tv Americas Newsroom FOX News November 1, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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set. thanks, coach johnson. let's look at the catch together as we go outside. we do have it. i guess we had it. all right, guys. >> ainsley: if you're in new york tomorrow, bring your family to the "fox & friends" block party. you can join us from 7:00 in the morning until 10:00 a.m. as we count down to election day. >> steve: that's right. >> lawrence: be an anchor for the day, record a video. food, fun, games, giveaways, face painting and more. >> steve: the prize pack is valued at $1500. a fox and friends tombler, fox news coffee mug and fox news democracy now. join us here on fox square tomorrow morning 48th and 6th avenue. >> bill: we'll keep the flames on, right?
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take an eraser to the official record. a breach of ethics rocking the white house four days before the election as hello on a friday. into the weekend we roll. >> dana: here we go. i bet the white house is glad it's friday. they have a problem. it's not the crime but the cover-up. fox news confirming the white house press office altered the biden's comment despite objections from the federal workers who document the words. that's their job. >> president biden: puerto rico and my home state of delaware they're good, decent honorable people. the only garbage i see floating out there is supporter, his demonization of them is unconscionable. >> dana: notice an apostrophe was added to the word supporter's that suggested he was only talking about the
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comedian. the sten -their job is record the official record. when this first happened and they added the apostrophe that's not allowed and i wondered if they would speak out. this is their integrity we're talking about. it happened in the bush administration once. tony snow was giving his last briefing and thanking everybody in the press office and goes through a list in his head. he misses someone, my friend, gordon. and then the transcript comes out and gordon's name is in the transcript and the press comes to me and says what happened here? i said i don't know what happened. tony snow, because he was a kind person, he had gone to the
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stenographers and said can we ad him in there and it was wrong? reporters saved how often do you do this? no, we don't do this. you aren't allowed. in the obama administration at the state department a video was edited that took out a question from a former fox news reporter that asked about iran and that became a huge problem. what the white house is done they didn't try to protect somebody because they were forgotten in a list of thank yous they were trying to protect president biden from causing a problem for kamala harris in the last days of an election and it is wrong and i'm glad the stenographers spoke up. >> bill: you are talking about snow was being kind. two hours after that comment was made the other night, biden's tweet went out and this is the president of the united states official twitter account on x. he said earlier today i referred
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to the hateful -- the trump supporter as garbage. they've been bouncing here and there and trying to correct it. dana, i would argue that unless we were covering this story, most people would have flown right by it. >> dana: it's funny but a time when i asked for a correction on a transcript. karl rove was leaving the white house. i did an interview in waco in texas doing an interview on cnn and there would be an official transcript that went out that says what i said. the reporter asked me are you worried that you don't have enough people and brains in the white house going through and i said i have a lot of juice left in the white house. the transcript comes out and it said that i said we have a lot of jews left in the white house. first of all, my chief of staff who is jewish was laughing historically. i called, no problem.
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listened again and fixed it. that is an example where you can ask them to fix something if there is a mistake. there could be. this wasn't a mistake. >> bill: you are a week from an election. the trail now former president trump is going to wisconsin and michigan. in michigan is alexis mcadams. good morning there. what have you got? >> good morning bill and dana. great day here in battleground mitch gone. behind me is the parking lot where the former president will be in a matter of hours. a long line of supporters out here well before the sun came out. he is hitting the midwest hard. this thing in michigan is locked in a dead heat. now trump is using the democrats' own comments against them. >> joe biden's comments were the decision of kamala harris to
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proper tray those not voting for her as a sub human person and we know it's what they believe because look at how they've treated you. they do treat you like garbage, they really do. >> the former president has another part-time job. he was at mcdonalds, dressed up as a garbage man in wisconsin taking out the trash after president joe biden suggested that trump supporters are garbage. fox news caught up with the truck driver who gave trump that ride. >> release the park brake and started moving forward. we only moved a foot or two and the secret service waved their hands it was the end of the ride. >> it didn't cost much money. a lot less than they spend for the ads on tv. in michigan black voters could swing this election. vice president kamala harris has said she believes the path to victory goes through detroit.
