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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  October 23, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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(♪) [ ♪♪ ] >> lawrence: it's 8 a.m. on the east coast and it's wednesday, october the 23rd, and this is "fox & friends." thirteen days until election day. >> new numbers show a shift as president trump tells me he's all in on early voting. >> the got to get out, you got to vote and i'll be voting early. >> okay. meanwhile, president biden got heat. they're saying this. listen. >> president joseph biden: we got to lock him up. [ applause ]
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politically lock him up. >> politically he said. right now secretary blinken is in the middle east as the fbi investigates a leak regarding israel's response to iran. why critics say this administration cannot be trusted. >> it's good to see the big stairs again. >> it is. >> the final hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. >> so there are thirteen days until election day, and the vice-president is heading back to pennsylvania while former president donald trump is set to appear at two major events in the state of georgia. >> later this week, trump travels to texas for a conversation with joe rogan on the number one podcast in the world. >> rich henson is live. >> reporter: texas is going to have to be big enough here on friday. you're going to have the former president speaking to joe rogan there and vice-president kamala harris holding a rally in houston that evening. the joe rogan experience, you mentioned it, it's got on an
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awful lot of listeners, how about 17 ½ million subscribers on youtube, 14 million on spotify, many of them younger men. trump has a sizable lead among male voters. both candidates have hit the podcasting circuit this campaign season. harris and president biden have also done howard stern. yesterday, in new hampshire, biden spoke about healthcare with senator bernie sanders who has a podcast called "hear the bern." he called trump a threat to democracy and said this. >> president joseph biden: i mean, so i know this sounds bizarre, it sounds like i said this five years ago, lock me up. we got to lock him up. [ applause ] politically lock him up. lock him out. that's what we have to do. >> reporter: throughout his time in the white house, biden has
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can distanced himself from the prosecution's department. lock him up was a regular chant by trump supporters in 2016 as trump claimed hillary clinton was corrupt. the trump campaign says biden is admitting the truth that he and the vice-president are politically persecuting president trump because they cannot beat him fair and square at the ballot box. back to you. >> rich, do you think the current president is still being briefed by his team? when you go out, say this and this and this. or is he just, because he's near the end, he's a short timer essentially, he's winging it? >> reporter: i think when you have a politician and one that's been there for decades and honestly, even when it comes to former president trump, there's what's in the prompter. there's what you've been briefed on and you're doing your thing. >> rich, thank you. >> the problem here is that he's the commander-in-chief right now and oversees the department of
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justice. of course, merrick garland is the attorney-general but that's under the executive branch. if i'm trump campaign, lawyers have the sitting president say that in the middle of a case going on, cases, i think there's some problems right there. >> lawrence, look, you could send a low key signal to the head of your doj and i would argue biden did that when in "the new york times" he said he was tired of merrick garland acting like a ponderous judge. also notably in july, there were "lock him up" chants. biden didn't silence that. my favorite part of this story, a former biden aide noting that this is not helpful to kamala harris and saying, maybe we got to lock joe up. then a current biden aide saying no one listens to him anymore. a current biden aide. as my dad says, he's a lame duck before lame duck season. and that's not good. >> i think one of the main reasons joe biden won the first time was the early voting, all the different moves that were needed during the pandemic or
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not needed taken advantage of, pick your poison. now early voting is part of what america does. unless they're going to rein it in. it's now voting season. it's not voting day. so we're within that season in florida. and i'm just wondering, president trump, who is so against and distrustful, would he change his tune now that he needs republicans to vote early and they seem to be doing it. would he vote early in florida? i asked him that. it's going to be an interview you're going to hear on the radio in two hours. you could vote early and set an example if you wanted to in florida. that would be an interesting decision. >> it's interesting, i really feel -- i'm very mixed. i have the old standard of the tuesday vote and all. a lot of people like to vote. you know the main thing to me is, you got to vote. voting early, i guess, would be good, but people have different feelings about it. but the main thing is get out and vote and i'll be voting early.
