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tv   America Reports  FOX News  November 4, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PST

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results. >> i can't wait to find out what swayed the votes. we'll do a show of hands throughout the night on different issues. how many of you voted today, how many of you voted previously which is interesting because a lot of people did vote early but not just early ballot mail and, in person early which is why we saw the lines and even in cobalt blue states like mine of new jersey. it will be interesting to see what drove them in so early. >> it well and our expert election coverage happens all night long. i will be here until eight in the evening and some would say early in the morning with our fax network. tomorrow it starts at 6:00 p.m. eastern time. thank you to everyone. it is a big night. election eve. and tomorrow we can only guarantee one thing and that is this. history will be made. but for now, "america reports."
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>> this is the end of a journey but a new one will be starting and that is the one we wanted to partake in which is basically to make america great again. >> are you confident you will win a question mark speak up my grandmother did not graduate from high school pier the grandmother who raised me and now here i am getting to hang out with you fine people on a monday morning and ask you to make me the next vice president of the united states. that is a great testament to our country. >> it is my only purpose in being here today. get out and vote. you know that. >> john: it is the race to the finish line. just 29 hours until the first set of polls close and both candidates are squeezing in the last stops in a state that could decide the election. former president trump and vice president harris zeroing in on pennsylvania for the last day of the campaign. i'm john roberts beard i guess
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it is good to end it in the place where democracy all started. >> sandra: it may be just the beginning. a hello and welcome everybody. i am sandra smith and this is "america reports." the two nominees have their eyes on the prize. pennsylvania's 19 electoral votes, a crucial state in the path to 270. trump and harris set to hold a combined five rallies in the state in the final hours before the election. >> john: we have an all-star lineup of guests with key analysis. >> sandra: our team of reporters are on the ground across the country in swing states that could decide who wins the white house. >> john: we kick everything off with the bryan llenas live in allentown, pennsylvania, where harris is going to campaign later on today. i can hear the billy joel music already. >> john, good afternoon peered vice president kamala harris, the entire goal election eve is to drive out the vote. here in pennsylvania. this is being treated as a must-win and like i said she will be spending her entire day here.
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she left michigan, she put a thumbs up in the air when she was asked how she was feeling. she is on her way here to pennsylvania. she is starting her day in scranton. that is where president biden is obviously from. she will be doorknocking there. she will then head over here to allentown for a rally and from allentown she will head to redding for an event with aoc and pennsylvania's governor josh shapiro and then she rounds it all up with two major concerts in pittsburgh and in philadelphia starring lady gaga, ricky martin, and oprah. yesterday she said her closing message at a rally in michigan and notably she did not mention former president trump by name for the first time at a rally since she became the democratic nominee. >> we have the momentum because our campaign is tapping into the ambitions, the aspirations, and the dreams of the american
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people. because we are optimistic and excited about what we can do together. >> half of her stops here in pennsylvania are in pennsylvania's latino 222 corridor. this is an area including allentown and redding. they are majority latino cities and she is trying to drive up voter turnout in these particular areas today and i have to say the democrats and the harris campaign continued to point to the comments made by the comic at the msg rally more than a week ago calling puerto rico and island of garbage. the mayor here of allentown again a majority latino and puerto rican population here it says those comments have led it directly to a more energized base here and he thinks it will make a difference. >> it's a big deal. particularly to puerto ricans. an apology would have gone a
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long way. their mind starts to wander to what the campaign thinks about their problems. el salvador, venezuela, dominican republic or mexico. it makes a person think twice about how they are viewed by the campaign. >> democrats desperately need a large voter turnout on election day, particularly when you look at the mail ballot advantage and pennsylvania has shrunk for more than 1 million in 2022 over 400,000. that means a 75% of the votes expected here in pennsylvania should be coming tomorrow on election day which is why she is hitting this commonwealth the entire day trying to drive out the vote in democratic cities like philadelphia, allentown, and pittsburgh. >> john: a lot of people were saying this entire race could come down to how many votes the democrats can turn out in philadelphia. we will see. bryan llenas for us.
