tv Fox News Live FOX News September 28, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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hassan nasrallah was killed in an israeli strike in beirut. nasrallah who led hezbollah for more than 30 years is the most powerful target to be killed by israel in weeks of intensified fighting with hezbollah. welcome to knocks fuse live, everyone, i'm aneato anita vogel. great to be with you. griff: the general staff indicated earlier today that more strikes are planned on friday. secretary of defense lloyd austin saying the united states was not involved in israel's operation or given advance warning. senior correspondent mike tobin is live in haifa, israel kicking things off. >> griff, a few developments in the last few moments. iran's supreme leader says the blood of hassan nasrallah will not go unavenged.
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a rocket was sent, but alarms were all over central israel. there was a fresh israeli air strike into the beirut neighborhood, the same neighborhood where hassan nasrallah was killed yesterday. it was a massive air strike, so large that collateral damage is certain. the idf says that hezbollah chose to put its headquarters in a civilian area and the destruction will prevent future attacks and greater loss of life. and meeting with hezbollah's number three who is now said to be dead as well. and israel stated that hezbollah chose to enter this war when they fired on israel with hamas, and that decision had consequences. there was a rare public statement in english. >> state of israel has eliminated hassan nasrallah, the leader of hezbollah. he was the murderer of thousands of israelis and foreign citizens, he was an immediate
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threat to the life of thousands of israelis and other citizens. >> nasrallah's death did not stop the rocket fire. alarms have been sounding all over northern israel. reuters reports that three days of mourning will go into effect in iraq and five days of mourn in iran. and there are reports ground forces into lebanon and syria, and israel can defend against attacks. and lloyd austin spoke with counterparts and it keeping them from expanding. griff: and we're seeing the continuing air strikes. do we have any sense whether this is going to be the norm for the immediate time being? >> it's interesting, griff, that
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this really is an air campaign based on intelligence. the israeli aircraft are unopposed in the sky. there are said to be some hezbollah surface to air defenses, but so far, we haven't seen them at least being effective if they've been fired at all. so, it's really up to the israelis to have enough targets to start-- to keep taking out the missile storage points, the weapon storage points, on the ground. the difficulty they have to develop the targets and handle the massive volume of weaponry in the south lebanon and the reports are 150,000 rockets. so it's a lot of targets between now and then and they're said to have taken out about 2500 so far. griff: and mike, as our viewers look live at our images of beirut a little after 7 p.m. local time. what the sense, the mood on the ground there in haifa where you are and elsewhere in israel? >> in the north of israel, you
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will people who are quite pleased that this has happened. you have people who have been very impatient with the last year that they've been driven from their homes and there was a lot of pressure politically on particularly benjamin netanyahu, but the upper echelons of israel's government to do something firm and robust to make sure that this rocket fire would stop. clearly there has been consequences, but the people here in the north of israel wanted this war because they want to return to their homes. you've got about 60,000 people who have been forced out of their homes. now, if you cross the border and you get into lebanon, you had people who are horrified at the strength of the israeli campaign and the tremendous amount of collateral damage. when you fire into a neighborhood like that, there's always going to be collateral damage and you've seen the video and the size of those explosions, we really don't have good figures right now for how extensive the collateral damage is, but there will be significant civilian deaths and injuries, griff.
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griff: mike tobin live in haifa, israel. mike, we'll be checking with you in the next few hours as things develop. thank you. >> in other news, vice-president kamala harris is spending the day in california, following her first trip to the southern border in more than three years last night. this comes as new numbers show a staggering amount of illegal immigrants with criminal convictions are currently roaming the u.s. lucas tomlinson is live outside the white house with more. and lucas, is there any reaction so far to the release of these numbers from ice? >> good afternoon, anita. so far there's been no reaction from the white house about these numbers and let's take a look at them. according to ice of the 10 million noncitizens illegal aliens in the united states, about half a million of them are convicted criminals, 5% total are excons.
