tv Fox News at Night FOX News November 1, 2024 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT
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gallagher. 11:00 p.m. on the east coast, 8:00 in los angeles and this is america's late news, "fox news @ night". breaking tonight, four days and counting from a monumental and historically close presidential election as kamala harris and donald trump remain neck-and-neck. both looking for any edge they can find. and an election that has featured words from both sides like garbage,, fascism, donald trump is now under fire for comments about former congresswoman liz chaney having rifles pointed at her. >> she's a radical war hog. let's see how she feels about it when the guns are trained to her face. they are all war hogs when they sit in washington. she always wanted to go to war with people. >> if donald trump who is talking about sending a prominent republican to the firing squad. >> this must be disqualifying. >> jonathan: is there criticism justified?
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we will get into it. nervous voters meantime looking for any final clues as to who will win the presidency. >> i know it will be a close race. >> we are going to find out when it happens. >> it moves up and it moves down, it's unpredictable. >> jonathan: we will see what the numbers say with pollster craig keshishian in moments. and as distrust in media reaches new heights, both candidates taking to an alternative platform to try to reach young voters, but which side is being more effective? we will talk to gen z from both sides of the aisle coming up. but we begin tonight with donald trump and kamala harris holding dueling events in battleground wisconsin tonight. we've got fox team coverage. senior white house correspondent jacqui heinrich with kamala harris. but we begin with senior national correspondent rich edson whose with donald trump tonight. good evening. >> reporter: good evening, they just started a video and
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let me tell you this is some of the loudest av system you will ever hear on the campaign trail. we are just a few miles away from vice president kamala harris' rally. a former president arrived here from michigan. i got here a little more than our a half ago. he's been speaking for just about an hour in milwaukee. this is his second speech in wisconsin in the past 48 hours. he was in green day's green bay the day before yesterday. trump is starting these rallies with a question ronald reagan asked in 1980, are you better off than four years ago? he said that the biggest problem in the country is the criminal invasion. the campaign built this is an economic speech. trump has leaned into the economy, calling it disappointing, the jobs report pathetic, more oil and gas drilling. today he was in detroit in the suburbs where he defended his comments about former representative liz chaney and played a bit of that earlier, the trump campaign also has a new memo from chumps -- trump's
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chief pollster maintaining the clear politics polling averages show trump is significantly better positioned in the swing states that he was just four years ago. the pollster says that is not to stoke overconfidence but do note that victory is within our reach. tomorrow the former president has a couple of rallies in north carolina and also in virginia. back to you. >> jonathan: fighting the noise could there, thank you. kamala harris, part of the final weekend in battleground states where the margins could not be much closer. senior white house correspondent jacqui heinrich live in milwaukee with more on the vps closing arguments. good evening. >> reporter: good evening. the trump team did spend all of today correcting the media that framed his remarks last night as a suggestion that liz chaney should go before a firing squad when he was making the point that chaney, who he called a war
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hog, would feel differently about sending american soldiers off to war if she was the one in uniform. already a cnn contributor retracted what he said on tv and apologized. but the vice president has seized on these remarks and she's called it disqualifying. take a listen. >> he has increased his violent rhetoric, donald trump has, about political opponents and in great detail, in great detail suggested rifles should be trained on former representative liz chaney. this must be disqualifying. >> reporter: it's a second time in two days that came trump says harris has taken his words out of context to fit a narrative. in arizona yesterday harris framed trump's comments about protecting women from migrant crime, whether they like it or not, as if he was talking about abortion. going all in on trump's character, whether or not the details are accurate, is working according to the harris campaign
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who said in a call today they have a double-digit lead among swing state voters who made up their minds in the last week. but cardi b who introduced harris here in milwaukee said she will be voting for the vice president because of this promise, which democrats have been saying for months has no chance of happening. >> i believe her when she says under her, buying eggs and milk won't break the bank. because she's going to pass a ban on price gouging on groceries. [cheering and applause] >> she told me that in my face so she better not lie to me in my face. >> reporter: remember this headline back in august when the controversial price gouging plan was revealed? political wrote democratic lawmakers are delivering a quiet message to act as allies, don't worry about the details, it's never going to pass congress, rather they are give it's a messaging tactic, a way to show that she understands food prices remain an economic burden. in fact gretchen whitmer, now a campaign harris surrogate, said on tv at the time that people
