Skip to main content

tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  August 5, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

9:00 am
looking for a smarter way to mop? try the swiffer powermop. ♪ an all-in-one cleaning tool that gives you a mop and bucket clean in half the time ♪ our cleaning pad has hundreds of scrubbing strips that absorb and lock dirt away, ♪ and it has a 360-degree swivel head that goes places a regular mop just can't. so, you can clean your home, faster than ever. ♪ don't mop harder, mop smarter, with the swiffer powermop.
9:01 am
>> harris: well, we have a crisis developing right now in this country, not to mention the ones that are all over the world right now. war in israel, that eventually the middle east now, they are on alert. so all of this is developing on a very busy monday, and concerns over a potential recession now are causing stocks to plunge. they have come back from where they were well over 1100 when stocks opened this morning, but they are still in triple digits, really high triple digit number losses at this point. the dow down now by 809, 810. japan's nikkei index has its workstations the black monday crash nearly 40 years ago. so we are all globally connected and we tend to think we are on top here in the united states because we are. so in our world rocks, everybody
9:02 am
does. the middle east again is on the brink of a wider war. israeli officials are bracing for potential attacks from iran, and it could happen, we are told, as early as today. so they are ahead of us in because it is dark there now. president biden will meet with his national security team in the situation room. we are told that will happen at 2:00 p.m. eastern. and the pentagon says the united states is preparing for every possibility as iran vows to "punish israel." our greatest ally in the middle east. we have many american citizens there that have dual citizenship with us here, israelis and american citizens, dual citizenship. some of them are fighting in the idf right now. this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner here is my cohosts, kayleigh mcenany and emily compagno. also joining us, carley shimkus, and fox news contributor and host of "the guy benson show" on fox news radio, guy benson. let's start with alex hogan, who
9:03 am
was live for us in tel aviv, israel, with the latest on the ground there. imminent danger is what the alerts are coming across. what is it like to be there? >> hi, harris. the sun is setting, another day of high tension here as people are bracing for what could be an iranian attack, something that we have been repeatedly hearing, growing concerns not just here on the ground internationally. today iran says that retaliation will happen, and it will be severe. but this is a look at the u.s. navy's assets within the middle east as the u.s. really tries to shore up its military might to support israel's defense. diplomatically, u.s. secretary of state antony blinken on sunday spoke with g7 foreign ministers urging the escalation. this weekend israeli officials held a defensive talk on the likely kind of iranian attacks that we could see play out, and much of the preparing we have seen is centered around iran's attack in april when it launched about 300 drones and
9:04 am
missiles toward israel, all of that taking place within one night alone. iran today also sending this morning to washington. >> interpreter: if the american government acted on its moral, legal, and human responsibility and put pressure on the zionist regime, we have d not have seen this level of instability in the region. >> in gaza today, hamas militants fired about 15 rockets from the southern part of the strip into israeli territory, but it follows a weekend that was violent in the war, that saw dozens of palestinians killed in air strikes according to hamas and the health ministry. the death toll has now surpassed 39,000 people killed in the last ten months. looking to the northern part of israel, back and cross fire today between the idf and hezbollah, which we sought repeatedly take place just in the last several days. the letter i af said they took out he has below weapons storage facility, as other countries are
9:05 am
now sounding the alarm. the world health organization today delivered 32 tons of medical supplies including trauma kids to lebanon for hospitals to stock up as tensions mount. this comes as the u.s., france, and the u.k. this weekend all called on their citizens and lebanon to leave the country as soon as possible. and if they are not leaving, they need to shelter in place. while that is taking place in lebanon, iran today is warning airlines not to fly over its airspace, so incredibly high tensions here on the ground and throughout the region as well as taking place in israel. the country's defense minister spoke to forces today, saying they need to be prepared to defend the country and they need to be prepared to switch gears and fire back offensively. harris? >> harris: meanwhile, there are about 100,000 people, we have been reporting, that have been displaced along the northern border with lebanon. which we know that has below is the proxy for iran, so we can
9:06 am
see a lot of movement along that board of potentially too. let's hope not. all right, alex, thank you very much. this is quite the moment. i don't think we have ever faced a time in history where a candidate has pulled out of the race for the white house and is now going to negotiate our way forward in one of the most precarious times we have seen in the middle east. >> guy: the news cycle has been overwhelming for more than a month. i think we are all feeling that. i think voters are feeling that. i was struck listening to the sound bite we played through a translator of an iranian official attacking the zionist entity, meaning israel, for the instability in the region. they do all of these liars. instability in that region has a name. it is iran. hezbollah, hamas, the houthis. they are the ones sowing this death and destruction. over the course of the war in gaza, 100% justified by what happened october 7th, the usual suspects you always blame israel
9:07 am
it always attack the one jewish state in the world, they have hidden behind various reasons for their supposed outrage, like civilian casualties in that sort of thing. in the last few weeks, what have we seen? the israelis executing pinpoint, precision, surgical strikes on top terrorists, and they are still mad at israel, and it is still israel escalating. no, israel is responding by taking out terror masterminds, and the people who hate the israelis are screaming but he murder as usual. >> harris: look, americans have so much to deal with. they're watching the markets move in a very negative way today, and from experts i've been talking with, it is twofold. if the energy coming out of the middle east, because countries are realizing now we can't get to those shipping lanes we need. that is already impacting our prices for oil. but the other thing that we are watching now, too, outside of the energy, is just the price of everything is up. our ability to be resilient as a country economically in this moment is hitting. that's playing a role on the