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>> tell me the voters don't respond to candidates because we're seeing it in the polling numbers right now. we're seeing it as we look at the count for counties. republicans are showing up early. they're not beating the democrats when it comes to it but that's the democrats' game is early voting. >> and apparently in the various states, i've been reading about what they're saying, in arizona and pennsylvania and nevada as well, the republicans are pushing at the statewide level is go ahead, republicans, and vote early. bank your vote. that way you know it's essentially in the bank in case there's some shenanigans come election day. when you look at the commonwealth of pennsylvania, this is great news for republicans trendwise. how bad could it possibly be for democrats? we'll know in about two and a half weeks, something like that. when you look at the last four years, democrats in pennsylvania have lost a net of, as you can
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see at the bottom number there, a quarter of a million registered democrats. where do they go? during that same period, you can see that republicans have picked up about a little north of 400,000. so the question is: how many of those people were democrats or are they now independence? i don't know that they break it down like that. >> it's a troubling trend for democrats. >> a troubling trend that nationally republicans now have a one-point advantage in voter registration. here's the number i look at. it's not ballots requested. it's also ballots returned. you can go on p.a.gov and pull up this excel spreadsheet. it says the ballots returned and tells you how many democrats, republicans, unaffiliated. 62% of democrats have returned their ballot. 29% of republicans, 10 percent unaffiliated. that may sound low. that's a 5% improvement for republicans from last cycle. it's a 2% decrease from
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democrats from last cycle. that is a very good sign for republicans. it's not enough. it increased a lot over the weekend. i looked friday and today. not enough. still got to get out and vote. that is a very good sign for donald trump. that's before you get to nevada and clarke county. >> look at nbc news is quoted harris campaign sources say there has been a thought that maybe michigan or wisconsin will fall. most of harris events have been taking place in michigan and detroit not the surrounding strongholds of wayne county and other areas which trump does well. there's a lot of anxiety about our light schedule not going out and doing anything yesterday and then choosing to go to texas tomorrow. >> kentucky. >> so why -- >> houston. >> why are you helping a candidate going against ted cruz, allred? why? go do the job first. early on, trump went out to montana a month ago. they said, why are you going to montana? john tester is ready to go.
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i want to finish the job. so people want him for that. this makes no sense. unless there's reports she loves meetings. she loves strategy meetings. but she doesn't really mike meeting people. now that she's sitting down with people that are asking questions let by brett bear and follow-up questions, she's not liking that either. >> right now the way we've laid it out the republicans are catching up to the early voting with democrats in -- it looks like it right now. we don't know for sure. the machine that the democrats historically for decades and decades have excelled at is get out the vote and particularly in nevada, it's really important. it looks like it could go either way right now. ultimately before it all happens. they're going to have so many door knockers. the afl cio of nevada is going to have 70,000 union members knock on everybody's door three times. the culinary workers' union
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which started in august expected to knock on 900,000 doors and talk to 130,000 people. meanwhile charlie kirk from turning point, he's mounting the republicans' response and it's something called chase the vote. and what they're trying to do is persuade voters who don't vote very often. hey, you know what this is a big one. you really need to go. so they will coordinate. how are you going to get there? can i help you with the ballot? they're going to essentially try to do what the democrats have done for decades. >> the democrats have been doing this for years. when you go knock at people's doors, what are you going to say? because i haven't heard it from the candidate. how are you going to improve my life? what is going wrong? can you acknowledge that the president's not fit currently right now? can you tell us what you're going to do to lower the prices at the grocery store? is there a plan to secure the border? when you go knock and talk with people, what is the message? because what i'm witnessing on the airwaves right now, i was at
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the convention. there was so much joy, celebrities were there. they were telling you inspiration, inspiration. and it just seems like it's totally faded away right now. there's no more joy. >> the ground game matters. and those of us who have been in politics know that. it's important. but i had a dad say to me when we were at tennis practise, he says, you know what ground game donald trump has? inflation. my grocery bill. and, hey, that may be the ultimate ground game. we may look back -- we don't know -- and say, that ground game was the game that mattered more. >> as americans, we don't like answering the door. >> that's another thing. >> we're done with that. no one drops in. when i get a package on my doorstep, i'm ready to call the cops. what's going on here? i would like to talk about the president. no thank you. >> get lost. >> i would like to do anything but that. >> i do it every day for ten hours. >> the question is, does anyone