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she is losing ground in the key demographic. i went to the west side in detroit and asked a pastor why that's happening. >> there is polling that comes out that says kamala harris doesn't track well with male voters and doesn't track well with male black voters across america. why is that? >> because we know that she never did anything for black men. we know when she was the a.g. in california her policies were against black men. >> no matter who you talk to on the campaign trail including michigan they say their top issue is the economy. talking to voters here after the comments came out from president biden who said the only thing they think is garbage is having to work two to three jobs just to make ends meet. >> bill: thank you for that in dear born, michigan. thank you. >> i want to explain in politics a good rule of thumb is don't say you want to do anything like hitler. >> in puerto rico in my home state of delaware they're good,
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decent, honorable people. the only garbage i see floating out there is his supporters. >> donald trump, you never see him around strong, intelligent women ever. it is just that simple. they're intimidating to him. he doesn't like to be challenged by them. >> bill: that last comment there is raising a ruckus. mark cuban, insult to conservative women around donald trump capping off a week of rhetoric by the democrats that has alienated a number of americans. republican leading ladies and the caption say it to their faces. one of them morgan ortegas, she worked for president trump. cuban then said the following. when i said it during the interview i didn't get it out the way i thought i did. goes on to say i apologize, anyone who felt slighted or upset and i set myself up for the six second sound bite. no excuses, can't nail every
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interview. my skin is thick enough. mark cuban, going back to the campaign of 2016 he was in the spin room of every single debate for hours, morgan, six, seven hours holding court, doing everything he could. at this time it seems like he stepped in it. were you offended by it as a former employee of president trump? >> i was offended but not surprised. i loved in his apology he a poll getsed for my feelings and not for what he said which is probably typical of how he handles his personal relationships. classic, exactly. not surprised because i think these moments are indicative of how people like him feel about women that are supporting former president trump or that are conservative. it is really based in both ignorance and arrogance. ignorance because you don't understand what it was like for me to be the basically the only
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woman in the room during abraham accords whenever president trump had that historic phone call between netanyahu and other leaders. i was almost nine months pregnant at that point and empowered to be in part of history. you think about those moments. i even think about working for secretary of state mike pompeo every single person in the room in our morning meetings was a woman. this is an administration in which i felt not only did i feel incredibly empowered but able to be a part of history and it's also just an arrogance of conservative women or listen, there are tons of independent women voting for trump. it is not just about groceries or the cost of groceries, the cost of gas, or as the left would have you believe just about abortion. i think women know that in the next four years they have a choice of who is going to be in the room, for example, with xi or putin. xi has said he wants his military to be ready to go to war in 2027.