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ice says more than 13,000 immigrants are convicted of homicide, either living in the united states or abroad or freely in the united states outside of ice detention and there are also 15,000 convicted rapists as well living freely inside the country or abroad. here was vice-president kamala harris during her campaign stop at the border last night in arizona. >> as president, i won't only bring back the border security bill that donald trump tanked, i will do more to secure our border. to reduce illegal border crossings, i will take further action to keep the border closed between ports of entry. those who cross our borders unlawfully will be apprehended and removed and barred from reentering for five years. >> here is the republican senate candidate in wisconsin earlier on fox and friends about harris' visit. >> look, it's a joke. i mean, really, it's hard to even conceptualize how this is a
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tight race at all. kamala harris has failed at literally everything she has done, most importantly, being the border czar. as we all know, you know, president trump pretty much had the border secure and then kamala harris and joe biden came in over three million came in the first year, three million the second year, well over four million, we don't know if that number is 16, 20 million, and every state's a border state. >> in the past, vice-president harris has knocked former president trump's border wall, in that bill that she now supports, anita, there's funding to expand it, so that's something that the vice-president will have to discuss later. >> all right, lucas tomlinson live outside the white house. griff: for more on vice-president harris' trip to the border, let's bring in border patrol counsel, former border chief in arizona, chris
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clem. what is the border patrol union's reaction to harris' visit. >> you've got to remember she's ignored the border completely almost four years and now this close to the election, she decides to come down here? what did she do? she went down there and met with two members from leadership, right? she met with the sector chief was one of them and she met with him for less than 30 minutes, she was down there less than 30 minutes over the problem that's been facing our nation for close to four years. the problems she created and she comes down, 20 minutes talks, takes a couple of picture and all of a sudden can tun around and say i've been to the border. the reality is, the american public is smarter than that. this mess we're seeing today she created. she can't take 20 minutes and take a picture. she needs to apologize to every single agent she spoke bad about. she needs to apologize to the american public, apologize to the people out there that have been affected by crimes and you've got to remember,
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president trump was here a couple of months ago, he spent over an hour in 100 plus degree weather speaking to agents, speaking to management, speaking to, you know, victims of criminal aliens and speaking to the media. i mean, there you go, just compare that alone, and you know who needs to be the leader of this country and you know, we just, the apology has to be as big as the insult, as far as i'm concerned. griff: you know, you raised the victims, art, and chief, here is a little more of what harris said last night about getting tough. >> i believe we have a duty to set rules at our border and to enforce them, and i take that responsibility very seriously. griff: she talks about a duty, chief, and i can remember back when i covered kate steinle's death, it was a major news event mainly because it was so rare. we now are having cases of kate
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steinle almost every week, it seems. so when you hear vice-president harris vowing to get tougher, what's your reaction? >> well, it's laughable because she has the california attorney general for six years, she's been a u.s. senator and vice-president tore seven years, she has claimed that her values have not changed and we've seen that since she's become a senator and vice-president, she has not valued border security we have the video to show it and stats to show it. when i hear her talking about getting tough, it's laughable. as art mentioned she came and officially capacity as vice-president for 20 minutes to meet with border patrol, and get the photo, and then meet with a campaign stop and she didn't talk about the 400,000 criminal aliens that entered the country or 10 million entered illegally on her watch and she's going to claim tough as ag.
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she's going to claim that as the vice-president. griff: ideal, routinely with border numbers have been doing so for the last almost hour years under this administration and prior to it, under the trump administration and these numbers shocked hean myself. even myself. i want to show the ice numbers out there. you have over 13,000 convicted murderers, 15,000 sexual assaults and these are the non-detainer offenders roaming the country and i want to ask you, art, is this a coverup? have they tried to cover these numbers up from the public? >> i think it's shocking. it's not surprising. i think what happens is, i don't think so much they covered it up, it's more like, hey, if they don't ask, you don't tell. i think and that's part of the problem. if they don't ask, don't tell and the american people don't know how much they haven't told you, because they don't ask.