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get "the atlantic" magazine? we've all known for a long time general kelly's chief-of-staff was clashing constantly with president trump. his secretary of defense mattis was clashing constantly with president trump. then you find out now that president trump is on the cusp of being re-elected or he's very, very close, and now those generals are coming out. general milly talked to bob woodward offered the most horrific headlines that he's a hundred percent fascist. enter now kelly and mattis. kelly front and center with this headline. >> the headline in "the atlantic" is trump said once "i need the kind of generals that hitler had" and the subtitle is the preoccupation with dictators and his disdain for the american military. this is an article by jeffery gold berg. it starts with a young woman twenty years old, she was serving our nation at fort hood in texas and she was murdered. and her name, vanessa gillan. she was the daughter of mexican
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migrants and the murder sparked an outrage and before her remains were found, donald trump was then president and he invited the family to the white house and he spent 25 minutes with the family. and at one point, he said, "if i can help you out with the funeral, i'll help you out." the family attorney said the military's going to take care of it. and he said, you know, financially, i'll help you out if you need it. fast forward throughout the story, then it talks a little bit about the back and forth about the cost of how much did it cost and stuff like that and hitler. the family itself has come out, but we have an actual eyewitness to that meeting. you were there. >> yes. i was not in the december one that's mentioned. i was in the july one. and i can tell you this: the president, his compassion, his love, his attentiveness to the gillan family was on full display and you have vanessa who was the sister who said -- mira, the sister, i don't appreciate, she said, how you are
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politicizing this story. you can read her tweet there. it goes on and on. and you can see how she says that so much good has been tonne in the wake of the death of her sister. there's been legislation pass and had all that diminished and talks about trump. i saw that first hand. the story's been dismissed by many people, the translator. this guy's name is jeffery goldburg. it took a few hours for me to get several on the record statements, more than a dozen, saying this was not true. zach flintase, who is a top aide to kelly, said president trump never said the suckers and losers. that's zach fuentes. he reported when trump did not go to the cemetery it was not because of a bad weather. guess who dismany missed that in john bolton. >> he couldn't get in the air with the fog. >> yes. i will just tell you, and i said this last hour, i've never seen
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donald trump so upset as when this story came out. he didn't give a care in the world when his personal finances came under scrutiny. he cared about this story because he loves our troops and in my hundreds of interactions i have never witnessed him saying anything like this more than a dozen sources agreeing with me. he loves our soldiers and you don't have to look very far to find that out. >> you just look at the polling when it comes to the soldiers and who they want as the next president. he consistently dominates it. secondly the story just doesn't make sense for me. there are some stories that they write about donald trump, okay, the comical side of donald trump. you can see him saying something like that. >> sure. >> but to say that he was in the middle of a cemetery and he said this surrounded by generals and other servicemen. you would have to be just an idiot to say something like that. as the former president said, when they confronted him about the story, he goes, one of those generals would have decked me in my mouth. i wouldn't have said something like that. it just doesn't make sense. attack him all you want about
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his bombast. to say he demonized servicemen in the middle of a cemetery doesn't sound right. >> kelly's been critical in some others and not areas. the president witnessed the phone calls when he calls the people that lose their lives in battle, whether it's afghanistan or a training accident, and he says, the president sincerely reaches out. sometimes it was taken the wrong way which prompted general kelly to take the podium as press secretary and talk openly about his son dying in afghanistan, what it meant to the family and just kind of trying to straighten everything out. but the bottom line is, if you read hr mcmaster's book, who was critical of president trump in some of it and not in others, he talks about how madison kelly didn't like the president. and didn't think he deserved job or was worthy of the job and he went out of his way to make sure a lot of the things they asked him to do never got done. mcmaster would be frustrated because he couldn't get their attention and say, it's not your
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job to rein in the president. then you factor in the fact that he runs his own company, coming from the business world, the first one we've ever had, it's not even a public company, and then he's obviously has frustration and i could absolutely see him go, you know what, it would be great to have german generals to do what they ask him to do, no egg knowing theys not fully cognizant of the third rail, german generals, nazis. he was frustrated with the slowdown of -- >> it wasn't just a slowdown. it was insubordination. there is a culture within washington not just when it comes to the generals, who should be fired after what happened, in afghanistan, is insubordination that the bureaucrats run the government. unelected people don't get to run the country. even if you have four stars behind your name. and i think they were very frustrated that you have this outside guy, that says, listen,