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that's in the next administration. so women of all ages, of all races, of all religions have a choice to make who they want to be in the room. the last time kamala harris was in the room with putin three days later he invaded ukraine. >> dana: there are early vote totals in for women across the country nationally, 54% of the votes already cast by either male and early in-person votes. men 44%. it wasn't a gaffe, it is the latest injection of toxic democratic arrogance. men accused of toxics masculine tee. the women written off as hand made. there was a day when politicians on both sides understood the likeability factor in elections. hard to like a party that views you as trash and in a way i think we can have this conversation what about cuban said and i'm sure there are democratic circles today saying
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they feel the same way about republicans and we have three days until this election and tensions are running pretty high. but as you said, morgan, i will give you the final word here, it is really important decision based on what we want the country to do in the next four years. >> yeah. i think that's a decision people have to make. will some women vote over a single issue? sure. but i think the vote is actually incredibly complex and nuanced thinking about the economy. as a jewish mother i'm thinking who will be the best person to stamp out the rise of anti-semitism around this country. we saw a jewish man killed in chicago walking just for the crime of walking to temple to be ob servant. you think of universities around the country i don't feel safe sending my daughter to today because of anti-semitism in this country. the vote next week, republican women are coming out in droves and i think it's a very nuanced
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conversation, not just about abortion, that's a fallacy. >> bill: morgan ortegas, thanks for coming by. >> dana: if you haven't had enough of us you'll get more of us on sunday. special edition of "america's newsroom" counting down to election day with experts and analysts starting at 9:00 a.m. eastern on fox news. >> bill: almost here. almost here. the thing about the garbage and the puerto rican comment, both of these stories took on a life of their own fueled by people who were involved in his campaign. remarkably. the puerto rican thing lived for three days and then joe biden stepped in it and then it lived for another four days. remarkable. >> dana: rub the spot on the wall. >> bill: we'll take you down to georgia in a moment. the illegal migrant accused of murdering laken riley will be back in the courtroom. we'll take you there moment tear. >> dana: the path of victory
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runs through pennsylvania. a small voting block there could make all the difference. who they are voting for and fighting for for their support. there is also this. >> on so many issues including our plans for america's economy. >> we had the most successful economy, the greatest economy in the history of our country. >> bill: for a year you've been telling us the economy is your number one issue. the final jobs report before the big day on tuesday is out. it was nothing. who is better for your bottom line. your money, your future, your family. larry kudlow is in studio on this friday edition of "america's newsroom." my dad believed in hard work, and the farm was the perfect place to learn grit, determination and problem solving. we're taking that passion and channeling it through our farm to home bedding bath, and apparel
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>> bill: here is the last jobs number right before the big day on tuesday. that number 12,000 is ridiculously low. the expectation -- since december of 2020 since the number was that low for the report. they are blaming it on strikes like blowing and the storms like helene and milton. also there were revisions for the last two months as well. larry kudlow will join us and give us his take on what is important inside the numbers and the strength of the economy today. 4.1% unemployment did not change. stayed the same. >> dana: not the number that kamala harris was looking for in the last three days. meantime jewish voters could also play a key role in swing states. bryan llenas is live in pennsylvania with more. pennsylvania being a key place this will be watched closely. hi, bryan. >> good morning.
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the trump campaign tells me they think there are 30 to 45,000 jewish voters in pennsylvania that could swing their way. many living here in philadelphia's suburbs. look, that's a significant considering the last two pennsylvania elections have been decided by between 40,080,000 votes. the campaign recruited new york gop chairwoman stefanik from new york to door knock in pennsylvania in bucks county to speak with potential persuadeable voters. she is known for grilling university presidents in congressional hearings on anti-semitism. >> do you believe the jewish vote could be the difference maker in pennsylvania? >> it is going to be i think not only in pennsylvania but also in some key congressional districts. we were talking about new york state. if you look, that significant shift among the electorate, they see the lack of support from today's democrat party and kamala harris's failure to stand