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i'm glad the question was asked. aside from that, these individuals have criminal records and still released into the country so now let's go back and beat the dead horse i come back to, look at the gotaways, how much worse could the got-aways be that they knew that they were not going to be qualified to be released and that's shocking. once we try to figure out a closer number to what did get away, people are going to be even more shocked. griff: and the known gotaways, more than 1.9 million, sources told me last week, that this fiscal year alone, upwards of 250,000 almost known gotaways. chief, i want to give you sort of the same question because you were on duty and you see numbers like that and we had your colleague, former chief testifying and essentially that there was a coverup. did you see anything that you felt like this administration was covering up just how bad it is? >> well, like i've said many
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times, they were more about securing their narrative and not the border. now, i would not-- i'd listen to their talking points, but i gave my reality of what was happening, affecting the boots on the ground in yuma, especially when i was chief there. this was the problem was that we kept-- this administration worried about processing and letting people in. we knew this threat existed and oftentimes could not even prosecute people because it took us three or four days to get their records checks because we had thousands of people a day coming into yuma. we know this exists, this is why we keep hammering home about the gotaways and that this is a national safety, a public safety and national security threat. this is what's coming through, this is what's getting away. this is what was keeping you us up at night. we really could not prosecute somebody if it took us three, four days to finally process them because it had been more than 48 hours. we couldn't get the u.s. attorney to prosecute them. we'd turn them to ice, ice would ultimately release them because they had no space. this continues to be a problem. griff: were you ever told not to
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put something out if it was related to information or arrests on sia's or staggering number increases? >> i was told we should keep it more focused on the big picture, but i was using my platform and limited capacity to put the facts out there. i know that i used to get a few phone calls every once in a while when social media immediate messages went out or i didn't give the talking points as described. i told them what was happening in yuma and what was working for us and what wasn't working. that wasn't what they want today hear, but i wasn't going to have my integrity questioned by this administration. griff: before we run out of time, art, your reaction to it's quite clear that harris' intention is to bring that border bill, senate bill back and put it front and center. what are your thoughts on that, do they need to go back, or would you support a regurgitation of the same bill offered? >> look, she's the
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vice-president, right? and she hasn't done anything for three and a half years. if she wanted to do anything at all. she would have done it. as far as i'm concerned she's got a couple more months of being vice-president if she really is serious, she would do something now. griff: art, chris, great insight as always. thanks for being here, have a great saturday. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> well, former president trump is in wisconsin today where he is expected to focus on immigration. this following his friday town hall in michigan where he focused on manufacturing jobs, and the battle ground states auto industry. rich edson is live in prairie du chien, wisconsin with more on this. hi, rich. >> hi, anita. we're in the midwest and the president is going to talk about the southern border. and he's due in a couple of hours. the crowd has been lining up for several hours and they are going to talk about immigration inside, that's what the
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republicans, certainly the trump campaign has been focusing and emphasizing on here in prairie du chien, in the western part of the state along the ris mississippi river. the reason why in this town, a migrant of venezuela accused of assaulting a mother and her daughter. and police say they're confident he's a member of the transnational gang, it's not a random attack that the victims knew the suspect. trump renewed immigration, and an issue he's been focusing on since he first ran back in 2015. >> a lot of them are real bad people, rough people and also taking a lot of jobs from americans and probably happen with you, and as the small number of jobs they created were all taken by illegal immigrants in the last short period of time and we are going to make that ch change. >> also last evening, vice-president harris toured the border in douglas, arizona. democrats are raising the issue
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to highlight the bipartisan senate border bill that trump opposed which effectively ended any chance of it passing and defended her approach to immigration. >> donald trump tanked it. he picked up the phone and called some friends in congress, and said, stop the bill because you see, he prefers to run on a problem instead of fixing a pro problem. >> wisconsin is a key swing state and so are pennsylvania and north carolina, and fox news happens to have new polling in the state. in pennsylvania harris leads trump by 2 percentage points, 50-48 among registered voters and 49% each among likely voters. in north carolina, harris 2 percentage, likely voters, the race flips trump on top 52-52-4 and you know what is not a swing state?
