tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News October 27, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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as a man who wrote about this, general james mattis, you may have heard of that publication. kamala harris is america, food and energy prices, the basics become unaffordable grief because that's who she is. blackout and brownouts, the death of civil society. the growing centralized police state without any opportunity to challenge it and the deconstruction of the constitution republic. she will tell you where she stands, i'm telling you where you stand, vote for kamala harris' vote for the enemy within and destruction of the united states, about fraternal trump is for the shining country on a hill. tomorrow night on life liberty and the. ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ pete: the changing of the seasons in our nation's anthem. you can watch the nation if change by watching -- rachel: good-bye, boats with flags -- pete: yes. hello pumpkins, yes. [laughter] you can feel the crisp in the air. good morning. thanks for being with us. october 27 theth, year of our lord, 2024. we are 9 days from the election. we're in single digits finally. will: incredible. and that means former president donald trump, he's here in new york, back in the new york groove. st -- he headlines madison square garden tonight. rachel: a star-studded lineup is set to take the stage alongside trump at the world's most famous
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arena. pete: that's where alexis mcadams is with us this morning. hey, alexis. >> reporter: hey, good morning. you can check it out behind me, there's already a few hundred people here in front of madison square garden in new york city. people from all over the place including, where are you from? >> tennessee the. >> reporter: we had some people from brooklyn. where are you from? >> florida. >> reporter: a jersey girl over here. but this is all people that are excited to see the former president at madison square garden. we're expected -- we're expecting about 19,000 people. the former president's expected to highlight illegal immigration which has been a big problem across the country and specifically here in the big apple. people flooding into the country, migrants who came in illegally since 20232 the costing the city billions of dollars. although it's only 6 a.m., i know you guys have been up for a while, so have these people. the former president's going to talk about progressive policies
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he believes lead to major issues with new york bail reform. sometimes he talks about how, you know, he used to love new york, he grew up here, and he thinks it's gone down the tubes. we're going to try to the check in with some people, including you with. i know you're from brooklyn. you said the former president, you know, is making a big homecoming here. you always wanted to go to a rally, but they've nebraska really been -- never really been close to the new york. tell me why you want the hear from the policy. >> well, i like his policies -- from the president. >> i like his policies. i voted for him in 2016 because i'm an immigrant myself. and even though we are a country of immigrants, there's a way, there's a process. not just walking across the river. so i really am against illegal immigration. >> reporter: i think in the beginning a lot of people on the democratic side thought letting
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people into the country was the right thing to do. but when you saw people crossing illegally and what happens with the car el and people dying, not even making it here, they come here and there's not enough resources for the american people led to a lot of people being upset. do you think immigration's going to be a top issue this election? >> i think is, because people understand how it impacts everybody. every state, it is undermining wages because even if you raise the minimum wage and you have people who are willing to work for less, that doesn't help the people who were supposed to get the higher wage. so you're telling me one thing and you're doing something else. enter. >> reporter: but new york, you live in brooklyn, you said. this is pretty deep blue, right, in the city. probably why he hasn't had many major rallies. he's been around when he's had the court cases. what do you think he's concern it's going to be like today?
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>> huge, everybody's excited. i think it was really ridiculous. this is supposed to be a free country, and from the first time he was running, you didn't feel free to say that i support trump. and especially as a black person. like, oh, he's a racist. i said, well, i don't see any evidence of that, you know? >> reporter: thought for talking to me, or appreciate it. have fun at the rally. it's similar the what we hear whenever we're in any state. last night if i was in pennsylvania for former president trump's rally, and those are the main issues too there, immigration and the economy. send it back to you. well wl thank you, alexis. those images are absolutely stunning if you've ever spent any time in new york orallied in this area. it's today see a make america great again hat on the streets of new york. but it wasn't yesterday as i left after our saturday edition the of this show. i saw a huge bus at columbus circle, and it was the just covered in trump and make america great again flags.