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thank you. >> sandra: former president trump crisscrossing key battleground states on the eve of the election. he has on route to pennsylvania after rallying supporters and north carolina. aishah hasnie is alive and rally for us. what was his closing message to voters there? speak of the closing message is nothing but get out and vote. bring the red wave on on election day. that's what counts the most now in the next 24-48 hours for the former president is feeling good at, he is feeling strong on this election eve and he just told a big crowd here in north carolina that this is his race to lose and they have to close this thing. >> hopefully everything will work out well. we are leading peered all we have to do is close it out. we have to close it out. if we get our vote, there is nothing they can do. this is one of those deals.
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we are leading every swing state which is unheard of for the republican party. >> just like you said, trump is headed to pennsylvania next. a big battleground for him. two stops there and that is where the campaign is tracking some pretty low urban and a female early voter turnout compared to 2020. they are flagging that because they believe that will hurt vice president kamala harris. then it is off to michigan where he will close out the 2024 campaign in grand rapids peered the campaign tells us they are very pleased with the early vote leads in key states like arizona, nevada, and a right here in north carolina. they are expecting the massive wave of traditional voters and they say if those g.o.p. voters that only vote on election day, the ones that they are expecting to vote tomorrow, if they turn out and the numbers they are expecting, the former president has clinched this thing. back to you. >> sandra: thank you. >> john: i remember 2016 being
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in grand rapids at 1:00 in the morning. elise stefanik is the chairwoman of the house republican conference peered congresswoman, want to hit you with some data because we love data around here. let's talk about the gender gap. "new york times" siena poll finds harris leading trump among women by 12 points. he leads her among men by 14 points for a total gender gap of 26 points. here's what we know so far of the early and absentee voting. women are outpacing men 53.3% to 44.2%. trump says he is doing better among women than kamala harris is among men but there is a substantial gender gap. he has to get a lot of women out to the polls tomorrow for voting. how was he going to do? >> first of all the data points that president trump is doing better with women think kamala harris is doing with men and what's important is under president trump today's republican party has grown tremendously. look at the historic support among african american voters. look at the historic support
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among latino voters, working-class voters, union voters. these are voters that are part of democratic groups that previously -- demographic groups that previously the democratic party had her thought they were entitled to and i believe you will see working-class women turnout and support of president trump because of his effective policies. women under president trump's economy, more women in the workforce than ever before. we had the highest wage and salary increase ever in our nation's history under president trump and look what happened under kamala harris. the inflation crisis, the border crisis. those are top of mind for women and men voters across the country. >> sandra: thank you for coming on with us. a lot will be said about 48 hours from now from trump's closing arguments with voters and whether or not he was reaching out to those undecided voters in these final hours. i wonder if there was a better use of nikki haley and you can answer that question a moment peered i will put this up on screen it's from "the wall street journal." she said trump is not perfect but he's the better choice. this is from sunday's edition.
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i agree that america should be strong, far stronger than we are today. when he was president russia did not invade another country, iran was on its heels, china received pushback for the first time in decades in the southern border was more secure. the world is unsafe under biden-harris and we should not expect it to change under a harris administration. perhaps it was there a better use of her in these final days? your thoughts. >> nikki haley wrote the op-ed on why she is supporting president trump and the reality is you have women crisscrossing the country whether it is tulsi gabbard, previously a registered democrat, female member of congress, sarah huckabee sanders, myself, kristi noem peered you have senior women who have run his campaign like susie wiles, kellyanne conway did in 2016. senior-level people around president trump and what i think has been a disgrace in the final chapter as you had kamala harris as top ally mark cuban smear the women around president trump saying he does not surround himself with smart strong intelligent women. the reality is they are smart strong intelligent women across
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the country who are not only campaigning with president trump at the most senior levels but are voting for him. so we can talk about that after the election cycle but the reality is you have women crisscrossing this country working to get out the vote for president trump and the most important message i want to give to voters today is get out and vote. it is we the people that will determine the outcome of this election. we the people need to save america and vote trump tomorrow. >> john: we want to come to the touch screen because we want to take on the balance of power in the house. this is something that is very important to you. republicans projected to get 208 seeds and democrats 205 which means 22 as a toss-up. we want to go to the big map out sites. let's use this path to 270 to talk about the races that are very, very important. alaska. i know richard hudson who is the nrc chair says they think they can flip a seat here. he also thinks that in north carolina they can pick up four seats. main they could flip name.
