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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  October 26, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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(balloon doug pops & deflates) and then i wake up. is limu with you in all your dreams? oh, yeah. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪ will: it is the 7:00 hour of "fox and friends" weekend, we are 10 days out from election day in the latest national poll shows trump and harris locked in a virtual tie, live report next. >> trump talking about his stint at a pennsylvania mcdonald's, three hours with joe rogan. pete: as the baseball star swing for world series when we take you to swings in the batting cage right here on fox square. the second hour "fox and friends" weekend starting right now.
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♪ ♪ i just came to say hello ♪ hello ♪ alone ♪ will: looks like a distinguished courthouse in the middle of the shot along the massachusetts town. rachel: why don't we build buildings like this anymore? will: we need bureaucratic buildings for nobody. you will like it with taxpayer dollars. pete: have to opt out of the batting cage. brenberg will be here to take you on. my shirt is a little tight. when i put it on, this shirt is too tight. rachel: just split the short-haul cogan style. will: are you getting more muscular? the shirt is getting smaller? will: in the armpits this is an
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uncomfortable thing, there's no swinging get with this was i need to go upstairs and change. i am guaranteed a loss. pete: one weekend when you were out we competed and they -- he claims all sports that i'm good at. wipe the table with him. we grew up playing a lot of baseball. it's good baseball. will: go ahead. let's do it. rachel: i told you about my t-ball days, i did play t-ball. will: that's why you know what a grand slam is. what is a fastball? rachel: a really fast ball. pete: i wanted to give her one. rachel: trick me up on one more. will: what is a changeup? rachel: you are changing the way you for the ball?
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will: what is an error? rachel: a mistake? will: these are too intuitive. we need to come up with something better. rachel: ten days from election day and donald trump and vice president harris are locked in a tie in the latest national poll. will: both candidates will rally in michigan after spending friday on the trail in texas. will: madeline repair is here with more. >> reporter: donald trump and vice president kamala harris are heading to blue wall battleground straits, on opposite sides of michigan, trump in the detroit area, harris in kalamazoo, trump heads to pennsylvania for a rally at state college. another big name joining harris today, former first lady michelle obama is campaigning with harris to mark the first day of statewide early voting in michigan after her
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star-studded evening in houston. some of the celebrities that joined her included jessica alba, willie nelson, kelly rowland and beyoncé who was a houston native. >> i'm not here is us liberty or as a politician. i'm here as a mother. a mother who cares about the world my children and all of our children lived in. imagine our daughters growing up seeing what's possible with no ceilings, no limitations. >> reporter: harris focused on abortion, she warned trump would prohibit abortion nationwide even though trump has said he veto a national ban. >> no one is protected if there is a trump national abortion ban. it will outlaw abortion in every single state. understand that. he can do it with or without an act of congress.
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all that to say elections matter. rachel: trump was in texas where he hit harris on immigration. trump met with the mother of jocelyn, 12-year-old houston girl who police say was killed in june by two migrants who entered the country illegally. >> kamala is here to rub shoulders with woke celebrities, while she is here she will not speak to the grieving mothers from whom she has stolen the brightest light in their lives. will: it was an attempt to drive young male voters to the polls. and use beyoncé giving a speech, not what people were expecting and trump talking mothers and daughters affected by ill legal crime and one of
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those mothers was alexis who talked about the contrast between donald trump caring about those impacts and what she has heard or not heard from kamala harris. listen to alexis. >> thank you for the opportunity to say my daughter's story. kamala harris has never reached out to me to give her condolences as her humane person running this country. it is very sad that she can't even give me an open apology, sincere apology. she has attempted to apologize just days before this election. i find it very convenient for her. i appreciate everything donald trump, senator ted cruz, has
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done for me. this incredibly hard journey. rachel: this mother's story is one of the most powerful things that has happened during this campaign season. she came out when donald trump went to the border and had multiple family members. the story is so gruesome, going to a convenience store in houston, a 7-11 type store, lore her out and rape her and beat her up and leave her for dead, this mother doesn't want to tell the story. kamala harris has never called or said anything or written an apology until she was asked in that 60 minutes interview but took no responsibility for what
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happened to. pete: she was forced. rachel: you see this mom so grateful that somebody connected to the government will care about what happened to her daughter. democrats want to sweep this away like her daughter doesn't matter. will: fascinating to take these human moments. i think about illegal immigration and the way so many people internalize it statistically. it's always an abstraction until it affects you personally. than you know this. as i said before, crime for me was often a staff. a couple years ago we had a home invasion, a break-in when one of my kids was home and in that moment it is not a staff. staff become human and a human face of this crime, this issue we are facing as americans.