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i'm in charge now. >> that outside guy got no new wars and four middle east peace deals. i'll go with whatever that guy was pushing. >> we brought you this story because kayla was there and got a perspective you have not heard until just now. >> we brought you the story because it's all the other networks are talking about it. you're desperate to make sure that kamala harris wins the election. >> it's october. >> indeed. >> all right. 8:8 on this wednesday. and carly joins us with news from idaho. >> more news to get to here. to the latest in the idaho murder case. brian cobourg is calling for a famed pathologist to testify. dr. barbara wolf has played a role in several high profile cases including as a defense expert in the oj simpson trouble murder trial. colberger is accused of stabbing four idaho university students at an off campus home and trial is set to begin in august. day three of jury selection
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in daniel penny's manslaughter trial gets underway in about two hours. the marine veteran is accused of putting homeless man jordan neely in a deadly choke hold in a subway car last year. witnesses say neely aggressively confronted subway passengers before penny pinned neely town for several minutes. opening statements are expected to begin on friday and the trial should last about six weeks. penny has pleaded not guilty and it's still unclear if he's going to take the stand. vice-president kamala harris claiming she was honest with the american people about president biden's mental fitness after getting pressed on it by nbc news. watch. >> it sounds like what you're saying is you feel like you never saw anything like that from president biden. >> i have worked with joe biden, whether -- hours and hours and hours over these four years, whether it be in the situation room or the oval office. i speak with not only sincerity,
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but with a real firsthand account of watching him do this work. i have no reluctance in saying that. >> harris was previously asked about this very thing during her sit-down with our own brett bear where owe offered a similar response. sounds like she's sticking to it. >> she was also asked would she pardon donald trump if she's elected and she said it's a hypothetical. i'm just worried about the next fourteen days. >> the reporters saw biden's mental decline but kamala didn't see it even though she had once with him once a week. that's believable. election day. under two weeks away. i can't believe that. the candidates are ramping up efforts to win over key voting blocks. florida governor ron desantis previews the race and the new ballot measures in his state. >> do you know that hard working patriotic americans just like you and me spend an estimated
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[ ♪♪ ] >> president trump promising latino voters in florida a secure border and an end to migrant crime while kamala harris uses a tellmudo interview. governor desantis, agreed to have you this morning. i want to start with this poll of "usa today" and you see trump
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with an eleven-point lead among latino voters. you did extraordinarily well with latino voters in your race for governor. are you seeing a trend of latinos going towards the republican party? >> well, certainly, in florida, i think donald trump will to do well. he'll win hispanics. we won 62 or 63% in 2022. and i don't think kamala harris is going to play well at all. i think one of the things in florida that's been exciting is you go back when when i got elected governor, there were 300,000 more registered democrats. now we're into this election, we have a million more registered republicans now in florida and i think you're seeing hispanic voters play a big part of that. so this is the first presidential election certainly in modern history where florida is not a swing state. florida is going to go clear red across the board. >> governor, i want to talk to you about some of these amendments because they're very important in the state of florida. i want to start with amendment 4.
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this is the abortion initiative in florida and we've seen the republican party lose every single abortion ballot initiative across the country and what people don't realize is the language is vague in these. it often leads to taxpayer funded abortion. no parental consent. abortion until birth being legalized. it's rather radical. but in florida, there's going to be language on the ballot explaining much of that. there's a 60% threshold. do you think you can win on amendment 4? >> absolutely. i think once people figure out the things you just said and this was written very vaguely and deceptively, it should not be on the ballot, because they're trying to fool people. their add campaign talks nothing about their ads. they're just lying about florida law. one of the things that amendment 4, you're exactly right, abortion until birth will likely lead to taxpayer funding and eliminates parental consent for minors, which is absolutely extreme and radical. but it does something that i don't even think california or colorado, some of these states
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did. it allows nonphysicians to green light abortions up until the moment of birth. they had always talked about the importance of the physician. so we've got a lot of physicians in florida who were speaking out against it. so if you're pro-life, obviously this is an easy "no." even if you're not, i don't know very many people who want to see abortion until birth or think that physicians should be displaced in favour of healthcare provider which you and i know can be a whole host of different things. >> another amendment is amendment 3. we're going to put up what amendment 3 would mean. and this is about legal weed and governor desantis, one thing, a case that your team is making, is that this would not limit it in public places, so is florida going to start smelling like new york? god forbid, if this passes. >> that will happen, yes. here's the thing: this amendment -- how did this get here? it's one big weed company has spent $100 million and they wrote the amendment to benefit them.