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are reading too much into her plan a middle that follow. cardi b was in the audience tonight and harris talked up price gouging again which we should note, having been at a lot of her rallies lately, has not been a prominent feature of her speeches as late but cardi b was in the audience, so she brought it up. >> jonathan: thank you. the good news for you is only a few more rallies to go until tuesday. thank you so much for being with us on this late night in wisconsin. thank you. let's bring in trump 20204 surrogate harrison fields, democratic strategist meghan hays and former white house deputy assistant to president trump, jenny korn. thank you for being here. let me turn to you first, jenny, here in the studio. we are neck and neck it appears. i think the entire country is thinking can we just get there, can we just get a result? how do you see it in these final
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days great. >> four more days. to cardi b i say she already has lied to your face. kamala is already lied about inflation, about crime, about an open border. but with all the polls right now, president trump and kamala are neck and neck. i say the tie goes to president trump because if you look at 2020, biden was ahead. if you look at 2016, hillary was ahead. you don't see kamala going ahead in any of these polls, barely. so i think that the tie goes to president trump. also he's build the best coalition that i've ever seen of latinos, blacks, muslim americans, the union members and independence. he has a coalition that she does not have. >> jonathan: i think from the other side too, there is some confidence that that late minute tied might surge towards kamala harris. do you see it that way. do you see hard evidence of it going that way? >> i think they've seen great numbers coming out of the old --
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early votes, i think women are voting more in the early votes than before. they have a great ground operation. they have over 3000 people on the ground turning out votes and working the field operation which is extremely powerful in the last couple of days so i do think their coalition and the ground operation will turn fruitful for them on tuesday. >> jonathan: harrison, kamala harris seizing on president trump's comments about liz chaney facing rifles today. the republicans on the other hand were seizing on comments by president biden just a few days ago about garbage supporters and weather on 'was inserted into the official transcript. do those kinds of things make a difference at this point, because it seems to me it's very inside baseball to a lot of voters who really just want to know about policies and who is going to make them better off.
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>> i would say 80% of americans don't know who liz chaney is and 99.9 percent don't care either. so when you talk about this foolish thing that the democrats are doing right now, taking his words out of context, i think it's a failed mistake. they are doing the same thing they did in 2016, making the race all about donald trump and completely ignoring the feelings of the forgotten men and women in this country, which is a fundamental mistake. ask hillary clinton. when you talk about what donald trump is doing, he's going to these battleground states and he's talking about the issues, talking about the border, about this dismal jobs report with 12,000 new jobs added. he's also talking about ending the wars overseas. he's focused on the message while kamala harris is trying desperately to make the race all about donald trump. it's a massive mistake on her part. >> jonathan: talking up that point, everybody, i just want to listen here to kamala harris talking today in what in a sense has been, as harrison rightly
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says, her closing argument. here's the vice president earlier today. >> donald trump closing argument is very different. he pits americans against one another, having americans point their fingers at one another, and he spends a considerable amount of time plotting his revenge on his political opponents. >> jonathan: so megan, you are out number here so i will come to you again, is it fair what harrison says, and jenny was also making the point that kamala harris is just focusing on he's not the right guy for america rather than why is she the right woman for america. >> i think she's walking the fine line in this final days. drawing a contrast of leadership between her and the former president and who would make a better president and who will take the country forward. i think she also is laying out her policies. talking about price gouging as jacqui talked about in the opening segment. i think she's trying to walk the line and doing both but i think
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it's important for her to continue to draw the contrast between her and the former president and to remind people what four years of donald trump was like and remind people that chaos that happen four years ago when he was the president. i think it is effective and you can see it's effective in the polling. she's only gone up in the polling where he is sort of captain 47%. >> jonathan: your response, jenny great. >> only 28% of people think we are going in the right direction in this country. no incumbent has ever won with those numbers so i don't think that will happen. all we have to ask ourselves is or you better off than you were four years ago? president trump will keep hammering got home and she's putting spaghetti on the wall. i think he's got the best closing argument. >> jonathan: harrison, confident for tuesday night? >> i would say so. if you look at the early vote totals, g.o.p. is about to hit their 2020 turned out in the early vote alone. that spells disaster for the democrats. i think they have a massive enthusiasm gap when you look at states like georgia, virginia where i met, in michigan and pennsylvania.
