tv Outnumbered FOX News October 7, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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♪ ♪ >> kayleigh: today marks one year since hamas' october 7th terror attack on israel, the deadliest attack on the jewish people since the holocaust. on this day, we remember the innocent lives that were lost to hamas' senseless act of violence. the families that were torn apart, and the attendees of the novi music festival who had their futures dropped from them. we also remember the 101 hostages who remain in hamas captivity. this is "outnumbered." i'm kayleigh mcenany. joining me today, talking fresco host ainsley earhardt, anchor and executive editor of "the story, because scott maccallum, fox news contributor editor in chief mollie hemingway, and host of t "the guy benson show" on fox news radio, guy benson. first let's go to trey yingst. he is live wity marks one year t
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cross-border attacked by her hamas,slaughtering so many peop. here is a look at the humans affected by this war. because she sobs while she reaches for her husband, yegev. as dirt covers his casket, the grief is too much to bear. yegev's mother and sister look on, they face is filled with agony and deep sadness. after waiting nearly 11 months for biden to be released from hamas captivity, like so many others, this family must come to terms with the painful reality. "what happened on october 7th turned our world upside down. it is incumbent angelo." a year after the october 7th attack against israel, 101 hostages remain inside gaza. more than half of them, according to a senior israeli official, are still alive.
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on that dark day, hamas launched a cross-border assault on israel, killing around 1200 people, starting a war that continues today. the israeli campaign against thomas targeted much of the group's military infrastructure, including an elaborate network of tunnels used to move militants and hold captives. >> you can see israeli forces he remain on high alert. they have their weapons raised understanding that hamas fighters could be just around the corner. >> with a war ongoing, civilians continue to pay the highest price. so far tens of thousands of palestinians have been killed by the israeli air and ground campaign, with nearly 2 million displaced. for many, their wounds will remain a reminder of the conflict. >> interpreter: words cannot describe how i feel now. even if i described it, you would never feel what i feel,
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because suffering is beyond what you can imagine. >> a year later, the war rages on. in the distance we have heard israeli artillery. today, attack helicopters overhead, and hamas firing rockets into southern and central israel. kayleigh? see what you have a book coming out about october 7th called "black saturday." tell us about it. >> "black saturday" is a first-hand account of the october 7th massacre in the days that followed. here not just from our team but from the people who lived this experience, from the hostages who are dragged into gaza, two israeli soldiers and civilians, to palestinians, hamas leadership and israeli leadership. the goal is to give the reader a clear picture of what happened on that horrific day and in the weeks that followed. as we know, as we are speaking, the war continues and there is no end in sight in terms of a diplomatic solution to end this conflict. kayleigh? >> kayleigh: an important
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piece of history. thank you very much, trey. one year later, israel is still fighting for its right to exist, fighting to recover the hostages still held by hamas at this hour. several of those hostages are indeed american citizens. however, vice president kamala harris is refusing to call israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu an ally. >> do we have a real close ally in prime minister netanyahu? >> i think, with all due respect, the better question is if we have an important alliance between the american people and the israeli people, and the answer to that question is yes. >> kayleigh: netanyahu of course represent the people of israel. martha, the support for israel has been fervent inward from the biden administration but perhaps type it in action. he saw the jostling last week, the call for a cease-fire after israel had that slight incursion into southern lebanon.
