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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  October 29, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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>> ainsley: i remember interviewing you in nashville and going through a hard time in my life and she was sharing how she got through the same thing going through divorce. >> we had prayer right there. >> ainsley: you prayed for me. >> and we prayed for us. >> ainsley: thank you. >> i attest those moments to where we are now. if it weren't for the grace of jesus, it's a jesus thing. when you stand by your beliefs and why i'm so excited to be in a time where i can release music how i want to do it. i have a new song time makes money talks about taking the important things in life and making it about the moral values that america is about. i love you guys. thank you. [cheers and applause] >> thank you, thank you. [cheers and applause] >> bill: that was a rocking show. good morning, everybody. one week to go on the calendar.
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candidates making closing arguments today in a key battleground shifting to republicans that we'll show you in a moment on the power rankings as we say good morning. i think it's seven more wake-ups. >> dana: well, yes, yesterday it was eight. so there you go. as a marine told me it is six days and a wake-up. now i know and i feel the proud. good morning, i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." we saw you on "fox & friends." arizona shifting from toss up to lean republican. >> bill: that would be good news for donald trump. 82 electoral votes in the toss-up category. >> dana: another busy day on the trail. the trump campaign in pennsylvania and michigan. harris campaign in georgia and d.c. >> bill: we're awaiting remarks from the former president live in mar-a-lago later this hour. the vice president, meanwhile, choosing our nation's capital as the back drop for her closing
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argument. tonight she will speak from the ellipse near the white house as candidates carve out closing arguments, the closing case to try and look to turn out voters with only one week to go. >> anyone who suggests we should terminate the constitution of the united states should never again stand behind the seal of the president of the united states of america. >> with your help from now until election day, we'll restore america's promise and we will take back the nation that we love. we are one people, one family, and one glorious nation under god. >> dana: alicia acuna is live from phoenix, arizona. the state of the race appears to be shifting. good morning. >> good morning, dana. both campaigns as you know every vote counts at this point. they have their top surrogates on the ground here pushing that
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early vote and courting female voters right now. last night lara trump, co-chair for the gop party and daughter-in-law to the former president outlined the women's team tour stop in phoenix and dana patrick appearing with kari lake who trails the democratic congressman in most polls. she said she would never pass a federal abortion pan or pass federal dollars to fund them. these are states deciding on abortion access. reproductive rights are a big issue behind the economy and immigration. the wife of tim walz will be in arizona today for a get out the early vote event and plans to focus on issues impacting families. we talked to some women about what is driving their decisions. >> securing the border and boosting our economy, and yeah,
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just as a woman i don't think too much goes into it from the candidates but just making sure my vote counts. i voted for trump. >> i am uninspired by the message coming out of the gop and harris speaks loud. i want a role model for my daughter. i don't want her calling names. >> a recent poll shows trump leads harris by 12 points with men but harris beats trump by eight points with women in arizona. both harris and trump will be in arizona on thursday. >> dana: getting up early there. it is still dark in phoenix. >> bill: power rankings. final ones are in. are you ready for the big reveal in here we go on the presidential level. next hour we'll get into congress and movement in the senate races, too, okay? here is what we're seeing right now in the great american southwest. we have taken arizona from a
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toss-up to a lean republican here. why did we do that? check out all the polling right now. 270 to win. we believe now the toss-up states in the middle, 226 harris, 230 trump. here are the polls. eight polls going back to the third week of september. seven of those polls have fallen into donald trump's column. one from the "wall street journal" that had harris up two points within the margin of error. this is what helps us gauge our reaction to what's happening in arizona. this is also very telling as well. when we track trump's polling over the past six months, let's say, we believe his flow has consistently been 48 and ceiling around 50. maybe a notch above 50 but generally 48 to 50 and the consistency you see going back to march of last year. trump at 50, trump at 48, trump a nudge above 50, trump a nudge
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at 50 and that's why we see the national battle between trump and harris with him leading on the national tally by two points. there is always a chance for surprises. we have to be ready for that. still a plausible map for kamala harris. wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania and one vote in nebraska. as she does that talking for a couple of weeks now, that would be the 270 mark she needs to reach. that's a plausible map based on what we're seeing. you talk about surprises. who knows what happens a week from tonight? starting to talking about minnesota, starting to talk about new mexico, new hampshire, virginia. maybe it's real, maybe just a head fake. we don't know. watch where the candidates go and we'll see next tuesday whether or not there is something there. meanwhile is there a surprise in someplace like iowa? we'll see. democrats are chasing texas for