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in california there's five close races. there is three in new york. the balance of power in the house could come down to new york and california which are typically thought of just as democrat strongholds but some important republican seats. how do you think the night will go? >> i think president trump is going to have tremendous coattails and house republicans are going to over perform just like we did in 2016 and 2020, the last two times president trump was on the ballot. you point out a really important trend. both california and new york are traditionally viewed as blue states but people are experiencing the double whammy of failed policies of kamala harris with state policies that are horrific by democrat governors. that's why you saw flip seats in new york. we flipped five seats in the midterms and in every single district in new york and every swing district across the country, kamala harris is underperforming joe biden's 2020 numbers and i will give you my example. if you look at one of the top targeted seats in new york, a district that joe biden won by 15 points, president trump is
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ahead by two points today. that in the 17-point swing so we are very optimistic that so goes the presidency will go the house and president trump is the most effective candidate ever in modern history of either party in turning out votes. i believe we will pick up seats this election cycle, alaska, maine, we will hold the new york seats. we pick up in north carolina as well as seats in michigan, texas, and elsewhere. >> john: there is a balance of power again. 218 needed for the majority and republicans tend away with 22 toss-up seats. we will see how it goes. it will be a nail-biter. congress woman, thank you. appreciate it. >> sandra: thank you congresswoman. both presidential candidates spending election eve in pennsylvania. what will they have to say to the undecided voters in the potential tipping point state? >> john: we are tracking different ways that candidates could reach the coveted electoral votes. guy benson here to help break down the potential paths to victory. >> you hear that republicans
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growth and registration has been much greater in key places than the democrats for you would think that was really a telltale sign and now what we are hearing is it's also high early vote turnout by republicans, much higher than before. and we've been together most of my life. not often do you have a childhood dog that, that lives this long so i think it's really unique and special that we've experienced so many, so many things in life together. knowing that he's getting good nutrition and that he has energy is a huge relief for me and my dad. “such a good little bean.” we're so grateful to have had this time with him, so let's keep it going and make every day special. next january, one of us will be president. if it's donald trump, he will wake up every day and stew over his enemies list. that will help no one. if i am president, i'll be focused on my to do list for you, the american people. i'll cut costs by cracking down
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on corporate price gouging. make housing more affordable. lower taxes for middle class families and protect social security. i will focus on getting things done. i'm kamala harris, and i approve this message. let's get to work. i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks! —uh. —here i'll take that. [cheering] ensure max protein, 30 grams protein, 1 gram sugar and a protein blend to feed muscles up to 7 hours. ♪ growing your business is easy
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>> sandra: both campaigns are looking to keep as many paths to 270 electoral votes open as possible peered 93 electoral votes across seven states appear to be in play right now. let's take a spin on the touchscreen. a host of fox radio's the guy benson show. super pumped for this because you will take us through a couple key scenarios as we have been pointing out right now when you look at the battlegrounds, you can make the case that the easiest pathway to victory for
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example for kamala harris would be to win the blue wall. wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania with nebraska that puts her at 270. if you were to look at a very easy pathway to victory for donald trump if he was to secure, obviously, pennsylvania would be huge, it would take north carolina and georgia after that to get him to 270. >> all these others would be irrelevant to what he would be at 270 with those three. but to your previous point if you look at wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania, we keep talking about the blue states, the blue wall. that is by far her easiest path. she just has to replicate democrat success almost every election. every presidential election of dating back decades with the big exception of 2016 by securing those three. >> sandra: let's get you on the map here. let's play round of a couple scenarios because this is what everyone will be a watching on election night. >> lets he she does all three of those. gets the blue wall. she is one short.