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and all of a sudden we support israel. oh, wait, but not attacking iran's nuclear sites. a. >> martha: i am struck by the title of trey's book. i think "black saturday" is a feeling that comes back for all of us today as we remember how horrific this attack was, how it came out of nowhere, and how it came after decades of peace, essentially. there had been skirmishes over those borders from time to time, but in general, israel is a very prosperous democratic nation that respects the freedom and individuality of all people in israel, which is not something that is felt around the middle east. it is something we should be able to support and voice as an alliance with no reservation whatsoever. i just can't help but remember watching that october 7th video over her hear, hear at the israeli consulate, a little boy who watched his father murdered at home, and he had to sit in a chair and watch a hamas terrorist drink
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juice from his refrigerator. and he screamed "why am i alive?" and i will never forget that little boy's cry as long as i live. when we watch the behavior of hezbollah and hamas, but i don't understand is why she doesn't use that opportunity to talk about them, and how easy it is and how clear it is to be in alliance clearly with the leadership in israel and with the israeli people, when you look at what they have been facing. >> kayleigh: no doubt. that is so well said. ainsley, the image i can't get out of my mind is the image of kefir, the youngest hostage, with his brother, ariel. they are still in captivity somewhere out there. he submitted his first birthday in captivity. his brother, his fifth birthday, and captivity. he was just nine months when he was inducted. every night i get on my knees with my daughter and we pray for
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them. maybe we will have a miracle and. >> ainsley: do you really? that is so sweet. we were talking about the lady in our bible study and i remember we all broke down in tears, talking about that lady. he kept seeing the images of blood on her bottom. i just thought she sat in blood. i didn't think the worst could have happened. and then i watched a video of someone talking about the assault she probably went through, the brutal assault. i didn't even think about that, as a woman. so we saw these images and we at fox had the opportunity to watch the gopro cam that hamas was using and some of the israeli soldiers were using when they went back through to see what was left. i mean, there wasn't a dry eye in that room, in that banquet room where we watched. never forget these photos. i am just shocked the biden administration -- why can't kamala harris acknowledge that benjamin netanyahu is an ally? this is one of our biggest allies if not our biggest ally. the bible is clear about where israel stands. the promised land, those are the chosen people.
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i just feel like you got hamas still in gaza, hezbollah in lebanon, the houthis in yemen, and she can't even say they are an ally. this administration needs to give 100% support to israel like donald trump was. >> kayleigh: guy, i want to play this clip from a spokesperson from ids. october 7th is not just something that happened and is static and is in the past, move on to seaside. as another october 7th that was in the planning. this was announced just last week. >> hezbollah has openly declared that it plans to carry out its own october 7th massacre on israel's northern border, but on an even larger scale, they call this plan "conquer." they want to do in northern israel what hamas did in southern israel on october 7th, invade israel, infiltrate civilian communities, and massacre innocent civilians. >> kayleigh: has below wanted to do it again.
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>> guy: it'll be harder for them because their entire leadership has been decapitated by the israelis in the last few weeks. i'm struck by the report that he watched from trey yingst. he saw the suffering on both sides of this conflict, and it is important of course to drive home that the conflict was started by israel's enemies. they did not want this, they didn't ask for it. they are responding as a must. when you look at these civilian casualties happening in gaza, that is despite israel's best efforts. hamas embeds themselves within civilians, whereas hamas and hezbollah deliberately target civilians on the israeli side. there is no moral equivalence. for people who want the war to be over, it could have been over at the very beginning by not launching the attacks on israel. it could have been over with a disarmament by either of these terrorist groups. it could've been over if they had brought the hostages back home. they've refused to do so. so israel is doing what it must. >> kayleigh: to your point, just as hamas was doing, hezbollah had their tunnels
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underneath children's beds. again, discovered last week. >> i think this shows u.s. elections don't just have great consequent this for a country, but globally. you had, in the trump administration, peace breaking out in the middle east. he had iran isolated, pivoting toward saudi arabia and letting them be the big dog in the region. and the biden harrison ministries and comes in, actively work to return power to iran, and iran of course funds hezbollah and h. this is where it comes from, a proxy war from iran toward israel, and it shows you that the foreign policy things matter a great deal and can cause problems globally. >> kayleigh: without a doubt. we hold those families in our prayers, and the 101 hostages still out there, we pray for you. coming up, americans desperate for supplies inhaling-ravaged towns feel the biden-harris administration is not doing enough to help them, forcing them to fend for themselves.
