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tv   America Reports  FOX News  November 4, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PST

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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 sense of
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the collective. we are good. and so we will keep doing this work with the optimism that it requires to be strong. everyone here knows in the context of your family, and your life, when you believe something is possible, you put in the hard work and you know it's go to work. hard work is good works, its joyful work, and we get the job done. let's get this done. thank you all. [cheers and applause] >> sandra: kamala harris rallying voters on the ground and scranton, pennsylvania, on most wednesday for both candidates peered we will see former president trump there shortly. >> john: election even america and all eyes on the state of pennsylvania peered vice president kamala harris as you saw on the ground right now. that is joan biden's hometown of scranton. you are member what he said there the other day. former president trump set to speak soon in reading. the keystone state to determine who wins the white house. >> sandra: welcome back to "america reports." we are kicking off our two here.
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i'm sandra smith. >> john: and i'm john roberts. >> sandra: good to be with you. we will be hours away from the first polls closing peered can you believe? 7:00 p.m. eastern time tomorrow but nearly 75 million americans have already cast their ballots so the final campaign stops in crucial swing states are all to turn out the end person vote tomorrow. >> john: fox team coverage starts now in the battleground keystone state. jacqui heinrich in philadelphia covering the harris campaign. she's doing a blitz there of pennsylvania today. four stops in total. >> that's right. and i was just watching those remarks john and it was really incredible to me that she referred to trump twice as the other guy. that is a serious shift away from how she launched the final leg of her campaign with a fiery speech at the ellipse on tuesday. she attacked trump by name two dozen times. we noticed the shift began yesterday where she did not mention trump by name all day
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long and a few moments ago senior campaign official told me that is the strategy. they want to close out fully positive. it will be interesting to see how long she can keep that up because as pete buttigieg noted in an interview, the campaign sometimes wants to respond to some of the things that trump does but that takes them off of message about what the harris campaign can do for voters so it is a delicate dance for them and they have evidently calculated that the focus right now needs to be on what harris could do if elected as president to drive the voter turnout. we also noticed in lansing yesterday a bit of a shift on how she is messaging around the war in gaza. it's different than how she is messaging about it here in pennsylvania. there are competing ads peered the pennsylvania ads play up israel's right to defend itself saying she will always protect and support that right and the ads in michigan talk about the plight of palestinians and speaking to a group yesterday in
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lansing, michigan, where there were arab americans the crowd, she softened the language about israel's right to defend itself saying we want to end the war and we want to make sure israel is secure. different language there. as she makes her way across the battleground states, we are witnessing subtle shifts in her tone, broadly though trying to stay positive, trying to drive turnout. you saw hearse and get out the vote, get out the vote, get out the vote. in philadelphia, they will want to get out the black vote are more than groups really because there is concern theirs lagging support among black voters that could tilt the state in a way that they don't want to. we had a campaign call and officials were not giving out any hard data on the early voter turnout especially on things that they are measuring like a black turnout and that could be an early indication of some concern but they have a day left so we will see them try to push it right here at the end.
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>> john: i know obama's campaign manager was saying earlier on another program or maybe it was yesterday that he is very concerned about the early vote and the way it is coming out. we will see what happens. jacqui heinrich for us in philadelphia. >> sandra: now to alice hopped. she is in reading p.a. for us where the donald trump will be shortly. >> good to be with you. after rallying here in reading, the former president will head to pittsburgh, pennsylvania. heading into the day he has been to the state 15 times and part of the trump campaign strategy that we have seen play out nationwide has been particularly true in pennsylvania, trying to reach out to demographics that have historically sided with democrats. latino, hispanic, black voters as jackie was talking about and union members. steelworkers peered steelworkers international endorsed vice president harris but the rank-and-file chapters have broken away from that.