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by israel. >> 70% of pennsylvania's 300,000 jewish voters are democrat or lean democratic. jewish trump supporters insist the fear following october 7th and the anti-israel protests has changed minds in pennsylvania. >> i am a grandchild of four holocaust survivors. my parents came here as legal immigrants seeking refuge after being persecuted for things that happened after the war. i grew up with anti-semitism in this country but there was always recourse. there was always a way for me to be protected. i don't feel that way now. that's scary. >> the harris campaign is playing on another fear, fear of trump. >> they will be thinking about general kelly saying that donald trump fits the definition of a fascist. the jewish people have learned
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through bitter experience what it means to experience fascism. >> dana, back in bucks county you can see a line of voters behind me here for on-demand mail-in ballot voting in person. it ended across pennsylvania on tuesday. it was extended until 5:00 p.m. today following a republican lawsuit claiming voter suppression. >> dana: thanks for being there for us. >> president biden: in puerto rico and my home state of delaware they are good, decent honorable people. the only garbage i see floating out there is his supporters, his demonization is unconscionable. >> bill: it is garbage day again today. that came on tuesday night. now comes confirmation that the white house altered the official transcript of biden's remark. trey gowdy sunday night america host and former house oversight
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committee chair. the big point dana and i were making 20 minutes ago. that's the official record. that's american history. that's sacro sank. you don't use it to abuse it and twist it in a way so it may help you in an election seven days away. at the time it was tuesday and now this coming week. what do you think? >> yeah, you know, they say it's never the crime, it's the cover-up. sometimes it is both. i actually got the best piece of political advice i think i ever got from a puerto rican colleague of mine who said people won't vote for you even if they don't like you. they will never vote for you if they don't think you like them. this whole last week has not been spent talking about the economy or jobs or war in the middle east. it is the word garbage. and what candidates and politicians hate is having to explain what other people have said. donald trump did not vet this
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comedian and kamala harris didn't say it. it was joe biden. so they are spending their last week having to deflect what other people said and i'm sure they're pulling their hair out. >> dana: stenographer's version versus the white house press office. it was quick thinking if we add an apostrophe it will be oh kaeng. stenographer saying this is not right. from an official standpoint the -- and the house republicans are saying better preserve your records, guys, this is not right. >> yeah. tampering with evidence. it's not a court case but still the point holds. this is history. this is a public record. who would have thought we would be talking about apostrophes? if you go back and look, this is the same party that referred to a basket full of deplorables, the same joe biden who stood in front of what looked like satan's house with the red
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background and talked about how anti-democratic trump was and his supporters by proxy therefore were. so how you get elected by offending half the country like mark cuban or others have done, politics must have changed since i left. >> bill: the white house spokesperson -- by the way, props to jackui heinrich working the story for days. they were stonewalling her every time she was looking for an answer. here is the spokesperson late last night. the president confirmed in his tweet tuesday evening he was addressing the hateful rhetoric from the comedian and reflected in the transcript. well, now we know that's not the case. now we know they got caught. >> there is a big difference between what you meant and what you said. i don't know what he meant. i think i do, but we do know what he said and that apostrophe doesn't change it. he was banging on trump
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supporters, which is about half the country. maybe slightly less, maybe slightly more, but about half the country. one apostrophe ain't going to fix it. >> dana: they took -- they are good at one thing that hurts them. there is a story that's bad for them and they make it so much worse and makes it last for so much longer. if they just said president biden regrets saying that and he got caught up in the morning but we probably wouldn't be talking about it anymore. but here we are. fox news alert. the trial of daniel penny begins at the top of the hour. we'll bring you the latest from opening statements. judge janine is on the scene. just 12,000 jobs added to the entire economy. more than 100,000 were expected. larry kudlow on how this shapes the race.
