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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  September 18, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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housing or much needed medical care. >> ainsley: there are so many stories coming out of the upper west side because the shelters and hotels are there where we see the migrants sleeping outside. that's your district. a lot of moms are saying my child's school is right down the street. >> right. and parks for the children. >> ainsley: central park sour backyard. we don't have backyards like we did in south carolina where i grew up or where when you lived in california. that's where we take our children to the playgrounds. >> there that's right. >> ainsley: very important. we wish you all the best. >> thank you very much. >> ainsley: we need something done about this city. tell us about your platform but also your story because in 1996 you were assaulted by a man that you knew and you ended up conceiving a baby. >> i did. >> ainsley: you chose to keep this beautiful baby. >> i did. it was a decision i made for myself. i was -- i felt i was strong enough to be able to make the decision to keep her and to raise her. and it was actually, that
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decision was really the -- really led to my contributed to my healing the most. keeping her, which a lot of people thought that that would be the opposite, being able to -- i look at this beautiful young lady every single day but actually was the source of my greatest healing. >> ainsley: that's beautiful. >> thank you. >> ainsley: when they put that baby in your arms, a mother's love is just something so powerful. >> yes. >> ainsley: will you use this as part of your platform? >> yes. it's a part of my story. so i'm an official speaker on the speaker's bureau for the rain organization, the largest antisexual violence. rape abuse incest national network. affiliates my story. i was also assaulted at the age of 4. i had the opportunity to use my voice and to share my story. the first time i actually shared my story was in the "new york post" publicly when i first competed in a pageant three years ago for miss new york u.s.a. and that allowed me to be vulnerable and to provide
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healing for myself when i shared my story and it brought hope for other people when people came to me and told me their story and it was very powerful. i'm very grateful for the opportunity it the pageant gave me. >> ainsley: it's very inspiring because those terrible times in your life did not define how are as an adult god bless you both. >> we believe in beauty for ashes. >> ainsley: me too. it's biblical. thank you. wish you best. reno we watch the pageant. >> thank you. >> thank you, ainsley. >> ainsley: wish you all the best with your election, too. >> thank you. >> ainsley: second hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ >> steve: good morning, everybody. it's 7:02 here on the east on september 18th, 2023. and we start this hour with a fox news alert. president biden right there is in new york city for the united nations general assembly, which officially starts today. >> brian: the iran -- and iran's president also set to attend as
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a prisoner swap which will release 6 billion in frozen assets is set to take place this morning. we expect it in about an hour. >> that's right. our very own jacqui heinrich is outside of the united states. jacqui, what do we expect to happen today? >> well, guys, good morning. we are expected to hear from the white house a short time from now. but we have already heard from the iranians. they have announced that the prisoner swap is going to take place today and the $6 billion in previously frozen funds is already moved from south korea into qatar. the white house maintains that this is not a ransom payment because these are not u.s. taxpayer dollars. but their argument is also somewhat self-defeating. listen to this. >> they aren't going to be released for nothing in exchange. >> didn't they also get 5 yawn iranians. >> they will get five iranians as well, jacqui. >> why did we need to add
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$6 billion on top of that? >> this is the deal that we were able to strike. >> the five iranians will receive clemsony in exchange for the release of five american detainees upper two detainees will stay in the u.s. we are told the iranian government will only be able to use these funds for humanitarian needs and strict controls on every transaction with the u.s. claim that the government can use the money however it wants. the deal comes ahead of the u.n. nuclear watchdog the iaea warned the international community is losing interest in holding iran account wble violations becoming routine and stock of weapons grain uranium increasing. congressional republicans said this deal has already had ramifications counter to u.s. interest. >> guess what has happened since then? a third of the inspectors at the iaea international atomic energy
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agency have been stripped by iran out. and also just today, this morning, the saudis said hey, this deal with israel you are trying to negotiate, we're out. it's having a damaging effect throughout the middle east. and it all started with this very naive transaction of 6 billion. imagine what iran is going to do with $6 billion. >> so u.s. officials insist they are still going to hold iran to account. that no sanctions on iran are being lifted here and this deal is separate from u.s. efforts to prevent iran from getting a nuclear weapon. the world's biggest sponsor of terrorism from getting a nuclear weapon, guys. >> steve: that's right. jacqui, welcome to new york. thank you very much. she joins us from the east side. now here in midtown, manhattan we got over here bring in the governor of commonwealth of virginia glenn youngkin. >> good morning. thank you so much for having me. lawrence, congratulations. so fun to be here. you were in virginia with us during the campaign.