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>> my family is all democrats and up until this year, that's how i voted. democrat. i didn't want to make that mistake again this year. because i feel that the party has left us. it's time for a change. >> pennsylvania has been the most visited state for the two campaigns. yesterday trump held a rally in lancaster county and they criticize the issues that several counties had had with a very cumbersome mall and ballot submission process that is unique to pennsylvania. listen. >> look what is going on in your state. talking about extending hours. who heard of this stuff? we should have one day voting and paper ballots. >> he did encourage his supporters to go out and vote anyway possible and that includes early voting. trump supporter's were credited for a lot of long lines that we
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have been seeing for the on-demand mail and ballot process that takes place in pennsylvania, something that will lengthen the count is the fact that election law does not allow for any ballots to be opened until 7:00 a.m. tomorrow. >> sandra: alex in reading for a spin we should see the former president there shortly. >> john: vice president hopefuls j.d. vance and tim walz are pitching voters in wisconsin. the race is a dead heat in the badger state. mike tobin live in la crosse, wisconsin, with more. what is the message that the candidates are putting out in the final hour. >> in the final hours the message is boiling down to get out to vote. the presidential candidates have made their last stops in wisconsin. it was a vice presidential candidates here. both of them showing up and la crosse, wisconsin, today. persuading of voters is largely done. the messaging today was don't let anyone sit this out. >> this election, quite literally could be won through the state of wisconsin and it could be one right here through
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the cross for the work that we are doing. that's how close that this could be. >> we will say to kamala harris tomorrow you are fired. we want to go back to common sense leadership. we want to go back to donald trump. >> and up poll today cementing the idea that trump and harris are neck and neck. you see 49-49, no room for undecided voters peered wisconsin voters are taking the role in the election very seriously in person early voting is up about 300,000 ballots froe same time last election. >> john: mike tobin and picturesque la crosse, wisconsin. >> sandra: lovely looking town. the race for the senate seat in wisconsin is tightening and the race could play a critical role in determining the balance of power in the upper chamber. let's bring in wisconsin candidate aircraft. we did invite his challenger tammy baldwin on as well. she is welcome to join. thank you very much sir for joining us today.
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how are you peeling stomach feeling just hours away from the big day? >> i feel great and thank you for having me. the momentum is clearly on our side and i have to chuckle about senator baldwin not responding because she does not do almost any interviews. i've been running from morning to night for nine months. i have seven speeches today peered i can't tell you how many media hits. i feel really good about where things stand in our state. it will be a jump all race, don't get me wrong. everyone has to get out and vote but you can clearly see the momentum is on our side. >> sandra: right now when it comes to your race, we will move onto the presidential and a second but when it comes to the wisconsin senate race, this is how close it is and right now your opponent does have the edge by 1.4 points. that's a real clear politics average. what is your closing message to voters in this very close race? >> that is in average and the
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latest polls, one last night showed me up by almost a percent. the main message is it is time for change peered senator baldwin has been in washington for 26 years, been in politics for 38 years. she has voted for all of this crazy stuff of guys playing in girls sports and going into girl's locker rooms and bathrooms and voted for every one of the spending bills that has ignited inflation. voted to give illegal immigrants cash payments when we have veterans living on the streets. she's just very hard core left. never really gets anything done. i come from the real world, the private sector. i understand the problems and how to go about fixing them. the message as it is time for change. >> sandra: she is not here and she is welcome to join us at any point but she did do some media because she went on with andrea mitchell on andrea mitchell reports and said this about you. listen. speak on my opponent would repeal the affordable care act.