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and you're, like, look at that. and it looks like it actually could be having an impact. the polling out of new york suggests that kamala harris is significantly underperforming that of previous democrats to the extent that it would be the lowest performance by a democrat since, i believe, 1988. rachel: that is incredible. by the way, we talked about how many people were going to be speaking at the event tonight. just really a list of conservative stars, if you will. eric trump, mike johnson, elise stefanik if among them are going to be also speaking here with us this morning. but they will be headlining at the event at madison square garden -- will: and they'll be joined by dana white, j.d. vance -- rachel: tucker carltonson. will: -- tucker carlson. pete: elon musk, yeah. will: 30-plus, something like that, speakers today. pete: you get the feeling it's going to be one of those tent
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pole events. we'll see. i think he's speaking at 5:00 today. at madison square garden. rachel: people already lining up. pete: it's interesting. let's stay in new york, because the mayor of new york was asked about his party's propensity these days to ramp up the rhetoric and call trump a fascist. what did mayor adams think about that kind of dialogue? it's interesting what he said. watch this. >> reporter: hi, mr. mayor. i wonder if i could ask you about any communications you've been having with the trump campaign and if you believe the former president is fascist. >> you know, i have had those terms hurled at me by some political leaders in the city, using terms like hitler is and fascist. my answer is, no. i know what hitler has done, and i know what a fascist regime
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looks like. i think as i've called over and over again that the level of conversation, i think we could all dial down the temperature, and i've heard people say that the former president should not be able to have a rally in madison square garden. i strongly disagree. this is america. this is new york. and i think it's important that we allow individuals to exercise their right to get their message clear to nicer. rachel: it's actually an odd question, do you think he's -- [laughter] do you think he's a nazi? do you think he's like hitler? well, no, i know the history of hitler. i haven't seen any if similarities between hitler and donald trump. we're in crazy town the right now. will: and it is the opening question. do you think donald trump is a fascist? go. [laughter] and in this case, thankfully, the mayor of new york city if reveals some sanity. rachel: yeah.
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by the way, he also got some, you know, he has some affinity with don -- he's known donald trump for a while. if you remember at the al smith dinner, donald trump referred to him and said, hey, i know what happened to you, it happened to me. although it only happened to you a little bit compared to me -- the. [laughter] you're going to be fibro. there's sort of something there as well, i think. pete: i was, as you guys know, i tend the spend saturday afternoons in my office, so i watched some of the speeches that you don't have to. rachel: well, then you told me, and then the i had to. pete: so yesterday midday michelle obama was in kalamazoo, michigan, headlining for kamala harris. and she gave one of the most vivid, unabashed, pro-abortion speeches i've ever heard. and the target audience on this was not just women. obviously, the women in the audience, but it was hard at the men. specifically you think targeting black men where they've had -- where trump has had inroads they
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deny expect. i may not agree with anything she said, but she's pretty good at what she because. here's michelle obama yesterday in kalamazoo. >> in the hands of politicians, mostly men, who have no clue or do not care about what we as women are going through, who don't fully grasp the broad-reaching health implications that their misguided policies will have on our health outcomes. the only people who have standing to make these decisions are women with the advice of their doctors. [applause] do not hand our fates over to the likes of trump who knows nothing about us, who has shown deep contempt for us. because a vote for him is a vote against us, against our health, against our worth. ms. -- [applause] to to think that the men that we love could be either unaware or itch different concern
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indifferent into our plight is simply heartbreaking. so, fellas, before you with cast your votes, can ask yourselves what side of history do you want the to be on. rachel: yeah. i mean, she painted an abortion dystopia -- pete: yeah, she did. rachel: it was the -- by the way, by the end of watching the speech, even i didn't want to have a baby anymore. [laughter] she made it sound so scary. and that was really the point, right? and then she kept, as you rightly said, pete, she kept trying the bring men into the argument. and service the really struggling to me, because i think the last thing the women want are men who want them to kill their own offspring. those are not real men. and yet she's appealing to those darker angels, i believe, in the speech. it was dark. will: you know, when i first got into this business, i did some documentaries and some nonfiction, long-form storytelling, and one of the tools that it taught to you and
