields enormous power as the leader of china. absolutely. >> do you wish the president had used another word?
6:10 am
>> i don't think we au ought tot tangled up in labels. >> >> have any of those countries submitted a credible plan to get to net zero emissions by 2050, china, india or mexico. >> no. the reality is the world changed in that period of time. >> you heard he says i don't want to geten tangled in labels or what he's talking about, whether or not -- >> the details. >> whether he would define xi jinping as a dictator. we talked about it earlier, the details they don't want to get entangled by. the argument on climate change is we need a bunch of money, we need all your money and we're going to reduce carbon. >> turn the th thermostat down. >> by how much. >> i don't know. >> give us an ill defined amount of money for an ill defined result. that illustrated so well back in may, we thought we would revisit it with senator john kennedy, drilling the energy secretary, david turk. >> how much would it cost to
6:11 am
get is carbon neutral, $50 trillion, is that right. >> it will cost trillions of dollars, no doubt about it. >> you don't know. you want us to get there but you can't tell the american taxpayer how much it's going to cost, is that your testimony? >> it's going to save us money and there's a lot of jobs. >> how do we know. how do we know how much it's going to cost? >> there's that a one, it's going to save us money. >> it's a perfect response. all he's asking for is how much. your goal is carbon neutral. how much? how much money do you want? do you need to get to carbon neutral? and he can't give a number he won't give a number. he says no, it's going to save money. how do you know it's going to save money if you can't tell me how much it's going to cost. kayleigh: they never have answers, they don't have answers on the cost. remember the dooms day stuff. al gore had a dooms da day deadline. the deadlines they set blow past and a the world still exists.
6:12 am
>> how much? the answer is more. if you don't give us more, you don't care and you want people to die. >> he kept pressing. it's a great clip. like how much, will you get to carbon neutral, what about india, china, russia, will they. i don't know. if i give you 50 trillion, how much will global temperatures go down. kayleigh: that's why we had to get out of the paris climate accord, because china was going to keep emitting. president trump said this is a bad deal. >> all makes you want to glue your hand to a tar a mack. tarm. >> there's no rational numbers base. it's all coming to an end, death toll. [laughter] >> all right. from a death had cult to headlines. we turn to a few of those starting with a fox news alert. the intense manhunt for a murder suspect would escaped from a pennsylvania jail nine days ago it's over. a tip came in from a pennsylvania couple claiming they encountered the suspect in
6:13 am
their backyard. he was still wearing police pants -- not police pants, prison pants, they immediately alerted police. he was captured at gunpoint. >> he was taken into custody and is currently at the pennsylvania state police warren station where he will be processed, determination will be made where he will ultimately be housed following his arraignment. >> police have not yet said what additional charges he might be facing after nine days on the run. >> and elon musk says twitter is in the red, blaming 50% drop in advertising revenue as well as heavy debt load this comes after musk claimed the social media giant was breaking even in april. musk had bought twitter for $44 billion. he laid off 80% of the platform's staff. and last summer we introduced you to a young boy from wisconsin taken the grand prize in the usa mullet championship's
6:14 am
kids division. defending champ emmett bailey and his mom joined us earlier to talk about the competition. >> last year at this moment, why can't he win it this year. >> we did it for a fun thing for the haircut and contest. it got so big last year. he's gotten so many incredible experiences over the last year, just from having his hair and being a kind of cool little kid. >> bailey used last year's prize money to buy a go cart and if he wins this year he says he'll use the money to get another kid into racing. he is -- oh, -- kayleigh: impressive dude. >> his mullet can't compete with this one. >> we did a size by side. kayleigh: you can't enter the kids division. >> in adult division. >> you've got curly hair. >> it doesn't show very well. kayleigh: it's there. >> it shows. a lot of people notice, pete. [laughter] pete: fox in the front, farm in
6:15 am
the back. >> i get compliments in the messages, what's up with pete. cut your hair. kayleigh: we've got to get you sunglasses too. >> i think it's beautiful. >> it's glorious. i wouldn't call it beautiful. you call it glorious. still ahead, diy policing with home invasions and a break ins on the rise, residents are encouraged to form watch groups and secure windows with bars. an activist joins us next. kayleigh: a new survey finds half of millennials thinks misgenderring someone should be a criminal offense. we'll read your rights, straight ahead. ♪ breaking the law. ♪ breaking the law. ♪ breaking the law. ♪ (vo) if you have graves' disease, your eye symptoms could mean something more.