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>> kayleigh: this just in from the white house, we found out that president biden has spoken with israel's president, isaac herzog, in a call monday, reaffirming our commitment to achieving a deal in gaza to bring those hostages home. of course there four americans being held hostage by hamas, or by a subsidiary group, and gaza right now. they have spoken via phone and reaffirmed our support as the united states in getting those four americans home. on to this, we are watching closely while millions of americans brace for another monster storm. this time hurricane milton. it's intensifying quickly and it could hit at catastrophic levels. this new storm is headed to the u.s. just days after
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hurricane helene ravaged the southeast. the suffering and destruction is astounding. over 230 people are dead, many still missing, and desperate americans are still without key supplies. many residents of the hardest-hit areas say they feel totally abandoned, claiming that they are being forced to fend for themselves because assistance from fema and the biden-harris administration is not able to reach them. but the federal government nowhere in sight, distressed residents have been relying on neighbors and organizations for help. one helene victim telling "the new york post" that fema said they were not coming because of a road closed sign. struggling and devastated americans are asking, when will someone step in? >> i think our government can do more, because we are going to need the help. there's roads gone. >> there is so much more that can be done, giving a $750 if you can apply for it is
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ridiculous. >> wears the help for western north carolina? we can send billions to ukraine and we can help western north carolina. >> the response time right now is extremely slow, if at all in some areas. i know it hasn't been touched except by the locals. >> president biden is here today. do you have a message for him? >> yeah, whoopee-doo, and where are you that when everything else happens? >> kayleigh: good question. no members of the republican party are expressing their outrage to the white house storm response. >> when you talk to the people directly affected, they will tell you that this has been an abject failure. fema has lost sight of its core mission. the federal emergency dissociation, their mission is to help people in times like this in the natural disaster. not to be engaged in using any pool of funding from any account for resettling illegal aliens who have come across the border.
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>> federal coordination is very slow. the government was caught flat-footed. the biden administration didn't come out of the gate. >> this administration seems to have no problem finding money when they want to spend it on their priorities. when they need hundreds of billions of dollars to pay off student loans for graduate students in gender studies programs, they somehow find it. when it's trying to get helicopters to deliver food and water and cellular service and life-saving medicines into these mountain valleys, they somehow can't seem to find the money. >> kayleigh: guy, the bottom line, you have entities trying to sack czech republic is on this. the bottom line is, one, with the residents said, but number two, president biden did not go to fema headquarters on camera. kamala harris on monday when the storm occurred on thursday. >> guy: there was a long de delay. he returned to the last part somebody asked him about the affected states and the storm zone and he didn't know what storm they were talking about it first. and then they said, they are all
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very happy across the board, paraphrasing. and we just heard from a few people who would descend from that to you and live in that area. i have a gentleman from save our allies dig some of this work on the ground in north carolina. he was on my radio show on friday. the estimated 90% of the efforts you have seen has come from private citizens and organizations, not from the government. it is too delayed and too a little. pretend like that didn't happen is preposterous. >> kayleigh: we had him on "america's newsroom" earlier reflect exactly what you just said. let's listen. >> we arrived the day after the hurricane landed. well nobody could get through roads, we are taking four-wheelers. there's no hotels of power, they are taking four-wheelers and sleeping in the back of suvs. what was clearly absent was the state and federal response. the men and women that showed up fema, it is still woefully absent. there was no command and control. begging and pleading for the
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state to hand over control, literacy q, the command system, to the united states military. >> kayleigh: i mean, martha, this is insane. walmart managed to show up along with several other private organizations. stevie honestly, kayleigh, i can't think of a better demonstration of the bloated and efficiency of a large government. that is what we are watching here. we see time and time again, save our allies, rubicon, they are able to get stuff done. they are former military people, they know how to cut through and say, here's what needs to happen right now. the fact that we are hearing from karine jean-pierre that this fema money goes for the immigrants in cities, this fema money is going towards relief efforts, and that money is going to run out, and we see this other hurricane barreling toward the coast, i don't know what else people need to see other than to look at the situation and listen to the people on the ground. i know there's a lot of politics going back and forth here, but the person i interviewed and
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countless other people saying, we are neighbors helping neighbors and we are getting help from private groups. but the government can't handle this stuff. they stepped all over their own feet, they don't know who is talking to whom, and it is the perfect demonstration of large bureaucratic government that is falling all over itself. >> kayleigh: mollie, maybe the most tone-deaf tweet of the century came from vice president kamala harris saying, "i'm sick. don't concern about the security and well-being of citizens in lebanon. we will continue to help meet the needs of civilians there." and that he has will provide $157 million in additional assistance to the people of lebanon. how about the people of asheville? >> mollie: it is just amazing to see something like that, during the scented period. it's not just the delay in getting down there, it is what they have been offering people is a few hundred bucks to help with rebuilding. we are still in the rescue and recovery operations right now. the lack of attention from the federal government is appalling,
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particularly when they are spending so much money overseas. hard-earned taxpayer money, to fight wars overseas, or to help out the people of lebanon and just leave these people in the dust. >> kayleigh: ainsley, i'm curious to see how this plays out. thursday, president biden is supposed to leave to go overseas. it's being described by cnn as a nonurgent diplomatic trip to germany and angola. when a hurricane hits wednesday night and thursday morning, is he still going to head over for that nonurgent trip to. >> ainsley: i hope not. they are getting a double whammy. we have friends in the tampa area. houses were flooded. one neighborhood, my friend used to live in the neighborhood and she went back to it, three houses had burned down, totally lost everything. it's nothing even compared to what we are seeing come of the mass devastation in north carolina. my friend's brother is a builder in the charlotte area and he packed up his truck with a friend, led to home depot, got a bunch of supplies, and the sister says that one guy with fema came to marshall north carolina about two days after the storm, assess the area and said they need everything.