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some time. we don't know if they'll capture it this time. when we look at the issue trump leads on the economy as you see behind me by seven points and leads on immigration by 15 points. when it comes to abortion harris has a lead of 13 points and that where we believe the state of the race is in the final power rankings. with us now rnc political director james blair. the numbers man for team trump. good morning to you. thank you for joining us today. what did we get right and what are we missing? >> thanks for having me, bill. you are getting a lot right. one of the things you mentioned arizona the polling looks good there. there is something else that's worth pointing out, i think, that the polling doesn't pick up. the voter registration gains for republicans in arizona specifically, which is also a national trend. four years ago going into the election there was 130,000 more registered republicans in the state of arizona than democrats. today that number is over
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280,000 and a lot of these pollsters, even when you average it out set their sample to look like the 2020 electorate. the fact is these battleground states and particularly arizona have moved three to five points to the right. that's a great sign for president trump. he has brought a ton of new voters into the party. i think that's something that the polling may not even be picking up despite showing him very strong as it stands right now. >> dana: if you could pull up call for number three. it's dana perino, hi. this is the power rankings and issues motivating people to vote. jobs and economy at 12%. you still have candidate and character or disliking the other candidate and immigration at ten and protecting democracy at ten. i'm reading this morning on x that at the trump campaign they are seeing good numbers like they've never seen before. it doesn't mean that they're feeling overconfident necessarily but those are the numbers the trump campaign is seeing. i'm curious from your perspective at the rnc across the board is that something
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where his coattails could help all republicans from up and down the ballot? >> absolutely. i can speak to both because i'm the trump campaign political director as well as rnc. his coattails absolutely. they are carrying everybody down ballot and pulling them up whether senate or house candidates. and i think we've seen that in some of those down ballot races you were mentioning. numbers are starting to firm up and close towards where president trump's are. it is extremely conceivable that president trump will win and bring in a senate majority and retain or increase the house majority. so i think down ballot it all looks good as long as he continues to perform well which he is. people are voting. right now we can start to measure things and measure in the early voting numbers that things are going well. they are going very well compared to two or four years ago. in some places it is unprecedented. the state of nevada republicans
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have never performed like this in nevada and here we are leading. that's a huge concern for democrats and they are sounding the alarm about it. >> bill: a couple of things happening in the last 48 hours that may or may not have an impact. democrats are hitting hard as a fascist. jokes didn't go over well at the madison square garden event. we asked whatley the same question whether or not this is an early vote that would come in regardless on election day. your view on both of that. >> well take a questions in reverse order. on whether or not the vote would come in on election day we look at that and historical voting patterns. what's important we're turning out more of our low and mid propensity voters than she is across the board. secondly we have more new registered voters than she does. president trump has expanded the party. they joined the party to vote
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for him. those people are turning out early. we feel good about the trajectory and turning out the new and higher shares than she is. that's a problem for her. the other questions, look, the campaign has made clear they thought it was a tasteless joke. at the end of the day what people voting on is who will fix the economy. crushed by inflation and high prices and harris biden administration put them in that there. will the border be secure or open and voting for the candidate to lower crime and regain america's standing in the world. president trump is offering a message to the american people how he will help them and fix what she has broken and she is running a campaign of hoaxes and personal grievances and i don't think it will pan out well for her. >> dana: there is all this data coming in. i can sort of feel like a raccoon in the middle of a disco ball. where do i look? i wonder about for you as an
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expert going in the last seven days, what are the things that you look at to give you the best indication of what either you need to be doing or whether you can feel comfortable? is there something specific that you look at that you can share with us mere mortals? >> sure. i look at the low and mid propensity numbers and newly registered numbers. we get the high propensity voters out. the more we increase the share of people that are more infrequent the more that electorate moves to the right. i won't feel comfortable until the race is called. that's my job is not feel comfortable. you run like you are ten points down. about everything measurable now it looks very good for president trump. >> bill: what can really change in seven days and what can you do in seven days? >> all we can do is keep scoring points. we can keep turning out voters and we'll keep turning out our voters until the polls close. a lot of conversation about