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this is at the same time you are seeing the humanity of this issue that they are painting trump as a guy who would dismiss someone like alexis as not worthy. there is reality and there's this false reality. >> back in 2016, when it was unpopular to meet with these angel moms, he was meeting with them, giving them a microphone, the media doesn't care. pete: it is something he does so compellingly.
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in 2016, and some are pointing out what kamala harris is doing rallies with bruce springsteen and beyoncé, big celebrities in highly curated events like what hillary clinton is doing in 2016 whereas donald trump is working at mcdonald's and talking, pointing out a contrast and appealing to a lot of people in a viral way and going on joe rogan, a full three hours, and as part of that, he talked about his shift at mcdonald's. >> i did mcdonald's last week. i got a call from your friends at google, he said this is the biggest thing we've had in years. do you know that? it was a great guy by the way
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who said this mcdonald's, i want to tell you one of the biggest things we ever had on google and you never know about this. i thought it was a throwaway. i thought i would walk in and highlight the fact, 56 of these mcdonald's, love it. we went there and the crowd was crazy, 48,000 people sitting around. it was crazy. couldn't get the secret service -- i went into the -- did the french fry thing. rachel: what he did with mcdonald's and understanding why he did it. the press refused to look into her background, there are no
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photos of her working in mcdonald's, no other employees who can say they worked with her, no pay stubs. mcdonald's has been oddly silent about a celebrity person who worked at their franchise. they love to advertise, one in 8 americans have worked at mcdonald's, they love saying famous and successful people worked at their store. it was obvious she was lying and he was so mad that he gets scrutinized for every little thing he does and this was her line, stolen valor, stolen valor, and you know, this, he brought attention to it and the media didn't want to cover it, the people writing the news stories, but people understood this. it was a perfect moment politically speaking. will: he talked how big this
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was in internet search engine, reflection of how this type of politicking matters in 2024. what has mattered throughout our history often is what newspapers choose to do. pete: i wonder how much it does. will: in the past you could argue an editorial board's decision to endorse a president or not mattered. we can all agree it doesn't matter to the average american but it does matter to the candidates, it matters to democrat candidates specifically if you don't get the endorsement. pete: if you are a major newspaper your endorsement is going to a democrat. will: the washington post will not endorse a candidate for president. this follows the los angeles times who made a similar decision. the minneapolis star tribune home newspaper of tim walz will not endorse a candidate for president.