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>> dana: opening statements are set for next hour in the trial of daniel penny. the 26-year-old marine veteran is charged in the choke hold death of a homeless man named jordan neely back in 2023. cb cotton is outside the courthouse. what is the latest? >> good morning. the jury is seated. there are seven women and five men. among them someone who works in healthcare, a former lawyer, a retired journalist, corporate lawyer and paralegal. almost all of them told the judge they ride the subway at least sometimes. most of them said they've seen outbursts while riding. two of the jurors told the judge they felt personally harassed for targeted. prosecutors say penny placed neely in a choke hold for six minutes on the subway in may of last year. some witnesses reported neely
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making threats, others did not. neely did not have a weapon according to court filings. his attorneys have said their client did not intend to kill neely but only hold him down until prosecutors arrive. they only have to prove penny acted recklessly. neely a michael jackson impersonator had documented mental health struggle and repeated arrests for assault and disorderly conduct on a watch list for a city task force that kept track of the new yorkers of most concern. his family's attorneys say neely did not touch anyone on the train and no justification for his death. this trial could go through thanksgiving and dana you probably hear be mind me protestors have already showed up to the courthouse, back to you. >> dana: thank you so much. that gets underway. judge janine inside. >> bill: we'll check it out. this morning's job report no good now, giving voters a final status check of the economy
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before the big day on tuesday. not pretty. we only added 12,000 jobs last month. they had expected 113,000. unemployment rate held steady 4.1%. biden's first reaction is just in and we'll get to that. let's get to the news. let's go to larry kudlow. downward revisions for the previous two months, larry, this is blaming the storms and strikes. biden's statement is blaming the storms in a significant way. >> you have to tell me this is the crack of dawn, i can barely see the print of the page. in all seriousness the labor statistics board is saying we quant quantify the hurricanes and i want to note at a matter of common sense the adp report that came out wednesday, those are private payrolls were very strong. so i don't think the hurricane really had an impact. people may not work for a week or two or three because of those
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awful hurricanes but they know they still have a job. i would take that out. the only thing that's glitchy in here is the boeing strike which probably knocked out 40,000 jobs from manufacturing. but even with that manufacturing continues to decline. it has been on a steady decline for almost two years. the other highlights here or low lights if you will, the unemployment rate held at 4.1%. that's important, not the worst thing in the world. the bottom for that was last summer, fall, 3.4. so it is moving up slowly but it didn't rise substantially. all right. revisions, downward revisions you remember the 818,000 downward revision, we have more. 112,000 down revision for the two prior months in september and august, of which 108,000 were private sector jobs. so that's a big negative.
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the only winner in this whole report honestly is government, which has been the story here for quite some time. when you are doing deficit spending that is 7% of gdp the highest in peacetime ever, it's the government. that feeds into consumer spending. i will just add government jobs increased 40,000 and healthcare and social assistance which i call government adjacent jobs, essentially government-sponsored jobs up 51,000. the two are up 91,000. the only positive in this entire report. one other thing self-employed people down 100,000. the household employment survey fell 368,000. that tends to jump around quite a bit. the bls can't tell us what the quantifying the hurricanes. i would not worry about that. >> dana: the high cost of
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housing, shelter, rent is on people's minds. a pennsylvania mom of three said this is what you are looking at, rent or eating. last time i was at my son's place and opened the refrigerator and there was only water. in harrisburg, pennsylvania for an example rent prices are up 50% since 2021. this is on people's minds heading into election day, larry. >> yes. a good op-ed in the "wall street journal" ted cruz and rick scott a couple of days ago. i know the fellow that did the numbers for that op-ed. looking all in you buy a new car, dana, the price of the car, the borrowing rate for the car and the insurance for the car, that's up 32%. that's for cars. 32% in the last nearly four years. the housing is even worse. again the price of the house, the insurance to the house, the borrowing rate for the house, that's doubled. that's doubled in the last four
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years. the cost of owning and living in a home rose from $19,000 a year to $37,000 a year. >> dana: that's a lot. >> those are big numbers. >> bill: i'm reading through the statement. >> especially for young people trying to buy a new home. >> i don't know if it's inflation, the cost of housing or maybe all comes into play on tuesday and we examine the results. joe biden consistently says he created 16 million jobs. okay, we all these were rebound jobs from covid. why are they able to get away with it? >> i don't know they get away with it. >> bill: why do they say it that way? >> look, having served two presidents myself, now we're in the presence of one of the best press secretaries in recent memory, this group has a propensity to lie, okay? they do. they do it all the time. they just did it yesterday with
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the apostrophe nonsense. i don't know why. because particularly now in the information age, it will catch up to you. and you are dealing particularly with numbers that literally million and millions of people have access to the same government databases and it is like they are pulling the wool over our eyes, no, they aren't. we know it's not true. when you adjust properly for the comeback jobs and so forth, actually their manufacturing jobs are very small below trump's overall the jumps were much smaller, way below trump. i think it's a character flaw in this administration. and i personally my own opinion, i believe the public sees it and i believe a chunk of the republic will rebel against it. they're tired of it. for heaven's sakes, tell me the
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truth. i make a point here we got clobbered when covid hit, the impact hit in march and april of 2020, okay? i was an economic spokesman, my pal was an economic spokesman. i had to go out there and tell people how many jobs we lost. i didn't like it and i felt terrible and we all understood what was going on but it still felt terrible because hardships were everywhere. >> bill: you didn't go out there to be dishonest. >> there are certain things you have to be straight. basic information. everybody has access to it. you can't hide anything. it is a character flaw. that's the best i can do on that subject. it will come back to haunt them. i just woke up it's the crack of dawn for heaven sake. >> dana: you must have late nights. >> the earliest i've been up since i came to fox.