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capital letters. no one has come back, not one person with fema. the locals have band together and are organizing a cleanup. >> kayleigh: governor kemp had to call and say, what about the rural counties? make sure they get federal decorations. >> ainsley: they give $30 million to the north carolina area. >> kayleigh: priorities, that's what that tells you. hurricane milton is threatening to bring even more devastation to florida as it intensifies in the gulf. the monster storm is now at a category 4 strength and set to make landfall this week. meteorologist adam klotz is in the fox weather center. >> kayleigh, just in the last 2s to a category 5. it's been growing rapidly out in the gulf of mexico. when now at 160 miles an hour. just yesterday morning we were seeing the wind down in the 40s, 50s, 60s, and this has jumped up so fast, faster than a time i can ever remember. you look at the storm, just the structure of it. when you see a very strong wall like this, the symmetry, you can tell this is a powerful monster
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that is sweeping across the gulf of mexico. it does run into some conditions that make it kind of weaken a little bit by the time you get to that landfall. we are currently forecasting a category 3 hurricane, still very powerful, wednesday afternoon, somewhere along the west coast of florida. vc tampa kind of in the middle of this. the thing is, once a storm has been this big, it picks up a ton of water with it, so we are talking about a wall of water as far as storm surge wherever this ultimately makes that landfall. hurricane watch in place from naples up towards cedar key, lift tempo being right in the heart of this. we are forecasting wind to get up to 110 miles an hour in that area down towards sarasota, as well. but i do think probably the biggest concern from this is going to be the storm surge, especially if some of these numbers are verified. 12-foot storm surge is the highest ever forecast in tampa bay. that would be absolutely devastating. again, wednesday night through thursday morning. we'll be watching. >> kayleigh: devastating. my family got flooding with
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helene. praise for the tampa bay area. adam, thank you. former president trump receiving a hero's welcome as he makes his grand return to butler, pennsylvania. you see it there. it was the site of the first assassination attempt. 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,
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>> if you want to really see something that is sad, take a look at what happened -- [gunshots] >> kayleigh: still so hard to believe that was just over six weeks ago. it was the scene at former president trump's rally in butler, pennsylvania. that was on july 13th. a gunman's bullet came within inches of taking his life, and trump made a defiant return to butler this weekend, retaking that very same stage to finish what he started. ♪ ♪
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that massive crowd greeted trump with a hero's welcome, and the former president responded with this show of gratitude. >> what our opponents have never understood is that this movement has never been about me. it's always been about you. it's been about a lot of people, millions and millions of people, the biggest ever in the history of this country, maybe anywhere. and every day, people who are the heart and soul of our country, they love our movement, they love our country, and they know they are doing right. your hopes are my hopes, your dreams are my dreams come and your future is what i am fighting for every single day. [applause] >> kayleigh: ainsley, i love how he began the rally. "as i was saying --" [laughs] >> ainsley: "let me pick up where we left off last time we rehear!" i'm so proud of him for going there.