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>> lawrence: congratulations on your wins a well, sir. >> thank you. >> steve: governor, let's talk about jacqui was just talking about. we are going to unfreeze that $6 billion. it was south korean money that was frozen during the trump administration. iran is going to get the money. they say they can use it for anything they want. although, we think it's for humanitarian reasons only. >> they will use it for whatever they want. that money is fungible. they will move it from one account to the next. >> ainsley: why the money? why not just do the prisoner exchange. >> i'm shocked. i don't understand that getting americans back is of the utmost importance. clearly there was opportunity for exchange here. i have no idea why the money was thrown on the table. let's be clear. that money will not go where they had promised the biden administration where it would go. i think it's representative. >> steve: you don't trust them. >> they are naive when it comes to iran. naive the way they deal with china. let's be clear. these are nations led by a communist party or a dictator that are going to do whatever
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they want to do. they are going to say whatever they need to say to get what they want. >> brian: over the weekend it was reported on abc that there was a difference between the foreign secretary of china in malta can jake sullivan. again, another official meeting with china. they don't meet with us. we don't have communications with the military to military are they more vulnerable than tlet on economically? you know so much about them from your previous career. >> first of all, they are vulnerable economically right now. we are seeing this economy that was really built on centralized planning stumble seriously. and it starts with an over building of rae all over the nation, forcibly funded by chinese controlled banks and other institutions. they have a real challenge. of course, the single child policy is going to come back as their item graphics have shifted so hard. it's go to come back and bite them because they have to pay for all of this. they are really struggling economically. the reality is we have to recognize that china is trying
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to dominate the world. and they will do everything in their possibility to do it. and that includes economic imperialism, forcing american companies to do what they want outside of china in order to keep access to that market. it includes massive surveillance, which we're seeing all other, not just balloons but what is happening in cuba. what is happening with chinese communist citizens coming in to states like virginia across the border. trying to get access to our military establishments. and it's saber ratling all the time against our best allies like taiwan. this is a moment that we have to step back and we have to recognize that these are not friends. and we have got to meet them with real strength and the biden administration continually shows weakness and that is at america's detriment. >> lawrence: governor, i want to switch gears with you. you are in a swing state. we covered your election heavily. we saw the change in the polling where you were down nut polling and you really took the issue of parental rights. as we go into this next
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election, what do you think the messaging of the g.o.p. knees to be to win the white house? >> well, we have a great window into that right now in virginia. because we're off cycle and we have our midterms. our entire house and entire senate is up, starting in five days. we start early voting and we have a 50 day sprint to november the 7th. and i think the issues in virginia today are just a precursor to the issues we will see in 2024. what are people in virginia worried about? they are worried about the cost of living and impact of bidenomics has had on his lives. every time they go to a grocery store it's a gut punch. they will can't make ends meet. they are also hugely concerned about their children's education. and the lernz loss that has been persistent following terrible, terrible decisions made previously to keep schools closed for an extended period of time is having a lasting impact. particularly on our younger kids. and they are terribly concerned about safety. and, of course, we are seeing the free flow of drugs coming
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over the border. make its way to every state. every state is a border state. and the cartels reaches deep ganged and illegal. five virginians a day on average die from fentanyl overdoses. five day. these are the realities that are on voters' minds in virginia this year. and i think they are the same realities that will be on americans' minds next year. >> ainsley: you have said children belong to families. not to the states. so many people agree with you. that's part of the reason why you won in virginia. because parents were fed up with the government trying to tell us how to raise our own children. we are seeing that in the state of new jersey what they're telling schools. also a new poll we wanted to ask you about. they polled men and women to find out who is the happiest. and women who were married with thinner 30 percent said they are very happy. drops to 25% for married and no children. it keeps dropping. if you talk to a woman who doesn't have a child. and then it drops for unmarried
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women with children, to 17%. as far as men, 35%. you can see right there. married fathers are the happiest. your reaction? >> well, i'm really happy. [laughter] >> so i'm part of that 35%. you know, it's just, i think, encouraging to see something we believe in our hearts is probably right. you know, i have haded great blessing of nearly 30 years of marriage to amazing woman suzanne we have four great kids. listen, raising a family is hard. in today's world where the family is being assaulted by bidenomics and it's so expensive to raise a family. 60% of americans can hardly make ends meet today. we see the role of social media completely invading families' lives and causing behavioral health and mental health challenges beyond anything we have ever seen before. so it's hard to raise a family today. and, yet, the blessing of a forever partner and kids is really special. so i was really pleased to see
