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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  October 29, 2024 4:00am-5:01am PDT

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[cheers and applause]
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[cheers and applause] [cheers and applause] welcome back to the second hour. you pulled off the first hour. you look pretty and handsome and nice and informative as well as insightful. can we do it again? [cheers and applause] amongst our guest robert f. kennedy be jr. wanted us to get dressed. oh he is dressed. he also is independent candidate as you know play a key role with the trump administration should there be a trump 2 on tuesday and should we get a verdict actually on election night that will be great. so, robert f. kennedy jr., ladies and gentlemen. [cheers and applause] >> good morning. so, i know you have lived a lot of your life in washington, d.c. what do you make of the fact that the "the washington post" announced inexplicably on friday
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we're not going to endorse a candidate and jeff bezos came out and said do you know what? we want people to decide on their own. >> you know, "the washington post" when i was little did not endorse candidates and only started doing that recently. the problem is the bias in the newsroom because traditionally you would have an unbiased reporting of the "new york times" and "the washington post" and then the editorial board would meet, vote and they would endorse a candidate and there was supposed to be a chinese wall between them. in recent years they have become blatantly partisan, and i think that's a tragedy for the news. there is very, very few sources of partisan news left how about. >> lawrence: how do you feel about the media at large painting the trump supporters --
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you were at that event in new york at madison square garden, painting them all as nazi supporters, as racists and this used to be your party. used to be the party of inclusion and open debate. that's changed, why? >> at the beginning campaign i made a statement about anne frank during a speech. i wasn't referring to say anything reminded me of naziism, i was talking about the rise of totalitarian systems ai and facial recognition that gives totalitarian citizens the capacity to control so much of our behavior and surveil us. and for about five months after that i was called anti-semite for invoking the nazi era. here you have leading democrats in the last couple of weeks and the press, msnbc has been really appalling there is no link -- i
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don't think madison square garden existed in 1939. >> brian: 196 # it moved. >> right. they are invoking this 1939 meeting of nazis and though are saying there is somehow a reunion. and you go this that there was a joke made during the by one comedian. i was in the crowd and they groaned. >> brian: no one was laughing. >> nobody was laughing. and there was so much joy in the room and optimism and patriotism and idealism about our country. it was the opposite of naziism. and the need to point -- to use that most evocative and explosive and incendiary and poisonous reference and being used across the top ranks of the democratic party hillary clinton
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country. some of us when he would were kids in this country were asked to to consider the moral quandary would you, if you could go back in time would you kill baby hitler before he could do all the damage and most of us answered yeah, we would do that. so, when you compare an american political figure to hitler who was about to become president, you know, the kind of people who are you are suggesting to them that this man should be killed before he gets to office. >> brian: president trump brought that up yesterday you are going to get me shot again. when i was younger my dad told me never bring up that word nazi in my house. now i'm being called that. and he said you are going to get me shot again. by the way they did a study. how many people have a great deal if not a fair amount of trust in the media?