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even said, don't do this or at least don't do e it readily, so to use music. layer music in there because it tells an audience what to feel if. you're manipulating an audience. the music makes you feel something regardless of what you're hearing. i think as this campaign winds down, the music is plague. you're being told now, and it's a familiar song, all of the messages and themes that are predictable to make you feel. and they are abortion, trump is a fascist and a nazi -- pete: i think that's it. are there other ones? will: i think, i think -- rachel: that's it. you can't think of one more, will. will: i do, i do. it's been played for the last half century, the republicans are bigots. rachel: oh, sure. will: you go with those three pieces of music, and you can make people feel. but it flies in the face of reality. while you're told white men are the problem and the country is racist and bigoted, donald trump the yesterday accepted the endorsement of muslim leaders in
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michigan. watch. >> the muslim and arab voters in michigan and across the country want a stop to the endless wars and a return to peace in the middle east. that's all they want. [cheers and applause] like we had under president donald j. trump. >> we, as a muslims, sand with president trump because he promises peace! [cheers and applause] he promises peace, not war! if. [cheers and applause] the bloodshed has to stop. all over the world. and and i think this man can make that happen. [cheers and applause] i personally believe that god saved his life twice for a reason! [cheers and applause] i believe personally that god has saved husband -- his life
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for a reason, which is to save the lives of others. [cheers and applause] will: i truly did see -- i saw one of my old colleagues. white men are the problem. they point to polling that shows, you know, only 30% of white men vote democrat. but in the meantime, democrats are underpolling with black men, they're underpolling with -- this is a huge endorsement right here. the state of michigan, muslim-american. i mean, tell me this constituency besides women, and i would like to even see the polling on women at this point, where kamala harris is polling even to the mean of democrats. rachel: yeah. no, you're absolutely right. this endorsement is really important. i el you why. donald trump is running on a record as a peacetime president, and his closing message, by the way, will, is if you want world war iii, vote for her. if you want peace, vote for me.
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and that is a message that i think jews and muslims can agree on, that the everyone can agree on. we all want peace. and i think they're looking at him. and, by the way, donald trump had lebanese if, he's married to a lebanese christian man, tiffany is, and his other daughter is married or to a jewish man and now she's jewish too. so he's got, you know, he's got a pretty diverse family there. and i think that this move -- and, by the way, i have heard that tiffany's father-in-law has been helping him in this area as well with reaching out to muslim-americans. and i think this is a big deal in michigan. pete: yeah. the democrat party hasn't figured out how the israeli-palestinian thing at all, is and it's had implications in their own backyard in michigan where if they don't vote for trump, they might if even sit it out, which is also not a vote for kamala harris. will: turning now to your headlines. authorities are searching for a
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tennessee the man accused of murder last week. deputies releasing these images of the suspect. they found a victim in a body of water with an id that didn't belong to him. investigators said the id was connected to fraudulent activity linked to the suspect. he reportedly has tied to alabama, montana, or alaska, kentucky and florida. now to a fox news alert, at least 35 people are hurt after a the truck rammed into a bus stop just outside of tel aviv this morning. the bus stop is near moss if sad headquarters and several idf intelligence units -- mossad. satellite photos confirming israel hit a former nuclear weapons test building and missile facilities curl its counterstrike on -- during its counterstrike on iran. the daughter of the owner of the l.a. times says the paper chose not to endorse vice president harris due to harris' support of israel. harris has received overwhelming majority of newspaper endorsements but has missed out on a couple of notable
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publications including "the washington post" and, in fact,s has way fewer newspaper endorsements than any democratic candidate as you can see there on your screen from the past. this comes as the former editor at large of the washington post claims jeff bezos colluded with trump in denying an endorsement of kamala harris. pete: said they coordinated. rachel: what's the quid, what's the pro? will: blue angel. bezos' face. [laughter] now to to the world series, the dodgers taking a two of game series lead with a 4-22 win in l.a. last night thanks to some great pitching. 4-2. >> strikes out swinging. got him with a slider. torres grounds the first pitch to third, and max muncie will throw over to get him. >> this was a must-score inning for the kwan keyes. go got him swinging! yamamoto is on a roll in game two! will: now the series comes to new york city for game three tomorrow night on fox as
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dodgers' superstar shohei ohtani could miss the game with a shoulder injury. coverage will start at 7:00 eastern time, and those are your headlines. pete: there you go. rachel: i'm feel thinking about i wish we could get somebody from michigan on to tell us, you know, really what that a endorsement means. i mean, trump wins michigan, it's the over. pete: i would want to know about the dynamics. which leaders are there, does that represent the entire state? rachel: right. pete: leaders can mean a lot of things. will it reflect in votes? we need the salina zito of michigan. rachel: yeah. is it maybe tieu corps dixon? pete: could be. start looking. all right, start spreading the news. president trump returns to new york today to headline marred. en, breaking down his play for the democrat stronghold, next -- madison square garden. >> it hasn't been done for a long time, but we are going if to win new york. [cheers and applause]