6:16 am
that gritty feeling can't be brushed away. even a little blurry vision can distort things. and something serious may be behind those itchy eyes. up to 50% of people with graves' could develop a different condition called thyroid eye disease, which should be treated by a different doctor. see an expert. find a t-e-d eye specialist at isitted.com
6:17 am
6:18 am
6:19 am
>> another day, another california crime story. home invasions, motor vehicle theft, and other criminal activity apparently gotten so out of hand in okay land that police are suggesting residents take matters into their own hands, consider reinforcing
6:20 am
doors with braces an security bars and other security measures including forming neighborhood watch groups. seneca scott runs anti-crime oakland, he joins us now. seneca, great to see you. what's going on? help me make sense. oakland is in bad say. now it's fend for yourself? >> well, i'll start by saying good morning, will. good to see you again. it is a beautiful day in oakland, california. we're looking at a normal 70 degrees and sunny. i like to start with that because people will wonder why are you even there fighting. [laughter] >> we're here fighting, i get that all the time, why don't you move. we won't move because oakland is one of the most beautiful cities in the country with some of the most neighbors. right now, we're experiencing a crisis of unlivability for possibly the first time ever,
6:21 am
there's no neighborhood in oakland that feels safe. the difference between crime in the '90s when we had the last major crime wave and now is that there's no neighborhood that goes unscathed. the same wealth disparity that's dramatic in the city, we used to have the same disparity effects on crime and liveability. now we're in the same boat. neighbors don't feel safe anywhere in the city. >> i wondered why you started with the weather report from oakland. i got it. it's your home, you love it. there's a reason for you to stay. >> i love it. >> your your you fight for it. robbery is up 18%, burglary, up 26%, vehicle theft up 36%. we've talked in the past. it always strikes me. when we do these stories, the neighborhoods that suffer the most from high crime happen to be for on one hand minority neighborhoods, low socioeconomic neighborhoods as well but also neighborhoods where defund the
6:22 am
police movement was -- it was advocated for. it was loudly yelled. and so what i'm curious about from your perspective is like, you know, when you see then the wave of crime that follows in that, do you sense in these communities a reconsideration of that? why did we go after police so hard? we're seeing -- we need the police. that should be the realization, we need the police. >> absolutely. it's cops and robbers, not robbers. although in oakland it's just robbers. grand theft auto, the violence mode on full throttle. and we have no rule of law in oakland. it's goten really scary. and the amount of people applying for -- has skyrocketed. we're dealing with the results of failed policies, failed policies of our elite who normally do not have to live the consequences of the policies and for the first time neighborhoods
6:23 am
that they live in are beginning to see the consequences from divestment of public safety. we had a member of my organization, neighbors together oakland, whose name is adam, he was on fox before. we had a meeting last night, he said something that stuck with me. i don't want to take credit for it. i'll give him the credit. he said i'm a business owner. i'm very successful. two things i know i have to do is i have to pay people well and give them everything they need to succeed. if they don't do the job well, i know it's on me. if you have under-resourced, under-momotivated, under paid staffer, you can't rely on them to perform at a high level. why would you induce those situations and brag about it. i'm all for criminal justice reform. it's not reparation toker rad to eradicatelaw and order.