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i think the democrats, they don't come out on election day, so if they are thinking they are going to make a massive change last minute, i think it's a big gamble, i think trump wins tuesday night. >> jonathan: we shall see. it's just about 100 hours away from what will be the last of the polls closing and most of the country. hawaii we see, we know it won't be 100 hours for you. we shall see. let's hope we know in 100 hours rather than 100 days. jenny, meghan, harrison, thank you for being here tonight. meantime, donald trump as we were mentioning taking heat tonight for those remarks he made about liz chaney who is of course one of his most prominent republican critics. senior national correspondent kevin corke is live in washington, d.c. with more on what trump said and the reaction to it. hello kevin. >> reporter: good to be with you. if you were busy today and you only saw the headlines, you may be under the impression that the former president called liz chaney -- called for her to face a firing squad.
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but is not really true? here's your chance to listen and see if what you hear lines up with how chaney, the media and the harris campaign are characterizing it. >> she's a radical war hawk. let's put her with 9 barrels shooting at her and let's see how she feels about it. when the guns are trained in her face. you know, they are all war hawk when they are sitting in washington saying let's send 10,000 troops right into the mouth of the enemy. >> reporter: you may have gleaned from all of that that the former president was actually mocking chaney as someone who, you know, pushes for war from the comforts of washington, d.c., but it was apparently lost in translation. maybe intentionally. look at the headline here with additional links to theories about military tribunals and an investigation in arizona. but critics say the dishonesty
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surrounding the characterization of mr. trump's quip is par for the course. but for the left. including chaney who you may recall was routed by nearly 40 points in her final election. she said this on x, this is out dictators destroy free nations, they threaten those who speak against them with death. wow. hysterics, hyperbole and lies say critics, all with just four days to go. >> jonathan: hyperbole and hysterics and an election season. how bizarre. [laughter] >> jonathan: great to see you, thank you. let's bring in fox 11 news anchor elex michaelson and elections correspondent for the federalist brianna lyman. great to see you. in some ways this has been the most extraordinarily fun election to cover as a journalist in living memory. in some ways it's a nightmare for every journalist now. given the way that everybody
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seems to see us. how are we doing? by we i mean the media and general, not fox news. we are clearly doing fabulous. >> you guys are doing fabulous. the propaganda press on the other hand are doing good by their own standards because their job right now is to create fodder for the democrats and to manipulate voters and that's what they did with a liz chaney story. they are willingly disseminating these lies to try and drag kamala across the finish line. they know it's alive because they never include donald trump's full quote because that would blow up the narrative. the used to be a point in time where american voters expect politicians to live but they also expected accountability for the lies and what we see now with the media, not you guys, is that they are willing to not only ignore the lies but actually take part in disseminating them, and that is the single reason that kamala harris has managed to say afloat, they peddled the bloodbath hoax, the charlottesville hoax, the liz chaney hoax all to drag their favorite candidate through the finish line. >> jonathan: and we are certainly less and less trusted
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it seams. there's a survey i want -- want to put up. for people finding reliable information about the election, very or somewhat easy. 38% neither easy nor difficult. 32% somewhat difficult, 28%. those are big figures, elex, for people struggling to know where to go for information. do we the media oh more to the viewers, the readers, the listeners? do we need to find a way to do things differently as a whole? >> clearly based off the polls on the way people feel about the media, based off of ratings, a lot of people tuning out. and based off the basic concept of trust of institutions. if we are at a place as a society where we do not trust information as being true, then what happens next week when half the country does not believe the result? whether it's trump or harris who wins, there's going to be people who say i don't believe that