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the results here. although they weren't surprising and, again, i'm constantly thankful every day for my amazing wife and our kids. >> steve: i know of some top republicans who would be very happy if you wound up running for president of the united states, this cycle. of course i know you are laser-focused on virginia. you would like republicans to control both of the chambers. after november 7th what are you going to do? let's say you win? >> first of all, we fully intend to win. this is the most important election, i think, in america right now. because it is a real step to. >> brian: what's the balance right now. >> our house we control 52-48. senate controlled 22-18 by the democrats. we have to hold the house and flip our senate. here we have lawrence, back to the topic we were talking earlier step forward and demonstrate the issues in 2024 for virginia and 2023 allow parents to raise their children or allow the state to step in
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and intervene r we going to support victims or crams? are we going to make sure virginians have access to their money or are we going to let the government continue to spend it. these are the same issues i think are so important for us to demonstrate in virginia that a state that used to be very blue, in fact, can stand up and completely pivot. and that's what is so exciting. i am laser-focused on virginia. i'm laser-focused on holding te house and flipping our senate. we have to get people off the slins. 45 days of early voting. secure your vote virginia.com and encouraged everybody. register to vote early. make a plan to vote early so that we, in fact, can win this most important elections. >> brian: governor, you saw the debate a month ago, three weeks ago and there is another debate next week is there anyone on that stage you thought they have much more on the ball than i do, i could never get the nomination as long as they are in the race? >> well, they are all campaigning in iowa and i'm campaigning in virginia. so we're just doing different.
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>> brian: what do you think about the talent on the stage? >> i'm impressed by the talent on the stage. think about it. we have extraordinary governors. we have got folks who have led the nation in various ways in foreign policy that's critical. and we have a former president. so we have great talent. the key thing for us is we have to win. the future of the nation at stake. last few years. our foreign policy is a disaster as we have an open border that is allowing for our foreign enemies come across unconstrained. we have been weak with russia and china. we have watched our economy fall apart. truly. we watched bidenomics truly steal our money. >> brian: he doesn't think so. >> americans and virginians know the truth. when they go to the grocery store or they try to shop for their children, they understand the reality of what he has done to this nation economically. and i would say, finally, the future of our nation sour kids. and what the liberal left has done to our kids in terms of
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educating them for the future is a true travesty. schools w were shut. virginia 44th in the nation getting kids back in the classroom. learning loss pervasive stickily for young kids provide the kind of resources to get them back. >> lawrence: what candidate in the race and i'm not asking you to endorse who is west for virginia then in this race right now that you see on that stage steve i think we know the answer to that. >> i'm going to let virginians choose when it's time. my big soaks we have great candidates who reflect a different path forward than what joe biden and we have got to win in 2024. >> ainsley: will you ever run -- will you ever run for president. >> my goodness gracious. >> steve: you haven't decided have you. >> what we are doing right now best job as governor. i'm not gotten a promotion in life without doing a good job in the one i'm enemy. >> i'm focused on doing well in
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the one i'm in. virginia bottom third in the nation job growth. now top four since then in job growth. largest workforce in the history of virginia. we just hit a 12-here my labor participation. our kids are getting huge focus. we rolled out intensive you tutoring and big program to combat chronic absenteeism. they thought families and kids not being in school was okay. it's not okay. they have got to be in school. >> brian: can i make one suggestion? as a former basketball player that likes to fill his time by working out. you watched doug burgum play basketball and tore his achilles. will that keep you from playing basketball before a big election. >> i do still like to play basketball i have to say my kids now beat me routinely. so i'm real hesitant to getting on the court. a big difference between 20-year-olds and 56-year-old. so i'm really careful. >> ainsley: really quickly, you have run businesses what would you tell big automakers? they are striking -- the workers
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are striking right now. >> i would say cut a deal. it's time. and put people in a room. listen, i have watched the -- these hard-working americans who are on strike interviewed on many shows. they want to go back to work. and, of course, the automakers want them back to work. >> brian: they want their benefits they lost that collapsed in 2008. >> here we see, again, the biden administration driving this myopic focus on everything being green and they recognize that more electric vehicles means fewer jobs. and that's just. >> brian: 40% fewer. >> on top of that, their own increases in salaries haven't kept up with bidenomics-driven inflation. this is a real indictment, i think, on the biden administration hog is supposed to prolabor. is he not helping labor. is he making the cost of living run away from them. they should come together agree. both parties have the right incentives and just a matter getting it done.