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that takes some guts. you might think his tweets are a little strong, but don't we need a strong leader like this? can you believe that crowd? you live in the washington area. it reminded me of the washington mall. the crowd goes on and on. i was really proud of him. he talked about god and how this was providential. he honored corey and his family and came out to "proud to be an american." i love that. elon musk was there, wearing an "occupy mars" t-shirt. i thought it was a great rally. the cow give me enthusiasm for pennsylvania. it's a tough state to enact. >> kayleigh: we do have those images. you will see elon musk here, he was jumping, very excited, and the photographers captured it. we have an iconic photo of him there, as he was drawing the contrast between biden and trump and their character. let's listen to what elon musk had to say. >> the true test of someone's character is how they behave under fire.
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and we had one president who couldn't climb a flight of stairs, and another who was fist pumping after getting shot. [cheers and applause] site, site, site! blood coming down the face. >> kayleigh: pretty vivid. >> mollie: i think that assassination attempt change the minds about who he is. they were told he was selfish and narcissistic, and seeing the courage and selflessness he showed that moment where i don't think anyone else would have had the wherewithal to handle things as well as he did, keeping the crowd calm, keeping people focused, it really powerfully show people that maybe what they thought about donald trump wasn't what we are seeing. and pennsylvania is an important state. it is a must-win state for these candidates and it is a very close race, so seeing a crowd that size, that enthusiastic, has got to give the trump campaign hope. >> kayleigh: my thought, he did nice job putting the attention on the people.
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he talked about david dutch, who was shot in the liver and the chest, he was there. cory's family was there, he had the firefighter uniform in the stands. they talked about james copenhagen, who couldn't make it, who was also shot. >> i think it is so important to remember the family who lost their father. those bullets were meant for donald trump, and those people ended up taking them. this is a very significant moment in all the history of this race, and i do think politically it was very smart and important for him to go back there, and i thought opening it that way and saying, "as i was saying," was brilliant. it is a way to say we will not stop, we will come back here and continue what we are fighting for. i also think, from a purely political strategy sense, it is important to remind people about this moment, because right after july 13th trump looked unstoppable in this race.
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then they went into milwaukee, unstoppable again. then you had biden plat of the race and it changed. >> kayleigh: you can see in our fox news poll is a town in pennsylvania. the real clear politics average, it's a tie, as well. if i'm kamala harris i'm looking at these numbers and thinking, boy, i should've picked josh shapiro. >> guy: she might be having second thoughts about that. we will see how it plays out. i just want to say, watching the clip again of those bullets being fired and the shots ringing out and people going down, the screams of terror, that was less than three months ago. i'm still not over it. i know we have seen that video hundreds, maybe thousands of times. i'm not over it. none of us should be. then there was another attempt on his life. that should never be normalized in any way. >> kayleigh: two assassination attempts treaty would have thought? but a transit return to butler, pennsylvania, on the part of president trump. coming up, vice president kamala harris taking questions over the weekend, not from reporters at a news conference but from the host of a
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>> kayleigh: we are just 29 days away from the election and vice president kamala harris still has yet to do a formal news conference as the democratic presidential nominee. she's running out of time. she is, however, sitting down for what critics are calling a series of softball interviews. harris just did an interview on the often controversial "call her daddy" podcast, and she will appear on howard stern's radio show, a 60 minute special of "the late show with stephen colbert," and "the view," all this week. despite the media blitz, vp harris is getting pushback for not being accessible enough. even alex cooper from the "call
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her daddy" podcast is questioning it. seek i'm curious. like, you don't do too many long form interviews. what made you want to do a "call her daddy" today? >> i think you and your listeners have really got this thing right, which is one of the best ways to communicate with people is to be real, you know? and to talk about the things that people really care about. see you and you know, die, as i look at this, howard stern and "the view" and colbert, i think it's a great idea to put her out there, but this week she's going to sit down on tuesday as a category four storm is approaching? i would have her go to fema headquarters can then do a campaign stop, and active team headquarters. see five you have to juggle a schedule when you're managing a campaign. issue for her is she has been so conspicuously absent some really any interviews for so long, few and far between. all of the sudden doing this flurry of them all at once,
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while you have these natural disasters playing out, it then raises questions like the one that you just did. this is something she should've been doing, making herself accessible to a wide array of news and other sources for months, but they are just getting started kind of doing it less than a month to go until the election. that is questionable in my mind. >> kayleigh: it really is confounding. my thought, when you see the political piece, i believe friday, that democratic operatives including some of kamala's own staffers are growing concerned about her light campaign schedule. do you think this was all in reaction to that? they see this criticism in the press. it wasn't just politico. they say we've got to get out there. speaking absolutely. they made a mistake not doing it right off the bat and she became conditioned to not doing these wide-ranging interviews. the 60 minute piece comes out tonight. i think this is a reaction to help close the polls are. they see they have to do something a little bit different. it got to mix it up in order to get those numbers higher on their side.