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i helped write the affordable care act. my opponent celebrated when the dobbs decision came down overturning roe vs. wade. i am the champion of the women's health protection act which would make rho the law of the land. you cannot have a sharper contrast but my opponent is just attack, attack, attack rather than trying to defend his positions and his plans. >> sandra: to that you say what? >> i just have to laugh. every single add she has ran as a light. she says i want a national abortion ban. i don't. she's trying to say i want to take social security and she's the one bankrupting social security. she has tried to tell people i'm from california. i'm a fourth-generation wisconsinite. i couldn't be running from the senate if i was from california and do i sound like i'm from california? i do think we need to restructure the affordable care act. it would lower the cost and
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access to care and you would be able to keep your family doctor. what happened? results matter. the cost of health care is continuing to rise dramatically even at a faster pace. access to care has continued to cupful and it's becoming very severe and the family doctors all but disappeared. she is wrong on almost everything. she never wants to talk about her votes on inflation that helped ignite inflation or any of these things. >> sandra: wisconsin senate candidate eric coveney. thank you for coming on today. tammy baldwin is welcome to join us. and john up to you. >> john: he doesn't sound anything like it from cali california. >> sandra: no midwest accent whatsoever. this is the real clear politics average in that state. showing just how close this is. we know what it looks like. that is real clear politics average heading into tomorrow
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and boy, oh, boy, does wisconsin matter. >> john: it does. it's fascinating that in pennsylvania it seems to all be coming down to how much support harris can get out in philadelphia and that is by and large minority support. the black vote is down from 2020, hispanics are increasingly going toward president trump. this will be a squeaker of an election. >> sandra: i can't wait to look at the fox news voter analysis data. it will tell the story as we work our way through election night tomorrow night. >> john: there is a new label out there for kamala harris, axios calling her the no, candidate as she remains vague on policy. we will talk to the cochair of her campaign. >> sandra: nikki haley with a plea to voters this election eve. we heard dominic have our all-star panel joining us coming up
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>> president trump is doing better with women then kamala harris is doing with men and what's really important is under president trump today's republican party has grown tremendously for 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. >> john: that was new york republican congressman elise stefanik and our last hour as the residential candidates make their final push. so are their support is former republican candidate nikki haley making one final pitch to her supporters with an op-ed in "the wall street journal" titled trump isn't perfect but he's a the better choice. will it move the needle at all? let's bring in matt gorman
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talking to fox news could you better and former state department spokesperson under president obama. here's what the nikki haley op-ed said in part. if you like his policies but are put off by his tone, consider the cost of the past four years. i don't agree with mr. trump 100% of the time but i do agree with him most of the time and i disagree with ms. harris nearly all time. this makes this an easy call. that's a very reagan like statement when he said if you agree with someone 80% of the time, they are your ally, not your 20% trader. will that potentially move the needle among women who have not voted yet that are waiting until tomorrow trying to make the decision between voting for trump or voting for harris? >> it interesting. the trump campaign knows they have a serious problem because women have been fleeing from donald trump to kamala harris including independent women and including many republican women. all these latest polls in the blue wall states, michigan, wisconsin, even the outlier iowa
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poll shows that older white women were really overwhelmingly going toward harris because -- and that is a group that delivered the presidency to donald trump in 2016 because of the repeal of roe vs. wade, his language on the campaign trail. you can write all the op-ed you want if you are nikki haley but donald trump has not asked her to campaign for him, has not had her join him at rallies proved he has done nothing to bring women back into the fold and when his closing message is i will protect you if you want me to or not, the trump campaign has a serious problem and my prediction is women are going to put kamala harris over the top here because they are mad and we are seeing it and every demographic and in every poll. >> john: but according to rostov and who had a really interesting op-ed today there is a crisis of confidence with kamala harris pretty he rode notwithstanding the great rally around her after biden's bow
