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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  October 5, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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let's see if he can keep that support. >> a lot of folks support him. he said look, i have to do what was right for me and my family. i can't be with the democratic party the way they are right now. he goes i've been governing as a republican mayor for the last four years. they just didn't know it. >> steve: lawrence, you have been at norman's all morning long. what did you have for breakfast and what would you suggest if folks are traveling through north dallas? >> get the biscuits and gravy and cinnamon rolls. >> steve: see you back in new york city. hop on the plane with your dog and get back to gotham. >> see you all tomorrow. >> brian: all right. run to the radio. "america's newsroom" starts now.
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>> bill: what you are watching is a stunning and yet absurd sight on our southern border. that is el paso, texas, video from overnight. droves of people rushing our southern border. it is just the latest example of the chaos down there prompting a major reversal on behalf of the president and the white house. that's where we start today. i'm bill hemmer. dana has the day off. our friend and colleague smitty got the early alarm today. >> sandra: always good to be with all of you. i'm sandra smith and this is "america's newsroom." the urgency at the border. the migrant crisis prompting president biden to resume construction of the border wall. the department of homeland security is fast tracking 20 miles of new barrier. dhs chief mayokas said the need for it is acute and immediate. he is waiving --
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>> they've seen a quarter million crossings. it has gotten so bad the president is willing to break a key promise that he made to the left in 2020. >> trump campaigned on build that wall. are you willing to tear that wall down? >> president biden: there will not be another foot of wall constructed on my administration. all those people are seeking asylum and deserve to be heard. that's who we are. a nation says if you want to flee and you are fleeing oppression you should come. >> we have been to the border. we've been to the border. >> you haven't been to the border. >> and i haven't been to europe. i mean, i don't understand the point you are making. i'm not discounting the importance of the border. >> sandra: the decision comes after a record month at the border. 260,000, it is eating up
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resources and no sign of slowing. jeff paul reporting live from eagle pass, texas this morning. another epicenter of this crisis. what are you seeing, jeff? >> the group of 300 we saw cross in eagle pass, texas, yesterday is a drop in the bucket compared to the thousands who are crossing the u.s./mexico border on a daily basis. that's in part why the biden administration is going to waive 26 federal laws to restart border wall construction it had previously stopped back in january of 2021. biden administration at the time called a massive border wall quote not a serious policy solution. but now roughly 20 miles are going to be constructed in the rio grande valley in south texas. the trump administration built around 450 miles of barriers along the southern border between 2017 and 2021. environmental groups are opposed to the new construction saying it impacts eco systems and
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wildlife in the area. when you talk with folks who call the rio grande valley home and have been dealing with the flow of migrants and crossings for years, they have long been frustrated that more hasn't been done. >> it's crazy down here. we are back to numbers that we were seeing in may. it is catastrophic. it is unreal. it is a travesty. a humanitarian crisis at its best and we have folks that we are supposed to call leaders. they don't deserve that title anymore. >> new video from the mexican side of the border, a crowd of migrants and their reaction to just arriving on that side of the u.s./mexico border. we've reached out to cbp for comment and waiting to hear back from them and also tracking a hearing that's going on right now regarding the legality of the river buoys that texas governor abbott had installed in
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eagle pass. >> sandra: thank you so much. >> bill: sandra, want to give our audience an idea of the area. you've seen our reporters up here in el paso for the past 2 1/2 years. you've seen our reporters here in eagle pass and also laredo and along the border between texas and mexico. this area is right here, star county, population 65,000. this is what sources are telling us from customs and border patrol. griff jenkins our reporter as well. they have to use the money or lose the money, all right? there was a high trafficking area for migrants and drugs and violence. and there will be technology used in this as well including sensors. it might not be the last, either. so this is starr county population 65,000. you see texas to the east. this is the trump steel that sits there along a highway in
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that town in texas. our drone team caught this on sunday this past week. it is all right there, a highway runs nearby. you see the traffic in broad daylight. another story happening on the southern border. you have to pay attention to this. you will see an obvious trend here. these are the suspected terrorists arrested at the southern border. back in 2019 you were at 0. three in 2020, 15 in 2021, 98 last year and so far this year-by-year to date 151. the pattern is obvious in the southern border. come across the room right here and bring in my colleague sandra smith and also paul mauro to talk more about this today. smitty, take it away. >> sandra: this crisis prompting the new york city mayor, eric adams to cry out for help and he is traveling to mexico. the first stop on a four-day trip to latin america. the goal convincing migrants not to come to new york city. paul mauro joins us now. make sense of what's happening here. the entire country is dealing
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with this crisis. >> what's happening here is that the mayor here in new york city, you are seeing attempting a political move relative to an enforcement problem, okay? he is going down there. what he is going to do according to what he is saying is he will tell the folks don't come to new york, okay? here is my question. will he say the following phrase? we're no longer a sanctuary city. those six words according to the mayor's numbers are worth $2 billion a word. he won't say that here but yet he is going down there. think what the message is. he is saying he is going there to tell them don't come to new york. he is not saying don't rush the border or come to america. the failing policies at our southern border is having the effect nationwide of turning our cities against each other. why are we having a battle between the new york mayor and let's say the el paso mayor? isn't it a national problem? >> bill: here is mayor adams when he got to mexico city.