9:08 am
stock market, too. so the world is watching us right now. where in the world are the people who are supposed to update us? it's a long way away when they started overnight. >> kayleigh: we have a twofold crisis. 2:15 p.m. eastern time they will be in a situation room. kamala harris, joe biden. does anyone have confidence in the people making decisions on these crises? no, and i maintain you shouldn't. i believe it was on january 12th of this year, joe biden was asked -- april 12th, excuse me -- what do you say to iran as they consider waging war on israel? he said, don't. sometimes you need more than a syllable to deter an adversary. he said "don't." iran did the very next day. kamala harris put out a tweet january 3rd, 2020, accusing donald trump of almost starting a war because he took out soleimani. they don't understand deterrence what effective fumigation.
9:09 am
joe biden's words last week to pretend, stop. people are not understanding that. adversaries don't understand that. you need more than a syllable, and i don't trust those mines coming together in this situation. >> harris: you have toddlers, they don't even follow those words. i get it. emily? >> emily: keep in mind, this weekend, when asked by reporters whether iran would stand down, the president said, "i hope so, i don't know." so in addition to the ineffective and the lame "don't" and "not," he's literally saying "i'm not sure." this feckless leadership, and the wishy-washy we see from the vice president, and curry become a part of authorizing force, support over there -- but flash back to 2020 when she was one oe large proponents of the no war against iran bill. she said at the time, we don't want trump to take us unilaterally into war. i won't support any type of funds over there. so we have one leader that isn't a leader, and one leader that can't make up her mind. what did we learn last week with
9:10 am
that historic prisoner swap? the importance of allyship. we learned the importance of these global relationships that we hope to rely on as americans, that our leaders will carry through. what did we also learn from the disastrous afghanistan withdrawal? can we count on these leaders to carry through? right now in the middle east our allies are aligned with parts of the islamic republic, or parts of iran, that say we are not the islamic republic, we want stability, legal and economic prosperity economic prosperity. >> harris: exactly. >> emily: we do not like hezbollah and these proxies cropping up. we do not want that. we want stability to preserve our economic interests, and to do so we acknowledge the jewish state sovereignty. that is the majority. the minority are these terrorists, the minority are these anti-semitic positions. when prime minister nutting who says the prepared for a multi-front war, it will be our leaders take that into account, because that includes the home front, the anti-semitism, and the support publicly and any type of hindrance for israel.
9:11 am
>> harris: what i love about that, it ties into what you're saying about how the jewish state gets picked on. the terrorists are outnumbered, the but people who are complicit in then retaining power and their bloodthirsty realm here, they outnumber everybody else. because those people who support them are all over the middle east. i mean, we see this with hamas. maybe people in gaza are waking up to it now, but when you support killers, they'll put you in harm's way. they will kill you, too. that's where we are. with the middle east in such a position, carley, i just wonder, is anybody focused enough in the white house on what's going on with human pocketbooks inside the united states today? their ability, our ability as a nation to go forward. >> carley: is a great question. i was talking to somebody in israel today and asked him if people there are on edge right now. he said yes and now. that answer makes so much sense, considering there is the constant threat of attack, but
9:12 am
this 24 248 our period is of heightened concern for obvious reasons. one thing that could prove to be important in this moment is at the foreign minister of jordan was in iran yesterday, and the king of jordan was speaking to president biden today, so they could be a communication channel still open. if and how they choose to use it, we may only learn after the fact. but, to your point on communication, and if people are clear-eyed in this moment, president biden saying publicly that benjamin netanyahu needs to stop b.s.-ing when it comes to this negotiation -- first of all, the main driver of these negotiations are israel, and hamas is the one saying no. the other question is, why is all the public condemnation from the biden-harris side always against israel? it is because it is foreign policy muddied by politics when
9:13 am
they need a clear approach to our number one ally in the middle east. >> harris: it's important to remember, it's not just this moment. it's their politics. it's every moment they've been engaged in. when biden meets with leaders in the situation room today, he has promised kamala shall be the last one in the room. i'll be curious to see, is she at the table at this point for these important foreign policy decisions? they own it anyway. >> emily: and a reminder, today is ariel's fifth birthday. there are still hundreds of hostages being kept. where are they? >> harris: absolutely. the dow's song by triple digit still. high triple digits. fears are growing that we are plunging into a recession. it would take to court is negative numbers and our total economy, that we are already cooking far fewer jobs than we had been told we would have for the month of july, and far fewer than we need. a live report from fox business, next. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete,
9:14 am
balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪) always dry scoop before you run. listen to me, the hot dog diet got me shredded. it's time we listen to science. one a day is formulated with key nutrients to support whole body health. one a day. science that matters. veteran homeowners need cash but worried you can't get a home loan because of your credit? here's great news. at newday we've been granted automatic authority by the va to make our own loan approval decisions. in fact, if you've had credit challenges and missed a payment along the way, you're more than five times more likely to get approved for the newday 100 va cash out loan. no one knows veterans like newday usa. hey. you seein' this?