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she's president. if that happens. here's one thing i will point out. you might say one of those get broken up? what if trump picks off one of them or two of them. that is possible except in every election since 1988 to since i was three years old come of those three states are a package deal. they always fall the same way. that doesn't guarantee that the same thing will happen tomorrow, but it is something to keep in mind. let's pretend for the moment that trump does well in the sun belt. there are some polling that suggests he will peer let's say he hangs onto north carolina and wins back georgia. i think he is looking pretty solid in arizona. let's give him nevada to although that is less relevant. republicans seem to be over performing there but we will see. he is at 268. >> sandra: real quickly in this moment since we are hours away from election day, kamala harris the vice president as landing there in scranton, pennsylvania. to that point, talking about the
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pathways to victory, obviously pennsylvania, it could all come down to pennsylvania. >> i think it probably will. surprise she's going to pennsylvania per guess where trump is headed right now? pennsylvania. i think it is a cliche that people in this business keep talking about but there's a reason why there has been an unbelievable amount of resources and money and time poured into the keystone state and its because it kind of unlocks anything. it's really hard, not impossible, but if you turn pennsylvania red, let's make that read for now. trump is at 2:30 eight. he now has an array of possibilities open to him and if pennsylvania is actually shaded in red on election night, he is the odds-on favorite. because he can do and who close our 8265. that puts it over the top. >> sandra: to your point, let's play around if he does crack the blue wall.
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let's say he's able to take wisconsin. >> it's plausible based on very tight polling peered one thing i will say on the polling point is if at you look at all the swing states in the last two elections, 2016, 2020, the state where the polls have been the most wrong is wisconsin. trump has over performed not by a little and wisconsin compared to his polls, he has over performed a lot. >> sandra: let me show you how this would work. if he breaks the blue wall, cracks the blue wall and takes wisconsin, he could then go on to win north carolina, georgia, arizona. >> game over. even without pennsylvania. >> sandra: that is without pennsylvania or michigan or nevada. >> easier said than done peered there some indications that the rural counties are going bananas for trump in wisconsin. we have seen them come out in huge numbers in a lot of the states. nevada for sure, georgia as well. but one of these unknowable questions is with the early vote
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seeming to have improved for the republicans up to this point, what does that mean for tomorrow? what trump and the republicans absolutely need on tuesday is big, big turnout on election day itself. they need to win election day by a substantial margin to overcome some of the advantages the democrats still have an early voting. that's why the big message from trump in particular today at these rallies, especially in pennsylvania is if you have not voted already, you have to, have to, have to vote tomorrow. >> sandra: we heard that from trump earlier. he will be arriving shortly and kamala harris in scranton. it's like you do this all the time. thank you. now this. >> we need to have a huge turnout because as i told president trump when i first started this journey a couple years ago, the most important thing we could give president trump is a republican majority because the first vote to get his cabinet officials through the u.s. senate so he can govern effectively. >> john: that is montana
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senator steve daines with us yesterday on the republicans push to try to flip the senate. we'll talk to eric kuchta coming up on his mission to turn wisconsin's blue senate state red. >> sandra: another seat up for grabs in his own state. the latest from bozeman, montana, for us. >> hi sandra. one of the questions in this all-important senate race here in montana is how many voters will split their ticket? it could end up deciding which party controls the senate. all of that coming up after the break
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>> i never got a deal done if i did not talk to the other side and say how do we work together. when i built companies i said let's build a team for what we want to accomplish. we have a lot of great things we want to accomplish. we will get a majority and take the best ideas from everybody and all of us coming together getting something done. i think people want a big change. >> john: that's florida senator rick scott confident he
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will hold onto his seat and republicans will win the majority in the senate. the g.o.p. has a low edge doing large part to montana where tim sheehy leads in the latest poll. first to dan springer. he is live in bozeman, montana, and if you wondered why they call it big sky country, just look at that backdrop. >> that's right. big sky country and a big lead for president trump and that's important here because president trump has won twice here by blowouts. he is to do the same thing again on tuesday and if that happens democrat incumbent will need about 20% of trump voters to also vote for him and to achieve that, he has been really trying to paint himself as a centrist who has bumped his party on issues like energy peered he voted for the keystone pipeline and immigration. he opposes amnesty for illegals.