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>> dana: our viewers are honored. >> it is my pleasure. thank you for having me. >> bill: going to michigan. both campaigns hitting the state. why that state is especially important come tuesday. stand by. (fisher investments) ar investments we may look like other money managers, but we're different. (other money manager) how so? (fisher investments) we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client'' best interest. (fisher investments) so we don't sell any commission-based products. (other money manager) then how do you make money? (fisher investments) we have a simple management fee, structured so we do better when our clients do better. (other money manager) your clients really come first then, huh? fisher investments: yes. we make them a top priority, by getting to know their finances, family, health, lifestyle and more. (other money manager) wow, maybe we are different. (fisher investments) at fisher investments, we're clearly different. so many of you have told me about your plans for the future. but prices are too high. so here's what we're gonna do about it. i will take on price gouging. i will lower the cost of health care insurance. donald trump? well, he wants to give more tax breaks to the wealthy. i will cut taxes for the middle class instead.
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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. for real. yes on prop 2. repair local schools. >> bill: so we have some breaking news out of michigan
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focus on the wolverine state. ford will cut production of its f150 lightning pickup truck. e.v. it was said to be the next great thing three years ago. grady trimble is watching the action or the campaign in taylor, michigan. what do you have? >> governor tim walz will be at this unite ed auto workers union hall in a couple hours. jd vance will be in michigan today and president trump. they will focus on the auto workers who may disagree with the union's endorsement of harris and walz and the uaw president sean fain will hold a get out the vote tonight with progressive. tlaib and -- have been reliably democratic voters. this time around many of those
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blue collar workers are getting crushed by inflation and in the motor city and michigan more broadly some of them take issue with the biden-harris administration's attempt to get more americans into electric vehicles. >> people are not ready for the e.v.s yet. we don't produce as many as we did a couple of months ago. >> the whole economy as middle class america. >> sthe is not qualified. she knows nothing about what is going on. >> that comes from the understanding of a black man struggling. i work for uaw and chrysler. she doesn't done anything for us. >> the trump campaign is seizing on that sentiment from auto workers in announcing this afternoon's event in warren, which is home to a plant that recently laid off more than 1,000 workers. the trump campaign says if kamala harris has her way with the gas-powered car ban people at michigan will lose nearly
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40,000 jobs. a key issue here in this state where the auto industry is so critical. >> bill: taylor, michigan, wayne county, detroit. we'll get more from you over the weekend. thanks. >> dana: with razor thin races acrows the country we're seeing extensive litigation pop up over the voting process. pennsylvania is dealing with a couple of cases centering around the state's vote by mail. kerry urbahn is here in person. how do we understand these cases? >> specifically to pennsylvania it's important to remember the history. in 2019 widespread mail-in voting was introduced in the state along with rules governing that. as you can imagine because pennsylvania is so important in presidential elections there has been tons of litigation ever since. today we wait to hear from the u.s. supreme court on one of those cases involving envelopes. two people put their ballots in
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the wrong envelope. they tried to self-correct that on their own and didn't follow the process. the pennsylvania supreme court said it's okay. the rnc said it's important, you aren't following the rules. if you are mailing in your ballot you have to put it in a specific envelope. secrecy envelope. you have to sign it and you have to date it. those three rules have generated so much litigation for the last five years it is quite remarkable. >> bill: you have to align the bar code the right way. if you screw up any of that you are in trouble. 24 years ago i spent 37 days in tallahassee, florida when we were waiting on bush versus gore. election law is massively complicated. and you will have a huge job if this is a close race in a close state that could determine the next president of the united states. >> that's right. also another case that just went to the pennsylvania supreme court. this is just yesterday had to do with dates.