9:15 am
wait... where's the dish? there ain't one. you're tellin' me you can get directv — the good stuff — and you don't need a satellite dish? oh, i used to love doin' my business on those things! you're one sick pigeon. them dishes kept the rain off our beaks! we just have different priorities is all. satellite-free directv... never thought i'd see the day. well, our lifespans are quite short... stream directv without a satellite dish. i'm going to do this thing with my neck, just for a bit.
9:16 am
when did i call leaffilter? when i saw my gutters overflowing onto my porch. leaffilter is a permanent gutter solution, so, you never have to worry about costly damage from clogged gutters again. it's the easiest call you can make. call 833.leaf.filter today, or visit leaffilter.com.
9:17 am
9:18 am
>> kayleigh: that's a live look at the dow as a global market meltdown intensifies today. stocks here and around the world are tumbling as fears about a u.s. economic slow down send out shock waves. the dow was diving over 1,000 points at the opening this morning, fueling recession fears even more. kelly o'grady is live with the greatest latest. >> this is about uncertainty right now. you have last week's jobs report, it sparks fears that maybe the fed has waited too long to cut rates and we could be entering recession territory. the dow is down 750, s&p 500 down 110, and the nasdaq down 409. it's off those lows, big tech
9:19 am
getting hit today. i want to zoom out. global markets are reeling from this, as well. the japanese nikkei closed down over 12%, that's the worst day that index has seen since 1987. cryptocurrency is also shedding over $500 billion in the last 24 hours. a couple things i want to tease out for you that we are watching that could point to a recession. goldman sachs just upgraded the risk of a session from 15% to 25%. i will note, they still see the risk is limited, but that concern clearly is escalating. the second key indicator is the unimplement rate. that ticked up to 4.3 percent last month in addition to ending 114,000 jobs. this triggers what is known as the rule that says the recession is likely already underway when the three month moving average from unemployment rises half a percentage point versus the low that it saw over the past year. all you need to know is 4.3% check that box, and this rule has been accurate in defining every recession since the early
9:20 am
'70s. but a lot of investors i'm talking to are pushing back, instead saying the sell-off is more of a correction. he still have sky high valuations from big tech driven by that ai hype. so some disappointing earnings results are causing investors to think twice, take some profits. if we continue to see this turbulence in the market, expect this to be a talking point for the candidates on the campaign trail. the strong economy message that will be tough for vp harris to push after this recent data, kayleigh. >> kayleigh: no doubt. kelly, thank you. on the topic of vice president harris, guy, i assume she wants nothing to do with bidenomics. let's pull this up for roll call. this is a reminder that should be given daily by the trump campaign. this is kamala harris' role in the economy. as vice president she cast a critical vote to break the tie in the senate and allow the american rescue plan to come forward to a final vote. had it not been for her vote, the bill might never have gotten to biden's desk. one month after it was signed
9:21 am
into law, inflation increased to 4.2%. so she might be known as the border czar, we should call her the inflation czar, too. >> guy: she put for trillions of dollars in new spending on top of what they did to fuel the inflation. we have prices now across the board of 20% since harris and biden took office. they were copilots on bidenomics is how the trump campaign put it, which i think is smart because it is accurate. the jobs numbers are really missing badly in july, downward revisions for previous months, as well. that unemployment rate now up to 4.3%. at r-word, recession, now on everyone's lips. this is highly concerning. i saw the republicans put out a clip earlier today of vice president harris, at a speech, big smile on her face. she said bidenomics and burst into laughter as she often does, and she said, we are very proud of bidenomics. i'm curious if she still agrees with herself. she doesn't seem to agree with herself on almost anything
9:22 am
anymore. her aides will put out little sentences saying, never mind not all of that. i wonder if she might never mind bidenomics at some point. >> kayleigh: so much there, but let's start with copilots of bidenomics. her copilot was joe biden. here's what he said six days a ago. >> the economy, and the environment. and if you have the small th things. >> kayleigh: he said, "i've cured the economy." i think the dow may disagree may disagree. >> harris: the markets are reacting. i was talking to a few retail clerks, because we were at a big mall, the american dream, it is called, in new jersey, over the weekend. i was commenting how they weren't as many lines. that is, like, the most popular model in our region. with people's bags in their hands. and she said, a lot of people put things on hold. we have been talking about how