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he also is not publicly endorsing kamala harris but as his opponent tim sheehy points out, every chance he gets, he has voted with his party 94% of the time including the green new deal and against funding for the border fence. >> jon tester voted to impeach trump two times. not once, but twice. voted against all of the supreme court nominees and cabinet nominees and now in an election year he is touting how close he works with trump. as a joke and people are seeing to it and we will beat him on tuesday. >> montana does have a history of ticket splitting but as a country has gotten more polarized, so has the treasure state. during the pandemic a lot of people moved in and it is estimated two-thirds of the new voters are republican. it was a mixed bag when we asked voters about montana's independent streak and if it is still strong enough to carry him to another improbable victory in this pretty red state. >> flat top haircut going for
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him but that's about it. he is a straight party line democrat. and montana is not. >> montanans are very independent. they don't like to be tied to one party or another. >> the other wild card is there is an independent candidate on the senate ballot and the independent candidate in his races has gone between it 2% and 6% of the vote. they take more from republicans than democrats so each of his elections have been within the margin of error. if the independent does really well, it could bode well for him as well. >> john: dan springer for us and the beautiful backdrop of bozeman, montana. gorgeous they are but clearly it is also freezing cold. thank you so much. >> sandra: florida senate race being closely watched. republican incumbent rick scott not sparing any expense and pouring tens of millions of his own money into his reelection campaign against the democrat in this race. steve harrigan is live in naples, florida.
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what a contrasting rubber view are having right now. you had the chance to speak with a senator. what did he tell you? >> it's interesting peered he said in every major race he has one they told him he would lose beforehand. it's different this time in part because of early voting. 8 million floridians have already voted out of 13 million. that is 57% and rick scott said even an democratic stronghold areas like miami-dade and south florida republicans are outperforming democrats. here's the senator. >> republicans have a way i was paced so far. typically republicans, on election day and that's how we win but there is so much energy i've been traveling the state today. i can say there's so much energy. people want change. they know what is on the ballot. >> there is to ballot initiatives which could make things a little bit interesting come election night.
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one is in abortion ban peered florida has a strict one, just six weeks. there's an amendment to change that to roughly 24 weeks in the second would be recreational marijuana. legalizing it. those two initiatives need 60% to win on the ballot. back to you. >> sandra: steve harrigan on that. i mean if we didn't have enough to watch on this election day coming up, it will be an interesting one. >> john: i do love the contrast in geography and weather. dan springer in front of these majestic mountains covered in snow where clearly it is cold because it was snowing there and everyone is wearing hats. >> sandra: when we saw the beautiful shot, why don't we all live there and you said because it's cold. >> john: you see in florida it's nice and warm. speedily got shot. stunning. >> john: unbelievable. if you want a shot, go there. what republicans in georgia's are accusing some counties of doing with early voting ballots.
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kerri urbahn reacts coming up next. >> sandra: plus former president trump and vice president errors both hitting the ground pennsylvania today. harris walz cochair chris coons is coming up on what harris needs to do to lock down the must win state. >> he did a lot of great things for the economy and internationally i think he is well-liked. but internally, i think there is too much chaos. >> people want a safe country and i feel like trump will do it. i feel like trump will do it.
