tv Americas Newsroom FOX News November 4, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PST
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and daughter alisa. >> say hi to all the anchors on the couch and sean hannity. >> hi, everybody. >> thanks for stopping by. >> steve: janice, thank you for the election day weather forcast. tomorrow "fox & friends" is all across the country. we have breakfast with friends in a number of the swing states. >> brian: we will have reporters all over. how jealous is sean right now? >> he is here in new york city. such a change. tonight and tomorrow. last night you did your show in new york. >> i did. i'm going back to florida where i belong. >> steve: what if we don't get a winner? >> i'm going right back to florida where i belong. >> steve: join us tomorrow. it's election day. >> brian: see you on the radio. >> and we will make america
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great again. >> we are not going back. >> we are going to launch a new golden age of american success. >> it is my pledge to you that if you give me the chance to fight on your behalf as president, there is nothing in the world that will stand in my way. >> on issue after issue, kamala broke it, but i will fix it. >> bill: it is election eve in america. the finish is finally in sight, we think. and we are firing on all cylinders. hello, it's election monday in new york city, across america. i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom."
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the new york city marathon and we're in the final mile. sometimes the hardest one. both campaigns are leaving it on the field hitting the battlegrounds and knocking on doors all in a last-ditch effort to turn out the vote. >> you will see the candidates today primarily in the eastern time zone. pretty close. the vp kamala harris, former president trump hold rallies in pennsylvania with a former president begins his day in raleigh, north carolina, a lot of votes to get there in raleigh speaking at 10:00 a.m. eastern time and we'll bring it to you live as it gets underway. >> dana: harold ford junior and trey gowdy are here and reporters in all the battlegrounds. let's begin the bryan llenas in allentown. >> a tied race in pennsylvania. both campaigns in the final hours before election day are treating the commonwealth like the must-win it very likely is. it's 19 electoral votes could push the candidate over the edge tomorrow on election day.
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look, today former president trump will be campaigning in redding as well as in pittsburgh while vice president kamala harris will be spending her entire day here door knocking in scranton before coming here to allentown for a rally and holding two major concerts in pittsburgh and in philadelphia starring lady gaga and ricky martin. the harris campaign is feeling good about its ground game. they've knocked on 1.4 million doors in pennsylvania this weekend alone. the trump campaign is feeling good about their early mail-in ballot returns compared to 2020 and its targeting of low propensity voters but it comes down to voter turn out. no democrat has gone on to win the white house since 1948 without winning pennsylvania and that is why they are both so focused on the commonwealth, dana. >> dana: thank you. >> bill: the vice presidential
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hopefuls hitting the ground hard. we're in lacrosse, wisconsin with mike tobin along the minnesota border. good morning. >> good morning. as you mentioned, the presidential candidates have made the final stops in wisconsin. the vice presidential candidates will get badger soil on their shoes. what we saw over the weekend was a parade of surrogates trying to pump up the base in the final hours. >> here in wisconsin a single s- the world that our children and grandchildren will inherit. >> for the last four years we've had rising prices, low wages, open border and war breaking out in europe and the middle east. not what we had with donald trump and not what we have if wisconsin sends president back to the white house and eric hovde to the senate. >> electing eric hovde and reelecting president trump.