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pete: they endorsed in 20, 16, 12, 8, 4, and 2000, all democrats. will: look at the last three election cycles. in 2016, hillary clinton got 240 newspaper endorsements, donald trump, 20. in 2020, president biden basically have that, 120 endorsements, trump, 14. in 2014 it has been reduced 60% or so. harris tim walz, 80 endorsements, trump less than 10. the story there is all of these newspapers who were slamdunk guaranteed endorsements for democrats for some reason or another going we won't endorse kamala harris. pete: they are making a bet, kamala harris is a horrible candidate and we don't want to be saddled with that. in many ways it is a dying
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business and they defended their readership time and again by misrepresenting who they are and it is bad business. will: a freak out up the washington post, that's the story. of full on meltdown. pete: democracy dies in darkness and hitler is running you better endorse and they didn't and base it will he bathe those said we and baseit will he bathe those said we won't do anymore endorsements. will: the story is donald trump. rachel: there is no single figure more responsible for how unimportant newspapers have become and legacy media has become than donald trump. fake news, the idea of fake news, introducing that it and exposing the media like he did with mcdonald's you don't want to cover the story, okay, i will go to mcdonald's and make the point to the people myself you don't want to tell a story i will tweet it out, take me
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off twitter i will start another media company another platform, truth social, still get my message out. the fact that they didn't endorse donald trump is the point they know she's not the right candidate. they can't endorse donald trump. he's responsible for them becoming irrelevant. they are still so angry about it. pete: trump loves mcdonald's. rachel: we talk about how authenticity matters in politics, that worked because he's a billionaire but a blue-collar billionaire, on his private airplane. will: i try to do that this morning and you wouldn't let me. rachel: you are a true blue-collar, not a billionaire. you are a mc fan. will: the district attorney files paperwork recommending the men and does -- menendez
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brothers be resentenced to. >> reporter: the legal paperwork is filed in los angeles, the da is asking a judge to reduce the life sentences for lyle and eric menendez. they could be eligible for parole. they are all smiles in new mugshots taken earlier this month by the department of corrections where they served a three decades behind bars for the grisly murders of their parents in 1989 when they were 18, and 20 one years old. the brothers claimed they were sexually abused by the father but prosecutors argued money was the motives. 35 years later the la da, george gascon, who is up for reelection believes the brothers have paid their debt to society. >> i came to a place where i believed resentencing was appropriate. i am going to recommend tomorrow.
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>> reporter: the attorney for the menendez brothers say they are cautiously optimistic about their release but resentencing recommendation must first be approved by a judge after a hearing on the parole board and the governor would need to sign off on eventual release which is a process that could take six months. will: donald trump is getting ready for the main event at madison square garden. pete: our next guest on the key issue he needs to address. and - ahoy! it's the explorer! each helping to protect their money with chase. woah, a lost card isn't keeping this thrill seeker down. lost her card, not the vibe. the soul searcher, is finding his identity, and helping to protect it. hey! oh yeah, the explorer! she's looking to dive deeper... all while chase looks out for her.
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pete: israel carrying out a counterstrike against iran in response to the missile strike. 100 warplanes targeted the iranian missile manufacturing and defensive systems. we are learning more in israel's largest attack against iran ever. matt finn joins us from tel aviv with more. >> reporter: iran's foreign minister has responded that it
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has the obligation to defend itself. ten iranian border guards have been reported dead. that number could increase. israel has battle with iranian proxies before but the early morning strike is the largest military inside the country of iran in israeli history. it began at 2:00 a.m. local time lasting a few hours and finishing. iran's terror proxy hezbollah jumped in and fired 65 missiles from lebanon in 2 israel as part of the back-and-forth between israel and hezbollah. iran has been downplaying the strike via state-controlled media. israel says this is in retaliation for two missile strikes, israel says it targeted 20 precise locations including the air defense system and missile manufacturing locations. israel says by taking down iran after defense system it can
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more freely travel through iran's air. the idf's warning iran and any other entity considering fresh attacks that the israeli military is, quote, at peak readiness offensively and defensively. >> if the regime in iran were to make the mistake of beginning around of escalation, we will be obligated to respond. our message is clear. those who threaten the state of israel and seek to drag the region into wider escalation will pay a heavy price. >> there has been a lot of anticipation for the israeli strike. life is carrying on as normal, people moving about freely at the beach, the israeli military is wanting to pay attention.