9:23 am
layaway used to be when we were kids, and people kind of need something like that now. imagine being a retail clerk. you probably have pretty interesting conversations with people buying things. she said, i wish many companies would bring something like that back, because people are in trouble. look, it is august. a lot of places are going back to school. dallas, texas, other places are going back to school already. not after labor day. then you see another big kick. i'm looking at the dial now and this is a reflection of how much money it costs to live in america right now for the basics. and we are feeling it on wall street, and experts are also telling me we are feeling the cost of energy. it's been hot, it's been sticky, hurricane is hitting the northern gulf coast of florida. we have a lot of things going on when people are shelling out cash. it'll be interesting to see if bidenomics even is approached. >> kayleigh: emily, we'll see. our latest fox news poll mag when you look at speeds advantage on the issue of the
9:24 am
economy, it is consistent across all swing states. all three of the major states that biden needs to enact. kamala, sorry. >> emily: the learning point from that is that the g.o.p. needs to hammer that home. while the left is busy trotting out the immutable characteristics and trying to gas lights us and say everything is cured, the reality is that the g.o.p. needs to hammer out, who do you trust with what you know? and what you know is what you see, which is double and triple digit inflation and a catastrophe of an economy that has hit all of us in our wallets, our savings, our 401(k), planning for the future, everything. victor davis hanson was on "fox & friends" earlier and he was excellent. he said, is what they need to do, keep our face out there, keep rolling that tape after explaining inflation so americans can see once and for all, we have you to blame for the disastrous effect that was clearly -- it was clearly predictable, with when you are pouring in several chilling dollars into the economy. what do you think is going to
9:25 am
happen? they will warn you up and down, the g.o.p. was quite clear up and down, this is what simple math is and what was going to happen. no one listened and therefore we have inherited this economy thanks to the liberal left that we are in charge of the whole time. >> harris: and biden declared the pandemic over. >> carley: joe biden likes to say he wants to fix the economy from the bottom up and the middle out. bottom, up, middle, and out. when it comes to the sell-off, you look at this red arrow and have to think about it from a presidential election standpoint, and also real people standpoint. if we do enter a recession, it's always backward-looking, you find out after the fact. but what does it mean to people right now? it usually leads to job losses at a time when prices are 26% higher. that's terrible news. and pete buttigieg was on that "white men for kamala" zoom called recently and said that a
9:26 am
lot of politics is just about vibes. these are not the vibes that are going to help the kamala harris campaign, but these vibes could lead to a balancing out any hysteria over kamala harris, and could potentially lead to her doing that press conference, which should be a baseline for any presidential election campaign candidate. >> kayleigh: and here is the vibe right now, number one trend on x, "kamala crash." how's that for vibes? not a good vibe. >> harris: that came from true social. we showed it on "the faulkner focus" last hour. the last thing in all caps was "kamala crash." >> guy: joe biden said he cured the economy. does kamala harris agree with that? will she answer that question, or any question? >> kayleigh: if you have a press conference we can ask it. it's been 15 days. the national weather service warning of a life-threatening situation as tropical storm debbie lashes the southeast. ya know, if you were cashbacking you could earn
9:27 am
on everything with just one card. chase freedom unlimited. so, if you're off the racking... ...or crab cracking, you're cashbacking. cashback on flapjacks, baby backs, or tacos at the taco shack. nah, i'm working on my six pack. switch to a king suite- or book a silent retreat. silent retreat? hold up - yeeerp? i can't talk right now, i'm at a silent retreat. cashback on everything you buy with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours. every day, more dog people are deciding it's time for a fresh approach to pet food. developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food.