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>> sandra: the all important swing states are battleground for election lawsuits. in georgia republicans are fighting multiple efforts right now by democrat heavy counties to continue accepting ballots after the official early voting period ended and that is one example. kerri urbahn is our fox news legal editor who will get no sleep because things are changing by the hour here. first in georgia and we have a list of the counties that are named in this election lawsuit, deep blue counties where mail-in ballots were delivered over the weekend. where is us headed next? >> the rnc welds appeal the decision pair they are disappointed that the courts sided with the state here and hear what happened was there was an early voting deadline which
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was friday evening and these counties decided to extend hours through the weekends and allow people to drop off in person the mail off balance. they said you are changing roles of the 11th hour, what do you mean, early voting is over. the state said two things. number one, we have always allowed people to hand in the mail-in ballots they call it over-the-counter meeting in person and counties have discretion to keep their offices open longer if they would like to. the one little twist here was after this happened the rnc said we will appeal the decision because it is our 11th hour and it was not scheduled. the director of elections in fulton county was not going to allow any poll observers to come in and watch what was happening the past weekend and the secretary of state got involved and they quickly changed course but the rationale was these aren't polling places so we won't have observers but it's like wait a second, you will turn it into that and you need to have the observers in.
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they change scores a few hours later and the rnc did tell that is a win and those were observers from both sides. spoon hears with the georgia g.o.p. chair said. the georgia republican party in conjunction with the rnc have filed suit in court to hold them accountable. at minimum you want to sequester the ballots that were submitted without proper oversight of our election observers. in the past courts have not been particularly receptive to those and this is not early voting pair this is extended deadline to hand in mail-in ballots. you can ask for whatever you want. it doesn't mean the court will give it to you but they keep saying even if you don't agree with this weather it's a signature, date, an envelope, can you set them aside so we can take a look at them as the litigation continues. >> john: i bet the judge says no. >> it hasn't gone well that remedy request. >> sandra: the lawsuit that is fighting elon musk's $1 million giveaway scared where does that
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stand? the philadelphia d.a. is suing. >> they had a hearing this morning reading the notes for our producers he was contentious peered at larry krasner who i will get you in a minute is insisting that elon musk is running a lottery, lotteries are governed by state law therefore pennsylvania law should be involved. elon musk is saying no we are not, we are asking people to as long as you are registered to vote you can sign this petition and they are making an argument that this person becomes effectively a contractor because they become a spokesperson for this whole petition. interesting legal argument but the irony, big irony here is it is larry krasner who is suing lee en masse. larry krasner who does not care about crime in philadelphia was one of the self-described prosecutors lower limit shoplifting. if you shoplift under $500 it's not a crime. he's going after elon musk's constitutional petitions.
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>> john: he doesn't care about a crime until it involves the richest man in the world giving away a million dollars. >> for donald trump. >> john: it's not a crime. >> and for donald trump. >> john: voter registration, you need to be a registered voter. it could mean people register so they can play and if it's coming from elon musk, the betting is that they will be registered republican. in philadelphia area which could decide the entire election. >> and the petition is a pledge to support the first and second amendments and we know who typically are big second amendment fans. >> j >> sandra: so what do you think will bubble up in the next hours before we hit election day? >> the situation in arizona is interesting. court ordered secretary of state there to release 218,000 voters who may have registered who are not citizens. there was a computer glitch so we don't know if they are citizens or not. the secretary of state has insisted they don't have the whole list and they are blaming other agencies so what will happen is the list will go to
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various counties in arizona and they will decide, they will do their own matching if they want to it will go to the arizona legislature and they will disease see all these people on the list, were they in fact citizens or not which is required. >> john: the crux and that case is the number of people who registered without proof of citizenship doubled between 2020 and 2024. rather than having 109,000 people, you have 218,000 people who may or may not be citizens. >> and that's why it is something to watch. i don't know how much they can get done between now and tomorrow but certainly an interesting situation to keep an eye on. >> sandra: kerri urbahn, thank you very much. you will have a busy few hours. spew and get some sleep tonight. it might be the last time. as a fight to the finish in battleground states. james freeman of "the wall street journal" will be at the touch screen for a look at what he is keeping a close eye on. >> sandra: we have heard a lot of talk on the campaign trail from president harris but has a
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clarified her positions on these key policy issues? what it could have on the undecided. that is next.