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outcome of the democratic nominee for president is still the dan quayle-like figure that everyone saw a little while ago. still vague on policy and painful and extended interviews. still carrying a record as a vice president that inspires little confidence in her abilities. late deciders are waiting until tomorrow to cast the ballot and they look at kamala harris and many people say you see an empty vessel. you see someone who has not articulated policies. what are they to hang their hat on when they pulled the lever? >> you are right. axios wrote a long piece calling her the no, candidate. a list of issues which she has not weighed in. she took a one side in 2019 and now she refuses to say where she stands right now but this will be in many ways a gender gap election. elise stefanik as you said before was exactly right on this. the nbc news poll that came out yesterday shows a trump doing with men then harris with women and whatever side get some more of those supporters is going to
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win the election and we need to outperform with men then we lose women by and this will be one by us. >> john: here is a potential point of concern for democrats. even jim messina said this is scary. early voting in pennsylvania way down for democrats, down a little bit for the g.o.p. in 2024 democrat early vote returned 971,615 and republican 57125. compare that to 2020. 1,702,000 for democrats, ex 234044 republicans per democrats this year are down 42%. republicans are down 8%. jim messina called it scary. what do you call it? >> i think this whole election season has been scary but it's almost over, think on us. my friends i have talked to working on the campaign who are looking at these numbers every day they tell me you cannot compare things to 2020 especially with early voting. it was such a different election and there is a question about
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whether this republican early vote surge we are seeing is just cannibalizing from election day because now the rnc has been pushing republicans to get out early and vote. i feel very confident about our chances in pennsylvania in large part because we know that groups like women vote more than men and we have seen that there has been all of this concern about black men and how they were voting and in the latest polls, they are holding steady for democrats. i'm worried about these numbers, everyone has to get out and vote tomorrow, but democrats knocked on 2,000 doors a minute and pennsylvania this weekend. that is a get out the vote operation that elon musk cannot come close to matching. >> john: in some states there has been a g.o.p. surge but in pennsylvania it's actually declined in the number of republicans who voted early. but here's the problem for democrats. they are down in the early vote. they typically don't make that up on election day. republicans typically rule the day on election day so if you have that decline in early voting for democrats plus the
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republicans inherent advantage or historic advantage on election day, what does that say about pennsylvania? >> they are hard and about what they are seeing in pennsylvania right now and you mentioned a couple minutes ago talking with sandra. one of the first things i'm looking for is a philly turn out along with wayne county turnout out in michigan. those will be telling me what is the african american turnout at with these levels? at a certain level it can be good for harris but right now if you're looking at where things are in georgia, north carolina, african american vote is way down. if that continues the trend in pennsylvania and michigan that could be a very good sign as we go into the night for president trump. that is one of those things we will be watching for very, very closely. >> john: again, all we can do is sit back and wait and see what happens. i think you are one of those democrats who is not obviously optimistic that she will pull it out at the end. we will find out one of these days. matt and marie, thank you so much. appreciate it. >> sandra: good stuff.
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both presidential candidates spending election even pennsylvania. what key counties are they targeting? >> john: we will take a spin on the touchscreen with james freeman coming up next.
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>> sandra: a live look atlanta half past the hour now. vice presidential nominee j.d. vance is headed for a rally as a trump targets the blue wall. there are 16 electoral votes as we know up for grabs in georgia. a lot of focus on the metro atlanta area. that will be a key. madison alworth is live there in cobb county for us. hello madison, what are you seeing and hearing there? >> hey sandor. ahead of this event, we are expecting him to talk to the voters that have not yet voted
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in the election but it really is a minority because here in georgia, over two-thirds of the voters that are expected to vote have already cast their ballot. we saw a record high early voting in the state. 4 million people submitted their ballot by this friday. but every vote counts here in georgia. this is a state that was decided by just 12,000 votes in 2020. as part of the reason why vice presidential nominee j.d. vance will be hosting that rally here in cobb county in the next few hours. republicans are delivering the final message to these essential swing state voters after trump also held an event in georgia last night. meanwhile a harris walz do not have plans to visit but they visited over the weekend they will hold a rally tonight with surrogates and it will feature usher. georgia was the last state to report 16 days after the election. so we will be all eyes on georgia hoping for a quick results. >> sandra: madison. thank you very much.