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watch. >> this is just the beginning of the really journey of trying to feel the ground and understand the whole flow of migrant and asylum seekers, a lot of information we learned coming down, the different places and the impact coming from ecuador, panama. >> bill: okay. so the point is for adams his entire political career now rests on what is happening in this city on this singular issue. he had 800 arrivals in new york city every day. the numbers continue to go up. 18 to 20 feet high barrier they call jersey walls meaning they can be moved not necessarily permanent, at least initially. the kind of walls you see driving down a highway when they are trying to redirect traffic. made of concrete these jersey walls.
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>> let's see if it works. i can tell you how this devolves to the ground. here in new york we talk about the migrants and saying there is not an indication that they are any more prone to criminality than the general population. of course that number hasn't been studied. we don't know. but that said, the reporting is that the pick pocket crews that are now working times square are migrant crews. you don't become a pick pocket overnight. that's a skill. venezuela is doing what the cubans did back in the 80s, they are emptying their prisons. of course you will get a certain level of criminality. that's why mayor adams' legacy depends upon this. he came in saying he is going to clean the city up but it has been a vacillating administration. he is afraid of his progressive left. >> sandra: we've talked about this for quite some time. he is not calling out the biden administration and its policies by name. when will he say these are the policies leading to this?
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>> he is trying to thread the needle. he says give us money. he doesn't say knock it off. that's the big distinction. you put your finger on it. that's the problem again, he wants to have it both ways. and he wants to be able to say to the progressive left look, you know, i'm on board with all this. we're a sanctuary city. he won't say that phrase. he is in a position where he is kind of boxed in. he can't be all things to all people. he came in saying he was going to turn new york city around. he cheer leads the city. i support that. at least he is doing something and went down and address it. >> bill: look at the walls they're waving here. safe drinking water act. endangered species. the left will hate this idea. it may not be the end. final word. >> i don't think it will work. he can go down and say what he wants. the biden administration rolled out the red carpet. ironic that mayokas is looking for 20 miles of wall after he sold out his own personnel and stuck to the story which he knew was false that they were whipping migrants on the way in.
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he lost his own agency. you don't get it back after you've sold out your own people like that. >> they sued texas for the floating barriers, arizona for the containers they put on the borders. ted cruz thinks it's window dressing. >> i agree. >> bill: crisis unfolding coming to a head in the city of chicago. check this out. >> you work for us. you work for us. you work for us. >> bill: so we have been hearing from them all week. if you heard that clip they say you work for us. residents are livid over a plan to move hundreds of migrants into their neighborhood. the former governor of illinois is going to join us in a moment with his thoughts on the history of the city and where it is now. stay tuned. >> sandra: interesting. over 75,000 kaiser employees hitting the picket lines this morning as the largest healthcare strike in u.s. history enters its second day now. chief correspondent jonathan
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hunt is live for us from los angeles. hi, jonathan. >> good morning, sandra. talks between the unions and kaiser appear to be at a standstill this morning. so as a result, hundreds are turning up here once again even though it is still dark here in l.a. to prepare for a picket outside what is one of the largest kaiser hospitals in its network. thousands were out across the country yesterday to register their annoyance with kaiser as they said keeping staffing levels at dangerously low levels and keeping wages well below the unions say what the workers need to keep up with inflation. the workers say that kaiser simply has to do more and start talking seriously. listen here. >> we just want them to bargain in good faith with us. come to the table and help us to solve this short staffing
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crisis. >> is it all about wages in the end? >> at the end it's all about patient care. >> kaiser says it is all about patient care and released a statement saying in part kaiser, our industry and our employees are now operating in a new cultural labor and post pandemic environment that we're all working hard to understand. we're committed, kaiser said, to finding workable solutions. but at the moment there do not appear to be any solutions. as i said, the talks at a standstill at this point. what is the impact on patients? kaiser says its hospitals and emergency rooms will remain open but non-urgent procedures are being postponed. some medical offices are being shut down. and some pharmacies, too, are closed. now this strike in itself, sandra, is due to run through to 6:00 a.m. saturday morning. the workers say they will be
