tv The Five FOX News November 4, 2024 2:00pm-3:01pm PST
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spent in europe covering the greek debt crisis as it gets difficult to ignore. it is annoying, but it's very difficult to ignore, and you can make the backdrop argument that the dollar is so fundamentally strong and so crucial to the economy that there will always be interested in u.s. treasuries, but that's true until it's not. and we we are looking at both on bankruptcy, so it goes very slowly and then very quickly. and again, you and i don't make predictions, we certainly don't make predictions on the monday before tuesday november but there is going to be a reckoning in this country with texas spending in the calendar indicating that we are going to have a big tax debate in 2025. so we will have a lot to talk about next year. >> neil: yes come in the most consequential election over time. thank you very much, good read on that.
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don't forget the election coverage tomorrow and he will get to "the five" right now. ♪ ♪ >> greg: i'm greg gutfeld along with judge jeanine pirro, jessica tarlov, jesse watters, and from her booth, dana perino, we are here for "the five"! [chanting "kamala"] >> let's vote! let's get out the vote! let's get out the vote! let's win! >> greg: that's amazing! kamala closing her campaign with a heaping serving of cringe, as they made a push to win over undecided voters in swing states. right now, this race is tighter than the hairpiece that is glued to jesse's scalp. trump is closing like a madman with border rallies across the swing states while harris is sticking to one place, the commonwealth of p.a.
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>> we stand on the verge of the four greatest years in american history. with your help we will restore america's promise that we will take back the nation that we all love so much. >> it is about the win and it is about more. it is about more. it is about just strengthening our country and reminding each other, we are all in this together. we rise and fall together. >> i have been waiting four years for this. we are just one day away from what will be the most important political event in the history of our country. >> it is time for a new generation of leadership in america. and i am ready to offer that leadership as the next president of the united states of america. >> greg: that's just a warm up to kamala star-studded finale with lady gaga, latin sensation ricky martin, and talk show queen oprah. never heard of her.
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but fans are worried that as a finale that could backfire. >> i don't understand her working people have to choose can i go to the big cool concert and paper babysitting for that or will i try to figure out a way to get to the polls? like these big star-studded events, probably helped us lose less time. i don't want people going to concerts. i want people knocking on doors and out there to fight for this thing. i'm just nervous, nervous, nervous. >> greg: all right, dana, i have to come to you first, you seem to understand the coils and the engine of this whole system and i don't understand as we add more experts and analysis, the election does not become more transparent. it becomes more complicated. it's like we turn the election into a phone plan or a cable provider where there is -- i don't even know what i am listening to. >> dana: brit hume said something, you know how you get frustrated with your phone and you want to go back to a paper
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calendar, where everything is there. he said earlier when he was reporting in the beginning of his career, he would as a reporter go and actually talk to people and get the feel for it and now everything is so ov over-polled and social media is distorting everything. so no one actually knows what is going to happen. but i want to add one thing. it's smart for her to stay in pennsylvania, because if she does not win pennsylvania, she is not going to win the presidency. and van jones who we saw from cnn said in that same hit that he is -- he said nothing is making me happy about pennsylvania. he said i'm nervous all the time, but he said that philadelphia has where they need big numbers, but it is going down and not in terms of people just republicans coming he says people are not going out to vote. so we started out with this chanting "let's get out the vote." i don't know if the chanting will do it or lady gaga or
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oprah, because if people don't feel motivated to go out and vote in pennsylvania, that will be tough for her. >> greg: she could put dana shapiro on the tickets, but she didn't. is it a microcosm, lady gaga endorsing kamala, but lady gaga's dad endorsing trump? who has a closer grip on reality of everyday americans? the one who feels the effects of a bad economy or crime or emigration, the restaurant owner? in a crime-plagued city or the pop star, his daughter? shouldn't she listen to her dad instead of her friends? >> jessica: i think she is listening to herself. she was born this way and has always lived this way. i don't think we need to pit families against each other. he has had success and she has obviously had wild success and is in is an incredible talent
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and there's no reason to minimize her for this. there is reason to consider if there will be someone who sees this as the final night is just about stars and it is not about kamala harris making her pitch. i'm sure she will give her same speech she has been giving which has been wildly effective, the late breakers are going for kamala by double digits and donald trump used to be leading in that category, people who were deciding closer to the end from 4-6 weeks out. but the last two weeks it's been about her. but van jones says i want people knocking on doors, they are having to send home canvassers because they have so many on saturday. this was incredible. the harris campaign was knocking on 2,000 doors of minute across pennsylvania. >> greg: 2,000 a minute, you say! >> jessica: and you just don't hear those kinds of stories from the trump campaign. >> greg: may be because they are lies.