6:24 am
our police officers are advising us for self help, the new word of vigilanteism. we like to change the world. self help is what they're asking for. who can put bars and wood on their doors. i'm a little disappointed. i feel that citizens are being used. we're literally part of the cross-fire. a real cross-fire where people are being shot like a baby on the freeway two days ago. they're advising us that. they'll put more pressure on the city to invest in public safety. and so i really want to see more investment in public safety from our elected officials. we have a mayor right now giving herself a $77,000 raise while she cut 911 dispatchers. oakland's 911 dispatchers went down twice the last week. it's absolutely tear firing,
6:25 am
will car cash-terrifying. >> you had a meeting last night. you need more help, you need more public safety and you'll need self reliance, you'll have to take k care of yourself. you have to defend the self as well. seneca, always appreciate your perspective. thank you so much. >> thank you, will. appreciate it. will: still ahead, from $20 gift cards to front row soccer tickets, gop candidates are offering perks for your support. tomi lahren and guy benson are joining us next. ♪ there's no stopping us right now. ♪ i feel so close to you right now. ♪ i just always thought, “dog food is dog food” i didn't really piece together that dogs eat food. as soon as we brought the farmer's dog in, her skin was better, she was more active. if i can invest in her health and be proactive, i think it's worth it. visit betterforthem.com
6:26 am
6:27 am
(upbeat music) - [narrator] what if there was a hearing aid that could keep up with you? (notification dings) this is jabra enhance select. it's a smart hearing solution that makes hearing aids more convenient and less expensive. it connects with your phone so you can stream calls and music. with jabra enhance select's premium package, better hearing doesn't have to start in a doctor's office. it starts with a free online hearing test you could take almost anywhere, so you can get your hearing aids custom programed for you and delivered in days. from there, you can fine tune your settings with your remote audiology team seven days a week, so your hearing aids work when it matters most. (notification dings) in fact, more than 95% of enhance select premium customers report hearing better with their friends,
6:28 am
family, and colleagues. with jabra enhance select, you can get the same advanced hearing aid technology and professional care you expect from a clinic at a fraction of the cost. try at risk free for 100 days. visit jabraenhance.com. ♪ i have type 2 diabetes, ♪ ♪ but i manage it well. ♪ ♪ it's a little pill with a big story to tell. ♪ ♪ i take once-daily jardiance, ♪ ♪ at each day's staaart. ♪ ♪ as time went on it was easy to seee ♪
6:29 am
♪ i'm lowering my a1c. ♪ jardiance works 24/7 in your body to flush out some sugar! and for adults with type 2 diabetes and known heart disease, jardiance can lower the risk of cardiovascular death, too. jardiance may cause serious side effects including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, that can lead to sudden worsening of kidney function, and genital yeast or urinary tract infections. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection, ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction, and don't take it if you're on dialysis. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. ♪ jardiance is really swell, ♪ ♪ the little pill with a big story to tell. ♪ >> these special political fund the raisers act like they have professional skill set and they keep up to 1 10% of what they
6:30 am
raise. biden talks about 10% for the big guy. i say let's do 1 10% for the little guy. we train them how to do it, go through the compliance. what you raise for vivek 2024, you keep 10%. kayleigh: that's vivek ramaswamy taking on an unprecedented fund raising plan with a new strategy of giving money back to donors. he's not the only one getting creative. fellow candidates are trying everything from $20 gift cards to raffling off front romasy tickets in miami. joining us now, tomi lahren and guy benson. guy, everyone trying to get on the debate stage. used to be the network setting criteria, now the rnc does. are you surprised to see the desperation. >> these are the rules. when you lay out the criteria, here's how you get on the stage, everyone wants to get there.
6:31 am
if you're a serious candidate, you have to get on the debate stage. that's a your moment. you're going to pull out every stop you can think of to make sure you're there in milwaukee. to be more cynical or realistic, if you are resorting to this kind of thing, just to qualify for a debate, perhaps there is not a sort of grass roots ground swell in existence there would need to be for you to have any shot at becoming the nominee but politicians are politicians and they always are thinking about their path and their lane even if others don't really see it. kayleigh: i mean, for some people this seems about raising the national profile. >> it all feels cheesy. vivek talking about giving back to people that are willing to raise money, that's an interesting concept. he's going to get media attention for saying that which i think is precisely the point. but i think a lot of the folks as guy, said, it fees like feele they're competing on a game show, not to be a serious
6:32 am
candidate. that rings a little cheesy. you're. kayleigh: vivek, it seems aser. he already made the debate stage. onto this. should misgenderring someone be a criminal offense. millennials, 44% say yes. guy, this is nuts. >> yeah, that's nuts. i'm generally a golden rule type person. do unto others and all of that and i try be sensitive around these things. sometimes people misspeak. sometimes they don't want to go along with whatever the speak of the day might be. and it's not a crime. we don't do that in this country. you can say what you want. we don't charge people for thought crimes. and it's a little bit alarming. even if that number is overblown by 10%, a third of people in our generation think should be a crime. that is unamerican, actually. kayleigh: it is. and i had a mom in the midwest saying at her daughter's school, her daughter is getting in trouble because kids are changing pronoun as a game.
