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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 7, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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welcome back, america. july 4 independence day unfortunately for about half the country, and vacation time and that's all they think about but for the rest of us, we understand how many men died to give us this country and liber liberty. when the war for independence began, there is not likelihood we would win. we were up against the most powerful military on the face of the earth. defend this country and remind the rest of the country what independence day is all about, it's about liberty, the rule of law, about republicanism. it's about civil society. we've got no intention of giving up. i'll see you tomorrow night on life, liberty and levin. ♪ ♪ if.
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♪ nab them. ♪ ♪ if. [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
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will: good morning and welcome to "fox & friends" on this sunday. your national anthem, your beautiful pictures and lisa boothe and joey jones with us this morning. what's up? lisa: i was singing along, but probably better that nobody heard me. [laughter] joey: she did a good job, as good a job as you could expect. st the last day of this long holiday. i'm excited to go home tomorrow ask is start mine -- will: start your vacation -- joey: but it's been great to see folks showing patriotism and getting a long weekend here -- lisa: absolutely. and you get to hang out with us. joey: yeah. lisa: be more excited. will: that was a minute, 15 of
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this rendition of the national anthem. i need to pay attention to -- what do you think the longest version of the national anthem is? i've never put an over-urn on i- lisa: we played this game, do you remember, on "the big weekend show." joey: we did. it was a trivia question on how long the national anthem would be. i think it was reba mcintyre for the super bowl. i want to say, like, hendricks maybe? if ted nugent does one that is long because they, i mean, they just riff while they're in there. lisa: that's kind of fun. that's an appropriate -- will: i'm going to start paying attention. lisa: okay. will: we're going to start here this morning, president biden is set to visit his home state of pennsylvania today looking to to gain points in the key battleground state. joey: but it comes as the list of democrat leaders calling for biden to drop out of the race grows longer and longer. lisa: madeleine rivera joins us now from washington d.c. >> reporter: hi, good morning,
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guys. what started as a drip, drip of democratic lawmakers could turn into a broken dam when congress returns tomorrow. , this bc reporting more than half a dozen democrats in congress describe the president's political situation in stark terms including heart broken, doomed and a disaster. at least five house democrats have already called for the president to drop out, afraid he could cause them to lose down-ballot races in november, and there is despair in the white house as well. one senior white house official who has worked with mr. biden during his presidency, vice presidency and 2020 campaign said in an interview on saturday morning that mr. biden should not seek re-election. on saturday or the president joined a biweekly meeting with his campaign cochairs. delaware senator chris coons, who was on that call, says there is nobody among the cochairs who is recommending anything other than he keep going. the president was told that we have members of the senate and house and governors and especially donors who have
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unanswered questions and were unsettled and who have concerns. if in an exclusive interview with abc news anchor george stephanopoulos, the president brushed off some of those concerns. listen. >> do you dispute there have been more lapses especially in the last several months? >> can i run the 1000 in 10 flat? no -- 100 to-- >> are you more frail? >> no. look, i have a cognitive test every single day. every day, i've had tests. everything i do. >> reporter: underscoring the urgency of the situation, house minority if leader hakeem jeffries is holding a virtual meeting with top house committee democrats today. will, lisa and joey. lisa: thank you, madeleine. will: 8.5 million people watched that interview on abc. 8.5 million, you would presume, voters. we've had the conversation i think largely, not exclusively,
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about a joe biden's mental capacity in terms of its play on politics. i think that the story has to evolve. i think the story, more importantly, is about the national security of the the united states. joey: sure. will: that this man at this capability if has his finger on the nuclear button. and if this is such a threat, which i believe it to be, to national security, there needs to begin to be an exploration of every single person involved in the cover-up. i'm talking about ron klain, kamala harris, the circle around joe biden that attempted to hide this from america. lisa: welsh you know, and then you also add another layer on that when secretary lloyd austin was in the hospital and didn't tell the white house, you kind of wondering, who's new york stock exchange making decisions then -- who's making decisions at the white house? we have a president who potentially can't answer a call before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. as a well. i think what's sad about this is just the extent we've been lied to both by this biden administration if as well as the