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>> jessica: they are not lies. my mom is in scranton knocking on doors. >> greg: really? >> jessica: you got something against my mom now? spewing of course not. we all said wow. >> jessica: anyway, the closing message differential is so stark though, and you are seeing the effect of this on people who are making these late decisions. in just the conversations about how it is ending. so donald trump has had to be in north carolina which i'm sure he is not thrilled about. that's the only battleground state that he actually won and he has to go back there in this rally that he gave yesterday morning, the first one in pennsylvania where he did everything from saying he should not have left in 2022 the weird comment about shooting the media that they have to shoot through the fake news and i don't mind that so much, but the spokesperson had to come out and clarify that. if you want to say it's taken out of context, it does not matter and he only has a finite amount of time left to tell the
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american public that their lives will be better under another trump administration then under kamala harris, and she is the one that actually is making those connections. she is the one commencing people that she be as good on the economy and has completely erased the lead there. >> greg: she seems to be actually not talking about any policy at all, judge. >> judge jeanine: i'm curious when people knock on doors what do they say kamala's policy is other than she has this great person who wanted to decriminalize the crossing of the border by illegals and wanted to ban fracking and confiscate guns and eliminates private health insurance, when they knock on doors i'm curious as to whether they have answers for that. here's the issue. she is in pennsylvania, pennsylvania, pennsylvania four times tomorrow. she is doing that because she needs to do that. had she chosen josh shapiro, if she ends up losing this race over pennsylvania, it will be on
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her totally for not picking a guy because he was jewish, for not picking a guy because he would outshine her. now there are 300,000 jewish folks in pennsylvania. 80% of them were democrats, so the smart thing to do would have been to allow schapiro to carry the weight on that. but she was not smart enough to do that. so now she has to be in pennsylvania all day tomorrow. let's talk about this over polling. i'm sick and tired of the polls. the one thing i do know is the democrats are 16 times more likely to pick up a phone and get involved in polling. that's number one, number two, 70% of america thinks we are going in the wrong direction. all right, number three, 65% of americans are living paycheck to paycheck. so it's not like everybody is like yeah, let's keep going with the biden administration coming you can't think of 11 thing she can do differently. and in the end, the kamala camp
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is worried because they keep telling women, i don't know how good their polling is, it's okay if you don't tell your husband that you are voting for kamala, and then she says to the burros, hey, boroughs, it's okay if you don't tell your men friends you are voting for kamala. she is worried about that amount of vote. and in the end his message is a positive one. we are going to have a golden era and his go but the economy. it was better when he was there and that he has done it before and she can even articulate. >> greg: jesse, i saved the jesse for last. can you respond to just because optimism about kamala and also what do you make of the polls with that shy voter phenomenon and my new shirt? >> jesse: i'm not a fan of the shirt, it's a little too urban for me. but it looks good on you, greg. you can tell that you did
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chested this morning. jessica keeps talking about all the doorknocking and it's not working, because the democrat machine in pennsylvania has gone kaput. the early vote is way down for democrats, female votes down, urban boats down, and the rural vote is way up. you cannot go on as many doors as one, republicans have sliced the early vote lead in half and that's why they are terrified. you talk about these late breakers going to kamala harris and what survey is that? i have not seen that survey. the democrats keep talking about this mysterious survey. >> jessica: it is in the univision pole. i literally just told you where it is. >> jesse: if it's actually happening it would show up in the early time vote, the republicans are either winning the early vote or they have actually just destroyed -- >> jessica: you are cannibalizing your election day vote. >> jesse: you think it's cannibalize, but it's low
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propensity voters. so the democrats are deciding to do or relying on they are now relying on this avalanche of enthusiasm on election day that has never happened before for democrats, democrats never produce huge avalanches of voter turnout on election day. they have to have that with black americans, hispanic americans, if there is that type of enthusiasm, why isn't it showing up in the early vote? it's a great question, because there is no enthusiasm. i have a theory here about schapiro, obama's wing man was in charge of the vp processing. you know that obama loves schapiro. they went with walz instead. it's like they burn walz on the l, because they wanted to save schapiro for four years. >> greg: interesting theory. >> jessica: is it? >> greg: not really i was just being nice.