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>> steve: if your party wins both houses of the legislature in virginia. and mid december you want to make a big announcement stop by. we always have room on the couch for you. >> thank you. what we need between here and there is voters to get off the sidelines, republican voters to go vote. hold our house, flip our statement and make a statement for america that a state that was blue can wake up and say no, that is failing us, and we are going to have common sense conservative policies and we are going to win. >> steve: running for something. >> brian: governor, great to see you. >> thank you so much for having me. congratulations again, lawrence. always fun. listen, there is still room on this sofa. >> steve: we have one person behind you. >> brian: dying to do the news. >> carley: i love in governor youngkin comes in studio you always talk behind the scenes. thank you for coming in. we appreciate it. more news to get to. negotiations set to resume between union leaders and big three automakers comes as the strike enters its fourth day
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costing the u.s. economy an estimated $2 billion so far. former chrysler chairman and ceo bob nardelli will join us this hour to talk about this. the senate will no longer enforce a dress code. fox news senior congressional correspondent chad pergram confirming that news yesterday adding senators can now wear whatever they want; however, others entering the chamber must comply with the dress code. coats and ties for men, business attire for women. senate majority leader chuck schumer says he will still wear a suit but the move allows pennsylvania senator john fetterman to wear his usual outfit of a hood i can't understand basketball shorts in the chamber. so interesting development here. we're becoming a sloppy nation, guys. >> >> i don't like this at all. what are we slobs? >> brian: republicans have to win back the senate for another reason. >> steve: carley, senators don't have a dress code but people who visit. >> carley: isn't that interesting? was this just because of john
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fetterman? >> steve: i think. so. >> brian: has to be. >> steve: it's crazy. >> carley: i'm not on board. we are becoming a sloppy nation even outside the senate, too. walk around airports. people are wearing pajamas. >> ainsley: now they are in pajamas and slippers. >> carley: i sleep with my heels on. >> brian: as a nation we ask you to shower today and get dressed letz's start today. >> ainsley: please. >> brian: and vote early. >> steve: still ahead, off the rails. shocking new video shows a train filled with migrants heading from to the united states from mexico. dan is next. >> ainsley: one grocery store chain adding warnings labels on products that are shrinking due to inflation ♪ dance in my living room ♪ love with an attitude ♪ drunk she takes robitussin. so, she can have those one on ones again.
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>> lawrence: texas attorney general ken paxton scoring a victory over the weekend. acquitted on all 16 articles of impeachment. paxton faced corruption charges by a group of texas state senators. the white house pulling the strings. in a scathing letter. can i promise the following.