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alabama. the former president is going to there for to tuscaloosa. and the game. >> griff. griff: we're keeping our eye on the space force station in cape canaveral, florida, a spacex rocket is expected to launch. pushed from thursday due to hurricane helene. when it returns in february, it will bring home butch and suni, these two astronauts left behind by the boeing starliner who have been on the international space station since june. anita. >> good to have them home. well, millions of people remain without power as recovery efforts are ongoing in the southeast after hurricane helene's devastation. a live report is coming up next. here's to getting better with age. here's to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein,
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>> dozens of dead after hurricane helene ripped through the southeast this week as recovery efforts are ongoing across the region. steve harrigan is live in gulfport, florida with the latest. wow, steve, the damage looks pretty extensive behind you. >> it's deep and it's widespread as well and the bad news, really, is that the death toll
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continues to rise, even well after the storm has passed through. right now, it's up to 52 killed by the storm. some of the worst far from the storm, such as south carolina hit the hardest, and in the state of florida. pinellas county near tampa where i am now, that's the hardest hit despite the fact that it's 200 miles away from where the storm passed onto land. that storm was 100 miles off the coast and yet, it was so big and produced such a wall of water, an eight foot storm surge right here, and it was that storm surge that caught a lot of people who thought the storm was going to be far away by surprise. >> it's the worst ever. the-- my grandmother lived right there and she said the storm-- worst storm in '35 and water never come over her house. >> it's tough when you listen to some of the 911 calls, just in pinellas county alone, 7,000
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calls for help thursday night. the water rising quickly and people needing and desperate for help quickly. the cleanup is going to be tougher now with the steady rain coming down. initial estimates put the damage at more than $15 billion. griff, back to you. griff: it's going to take a long time to clean that up. steve harrigan, live for us in gulfport. thank you. >> well, the devastation hurricane helene left behind has a community from madeira beach, florida to rescue and get supplies for neighbors and strangers. for more on the efforts, let's bring in the owner of salty dog charters, sylvia litchfield. thank you for joining us today, really appreciate it. i understand that you and your husband have been extremely busy not so much looking after yourselves, but looking after others. you have a charter boat company and how have you been able to put that to use to help other people? >> hi, yeah, thanks for having me. my husband at captain of this
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company and he is out right now. we have hundreds of calls, i made a facebook post yesterday morning saying that we could go dunk our boats and it has turned into hundreds of calls, calling. i have him at a condo right now that has 50 elderly people trapped in it. they have no food, no water. and i'm currently at bait pines bait and tackle shop i have a band of companies here, we are collecting donations and getting them to the boats and then we are distributing out. there's no access to the barrier islands and thinking it's going to be over a week before anybody can get out there. the sand is four foot high on the roads. the devastation here has been awful and those people, unfortunately, didn't think it was going to hit as hard as it was since it was so far off the coast and not a lot of people
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took it seriously and the one time that nobody did take it seriously, and a lot of people stayed back, i'd probably say thousands of people stayed back. and it's unfortunate and a lot of people have lost their homes, their livelihoods, our small businesses are wrecked and john's pass is wrecked and it's unfortunate what we're going on. and we were fortunate our boats were out of the water and we can get back into the water and we can help, we've been rescuing, supplying, we are going to continue on until the island is open. anita: wow, this is just unbelievable. talk about throwing people a lifeline. so you have-- >> absolutely. anita: yeah, you have put together your boats. how many boats do you have in your company? >> we own three. anita: you own three boats. and have you been able to get other people who have boats available to join with you in this task of going out and