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not to benefit the people of florida. so this is not about freedom because they don't let you grow your own weed if you want to do that in your backyard. you got to buy it from them. they create a big weed cartel. but on the other hand, they don't limit use in public. so you will see rampant use. to me, this is anti-freedom. they don't let you grow your own, but on the other hand, people that don't want to be involved in marijuana will have their freedoms infringed upon when this is in our parks, beaches, just like it is in colorado, in california and places like that. and i would say this is a horribly written amendment. if you don't like weed, you vote "no." even if you do, you have to read the actual text. this amendment actually gives the big weed companies total immunity from any civil liability so if they sell you bad weed, you can't sue them. this is not something that should be in a constitution in the state of florida. we have medical marijuana that's legal in florida. people can get cards and do it. but we have not let it run
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rampant around our state and infringe on people's quality of life. if this amendment passes, it will reduce the quality of life in the state of florida. there's no question. >> the text does matter. i saw in that amendment 4 about abortion, a pro-choice voter saying why she was voting against it. very interesting. very important. governor desantis, thank you as always. >> thank you. >> the investigation continues into the top secret intelligence leaked on israel's plans to attack iran. why critics say this administration simply cannot be trusted. what can i do to make a better cotton crop? we believe that the best products are made in america and come fresh from the family farm. and produced under the most sustainable farming techniques. from our sheets to our blankets and quilts this is a product that can be passed on. it could be a family heirloom. go to red land cotton dot com and receive 20% off your order with code fox 20.
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i try to put my arm around any vet that i can. absolutely. at newday usa, that's what we're doing. we put our arm around the veterans. when i think of the veteran out there that needs to refi his home, he may want to purchase and we can help them and provide that financial solution for them and their families. it's a great, rewarding feeling. everybody in the company, they have that deference and that respect and that love for the veteran that makes this company so unique. >> good morning, everyone. it is a beautiful day. another one here in new york city. much of the northeast has been experiencing above average temperatures and dry conditions. let's take a look at it. the only problem is we have no
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moisture so wildfires are a concern. connecticut right now has a wildfire burning and we're setting records in terms of temperatures. we've got drought for the ohio valley in towards the northeast. and if you got a wildfire burning, 20 to 30 mile per hour winds as a cold front moves through is not going to help things. we'll watch that, but here's this rainless streak for the northeast. 23 days without rain. we're getting into record territory for a lot of these place and is that includes austin, minneapolis, philadelphia, and new york city. so i know brian kilmeade, we were talking about you think the 1800s. we're not there yet. >> right. i'm loving the weather but i would like a little rain for my crops. >> exactly. it's very important. >> thank you very much. >> always nice to see you, my friend. >> in my interview airing today with the former president of the united states, who wants to be the 47th president of the united states, he react to the classified documents leak and says -- i should say satellite image leak and how he would
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handle the situation differently if it leaked out of his pentagon. watch. >> how would you like to be israel and wake up and find out that you will of a your various plans on attacking iran have been leaked to the media and to the world? and this can only happen to this administration. this group of people is just so bad. october 7th would have never happened. iran was broke. they didn't have money for hezbollah. they didn't have money for hamas. i want to make a deal that's good for everybody b you with he don't want iran to have a nuclear weapon. >> so would that be one of the targets? we talked about that. former director of national intelligence under the trump administration, former congressman from texas, ro john radcliffe joins us now. great to see you. your reaction to this leak. there's no faith that there's going to be a thorough investigation of how this imagining got on telegram which means iran saw it. >> right. and who's paying attention to this? obviously this is a stunning betrayal of israel by the
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biden-harris administration. but as president trump pointed out there, if it would have happened in his eneadministrati he wouldn't stand for that with his national security cabinet. he would hold people accountable. but if you look -- if this were happening in a republican administration, you would also see democratic members of congress out there talking about this as well. where is shiff, raskin, falwell? check their twitter feeds. they haven't said a word about this. they want this to go away. they know that kamala harris has an iran problem. biden administration has an iran problem. in this administration, you can only fail up. >> this is one of the rare times in our lives, we know iran is going to hit. they're expecting israel to hit. the question is when and what targets. they published the targets ahead of time. >> right. >> obviously there's a plan b for israel. but almost every conversation they have with the prime minister or his other ministers ends up in "the washington post." do you believe there's a