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media. if you look at totalitarian countries, you know, what totalitarian leaders do is they control the media, right? because then you control the propaganda, the flow of information. but what's sad about a our country is the media's willingly doing. this. will: right. lisa: and when trump walked down that golden escalator, they a made the decision that defeating trump was more important than telling the truth. joey: it's a progression. right now the liberal media and the democrats a are in this, as george stephanopoulos was described, they described him as i think it was like a son holding the hand of his father telling him, you know, like an intervention, something coddling. they're the on the same team, but it's time for you to step down is kind of the posture of the media right now. they're not necessarily being mean if or even being skeptical, they're just saying, listen, we know you can't win. but the other side of it is this is actually a scandal. it's not just that he has gotten ill while he's in office and
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it's good for him to step out or something like that. this was built over years. this was excused for a long, long time. there was a democratic congressman, i can't think of his name, i think it's garibaldi, that was on with griff jenkins, askhe tried to compare griff stuttering for a second with what president biden does -- lisa: i saw your tweet about that. joey: very scandalous. with that, house speaker kevin mccarthy kind of compared it to scandals we've seen in the past a. >> the problem here is the democrats, this is their watergate moment. who knew it and when. i've a been talking about this for more than a year with my interactions with this president. and, brian, remember, i have worked with four different presidents, two republicans and two democrats. i know what it's like to have a real, moving oval office, that you really feel you're at the center of power of the world. at joe biden's, you never felt that way. i knew if you could have an advantage over him in negotiations like we did in the
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debt ceiling, getting $2 trillion in cuts, getting welfare reform. he can't negotiate without his cards. but you know what? they have known this entire time that i knew as well, because we see prove of it. will: that's the scandal. that's the cover-up, and that's what has to be held accountable. meanwhile, when it comes back to politics, the part everyone wants to focus on, politico writes: biden tried to put his campaign crisis behind him. it isn't working yet. talked about that interview with george stephanopoulos and how much pressure was put on that, and it doesn't seem to have calmed the waters and stemmed the tide. joey: not. lisa: the challenge for this is he's not benjamin betton, right? he's not going to age backwards. the it's only going to get worse. you can't put this crisis behind you because the crisis is ongoing, right? he's only going to further deteriorate at his age of 81, the oldest president in american history, someone who is clearly not mentally all there.
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he is mentally vacant. we saw that on the debate stage, the first five minutes we all knew there was a problem. watching this interview with george steph thop louse, to your point, it was the an intervention is. that is my first thought and, you know, the questions that he asked, the manner in which he conducted the interview. it felt like an intervention. this isn't getting better for him. you cannot put this behind him, it's only going to get worse. the only decision is, is it going to be joe biden, or do you try to replace him, but it doesn't look like joe biden wants to go anywhere. joey: the concerted effort among democrats right now, this weekend, and i'll explain why, the strategy right now is if we can get him out now and get someone else in there, we still have time. i think tammy bruce made the point with us last night on "the big weekend show," they're all a reacting to polls. not joe biden's performance. they're reacting to the fact that the performance has led to he's losing in swing states, he's losing in -- i know he raised a lot of money right after the debate, but i think
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donald trump sill raised significantly more in the last quarter. he's got the heiress of disney and several others saying they're not giving more money to the campaign. so down-ballot democrats along with the media are really, really worried that they're a going to lose and donald trump will be president. so if they can't convince him of it, because it's his decision, this is what he says will actually, what it would take to convince him to go ahead and drop out. >> i con convinced myself of two thing it is, i'm the most qualified person, and i know how to get things done. >> if you can be convinced that you cannot the defeat donald trump, will you stand down? >> well, it depends on, i mean, if the lord almighty comes down and tells me that, i might do that. >> if chuck schumer, hakeem jeffries and nancy pelosi come out and say we're worried that if you stay in the race, we're going to lose the house and the senate, how will you respond? >> i'd go into detail with them. i'd speak with all of them this