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back at work after that point. but if there is no deal, they plan another possibly longer strike next month. sandra. >> sandra: it's a remarkable development. we will certainly be watching that closely. jonathan, thank you. >> bill: tends to be the trend these days. "wall street journal" tells us the u.s. lost more than 7 million workdays because of labor disputes so far this year. that goes until the end of august. more than any full year going back 23 years. that does not include the ongoing auto workers strike, right? that's the writers union, now the health workers and others have gone to the line. >> sandra: under the president of the president who calls himself the most pro union president ever. something to think about. >> bill: a lot are challenging that today. 14 minutes past. back in california the big school district there is
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underfire for celebrating national coming out day as half the students can't make the grade in math, in english. where are the priorities? are they misplaced? >> sandra: some dismal numbers there. president biden weighs in on the battle for the speaker's gavel. the unprecedented ouster of kevin mccarthy. >> bill: should california get rid of its palm trees? some climate activists are raising hay about this saying it is not good for the environment. some folks are not happy. >> sandra: good luck with that. ♪
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asked about it. took a pass on offering tips to kevin mccarthy and republicans on their next speaker. says he is not high enough on the ladder to weigh in on that. check it out from the white house. >> what is your advice to the next house speaker? >> president biden: that's above my pay grade. >> bill: the president called on congress to fix what he called a poisonous atmosphere in washington after mccarthy's removal. >> sandra: swimming's governing
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body was looking for way to prevent biological men from competing against women. it set up an open category for transgender athletes at the world cup in berlin starting tomorrow. the plan is scrapped after it received no entries to compete. let's bring in fox news contributor douglas murray. thank you for being in new york with us. many saw this as a solution. provide their own category and that doesn't seem to be working. >> it has 0 entries might be the definition of failure. no, i mean i think people have to realize again what's happening here. the whole issue of trans in sports is about people born as male beating women in women's sports. very, very rarely is there a case of a biological woman trying to compete against men in men's sports and very, very rarely, i can't think of any occasion, that that has happened and the biological female has won in a male sport. >> bill: caitlyn jenner has been
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making this case for a while now. give them their own category. now they have an open lane. >> yeah, but again, you know, this is the solution if people want to be fair and if it actually was about what some trans activists claim it was about this would be the obvious solutionargued for a long time
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and written about this. i wrote this in my book the
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madness of crowds. the problem is athletics is biological men wishing to beat biological women in women's sports. that's it. there isn't any solution to that other than saying you can't do it. >> bill: a couple more topics. in los angeles some folks out there want to get rid of palm trees say it is terrible for the environment. why palm trees make less sense in a warming world. "l. a. times."enter heat kills more people in the u.s. than flooding, hurricanes and tornadoes combined. residents and lower income non-white communities disproportionately bear the brunt of extreme heat due to a lack of tree shade in those neighborhoods. through that lens palms are making less and less sense to plant or maintain. i'm not quite sure i believe what i just read there. [laughter] >> well, i could have predicted it because everything always has to be looked at through this lens, doesn't it? always like who is disproportionate lull affected by palm trees? it will have to be lower
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socio- economic groups and black communities. you can predict that one. anyone who thinks that getting rid of palm trees is going to solve any global warming issues or anything like that just should go over to china and see the number of coal-fired power factories that they're building every week and then wonder whether or not the palm trees are the problem. >> bill: a new one every 14 days in china. third cop i can. >> sandra: they're worried about that while their kids are failing in that state. the number of kids meeting the standards is continuing to drop. the percent of students meeting standards in english, less than half, 47%. this is looking back. that's what it was. it has dropped now to this, 47% of students in california are meeting english standards and just 33% of students are meeting math standards. while they are focused on that they continue to fail the kids in that state, douglas.