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cannibalization or otherwise. it doesn't matter as long as the polls are open people can vote. our job is to keep scoring points every day and what we're focused on. >> bill: thank you for coming on. we'll watch it eventually together. thank you. fears of anti-semitic crime growing in the city of chicago. a jewish man shot on his way to his house of worship. we'll take you there in a moment. >> dana: new concerns about voter fraud in pennsylvania. officials are on high alert. how the rnc is responding. >> bill: the stage being set at mar-a-lago. president trump gearing up to address reporters there. we'll bring it to you live and get his closing argument as our show continues on this one week from election day 2024. te... ev. every instrument... creates an incredible melody of power and possibility. but that energy needs to be reliable
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>> dana: hezbollah names its next laider. he will lead the lebanese terrorist group after israeli air strikes killed nasrallah last month. he has been the leading spokesperson and deputy and served as nasrallah's second in command for decades. a tough job for him. >> bill: 19 past the hour. back in this country now in chicago. a gunman accuse i had of opening
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fire on an orthodox jewish man walking to service on saturday. chicago police are looking into a potential hate crime here and there is video, too. jonathan hunt has the story and live on the west coast with us now. good morning. >> good morning, to you, bill. the alleged shooter in this case faces six charges of attempted murder. shooting a jewish man and opening fire on responding officers. police don't have enough evidence yet to know the shooter's motive or call the initial shooting a hate crime. >> we do investigations. our investigation is based on facts that we gather into evidence in order to present charges. until we have those facts, we will not announce charges. it is about what we can prove at the time based on the facts. >> police say the suspect seen on a neighborhood security
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camera shot a man on his way to synagogue and wearing the typical jewish head covering. the man was hit in the shoulder. jewish community leaders believe it was a targeted shooting. >> our community would like to see this as a hate crime. there is, you know, here he was walking to synagogue and we are very concerned. >> as police officers arrived at the scene of the first shooting, they too were fired at. none of the officer was injured although an ambulance was struck by a bullet. the shooter identified by police as a 22-year-old was shot by officers and is now in the hospital and investigators haven't been able to interview him because of his injuries. police say she shouted something at officers during the confrontation but can't say what at this point. they say there may be further charges in necessary. the jewish victim is out of the
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hospital and said by friends to be doing okay. >> bill: good for him and his family. we'll follow it. jonathan hunt. >> we can't get mortgages or millions of things fixed. things needed to be fixed but it is an onslaught. >> dana: jp morgan chase railing against the regulatory policies of the biden-harris administration essential. many of the rules are based on stupid calculations and now time to fight back and shred the red tape. brian brenberg from fox business is here. it must be pretty bad if he is going to come out and say that. >> yes. a lot of americans are saying where have you been on this? the fight was years ago. we did get a fight under the trump administration on regulation. most people agreed did a pretty good job on that. i like that jamie diamond is doing that. he has a great voice. when he doesn't like banking regulations and he says
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something, the government listens. the problem is small businesses. when they don't like regulations, when they don't like the new green energy regulations and osha and epa regulations, they don't have the same voice and they're stuck with the cost. he gets to say something. the one thing i like that he said is this hurts lower income individuals the most. he is absolutely right on that. >> dana: what is causing that? >> it's primarily the epa regulations. the american action forum does a great job on this. when they tell you what you have to put in your car, how you power your home. all those things you don't have a choice on that. you just have to comply and you can't bear that cost when you are living right on the margin of your income. >> bill: he is pretty frank. i have had it with this stuff. many banks are afraid to fight with regulators because they would just come and punish you. that's the world he is working? >> who runs these regulatory
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agencies right now? who is the person with the most influence in staffing this? i would argue the elizabeth warren, bernie sanders wing of the democrat party. they don't like big business. they have a knee jerk reaction negatively to almost any business particularly big business. look, i don't have a lot of sympathy with big business only because those are the guys who win in a high regulatory environment because the money to comply with it. my sympathy is with the middle and small guy who don't have a great voice right now. for years -- the biden administration has institute you had 1.7 trillion in new regulatory costs in the three plus years they've been there. small businesses have taken it and taken it and taken it and saying jamie dimon, welcome to the party. don't just talk about banks, talk about everybody.