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i'm just crushed over ricky martin. all right, up next, kamala refuses to squeal on kali's tough on crime appeal. ♪ ♪ fast, significant pain relief. easy and clean to apply. it dries faster than most. i love that i can quickly apply blue-emu even in the middle of the night and get right back to bed and to sleep.
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tough on crime ballot in california that would roll back the wild, wild west smash and grab insanity that has destroyed her home state. and here's what she did. >> how did you vote on prop 36? >> so i have my ballot is on its way to california and i am going to trust the system that it will arrive there and i am not going to talk about the vote on that, because honestly it is the sunday before the election and i don't intend to create an endorsement one way or another around it. but i did both. >> jesse: dodging the tough questions is a pattern, axios points out how. harris is a no comment candidates, purposefully and strategically, has calculated it safer to be vague on policy orders to look through a left-winger. this symbolizes the entire campaign. >> dana: it reminds me when i worked for the department of
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justice for nine months and i learned how to say no comment, and it's useful as a spokesperson coming in a terrible habit and a candidate, you expect your commander in chief to have two be able to articulate them even if they are different than what you had if you are a prosecutor in that state. so this basically is asking california, do you want to make shoplifting a legal again? and 73% of californians are like, they support this but it's on the ballot. why can't you also just be for what is going to happen? have a theory as to why, it's not just a theory, i heard it on a podcast of course. they were interviewing black voters in pennsylvania, and they were following a doorknocker around, 2,000 a minute and she was knocking on doors and several of the people that she was talking to you, of the men equated kamala harris as a prosecutor to being a cop and i
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don't know whether the margins in pennsylvania are so tight and she is so worried about this idea that she is being considered a cop, so maybe they are going to come out and vote for her, that's perhaps one of the reasons that she is unwilling to try to do that. trying to think of why would you not want to take a position? and then to say that it's because it is a sunday before election day, like no, exactly. that's what you tell people what you're thinking, if you want this position. >> jesse: she is admitting she doesn't want to say anything that could affect the election. >> judge jeanine: that's hogwash, okay, you have to understand, the reason california is in this mess is because she wrote the title the proposition 47, which is what reduced certain drugs and shoplifting certain amounts from a felony to a misdemeanor, what prop 36 does is it elevates shop
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keeping especially shoplifting i should say especially several of them to a felony which was not allowed now. but based upon when she was attorney general ten years ago in 2014 when she wrote the title for the proposition 47, she is the reason that people voted for it because they thought that it was a law endorsement focus, tough on crime proposition. it was just the opposite. and so she is the reason for that proposition, but they put california in a decline for ten years as the highest number of people in the country and coming out of every street corner. now right now and she says it's the sunday before an election, what the hell does that have to do with anything? nothing. the other reason is maybe she does not understand it or remember it or maybe she is not a real prosecutor, hello, i have
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been saying this. this is a woman who bailed people out on the minnesota male fund who were criminals and committing violent crimes. so she does not want to put her finger on the scale and say look, this is for the benefit of people in california if they want to fight crime or if they want to make sure that these cases are prosecuted. so she is responsible for half of the problem and she does not have the backbone to admit it. >> jesse: the word you're looking for, correct. do you think she is being told not to say anything more that she is taking it upon herself, jessica, to just be vague about pretty much everything? >> jessica: i think it is her natural posture and she has done it throughout her career and she does not want to step in anything. and frankly i don't know if that's a bad choice to make with 48 hours to go. there are things then that they turn into ads within minutes when you say something, like don't you think there is a part of trump right now that things may be ash and out of said rfk jr. could be a health and
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human services secretary, now that he is saying he does not want fluoride in the water anymore because it causes cancer. if he had just said, bobby is a really good guy, happy to have them on the team if i'm lucky enough to win and america, i am asking for your vote, we will talk about it then. >> jesse: that's your typical political answer, he is trying to lead the country and a specific answer. >> jessica: towards having no fluoride? come on. >> jesse: there is a little bit of an issue, it's not just this that she hides, it's everything. >> greg: it always goes back to what did donald trump say? we are trying to figure out why she is not saying anything. he talks a lot, but directionally you get the information as you don't get jack from her and this is a problem with being a different person to different people. it's really hard to keep track of who you are and what you're going to say to the right people. the thing about donald trump as he talks to women, jews, blacks,