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>> hovde is the republican challenger to tammy baldwin the incumbent. latest poll shows him four points behind but closing the gap. he is within striking distance. harris and trump are neck-and-neck. ten electoral votes is the prize. >> bill: nice to see you in wisconsin. mike tobin live. >> dana: now let's go south. madison in cobb county, georgia. what's on your radar? >> the race is also neck-and-neck here in georgia. former president trump trying to eke out a win after losing the state by just 12,000 votes last time around. latest polling shows harris up by one point. that's well within the margin of error. interestingly, only one of the tickets will be in the peach state today. trump and vance. vance is set to hold an event later today in cobb county. president trump held a larger rally last night in macon trying to capitalize on votes unhappy
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with the economy. macon is one of the poorer counties in the state where a quarter of residents live in poverty. harris and walz do not have plans to visit georgia at all today. both of them visited atlanta over the weekend. the campaign will be holding a large rally tonight featuring singer usher in the evening. when it comes to georgia, we saw a record breaking early votes that ended friday. the state is expecting another record to be broken during the election tomorrow. >> dana: billboard. >> bill: we'll see a lot. >> what's their biggest concern right now? >> republicans do have an advantage in early vote numbers. when the early vote came in it will look different than 2020 and that is scary. >> bill: that's very interesting. we look back. you have a candidate on the ballot for the third time at the national level. what does the end vote look
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like? like 2016 when trump squeaked out a win and swept the blue wall and made it red? southeast red as well? or does that election look more like four years ago? here is biden squeaking out a win over donald trump. what did he do? he flipped that red wall and made it blue again. blue down here as well in the southeast. let's go to this right now. madison was talking about the early vote. this is what happened in 2020. you had just shy of 159 americans voting, okay? so far right now, okay? no pandemic or covid or nothing. at 77 million. just about half of the total that we expect in the end. among those now, there is a category of others. sometimes they register as independents but based on party, based on the states and early voting that report by party registration, democrats make up 41%, republicans make up 39.
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this is one of these things that they are talking about in the sound bite and we will bring in our guests. one of the things that republicans like to see right now in the early voting. we'll see how it shakes out once we add them all up. >> dana: harold ford junior and trey gowdy are here with us. no one better than to shake it out for us. your thoughts about that and maybe the concerns take messina has. >> we understand how election eve feel for candidates across the country. you said it well over there at the board. i think it's important for people to realize early voting what it means for a lot of places around the country and battleground states aware where we're most focused. as i think about the closing arguments, both have probably -- trey was saying in the greenroom probably like to do it a little differently. she has been more disciplined. in the last three or four days she has been tighter and more
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concise in her message. as you look at the map and where she will spend the night and spend the day and perhaps evening is pennsylvania. without pennsylvania democrats can't win. i don't think republicans can win either without it. the focus today over the next 24 hours. i have to tell you this is like christmas eve for me. i'm excited. >> harris's team claims she is no longer the underdog, trump team scoffs. what about harold's thoughts there. >> if you are donald trump your closing argument should be you had three years to do the next thing that comes out of your mouth is and you didn't do it. most people think our country is headed in the wrong direction. he explained what someone else said at madison square garden. she wants to be talking about turn the page. joe biden is not turning the page. he is the table of contents, the forward to the book. and yet he uses the word garbage and she has to explain it. what i find fascinating about
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pennsylvania is it's really a microcosm for the country. to urban centers with texas in the middle. who is going to win? it is no longer whatever the old political dynamic. it is urban versus rural. who can win the cities and rural area in between? >> dana: something that is -- i think the trump campaign would like to close on this as well. they are trying to define harris for the last 100 days since she became the candidate. pull up call for number three here. these are the issues that harris's team has declined to say whether she still supports and it has everything from immigration and the senate filibuster, the closing private for profit prisons calling it morally wrong. she wants to install climate envoy in every embassy around the world, etc. all of these things, harold.