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pro-iranian element inside the biden administration? >> we know there is. look at rob mallley, who has been suspended, under investigation for himself, possibly leaking classified information to iran. >> he was one of the lead negotiators on this nuclear agreement that was horrendous that would have sun setted this year. >> from talking it with my former counterparts in assad and the idf when i was in the intelligence community, the concern all along about the biden-harris national security team is their competence and why they've made so many mistakes in the middle east that have been very clearly documented. but now they're wondering whether or not all of this was intentional all along. when your sensitive national security war plans are revealed to your common adversary, i'm go to go say what the israelis can't say. they don't trust thewide-harris energies. all of the good will that the
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trump administration built up in the middle east with the abraham accords and with moving the capital to jerusalem, trying out qasim sulmani, they have destroyed a lot of the will. >> the middle east would cheer if iran's nuclear program was set back or destroyed. but that doesn't play a role in the mind-set of the biden administration. yet israel might do it anyway or take a shot at it anyway. >> well, you know, removing iran's ability to pursue nuclear weapons should be an effort that the united states and israel are doing together. you're right, brian. unfortunately, at least for the next few months, israel has to contemplate doing that alone. i do think that if president trump is elected, hopefully, in the next two weeks, that that discussion can change about not allowing iran to be a member of the nuclear club because that will start a regional nuclear
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race with everyone in the region wanting a nuclear weapon and we can't have another north korea in the middle east. >> although north korea's in ukraine for another time. and if donald trump wins, he'll be calling you no matter what job you want. john radcliffe, thanks so much. straight ahead, the white house taking a victory lap after a decline in border encounters. but are they overlooking some important details? we'll discuss.
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yes on 2. all kids deserve a safe place to learn. >> so the white house has taken a victory lap over c pcpb's lat report showing the number of migrants who have entered the u.s. unlawfully under the biden-harris illegally. griff washington has the rest. >> reporter: the border numbers were 1101,000, the lowest in for years. how did they do it? there's an app for that and a program. take a look. over the past two years, more than 1.4 million have been allowed to enter the country lawfully under the cbp lap in the parole program. break that parole program down, you can see you've got 111,000 cubans, 214,000 haitians, 96,000 nick nicaraguans and the white
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house has taken that victory lap putting on a quote saying border crossings have dropped by more than 55% to the lowest levels in over four years and encounters between the ports of entry are lower than they were during the last several months of the previous administration. the biden-harris administration has taken effective action and is republican officials continue to do nothing. but at a rally yesterday, senator j.d. vance isn't buying it. >> you can be compassionate about it by i completely reject the argument that kamala harris's open border, which has led to 320,000 missing children, that has led to eleven and twelve-year-old girls being sex trafficked by mexican drug cartels, that is not compassionate. having a border is compassionate is for american citizen and is everyone else too. [ cheering and applause ] >> reporter: meanwhile officials watching yet another caravan of migrants about 2,000 strong is left southern mexico last week and very often, they splinter off and find smugglers to get them across the border but now,
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lawrence, we'll find out whether or not they may just use the app or apply for the parole program. one final note about the numbers, while the administration is taking a victory lap with this low september month, the total fiscal year for 2024 was over 2 million 135,000 and that's the third straight year of a fiscal year over 2 million. something the previous administration never had. >> even when they changed the rules, the numbers are still up to that regard. thanks, g riff. >> thank you. tim walz congressional strict district is making it sure they don't share his values. first let's check in with diana perino. >> i love "off the grid" that's a good segment. >> you're good. >> i'm trying to be like you. >> i know. even me. i see you. thirteen days and democrats are
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fretting over the betting. just how many immigrants did biden and harris allow into the country legally since january 2023? plus, will enough jewish-american voters switch from democrat to republican this year to make a difference? why are both candidates going to be this texas this friday is something is up. we'll tell you all about it. we're up next. see you at nine.