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because everybody in my ecosystem tells me that it is the other way. people are so now focused on algorithms and getting their information exactly what they want to hear that they are not hearing the other side and that has bad effects for the way our country even functions. >> jonathan: it sure does. brianna, gallup talked about the americans trust in the media being record lows and three readings in the 1970s, trust ranged from 68-72% yet the next readings in the late 90s and early 2000s, smaller majorities. currently 54% of democrats, 27% of independents and only 12% of republicans say they have a great deal or fair amount of trust in the media. i think that is part of why particularly the younger generation, we will talk more about that later, are looking to other methods to get their
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information, whether it be on elon musk's x or tiktok, but are they getting more reliable information there? is reliable information just gone? >> no, i do think that places like x have become the defacto public square because you don't have a specific narrative that is pushed when elon musk is in charge. you have a lot of journalists these days, i shouldn't called on journalists, they are propaganda puppets masquerading as journalists because it gives them a sense of authority. unfortunately americans are so used to being able to trust the news media, especially older folks who grew up in the 50s and 60s, who could turn to trusted figures and newspapers, that they still don't want to believe that the media has turned into largely a propaganda mouthpiece where the democratic party. when you see the hoaxes that the media willingly pushes onto voters days before an election, it's hard to give them any credibility. >> jonathan: so elex, how do we tackle it, how do you think we should tackle it? >> i think we need to try to give people straight information
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that they can trust. you build trust overtime. >> jonathan: but everybody is driven by ratings too. as you mentioned, everybody wants to see something that is reflected back to them. if we are a ratings driven industry... >> then in a lot of ways the american people are to blame for this because this is what they want. >> jonathan: like the chicken or the egg. >> part of the end -- problem with getting your information only buy it x or tiktok is that a lot of those accounts have no accountability. if they say something wrong, you can't sue them. if you say something wrong on fox, somebody can see you. if "the new york times" reports something wrong, something can so you. licenses can be taken away. if it's an anonymous account where we don't even know who the person is that is spreading this information that can go to hundreds of millions of people on x, that is a potential problem when there's no weigh to hold anybody accountable. >> jonathan: yeah, it really is a big issue. brianna lyman, thank you for being here. by the way, elex is in his 25th
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hour of news coverage over the last 24 hours, having covered the dodgers parade earlier today and every political race across the entire state of california and beyond. we thank you for being here. >> it's worth it. >> jonathan: go dodgers. go do your show across the road. thank you both. a few areas of pennsylvania could determine the outcome of this election. alexandria hoff takes us to the suburbs of the keystone state next. and later in the nightcap, a most three days until election night, which state do you think will be the one that puts the winning candidate over 270 in the electoral college and what do you think the final numbers will be? let us know x and instagram. we will read your responses in the nightcap. we will be back.
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♪ ♪ >> jonathan: four days away from the election and the stakes could not be higher. in deeply divided pennsylvania where polls show it's anyone's game. alexandria hoff is live in chester county with how things are looking in the all-important suburbs. i believe we are having an issue with the connection. no, we've got you back. good evening. >> reporter: good to be with you. the trump bus tour kicked off across pennsylvania today. those on board hoping to win back to suburban philadelphia counties that helped propel president biden to victory in 2020. one of those counties they stopped in was bucks county. made multiple stops but bucks county perhaps the most critical swing county. their voters endured hours long lines to participate in on
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demand mail-in voting. the unique process ended tuesday but it was extended through today after a judge sided with the trump campaign which sued because some voters had been turned away earlier this week. the bucks county communications director stated in part, we've added people to help process, we are throwing all the resources we can add it. in 2020 democrats had a 3-1 mail-in ballots admission advantage. this year 553,000 republicans returned there's so far compared with 947,000 registered democrats. that's 2-1. an improvement for republicans. here in chester county drop box was buzzing this afternoon because it's too late to mail back the ballots. 2020 president biden secured 57.8% of the vote but some mines have changed since then. >> trump is my choice. >> reporter: who did you like last time? >> last time it was joe biden. >> reporter: biden and then trump? >> yeah. >> reporter: i guess the past four years changed her mind? >> yes.