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>> john: north to michigan where former president trump will make his closing pitch to voters in the last rally of his campaign. he will be out there in grand rapids. grady trimble is live in kent county. i was where you were -- i was where you are eight years ago. closing moments of the campaign. it will be a late one. what can we expect he will be saying tonight? >> we expect the former president will make one late night last minute push to get out the vote here in michigan and you can see behind me despite this crummy weather and despite the fact that this event probably will not get underway for another eight plus hours, there's a line of supporters already here waiting to go in the arena to see former president trump give the last a speech of this campaign and possibly his last speech as a presidential candidate ever. this is a significant and in many ways symbolic location to close out this campaign because as you noted, john, this is where the former president held
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his final rallies about the 2016 and 2020 campaigns. >> he won eight years ago and i was here. i missed four years ago and he lost so i'm here this time. i'm hoping it's a repeat. >> you are sounding superstitious to then. >> we all are a little bit. >> the trump campaign is happy with early voting so far here in michigan. they say turnout has been high in the rural areas. it's been a little muted as they say in the urban areas and they claim that bodes well for the former president who will be here at around 10:30 or maybe a little bit later tonight. >> john: like that fella you talk to, i was there eight years ago and not their four ago when he lost. was it us? i'm not sure. thank you and enjoy the lovely weather and the event tonight. i hope you get some sleep. >> thank you john. speech of the music is rocking. james freeman is here.
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assistant editor and fox news contributor. you were so good at this last time we brought you back for more. take for example where we have reporters on example right now. let's start in michigan appeared we had a report on the ground there when it comes to grand rapids. this is a key county to watch on election night. kent county. joe biden flipped this from a donald trump 2016 victory and a won by six points in 2020. this would donald trump's county by three points in 2016. why the change on and what will you be watching on election night? >> grand rapids and that county of bellwether for the state and the state of bellwether for the nation. michigan state wide, it's one of those states that trump won in 2016, lost in 2020. it's a little hard to predict. they are all hard to predict, but especially hard because people don't register thereby party. we've been looking at that and a lot of states to try to get a guide. what we are left with is a polling showing very tight race
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and obviously a lot of those counties around detroit are going to be big. >> sandra: that's michigan and get the report on the ground and georgia of cobb county. hillary clinton owned by two points in 2016 and joe biden ran this up to a 14-point margin of victory. 56,000 votes there in 2020. what is happening in atlanta outside of -- counties outside of atlanta here as we know just how much biden one in that county, cobb county 14 points back in 2020 paired what are you watching? >> election light you are looking at can trump contain the losses in fulton. he will lose fulton. but can he score nice margins in cobb and the cab county? those are places where trump would hope to run better. it's another state. trump wanted 2016 and lost in 2020. also lake michigan, you don't register by party in the state.
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when we see these huge early early voting numbers coming out of georgia, people tend to guess based on where they are coming in, and some states you can't sy this many republicans voted. >> sandra: your reference to the statewide vote tally. >> doesn't get much closer. >> sandra: 11,000 votes made the difference in 2020 when biden took victory over donald trump. based on everything you just said about michigan and georgia, what makes pennsylvania different? this is a must-win for each candidate. >> they both view it that way and they're both going there n now. i think what gives republicans a little bit more confidence about the state is like a lot of places, pulling very clustered margin of error and who trust the pulling out of the last few elections anyway. but you register by party in pennsylvania and that's where you have seen traditionally democrat it margins shrinking.