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collecting people and delivering supplies? >> hour community has completely banded together here. we have had hundreds of boats going out and so many search and rescue boats. at this point we have-- we have so many people on the water. it's raining right now and kind of has halted everything, but we are continuously, between facebook and social media, people calling us, i am at the headquarters, i'm here coordinating with all of the boats and we are absolutely, we have so many helping hands. this community has come together, so beautiful in a terrible tragedy. anita: this is just really amazing you've been able to be in touch with people through social media, through facebook and you know, other social media platforms. the power is out there so there isn't, you know, a lot of ways for people to communicate. tell me about some of the more
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dire circumstances you've find people in. >> the people that broke my heart that we picked up yesterday, 90-year-old couple, they were our last boat of the day before it started getting dark. they told me that they were laying in their bed and holding hands and just praying that they would make it. they were floating up and their nose was touching the ceiling, there was so much water in their house, eight to 10 foot and they just laid in their bed and they didn't know if they were going to make it to the morning and they fortunately did and we were able to pull them out and got them to their family safely. anita: wow. that's just amazing. their prayers were answered in the form of your boats coming to get them. we thank you for the good work that you've done, you and your husband, the salty dog charter company. we want to remember that name. thank you so much for all of your good work and you take care
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of yourself as well. >> i appreciate you guys. anita: thank you. celia litchfield. okay, griff. we want to put this up on the screen, go ahead. griff: yeah, we do, because you can join all of our viewers can join fox in support of the efforts following helene. your help helps them respond. red cross.org fox forward. or scan the qr code on the screen and help out just like the salty dog folks. anita: ukrainian president zelenskyy speaks exclusively to our own griff jenkins on his meeting yesterday with president trump. that's next. stay where you are, you don't want to miss it. ♪(voya)♪ there are some things that work better together. like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. voya provides tools that help you make the right investment and benefit choices. so you can reach today's financial goals and look forward to a more confident future. voya, well planned,
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beirut. president biden just moments ago said in a statement he was directed his defense secretary to further enhance united states defense posture in the middle east. mike tobin is live with developments. set the scene for us, what is going on there right now? >> well, first of all, to enhance what you just talked about, the president chimed in saying the defense posture will be enhanced out here to reduce the risk of a broader regional war, and when you talk about what is happening out here, there's a lot of concern that this could indeed spill over in a broader regional war, particularly since hassan nasrallah was assassinated yesterday. you have the supreme leader of iran, ayatollah saying that the blood of hassan nasrallah will not go unavenged. an update since i was last on the air. and we talked about a new strike
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going into the neighborhood where he was assassinated yesterday, a new strike this evening. and israel says a member of the intelligence array was taken out in that strike. so the combat is ongoing. the israeli planes are in the air and we can hear an israeli drone now. and they are looking for new targets, generally weapons launchers and weapons storage, again, watching the situation out here as so many of the regional players, iran in particular is now vowing revenge, even threatening to put troops on the ground. the idf hasn't responded directly to the threat of troops on the ground only saying that they have shown they can stand up, they can defend against iranian aggression and they've proven that in this stage of the conflict, anita. anita: that's certainly a big fear around the world that this would turn into a wider
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conflict. mike, any other reaction there on the ground as to more strikes coming up and just i'll give you the last 10 seconds here. >> what you have is israelis in the north of the country very tired of the rocket fire that's coming in their direction. so they support this overwhelming aggression that israel is showing in the south of lebanon. what we don't know yet is the collateral damage from the massive air strikes yesterday, but you have to know it will be significant. i should also let now that israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has landed back here in tel aviv and he is meeting in israel's version of the pentagon. anita: mike tobin live for us in haifa, israel. thank you so much. griff: . >> we had a very good meeting, a very productive meeting and the relationship is absolutely-- i would say fantastic. it's great. and i think a lot was learned and it will all end, it will end