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only 31 percent said yes. that was the 40% in 2012 and used to be over 70%. >> when my uncle was president 85%. >> you had walter cronkite and people like that in the media focused on telling the truth to the american public. >> ainsley: when your uncle was president, 6% of the americans had chronic disease. now it's 60. add a zero to that you walked in here and gave everybody in the audience make america healthy again hats. as moms, as americans we appreciate what you are doing because we are getting older. [applause] >> ainsley: we are thinking about we want to live a long life and see grandchildren. i want to see my grandkids and walk down the aisle. go to europe and eat pizza and italy and don't feel bad and don't gain weight. we want to know why that happens here in america and what you are going to do. but, first, let's play the soundbite this is donald trump at the rally. >> not going to let them go too
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crazy with the oil and gas stuff because robert f. kennedy cares more about human beings health and the environment than anybody. and is he -- having him i have been friends of him at the same time i'm going to let him go wild on health. i'm going to let him go wild on food. i'm going to let him go wild on medicine. the only thing i don't think i'm going to let him get near is the liquid gold we have under our feet. [laughter] >> brian: what was your reaction to that. >> he always says that. i get it. but, what what is he right we have the sickest children in the world right now. nobody in the world that has -- when i was a kid, the autism rate among american children and in 70-year-old men today and in my generation is one in 10,000. in my children's generation it's
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one in every 34 kids. one in every 22 boys. and diabetes, a typical physician when i was a kid would see one case of juvenile diabetes in his lifetime, over a 40 or 50 year career. today one out of every three kids office is diabetic or prediabetic. it's costing us # $.3 trillion a year. it costs zero -- we made zero for chronic disease when my uncle was president. today it's the biggest expense. five times our military budget. it's easy to fix. we have 1,000 ingredients in our foods that are illegal in italy and other countries in europe. and the reason for that is corruption at the food industry and agricultural. big agricultural producers control fda. they are not worried about public health. they are worried about advancing those corporations and they
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have -- you know cereal companies make two kinds of cereals fruit loops in our country is loaded with chemicals and food dyes carcinogen nic and cause adhd in your kids. if did you go across the border to canada or europe same product but it has no dyes in it good ingredients. these companies know how to do it. they can get away with doing it here. >> brian: i want you to go to the studio audience. james, you are over there. do you have a question for robert f. kennedy jr.? >> absolutely. thank you so much for taking our questions and being here. we all know that access to healthy food is not always easy or affordable for many. what are some ways that you hope to change this first, you cannot afford to eat bad foods because it is going to effect your health and you are going to pay later on diabetes crisis.
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most people diabetes prediabetic can be cured with good food. and if they choose, instead, to be cured by ozempic, the government pays $1,500 a month for the rest of your lives. and with a fraction of that, we could give everybody organic foods three meals a day in this country. what i would do is, you know, the first thing i would do is tell the cereal companies take all the dyes out of their food. >> steve: seems pretty simple. [applause] >> president trump was cooking at mcdonald's the other day and giving people french fries. people criticized me and they said well, you know he is giving fast food. i don't have anything against fast food. i'm against food that has seed
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oils. when i was a kid, mcdonald's was made with cala fat. your body needs that why aren't we making with tala fat again. in england mcdonald's has -- a mcdonald's french fry has three ingredients in it like potatoes, sugar and some, you know, oil, sorry, potatoes, salt and tala fat in our country there are 17 ingredients. and none of them are good for you. >> steve: obviously, something has got to give. lynn writes in the front row r.f.k. has got a question for you. lynn? >> hi, i grew up a bostonian. with a kennedy name is sacrosanct, how did you get the courage to stand up against the liberal media and your famous
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family? i saw the truth that was hang to our kids. and i had to make a choice between whether i was going to do, you know, whether i was going to try to help people get healthy again. and then there were other reasons party of peace, constitutional rights and civil rights. it was the party of today's democratic party of lords, censorship, party of surveillance, party of big tech, big ag. big banking, the military industrial complex. and big ag and big food and big pharma. so, i didn't leave the democratic party. the democratic party left me. >> brian: tried to run as a democratic and they locked you out. they wouldn't put you on the
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ballot. [applause] >> ainsley: one more question. other side of the room. what is your question? >> participate in the usda national lunch program during the year. you are given a position by the trump administration in the agricultural department, what will you do to improve school lunches? >> i will get processed food out of school lunch immediately. about half the school lunch program goes to processed food 70% of food stamps. 10% go to sugar drinks, to soda. we are creating diabetes problem in our kids. by giving them food that's porsche. and i'm going to stop that. >> brian: we have got let did you go but quick question. [applause] >> lawrence: you were talking about mcdonald's here versus another country or the fruit loops here versus another country. what's the reason why?