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is that a reflection of the campaign being so truncated and short that she didn't have time or does she not want people to know where she stands? >> i don't know the answer to that. if i were running against her if i were donald trump i would have been talking about the entire time. i'm surprised he is not closing at the border. i would have had the cameras there saying to the country here is why i have to be president again to insure that we get some reasonableness and sanity here. for president trump some of the undisciplined way he has closed has invited or given people permission to think back about the things they didn't like about him eight years ago. do you want that in your living room and in your dining room and kitchen and bedroom, wherever you consume television or media for that matter? for her, i'm surprised she didn't have to give a long form interview and didn't have to do more. what she did with bret she did a good job. i would have done more if i were
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her. as we sit here today she is in a good position, he is in a good position. interesting he will spend as much time in georgia as the republicans are. you would think georgia, north carolina might be locked up. >> bill: the play he has been running the last four days is georgia, north carolina, pennsylvania. if you go to the board and add up electoral votes that would be enough to get him back in the oval office. a couple of things on that. if she wins, trey, the first candidate certainly in the modern era, perhaps ever, who has never held a formal press conference. i don't know how you feel about that. nikki haley went public. op-ed today. trump isn't perfect but the better choice. if you like his policies but put off by his tone or excesses consider the cost of the past four years. i don't know how you evaluate that. nikki haley has weighed in twice in the final seven days. >> i never got in trouble for something i didn't say. if you don't talk it is hard to get in trouble. the problem with kamala harris
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she has a voting record and to the left of bernie sanders. very few americans think death row inmates ought to be able to vote. like maybe none. i mean none. she did. so she either has to explain her change in position, which is always tough, or she has to just not talk. donald trump didn't participate in the primary debates. katie hobs won in arizona. it is on us as voters if we give people a free pass for not having to explain their positions but both sides have done it in the past. >> i hope it is a tradition that ends and the last time we allow the candidates to dictate to us when and how many debates they will have. they should have three always and should split it up about the issues. we'll have an opportunity to talk about that later. >> bill and dana should moderate one. >> bill: with a trump victory how different might it be from his first term? >> i think 2016 caught them all by surprise.
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i'm not sure they were planning on winning. finding and vetting good cabinet. the number of original cabinet members that survived. i know the folks running transition for him, they have been hard at work. i think you will see a more closely vetted candidates. i think where he will get frustrated is the house is a slow moving body. it starts all over again. he may have an agenda but the house takes a while to get cranked up. he will have to do it with executive action, which conservatives used to not like but now okay with it. >> dana: depends on the tunneling. >> i don't disagree with what trey said about president trump. harris will have similar challenges. she has a little incumbent inadvantage and able to pick her team. we have a long way before that. >> dana: likely have a republican senate to deal with. >> hopefully democratic house. if republican house and senate the country may like it to slow things down but may frustrate
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her if she is president. >> bill: get your sleep. >> dana: tune in to our special coverage on election night. bret and martha are the anchors. bill will be at the board at 6:00 p.m. eastern right after "the five." >> bill: north carolina. former president trump, first stop of the day in raleigh kicking off his final day of campaigning and his final stop has been a tradition for him and we'll explain it here. >> dana: we're watching the battle for the senate. the map favors republicans. democrats have one big advantage. >> bill: the republican fight to keep the house runs through two deep blue states, all right? why the party today likes its chances. all part of a big day today on "america's newsroom." we're getting started. the lineup is stacked and packed as we like to say on this election eve 2024. i try to put my arm around any vet that i can.
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>> dana: the balance of power in the senate rests on a handful of clovesly watched races. democrats have one critical advantage, money. just look at the ad spending. nearly a quarter million dollars spent in ohio alone. it is forcing republicans to rely on outside super pacs to level the playing field. which they've mostly been able to do. let's bring chair of the national congressional committee richard hudson. that's about the senate. you talk about the house. it matters to you what happens in the senate as well. what is the difference this cycle of small donors for republicans and democrats? how has that affected your efforts? >> the flood of money on the democrat side has been shocking. they've got some built-in
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advantages structurally. labor unions pouring money into their campaigns. more billionaires and more large dollar donors. their online presence has raised a lot of money. hard to tell where the money is coming from. we're asking questions about that. >> dana: a friend of yours, former speaker of the house kevin mccarthy had thoughts about republicans in this cycle. watch here. >> it should be easier for republicans to win seats this time than the others. but republicans have fell short on money. democrats have done a much better job on money. we had more seats and more competitive that we have to defend now. >> dana: i want to show republican spending in competitive house races in california $26 million and in new york $20 million. a lot of money. and how do you see things for the balance of power either way? it seems like it will be plus ten republican or plus ten
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democrats when the votes are all tallied. >> it will be very close, dana. one thing about the money republicans have spent our money a lot better. through the third quarter of this year we got outraised, the house campaign committee by about 70 million. the difference in cash on hand was only a million dollars. so i think we've done a better job with our money and run hybrid ads with our candidates that we get at a lower rate. three or four times cheaper. we're at parity in the final stretch because we've done a better job managing the money. we have 20 races that are tied within the margin of error. asme owe confident we'll hold the house. there is a whole lot of races that are really close. whatrd to tell what the final number will be. >> dana: will there be any that will surprise bill hemmer? >> bill is pretty good hard to surprise him. i think we'll pick up some seats in places like maine, oregon.