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for everybody's benefit. griff: ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy concluding his whirlwind visit to the u.s. by meeting with former president trump in new york city yesterday. this following his separate meetings with president biden and vice-president harris where he presented his victory plan. president zelenskyy spoke exclusively with fox immediately following his friday meeting at trump tower. >> president zelenskyy, thank you for being here, you've just come from a meeting with former president trump. how did it go? >> thanks so much for invitation and really we had very productive, i think good meeting. it was very important for me because before i came to new york i said that i have to strengthen my country now, it's very challenge you period. and we need the answers, that we need the answers from the united states because you are the leaders in support of the very beginning of the war and for me,
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it was very important to share our steps, steps in our plan of victory, what can really strengthen us to be strong on the battlefield. even after battlefield, we understand. even in any kind of future negotiation, ukraine has to be strong. and that's what about we spoke with biden, kamala harris, donald trump, and congress of the united states. i don't know what will be after elections and who will be the president because your country, your people right, extremely right that they decide who will be the president, but i've got from donald trump very direct information that he will be on our side, that he will support ukraine and there are so many details, i think, which he was very interested to hear from me, directly from me. griff: did he ask you questions? >> did he ask me? >> yes, sir. >> yes, of course, a lot. griff: what did he ask you. >> what is really now the
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situation on the battlefield, how you see the support from the united states and and why putin did this invasion. griff: and former president trump said he had a good relationship with you and good relationship with putin. does that concern you. >> i said i hope that he have more warm relations with me and i said it during this meeting and really i understand that, that donald trump has relations and had relation during when he was the president. griff: you told the new yorker recently that you didn't think trump knows how to end this. did he say anything today to change your view of it? >> i said i think we understand much more better than everybody, really, including donald trump, what going on in ukraine and how to stop him. it's difficult to understand, yes, with all of our respect
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between the united states and ukraine, but we are on the big distance and if you're not in the war you can't understand. of course, you're smart people and you read a lot and you support it all, but if you're on the distance, big distance, and you didn't come to ukraine during the war because ukraine during the war and before the full scale invasion, two-different countries. so, without this experience, you can't really understand how to stop putin and that what i want today share to president. i wanted the price of the tragedy, bloody invasion of putin. griff: you've said and you're seeking the authorization to use weapons the way you want to, to strike deeper into russia. in your meetings with president biden, vice-president harris, or trump, did you get any reassurance that you're closer to getting that authorization? >> we are en--
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that's important, we want to use it only on military targets. it's important that americans know we are speaking exactly about military targets. griff: are you any closer to getting that authorization from-- >> yes, we begin to work, to the plan with details and we gave this plan to biden, yes. we share some ideas about it with kamala and with donald. i have-- about it now, i'm more positive, but we will see. and today, it doesn't depend on our side. we did our work. i think we did it very well. griff: let me ask you, you talk about needing the support of everybody. >> yes. griff: but speaker johnson did meet with you, he's upset about the trip you made to pennsylvania. did president trump raise the pennsylvania trip. >> no. griff: do you regret this trip? >> no, no, no, he-- president trump didn't raise this topic and i think it's
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clever because, to my mind because i was in-- so i had meeting with republicans and i was in pennsylvania. it's different times, but it was not about elections and i don't want to involve us to election period of the united states, that's why i think that-- that's why we did the rise this topic with donald trump. i think it's very important because i had meetings both in meeting with people, with ordinary people, from politicians on both sides, we need both support, bipartisan support and what is very important, i was thankful both sides to ordinary people who helped us very much. griff: let me ask you about your meeting with vice-president.