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lou valentino is a trump support if -- supporting youtubeer, and he joins us now. thank you for being here. >> thank you for having me. pete: of course. what do you think it means that the president is going to to msg? if. >> i think it's legend dare. i think it means a lot to him and the fact that he wants to win new york. i know when he came to the bronx, that was the story, but now he is going to the to the most famous arena, and this is a big statement for republicans. and this is a seed that's being planted now, you know, and i love it. pete: well, is the soil, sticking with the seed analogy, is it fertile enough given what's happened in this city? are people willing to say, hey, we need trump here? >> you know, i know that the numbers were 89% in certain counties, it was 90% for joe biden. i'm not sure if he's going to win. i would love that. that would be dope, just to see a huge change. but in my opinion p i just want to the see the numbers show exactly what i've been seeing in
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the streets, in the barbershops and, you know, with my friends. we want change and, you know, and i believe that this time around the numbers will show that. pete: when you talk about some of those young people, a lot of hem did not vote for trump before? no. >> no, not at all. pete: what concern how much of their frustration is national issues or local issues? because we've got some stats here of the illegal migrant problem in new york city, right? if you've got -- it's exploded under biden-harris. just like -- there's some numbers right there. just like crime has exploded as well. how much of these young men or others that you know are moving over to trump? is that because their city's changing or their country's changing? >> i think both. i think it has to do with money, it has to do with national security, it has to do with overseas. i have muslim friends that are beginning to look at trump as an option, and that that before wasn't never -- you know, we just saw what happened in michigan, right?
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that's huge not because of who they are, but it's huge because they're muslim. and we're watching muslim men who are some of the most conservative people i know endorsing donald j. trump. there's a lot of muslims in new york city that feel the that same way. so i think it's a mixture of all, but mostly the war in the middle east. we want that to be done. we want ukraine, we want taiwan to be as safe -- we just want no wars. and i believe that trump coming in and i think a lot of us that are young, 27 years old and down or coming out of. college, we want a future. pete: sure. >> it feels like every day we're looking at the news, something's popping off. we know that turned trump that wasn't happening, and we believe that if he's given another chance, he will9 put these things to rest. so i believe. pete: well said. you'll be there tonight? >> for sure. pete: let us know how it goes. >> thank you so much for having me. pete: donald trump teasing a potential role for rfk jr. in his administration.
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♪ >> i love this idea of you teaming up with robert kennedy -- >> right? >> and i love this make america healthy idea, because there are chemicals and ingredient ifs in our food that are the illegal in other countries because they've been shown to be toxic. are you complete committed to have him a part of your administration? >> oh, i am. i said focus on health, you can do whatever you want. rachel: former president trump says he'll work with robert f. kennedy jr. to make america healthy again with a folk on improving the country's
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metabolic health. watch. >> i know you're aware of casey means, right? if. >> yes. >> one of the things they pointed out, and this is very important for people to understand, is what a lot of these drugs do is they act to somehow or another mitigate the effect of poor metabolic health. but most of these problems that these people are suffering from wouldn't exist if we put an emphasis on metabolic health. rachel: here to discuss is true med if cofounder, calley means. i boy, this is an exciting time, and i want to talk about what you expect to happen. last night, i was listening to michelle obama's speech, and she was talking -- she was criticizing trump on covid, and she said, you know, we -- you know, america had the high itself rate of death with covid, and she blamed it on trump. and i'm thinking, no, we have the highest obesity rate and co-morbidities, of course we were going to be more
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susceptible. >> we're the sickest country in the world. it's not even close. we chi 6 years earlier than the italians. there's something wrong with our system. i can't help but think what's going to happen at madison square garden today. these people are putting themselves on the line because this election with president trump is about big, existential issues. meanwhile, you have bill gates and reid hoffman funding kamala privately because they want the epstein tapes withheld. rachel: right. >> trump should be congratulated by all sides for thing together this coalition. my formulation is that the foundation of trump's candidacy is taking on the swamp, taking op on corruption. there's no greater example of the corruption that's bringing down our country than health. why are kids being poisoned and then drugged for profit? why is 70 to % of our kids do dying of ultra-processed kids and 40% of teens are on a pharmaceutical? rachel: that is the most astounding number.