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detail including jim clyburn, every one of them. they all said i should stay in the race, stay in the race. no one said, none of the people said i should leave. >> but if they do. >> it's, like -- [laughter] they're not going to do that. >> you sure? >> yeah, i'm sure. will: they're not going to do that. joey: they may do it tomorrow. there's a meeting today with hakeem jeffries. so those names he said specifically, it could absolutely happen. lisa: i think what's more difficult for him potentially is what senator warner's doing in trying to potentially -- we'll see what sort of coalition he can build within the senate of trying to call on joe biden to step down. you know, there is this question at what point is it unavoidable for joe biden? at what point is it inescapable when you continue to have more and if more people call for you to step in? i will out in the caveat, and even though the point does look good for donald trump and he was a much better president, a lot of campaigning now is machinery. you look at the state of
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pennsylvania in 2020, biden won 75% of the mail-in ballot. so we're looking at a different elections than we had previously where covid really upended the way we vote. it is a different election now, and we can't base previous history on what this election and future elections will look like. will: you heard biden say it would take an act of god or a message from god for him to step away from the election. some of his donors, the producer behind "lost," part of a group that jeffrey katzenberg has put together, said if god almighty's the only one who can convince the president to gracefully step aside, we need to go to our churches, temples and moss if beings and get to praying. [laughter] there's a message from the donors. hakeem jeffries and the house democrats going to meet, high-level democrats, committee chair hen going to meet today. to your point, lisa, senator warner and other democrats in the senate going to meet. it does seem to be if if not god, everyone else approaching the moment of talking to joe
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biden. joey: listen, a little bit of levity here. if i'm struggling because i'm old, the last thing i'm going to do is invoke god to tell me -- i'm just going to pray for more days on this earth, is what i'm going to do. not say only god can stop me from doing this. i get what he's saying there. it's almost a religious thing anyway especially in the church of climate change. i think in a couple of weeks as long as nothing major happens, they start to turn back and they start to support him again ask if get ready for the convention. but we'll see. all right, we're going to turn now to our fox weather alert. texas already feeling the impant of beryl as hurricane warnings are issued along the state's coastline. you can see rain drenching the streets this houston as the tropical storm is expected to intensify into a category 1 hurricane before making landfall tomorrow morning. will: meanwhile, residents in galveston are under a voluntary evacuation order. lisa: let's turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for
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our fox weather forecast. rick: good morning, guys. yeah, probably maybe a category 1 storm making landfall sometime around 24 hours from now, maybe a little bit less. if you are making preparations, you need to be doing those right now. starting to get close enough we can puck pick this up on radar imagery. today we'll start to see the first band onshore, but when you look at the satellite image of this, it's still really a ragged system, not at all organized, and that's good news. it's going to keep it a little bit weaker, hopefully, and and it doesn't have a lot of time to get its act going, maybe about 18 or 20 hours or so. that right there is the center of the storm. it is going to move pretty slowly over the next 24 hours, so it'll take about 24 hours before it gets somewhere along that coastline, probably just to the north of corpus christi, maybe around port if la vaca can. -- port a la vaca. and maybe an 855 mile-an-hour -- 85 mile-an-hour storm. hurricane warnings anywhere you see that a pink, so if you're in
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this area, have all of your preps that you putting in many in place right now. one of our models has hurricane force gusts until right about landfall, that's when we think this will be strengthening. it does cause more impacts, so probably some pretty good storm surge right there. notice the yellow, tomorrow afternoon we'll be looking at tropical storm conditions up through houston and into central texas as a well. all right, back to you. will: really good pronunciations, rick -- rick: which part? will: port if la vaca. you've got to know a lot of different locations in the u.s. you're so good at that, and yet i would still smoke you on a geography quiz on -- rick: you smoke me on the capitals of states. that is not geography -- lisa: i feel like that's something -- rick: part two. joey: we all have a talent. will: which means we have to have a rematch. rick: i'm in. will: thanks, rick are. we're going to turn to some