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>> ainsley: good question. >> lawrence: if they know how to make it already why are we doing it. >> because it's cheaper for them. and president trump wants to get the chemicals out and he wants to make us healthy because in the long run that's cheaper for our country. >> ainsley: it's america. america is the best at everything. we need to be the best at food, too. >> steve: there you go. ladies and gentlemen, r.f.k. jr. >> thank you. >> steve: thank you. [cheers and applause] all right. as he -- you know what? we just started talking to the folks. all right. are you leaving? go on out. there you go. [applause] >> brian: there he goes. >> steve: let's talk to some of the folks about what we just heard and talked about as well. what's your name? listen, are you concerned about the future? >> absolutely. and what in particular about it? >> having children in america and raising a family of my own one day. >> steve: okay. that leads us perfectly to my next question and that is are
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you worried that, you know, giewfl that is possible. >> i feel like it's more challenging than it used to be. you are nodding. why are you nodding? >> this is my little girl. her family, also. >> steve: are you doing better than your dad? >> i don't know. i'm trying though. >> steve: it's tough. and it's got people struggling and talking earlier about mortgage rates and stuff like that, it is challenging what are you worried about the future and next generation. >> we have almost 8-year-old daughter, and the divisiveness between our to be able to speak intelligently without being attacked we have to get along
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better and respect each other no matter what our opinions are. >> steve: this election the country is completely polarized. are you reluctant to talk about politics in front of pe speak at politics in front of people you don't know very well. >> 100 percent. i believe the world is gray and we should all try to have, you know, some kind of civility with humanity and people just scblin getting along. i have friends that have family where politics have divide friends and family. and it is really scary, because it shouldn't be that way. >> steve: thanksgiving is coming. >> thanksgiving is coming. >> steve: somebody is going to get drunk and then people aren't talking. >> thanksgiving is happening. >> steve: who would like to be a tv announcer. -- you have already done it. we just put you on. anybody else? we need somebody else. this guy right here. all right. the providence. here is what i want you to do. he told me earlier these glasses
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are 8 bucks on amazon. tell us who is coming up next. we have harris faulkner's next. [cheers and applause] >> steve: good job. welcome, harris. >> harris: hi. >> steve: but, first, essential message from two of our favorite hosts who couldn't make it today. >> elections day is in the air. can you just smell it. [sniff] >> it's the smell of mcdonald's french fries. ha ha, and victory. we hope. but it's up to you to vote. right now, the polls are all tied. and they are just as wrong as '16 and '20, trump wins. you have to make that happen. go out and do your patriotic duty and vote. also, fight, fight, fight. but always remember, i'm
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watters, and this is my world. >> hello, "fox & friends," audience. it's your favorite host of all time, greg gutfeld. "fox & friends" to be on this show. do you think i'm actually going to get up this early? hell no. so, anyway. they asked me to say something. and the only thing can i say is whatever jesse watters said before is bull [bleep] [cheers and applause] ♪ walking on sunshine ♪ walking on sunshine ♪
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my favorites. get xfinity streamsaver with netflix, apple tv+, and peacock included, for only $15 a month. [applause] >> ainsley: i love it. what an audience. welcome back to our live studio audience. i have a special guest to help me with election day forecast. what's your name my friend. >> my name is nobody that. >> janice: where are from you. >> faulkner, new york. >> janice: have you voted yet? >> yes i have.