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a chance in california and new york to pick up a seat. so hopefully there will be good surprises. >> dana: president trump is spending some considerable time in north carolina. that's your home state. i know you pay a lot of attention to it and had the horrible hurricane helene after effects. how does it look for president trump in north carolina? is he spending time there because it is not locked down? >> president trump has been here almost every day it seems like in the last month. north carolina is going to go for donald trump for a third time. he will win the state. but it will be close like most states. our cities seem to be democrat and everything else seems to be republican. a lot of folks in western north carolina who are really suffering lost homes and lost everything. we've worked very hard to try to get them ballots and voting locations and in early voting western north carolina has been broken records. >> dana: i saw that yesterday.
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impressive. what are you doing on your birthday? >> so here at home in southern pines i will be heading to meet the speaker of the house to campaign for the candidate and head to virginia for another candidate. >> dana: i hope you get cake all along the way. congressman, thank you for joining us. >> thank you so much. >> dana: take care. >> what i'm worried about is how -- you are counting on some women who are independent republican women to come out and vote for harris. is that going to materialize? >> bill: good question. we'll watch it. the gender gap driving a wedge in the trail. is it enough to get either candidate over the top? and there is this. check it out. >> your vote will make the difference. >> that means you, gary, oh, i'm just one person.
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should the [bleep] up, gary. >> bill: where is the joy, dana? democrats still insulting republicans. so much for the promise of unity, huh? [crowd cheering] sore throat got your tongue? mucinex instasoothe sore throat medicated drops, uniquely fomulated for rapid relief that lasts and lasts. that's my babyyy! try our new sugar-free cough drops. instasoooooothe!
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>> dana: counting the votes in arizona tomorrow night could turn into a marathon. all thanks to a ballot in maricopa county that is unusually long. tell us more, alicia acuna is live in phoenix with more. >> i spoke with a maricopa county elections official who told me the county is already backed up as it processes the early mail-in ballot here. that's because of the county's long ballot. it is two pages, double-sided with an average of 79 different contests. it is twice as long as most
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years so taking the pages out of the envelopes is double the time. this could impact voters in two ways. it is likely going to delay fuller results we historically see in the hour after the polls close. we will still be able to report early results but only a percentage as they catch up. maricopa county says they're working 24/seven and added shifts. a long ballot can equal long lines on election day. we talked to a couple of people who said it took them about an hour. >> it took more time. i felt like i did have to spend more time going into depth on everything on the ballot. >> are you concerned about the lines on tuesday people waiting while other people are filling out the long ballot? >> i am concerned. ease of voting has always been a concern for me. the whole system needs to be reframed and really thought about to make voting easier for everybody. it is a struggle here. >> maricopa county is a must-win in the state. elections officials say it could
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take between ten and 13 days for the final tally. some people will remember we were here standing here in 2020 and 2022. it felt like for days on end. it has to do with the election laws here and the order in which the ballots are allowed to be counted. we are trying to establish a level set for expectations because again, arizona is going to arizona. we are all going to have to settle in, dana. >> dana: come on, arizona. figure it out. thanks. >> bill: we showed you a moment ago about the battleground states now democrats lead republicans in turning out the vote but it is only by two points. it gives republicans a lot of hope they can overcome this tomorrow with their in-person vote. another thing we're looking at now. gender gap is huge now. men favor trump by 18 points. women favor kamala harris by 16 according to the poll that nbc put out. here we go on the issues, all right? immigration trump, inflation