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>> dana: ted kruz and rick scott have put together what four years of biden-harris talk you. let's pull up call for number three. up over 7800 for new year's. about a grand more for your auto insurance. gasoline up $3 hundred on the year. so what would a harris administration bring? >> that's what you've gotten under biden-harris. when you get is more. here is the best stat to me in all this and helps bring it home. the annual cost to own a home and own a car when you put everything in there has gone up by $21,000. if you put that money aside for retirement in 20 years, it would be worth half a million bucks. you give up half a million in retirement savings potentially to pay for the higher costs of
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just getting by. >> bill: the thing about trump's campaign. he mentioned tariffs a lot. he talked about regulations. if you listen to the rogan con saying this past weekend he believes after talking to business folks and being in the white house for four years that regulations enabled them to grow their businesses more than tax cuts and tariffs. >> yeah. when you talk about 1.7 trillion in regulatory costs over three years, if you could wipe that out it's like a tax cut for businesses. >> dana: including for housing. when she says she wants to give $25,000 for first-time home buyers. >> we don't have to time get me started on that. regulation is boring and complicated. you need people to go into the guts of the bureaucracy and pull it out in painstaking ways. >> bill: an economic engine. >> it is huge and we've seen trump do it once. >> dana: looks like you could be
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the man for the job. >> i need a lot more stamina for a job like that. >> dana: you would not need caffeine, you have it. you are all set. brian brenberg, sorry about the yankees. >> bill: there is still time. >> most of my family perished in the holocaust. i have very few relatives left. i don't need the democrats to remind me of that by making up these things by making our politics that the people who might beat them and don't like because of domestic political issues are nazis and fascists? >> bill: does that resonate? we will ask the co-chair of the harris-walz campaign about that and more coming up. republicans ramping up the ground game in critical swing states. what the trump team is doing to try to motivate the unenthusiastic voter, the supporter who tends to go under the radar. >> people that wouldn't even think of putting a sign or letting you know they were a
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trump supporter are now waving their hands what can i do? how can i help? people have had enough. it's more than paint. it's more than cleaning. that's the thing we'll never forget. for belfor, it's your memories. it's your life's passion. it's your home. belfor, restoring more than property.
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they would descend into chaos. announcer: kamala harris wants us to believe that she is something new. but is she really? interviewer: would you have done something differently than president biden? kamala harris: there is not a thing that comes to mind in terms of... and i've been a part of most of the decisions... announcer: in other words, she wants more of the same. more inflation. more open borders. more disastrous foreign policy. why would anyone vote for more of this? restoration pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. i try to put my arm around any vet that i can. absolutely. at newday usa, that's what we're doing. we put our arm around the veterans. when i think of the veteran out there that needs to refi his home, he may want to purchase and we can help them and provide that financial solution for them and their families. it's a great, rewarding feeling. everybody in the company, they have that deference and that respect and that love for the veteran
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of fixed full arch dental implants in the u.s. schedule a free consultation. >> dana: welcome back to the show. former president trump is about to address reporters at mar-a-lago. his closing argument that kamala harris broke it, i will fix it. his remarks are scheduled for 10:00 a.m. eastern and bring it to you live as it happens. >> bill: this is a problem. meanwhile former president trump's campaign unveiling a new ground game strategy in the battleground state of pennsylvania. it seems to be bearing fruit. bryan llenas is live in the philly suburbs, bucks county north of the city just along the jersey border. what are you learning there, bryan, good morning? >> this year there are more republican registered voters than democrats here in bucks county, pennsylvania's largest swing county.