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buckle up because lawless policy also not go unchallenged. we will not allow to you shred the constitution and infringe on the rights of texans you will be held accountable. texas lt. governor dan patrick joins us now. you oversaw this trial. you were the judge in this trial. >> yes. what do the folks at home, that aren't texans need to know about it? >> well, they need to know that we should not look at impeachment like a parking ticket. impeachment was something that was rarely used in states or our federal government. for most of our history because it's a very, very serious issue. you are overturning a recent election. you throwing someone out of office. you better have the proof. you can't look at it like it's a parking ticket. that's what it is becoming in the texas house last may, over the memorial day weekend when no one was watching, they were on vacation, they had a four hour -- only a four hour debate in the texas house to impeach
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ken paxton, the attorney general. now, there were two house reps, lawrence that stood up on the floor, two of the most experienced lawyers. one of them said the impeachment in the texas house was indefensible. no witnesses you put under oath no. cross-examination. the attorney general was never allowed to answer any charges. another representative, one of the mothers experience lawyered in the house travis party stood up and said they would look back on this one day and say you know what? we're not going to know what we are going to do with this impeachment decades from now this was a farce from the beginning. members of the house only had four hours -- four hours to look at no evidence. again, there was no evidence in the case that they sent us, so they sent us the case. we spent 90 days studying it. we spent nine days in trial. and our members looked at the evidence and said it's not there. there's no there there. and so, he was acquitted. and i'm asking for our constitution to be rewritten on this issue.
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number one, in the federal government, if you are impeachment like clinton and president trump were. you still maintain office. in texas you get thrown out and suspended with pay. basically as senator -- representative john smithy said on the house floor our policy is to hang them now and judge them later e was put out of office with no pay. that needs to change. secondly every house impeachment in the past. they have only had two 1890s and 1917, they had witnesses under oath. they had cross-examination. they had a full trial that went on for weeks and months. and sent 70 cartons of documents. in this one we got basically nothing. there were no witnesses, no evidence at all. that's what house members said and that's why he was acquitted. the house never proved their case. they had a weak case. and every witness they put on the stand, which was now under oath. they crumbled. all but one. they crumbled on the witness stand with cross-examination. there is no witness and that's
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why he was acquitted. >> lawrence: all the allegations were presented before the last election and voters still reelected ken paxton. i want to get your thoughts on this because as you know the state of texas already dedicated about 5 phone 5 to the border. train shows migrants heading toward the southern border from mexico and then you have got these kids drawing under the razor wire that the texas dps installed. is this crisis only getting worse for our state? >> let me tell you for our state and for america. in most big cities now around the country they see people here illegally on the streets. everywhere they see them. i have been saying this and i know we have talked about this, lawrence. i have been saying it a long time. we are now approaching a moment where we have between be 10 and 15% of every person in america being here illegally. before biden came into office we had between 25 and 30 million people here illegally according accord mitand own study i keep.
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under joe biden 8 million, another million plus got-aways we see and we can't catch. that's 9 million and by the way. weave don't apprehend everyone as you know, lawrence. you are a texan. so if we apprehended 8 million let's say a one-on-one there is another 8 million that got. in that's 15 or 16 million people since biden became president that's illegally here in this country. add to that that was here before. we are now between 40 and 50 million people here illegally. they have health issues. most are not highly educated. they don't know our history. and it harms our very foundation of a nation. we need a republican president to shut down this border and end what is ending america over time. >> lawrence: either we are a nation or we're not. lt. governor dan patrick. thank you for giving us time this morning. >> thank you, lawrence. congratulations. you are a great man. we are proud of you.
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>> lawrence: thank you, sir. i appreciate it. >> steve: you are right you are a great man. 7:30 here nut. set to hold a press conference. nine teenagers escaped a juvenile detention facility in the state of pennsylvania. you are looking live at morgantown p.a. let's go ahead and listen to law enforcement because it sounds like they have captured. >> ainsley: all nine of them. >> i'm trooper beto-mania. the troop all nine of the escapees from last night were picked up within the last two hours. just give you a little rundown. we had four of them at 5r7d a quarter to 6 this morning go to a house.