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>> janice: round of applause for nina voting. [applause] >> janice: i love it. have you ever done the weather on national television. >> no i have not. >> janice: you haven't? >> no i have not. >> janice: would you like to try. >> i would be more than happy to. >> janice: look at nina. you are meant to do this job. here is your microphone. take it away. >> looking ahead to election day tuesday a cold front could bring rain and/or scattered storms from texas to michigan. snow will be possible over the mountains in the northwest and across the rockies. [cheers and applause] >> janice: oh my gosh. holy moly. who knew that my job was so easy. [applause] >> i'm a banker. >> janice: you are a banker? >> i'm a banker. >> janice: did you tell the office you were going to be here today. >> yes i did. they know. >> janice: i could have written you a note. [laughter] >> please excuse nina for doing the weather. >> janice: didn't she do amazing? [applause] >> thank you. >> janice: toss it over to all those wonderful people. >> now back to all those
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wonderful people. >> ainsley: thank you. those are very pretty shoes. >> they have little things on them. >> brian: we haven't introduced harris yet. haters hairs no, but you introduced my shoes. >> brian: election week is one week away and both candidates are giving final arguments to voters. watch. >> our country has gone to hell, so i made a decision to run. >> we're going to make america great again, greater than ever before. >> for trump, it's all about getting unchecked power while you pay the price. donald trump, more unhinged, unstable, and unchecked. >> ainsley: okay. so let's bring in the beautiful harris faulkner, co-host of "outnumbered" and host of the faulkner focus. the show them your shoes. >> harris: how do i do that? >> ainsley: that might be
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challenging. >> harris: so challenging. i can do it. i am flexible. >> ainsley: dave will get a shot a little bit later. >> harris: okay. >> ainsley: two different messages. >> harris: different messages and gift of a closing argument is consistency. what both of these candidates have to do now is stick to what they are going to stick. to say and there is a decided difference that kamala harris has taken, well she has reintroduced herself and given closing arguments time and time again. this one, if she wants to do well, has got to stick it's about negative and hate and calling people names and it's not the joy and all of that i don't know if they like poll tested joy and decided that maybe joy is not popular but i personally love joy. but, i don't know what they found out but with trump, this will be, i would imagine, a consistent message, like chapter 2, if you will, of the huge delivery at madison square garden. that was his official closing argument according to his campaign. so, this is like part, i imagine
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it will be sharpened a bit. it will go on the economy and border. and she will go in on him, hate trump is the message from the left. >> ainsley: yeah. >> harris: we have gravitated quite some distance from 2016, 2020. people want a change. that does not represent a change. >> brian: obamas over the weekend very negative. the former president yesterday. you don't know what tough is. donald trump isn't tough. i will tell you what tough is. it's an odd message. >> it's an odd message and, again, it's about inconsistency, by the way, so many millions of americans have early voted. many of them in person. i voted for the first time in person early voting. i have done it by mail before. >> brian: right. >> harris: in new jersey, lines all weekend long. it really means people are coming out to vote. we don't know how people are going to vote but it's important people exercise that right. so, if sheens going -- again, brian, if she is going to be changing her message down the
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stretch here it's hard most of the people who are left like day two before whatever might be undecided. so what you say matters and that consistency matters. it is time to close with conviction and few mistakes and that goes for both candidates. >> steve: people are motivated. we have been talking to the audience here. they are motivated by the economy. they are motivated by the border. >> harris: yes. >> steve: "fox & friends first," two hours ago a super powerful interview with a bomb by the name of victoria garcia. her son was killed by illegal migrant. we wanted to bring you a little bit of that. watch this. >> i'm a mexican american. my father is from the state of -- i get it. not everybody who comes here is a bad person. but we do need to know who you are and what are your intentions? my baby as you can see, his smile -- his smile now is what keeps his mom going. and i will fight -- he is not
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here to fight his fight but i will. i will be ricardo's voice to the very end. i will do what it takes for my son to receive justice. and that's all i want is justice. >> steve: that's what every parent would say. >> harris: look, these are the things that matter. people's lives have been turned upside down. shared resources strained in unaffordable economy. and now you have people who are here illegally, suspected of heinous crimes, taking up resources, it's untenable. it's unsustainable and it's unacceptable. that will be, i would imagine, a lot of trump's closing argument. i know that she is going to the ellipse vice president kamala harris, and she wants to make this about january 6th, the brookings institute rather did some research right after january 6th, a year later, two years later. in january of 2023, the country was divided on how they see it. 25 percent said it was time to move on.