6:33 am
now you're hit with a civil rights violation. >> because we have an entire generation -- i worry gen z is much worse. i say that because i'm a millennial. the worst thing that can happen to you is someone calls you a name or offends you with words, i'm concerned that millennials and gen zers are not as concerned with actual crime, actual violence, making sure we have enough police presence as the story you guys just talked about, they're not as concerned about that. but they're worried that someone is going to call them outside of their name or be mean to them and their feelings are going to be hurt. that's a real problem. kayleigh: it's a huge problem. >> i like the shot at gen z there. you'll hear it on social. on the polling, it might be millennials telling pollsters or people publicly something and saying something different privately. i was chatting with a left leaning friend of mine the other day who confessed some of the stuff is going too far. probably wouldn't say that public by but that's what he feels. so that could also inflate some of the numbers a little bit. kayleigh: there does seem to be a recognition of common sense.
6:34 am
i was surprised, pleasantly surprised watching a poll on all of he these issues, biological men and women's sports, these are 80, 20 issues, 80 saying we're against it. >> it's the loud minority that makes it feel like that they are loud majority. that's not the case. it's all very confusing for a lot of people, they, them thing. demi lovato said i'm not going by they, them, because it's too confusing. we don't know what a they, them is. it's not people trying to mean. it's simply not understanding what the term is. it's not familiar to everybody. and maybe a it shouldn't be. it's a little odd. kayleigh: i can't keep up. it's plural, they, them. tomi and guy benson on the big weekend show tonight at 7:00 p.m. eastern time. i'll be tuning in. you should too. still ahead had, former president trump sits down for an exclusive interview with maria bartiromo and talks buy glass the fbi. maria: was it a mistake to put christopher wray there?
6:35 am
obviously, the fbi is not following any of the things that you are talking about. >> sadly, it probably was. kayleigh: we'll find out which gop rival he blames for wray's appointment when maria bartiromo joins us next. ♪ maria, maria. ♪ she reminds me of a west side story. ♪ ♪ here i go ♪ ♪ i am strong and brave i know ♪ ♪ with a little time for me ♪ ♪ no doubt i will get through ♪ ♪ loving me is loving you ♪ ♪ new from centrum. the women's choice multivitamin brand. my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger.
6:36 am
6:37 am
hi, i'm sharon, and i lost 52 pounds on golo. i realized i needed to make a change when i looked in the mirror
6:38 am
and did not recognize myself. i felt sick, i felt sluggish, i was diabetic, and my cholesterol was high. after about a week or two of being on golo, i felt my energy increasing and my weight shedding. i was going to a christmas party with my husband, so i decided to try on the dress that my daughter wore to her prom when she was 18, and to my surprise, it fit me perfectly. my children have seen a changing in me. i'm not sitting around anymore, i'm just moving and just seeing that i got up and changed my life. we are not supposed to feel sick and tired as we age. since being on golo, i look and feel better than i did in my 20s. i truly feel like i'm back to the best me i can be. (soft music) >> back with a fox weather alert.