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trump, economy trump, unite the country harris, abortion harris by 20 points, 53-33. we'll gauge the gender gap tuesday night and wednesday morning. on women they turned out by 53% to men 44%. this is not battlegrounds. all the votes cast thus far at this point. typically in a national election women make up 52% of the vote nationwide. that's a tick higher. we'll see how it goes tomorrow. meantime new york's democratic governor not showing so much love. check it out. >> remind everybody if you are voting for these republicans in new york, you are voting for someone who supports donald trump and you are anti-woman, anti-abortion and basically you are anti-american. >> bill: how about that? clay travis, how do you feel about that? >> well, bill, i've already voted for donald trump about 17
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days ago early in tennessee. so i guess i'm anti-american. i guess i'm garbage, a nazi, no intelligence and i'm not very strong according to the closing argument of democrats out there. and the data you showed may welcome down do men show up and vote or not? the data is clear, men are overwhelmingly voting for donald trump. but women so far have been more likely to get to the polls and they are voting for kamala. if you are a man watching me now and want your voice to be heard you better go ahead and get your plan in place and get out and vote on tuesday. make sure your voice is heard. >> bill: a supporter of kamala harris. roll this. >> speak now, guys, or fir hold your piece. if he wins by 9,000 votes in one of the states and becomes president it is on you guys.
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glad your hands are so clean. >> bill: tennessee there you go. back to your room you go and repent. there is a ballot issue in california called prop 36. kamala harris is registered to vote in los angeles. if it passes it is a prosal to crack down more on crime and theft and asked about it on sunday. watch here. >> how did you vote on prop 36? >> so i have -- my ballot is on it's way to california and trust the system it will arrive there and i am not going to talk about the vote on that because honestly it's the sunday before the election and i don't intend to create an endorsement one way or another around it. i did vote. >> what is it? do you want to crack down on the people running through stores in san francisco over the weekend or not? if she wins, you know, how would she govern? right now that's a wide open
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space and a blank space i would say, clay. >> i would say that much of kamala harris's plans have been a wide open and blank space, bill. she has tried to have both sides of every issue. she was against fracking, now for it. she was against a border wall, now for it. she was against plastic straws, now she believes they should be able to come back. you can't take every side on every issue. i think it is incredibly cowardly you won't level with the american public how exactly you voted. i just told you guys how i voted. some people will say i'm a moron. some democrats will say i'm a nazi but i tell you what i believe. how can the person trying to be president of the united states not tell us what she actually believes? it is just a symptom of her overall failure, i think, as a candidate to elucidate clear plans and exactly what she believes. >> bill: we'll see what happens tomorrow. you will be on fox nation and we'll be tuned in. >> you do a great job, too.
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get your sleep. it will be a long night. >> bill: we'll come in rested. talk to you soon. >> dana reads sports. >> i don't know what i'm going to say here. here it is. but i guess maybe -- >> slips two tackles and picks up the first down slipping up in the air to the 30. >> dana: that's what i was waiting for. philadelphia eagles running back barkley doing the impossible last night. barkley jukeing and hurtling backwards. is that what it is called? he picked up the first down. saying after the game he let his body react to it. watch. >> i kind of just play ball, let go and let my body just react. that play was cool. >> dana: it was really cool.