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there's been several times people have rushed to shelters as a way of life. looking at tomorrow the united states is hosting a de-escalation meeting in qatar, egypt and qatar acting as mediators for hamas. the secretary of state ended a 5 day trip so we will keep you updated on that. rachel: appreciate it. tomorrow donald trump takes manhattan, the former president headlining madison square garden as he spread his message to voters in deep blue strongholds. part of the message will likely be illegal immigration, a big huge problem in the big apple as polls show it remains a top issue 10 days to the election. with us is republican new york
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city councilwoman vicki paladinno. how important is illegal immigration? if you go outside -- >> this is huge. will change people's minds? i think it will this go around. the fact that trump is coming to the garden is tremendous. it will be packed. it is exciting. this illegal immigration as we are calling it, this invasion onto our city of 200,000 migrants be they black, white, blue, green, families, no families, we have turned new york city into a third world country. todd: they are taken up by illegal migrants being paid for by the city, federal dollars and raising costs of rooms because there's a scarcity of rooms, you famously said people want this to happen because
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they are getting rich from it in the city. >> let's be clear, there is 150 hotels in manhattan that are being taken over by the illegals. we come into the outer boroughs, people who own these places. in my district my one hotel that has migrants and it made these people millionaires. they are making $3 million a year, $300,000 a month to house illegals. they do not want this to end. rachel: i went outside a hotel and engaged with these illegal migrants to get an idea how they got here, what their experience been inside of the hotel and what services they are getting.
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i want you to hear what this man told me. [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish]
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rachel: that is a service i didn't know was offered, they were getting food, housing, he is telling me he is staying at the hotel with his wife and his son. his wife works at a restaurant and he said his child goes to a day care. he said day care for 8 hours a day. how many new yorkers are struggling to pay for daycare? >> middle-class families, double incomes, one entire paycheck pays for take care. that is what we have now. this is a tax burden on the city of new york, when a lot of people maybe still don't understand, everything they need they get for free. rachel: if you run a charity you want to brag about what you are doing for your clients, the state and the federal
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government is not being very transparent about what services they are offering because i don't think americans would be down with this. i appreciate all the information you've given us. on weekdays at 4:00, we have more of that and other interviews with illegal migrants outside of that hotel. hope you will join us on fox news. a federal judge barring virginia from removing 1600 alleged noncitizens from its voter rolls. what governor glenn youngerkin says he's willing to do with 10 days until the election.
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will: an emergency motion after a federal judge bars the state from removing 1600 alleged noncitizens from its voter rolls. jonathan turley joins us now. great to see you this morning. having you on the program is the reason we should die into the legal aspects of it but we should talk big picture as well. on the legal aspects, you helped me understand this it is illegal to systematically change voter rolls, it is illegal for noncitizen to vote. youngagain not doing anything, this is individualized the people who identify as noncitizens or don't identify as citizens, we kick them off the voter rolls. a federal judge says noncitizens have tuesday. >> governor youngerkin has a
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point, it's a crime for noncitizens to vote. the law has been on the books since governor kane was sitting in his office, now on the ballot as the democratic candidate for u.s. senate for reelection. he submitted this to the department of justice which greenlighted it and what youngerkin has said, it is not a systemic program. it was kicked back by the dmv on an individual basis based on the information given by the individuals themselves. what virginia objects to is the system allows you to correct it. if there's a mistake in 14 days, they did this weeks ago, even if it is not corrected, if
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we reject your documents, you can cast a provisional ballot and you can vote and the federal judge said put them back on the roles. rachel: the question is if this is systemic or there's a curable problem of legal voter who got kicked off accidentally but everywhere i turn every state in which i look at the doj under the biden/harris administration is working on behalf of any effort to get off the voter rolls. >> it is frustrating for many states, not just noncitizens voting but voter id. the biden administration has been calling jim crow 2.0, and lost the all-star game over this false claim, they had
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record showings in this election and the previous election. what's astonishing is over 80% of americans support voter identification laws for voting. think of any issue in this election that has 84% of the american people, not the biden administration. will: we will keep an eye on virginia and georgia. it's a showdown at the horseshoe as ohio state takes on nebraska on fox. ♪
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>> this country can become rich with the proper use of tariffs. >> did you float the idea of getting rid of income taxes and replacing it with tariffs? are you serious about that? >> why not? will: donald trump doubling down on eliminating income tax and swapping it with tariffs during the wide-ranging interview with joe rogan.