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>> and, you know, what's happening with with rfk and what happened when he stood out there with trump and they said make america healthy again, fors not left v. us right,s it's corruption against the american people. this is corruption that's been in place for decades, and finally a candidate is giving an optimistic message that we can fix this very quickly. rachel: how can it be fixed? i believe that trump is going to unleash -- it was the fun ifny at the al smith dinner, he said i'm going to unleash him a little bit. but i have to believe right now the lobbyists are quidding themselves. because the swamp is real. >> the, i think a month after president trump wins is going to be -- there's trillions of dollars at stake, and if he said there's a lot of pressure existence him, and he's telling them, absolutely not, he's going to the appoint reformers. what can he do? it's actually difficult but it's very simple. when it comes to health, just
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fundamentally an industry, pharma, that profits from when we're sick has bought off many of our instruments of trust. they're the largest funder of research, they're the largest funder of civil rights groups saying it's racist not to prescribe ozempic to 6-year-olds. they've been able to co-opt our institutions of trust just like the military industrial the complex, the education industrial complex, the teachers union is making our country less competitive. these big industrial complexes, and health is the largest, are bringing down our country. and it starts with getting conflicts out of the system. giving the american people the truth, real scientific guidelines and then letting them make decisions. getting rid of the mandates and st. petersburg up flexibility. -- spurring up flexibility. letting patients choose where their funds go instead of this top-down symptom that when your kid's sick, they're getting a drug. they're not getting holistic advice from their doctor for
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corruption. rachel: yeah. that is absolutely true. and and you're right about putting transparency in. you think that this could happen pretty quickly? >> i think within -- we're working on this. and i think this is really what voters, undecided voters should know about president trump. he is genuinely -- i saw it. he spent hours talking to robert f. kennedy jr. truly learning about this issue, asking about policies. we're working with the transition team and preparing really bold policys for president trump. he's asking for them on every single institution. yes, it can happen quickly. we have the ability of america, as joe rogan said, we're spending $20 2000 billion giving to the ukraine, we can up unpoison our food. rachel: yeah. >> we can create a thriving environment for our kids very quickly, it just take clear-eyed leadership. rachel: and i do believe this is the most bipartisan issue in america. everyone wants it. you've been at the forefront of this, and i really hope you get
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to get in there and clean it up. >> thank you, rachel. it can happen quickly. rachel: awesome. from election interference products to appealing the verdict in his former fraud trial, president trump is still facing big legal challenges. what happens to those cases if he wins? we'll the discuss. and we've been together most of my life. not often do you have a childhood dog that, that lives this long so i think it's really unique and special that we've experienced so many, so many things in life together. knowing that he's getting good nutrition and that he has energy is a huge relief for me and my dad. “such a good little bean.” we're so grateful to have had this time with him, so let's keep it going and make every day special.
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from the election, and former president trump is still battling a full slate of legal challenges on everything from election interference to appealing the verdict of his civil fraud trial. so what happens to those cases if he's elected president? let's ask former whitewater deputy incompetent counsel sol wisenberg. sol, thanks for being with us this morning. overarching, donald trump is elected president, what happens to all of these cases? >> well, let's start with the federal cases. he has the authority to ask his attorney general to the -- to order his attorney general to to fire jack smith and to dismiss the federal case in d.c. and the federal case in florida. the problem is he's not going to have his team in place at can doj right away. they're going to be holdovers there. so what he needs to do is have in the waiting a qualified acting attorney general he can appoint and then put those steps into motion because, you know, the senate's jealous of its progress tyes.