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did you get the sense that if she wins that it will be an extension of the support you're already getting from the biden administration or does it differ? >> i think it's not for my side to speak about elections about both of candidates. as i said, i don't want to be involved to the election period and i don't want ukraine to be involved. it's so dangerous. i don't want to lose one or another part of americans for us, the unity helped us to survive from the very beginning of war. unity in the united states, which have influence on the unity in eu. griff: the calls, speaker johnson and others in washington are calling for you to recall your ambassador, upset about the pennsylvania thing. do you have any plans to recall ambassador markrova? >> i'm the president of ukraine and i can't discuss our
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ambassadors only with the speaker of my country. that's-- you know, the constitution and i can't discuss it with speaker johnson, with all respect, and so it's not about it. griff: and you can catch more of our exclusive interview with ukrainian president zelenskyy and hear him directly address whether or not americans should care about the effort there and the billions being sent over. that's coming up in the next hour. anita. anita: good stuff, griff. looking forward to that. there are new calls for new york city mayor eric adams to step down after he pleads not guilty on federal corruption charges. that's next. is exceptional customer experience. what makes it possible is unmatched connectivity and 5g solutions from t-mobile for business. t-mobile connects 100,000 delta airlines employees.
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running his city after pleading not guilty for charges. and calls continue for him to step aside as he fights the case. cb cotton has the latest from new york. >> nice to see you, griff. new york city mayor eric adams appears to be moving forward with some of his usual scheduled public appearances as bipartisan calls continue for his resignation or for his due process. this week, he pleaded not guilty to the federal criminal charges and his attorney slammed the prosecutor's case. >> we expect these charges to be dismissed. the entire body of evidence is one staffer, one staffer that says there was a conversation. what you have not learned is that that staffer has lied. >> while adams let his defense attorney do the talking on friday, the day before adams made a plea to new yorkers asking him to hear his defense before they make a judgment.
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prosecutors accused adams of bribery, wire fraud and seeking illegal campaign donations from foreign donors. if convicted on all five counts, adams faces a maximum penalty of 45 years in prison. now, as adams was in court on friday, his chief advisor had her home raided and phones seized and her attorney telling us moments ago that she is cooperating with all the investigations and quote, not the target of any case of which we are aware, griff. griff: cb cotton, live for us, the latest from new york. thank you. >> what is next for the southeast after catastrophic flooding from hurricane helene? that's next. weight and keeping it off? same. discover the power of wegovy®. ♪ ♪ with wegovy®, i lost 35 pounds. and some lost over 46 pounds. ♪ ♪
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>> the remnants of hurricane helene still having a massive impacts across states. adam klotz is live in the weather forecast center. where is she going next? >> anita, the storm has been winding down, but 28 flash flood emergencies in one day, that's by far a record. to shows you how powerful the rain swept through. i want to highlight this storm's path and some of these areas saw some big numbers. we'll run over them, but the
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atlanta area around a foot and then into the appalachian mountains and north georgia mountains a foot or so and as we continue off to north carolina, the numbers got bigger and bigger and bigger. this is where it's unheard of, several feet of rain coming down in some of these communities. as a result, even though the rain is kind of winding down, there's places where the flooding is a concern. it's not widespread. but the rivers and creeks, the water has to funnel down somewhere and that's why flooding continues to be an issue even though the system has largely rained itself out. it's still spinning, over kentucky, tennessee over southern indiana and southern ohio not a lot more rain actually still on the way. largely, they're under about a half inch and it's going to fall across the areas and some of the communities. winds continue to be a bit of an issue especially there at some of the higher elevations. 20, 30 miles per hour winds and anita, i'll toss it back to you.
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winding down, but boy, what a storm it was. anita: unbelievable devastation. griff. griff: we have much more ahead and a storm including the reaction to the killing of the leader of hezbollah and more on our exclusive interview with ukrainian president zelenskyy and a live spacex rocket launch coming your way in moments as fox news live continues. stick with us. but sometimes it can start to slow down. but did you know prevagen can help keep your memory sharp? the secret is the powerful ingredient, apoaequorin, originally discovered in jellyfish and found only in prevagen. in a clinical study, prevagen was shown to improve memory in subgroups of individuals who were cognitively normal or mildly impaired. stay sharp and improve your memory with prevagen. prevagen. in stores everywhere without a prescription. ah mornings! the golden hour of cold and flu symptoms! i'm feeling better. cough? congestion? all in one and done
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