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banged on the door they were done, they were tired, they were cold. we went there and took them into custody. then at 6:36 this morning, we had a report of a stolen vehicle and a trailer at 202 oak grove road. our people were right there. they got into like a sort of a pursuit with this vehicle. and got the vehicle stopped at furnace road and mounts road where they took four into custody in the pickup truck. one took off in the field. taken into custody shortly thereafter. so now we have all nine of them are in custody and they are not out there anymore. >> were any actively resisting arrest? >> no. that's the other five, i mean, no. >> what happens to the boys now? charged with escape, criminal
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mischief for the car i told you about before. the car they tried to get in. those -- we have to put them there with you they would be charged with any crimes that they committed, they are going to be charged with, whether it's stealing the truck, all going to be charged with escape. >> do you know how the truck was stolen? were keys left inside? >> that, i don't know. >> the capture of the four lead to the five? did they talk about the five? >> all kind of in the same area. all that stuff with the car, when they broke the window to try to get the car, that's all kind of in the same area. >> can you describe the conditions that you found the boys in. >> i saw two of them when i was leaving because our command post was out of brackets sis. they are really dirty looking and look like they have been out walking in the woods since 8:00 last night. i think both of them came in without any foot wear. but their foot wear were slides. so they looked pretty weary
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looking and dirty. >> can you elaborate on what extra effort. what extra costs. i'm not asking for a dollar amount but when people escape as they did over the last two weeks and as they did this morning. what kind of extra effort, manpower, cost does it put on the state troopers in order to bring them back in. >> we are going to do what we have got to do. a whole group of folks coming in this morning to start at 7:00. we had to cancel them that come from all around. that just doesn't come from right here. it comes from everywhere. >> is there any chance that schools reopen with all them all being caught or is that going to make them crazy. >> i don't know that they would do that do you know if there was change in tactics. cavalcante search and knowing they weren't homicide suspects. >> some of them did, like i said earlier, have some interesting charges. so, we have to look at anybody that's taken into custody and are in custody when we go to
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apprehend them, could one of those teenage boys kill a cop? they absolutely could. so we're always high alert it. doesn't matter how old they are i guess is what i'm saying. >> as none of them got access to anything else while they were out there. >> no, no. >> how far were they from the actual detention facility. >> about four miles-ish. not far. >> are they going back to the detention center? >> that's the whole thing right now. we're going to interview all nine of them. will all be interviewed by our criminal investigative unit at reading. >> steve: we are listening to law enforcement update the press regarding that essentially a jail break at a juvenile detention center last night about 8:00. nine juveniles escaped when we went on the air five minutes ago the number was four. but as that trooper said right there, ainsley, in the last one hour, they caught the last five.
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>> ainsley: yeah. he said some of their -- what they were convicted of is pretty questionable. so we weren't sure how dangerous they were. because we -- this is a flashback to last week when danelo cavalcante was caught on wednesday. it happens that these guys were actually caught 15 miles away from where he was caught. so people living in that area, the schools were on lockdown. when he escaped and then the schools in this case as well. so, you heard that reporter ask should they open up schools today or would that cause too much confusion? i know as a parent there are a lot of moms working moms and dads that are working dads that have already made plans. but they would probably prefer them to be in school because they want them to learn but also might not have another place to go. >> steve: can you tell the troopers are relieved those nine teenagers back in custody. >> ainsley: good job, law enforcement. >> steve: indeed. more updates throughout the morning. brian is in the downstairs area with something else. >> brian: let's talk unions. this morning negotiations set to resume between united auto workers and car makers as the
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strike enters its fourth day. the uaw says they are not rushing to endorse union joe. >> president biden says he is the most prounion president in american history but you haven't endorsed him. what is it going to take for you to do that? >> our endorsements are going to be earned. we have been very clear about that no matter what politician. >> how does he earn is it. >> we expect action, not words. >> brian: how many green action? former chrysler chairman and ceo bob nardelli joins us now. bob, you are the perfect person to talk to about it. removed it but know all about it. >> your thoughts about this strike. where do you side with management or do you side with the workers? >> well, thank you, brian, for having me on. and congratulations, lawrence, to join the program. so, brian, here's where i'm at. i'm looking for a fair, equitable settlement. we know that household income sunday a lot of pressure due to this administration's fueling inflation, number one. so i'm not on either side.