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headline, police officers and the family of a fallen nypd police officer are paying their final respects on long island yesterday with. her husband speaking for the first time since her death saying, quote, instead of being sad over the things we didn't accomplish, i'm happy and blessed we were able to do so much in the time that we had together. rememberhack was killed when police say a suspected drunk driver plowed into a long island nail salon. three others also died. the suspect was charged with dwe. attorneys believe the charges will be upgraded. the tsa is expecting a record number of fliers today, estimating they'll screen 3 million passengers. according to ark aa estimates, more than 75 million americans have traveled these past 9 days for independence day weekend. the the organization says this year could break records for car travel. more than 60 million drivers expected. everyone be careful. and now to the wnba. caitlin clark becoming the first rookie in league history to
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record a triple-double as her indiana fever took on the defending eastern conference champion new york liberty. >> penetrating, the three on the way and the first -- [cheers and applause] triple-double for a rookie, caitlin clark has it! [cheers and applause] more history for the fever rookie! will: not a big fan of the weird-colored basketball courts. lisa: that's what i was just thinking about. will: stick with the normal woo- lisa: glad you pointed that out. will: and those are your headlines. so it is summertime. joey has kids a little younger than my kids but not far. >> 5 and 15. they're 10 years apart, actually. will so fairly in the same range as a me. i know this is something we have to think about, talk about and budge. i don't know -- budget. it's the cost of what your kids do during the summer and whether they go to camp. athletic camp, sleepaway camp,
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whatever. maybe -- t just getting heavy. jamie is from new jersey, she started posting about this on tiktok. >> so what should i do with my kids during those three months that school is closed so that i can work? of course we have a solution for that. they can go to camp. camp? what's that? oh, camp is great. it's where they do cool things with pop sickle sticks and play sports they're not prepared to, and we hold them down when it gets too hot outside. and it's run by a bunch of hungover college kids. okay, but, i mean, it's pretty, right? part of the public school system, free? [laughter] no. not free. [laughter] if it'd be great if it was though. it's a good idea. so how much is camp? the camp i just described to you? oh, that's $5,000. lisa: yeah. i mean, everything finish the cost of everything's going up. and this is the estimate for the survey for summertime cost for parents, 61% of parents with
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kids under 18 says it feels even more expensive to raise kids in summer months, 29% of parents unable to save money during the summer, 28% plan to take on debt to cover costs of summer childcare. a9 lot of parents, i've got to work this summer, what do i do with my kids, everything's more expensive, camp's more expensive. that that's on a lot of parents' minds, joey. joey: no, absolutely. i used to work at a camp, and we worked really hard to provide donors to find scholarships. we started with military, first responders, children with autism that are on the spectrum trying to find ways to help families out. $5,000 seems absurd, it's not. you know what? what we charged, 80%, 90% of that was what it cost us. it's an expensive thing to do, and we didn't have drunk college kids. really good counselors. [laughter] lisa: when you said that, i was going to ask. joey: all right. moving on here, thanks to pandemic pauses, borrowers got
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three years off paying their student loans. so why are millions of americans still overdue on payments? lisa: plus, first they come for your cars, now they're coming for your cheeseburger? if denmark rolling out the first carbon tax tax on cows. will: calling out the left's beef, next. ♪ ♪ can it keep me warm when i'm cold? wait, no, i'm always hot. sleep number does that. shop our lowest prices of the season with free home delivery when you add a base. sleep number smart beds starting at $999. learn more at sleepnumber.com
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♪ if. ♪ joey: welcome back. they had a 3-year pause on student loan payment, but nearly 19 million of those borrowers haven't paid back a cent since payments resumed last october. president biden already forgiving $167 billion of debt for nearly 5 million. and he's still pushing for more. former trump economic adviser steven moore joins us now to react. stephen, good morning, thank you for joining us. e look at this, i think 20 million borrowers start started paying, nearly 19 million aren't paying at all. is this something where the biden administration, because of their posture, just isn't asking them to? how are they able to do this?