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i also think she is the vice president of the united states and, as it happens, these catastrophes happened in georgia and north carolina. these are two very important states. i think there is a missed opportunity. i know she has been there. but to really embrace this and show leadership, i'm not sure that is what people see when the headlines are grabbed by "call her daddy." >> kayleigh: there was one sentence i couldn't get over it, that she, kamala, has spent nearly half of her post-dnc days in washington. the reason i point this out, if your dream is to be president and you get picked, handed the nomination, you didn't have to compete for it, i would be in a different swing state every hour if i could, not spending half my days in washington. >> ainsley: i think they are trying to campaign her in the basement like they did joe biden, and it worked. they're trying to handpick all these interviews. they are picking the ladies of "the view." they are already with her. they're picking howard stern. he's already with her. they are picking stephen colbert. he's with her. they're not going to ask the
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tough questions. why can't you say radical islamic terrorism? why can't you say, kamala, illegal alien? why did you flip-flop on fracking, on medicare for all, the list goes on. compensating guns. on the wall. now you support the wall. why did you flip-flop? why did you bail out rioters in 2020? why do you want to abolish i.c.e. and why are you flip-flopping on that one, as well? those are the questions we need answers for. but she doesn't talk about it and she only goes on these democrat or liberal shows. then i could ask her that. so the people don't know what her record was. >> kayleigh: mollie, if you're being criticized for hurricane response, why not go on the weather channel and lay out what your plan is in advance of an approaching storm? >> mollie: that's what i would say is the problem. it's not that "call her daddy" isn't a super popular podcast. it is, so it makes sense you might go on something like that. but he's already got them with her. she does need to reach them anymore. her problem is with men, frankly, and a lot of americans
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who just don't think she has what it takes to actually lead the country. so going with these friendly people have already endorsed her, "the view," stephen colbert, howard stern, that's not going to result in anything. it also doesn't help that, when she does do a regular media interview, those people are also with her, by the way, but she struggles they are the clips they've released from what's happening tonight show that she did not handle even mildly realistic questions with any degree of capability. so they need to get her out there. the big campaigns campaign switch. but it's also a problem because she struggles in interviews. >> kayleigh: that was what happens when you're rusty. they were fearful tim walz hadn't had enough reps of interviews, and someone says it showed. a new report details a growing rift between the harris campaign in president biden. that's next. it all the time. people tell me they'd love to buy gold. but because it's gold, they think it must be complicated. it isn't. not with rosland capital. with rosland... the entire process from start to finish
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i'm john roberts. come join sandra and me top of the hour for "america reports." we'll see you then. >> kayleigh: president biden claims he is in lockstep with vice president kamala harris and her campaign. >> i am in constant contact with her. she is aware, we are singing from the same song sheet. she helped pass all the laws being employed now. she was a major player in everything we've done, including the passage of legislation which we were told we could never pass. and so she has been -- her staff is interlocked with mine in terms of all the things you are doing. >> kayleigh: i'm sure kamala's team loved to hear that, especially in light of this new report which suggests kamala harris does not want to be so closely tied to her boss. the cnn headline reading, "harris weighs more breaks with biden as he keeps injecting himself into the campaign." the report notes that
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president biden's upcoming trip overseas might be lauded by kamala harris. he's going over for a week, but some staffers say they way she would go away for a longer period wow. and when biden made a surprise appearance at the white house podium, "harris' aides did not find the appearance helpful." that's according to cnn. the harris team knows running as an extension of the president is not a strong position and she has been trying to distance herself from biden, like this moment on the debate stage last month. >> remember this. she is biden. she's trying to get away from biden. >> i want to just respond to that briefly. clearly i am not joe biden. >> kayleigh: the cnn piece notes that as one of the most popular lines of the debate, but it doesn't seem he wants to let her distance herself. stevie on the other hand, she was with him during the entire of administration.