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>> john: it has been long campaign and it's not over yet and vice president harris has had plenty of chances to reveal her positions on a wide range of key policy issues as we see her coming down off the plane there and scranton, pennsylvania. it is now one day before election day and voters are still in the dark. steve hilton is a fox news contributor. that point was driven home again when harris was asked about the all-important prop 36 there in california that is on the ballot. here's what she set about it. listen to this back-and-forth. >> how did you vote on prop 36? >> my ballot is on its way to california and i'm going to trust the system that it will arrive there and i am not going to talk about the vote on that
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because it is the sunday before the election and i don't intend to create an endorsement one way or another. >> john: she's been asked about prop 36 and she ducked and ducked there again but knowing how she would vote on prop 36 and what she thinks about it would give voters on the federal level real insight into what she really thinks about crime and whether or not to enforce the crimes that are on the books. >> exactly. i think this is completely disqualifying. remember, this record of hers as a california attorney general prior to the san francisco d.a., it's the main thing that she puts forward in persuading people that she would be good in the oval office. for her to just completely disown it and say i'm not having anything to say about that particularly when this proposition 36 is cleaning up a lot of the mess that was made by prop 47 that was passed when she was state ag and also, it's a really important point.
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this adds a new dimension which is dealing with fentanyl which is a rising sense and peered for her to not say that she is in favor of a proposition which is supported by 70 plus percent of californians which brings in tough penalties for fentanyl dealing and at the same time she is bragging about how she is prosecuting international gangs and drug trafficking, it's a disgrace but it tells you that she is terrified of revealing any position that is in any way controversial. >> john: for folks at home who may not be familiar, the fentanyl provision is a drug provision. drug dealers who keep dealing after they have been popped once could be charged with murder if they keep dealing after that and we know how many people have died in this country from fentanyl poisoning. here's what clay travis at about it earlier today on fox. listen here. speak out trying to have both sides of every issue appeared she was against fracking and now she's four appeared against a border wall and now she's for it. she was against a plastic straws, now she believes they
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should be able to come back. you can't take every site on every issue and i think it is incredibly cowardly that you won't level with the american public how you voted. how is the person was trying to be president of the united states not tell us what she actually believes? >> john: she has bobbed and weaved and flip-flopped so much that voters will be hard-pressed to know exactly where she stands on issues. >> exactly. and you can see the cynical strategy at play here. treat it as if she has whatever analogy you want to use. blank sheet of papal, don't scare anyone annually elected and that she could do whatever she wants afterwards peered but there's a risk to that because being an empty vessel is a risk. i have seen it up close when you are in the government. a lot of what you do is responding to unpredictable future events. if she is not telling us how she would react in those kinds of situations, that is a very scary prospect for voters.