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>> the same in state after state in this country and it should be a national scandal. >> sandra: it should be an emergency. >> it should be in emergency. in new york 51% of kids in new york between 3 and 8 grade failed proficiency in literacy. 64% once you get to black students. 64% of black students in new york state are being failed so badly by the schools they aren't proficient in literacy? and we're not -- every time the unions and everyone else say it's a matter of money. it is not a matter of money. there is a bigger spend in students on their education here in new york and in l.a. than most private schools. so it is not about money. it is about teachers. they are totally failing the kids. >> bill: 40% of baltimore city high schools where the state exam was given did not have a single student proficient in math. not one. >> we think we'll compete with
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china in that situation? china has many times the population of this country fighting for the lifestyle that we're used to. >> bill: they call it educational homicide in baltimore. they are probably right. douglas, thank you for your time. we have this from new york now. >> this will be an interesting trial but it is really what she said and what he said and what does the paper show? that's what i want to know. show me the money. >> bill: there is a lot of money, too. the crypto kid in court for day two. prosecutors argue he stole billions and created an empire built on lies. back on that in a moment. chicago struggling to house thousands of migrants and the folks who live there in those neighborhoods are not holding back. >> i want mayor brandon johnson to understand that you are selling us out for people who can't vote for you. -ahh, -here, i'll take that. woo hoo! ensure max protein 30 grams protein,
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- [narrator] wounded warrior project helped me find the strength to go further than i ever thought possible. - [narrator] i was able to come outta my shell and really connect with others.
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- [narrator] so i can feel like part of a team, part of the community again. - [narrator] it's possible to live better. - [narrator] it's possible to have a voice and to be heard. - [narrator] to feel understood. - [narrator] to find peace. - because i've experienced firsthand that anything is possible. (inspirational music) >> bill: all right. 9:31 in new york. day two in the trial of the
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crypto kid gets underway. the top democratic donor accused of stealing customer's money to live a high lifestyle. they said his power was built on lies. fox business kelly o'grady has been on the story from the beginning in downtown manhattan. good morning. >> good morning, to you, bill. the prosecution's case is underway and everything that we are going to see from them over the next couple of weeks will feed into the picture they are painting of sbf as a fraudster. they said he hung out with actors and politicians. the money he was stealing from ftx's customers. those celebrity connections are being used to bolster the false credibility the prosecution is saying sbf created. they played the tom brady and larry david commercial and underscored safety on the platform. one of thieves witnesses they
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called was a victim. a trader who lost $1 hundred thousand. he argued he never would have invested if he knew his money would be used for other things. when the defense pressed him if he read the ftx terms of service he said no. you see how the defense is creating doubt in the minds of the jurors. today we hear from a crypto coder. the prosecution has to be careful not to muddy the evidence and confuse jurors. send it back to you. >> bill: a crypto coder. that could be thick. kelly, thank you very much. we'll see how it goes there in lower manhattan. thank you. you have something coming up, right? >> sandra: a fascinating story. i go back to my trading days and sometimes there are these young up-and-comers who show a lot of talent. he was one of them and people threw a lot of faith in him and it led to him taking on big risks in the crypto world. here is a bit of the special we have on fox nation screaming now. >> a privileged rise crashed down hard. >> if you think of sam bankman-fried as a shooting
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star, he basically became the american story of crypto for three very bright years. and then fell right out of the sky. >> sandra: kevin owe leery was one of the first ones to see funds evaporate. this was a big warning of the crypto world and how you prevent something like this from happening again. so many people were affected and so many people trusted them. remember the friendly media surrounding sam bankman-fried, when it first erupted, right? this was just a massive fail, a massive collapse that affected a lot of people and a lot of money. >> bill: check it on fox nation. smitty did it. it's there for you now. >> the reality is got to say no. that's the simple solution is no. turn the buses around. >> we are a community of black people where we already get the low scraps. then you want to take the little
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scraps that we have and put us at the bottom of the barrel? that's not fair. >> sandra: tensions are high in big cities. many chicago residents are fed up as that city struggles to house its influx of migrants. thousands of migrants are sleeping in police stations there or airports as they wait to be placed in shelters. the number of people bused in from the southern border is expected to double. so you think they have problems now, those problems may be growing. former governor of illinois joins us now. thank you very much for joining us. what is your big picture thoughts on this? what is going to happen here? >> well it's a humanitarian crisis, a national security crisis, caused by biden's open borders policies, caused by the rhetoric of democratic governors like pritzker who used to work for me when i was a democratic governor. they talk about sanctuary cities, the tale of two letters our governor sent last year.