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it typically does not confirm appointments right away. so what happens then? what happens if trump has an acting attorney general in there who because fire jack smith and move to the dismiss these cases? well, it ain't over yet. judge cannon in florida, federal judge, we can expect her to agree to doj's motion to dismiss if. they can't just say we dismiss. it's in court. is she'll have to approve that with an order. she'll do it, i think. but judge chutkan in keyes is unlikely to do that -- in d.c. if you recall, when bill barr moved to dismiss the indictment against michael flynn -- rightfully so, in my opinion -- the judge there, emmett sullivan, refused to do it. and so flynn had to be pardoned, ultimately, before trump left office. so it'll be litigated, i think ultimately, president trump will win that. but it won't be quick and easy. will: it won't go through dismissal, you're saying.
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it'll be litigated, being a sitting president actually wouldn't change the equation in that particular case, even if you were able to get jack smith replaced. two to to the state side, because there's a couple of those as well, mote notably right here in -- most notely, right here in new york. >> obviously, he's got a a lot less influence over the state cases. he can't just go in and order the states to dismiss the cases. right now he's got statutory and constitutional issues being litigated n -- in the new york case where the verdict was against him, and in the georgia case. it hasn't gone to trial yet. but even assuming that the he loses his constitutional and statutory arguments there, it's hard for me to believe that the u.s. supreme court is going to to let a sitting president have to undergo while he is president a lengthy georgia state criminal rico trial. and certainly, i don't believe that he will, that the supreme court will allow while trump is
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president any state process to put him in prison which is what would potentially happen in new york state. will: just really quickly -- >> so much better positioned. will: clearly in a much better position, but it doesn't just magically disappear in your -- to your point. so just worst case scenario, sol, these cases continue? he's convicted in a state court, perhaps, but he's sitting president of the united states. how does the supreme court intervene? to your point they wouldn't allow this, what's the mechanism for the supreme court to go, no, you're not doing this with a sitting? >> well, somebody's got to litigate it and try to bring it to the supreme court, but trump's lawyers have shown that they don't have any problem doing that. now, keep in mind, don't forget also even under trump v. anderson, the ballot case where they tried to take him off the ballot as an insurrectionist, supreme court left open the possibility that congress, before trump aches office -- tax office or even, before he takes
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office but after the new congress is there, depending on who controls congress, congress could enact the mechanism the say that trump was an insurrectionist. that's unlikely, but if the democrats control the congress, they can under 14th amendment set up a process whereby there could be a finding that trump engaged in insurrection and then try to keep him from taking office. will: okay. still have an election. that's' the big hurdle we're talking about. these presumptions under the scenario that trump wins the presidency. let's get through that fist. sol wisenberg, thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. will: rachel, over to you. rachel: thanks, will. we're turn thing now the your headlines. residents in haiti's capital city are fleeing homes as gangs are reportedly ramped up attacks on areas they don't already control. according to reuters, much of the city confirmed -- controlled by violent, armed groups that have allied together. nearly 700,000 haitians have
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been displaced in just the last lee months. dangerous. to a wildfire alert next. california fire officials say they finally contained the growth of a wildfire that spurred residents to evacuate their homes in santa cruz k. the blaze burned two acres before fire fighters stopped its growth. its cause is still being investigated. the bear caught on camera stealing a connecticut family's pumpkin right from their porch earlier this week. you can see it going up to the home and checking to make sure that the coast is clear before swiping the pumpkin off their porch. he walks off with his prize, the pair -- the bear did not return for a second pumpkin on the porch. who knew that bears loved pumpkin? those are your headlines. am i -- i have pumpkins on the front of my porch area outside my door. am i attracting -- pete: bear treats.