9:28 am
9:29 am
9:30 am
9:31 am
>> harris: debby, formerly a hurricane, now a tropical storm, made landfall on the northern coast, gulf coast, florida. it happened in the snow morning as a category 1 hurricane, bringing life-threatening storms, high winds, and pounding rain. at least two people are confirmed dead in the storm, and the storm has also knocked out utilities for more than 300,000 people. nicole valdes, 45 miles outside of tallahassee. the last hour when he saw you it wasn't doing what it's doing now. nicole? >> you are absolutely right, it has been changing by the minute here. we are already starting to see roads lead, trees are coming down, and it's definitely an impactful storm, to say the least here. now tropical storm debby has left, as you mentioned, more
9:32 am
than 300,000 across the sunshine state in the dark, and sadly killed at least two people here in madison, just east of tallahassee. you will noticed the roads behind me, a few cars driving around, likely those emergency crews try to get resources to where they're going to be needed for the next few days, but what you will notice is all the rain being pushed sort of blessed with a strong wind gusts. behind me the madison county courthouse, sort of a figure in this town, but unfortunately the damage is just starting to be seen, and our view of an example of it here is this tattered american flag weaving just above me, an example. and for some, a reminder, the damage and the strength of the storm that's already packed a punch. fortunately this community across the big bend area are still recovering from another hurricane, and less than year ago, hurricane italia. you can imagine there's a lot of
9:33 am
people here who are not happy to see a repeat scenario less than one year later. >> harris: we were told it would be a very reactive hurricane season and at least this part of it is proving to be true. we will see what's in the future for us the rest of the summer. nicole, thank you. you heard nicole saying this is going to track list. maybe georgia would be next. let's ask meteorologist adam klotz in the fox weather center. >> hey there, harris. unfortunately this is going to be one of those storms we are tracking for the next several days, maybe ugly to the end of this week. wind currently at 70 miles per hour. it has weakened because it's moved over land, but the story isn't going to be the winds, even though they've been impressive. these are the high wind totals over the last couple of days, got it close to 100 miles an hour but a lot of folks are at least 70 miles an hour. the stories instead probably as we look back on this when it's all said and done, it's going to be the rain. there are really impressive rainfall totals already as you're looking at anywhere from a foot up to 16 inches. that's just south of tampa. but the system will continue to slowly drag off toward the north
9:34 am
and the east, and it's going to bring a flood potential that probably is even greater the next couple of days. when he started to see these red colors, that is an extreme flash flood threat, and we have it today, tuesday into wednesday. the storm is going to linger for a little while, and you start to really focus later today into tomorrow on the coastline of georgia, the coastline of south carolina. that continues to be the case on wednesday. even at least some flooding risk taking you all into thursday. the problem is the storm just starts to sit off the southeast coast, and you see some of these really big numbers. i will leave you with this one, harris, and just give you an idea. this is one potential model, but we have spots here, maybe 2 feet of rain over the next several days. that would cause massive flooding across portions of coastal south carolina. >> harris: oh, my gosh. i'm looking at all those numbers. anything above 12 inches. 2 feet. adam, thank you very much. coming up, a new report reveals radio transcripts which show shocking communication failures
9:35 am
on the day the nation's 45th president was nearly assassinated.
9:36 am
[music playing] tiffany: my daughter is mila. she is 19 months old. she is a little ray of sunshine. one of the happiest babies you'll probably ever meet. [giggles] children with down syndrome typically have a higher risk for developing acute myeloid leukemia, or just leukemia in general. and here we are. marlo thomas: st. jude children's research hospital works day after day to find cures and save the lives of children with cancer and other life-threatening diseases. tiffany: she was referred to st. jude at 11 months. they knew what to do as soon as they got her diagnosis. they already had her treatment plan drawn out. and they were like, this is what we're going to do. this is how long it's going to take. this is how long in between. this place is like a family to us now. like, i can't say enough how grateful we are to be here.
9:37 am
medical bills are always a big thing to everybody because everybody knows that anything medical is going to be expensive. we have received no bills since being at st. jude. we have paid for nothing. marlo thomas: thanks to generous donors like you, families never receive a bill from st. jude for treatment, travel, housing, or food so they can focus on helping their child live. for just $19 a month, you'll help us continue the lifesaving research and treatment that these kids need now and in the future. join with your credit or debit card right now, and we'll send you this st. jude t-shirt that you can proudly wear to show your support. tiffany: anybody and everybody that contributes anything to this place, no matter if it's a big business or just the grandmother that donates once a month, they are changing people's lives. and that's a big deal.
9:38 am
[music playing] (fisher investments) at fisher investments we may look like other money managers, but we're different. (other money manager) how so? (fisher investments) we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client'' best interest. (fisher investments) so we don't sell any commission-based products. (other money manager) then how do you make money? (fisher investments) we have a simple management fee, structured so we do better when our clients do better. (other money manager) your clients really come first then, huh? (fisher investments) yes. we make them a top priority, by getting to know their finances, family, health, lifestyle and more. (other money manager) wow, maybe we are different. (fisher investments) at fisher investments, we're clearly different.