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the trump campaign says this is proof that their new ground game strategy is working. we visited a field office here in bucks and look, we unlike prior elections this year, the trump campaign is using data to primarily target likely trump supporters who have never voted before or sometimes voted. the campaign is focused on registering them to vote and getting them to the polls. >> we get out the vote. we targeted right here in bucks county 7,000 of them. that's the difference. president trump, 87,000 votes he lost in 2020, there was almost a million republican registered voters that never voted. never voted. >> the campaign is relying heavily on specially trained trump force 47 volunteers especially team captains like joy who are new to politics and motivated.
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>> it just became evident that i needed to be involved. that i had to get active. i don't have time for this. i have two kids, amazing husband, i'm a full-time lawyer. i'm devoting my time for president trump because i feel so strongly he needs to be elected. >> meantime democrats are deploying a more traditional ground game in pennsylvania outspending republicans on tv ads and opening 50 field officers to reach every voter. i spoke to democratic governor shapiro who said he would rather be vice president harris than trump heading into election day. >> what's clear to me the people-powered army we have knocking on doors, sending texts, putting lawn signs up in communities where oftentimes you don't see democratic lawn signs or see a lot of democratic activity. that has me enthusiastic feeling we're in a strong position to be able to pull this thing out. >> last night in philadelphia singers bruce springsteen and john legend joined former
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president obama at a harris rally urging folks to reject the hatred at the trump rally on sunday. today is the last day that voters here in pennsylvania can register for their mail-in ballot vote. republicans feeling confident how the early vote is looking. democrats used to have a 3-one advantage. that looks to be 2-one this time around and they're feeling confident. >> bill: good make a difference. we'll see. thank you, bryan llenas. >> i had a great father. tough guy. he used to always say never use the word nazi, never use that word. never use the word hitler, don't use that word. then i understood it. they use that word freely. both words. >> dana: both of those loaded words could come up again later tonight. harris is set to make her
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closing argument at the ellipse in washington, d.c. as the campaign enters the homestretch. joining us now is the co-chair of the harris-walz campaign and former louisiana congressman. mr. richmond, thank you for joining us today. i wanted to start with this. a headline in the "new york times" that caught my attention that said harris aides quietly grow more bullish on defeating trump. yet yesterday there was this pro-harris super pac that had an email circulated to democrats that said in an email about what messages have been most effective in internal testing, future forward, the leading pro-harris super pac said focusing on mr. trump's character and the fascist label were less effective and attacking that is not that persuasive in bold type in the email. trump is exhausted isn't working, either. i know they can't coordinate directly with the campaign. is that message to the getting
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to the harris campaign? >> that's not our focus. our focus has been and the vice president's focus has been to remind people the people who know donald trump best know that he is unfit. that is his former chief of staff, his former chair of the joint chiefs, that's over a great number of people who worked in his administration and know him best. so when the people around you and the people closest to you say that you are unfit, i think that is something that people should talk about because this is an election and choice between. >> bill: in the last week alone fascist and nazi was around a lot. >> it was the answer to a question at a town hall. the vice president gave a direct answer to a question. it is consistent with the people who worked around him. so no, we're not dwelling on the word fascist. what we're dwelling on is offering people a choice.