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registration growth advantage for republicans versus democrats since the last election. >> sandra: the difference in the statewide vote tally. 81,000 votes in all of pennsylvania it came down to 81,000 votes, just over one percentage point in 2020. >> and that is smaller by several hundred thousand on the margin that republicans have gained in registration. so if you look at registration, and a lot of places are very close, you would think that makes republicans optimistic. >> sandra: o one of former president donald trump will be in its bird tonight. joe biden ran up the vote count there by 20 points and he won. he ran the vote up from hillary clinton. before you go, i want to go to the eastern portion of the state, philadelphia. obviously deep blue philadelphia but the surrounding suburbs are going to be key to watch on election night. look how close i got in 2016 there. and chester county for example and joe biden, he ran it up
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there as well appeared 17 points he won by an chester. >> trump obviously wants to do better in the color counties. a little further away you get york county where tim walz was telling people at a fund-raiser in california wish they didn't have to campaign and places like that and a beaver county. you wonder if some of those comments and up writing the harris walz team as we look at turnout among the traditionally union blue-collar areas in the east and the western part of the state. >> sandra: i keep looking whenever i pull up places like philadelphia, philadelphia county the most populous county in the entire state. it counts for 12% of the population but when you back out you just see the deep blue areas around the city there and the rest of the state, so much of it is red and has been historically. thank you so much. good to have you here. >> john: sticking with the theme, it is election eve and both candidates are squeezing in the last stops in a state that
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could be critical to deciding the election. does the keystone state hold the keys to the kingdom question mike we will speak with harris walz cochair chris coons coming up next
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>> is ours to lose. does that make sense to you? it is ours to lose. if we get everybody out and vote, there is not a thing they can do. >> are you confident you will win a question mark. >> we will vote for change, we will vote for american prosperity, we will vote for donald j. trump to be the president of the united states. >> everybody belongs. everybody benefits when we work together for the common good. those are the values we will take to the white house. every single day.
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>> john: closing arguments on this election eve. a live look at reading in allentown, pennsylvania, were for her president trump and vice president harris are set to hold dueling rallies in the keystone state. they are to have several today with the hopes of swing voters to win the 19 electoral votes that are up for grabs. let's bring the democratic delaware senator and harris walz chair chris coons in. the vice president has four campaign events. she starting in scranton and cheese and allentown, pittsburgh, and philadelphia. that won't happen until 11:00 tonight. some people think that this election rides not just on pennsylvania but how many they can turn out to philadelphia. what do they think. >> i've been crisscrossing the state of pennsylvania and the recent days and i have been encouraged by how many folks are excited to come out and to vote for a positive change for a new path forward with vice president harris and governor walz. i think that turnout appellant n
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academic is key. but the counties around philadelphia and in scranton where she began her day and throw the commonwealth are important as well. in the closing days of this campaign, former president trump has been talking about things that really don't connect with the average working family. raising by 20% tariffs on everything imported into this country, that would be the equivalent of a new national sales tax or a $4,000 per family cost and kamala, our vice president is talking about reducing health care costs, day care costs, housing, and helping to start and support new small businesses. i think those positive forward-looking messages are connecting with the voters i've been talking with. >> john: did you hear what he said this morning about possible tariffs against mexico when he said he will contact if he becomes president on day one he will contact the mexican providence and he will say fix
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the problem with people coming up through central america and panama and everywhere else in the world or i will slap a 25% tariff on everything come out oo and he believes that's a no-brainer that she will say we can't deal with that i will fix the border. >> that's just another reminder that his idea of how to conduct international relations is through threats and bullying. >> john: but it works. >> mexico is our largest trading partner. it didn't work well the last time he was president with our key allies around the world. i met with the heads of state from countries like australia, canada, germany, korea who found his onboard and unbalanced leadership style discouraging and unnerving. i do think that we need to address border security. there is a great way to do it, a bipartisan bill that was on the floor of the senate and we should have past months and months ago except for a former
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trump weighing in against it on the day we were to take it up and pass it. that will get taken up passed and signed into law by vice president harris in her first couple weeks in office and it is my hope that we will have a positive agenda to work on, not one that imposes tariffs on every imported product from around the world. >> john: but the other side of that is there's a lot of people that say that bill won't do anything to decrease the amount of cross-border traffic. you said you are optimistic about pennsylvania. >> i will say this. the border patrol union endorsed it and said it would be the biggest change in border security they had seen it and it would have invested billions of dollars in new border security agents, new deportation resources, and a new judicial resources. it was a balanced package that i think we should pass. >> john: but they also endorsed trump so it's a bit of a wash on that front. you said you are optimistic about pennsylvania. here is something that may cause