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>> well, they don't have congressional approval to do it, and they don't have supreme court approval to do this -- joey: yeah. >> -- so joe biden is acting as a dictator to basically forgive people's loans. that's the first problem of this, this is not the, under the authority of the presidency. he's the one, by the way, who blames donald trump for being a threat to democracy. i would say this is pretty threatening too. but the other point i would make is, look, we are running a $2 trillion budget deficit, and biden is throwing away hundreds of billions of dollars for people who should pay their student the loans, could pay their student loans and aren't doing it. and the question is, why should the cost of that fall on the backs of taxpayers? i mean, i think it's outrageous, i think most americans do. especially, by the way, people who did pay their student loans and did the right thing. why should they have to pay for the people who don't? joey: as the son of a brick mason who owned his own business, i understand very well
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the unfairness that people perceive, especially blue collar workers and people in the trades. but if we take our principle perspective out and say, okay, is it a net os if or a net gain, are there any economic indicators that show this is helping or hurting our economy? >> it's having a very negative effect. first of all, who in the future will ever pay a student loan back, right? if if the government's going to keep forgiving people to pay their student loans, then people who are the suckers, frankly, are the people who did the right thing and paid their student loans back. but the other point, i want to go back to this, our country is going bankrupt. we don't have hundreds of billions of dollars to pay off student loans. if there's a crisis and student loan payments that universities that have billions and billions of or dollars of endowments -- joey: absolutely. >> -- why don't they use their endowment money to pay off student loans? joey: when the liberals are already heavy handed in regulation, you'd think they'd try the make college tuition
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cheaper. you'd think they would at least go in that direction. instead, they just want to spend our hundred. i want to move on to a separate topic here that's almost as outrageous. what we have here is the country of denmark imposing a tax on cattle, i believe maybe igs as a well, but at least cattle, livestock. ask that is, i believe, their number one export. what this tax looks like, it levies out to $96 per cow by 2030, and then that'll bump up to $24111 per cow d $2411 per -- 241 per cow by 2035. no matter what the dollar amount is, you're taxing your number one export and what people used to live off of in order to do a green deal. what do you think about this? >> well, this just shows the complete craziness of the modern day climate change movement where they basically are talking about -- by the way, just so your viewers understand, the
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left doesn't like cows now because -- [laughter] i guess i can say this on tv, when cows fa a rt and burp, they emit greenhouse gases -- fa a rt. so, basically, the environmentalists want to do away with cows as a way to save the planet. now, i'm old enough to remember when the environmental movement was about safing tigers and -- saving tigers and pandas and whales. now they're trying to get -- [laughter] because they think they're destroying the planet. it just shows how outrageous the green movement has become. and i guarantee you, by the way, this may just be denmark, but i guarantee you this idea will come to the united states. joey: yeah. denmark pushed offshore wind, and this administration has been accepting of that, so it does worry me, and i appreciate you, stephen moore, for joining us today. >> okay, thank you very much. have a great day. joey: yes, sir. while biden's mental acuity is in question, his team is now accused of feeding questions to journalists.
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>> the questions were sent to me for approval. >> the white house sent the questions to you ahead of the interview? >> yes. joey: yeah. talk about having your media in your corner. joe concha sounds off on that next. ♪ if i'm unstoppable. ♪ i'm invincible ♪ nice to meet ya. my name is david. i've been a pharmacist for 44 years. when i have customers come in and ask for something for memory, i recommend prevagen. number one, because it's safe and effective. does not require a prescription.