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it's 2024 now, so we need to look forward and those statistics are lessening, so, not by a lot. the country is very divided. there are more and more people say see it the way you want, but agree that it's time to move on. >> lawrence: the issues like inflation, immigration in her close. they keep attacking him personally but popularity the highest it's ever been right now. is that going to be effective? >> harris: clearly talking about policy she was part of is not effective for her. she is going to try again, something new. a lot of people have already made a decision, are making it right now. the all-important battleground state begins today of michigan in early vote. you have four states starting early vote today. these times matter. so if she wants to talk about hate and what was, if she wants to be burdened by what was, we can be unburdened by what has
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been the last three and a half years and look forward to a better economy. >> brian: i'm starting to get dizzy. [laughter] >> brian: watch harris on the faulkner focus at 11 and more on outnumbered. >> harris: you make it sound like a bad thing. will. >> brian: kevin mccarthy will be the man. >> ainsley: can you get a shot of her shoes? >> harris: my goodness. >> ainsley: there we go. >> steve: they are fuzzy. thanks, harris. >> harris: thanks for having me. behind the big door judge jeanine pirro and jessica ta tarlov. [cheers and applause] ♪ girls just want to have fun ♪ wanna have fun, girls ♪ wanna have -- ♪ ♪ dney disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with farxiga.
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oh hey! would you like to join us? no. we would love to join you. ♪ independence, with that declaration, america was born. inspired by a belief in the god given rights of every human being, and in the good that comes from exercising these rights well. the founders of our great nation chose independence, as do we. hillsdale college accepts no government funding, because independence makes possible the good to which we aspire.
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[cheers and applause] >> ainsley: welcome back to our live studio audience. everybody has been so wonderful. we are so glad you are here. we have a raffle for audience members and someone here is taking a big gift home from our friends at red land cotton. so, let me spin the wheel and open the raffle box. and the winner is patty dave feliz. come on. who wins? you are wonderful. come here. congratulations. from our friends at red land cotton. you get a beautiful blanket and a gift card that is filled with a lot of money. so you can spend it. >> thank you. >> congratulations. all right, steve, over to you.
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[applause] >> steve: congratulations, patty and thank you to red land cotton. meanwhile our department of justice is facing a 3:00 deadline this afternoon to respond to the commonwealth of virginia's republicans and their emergency appeal to the u.s. supreme court asking to block the return of 1600 and non-citizen tots voter rolls. meanwhile the pennsylvania g.o.p. is asking the court to block some provisional mail-in ballots saying they don't follow state election laws. oh, this is a lot. let's talk to the co-host of "the five." we got judge jeanine pirro and jessica tarlov joining us, ladies and gentlemen. okay, so on its face it seems pretty simple because there are 1600 people who self-identify on a form at the dmv i'm a non-citizen. the state kicked them off but the doj says you can't do that judge?
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>> well, you know, it's no surprise that the biden administration, along with several immigrant groups have fought the fact that virginia is trying to take off voter rolls, those people not only not allowed to vote but are illegals and, by the way, it is a crime for an illegal to vote. and the biden administration is saying no, no. don't touch those voter rolls because it's within 90 days of an election. >> steve: right. >> only problem is glenn youngkin in virginia started this before the election it's just taken that long to get to where we are. so the fourth circuit said no, we're not going to take. this so virginia has gone to the united states supreme court and they the supreme court said look, give us a reason why we shouldn't purge these people? meanwhile alabama is doing the same thing. other states have illegals self-identified illegals convicted felons and they are saying look, you are canceling out the vote of americans who have legal votes over burdening the system what we can do is you
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can explain that you are a citizen and deserve to vote. i mean, there is a way to do, this don't just shut down and let all the illegals vote, it's a message, come on, in all of you and vote. >> steve: here's the thing, jessica, we don't know if they are non-citizens or not. >> right. >> steve: they haven't been verified. if they are non-citizens, they shouldn't vote. >> jessica: absolutely if they are non-citizens. but the problem is that you have a pot of 1600 people where they at least some articles i have read seen evidence that at least a few hundred of them actually are u.s. citizens. >> steve: and they did something wrong? >> jessica: that's the problem. that's the balancing act that they are having to face. that's what is going on in pennsylvania as well all over the country. the good news is that we have never had instances of widespread voter fraud in this country. we don't have instances of people who are here undocumented voting. that's what they are arguing in virginia about this. it will be interesting to see if the supreme court gets involved in it.