6:39 am
at least three people are confirmed he dead, four missing after flash flooding rocked south east -- officials holding a press conference 30 minutes ago on the latest. >> we are treating it as a rescue but we are fairly certain we are in a recovery mode at this time. in my 44 years, i've never seen anything like it. we had 6 and-a-half to 7 inches of rain in under 45 minutes. when the water came up, it came up very swiftly. >> severe weather is set for much of the country again today, nearly 100 million people are facing record breaking heat. let's check in with meteorologist adam clots for the fox weather forecast. >> big weather stories, we're tracking a line of storms sweeping across the eastern half of the country, a lot of moisture funneling in off the atlantic. that continues this morning. there's going to be rounds and rounds of rain, any one of these could cause flooding. every one of those little green poly gons you see on the screen
6:40 am
is a flood warning there. we've seen a couple isolated tornadoes across massachusetts. across this area we're expecting rain to continue to fall throughout the day. this is not just clearing out this morning even though the initial round might be pushing offshore. round after round of this, we have flood alerts including d.c., philadelphia, new york and boston and the interior of new england where they've seen a lot of rain the last week, flooding still going to be an issue. i'll leave you with the temperatures across the country, particularly the bottom third of the country, it continues to be incredibly hot, 106 in el paso is the high today. in the desert southwest, a lot of those places around 110, 120 degrees, incredibly warm. download the fox weather app to follow these stories. those are your weather headlines for now. >> a woman in alabama who disappeared after a frantic 911 call from the side of the highway was found safe 48 housers later. she was reporteded returned to r
6:41 am
parents house in a state of shock. she called police friday night to report a toddler she said was alone on the side of the road. when police responded she was nowhere to be found. they found her car and cell phone later. there was no known reports of a missing child in the area. people have not commented on the circumstances leading to her disappearance. a real estate investor is pulling back on the six figure donations to arizona state university citing left wing hostility and activism. he explained the decision to stop the annual donation comes after a faculty member who said she was fired for inviting conservative speakers on campus. he wrote, i regret this decision was necessary and i hope that barrett honors college and asu will take strong action to ensure free speech will be protected and all voices can be heard. and king chairls reportedly annoyed at prince william for
6:42 am
having to pay rent at the family property in wales. the prince took ownership of the cottage after the death of the queen last year and will rent it out starting in september and is asking for rent from his dad for a two week vacation. the king reportedly not happy with the new situation, i bet, and has historically visited that property at least once a year. those are your headlines. >> charging the king rent? >> there's got to be another detail here, right? >> there's got to be. oh, man, the family is falling quickly. thank you, will. pete: as the fbi faces accusations of bias and weaponization, former president trump admits he may have made a mistake when choosing who should be in charge of the bureau. maria: was it a mistake to put christopher wray there? obviously the fbi is not following any of the things you're talking about. >> yeah, sadly it probably was. you know, he was recommended very strongly by chris christie
6:43 am
who is, you know, a sad case. >> joining us now to preview more from that exclusive interview with donald trump, sunday morning futures anchor, maria bartiromo. thanks so much for being here. maria: thank you, pete. pete: what are the big take aways. maria: a lot of take aways. the president made a lot of news in the interview. you'll be surprised to hear what his answer is to reforming the fbi and doj. of course he agrees it's been weaponized and politicized. republicans are talking about moving the headquarters to alabama, to other place, get it out of washington. president trump did not agree with that i thought that was really interesting. you'll want to hear what he has to say about the reform of the fbi. we also talked about potential first 100 days. he went all in on security. he was talking about his agenda and the priority for president trump right now is security,
6:44 am