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>> there's only one choice and that happens to be my wife, kamala harris. >> reporter: second gentleman stopped by a volunteer phone bank in chester county today, this is the county democrats really bank on, along by nearby montgomery and delaware county along with bucks county. those they simply have the population, the volume to really helped democrats as they have before but this year the margin between democrat voters that have registered and republicans, it has tightened. >> jonathan: certainly hard to think of a state more critical to the outcome of this election then pennsylvania. alex, i'm sure you will be home to your two wonderful little children, i don't know, sometime in december maybe when we know. thank you for being here tonight. >> three weeks at least. >> jonathan: thank you alex. i trust bolsters less. every time a pollster -- every state is just a plus one, every single state is a tie, no, you are cheating.
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the numbers are all going to come out at exactly one point leads. you are lying. putting your finger on the scale. >> jonathan: polling data expert nate silver accusing most pollsters and colorful language of cheating, saying that while the race is close, it's not as close as they are making it out to be, although mr. silver did not say which way it goes. let's bring in pollster craig keshishian. thank you for being here. nate silver, who is very skeptical of polls and pollsters, i think a lot of the american people perhaps a little skeptical after the red wave we were told was coming in 2022 did not materialize after the hillary clinton victory that was predicted in 2016 that did not materialize. so it's all your fault. what say you? >> i'm so sorry about that. [laughter] >> on the other hand i think pollsters have a challenging job in this era. it's difficult to collect data, even harder to discern the
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attitudes and mindsets of americans, because a lot of americans are somewhat hesitant to be open with strangers now. for good reason. so we as we speak we are seeing a lot of statistical noise, use all the terminology you can that's out there in the polling universe, but right now poles are scattered and they cannot be really counted on during these last couple of days because views have been distilled. you have to look beyond the data and you have to see what i saw as a pollster and an analyst when i traveled through pennsylvania which is a massive surge of let's call it the silent majority speaking up. that is qualitative. polling is not a science, it's art. melding statistics which really means status quo in london -- latin, with sociology which is
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fieldwork, it makes you more accurate pollster and that's what i try to do. i did not call it a red wave, i called it a red surge last cycle because i saw what happened. this cycle out i see something unique, i see a head of steam rising amongst people who have been slammed. >> jonathan: so for whom is that head of steam? >> for trump. these are people who have been disenfranchised but under siege by inflation, the economy, crime, and they are not necessarily vocal about it. they will take out their frustrations at the polling booth. >> jonathan: i'm interested. this day in history, the real clear politics polling average, we have this graphic here, today trump, the rcp average puts up trump 0.3 percent, would hardly be closer. in 2020, biden by 7.9% back overestimated obviously. hillary clinton in 2016 by 1.6%.
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clearly very overestimated. i'm interested in what you said, that there is a cultural difference. i feel like maybe 20 years ago, if a pollster called you up, people felt you had to give an honest answer of what you were feeling. now it seems to me that people almost sometimes want to confuse pollsters. is that an accurate description of what's happening out there? >> i think you are pretty much on point. i did polling for president reagan as a junior analyst, we ran our polls at 6:07 p.m. to catch everybody at the dinner hour and they were more interested in being blunt and candid then than they are today. it's much more challenging for pollsters today and i handed to them on both sides of the aisle for trying to collect information. right now it's the fog of war. you really have to rely on qualitative material and qualitative observations to get a better sense of what's going on. >> jonathan: i get the sense that there's a lot of people out there thinking that this is going to break one way or
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another on tuesday. obviously kamala harris has people saying it will break her away, the trump people saying it will break his way. but you have seen something that you believe is qualitative that makes you think it will break towards trump, or are you talking about just in pennsylvania? >> no, i think nationwide. the seminal question, are you better off four years ago than today, is mainstay and i think people will answer that with a roar on tuesday. >> jonathan: we shall see. craig keshishian, we will have you back and see if you are correct. we will hold you to account. great to see you, thank you so much for coming on. they are calling it the podcast election as american distrust in traditional media grows, both kamala harris and donald trump have turned to a new format. so who is dominating this year's podcast politics? two gen z duke it out next. 8:33 on the west coast, here's a "fox news @ night" trip across
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america. the pockets ray 2024 edition. first a live look at flint, michigan where joe biden received if the 4% of the vote in 2020. turnout in the county this year has surpassed levels from the past three elections. considered a democratic stronghold, they've only gone red five times since 1932. next to georgia, some consider the small town of 42,000 people trump country. the former president taking the county by 35 points last election, expecting a similar outcome next week. finally to media in the state of pennsylvania, joe biden won delaware county by 19 points in 2020 but where harris' town hall took place is set to be a crucial indicator this year. "politico" saying this area of pennsylvania could be where the presidential election itself is