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invited migrants to come to chicago. now that they are actually coming and not staying in texas, arizona or new mexico our governor and mayor are crying for help and changing their tune. and your residents that you just pointed out on the west side of chicago, a neighborhood i grew up in. i boxed golden gloves out of that park. the moms talking about places for their kids to play sports and do constructive things as opposed to hanging around on the street corners doing criminal things. it is all about making choices and setting priorities. right now democrat leaders created a crisis in cities like chicago and new york because they didn't expect the rhetoric would be acted on. they just figured let the governors of texas and arizona and new mexico deal with the problem. now at their doorstep they've changed their position and we have mayor johnson going down to the border to do something that president biden refuses to do. >> sandra: the mayor in his own words on that trip. governor, thank you.
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listen. >> i have a wife, i have children, they have schedules. and plus we still have public safety that we have to address. we still have the unhoused we have to address. i still have a budget i have to address and i'm doing all of that with a raising three black children on the west side of the city of chicago. i am going to the border as soon as possible but i have to coordinate it to make sure my wife and children are secure as well. >> sandra: john the -- the tension is high with long time black residents told to step off the corner to step back and give their place in line to illegal latin immigrants. black voters have been betrayed. what is the political consequences of this growing crisis, governor? >> it's a very real possibility there will be a split in the democratic coalition because of this issue. a question of priorities.
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whose side are you on? one of the moms there was crying out you work for us and the fact of the matter is that they've created these policies that have pitted part of the democrat constituency groups against each other. i would say again, 300 to $400 million has been spent already in chicago and illinois. that's money that could have been used for more police officers in a city that's facing violent crime. that's money that could be put into schools so the classrooms can be smaller and kids can learn better. the kids disproportionately are kids of color, largely african-american kids. the community hurt the most by these policies are the black communities and -- >> sandra: the very communities the democrats say they are out to help the most. we're running out of time. i ran some crime stats over your tenure compared to now. it shows actually crime was higher in the city of chicago
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during your governorship than it is now. i asked paul mauro about that a second ago. he suggested that somehow cook county has cooked the books to improve the numbers. can you give some perspective on that? why are the violent crime stats appearing to be lower now than when you were in office back then? >> one of the great prime ministers of england used to say there are lies, and statistics. it has to be untrue. the city of chicago was a much safer place when mayor daily was the mayor and i was the governor. talk to anybody who lives in chicago and talk to you how unsafe things are today. it is happening in every neighborhood. when you spend $4 hundred million to deal with illegal immigrants and taking it away from police officers or from our schools and from communities that need it, it is misplaced priorities and a real serious problem that will only get worse in chicago, not better. >> sandra: a city so many of us know and love and wish it could
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get back to what it once was. thank you for joining us, appreciate it. all right. >> bill: so 75,000 healthcare workers on the line. they are walking it again today. the largest healthcare strike we have seen in american history, wow. how it's affecting patients and the treatment they need. plus who wins iowa? this could determine a lot in the republican battle for the nomination. you are about to hear from three who will caucus in january. who do they like and which issues move them today? ♪
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>> sandra: the border crisis is being felt across the country
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including massachusetts where it is making it hard for some football fans to attend the army/navy game. molly line has the story from foxboro, massachusetts for us this morning. hi, molly. >> good morning. for the first time ever the army/navy game is coming here to new england. some fans, including the families of players and veterans, are scrambling to find new accommodations, new hotel rooms. reportedly some of those hotel rooms are going to arriving migrants. according to some reports some reservations long held by military families planning to attend the historic match-up now slated to be at gillette stadium have been canceled to accommodate migrant families which have a right to shelter under massachusetts law. more than 6,000 families are in shelters now. with new migrant arrivals the state is buying up hotel rooms for the use as emergency shelters. mark owns new jersey based hills dale travel and was stunned to get a mass cancellation email
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from one hotel management group. >> we recently were notified we are no longer able to accommodate any groups as the hotels are now being leased out to the state of massachusetts for refugees. >> hotel management that runs the comfort inn confirms the company is thrilled to provide shelter to refugees writing we consider it a privilege to offer a safe haven to those forced to flee their homes and enthusiasm stems from our belief in the fundamental values of compassion and unity. the massachusetts national guard has been called in here in the state to help with the migrant crisis. they are working at emergency shelters at the hotels and some areas across the state the democratic governor declared a state of emergency in august as this crisis continues. sandra. >> sandra: molly, thank you. >> bill: so smitty, a new poll finds that donald trump holds onto a commanding lead in a