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he rushed for 159 yards in the victory over the jacksonville jag ares. eagles with their sixth win of the season? jesse will be in a good move oh "the five." >> bill: he tried that before but never tried it to leap over another player on the field. >> dana: it is pretty great. >> bill: what do you have now? 22 minutes before the hour. watch. >> i'm not here to advocate for a candidate, i'm here to advocate for all of you. i'm asking you to think about the kind of world we want to build for ourselves, for our kids and for our grandkids. >> that was the message on sunday. seems like the center of the political universe. it might be. the candidates going all out in pennsylvania dueling rallies again today. is that the key to victory in the keystone state? good question. call it the litigation election. the battles over ballots unfolding in courtrooms
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nationwide and both sides are already lawyered up. >> it really goes back to covid in 2019. that's when widespread mail-in voting was introduced and state laws around it, some of them are unclear. 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,
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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. ok guys, instead of getting weathertech, i saved a few bucks and got some cheap, foreign made floor mats. but they really stink, so put these on. ♪ really, gary? mom, i'm thirsty. don't settle for cheap, stinky floor mats. at weathertech we make our floorliners and cargo liners here in america, out of pure non-toxic american materials. dad, next time get weathertech. they don't stink! i'm on it. find out everything we have at wt.com. dupixent helps people with asthma breathe better in as little as two weeks. when you can breathe better, what isn't better? this is better. this is better. that's better. dupixent is an add on treatment for specific types of moderate to severe asthma. it works with your asthma medicine
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issues, particularly immigration. that as you well know is of concern to some swing voters in georgia, pennsylvania, though they aren't border states. folks living there have been expressing unease, concern about her immigration policies throughout this entire cycle so far. listen to this. v.p. kamala harris herself yesterday former prosecutor declined to reveal how she filled out her own california ballot on a tough on crime issue. listen. >> so i have -- my ballot is on its way to california and trust the system it will arrive there. i won't talk about the vote on that because honestly it's the sunday before the election and i don't intend to create an endorsement one way or another around it. but i did vote. >> she also has yet to clarify if she stands by her promise to end immigration detention or provide a path to citizenship
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for dreamers in the united states. an axios headline calling her the no comment candidate. it clouds how she governs. president trump has yet to put forward his own details on his foundation plan to deport millions of illegal immigrants. his stance on the issue remains clear. take a listen. >> i am here by calling for the death penalty for any migrant that kills an american citizen or law enforcement officer. >> so neither president biden nor vice president harris are at the white house right now. the president will return from wilmington a couple of hours from now and hope to ask him a question when he lands on the south lawn. here is looking at the chances. harris for her part is continuing her blitz across pennsylvania today presumably coming back to d.c. tomorrow. >> who is minding the store there? thank. gillian turner north lawn. >> dana: the candidates will hold dueling rallies in pennsylvania today. 19 electoral votes will be a
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major prize and democrats are banking on big names to make their case. katy perry, lady gaga, oprah winfrey. some of them. john fetterman on how quickly he thinks the votes can be counted on election night. >> trump definitely has a connection with voters here in pennsylvania. that's why it will be close. there is a lot of tremendous amount of energy for harris as well, too. i would say, of course, again i think perhaps it is certainly not going to be like it was in 2020. it won't be two, three or four days coming out of philadelphia. >> dana: we have a great guest. what is your take how quickly pennsylvania will be able to count these ballots? >> i love coming on your podcast, it's a must listen to. i think it will take a while. i don't think john feeterman is correct on that if it is as close as he says.