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try our new nearly invisible solution risk-free. call 1-800-234-7090 now. >> jonathan: both presidential candidates making unconventional stops along the campaign trail this cycle, turning more and more to podcasts to win over the electorate. let's bring in two gen z voters that they might be targeting. democrat billy duke with me in studio and republican christian hodges. christian, let me start with you. why do you feel that the presidential candidates have turned to so many different podcasts, different ways of reaching young voters? is it simply because none of you guys watch cable news anymore? thanks, by the way. >> thank you for bringing the onto night. it's good to be here with the representative from white dudes
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for harris on fox news. you don't get that often here. but if you look at the latest "new york times" youth poll, it showed that donald trump was leading young men 58-37. kamala young women 67-35. roughly. it's really all about the charlie kirk method. going to wear young people are, just like a baby. you can't get a baby to come to you, you have to go to them and tell them what to do." to college campuses and podcasts where they are watching. trump did that with joe rogan, 45 million views later it's live and call her daddy only got 750,000 views. so it's doing fantastic and this is where young people are so it's fantastic they are taking advantage of this and i think the only weight it can improve his by going on a young woman's podcast like alex clark and talk about -- or an audience were -- a magazine where the audience is politically split. >> jonathan: it is a different landscape and clearly there's
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bigger effort on the part of the candidates to reach out to the young voters. how successful do you think kamala harris has been, given that according to the latest fox news poll, christian makes compelling arguments, but the latest fox news poll says ages 18-29, harris leads by 54% -45%. to combat christians argument, it seems, according to our figures at least, that kamala harris is doing better. >> i think that christian brings up important points and i was really interested by the conversation you had with craig in the last segment. i think he's absolutely right. young people are not consuming information in the way that we did. i think to a certain extent this is empowering. we have younger people who are getting these elected representatives to come to their spaces. i think people who are gen z are starting to really realize the power of their vote and i think kamala harris is really leaning into that. you brought up the alex cooper
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interview, christian, and i think what people failed to understand about that is alex cooper has the number 5 podcast in the world and she has the number 1 podcast on spotify with women. what she was trying to do was to lean into an issue that's really important to young people, and that is reproductive health. that is something that kamala we know leads on, we know that young women make up a very strong portion of gen z, women in general make up 53% of the electorate, we know that women are going to show up, we know young women are going to show up and i'm hoping they show up in support of kamala harris. >> jonathan: i'm so old i have no idea who alex cooper is or how to download a podcast but christian, the 2020 voter turnout, ages 18-24, 51.4%, generally across the board all ages 66.8%. it strikes me that almost every election cycle we talk about the
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young vote is going to get out this time, it's going to make a difference and then you guys don't show up in significant numbers. is this time different? >> i think it is different. to billy's first about reproductive health, i have one question for billy and other young people, do we want a president who goes on the largest platform in the world and talks about their intimate sex life or do we want to candidate who goes on the largest platform in the world and talks about the existence in debating extraterrestrial life on other planets and giving an historical analysis of abraham lincoln? what do we want? to your point too jonathan i think young people are turning out. early vote numbers are looking good in these states for young people, especially in pennsylvania. young men are turning out on election day, on tuesday, to come out and support president trump and flip pennsylvania red. >> jonathan: let me jump in. i want to give a quick last word to billy. >> i just want to say that i think this is the exact type of rhetoric we are hearing from christian, which is the reason
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that nikki haley came on this network to talk about how trump and what she described as an overly masculine campaign is alienating women. i think women voters want to feel heard, i think gen z americans want to feel heard and i think kamala harris has done a great job with that. >> jonathan: all right billy and christian, great to hear from you both. important voices in this election and i truly hope that everybody in your generation gets out and votes on tuesday, if they haven't done so already. billy, christian, thank you for being here. meantime, congressional leaders are hoping the -- to pass a bill that will regulate artificial intelligence or ai, but putting guardrails around that emerging technology may prove quite challenging, to say the least. senior congressional correspondent, the best writer at fox news, chat program has that story tonight. take it away. >> -- chad pergram -- >> reporter: chuck schumer promised legislate of action on ai. >> it can't be days or weeks but nor should it be years.