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this whole episode where we saw axios reporting on issue after a few on reparations and banning gas cars and ending detention, on and on, it's actually showing that this is a person you cannot trust. this is a fake campaign and the whole process is a fraud on the electorate. >> john: because you speak with a british accent which makes sounds inherently smarter and because you used to be a chief advisor for david cameron, i want to ask you about foreign policy and kamala harris because "the new york times" had a fascinating column in which they warned about the weakness of liberal internationalism and here's what he said. one might prefer well-meaning weakness to the trump alternative of an amoral president seeking retrenchment followed by foreign policy using his mercurial persona to keep our rivals off balance. but it's possible that the trumpian for mail yielded better results for a reason and it's
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not all clear that harris is ready for the test that biden's failing foreign policy will have on her. based on your previous relationships, how are people in the u.k. and elsewhere in europe thinking about a harris administration versus a trump administration when it comes to the ideas of no war, strong foreign policy, strong united states? >> you know what is so interesting is when you look at the europeans in particular, they are always going to buy the superficial in the marketing aspect of all of this and they say we don't like trump because he is not to our taste and they find him slightly vulgar. exactly the same that george w. bush and they fall for people like obama and now kamala harris and biden with his ridiculous remark that the u.s. is back. but the results are completely the opposite and on the trump policies and the trump personality you saw a more
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stable world. you saw our enemies back on their heels and use all the world unleashed into chaos because of these policies. the real question is will they focus on the substance, on the policy rather than the superficial appearances. at this point i don't think so. you go to europe and they are all convinced that kamala harris will win and they believe it's a good thing. let's hope that the american voters are not as fooled and actually focus on the real results of the policies and the substance and there's only one direction that points. >> john: a lot of european leaders did not like that they had to dig deep into the pockets and pony up for nato but the one person who did appreciate that was a secretary general. good to catch up with you. we will see what happens tomorrow. thank you so much. >> sandra: we are looking live at vice president kamala harris who is speaking to voters rallying on the ground there one day out from the election. scranton, pennsylvania, appeared she is on the stage there and we are about to see dueling rallies
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with form president trump also on the ground in pennsylvania in reading, pennsylvania. let's take some of harris now. >> vice president harris: and i would require people to talk to me as they walked in and out of the grocery store. and i will tell you, that is how i left a campaign. i don't do it as much anymore, obviously, but what you all are signing up to do today and what you have been doing, let's enjoy it. i know you do. i can feel the mood in here because it is the best of who we are as a democracy. right? [applause] and that's what our campaign has been about. we are a people driven campaign and we love the people and we see in the face of a stranger or a neighbor. right? and that is the spirit of what we are doing. the whole era of this other guy, what it has done with all the talk that is about trying to have his point fingers at each
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other and divide each other, it makes people feel alone. it makes them feel like there is nobody standing with them. the way i have always been thinking about our campaign, and these next 24 hours, is as we are getting out the vote, as we are canvassing, let's be intentional about building community. about building community, about building coalitions, about reminding people that we all have so much more in common than what separates us. there is power in that. there is power in that. [cheers and applause] and there's lasting power in that. it's about the when and it is about more. it's about more. it's about strengthening our country and reminding each other we are all in this together. we rise and fall together. and that is the strength of who we are at everyone here. that is the strength of bob casey. we need to get him back in the united states senate. that is the strength of mayor,
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nettie and all that she has been doing. it's about leadership. it's the leadership that we want. they are leaders, we are leaders who understand that the measure of our strength is not based on who we beat down, it's based on who we lift up. right? [cheers and applause] that's what we will do peered over these next 24 hours, i know everyone is here including our youngest leaders. i see you over there. i know you aren't ready to vote because he look like you are about eight but you tell the adults in your life why it's important that they vote. okay? but over these next 24 hours, let's enjoy this moment to knock on a neighbor's door and even if we have not met them, know that we have a lot that we care about in common and we are optimistic about the future of a country, that we love our country, and
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that's what this fight is about and about the promise of america and the promise of america being represented by everybody who is here. so i think you all for the time that you have taken out of your busy lives. there's a number of things that each one of you could be doing right now but you are here and we are all here together under this one roof. as a community of people who care and who are dedicated to the hard work that it requires. when you love something, you fight for it. and that's what we're doing. [cheers and applause] and that's what we're doing could we love our country and we are fighting for the best of who we are. and i love you. [cheers and applause] thank you. i love you. thank you. [crowd chanting]
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let's vote! let's get out the vote! let's get out the vote! let's get out the vote! let's win! all right. let's get to work. 24 hours to go and i am so grateful for everyone here. i will end with this point. i have the privilege, i have the blessing of being able to travel around our country and i'm telling you guys, we are good. we are good. we are good. we really are. i go into rooms with people who, again, seemingly have nothing in common and have everything in common. rooms of people of all kinds of different backgrounds peered of ages. coming together in the

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