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we have a to do list and he whats a hit list of people he wants to get revenge on. we'll stay focused on the american people and he will stay focused on people he wants to get revenge at and that's the choice voters will have to make. >> dana: i want to get your take on this. you were in congress for a long time and i worked in d.c. around the same time. call for eight is republicans labeled fascists or hitler, you look at them up here. almost as if the word has lost its meaning if now is trump the ultimate fascist if that's the point? >> i don't know. maybe you should ask jd vance. i think he is the one who called him hitler. i criticized donald trump for a long time since i with as in congress. and i have not called him hitler nor does it make sense. what it does is makes sense to focus on the american people. if you want to know why people call trump hitler maybe you should start with jd vance who did that. >> bill: if we get a chance to get around to that we certainly
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will. donald trump is going to speak in 20 minutes, sir. we are told that he is going to put an emphasis on the future. talking about immigration, the border, economy as well. we look at some of these key groups, democratic key groups in terms of gains. here is what we find. with black voters he is down 13, hispanic voters down 18 and jewish voters down eight. what would you say to the folks out there who haven't made up their mind about how you can make up for those numbers that seem to be a significant deficit one week out? >> well, we've cut into those numbers you just put up. i would say to people out there it is a broad coalition this time. you see many republicans, many independents and if you look at her numbers with undecided voters she is up ten over trump with those who are still making up their mind of who they will support. that's very significant. on the economy she has cut it in half. so she is doing the hard work to deliver her message and talk
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about an opportunity economy, talking about the future as opposed to the past. that is starting to resonate and as any prize fighter or any election or politician would know you want to peak on election day, not early. she is doing exactly what she needs to do and tonight's closing argument is a big step in starting that two-minute drill into election day. >> dana: sir, i think about 40 million people have seen or listened to the joe rogan interview that former president trump did and he himself, joe rogan tweeted that he would like for the harris campaign to do it. he says it is not past on doing it and you are trying to work out a date. i hope we can make it happen. do you think it's a possibility if she really wants to finish strong to talk to that many people? >> well, we made the offer and that's where the communications department and scheduleers to work out. but i think rogan's team will say that we talked to them about doing it. but we're also at the end of a
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campaign when the two-minute drill and see what happens. >> bill: you did make an offer to talk to rogan? >> we've talked to his team about doing it and we just couldn't come up with dates and -- >> bill: i just want to make sure i understood the language there. nothing set, nothing moving forward as of now and it will stay that way for the next week. >> i wouldn't say it will stay that way for the next week. we're in the two-minute drill and see what happens. >> dana: what's the two-minute drill. >> bill: end of the drill. how did i do? >> that was very accurate. >> bill: you come back. nice to talk to you, thank you. >> dana: thank you. speaking of which. >> dana: baseball today, bill. the los angeles dodgers knocked off the new york yankees in game three of the world series and the dodgers got a home run from
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first baseman freddie freeman. >> it is a fastball ripped down the line and it's gone! a fifth consecutive world series game with a freddie freeman home run. >> 2-two to torres, bouncing ball. towards the middle. the dodgers dominate game three. >> dana: the dodgers win 4-two. they have a 3-0 lead in the series and one win away from becoming stadium. game four at yankee stadium tonight and catch it on your local fox station. >> bill: i want to see a good series. i want new york to win tonight. let's keep it going. >> dana: harold ford junior went last night and he is depressed. >> bill: new fox polling coming out in a moment. tight battle for control of the senate. where will that land? senator john thune is with us on that coming up live. the "washington post" owner jeff
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being a student is - very stressful. challenging. but it's even harder when half of the school is just broken acs. the ceiling in math class leaks all over your desk. the drip. drip. drip. in california, 38-percent of students go to schools that fail to meet minimum health standards. prop 2 will fund repairs at local schools. get rid of toxic mold. make sure bathrooms work. and fix leaky ceilings. and all the money goes to local schools.