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you concern. her early voting 2024 democrats have put in 971,615 and republicans 571725 compared to 2020. you are down 42%. republicans are down 8%. here is what jim messina said on sunday with jen psaki on msnbc about the early vote. listen here. >> what is the biggest concern right now if you are the harris team? >> it's a couple things. early voting numbers are a little scary and you and i have been texting back and forth. republicans did not do what they did last time. last time trump said don't early vote so they didn't. republicans and do have an advantage and early vote numbers when the early vote comes and it will look a little bit different than 2020 and that is scary. >> john: he says it's scary what he is seeing in the early vote. what are you seeing? >> i say i hope folks will get out and vote. if you haven't already. exercise your right to be a part
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of our democracy and to your viewers, remember. we won't have final results here in pennsylvania for several days. >> john: but does you concern you with the way it concerns jim messina? >> i'm concerned about this election all over the country. it will be razor-thin. we will be working on it until the last hour. part of why i have been campaigning across pennsylvania and encouraging people to come out and vote for kamala harris and tim walz is because i think this is very close. >> john: no question about that. every poll in the land has said that. good to talk with you. thank you for spending the time. >> thank you john. >> sandra: senate candidates across the country facing off in down-ballot races. which will decide who has control of the senate. we will take a closer look at a couple of those key races next. than walls. it's more than paint. it's more than cleaning. that's the thing we'll never forget.
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>> sandra: can you feel it? the excitement is building paired we are tracking down-ballot races across the country that could determine which party controls the senate. one of those races is in texas between republican senator ted cruz and democratic representative colin allred. brooke taylor is in houston for
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us. to both parties think texas could turn blue? >> a democrat has not won a statewide election here in texas in 30 years, since 1994 but democrats do see a real possibility of possibly flipping the seat. they tried to do this in 2018 and i've also spoken to the republican senator ted cruz myself. he has acknowledged the competitive race to me and said he want texans to understand what is at stake right now. a recent "new york times" poll has him up by four points ahead of congressman colin allred. here's the final pitch is to texas voters. >> we will make roe v. wade the law of the land again. keep ted cruz out of the doctor's office. >> i will fight against the open border policies and fight against assault on a law enforcement and fight against their efforts to take away our constitutional rights.
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>> both candidates have spent combined more than $160 million. it's one of the most expensive senate races. >> sandra: so much to watch her. thank you. >> john: another down ballot race we are following closely happening in ohio. the incumbent democrat sharon brown and republican challenger bernie marino are neck and neck. nate foy is in cleveland. one impact is former president trump having on this week's? >> a huge impact. this is a state that former president donald trump has one twice and now he is urging all ohioans to vote for bernie marino over sharon brown. >> if you want to defeat the radical left democrats, you first have to get out and you have to vote and vote for bernie marino. he's a great guy. >> take a look. this "washington post" poll i senator brown up at one point on bernie marino well within the
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margin of error. he is a businessman and a colombian emigrant who sells himself as the american dream while senator brown has been in politics for 50 years. he sicking his fourth term as a senator and as a democrat he is campaigning on his ability to work with trump. >> sharon brown is fighting back. he wrote a bill that donald trump signed. >> bernie marino puts america first and will secure the southern border. >> we have a wide open border. >> something to watch here john. no democrat senator has ever won an election in a state that trump carried while trump was on the ballot. we will see if senator brown can buck that trend or if bernie moreno will continue tomorrow. spew and he seems to be embracing the former president so we will see if that by some any coattails. nate fully for us. thank you. >> sandra: as the excitement does build, we are looking at the live events happening.
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alexandria is left and we are waiting former president trump and it harris has been rallying in pennsylvania. it is a big day folks. we will take a quick break. we will be right back.
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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 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.
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>> there is a lot going on. when you were out on the campaign trail, this is the most fun day, it really is. >> it could come down to pennsylvania. >> here is the plan for us. that does it for us until election day. have a good dinner, get to sleep early, sleep as much as possible because tomorrow is never going to end. >> we will see you tomorrow. thanks for joining us. >> we will see you tomorrow afternoon. >> martha: it is

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