9:39 am
>> emily: we are learning chilling new details about communication failures surrounding the assassination attempt against former president donald trump. encrypted radio communications reportedly revealing a local counter sniper actually warned they "lost the gunmen" after they had sighted him with that range finder. matt finn has the latest on the investigation. matt? >> emily, the acting director of the secret service now confirms that former president trump's counter sniper team did not have direct radio communication with
9:40 am
local police here in butler on the day of the shooting, and a new "washington post" report reveals just how poor communication was between federal and local agencies. according to encrypted radio transcripts, on july 13th at 5:42 p.m., a local counter sniper here in pa said, "just fyi, we had a younger white male, long hair, lurking around the agr building treaty was viewed with the range finder sighting the stage. we have lost sight of him." that was referencing thomas crooks, who pulled left in your assassination while killing one man and injuring others. there's been outcry over why no secret service workers have been publicly fired or suspended just yet. you're on the ground i spoke with republican congress and mike kelly. this is his district, and he's on the special task force that is investigating the july 13 shooting. >> the american people have the right to know when we have a tremendous response to a did
9:41 am
find out for them. i don't want to talk about innuendo, or something said something or i got a secret note from somebody. we are going to do the deep dive necessary for people actually on the ground, what they went through, and how did you prepare for this? >> and congressman kelly is urging everyone to take a breath, because he promises that task force will come to this site, and he promises the country that everyone who needs to be held accountable will be. emily? >> emily: matt, thank you. kayleigh, leaving talking about this the whole time, the colossal communication failures keep piling up, and all it does is underscore the colossal leadership failure of the secret service. >> kayleigh: no doubt. emily, that "washington post" report was stunning. we had been saying we need to transcripts of the radio munication's. "the washington post" got them. at 5:42 p.m., local law enforcement communicated there was a guy with a range finder? fine, you use one in golf, and shooting. you don't use it at a trump rally.
9:42 am
the shooting took place at 6:11 p.m. 30 minutes past, where there ise range finder, then we find out in this "washington post" report that the information is communicated into a command post that only contained local law enforcement. so what happened to what i've been told by trump officials was the model for everything a presidential event? you have a security center with the head of every law enforcement group in the same room. did that not happen here? and then, finally, we are told man with a gun, 32nd goes by, the message not communicated why? because they didn't have enough time to call in on a cell phone. what are you using radios connect so many questions. failure, to your point, although they round. >> emily: you know who didn't lose sight of him, were all the rally goers who had their cell phones trained on him and trying to get the attention of those in charge. >> harris: we are supposed to see something and say something, but apparently when we say something we don't get listen to. that's not a good message. there's only one question i have today for leadership at the
9:43 am
usss. how many people who you are looking at who fell down on that day, where the failures actually happen, are still on the job today, and what are they doing? who are they protecting? i want to know where we have moved to with people who are being most scrutinized. you have enough redundancy in our ranks to replace them while you finish your investigation? we don't, because you know what kimberly cheatle told us? there are 1,500 employees short under watch. she knew she had positions to fill, so they were stretched. they were stretched. so even if they wanted to take some of these people out of the field, we don't have potentially the redundancy we would need to keep people safe. and this isn't just about our candidates as president. these are about any of our elected leaders. we know the enemy wants to cause chaos, and so they are targeting us. and we have enough enemies around the globe now, we don't need a piece of paper that says, today is trump and iran's day. it's everybody all day long. so get ready.
9:44 am
>> emily: that's right. focusing on this particular point, which i feel is so disturbing, is the erosion of the relationship between the secret service the leadership and local law enforcement. president biden doesn't leave the white house without the support and the dependence on local law enforcement who bravely and steadfastly support the secret service all throughout the country, with all the protective ease. and here we have leadership that's been throwing them under the bus and trying to blame them for their failures. >> guy: i think the locals felt scapegoated unfairly in the very early days, when the now erstwhile leader was trying to sort of cast blame everywhere but on herself and her own agency. and it is sort of amazing, because every time some new development comes out involving this incident, the near murder of donald trump on national television, i keep waiting to have a sense of, oh, okay, now i sort of understand why that happened. and yet, each new piece of information makes it more unbelievable, less
9:45 am
understandable. it is shocking how many different levels of failure they were here. it's like, he hid the gun in advance, he did the flyover with a drone in advance. they spotted him an hour in advance. they lost sight of him and radio-etn, and somehow donald trump was allowed on the stage? at every step that should've been a stop, and there wasn't. speed to near murder of donald trump and the actual murder. everyone's point here, we need these answers right now, because right now there are many protect ease under the protection of the secret service who thus far we have seen no leadership whatsoever may change other than cheatle. >> carley: i feel like we have learned so much and you nothing at all when it comes what happened july 13th. when it comes to communication issues between local police and secret service, you can't have everybody on the same radio channel, i am told, because it would be chaotic, but what we could do was have a local guy embedded with the secret service, so when they get the call, we are seeing
9:46 am