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it will be in the general category of months. >> reporter: convening multiple ai forums, inviting tech titans to capitol hill to educate senators about the prospects of ai. >> important and urgent and in some ways unprecedented think we really -- >> we know there is extraordinary potential and possibility with this but also some peril. >> reporter: house speaker mike johnson assembled a bipartisan task force to develop ai legislation but he's leery of big government. >> we want to resist over regulating ai. the innovation aspect of ai is very important. >> reporter: virginia democrat working on a master's degree in ai at george mason university says the european union went too far when it tried to regulate ai. >> we want to have a light enough touch so america is the center place of innovation and imagination. >> reporter: house ai task force cochair says people should not fear ai. >> they will give you something out of a terminator movie or an army of evil robots taking over
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the world. that is not what we worry about. >> reporter: puck in congress act before ai does? >> under republican control, we've had trump keeping the lights on. >> reporter: a report is due from the ai task force later this year. recommendations for ai regulation include guarding against unauthorized money transactions, social surveillance, and misinformation. back to you. >> jonathan: chad, thank you. with just three days of campaigning left, less than 100 hours until the polls close across most of the country, hawaii we see you, we want to know what state you think will be the deciding factor come tuesday. and what do you think the final electoral college numbers will be? let us know x and instagram @foxnewsnight. we will read your responses in the nightcap. but first, this sunday, join trace gallagher and the entire team for a democracy 2024 special. they will be diving into the latest polls and making some
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(♪♪) behind every splenda product is a mission. helping millions of people reduce sugar from their diets. now try a sweetener grown by u.s. farmers. introducing zero-calorie splenda stevia. at splenda stevia farms, our plants are sweetened by sunshine. experience how great splenda stevia can be. grown on our farm, enjoyed at your table. (♪♪) ♪ ♪ >> jonathan: we are back with the nightcap crew, kevin corke, billy duke, brianna lyman and
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jenny korn. which state will be the one that puts the winning candidate over 270 on election night? what do you think the final electoral college numbers will be? cabin? >> nevada and trump 300 electoral votes. >> jonathan: interesting,. >> pennsylvania and 281 trump. >> jonathan: okay, jenny. >> doubling down on pennsylvania. i think trump gets 302, kamala 236. >> jonathan: bill lee, as the gen z who will decide this election, what say you? >> giving me a lot of credit. because i'm a loyal viewer, i also think it will be pennsylvania, it will be closed. i think kamala will get in the 270s or 80s. >> jonathan: i'm going to say nebraska, that one vote will make a difference. 268 with that make it? let's say 272-68. we as to what you think and here are the answers we got. michael said, colorado will be
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the election night surprise. i'm going to guess that michael is in colorado. bill says of course it will likely be one of the swing states, i'm going to say wisconsin, 320 electoral votes. vicki says michigan, the number will be 285. forensic girl says this maybe an outlier but new york, interesting. i'm not sure if this is -- the french word for song. says ohio, it will happen early and it's going to be big. i hope for the sake of all of us that happens early so we can get some sleep. i have only been able to vote in two elections since i became a citizen. it is such an honor to vote so whoever you are going to vote for, just to do it. you get out there and vote. thank you for watching america's late news, "fox news @ night".
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