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provided a preapproved list of questions. this as the media changes its tune with more in the mainstream media questioning his ability to serve. fox news if contributor joe concha joins us now. joe, it's always great to see you, my friend. so, joe, i have interviewed -- >> happy sunday. lisa: i've interviewed former president trump twice, multiple governors, senators, members of congress for hi podcast. not once has anyone submitted questions to ask about topics or, you know, legislation they're working on. not the questions. >> right. [laughter] i mean, look, let's face it, lisa, this has been going on since the beginning of this presidency. remember all those note cards telling the president exactly which reporters to call on? remember biden sharing over and over again, he said the quiet part out loud, basically, that he had a list of reporters to call on, and then he would proceed to follow it to a t. and remember when biden would excuse himself from the those rare moments he actually took questions by saying, quote, i'm going to get in trouble if i
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take any more questions, unquote. and in this particular radio interview, biden told the host that he was proud to be the first black woman to serve with a black president. so even with the questions to the big test in advance being given to him, biden still failed miserably, lisa. lisa: yeah. well, first black president. so this is what the biden campaign is saying, joe. well, interview hosts have always been free to ask whatever questions they please. moving forward, we will refrain are from offering suggested questions. i mean, joe, is that an admission? >> of course it is. they literally just admitted, okay, we won't do it going forward. sorry, slap on the wrist, you caught us. i mean, this is such a bad look for joe biden in this moment when his team is desperately trying to show that he's not up for the job now, but for the year 2028, imagine joe biden at age 86 doing in this job. this shows his team simply if does not trust him outside of a teleprompter. but more importantly, whoever was sending these questions in
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advance is complicit in the biggest coffer-up in modern american political history -- cover-up. think about it. if they're doing this, they're seeing what we saw on that debate stage, just like what jill biden sees on a daily basis, what hunter biden sees, what karine gene peer sees -- karine jean-pierre sees. they're all involved in this huge cover-up. by admitting this, yeah, we did it, we won't do it again, sorry, that's just not good enough, and heads must roll starting with this president who should not be president anymore. forget not running anymore. if he's acting like this, why does anybody think it's stay sister -- safe for this country to keep this man in this job as commander in chief of our armed forces for the next 200 days before inauguration day? somebody answer that question. lee lois why the shift in the media, right? they were perfectly happy with lying to us before. now all of a sudden they've had a come to jesus moment, joe biden's not up for the task. so why now? why the shift? >> the shift, a, because they
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can't possibly defend this anymore, right? they can't use the cheap fakes video excuse anymore. oh, those have videos of biden falling down or wandering off, those are edited, manipulated. they tried to go down that road, then they got caught, obviously, with that performance at that debate that you're seeing on the screen right now. so now they have to go down this route because, i guess they're trying to salvage their credibility to show they're holding biden accountable. no. you had three and a half years plus a campaign before that to report and talk about the things that you were talking about, lisa, i was talking about and almost everybody else on this network was talking about, that this man has no business, you know, being a golf starter, let alone the president of the united states. you just get the feeling that joe biden, if he were at a funeral parlor at this point, no one would die. [laughter] that's it, lisa. lisa: you know, i just wish you'd give us your opinion, you know? [laughter] >> too much coffee already this morning. lisa: no, you're great.
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joe concha, always a pleasure to see you, my friend. thank you. >> see you soon. lisa: all right. even more delays in trump's court cases as judges weigh the new supreme court ruling on presidential immunity. a legal expert says it's all good news for the former president. that analysis next. ♪ if new york city, please go oaz city on me ♪ the tempur-pedic breeze makes sleep feel cool. so, no more sweating all night... or blasting the air conditioning. because the tempur-breeze feels up to 10° cooler, all night long. during our july 4th sale, save $500 on cooling tempur-breeze mattresses. (♪) heartburn makes you queasy? get fast relief with new tums+ upset stomach & nausea support, and love food back. (♪)
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i would say that we're closer than the average mother daughter. hi mom!
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if i lost my mom... i can't think about that for too long. i was like, "whoa, mom, i have this gene!" kenzie's test and me being able to find out that i was brca positive was lifesaving. i've seen her take her health into her own hands, for herself and for us. i'm really proud of my mom.