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i'm looking for a fair and honest negotiation. >> brian: what's fair when it comes to wages? >> well, fair was stellantis came out over the weekend of the encouraged put 2 #% on the table. i guess it was flat rejected at this point. i think what is happening here, brian, is there is tremendous polarization going on between the big three and the uaw. now, here's what is hang. they are looking over the fence and they see a settlement with u.p.s., 40%. let's keep in mind, u.s. settled but the teamsters lost 30,000 jobs when they pressured yellow freight. then they saw american airlines. they saw the dock workers on the west coast. they are in line saying hey, it's our turn. i think, you know, fair negotiation to try and keep up with inflation for household income. maybe there should be a cost of living to keep that steady as we go forward. but some of the other things are clearly overreaching, brian. you can't get paid 40 hours a week for 32 hours of work there is no way we can technically
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reinstate pension programs. there is a number of add ons on here whether they're just negotiating ploys. pushing both parties further apart. i think this is going to have a devastating impact on our economy. >> brian: ripple effect down to dealerships who now, again, won't be getting cars. now there is just kind of a wave type of strike where only 8% of the workers in ohio, michigan and missouri are out. wilet's see if that grows or changes. bring to you something else in your note that says matters. that's this government subsidized push to green energy. and these electric cars. the government is making sure electric cars is successful by giving these companies money to have these electric cars and subsidies for the consumers to buy them. that's not fair. >> no. that isn't fair. let's unpack that for a moment. this is the very administration who is desperate to get endorsed by the uaw and, yet, they are forcing the transfer from
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internal combustion engines to electric vehicles. my good friend jim farley has lost $6 billion in conversion to evs over the past two years. he just took a $9.2 billion grant to build a battery plant in michigan. that's proof problem that he is not trying to, you know, eliminate union workers, uaw workers. now, the problem is this is their -- they are forcing something before it's time, brian, they need an infrastructure to be able to charge these vehicles. and so, it's not anxiety over ev, it's anxiety over the ability to charge these vehicles going forward. so this is going to continue to compound the problem that we have. and i think what is happening here, also, brian, is you have talked about it the cost of these vehicles is going up. second, i lived through this in '07, '08, and '09 with obama. it another page out of the playbook put in cafe standards which eventually they had to take a off ramp.
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forcing consumers to buy small cars. you cannot force a consumer to buy something they don't want. the problem is there is a lot more optionality now. honda, hyundai, tesla. i think the uaw is in a very sensitive situation with a very fragile economy that could go sour on them. >> brian: i think a guy like you coming in would actually help in the negotiations, especially when they hear you speak like that. bob nardelli, thank you so much. i know it must kill you as not see chrysler not one of the big three. forced to sell off chrysler because barack obama decided that was the right thing to do. maybe you will get investors and get it back. bob, thank you so much. >> thank you, brian, yes. it was a tough nut to swallow. let me say that. >> brian: absolutely. should be for all americans. thank you. killed in the line of duty, police mourn the loss of a los angeles sheriff's deputy gunned down in a suspected ambush at just 30 years old. we have a live report as police
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>> ainsley: new details coming to light in the investigation of a murder of a l.a. county sheriff's deputy over the weekend. >> lawrence: the sheriff's office is calling it a targeted
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attack and now offering $250,000 reward for any info leading to an arrest. >> brian: alexandria hoff joins us live with details. alex. >> good morning to you. investigators are all using words like senseless and execution saying this was completely unprovoked. they a are still searching for a motive, looking for surveillance video that' as to show a dark colored car showing up to patrol vehicle. the car speeds away and cruiser drifts forward. l.a. county sheriff's deputy ryan clinkunbroomer shot in the head. found by a good samaritan who alerted the authorities. clinkunbroomer died at the hospital. 30 years old and roadways shut down for a procession as his body was transported. third generation law enforcement. the former county sheriff worked with clinkunbroomer's father and offered. this. >> it's just horrible because one, our heart goes out to the
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clinkunbroomer family and they have such a rich tradition of family service themselves. the palmdale station is a very tight-knit community of they live in the community that they serve. this happened literally outside the front doors of the station. >> a very emotional vigil was held yesterday, too. ryan clinkunbroomer leaves behind a very, very new fiancee. he got engaged just four days before he was killed. guys? >> ainsley: oh my word. that is awful. >> steve: thank you, alex. >> ainsley: poor fiancee and family. >> lawrence: baby on the way as well. now to a fox weather alert. one person is dead after a post three-point line cyclone tears through new england. 2,000 people waking up without power this morning as clean up efforts continue. >> ainsley: watch this a police officer narrowly missing being hit by a tree as he is walking to his cruiser. so now let's head over to janice dean for fox weather forecast. wow, close call, janice.