national security as well as personal security. he was very disturbed by all of the crime, very disturbed by weak leadership when it comes to accountability there. he was also very disturbed about the response to communist china. so we talked about that. there were a lot of breaking news nuggets in this interview about what a sees happening. i asked him is he going to participate in this upcoming first gop primary debate. he says he has not made his mind up yet. ronald reagan did not do i then i said, are there people on that stage that you could see in a potential cabinet. yes, there are. we talked about that and who he likes a lot. i mean, he had great things to say about tim scott, the senator and he also had great things to say about vivek. so i could see some partnerships with those two. i don't know if it's a vice presidential candidate or if it's somebody in a potential cabinet. president trump was very upbeat. he was strong even in the face of these indictments. he said look, the trial should
6:45 am
be postponed. that of course is what his lawyers are asking to postpone it indefinitely. it's interesting to see how this plays out because you've got the iowa a caucuses coming in january and they're talking about a trial related to this indictment over the classified documents in december. so we'll see if judge cannon answers this motion, positpositivelyfor the trump cas the trial out. i don't know if it's going to be indefinitely but you would think that maybe given the closeness to the iowa caucuses we could see him moving this trial. we'll see. >> before the cameras turned on, you mentioned one of the things detractors tried to use against him, can you win in the general election. you asked him about that. maria: i did. i asked him a few different ways. there's no question you're the favorite in the republicans. look at where he is, he's above 50% right now, ron desantis is in the 20%. and he said yes, of course i could win in the general election and i said look, i
6:46 am
asked because it's not about whether or not you can win in the republicans, we see that, but even supporters of yours, republicans, question whether or not you can win in a general election. and we went through why he believes he can and it also, again, those do with security, those do with the economy. he's talking about getting the economy back in shape with interest rates lower as well as inflation lower and of course he went all in on the dangers around the border, the dangers around this current foreign policy and we talked about regulation. you know, he's talked a lot about lower regulation is a beautiful thing, remember when he famously stood in front of all the stack of papers and cut the red tape. that's the opposite right now. joe biden wants many, many more regulations and he wants higher taxes. president trump wants to cut taxes and wants lower regulations. so look, it's a lot of what we heard in 2016 about where he thinks america should be going but he's also gotten the support of so many in the republican and
6:47 am
conservative side. when you actually see what has taken place in the last two years. >> for sure. maria: the economy, foreign policy and america's standing in the world. >> and what they've done to him and a second term would give him a chance, knows where the bodies are buried and can go after the real threats. maria: what you mention is really important. i think many people recognize that what has happened to donald trump has been a lot of unfairness beginning with the russia collusion lie from 2016, putting a president on defense. i said to him, mr. president, does that mean that you would have made different decisions when it comes to china, given the fact that every time you turned around you had to be on defensing, i didn't collude with russia, i didn't collude with rushing sha. he said, i did great in my response with china. have you to question how dangerous that was that every time a sitting president had to answer for i didn't come -- >> absolutely. maria: would that have changed the way he responded to the real threat, communist china. >> watch more of maria's
6:48 am
interview with donald trump at 1 0:a.m. eastern time on sunday morning futures. we'll be watching. i'm pretty sure my family will be watching because i'm pretty sure they love you more than me. it's sunday fun day. it's national ice cream day. our friends at friendly's are coming by. ♪ sugar. ♪ honey, honey. ♪ you are my candy girl. ♪
6:49 am
[city ambience sounds] [car screech] [car door slam] [camera shutter sfx] introducing ned's plaque psoriasis. [camera shutter sfx] he thinks his flaky, red patches are all people see. otezla is the #1 prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis. [ned?] it can help you get clearer skin and reduce itching and flaking. with no routine blood tests required. doctors have been prescribing it for nearly a decade. otezla is also approved to treat psoriatic arthritis. don't use otezla if you're allergic to it.
6:50 am
serious allergic reactions can happen. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. some people taking otezla had depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. [crowd gasp] ♪ with clearer skin, movie night is a groovy night. [ting] ♪ live in the moment. ask your doctor about otezla.