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for real. yes on prop 2. repair local schools. >> bill: this could be a problem. authorities now investigating two ballot boxes set on fire
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early monday morning. one was in portland, oregon, fire suppressant protected almost all the ballots. only three with dagema. 30 minutes later another ballot box was ignited in vancouver, washington. officials believe the fires are connected and say the incidents are similar to another ballot box fire from a few weeks ago. so stand by for more on that. >> dana: jeff bezos defending his decision to end the "washington post" tradition of endorsing presidential candidates. he writes that americans don't trust the media and it would only reveal bias. howie kurtz. you know the "washington post" well. you used to be there. the hard truth, americans don't trust the media and he says we must be accurate and be believed to be accurate. it is a bitter pill to swallow but we're failing on the second requirement. the "washington post" and "new york times" win prizes but
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increasingly retalk to a certain elite and more and more we talk to ourselves. what do you think? >> this should have been done ten years ago. jeff bezos admits what i've been saying. the timing was terrible to drop the stink bomb before the election and shows a fear of donald trump because they have a testy relationship. jeff bezos does a lot of business with the federal government through amazon and blue origin rocket company. if trump wins which he seems to think is a strong possibility, he doesn't want to be on the enemy's list. >> dana: one of the things the "washington post" in terms of timing, it is interesting that just recently they did endorse the democratic candidate for maryland senate over the former republican governor who is very moderate, larry hogan, then they
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do this. what about the point of not being believed as the media? the media being a part of that. one other things in terms of cbs, abc and nbc, 78% of the coverage is positive for harris and 85% has been negative. >> that's the thing i agree with jeff bezos on. people don't trust the media for good reason. he has set back the post ten years with this blunder by which i mean ten years from now people will still be talking about this. you know, he is the one who came up with the slogan democracy dies in darkness. for him to do it. if he did it months ago no one would have cared. newspaper endorsements don't matter on the national level these days. for two years the editorial pages of the post, the same situation with the "l. a. times" owner, is constantly anti-trump,
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anti-trump, left leaning and then on the most important thing that they face, oh, we couldn't possibly tell you what to think. that would create the perception of bias. they're pulling back on this but we know what they think. it helps donald trump. you have four people who have left the editorial board, others writing columns taking on the boss. all kinds of language, spinelessness and so forth. not just self-involved journalists, they feel bezos pulled the rug out from under them. >> he saved the paper and saved their salaries. in some ways where would the post be without him? >> jeff bezos and billions saved the "washington post", yes, he pays the salaries and has the right to do this as the owner. it is just, you know, the way that he did it, when he did it and the fear of donald trump. i will tell you one more thing,
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dana, all these people, tens of thousands canceling subscriptions only hurts the news organization that they say they care about and some people are saying why not cancel your amazon prime membership if you want to get back at bezos? the post has already been decimated by layoffs and buy-outs. this is a disastrous move and a body blow. >> dana: thank you for your take. we appreciate you. >> bill: palm beach, mar-a-lago, former president trump will speak in a matter of moments here and our cameras are rolling. his message in the final weeks. stand by for that. another small town usa overwhelmed with a huge influx of migrants. residents there say the sudden surge in population is now breaking their bank. >> when you double, triple or worse quadruple the number people living inside that one space, it is overran. ere your ry and investment portfolio
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>> bill: the morning we take you to another small town in the heartland buckling under the burden of my granulitis. the population of the village doubled. resources drained. lockland, ohio just north of cincinnati. this >> the entire village is a mile ride. population 3500 people. over the last 12 to 18 months city officials say the number has nearly doubled as more than 3,000 men from the west african country of moritania have come to this small town after crossing the southern border illegally and claiming asylum. nearly all don't speak english. can't legally work and they pack as many as 20 people into apartments meant for two to four. because so many of them have never used an oven before, the fire department is regularly
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responding to kitchen fires like this one where hundreds of people had to be evacuated. the massive influx of people is taking a big toll on the city's utilities, particularly at these apartment buildings. >> the sewer system is getting backed up. the drainage is getting backed up in the building. we're responding for issues of literally feces running down the walls of the bathrooms from the floor above. that's not how anyone should be living. >> one woman who lives in one of the apartment buildings and didn't want to be on camera said the sudden flood of people from a third world of country has changed the small town tremendously and americans like her struggling to get by are being left behind by the federal government. >> it's awful. everywhere you turn you might as well be in africa. i've been trying to find a two bedroom i can afford. it is tough being a single mom and

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