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♪ if. will: well, in a win for trump's legal team, u.s. district judge aileen cannon pauses several key deadlines in his classified documents case in the wake of the supreme court's ruling on presidential immunity. here with reaction is former federal prosecutor and president of the west coast trial lawyers, neema ramani. how does the ruling over trump's immunity affect, dueck, this class -- do you think, this classified documents case? >> trump keeps winning both inside and outside the courtroom. even though the supreme court's decision in the classified documents technically just apply pded to the d.c. election fraud case, of course; that same logic has been applied to the other cases. and judge cannon issued a stay in the case and set a 2-week briefing schedule to consider whether that case should be dismissed entirely. and she also took three other deadlines off calendar related to expert disclosures and disclosure of confidential
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documents and classified documents in the case. this is something she's going to the seriously consider, and it's a very real possibility that trump gets the case tossed entirely. will: since you bring up the the timeline, let's take a look at this, by the way, all the different cases with donald trump as each and every one of them seem to be delayed, adding time to the calendar. a verdict's been reached, of course, in new york v. trump, in the e. jean carroll case. postponed, the documents case that we're discussing, on hold. the election interference case, that's jack smith. sentencing in the new york case has been pushed from july to september, and on hold is the georgia state election case. you can see all of these with election day looming there at the end of the timeline, all of these being pushed and pushed and approaching past that election date. so here's the question i would have for you, neama. it's always the question of what's an official a act. you have immunity for an official act. i don't know the test, by the
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way. what's the test for a court on whether or not something is an official act so they can answer the question of whether or not how he handled classified documents is immune? >> well, that's thest. and, will -- the test. you nailed it, this is uncharted legal waters. i would say that trump has a better argument in the classified documents case than the election fraud case. this is why. historically, at least in the civil context, some judges have held that campaigning is personal and not official. of course, trump is going to argue that he was auditing the election in his role as commander which chief, to make sure we have free and fair elections in this country. as far as the classified documents go, i think trump has a very good argument that his role as head of the executive branch is to classify or declassify documents. so i think jack smith is going to have an uphill battle. he has a very favorable judge in south florida with judge cannon. i don't think he has that type of judge in d.c. withton what
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chutkan, so -- tonya chutkan. bill: just making sure that i understand, in applying the supreme court's decision on immunity, we now divide acts into official acts versus personal acts, and applying it to these two cases you think his handling of classifieded documents and taking them to mar-a-lago or saying they are, you know, classifieded or unclassified, easier argument to say, hey, that's an official act so, therefore, i'm immune. and whatever happens in the d.c. case, how he campaigned, what he had to say that day, we'll see, personal if or potential. -- personal or official? >> i think that's right, will, both in terms of the substance and in terms of the audience. i think judge cannon has given trump some very favor if, rulings so far, and i expect that to continue. judge chutkan has been more skeptical. she, of course, denied immunity in the first instance. will: right. >> the d.c. court also denied,
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so just reading the tea leaves a little bit, i think judge cannon's the more favorable draw. will: and this is how the supreme court's immunity decision affects those two cases, not even getting to the merits of the case. neama a, thanks for getting up early with us this morning. >> of course. thanks for having me, or will. will: lisa, over to you. lisa: great interview, will. thank you. turning now to your headlines, german officials say they found the american teenager who disappeared three days ago when he walked off a cruise ship after a arguing with his grandmother at a port in germany. his family feared he was lured away. the teen was seen speaking with an unknown man just before going missing. no word on whether he was connected to this disappearance. princess cruises say the 14-year-old is safe and sound, and thank god for that. right now french citizens are lining up at the polls for the second round of the country's parking lot ifmently elections -- parliamentary elections. president emmanuel macron calling for the vote after his
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party lost the bid for the european parolment last month. the national rally party won the first round last week taking home a third of the votes. if the national rally wins the election, macron would be forced to name the party president as prime minister. colorado firefighters rescuing a blind horse who was stuck in water up to her shoulders after getting lost in a canal yesterday. they guided the 20-year-old horse named lacey from the water and then used a one. system to pull her onshore. despite some cuts to her leg, officials say lacey has put rescue behind her with the help of fresh hay and loving pets. and those are your headlines. all right. coming up, a real-life jaws moment. [background sounds] >> you're going to need a bigger boat. lisa: this one happening on a louisiana bayou. we are talking to the captain who helped reel in that 6-foot bull shark.