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with this idea work? what it payoff? let's ask brian brenberg, cohost of the big-money show. what do you think. brian: problem with the income tax is it punishes good productive work, that's why i hate the income tax. next best thing is to make it flat, next best thing is to put attacks on consumption, better than that would be put a tax on consumption of goods made outside the us so you improve domestic production. in theory i love the idea. i don't want to punish work. my fear is in america what happens is you say you replace one tax with another and you end up with both at the end of the day. i want to know from donald trump if anybody can do what he can do it, how do you rip the income tax out of this country? it is so deeply embedded right now. pete: it is also constitutional. you put the tax up to 0 or very
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low, removing it all together, here is the point. donald trump is creative on taxes. 's goal is to make america richer than it has ever been, make americans richer than they have ever been, reward good work and he's opening up all the ideas to do it. kamala harris is not doing that, taxing the rich, moving on to ideas that make everybody rich, which of those things do you want? and putting more money in my pocket. brian: if this leads to lowering the tax rate. pete: you get somewhere better but you get a vision of what they looks like. brian is going to stick around. we will hit the batting cage and tell you why. the competition was really good.
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so we will be back in a moment hitting the cage. we go to adam next. to college football. we are not going to commercial. are you supposed to read it? will is downstairs. nebraska takes on number 4, adam klotz live in columbus, ohio ahead of the game, there he is. >> reporter: nebraska takes on ohio 8. this is my second time in columbus recognizing familiar faces, we met before. i recognize this and what i would like to do is trade you breakfast if you want to get a shout out. go ahead. >> if you are watching this, i love you.
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over the line. >> oh. [chanting] >> almost all ohio state fans. we love it. wait, wait, wait. go big red. oh. [crowd chanting] will: not like you have an energy deficit. will beyoncé have fans falling in love with harris? the pop-culture roundup coming up. ♪ but that energy needs to be reliable
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rachel: time for another pop-culture roundup. thank you for coming here. we talk about hot topics. beyoncé, she didn't per format.
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just going to say, beyoncé didn't feel her heart was in it. rachel: the kamala harris campaign feels like an abandoned ship, the fat laying a singing -- rachel: this is like an abortion rally. that's all it is. on abortion rally. pretty sad. 30,000 people most of them left disappointed she didn't say. rachel: they were expecting a lot more and just got kamala. i think trump stole it. all right. martha stewart, this is interesting. the golden bachelorette. people finding love later in life. i love it. martha stewart was asked if she would one of the bachelorettes and she said no other guys aren't hot enough for her. rachel: i believe that. being on the air.
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from women her age, are you single, i am single. hide your grandmothers outside. will: they are very special guys, give them a shot and she suggested martha show up at the grand finale and check out how great these guys are. good idea? rachel: she should but you here once a special guys, can't get them both in one package. rachel: i've got it. i've got it. >> i can't speak for others. rachel: let's move to this. matthew mcconaughey, still thinking of all these cougars. >> your granddaughters instead. rachel: my goodness. matthew mcconaughey in malibu went to visit his mom, wasn't
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feeling well in texas and said i'll leave it. she moved the family to texas and talked about why. he said in texas a minute, 60 seconds it feels like a minute. a mile is a mile, life slows down. >> these hollywood celebrities promote a certain lifestyle and say i don't want my kids growing up in that. rachel: they seem happy year. rachel: people who want to protect texas and keep it conservative, bring them in. rachel: he loves texas but not as much as will. >> he loves it. rachel: he will play basketball in a tight shirt. that was in cowboy boots. catch you on fox news saturday night at 10:00 pm eastern and you can dm him as well. all right.
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will and pete. will: bring it in. pete: that is a routine. got a little batting competition. will: swing and miss off camera. here we go. a couple more. one more. is this live? that looked good. for some context the reason we do this is brenberg was hosting the show a month ago and felt the sports were rigged in my direction. mine was a little league baseball player. you had one like that. another drive to second base.
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brian: not used to hitting with a tie on. brian: didn't get that one. come on. the commentary. i am leaning toward his feet. there we go. that's what he's talking about crowding the plate. a beautiful left swing. people compared it to ken griffin junior and brian brenberg, who won the batting contest? will: they are not pointing at you. pete: i set that up unfairly. baseball out here getting a little winded. we will be back after the commercial. . ♪ ♪ i'll be there... ♪
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