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the u.s. supreme court has to deal with envelopes. this has to do with dates. apparently in a special election that happened in special elect in pennsylvania a few months ago, state race. a number of ballots were improperly dated. the mid level court of appeals in the state said what does it really matter? we got them on time. why does it matter if they dated it wrong? wait a second, there are rules. and if there are no dates where is the order here? that one is pending before the pennsylvania supreme court. >> dana: there has been a lot of coverage about republicans, trump supporters being ready with litigation. they aren't the only ones. i feel like we're not focusing enough on the fact that marquee lie yeas on the democratic side has an army of lawyers ready to do the same thing. >> he is all over it. dnc filed a case in erie county,
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people asked for mail-in ballots and didn't get them. that's another case percolating. my observation with respect to the rnc is that they are very organized this time around. they've been taking care of business before the election, always much better than afterwards and they have 5,000 lawyers on call ready to volunteer post election should the race be close which is what we expect it to be. >> bill: don't go far, okay? >> dana: great to have you here in new york city. >> bill: in minutes the illegal immigrant accused of killing laken riley will be in court. this is a hearing before the judge and we'll see how it progresses together when we go there live coming up. duckduckgo comes with a built-n engine, like google, but it's r and doesn't spy on your searchs and duckduckgo lets you browsel but it blocks cookies and creepy ads that follow youa and other companies.
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[cheers and applause] >> if you can't make it tomorrow, you will make a plan, you have to be there on tuesday. >> bill: we look at swing counties on tuesday. the kind of counties that tell you which way the wind is blowing. they tend to go with the winner. in pennsylvania you have north hampton in the east and erie, pennsylvania right up here, okay? biden won it by a point eight years ago. trump won it by two points. that's one to watch. i would also come down to north carolina. remember like georgia, north carolina, pennsylvania going to get some quick results from places like georgia come tuesday night. this right here east of raleigh is nash county. look at that,.3 percentage points eight years ago and biden wins it by.2. others you could point to. up here in wisconsin, you see the finger there that extends
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east of green bay? that's door county. biden 1.5 percent four years ago, eight years ago trump 3.2. another one of these flippers. that's why door county is getting some attention today from folks like mike tobin who joins us live now. how is door county, one of my favorites on the entire map. good morning. >> good morning, sunny and cold here now. if you total up all the counties, you come to 513. of those 513 counties only one of them has picked a president in the last six elections. that's door county, wisconsin, where the sun is shining today. they picked george bush twice, obama twice, president trump and by 292 votes in the last election they picked joe biden. as you mentioned, door county is that sliver of land that separates green bay from the rest of lake michigan. economy here is di verse from ship building to manufacturing to summertime tourism business.
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and you have a lot of retired people out here. door county serves as a window into what americans are thinking. the chair of the door county republican party feels to pressure to get every party voter off the couch. >> i'm certainly aware of the attention we're getting. i'm doing everything i can to get as many people involved and to get our message out there. get all the doors knocked we can and just get that one last vote that we can just push donald trump over the edge. >> like all wisconsinites are not unaware of the attention and bombarded by visits from campaign volunteers and ads. >> every ten seconds there is one on tv and your phone blows up at the same time also. it is interesting. can't wait for it to be over. >> as a local growing up here it kind of stinks but it is ultimately good for us and all the people that own businesses in our town and community.
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