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>> steve: this morning the harris campaign reportedly worried about those blue wall states as more everyday rural voters like this michigan auto worker we spoke to earlier today says it is no longer their party. >> we can pretend all we want the democrats are for us. but they're not. they're not. i've learned this over the years. like i said, i was a life long democrat voted for obama both terms and all i saw was more losses and more jobs going overseas is. your fake optics don't work anymore. you can't tell us the economy is doing great, you aren't hurting. no, we are hurting. >> steve: tell that to tim walz as he rallies with former president barack obama trying to appeal to working class
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families. >> the governor says kamala harris is promising a new way forward and ready to deliver. both of us. both of us grew up in middle class families. we didn't start out with $400 million. kamala and tim walz have is an actual plan. give a tax cut to 100 million middle class and working class americans. >> however, the democratic vp pick is struggling to win ore places like his old minnesota congressional district which has shifted to the right and the red during his time in office. here to go off the grid and discuss is "fox & friends" weekend co-hosts pete hegseth is and will cain. good morning, guys. pete, let's start with you. my great grandma is actually from grenada, minnesota.
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over time it sounds is as if tim walz is out of step with his own stomping grounds. >> steve, we might be related. my great grandmother is from southern minnesota and northern iowa. know the area very well. tim walz represented that area for five terms and pretended to be a moderate. he always pretended and vote ised left. he ran for governor and made a bargain with the tall building crowd in minneapolis/st. paul to make it look like he was moderate. the covid stuff, illegal immigration, somali, immigration. once he governed he went far to the left. what district working class people crushed by nafta, who have common sense is and they were slowly drifted from the democrat party and tim walz. now they are running away, steve.
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tim walz is a flamboyant cartoon of a rural voter. coach who was an assistant coach. a vet who lied about his rank and didn't go to the super bowl when his team deployed amongst other issues. so this is why the democrat party is losing voters in those places. >> steve: will, in 2016 when donald trump won the presidency tim walz was running for the first congressional district in minnesota. he only won it by one percentage point. when the going gets tough, the tough run for governor. instead he ran for governor and won. >> what an inspiration, won by one. governor of minnesota. the best i can do is i believe one of my grand parents on my mother's side is from south dakota. exposure to be a voter in the upper plains and midwest. i think everybody watching knows
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pretty well at this point, i think, about tim walz's policies and i think we even have them and flash them on screen. you would say that's not moderate, that's not the values of a rural voter. not what i know. that's why i come back to you guys. i lived in montana, in a small town. there is some cultural differences from a small town in texas, policy-wise not that different. i go to pete's thing about tim walz being a cartoon of a rural guy. i don't know rural people like tim walz that jazz hands and high step kicking. how kamala harris or the democrats thought that was our guy for small town america. >> steve: lightening round. 30 second iss tops. pete, it comes to prices. that will undo them ultimately. >> is absolutely. everything costs more. whether you are a farmer, fuel, this used to be the democrats in
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minnesota called the dfl. the democrat farm labor party. they have lost the farmers and lost the workers which means they have lost their base and cater only effectively to immigrating voters and urban voters. >> steve: will. >> yes, pocketbook, yes inflation, yes the economy. it is truly the issue that affects every single american. you can see it from lawrence's barber shops with donald trump to urban areas across this country to rural areas all across this country. it is the biggest issue, you are right. >> steve: before you go. pete, a patriots award plug. >> still get tickets. look to see is you december 5th. it will be awesome is. >> steve: thank you for going off the grid. check out lawrence in the barber shop tomorrow in atlanta. see you tomorrow. >> i'm running for president of the united states. joe biden is not.

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