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she bragged about being the last person in the room before the afghanistan withdrawal. she talked extensively about her love for bidenomics page he has embraced everything about her administration, and so trying to separate herself now, it's not that biden is being a problem by just acknowledging that she is the incumbent vice president. >> kayleigh: that's right. ainsley, as you look at this piece, i am so struck by the line, "no one on the vp team is upset that biden is headed away for a week and some way she would stay longer." >> ainsley: she needs to be grateful for him. she would be running for president if it weren't for joe biden. remember, she was a nobody. nobody voted for her. she got 1% and then decided to drop out. he picked her because she is a woman and he said, i want a minority. so she fit the bill and she was up on stage with him during the debate and she got this position. she's the luckiest candidate ever because she's never had to be primaried or get any votes to get in this position she is in now. but the headlines are that her team is not happy. what did they expect?
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to they expect joe biden to be aware she might not want them to be around? they lied for him, covered up for him, they know about his mental ability or acuity. they know about that. for them to say that he should be aware and he should stay out of it, he is not aware. >> kayleigh: buried at the bottom of the piece is a line that close biden advisors told cnn they have heard completes the president would be in the same spot or better right now hd he stayed in the race. that is vociferously denied by those on the record. >> martha: i mean, hasn't this been interesting to watch? he got pushed out. one of the only things they mandated when he sent that tweet, that he was leaving the race, and then in the next one he said, "and of course i support my running mate, my vice president." he saved her the entire process which most powerful democrats including nancy pelosi wanted. jim clyburn. a mini primary. they didn't want that anointment process. so she should be very grateful
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to him for doing that. he is bear hugging her all the time. i find it very, very interesting. it's like, we did everything together! and he also let slip recently, "i never really believed the poll clearly showed i wasn't going to win." >> kayleigh: exactly right. guy, the best thing for her would be to make a definitive break and just say, i stood up to him on this issue, i pushed back on this. this is where i differed from him behind the scenes. let the viewer, the voter, in behind the scenes. >> guy: problem one is she is harris of the biden-harris of administration, so it's hard to distance herself from her own administration. second point, the headline from cnn was "harris weighs more breaks with biden." so this is occurring to them a month out from the election? but also, which breaks every talking about? is there a single thing she has proposed or said that contradicts him in any way, that he opposes? is there one example? how that one break from biden, let alone more? there have been none. >> kayleigh: maybe the answer
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is those moments simply don't exist. >> guy: right, which is the problem. >> kayleigh: that is thereal problem.unt. more "outnumbered" in a moment. a healthy weight can help dogs live a longer and happier life. the farmer's dog makes weight management easy with fresh food pre-portioned for your dog's needs. it's an idea whose time has come.
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dry eye over and over? it's time for xiidra. (♪) >> we are tracking a lot of breaking news. at 1:00 p.m. eastern the white house racing with karine jean-pierre where she hopefully will be pressed on the contradictions on fema funding being diverted to illegal immigrant shelters. nguage sounding much different than her most
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recent language. october 7th memorial event in washington, d.c. all of this happening just before the story with martha maccallum appeared what do you have. >> we talk to the former ambassador to israel from the united states robert o'brien who you worked with former national security advisor will join us on the threat that america faces and we will speak to someone who was at the music festival and another woman whose mother is missing in north carolina. >> a lot of powerful stories coming up at 3:00 p.m. eastern time. tune into the story with martha maccallum. hurricane milton approaching and questions at the briefing about that. just on the heels of her hurricane helene and what some would say is a woefully short federal response to the hurricane and its damage here thank you to everyone. dvr the show but for now, "america reports." >> john: thank you. today marks one year since hamas is attack on israel kickstarting a brutal
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