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>> janice: absolutely. lee is out of the way. watching potential disturbance number two. that's probably going to become three-point line regardless heavy rain in the forecast for the east coast. we have nigel out here that is a hurricane. another area of low pressure coming off the coast of africa. nigel is not going to impact the u.s. but this will. potential three-point line trouble for the southeast. we have got this lingering area of low pressure. that could slowly organize, gaining some three-point line characteristics that could become a named storm. we are still going to see the impacts from florida up towards the plant. mid-atlantic.even the northeast. another area of low pressure across the northeast. sloppy drive in all up and down the i-59 corridor from washington to boston. that's going to linger throughout the day today. so flooding is going to be cancer. also looking at some showers and thunderstorms for the four corners and the southern plains. tomorrow, warmer temperatures on the way for the upper midwest and, of course it is a messy wet
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day in the northeast. including new york city. i'm very glad to be inside. my hair looks great. i didn't do. this thanks to our magician, the hair and makeup staff here at the fox news channel. and welcome, lawrence, you know, i love you. welcome agoortd curvey couch. you guys look all nice and sunny today. >> steve: our family has grown. another tax deduction. >> janice: very nice. nice to see you all. >> lawrence: thanks, j.d. >> lawrence: still ahead the great sean hannity joins us live coming up. >> ainsley: but, first, senator chuck grassley has been in politics for 66 years. that's a long time to be in one profession. i caught up with him ahead of his 90th birthday to talk marriage and farming and his role that his state plays in or the role his state, i should say, plays in our republic. >> the importance of iowa. the voters here. the caucus. first in the country. >> we are proud of it.
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didn't see this coming. hunter biden is now suing the irs. the president's son claiming the two whistleblowers who went before congress about biden taxes violated hunter biden's privacy. this is breaking news, we'll talk about it in five minutes. >> brian: senator chuck grassley celebrating his 90th birthday yesterday. >> ainsley: we traveled to iowa to meet him and his amazing, funny wife barbara.
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>> glad to be able to show you around the farm, i've lived here 40 years. my son robin, raised on the family farm and got a grandson in it 2% of people in the united states grows product for the other 98%. i attempt to educate 98 prgs of america that food doesn't grow in supermarkets, it grows on farms. >> ainsley: can you teach me to shuck corn? >> give the corn a little twist. yes, you did it perfect. you did it like we did in 1930, 1940s. >> ainsley: how many years you
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been in office? >> 16 years in state legislature. >> ainsley: you acquired and released the 1023 form. it was redacted. >> most horrific redaction is 17 phone calls between ukraine ol garbing and two with vice president biden and 15 with hunter biden. now what those phone calls say, i don't know. i don't want to make a judgement of the guilt of any of the bidens, my oversight is to make sure the fbi does their job without political bias. >> ainsley: some people say we need age limitses. look at joe biden, democrats are saying he is too old to run for office. what do you think? what do you say?
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>> in 240-year history of our country, it seems this is something americans decide whether biden ought to be elected or some republican instead and so-chuck grassley, i was elected by the people of iowa. voters of iowa made a sound decision and that is what you have to go by when you have democracy. >> ainsley: importance of iowa, the caucus, first in the country. >> we're proud of it and want to keep it that way. everybody come to iowa and test their political mettle here. barbara, i have some pictures to show ainsley, will you come over
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and help me? >> ainsley: thank you for welcoming us to your beautiful home. how did you meet? >> blind date and married eight months later. >> ainsley: how many years? 69. >> 68. no, 69. we just had the 69th one. >> ainsley: what happened on the way to your wed something >> she was 15 minutes late. >> we had a thatted tire. what do you do? change it. this is our family, five children, nine grandchildren and 13 great grandchildren. >> ainsley: you have a special birthday, turnin

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