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i don't know if it will be as close as they think in pennsylvania. based on the early in-person voting where we saw people waiting in bucks county until 8:15 p.m. brought lights, pizza, chairs. if that enthusiasm factor is there and you have bob casey leaning into trump which tells me his intern always show how popular trump is in pennsylvania it may not be that long of a night to count the votes. i don't know if it will be as close as everyone is saying. >> bill: interesting. inflation in pennsylvania is no good, going back to january 2021 up almost 19%. you are talking to people every day. how often do they talk about this? >> all the time, bill. you know what's crazy about it is that franklin marshall had a poll recently two out of five people in pennsylvania think inflation is a killer for them. 48% think the state is on the wrong track. economics still the number one issue. in the clip of kamala refusing to say how she voted on the
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crime initiative crime is a major problem in pennsylvania like philadelphia. you have working class voters latino voters who used to be absolute democrat voters, working class neighborhood are breaking away from the democrat party and voting republican now. a coalition the democrats need to hold on. if they can't hold onto that in philadelphia they have major problems. trump is strong in western pennsylvania. in the collar counties of philadelphia where republicans are making huge inroads with voter registration eclipsing some of these counties from blue to red in terms of registration numbers are positive signs for trump going into tomorrow. >> dana: how is the issue of fracking settled out in the state? determinative? >> yeah. well, based oh than that franklin marshall poll most pennsylvaniaians support fracking. if you are outside of pittsburgh
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you are worried about the future of this industry. you have seen the democrats go after fossil fuels. trump has used this issue out there listen saying i will expand this industry. liquid natural gas export facilities. i still can't believe tomorrow is election day and they still have a ban on liquid natural gas exports in the united states of america. talk about an issue that would have helped her with pennsylvania and they still have a ban on that today. i think whether you have 100,000 people that work in the industry or 350,000 people and towns that benefit from the industry it is a very clear choice for you. republicans have done a good job bringing in people like stefanik from new york who says new york has a moratorium on fracking. that's what you will get new vote for kamala harris. the fear on the issue. they've seen the war on coal devastate pennsylvania towns. that will drive a lot of voters
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tomorrow. >> bill: this is where inflation is higher and harris loses ground. what sticks out to me is nevada and arizona, where it also sticks out to me is georgia in the southeast based on the shading there and pennsylvania somewhat similar. here is what is written the biden economy is glorious if you are wealthy. a piece in the "wall street journal." americans who own stocks are feeling good about the economy as their mutual funds grow. others have seen it erode spending power. a lot of republicans think if you start doing that more out and ease the regulations you can bring down energy prices that will have a direct impact on the map i showed there. final thought on that, rich. >> final thought it's a fact that you are the master of maps, we all know that. that's undisputed. everyone understands the energy prices are directly tied to inflation. they don't believe it is price
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gouging. they just don't. they believe it is energy. inflation has not leveled off. unbelievable. families are struggling, working class families in philadelphia and the collar counties. >> dana: you have a couple cute kids to feed. i saw them baking and getting ready for fall. >> thanks, guys. >> dana: great to have you. he is great. >> bill: live look raleigh, north carolina, donald trump stop number one on the final day of election eve. he will end the day in grand rapids, michigan, which -- he has done it on all three cycles going back to 2016. that and this from michigan and kamala harris. >> as president i will do everything in my power to end the war in gaza. [cheers and applause] to bring home the hostages. and end the suffering in gaza.
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>> v.p. harris says she is flipping on her message on the mideast war. she says one thing in one battleground state and another somewhere else. we'll play the tape and let you decide. every day, veteran homeowners are calling newday to pay off credit card debt that's been piling up. many were shocked to learn they've been paying 22% on their credit card balances. and if payments were late, as much as 30%. that's over three times the interest rate on a newday 100 va home loan. pay off high rate credit cards and other debt with a lower rate newday home loan. save hundreds a month, thousands a year.
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>> bill: yes for america. who will run congress? great question. often overlooked. chad pergram has the look from capitol hill. hello, chad, good morning. >> good morning. how the house is won may hinge how the west is won. there are competitive house seats ranging from new mexico to alaska. they could decide which party controls the house. democrat is trying to hold her seat in alaska. a seat that republicans had
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until 2022. >> we do have very high inflation rates across the country. this is certainly most especially true in alaska when you compound that with shipping costs. >> now you will find the most swing district in the country is southern new mexico. a republican is trying to reclaim that seat. she barely lost to the democrat two years ago. >> i don't think anybody could have imagined the border being wide open and 18 million people coming into the country illegally. immigration reform. >> that new mexico seat has flipped between the parties every cycle since 2016. there are also competitive races in colorado and oregon. >> bill: we'll lean on you rick chad. nice to see you on capitol hill. he knows all. >> dana: the last day of the 2024 campaign and both candidates are giving it
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