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♪ joey: all right. shark week came early for one louisiana charter captain and his guests ors bringing in this 6-foot bull shark in fresh water. lisa: it took them an hour and 15 minutes of fighting to reel it in and three of the men to lift onboard. will: joining us now is the captain who led the group, mackey. thanks for being with us this morning. okay, first, i want to know this, because we just said you caught it in fresh water. you were in lake port cher train, right? >> yeah. lake pontchartrain. will: so i'm always fascinated by sharks getting in rivers, is it fresh water? is it brackish? like, you're not shocked you caught a shark there, are you? >> i'm not at all shocked, actually. so we catch a healthy amount of bull sharks which range from about a foot in length to 3 foot in length, 1 to 2-year-old sharks, definitely, and that's definitely on the list of species we catch. it's actually a bull shark nursery, but it's super uncommon the actually see the big ones,
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actually catching one. seeing one but actually hooking one, getting it in the boat, you know, laying out the measuring tape on it was a pretty crazy experience, not typical for this area at all. lisa: so let's get into some bull shark facts. one of seven shark species which can survive in fresh water. they grow to the lengths of 11.5 feet, 500 pounds, responsible for 12 the 1 unprovoked attacks, third most of any species -- species. they have a bite force of 1,30000 psi. i mean, that must have been -- how exhausting is that, to reel in a shark of this magnitude? i imagine that's just got to be exhausting. >> i mean, we had six people in the boat, and we each took a turn reeling this thing n. will: really? >> it was heavy lifting, it was pumping. so, you know, obviously we're talking alligator gar, smaller
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fish, so with that we've got smaller gear so, obviously, it was a miracle we even got this thing in the boat. but, it was pumping and constant reeling and, timely, the fin broke the surface and we were all just in shock. we were, like, there's no way this is a bull shark of this magnitude. lisa: it's a big boy. >> it got to the point where one of the passengers was like let's get this thing in, i don't care what we've god toot. i ended up cranking on it, and finally she swam into the net, put it in the boat, and we all started high-fiving and celebrating. joey: so you're out there fishing all the time, i don't know, do you fish for shark specifically? if you do, what do you do with them after you catch hem? what'd you do with this one? >> yeah, we actually do target them for catch and release. this was another one that we caught and released. it appeared to be a pregnant female probably right around 200 pounds. but, yeah, sure enough, we put the net back in the water, we got a video of releasing it. it was a good experience for
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everybody. we, you know, thought about the idea of keeping it because it's pretty uncommon, you're actually able to keep one here because the size limits are so strike. this one was a keeper size being over 55 inches, but we made the collective decision to let it go and -- which i'm glad about because i'm not super familiar with cleaning them -- [laughter] i've got an electric knife i'm used to cleaning my fish with, i'm glad we came to that conclusion -- will: real quick, what'd you think it was before you saw the fin? the. >> man, you know, we actually hooked a tarpon two weeks ago, and that goes to say something about the salinity in the water this year. we hooked that, and i was hoping it might have been another tarpon. ended up being a shark, which i was even more excited about -- will: captain mackey, thanks so much for sharing that story. >> be safe out there. >> yeah, i appreciate it. i'm fixing to head out now. thanks. will: all right. more "fox & friends" still ahead.
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when you're in the military you're really close with your brothers and your sisters that are in the military with you. and when you get out of the military, you kind of lose that until you find a new family. we can talk about our struggles and the things that we did overseas and not everybody can do that. adam! how's it going, brother? we live pretty close to each other. so he's always coming over. when i go to jack's house, we watch a lot of football, hang out. we go outside the friendship has kind of grown into a family i was talking to some vet■s last week amazing how we have these houses where they can come over because they■re in chairs too. carpet and wheelchairs don't mix very well. tunnel to towers, they got rid of all that. they redid my whole bathroom i thought they were just going to do the upgrades. but the surprise to me was they paid off the entire mortgage. when they told me they're going to pay off my mortgage, i cried. please visit t2t.org

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