something suspicious, you can communicate that much more effectively person to person with the secret service agent who can then go check it out or alert the immediate detail around former president trump. or anybody to secret service is protecting. that's one thing. the other thing is we don't know anything about the shooter or a motive yet, and one of the reasons for that is because the social media is still encrypted. so i completely agree with senator lindsey graham who brought this up in the hearing last week when he said there is an answer that is sitting somewhere out there, and because these apps are still encrypted, for a murder, and assassin, he says privacy to a point, but that is ridiculous. >> harris: and our enemies are watching all of this. they are like the borg. they are learning. >> emily: speaker mccarthy told us on friday, when his team land somewhere, his secret service hands they radio to the local law enforcement so it ensures seamless
9:47 am
communication. that's leadership. all right, guys. on to this. kamala harris' search for a running mate is in its final hours, and a new report says she has narrowed it down to just two candidates. we will tell you about that next. ♪ ♪ dupixent can help people with asthma breathe better in as little as 2 weeks. so this is better. even this. dupixent is an add-on treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma that's not for sudden breathing problems. dupixent can cause allergic reactions that can be severe. tell your doctor right away if you have rash, chest pain, worsening shortness of breath,
9:48 am
tingling or numbness in your limbs. tell your doctor about new or worsening joint aches and pain or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines including steroids, without talking to your doctor. ask your specialist about dupixent. oh, why leaffilter? it's well designed, efficient, i appreciate that. leaffilter's technology keeps debris out of your gutters for good, guaranteed. what more could you ask for? call 833.leaf.filter today, or visit leaffilter.com. my name's trevor. i've tried other diets in the past never lasted before too long my cravings came back especially my sugar cravings and i fell off the wagon. release worked fast. my sweet tooth is gone. i'm so happy with my progress and now i love myself. ♪ imagine a future where plastic is not wasted... but instead remade over and over... into the things that keep our food fresher, our families safer, and our planet cleaner. to help us get there, america's plastic makers
9:49 am
are investing billions of dollars to create innovative products and new recycling technologies for sustainable change. because when you push for smarter solutions, big things can happen.
9:50 am
9:51 am
>> kayleigh: we have breaking news. reuters now reporting that the presumptive democratic presidential candidate, kamala harris, has narrowed down her search for her running mate to two finalists. you're looking at them. at minnesota governor tim walz, and pennsylvania governor josh shapiro. we could learn her choice and just hours, and vice president harris plans to take the stage with her pick at a rally in philadelphia tomorrow night before a swing state blitz. these are the two candidates. the atlantic says this, probably the best summation of josh shapiro. "a politician designed in a lab to help democrats win pivotal rust belt swing states would probably look a lot like josh shapiro, he won by 4 in 2022, and democrats took the governorship by a whopping 15 points." there's just one problem. he was john king on the one problem. >> josh shapiro is being discussed is one of the potential running mates.
9:52 am
he also endorsed her tonight. in your view, what are the pros and cons putting him on the ticket? >> he is certainly under consideration. he's a first-term governor, he's jewish, but could be risks in putting him on the ticket. >> kayleigh: there is the risk. >> carley: if you are kamala harris i would hope you don't listen to any of the extremists on the democratic side that say just because he's jewish he shouldn't be the vice president because of his support for israel. look what's happening right now. it does look like she may ultimately choose josh shapiro. he's one of the two remaining. and there are a lot of reasons for choosing him, but the fact that it's even a concern shows a deep and concerning divide among the democrat party. now that it has been whittled down to two, it is clear that mark kelly's tweet from arizona, the one that he quickly took down, was accurate when he said he wants to focus on supporting arizonans. when it comes to the vice president overall, we focus on it a lot, it's fun to talk about it but there are questions on if it really matters. will somebody in november go to
9:53 am
the voting booth and say, man, she chose josh shapiro, i wish he chose mark kelly out of arizona, and i'm going to vote for donald trump because of that? i don't really think so. the top of the ticket matters most. >> kayleigh: emily, that is a reuters report, so that's not our own fox reporting just yet. but john fetterman is making a play to oust josh shapiro. here's what politico said. i chuckled when i read this. this is about their time serving together on the board of pardons. fetterman sought to revitalize the institution and provide second chances to some convicts. schapiro often took a less lenient position, arguing he believed in criminal justice reform that commutations process was not a place for structural change. that's kind of a check. he's someone who is tough on crime. cts, and i think that supports harris' reinvention of herself, that she too is tough on crime all of the sudden. i think what we see between those gentlemen is someone airing their dirty laundry with a roommate. i think it is sort of
9:54 am
ineffective and, frankly, really inconsequential in this. but what i do think is consequential, if i may go back a step, is the articulation of the risk with him being jewish. i find that reprehensible and aberrant, that someone can go on live television and say to the democratic party that it is a risk. that's all you need to know about the anti-semitism that has been allowed to foment and is effectively in the democratic party today. that's the biggest deal breaker to me. if that's being articulated, what is being articulated next? >> harris: and media included in that. because it was an anchor who said that. >> kayleigh: people are saying tim walz has minnesota dad vibes, but as a republican who told politico said, if dad vibes mattered, tim kaine would be enjoying his last few years. >> emily: boom. >> guy: i don't really think the front runners anyone other than josh shapiro. it has to be. there was a video put out by the philadelphia mayor, perhaps prematurely, that was touting the harris-shapiro ticket.