6:51 am
6:52 am
kayleigh: earlier we had lobster rolls. now it's time for ice cream. >> because today is national ice cream day. >> lee here to help us celebrate with sundaes is sharise mitross and the president of friendly's restaurants. >> thanks for having us. >> we'll make sundaes today. >> when is too early to eat ice cream. >> never too early. it's national ice cream day and friendly's 88th birthday. started in springfield, massachusetts. >> is that why scoops are 88-cents. >> 88-cents all week. kayleigh: can't get anything by you adam, what is your most popular flavor. >> my favorite flavor is black
6:53 am
raspberry. what would you say is the most popular. >> vanilla. kayleigh: got to go chocolate. >> adam and i are going to have a competition on who makes the best sundays. adam, i'll reveal an internal debate. you can help solve it. do you think, don, we should go minimalist or maximalist? you go to one of these places, you load up tpings and then you take -- toppings and then you take your second bite and you're like that was a mistake. >> why don't we let them sample them. >> i'll do it first. >> what do we do? >> i have a question, are these edible? can i drink this. >> they are. >> they are world famous fribbles. >> we'll start with strawberry milk. it's never too early for ice cream, never too late for cereal. we add in your favorite fruity cereal. we add in two scoops of vanilla
6:54 am
ice cream. >> i think we're going maximalist. we're going big. >> if you're doing it, you might as well. then we're going to add in some more cereal. we're going to put in a third scoop of ice cream. >> who invented this? >> push it down a little bit. >> what's the name of this thing. >> it's the super sundae dunk. >> super sundae dunk. >> okay. then this is usually tough for people. we got to get the whip right. >> that's going to take talent. >> when we're going to try to keep all the cereal on the whipped cream and add a cherry. >> real quick. what's in this? >> this is strawberry milk. >> it's like a bowl of cereal. >> we're just making that. this is what we're doing, a competition to do that better. >> it's me and pete versus will and adam. let's roll, who can create a better sundae. >> here we go. look at what we have access to. the extras. >> we're doing in order here.
6:55 am
we're doing it with a little more care. >> i want you to get in tight here. kayleigh: if we don't win, i'll have a very sad 3-year-old. >> you dump them all. put them together. kayleigh: she me how it's done. >> no, no, you do it. >> then we go here. not one. kayleigh: the taste is what matters. >> if i'm being honest, i like strawberries. >> this is your sundae. >> we've got one more scoop. kayleigh: we're going to lose. >> we really buried them. >> we have a new sundae. >> there we go. you can name it after us. >> kayleigh: a volcano. >> there we go. we've got to go. we're going to reveal the winners when we come back on "fox & friends." choosing a treatment for your chronic migraine - 15 or more headache days a month, each lasting 4 hours or more - can be overwhelming. so, ask your doctor about botox®. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine
6:56 am
before they even start. it's the #1 prescribed branded chronic migraine treatment. so far, more than 5 million botox® treatments have been given to over eight hundred and fifty thousand chronic migraine patients. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be signs of a life-threatening condition. side effects may include allergic reactions, neck and injection site pain, fatigue, and headache. don't receive botox® if there's a skin infection. tell your doctor your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions and medications, including botulinum toxins, as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. in a survey, 92% of current users said they wish they'd talked to their doctor and started botox® sooner. so, ask your doctor if botox® is right for you. learn how abbvie could help you save on botox®. - this is jabra enhance select. it's more than just a hearing aid. it's a smart hearing solution that makes hearing aids more convenient and less expensive. with jabra enhance select's premium package, better hearing doesn't have to start in a doctor's office.
6:57 am
it starts with our free online hearing test. you can fine tune your settings with your remote audiology team. with jabra enhance select you can get the same advanced hearing aid technology and professional care you expect from a clinic at a fraction of the cost. try it risk free for 100 days. visit jabraenhance.com.
6:58 am
trying to control my asthma felt anything but normal. ♪ ♪
6:59 am
enough was enough. i talked to an asthma specialist and found out my severe asthma is driven by eosinophils, a type of asthma nucala can help control. now, fewer asthma attacks and less oral steroids that's my nunormal with nucala. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. talk to your asthma specialist to see if once-monthly nucala may be right for you. and learn about savings at nucala.com there's more to your life than asthma. find your nunormal with nucala. ♪ will: welcome back. during the commercial break, dawn said that will and adam
7:00 am
won! [laughter] >> this one over here is pete and kaylee's, and they certainly followed directions beautifully, but i have to pick that one. >> thank you, dawn. pete: we're putting this one on the menu. >> now we're talking. pete: thank you all for being here. >> thanks for having us. pete: go to church. we'll see ya. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining us this morning. welcome to "sunday morning futures," i'm maria bartiromo. breaking news from former president donald j. trump. i sat down with the 45th president of the united states when he told me he has not yet made a final decision on whether he'll participate in the upcoming gop primary debate next month but that there will leakily be future members of his potential cabinet members on that stage should he win the

94 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on