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rachel: let's check in with meteorologist adam klotz for our weather forecast. ad add good morning, rachel. really pleasant out here on fox square early this morning. going to be fair across the country. yes, it might be a little bit on the cool side here early in the morning. temps down into the 40 there the in chicago, but it heaps up and becomes a nice day. 61 over in chicago, still fairly warm in the middle of the country, 800 crees today in denver concern 80 crees. look how that heat builds in the middle of the country, 83 degrees in kansas city by monday, slowly spilling off towards the eastment 82 in chicago. i will leave you with this. the driest fall on record for a lot of places across the country. still not a lot of rain out there today to, and it's the top five driest for even more folks. st been a lot of sunshine out here. i know folks are enjoying it, but we certainly need the rain as well. os tossing it back inside to you. rachel: thanks, adam. you guys, it's downs sin
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♪ rachel: i love this month. it's downs syndrome awareness month, and this morning we're celebrating companies founded by people with downs syndrome. up first, we have the ceo of 21 pineapples, nate simon, with his mom holly and his sister the lindsey. so tell us about your product, nate. >> so i sell hawaiian shirts, and i'm spreading love. >> yes with. so we have hawaiian shirts that are all here to represent the people with downs syndrome, and there's actually hidden chevrons and all that. there's a whole collection of things to spread the mission of being a good human. rachel: and i love the feel of these shirts. they're wonderful. >> and they're beautifully tagged with reminders, be a good human on the bottom. he picks the patterns -- [laughter] and the whole mission behind this is changing the way others perceive those with capabilities, one funky shirt at
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a time. rachel: really quick before we move to everybody else, what's it like being a ceo? >> well, the it's amazing. i can't believe i have my own company. it's very amazing. rachel: well, i'm -- i think you're probably one of the best ceos i've ever met. all right. 21 is pine apples.com. be sure to support your product. awesome stuff. will? will: let me introduce you to grace and carrie from candidly kind. first of all, i like to be candid on tv, and it's really cold, right? >> yeah, it's cold. will: and it's really early too. so we're tired and cold, but we're also excited because grace puts her -- tell me, first of all, what you cohere, what your business is with the, the t-shirts. >> well, i, we take a picture, and they motorcycle up on shirts. -- mock it up on shirts. hey, party people is my favorite shirt --
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will: hey, party people, is your favorite shirt? where is that one? if it is your favorite shirt. real quick, how do you come up with the ideas for the art? >> just spread love, inclusion and empathy and inclusion. will: that's beautiful. it's really awesome. this is an incredible business. what does it mean the you guys. >> thanks, first, for having us. it just means the the world. we've been doing this for almost seven years. it started out of some adversity, and it has turned intoing something amazing. and our mission from day one has been to spreadif light, love and acceptance for people with downs syndrome and disabilities in general. will: candidly kind. listen, you can get 15% off, any fox viewer, by using fox 15 at candidly kind.com. and get some of grace's beautiful artwork on these, the the shirts. thank you so much. >> thank you. will: all right, pete, over to
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you. pete: all right. come on over here. i'm here with mark and john, and if you've seen our show, you know their socks. john's crazy socks. every time i see you, you have more socks. how many do you have in your store? >> right now we have 4,000 different socks which means i own the world's largest sock drawer. [laughter] pete: the world's largest sock store. >> -- walmart and target. but not yet at least. it's been through hard work. our socks, you get great socks, right? >> yes, you do. >> but when you buy our socks, you help us employ people with different abilities. you help us give back. john here has donated over 800,000 to our charity partners like -- >> like special olympics. >> and today, national down sin chrome society. but most of all, what's our mission? >> spreading happiness. >> we're trying to bring some
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happiness. and, pete, john has a gift for you. >> yes. i have -- my gift to you because you a veteran. >> we have support for -- pete: support our troops camo socks. you've got american flag unity socks -- >> right? >> democrat socks, republican sock, we're coming together. >> that's what we want to do. these unity socks we sent to every member of congress to say, guys, we can get along. we have more in common than we do that separates us, let's a talk. >> absolutely. pete: john, where can people get the socks? >> at johns crazy socks come. come check me out. pete: johns crazy socks.com. it's great to see you both, as always. god bless. i love it. want to thank the nate, holly, grace, carrie, john and mark. we've got a big show still ahead. don't go anywhere. ♪ turning my cheek for the sake of the show.
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