9:55 am
maybe they hit send a little too early on that. i'm not sure what happened there, but he makes so much sense on paper for her, it seems nutty that he wouldn't be the pick. i guess we'll know soon enough, that i think it'll probably be him. >> harris: it's been talked about that he is the future of the democratic party, for the reason of his heritage, being jewish and all of that. before this moment in history, with the pro-hamas crowd, some of them. but i don't even think kamala could beat josh shapiro if it came to that. i really don't. >> emily: he outperforms her in literally every demographic possible. >> harris: so if they get into office and he decides he wants to move up the ladder, bye-bye, kamala. you could see it. i would say this, why did you take anyone else to a rally if it were not the governor of pennsylvania? it seems a little obvious. >> kayleigh: and if she goes for governor tim walz, watch for
9:56 am
it, this is doubling down on progressive instincts rather than acknowledging the political ones. we will see. my "outnumbered" next. grow? new pantene with more pro-vitamins, plus biotin & collagen. repairs as well as the leading luxury bonding brand. stronger, healthier hair, without the $60 price tag. if you know, you know it's pantene. when the sawdust settles and the engine roars the thing you care about is a job well done. but when you get your tools from harbor freight something about the job feels different - your wallet. whatever you do, do it for less, at harbor freight. ♪ ♪ ♪ have you always had trouble losing weight and keeping it off? same. discover the power of wegovy®. ♪ ♪ with wegovy®, i lost 35 pounds. and some lost over 46 pounds. ♪ ♪ and i'm keeping the weight off. wegovy® helps you lose weight and keep it off. i'm reducing my risk.
9:57 am
wegovy® is the only fda-approved weight-management medicine that's proven to reduce risk of major cardiovascular events in adults with known heart disease and with either obesity or overweight. wegovy® shouldn't be used with semaglutide or glp-1 medicines. don't take wegovy® if you or your family had medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop wegovy® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis and gallbladder problems. wegovy® may cause low blood sugar in people with diabetes, especially if you take medicines to treat diabetes. tell your provider about vision problems or changes, or if you feel your heart racing while at rest. depression or thoughts of suicide may occur. call your provider right away if you have any mental changes. common side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. with wegovy®, i'm losing weight, i'm keeping it off. and i'm lowering my cv risk. that's the power of we. ♪ ♪
9:58 am
check your cost and coverage before talking to your health care professional about wegovy®. you'll find them in cities, towns and suburbs all across america. millions of americans who have medicare and medicaid but may be missing benefits they could really use. extra benefits they may be eligible to receive at no extra cost. and if you have medicare and medicaid, you may be able to get extra benefits, too, through a humana medicare advantage dual-eligible special needs plan. call now to see if there's a plan in your area and to see if you qualify. all of these plans include doctor, hospital and prescription drug coverage. plus, something really special, the humana healthy options allowance. your allowance. to help pay for essentials like eligible groceries, utilities and rent. even over-the-counter items. and whatever you don't spend gets carried over to the next month. plus, with a humana medicare advantage dual-eligible special needs plan you'll get other important benefits. all of these
9:59 am
plans include dental coverage. with two free cleanings a year. plus, fillings, and a yearly exam. vision coverage, including eye exams and a yearly allowance for eye wear. and hearing benefits. including routine hearing exams and coverage toward hearing aids. you'll also get free rides to and from medical appointments. best of all, you'll pay nothing for covered prescriptions, even brand name ones, all year long. and zero dollars for many routine vaccines at in-network retail pharmacies. plus, you'll have access to humana's large networks of doctors and specialists. so, if you have medicare and medicaid, call now to see if there's a plan in your area that will give you extra benefits, including an allowance to help pay for essentials. plus, no-cost for covered prescriptions. and coverage for routine dental, vision and hearing. a knowledgeable, licensed humana sales agent will explain your coverage options. and, if you're eligible, help you enroll over the phone. it's that easy! call today
10:00 am
and we'll also send this free guide. humana. a more human way to healthcare. >> when we started this day, we were in a position where he had not seen the nasdaq s&p and the dow which are watching very closely at such low points since september of 2022. so this is categorically an important spot in history today. we have to get out of this ditch. you see we are off by close to 900 points as well. a few hours away from close and a lot can happen between now and then peer president biden situation room meeting is set for an hour or so away. vice. vice president kamala harris will also be there and israel is bracing for an attack by iran possibly as early as today and some of the iran funded terrorists could be in on that. thank you for watching. here now is "america reports." >> john: thank you peer president biden departing wilmington, delaware, any minute now ahead

130 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on