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crowded field. there is also the potential wild card in the race that looms and you never know what happens in states like iowa. let's go to iowa right now and talk to two voters, tim atkins is with me and deal yeah meyer is with me as well living on the eastern side of the state. you live davenport and walcott. tim, i want to start with you. you are leaning toward desantis or donald trump. what makes the difference for you? >> i think there will be a lot of things that will take place between now and the primary and i am actually undecided at this point. trump, desantis, tim scott, and others. but i do lean toward trump and desantis. >> bill: you sound like you are wide open, is that what i hear? >> to the very end i will remain
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undecided until we get a candidate. >> bill: you are a real iowa caucus goer. i have met many of you out there in your state. delia. you are leaning toward nikki haley. what do you like about her? >> i feel like as a woman we have some shared experiences. i know that i'm probably nothing like her but when i talk to her i feel like we have a lot in common. and i think that what her experience is perfect for the job. i think that a lot of times she comes off as the adult in the room. she is calm, she is comforting, she is saying the right things. and you know, i hope she does well. but i am also a caucus goer and keeping an open mind. i just really want to see a change at the top. >> bill: all right. they have to come and prove it to you is what i've learned from iowa. now, tim, you are a retired miner and you list your top
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issues, the economy, you are right in line with the rest of america on that. also border security and crime. explain why that matters. >> the economy affects us all. it has affected me and everyone in the united states with the inflation, the cost of living rising. i think the biden administration policies have had a direct impact on that. as far as the border goes, i support immigration, but i support it legally and managed under control. and i see the border right now with all the drugs, cartels, sex trafficking issues that come along with it as a major, major issue. i see it out of control and i would like to see that in control. >> bill: you are not alone. a lot of republicans feel the same way. delia you own a truck stop and the issues for you are
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leadership and crime. explain that. why? >> you know, i think retail crime has been hitting all retail stores. you are hearing about targets closing, wal-marts closing, walgreens. i think that retail crime is a big issue and there is nothing that people are willing to do about it. the police don't always support. now in iowa we have great police support and i don't feel like we are having that problem. but a lot of my friends in the industry are just really facing a rough time of it. i don't want it to come to iowa. i think that's ridiculous. and you can't just steal stuff. you can't walk into a store and get it. >> bill: you have to have boundaries, right, in every way. i know the truckers talk to each other and you have your ear to the ground on that. last question, tim. we might see president trump back before a judge again today. if he were convicted in any of
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these trials, would that make a difference to you? >> a great question. possibly. i would want to see the outcome. i would want to see how all this plays out. of course, i want to see a republican candidate win and be back in the white house. so again, i'm remaining open on that and see how everything plays out before i decide which candidate i will support for the republican party. >> bill: 15 seconds, sorry, delia for the time loss here. same question to you. would a conviction matter? >> of course a conviction matters, but again, i think that the iowa voters will pick somebody that is a suitable president and will move forward with that. >> bill: we shall see together in january the 15th. tim and delia. thank you for your time today and appreciate you coming on. thanks.
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>> sandra: so-called killer robots at the center of a new military arms race. it is cutting-edge technology with some scary implications.
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behavior. >> it is the 12th known incident of this dog biting a white house staffer. a lot of times when that happens there is a lawsuit. isn't the president worried about getting sued? >> i will refer you to the secret service or the first lady's office. >> sandra: there have been 12 known incidents of the german shepherd biting white house or secret service personnel. that's according to a report from judicial watch. i don't believe there are bad dogs. usually it's bad owners. >> bill: you are a dog owners. >> sandra: dogs need boundaries. especially for a german shepherd. they are so protective. unless they know what their role is, things can go badly and that can have a dog bite. >> bill: we always had a dog and my mom made that call, right? german shepherd, mixed breed, colley. my dad hated that dog and then we moved to a lab in charlie.
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and charlie got older and she got mean and she got mean because she got territorial. it does happen to your point and unfortunate. however, you have to take action, right? >> sandra: that's happened. >> bill: you have to be the responsible party. >> sandra: always true. >> bill: let's go to new york, check it out. >> we have received several leads in regards to this case and have developed a suspect. the person that did the stabbing was seen on the corner with a female acting very agitated prior to the stabbing incident. i believe them to be boyfriend and girlfriend. >> bill:

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