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you don't want to disenfranchise 200, 300 citizens who have their constitutional rights to go to the ballot box next tuesday and cast their vote. >> judge jeanine: right now we are talking about 1600 in virginia alone in addition to now alabama, pennsylvania. if you say you are an illegal i am going to take you at your word. i'm going to give you the opportunity to come back and prove that you are legal and are entitled to vote. there is a way to conditionally vote. count that vote. >> jessica: in pennsylvania which we are going to talk about republicans are suing to make sure you can't cast a provisional ballot. the theme is republicans want to make it harder for you to vote. >> judge jeanine: no, i think it's the democrats who are going to the supreme court and objecting to the fact that self-identified illegals are trying to vote and the biden administration is saying let them vote under the argument that this was the quiet period within 90 days. but there are exceptions in that 90 period. so. >> jessica: so early for this.
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[laughter] >> steve: like we are watching "the five" at the big table in this room. all right. meanwhile, the election one week from today. eric trump told the daily mail what a second term would look like if hypocrisy father is elected he, donald trump, would want nothing to do with prosecuting hunter biden or hillary clinton. he doesn't give a damn. he wants these games to end. he wants a safe prosperous world and fruitful society. he wants to get back to a country that is functional that wins on everything we do. he wants to win on education, safety, economy, the military. he doesn't want to go into senseless wars. he wants the respect of the entire world. jessica that, is a forward-thinking optimistic message here in the closing josk jessica from eric trump, listen. i have always said if donald trump and his campaign can stay on message he should have good night. they seem largely incapable of
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doing that kamala harris will lay out her vision for her first term as president and hopefully a second term. tonight she is giving a speech and we'll see how it goes it's obviously going to be very, very close as all the polls indicate. that's the kind of message that resonates with people what laid out. >> judge jeanine: kamala harris whether or not she can lay out her vision if she told us whether you are better off now than four years ago. >> you are. >> judge jeanine: i am or you are. >> jessica: both of us are and you. >> judge jeanine: pay 25% more for food, gas and everything else, you are not. here is the issue about eric trump. look, donald trump had the opportunity, when he first was elected in 2016. to go after hillary clinton. there is no question that the only items that she had classified emails on were her laptop and her iphone. she had classified emails. donald trump made a decision to heal the country and he said
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we're not going to prosecute her they weren't going to prosecute her for the clinton foundation couldn't for its life pass a forensic audit. a legitimate one and right now donald trump has said pardon hunter if joe doesn't. donald trump wants peace. he wants to go forward he is most interested in the assassination attempts. that's going to be scorched earth as well it should be. >> steve: indeed. ladies and gentlemen, round of applause for our judge and jessica. they will be on "the five" later on today. in the meantime, lawrence is right over there "studio m" talking to a few folks. >> lawrence: thanks, steve. big question the former president asked at madison square garden on sunday. who is better off today, show of hands than they were four years ago. raise your hand who was better four years ago. raise your hand. we had one with jessica she is better off. let's ask the folks here. i'm going to go to you, ma'am.
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when you go to the ballot box, what would be the issue at the top of your mind? >> inflation, of the economy. >> lawrence: why inflation? >> i'm a small business owner and the expenses has to come down. we have to be able to get inflation in control lawrence lawrence who do you think is the best foreign solve inflation. >> donald trump. >> lawrence: all right. i'm going to pick you. what's your name? >> amy. >> lawrence: amy? you got to read the tease for me, who is coming up. >> frank siller from tunnel 2 towers is next. >> lawrence: great job. [applause] [cheers and applause] ♪
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♪ ♪ >> ainsley: welcome back to our live studio audience. and this morning we remember air force master sergeant and allen town, pennsylvania fire marshall jeffrey tom zac. he died just recently july 2 #th from service related cancer master sergeant tomcz ak left
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behind wife and two beautiful boys. frank siller joins us now along with britney and her sons, good morning to all of you item us about your husband and what he was like and what happened. >> so, jeff was a firefighter through and through. he served in the army, the air force, fire department, i mean everything, volunteer firefighter. obviously a dad and husband. he took his roles very seriously but he was also kind of a jokester, too. he kind of kept everything light-hearted and, you know, just try to see the good in everything. >> ainsley: matthew and conner y'all are such handsome boys. tell me what you loved about your dad if you don't want to talk you don't have to if you are a little nervous. what do you miss most? what was he like?
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played sports with you. >> um-huh, yeah. >> yeah. >> i miss his hugs. >> ainsley: aw. >> i miss what he always says. i like turtles. >> i know he was so proud of you all. he is such a hero. everything he did for our country. so we thank you for giving us your dad. sounds like a wonderful man. and, frank, you wanted us to meet the family. you want america to hear their story. tell us why you wanted -- why was it so important for you to be here today? >> i will tell you why because the sacrifice for our country whether it's men and women serving as first responders or in our military, it goes on every day. and america can't forget about it. and when you see a family like this, that pays a price for somebody serving us. we all have to come together to make sure that we take care of families like this. and that's what we're going to do here today. so, just so you know, that i
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know i told you i wanted to meet you today and talk about whether or not we are going to help you or not. today we have your paid mortgage. we paid it off early, yesterday. [cheers and applause] your dad sacrifice's sacrifice took carol of this with his sacrifice. all the years that he put in serving our country and you're community. this is his gift to you as a family. he did. this his sacrifice did this. we just come together as americans to make sure that we take care of families like yours. god bless you. >> thank you. britney, what does that mean to you; some people in the audience or watching at home give to this fabulous organization to help you and families like yours? >> so, one of the dreams that jeff always had for his family was to purchase the home that he
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grew up in, which we did. we purchased the home from his parents in 2014. so this helps us be able to stay in that house so that i, you know, financially secure, you know, this is amazing, because, you know, he just wanted our boys to stay in the neighborhood, stay in the community that he lived in that he would both grew up in. and so, you know, i can't thank you enough. >> ainsley: yeah. i'm sure, you know, it's been so hard for you and this is something so stressful for americans paying for their mortgage and then when you are a single mom and have to do this on your own. >> yeah. >> ainsley: thank you to everyone to. tell us why you started the organization. >> my brother was a firefighter he gave his life on 9/11. he ran with fire gear on his back. he was courageous like your dad. and they run towards danger. they never run away. that's why they're heroes so why
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wanted to honor our hero, my brother, my little brother and that's why my family and i we started the tunnel to towers foundation we're going to do 200 of these mortgages this year. we are building smart homes all over the country. eradicating homelessness among our veterans we do it $11 at a time. i know you donate. >> ainsley: u.s. just thinking i don't get my notices on my phone anymore. i need to make sure you have updated credit card. i'll check. >> believe me, i will call you later today. [laughter] but this is how we do it $11 a month. i don't know your audience in here? >> ainsley: anyone in here give? thank you all. >> thank you very much. let's get all of you to do it and everybody that's listening here today so we can keep on taking care of these families. >> ainsley: there is the website at the bottom of your screen t2t.org. britney, we want you to meet someone very special your boys
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to meet someone very special. i know personally and i know would love to give you a big hug or thank you for your service because she supports the military. the former first lady of the united states, melania trump. [applause] >> wow. ♪ you take me places ♪ that tear up my reputation ♪ manipulate my decision ♪ baby, there's nothing holding me back ♪ ♪ [applause] ♪ there's nothing holding me back ♪ there's nothing holding me back. ♪
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