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hispanics the same way. he will say sorry, i will get to something later, book signs are operating, both political sides are operating on something. on trump there is a faith his side he will fulfill the obligations of these impressive people that have aligned with him. impressive person, elon musk, one of the most impressive people on the planets, so there is a promise that donald trump will stay true to this future that they are building and you're hoping he does not default into some kind of petty argument or something like that. meanwhile there is a faith for some liberals, hopeful liberals that she is really not that w
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woke, that she is not crazy, that she is more of a sioux centrist to go along, play along, kind of like she is not crazy. she won't go down the woke path, but then she has this opportunity and there is no evidence that she is a centrist. there is no evidence that she -- she will not -- she did not want to scare the criminal crowd? who is she afraid of? who is she worried about upsetting? so she could have just said you know what, this progressive reform wasn't a mistake and we need to return to basic law and order. she can't say that. >> dana: she cannot even say that she wanted criminal transgender's to have -- she cannot even say that. 's before i watch a lot of dateline, she hopes that the husband does not look at her previous relationships and notice that all of the spouses mysteriously died while hiking. >> jesse: greg has always said if you want to kill your spouse, take her hiking. >> greg: i learned that the hard way. >> jesse: coming up, kamala harris is done talking about donald trump! ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: after saying his name endlessly on the campaign trail. >> donald trump. >> donald trump. donald trump, donald trump, donald trump, donald trump. >> judge jeanine: kamala harris is apparently it done talking about donald trump. the veep did not to mention trump by name for the first time as a candidate and her campaign says it's intentional, because they want to "close fully positive." so instead kamala is letting her allies do the dirty work, nancy pelosi making crazy comments about donald trump's fitness for office. speak of the ex-president just
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said further indication of his cognitive generation. use all recently he was talking about whether he chose electrocution are being eaten by frogs and something is really wrong there and indicative of also is diminishing the power of the press which is the guardian of our freedom and our country. so i think that people who are thinking about voting for him have to know that he can't last as president for four years with his brain deteriorating at the rate that it is and it is clearly evident. >> judge jeanine: jesse, how is that even a talking point? is her brain deteriorating? >> jesse: so i sometimes think we are going to get along if trump wins and then i look at her and i think oh, no, they will impeach him if they when the house in the house is a coin toss. trump could have six plus senate seats in the senate and if he loses the house, where is the
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agenda? so they are going to investigate him and impeach him and going to these intelligence committee rooms and they will come out and leak god knows what this time. and so it will throttle everything this country is trying to do. if he gets in this white house with a mandate to heal the country and fix the economy and close the border and nancy is standing in the way, because of some personal agenda, then i think the only thing you can do as an investigator for insider trading and a look at the visa stock, you look at the pillow talk and i don't think that would be consider revenge, i think that would be considered accountability and it something she should think about. and that's not a threat, that's just how i feel. >> judge jeanine: yes, thank you. she stopped mentioning trump's name, now she says the guy before me, does she have anything else to talk about? >> dana: lets remind everyone how this happened, how do you know she stopped saying his name?
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because her staff told the reporters to make sure she stopped saying his name, so the pack that is supporting her is not allowed to direct to the communicate with her and they were sending smoke signals through "the new york times" that their direction of going after trump all the time and calling him a fascist was not working and the kamala harris people would send back through "the new york times" reported, we think it is working. i'm telling you it is not working and they are telling us through the newspaper and then all of a sudden they say oh, now she is not talking about them anymore and she wants to end positively. this is not something she decided. this is something that they finally realize that future forward was correct. not only did she not mention trump, she did not mention an economic plan, she did not mention how to clear the border, or israel like world war iii, she did not mention a plan for inflation or energy we talked about yesterday. she's not mentioning anything.
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it's a cotton candy closing. spin on jessica, she keeps saying we aren't going back, we aren't going back it, except americans looking back remember things were better five, six years ago and they also think the country has gone in the wrong direction, but she really will does want to go back, because she wants to go back to roe versus wade. >> jessica: a lot of people want to go back to the protections and that might be the republicans undoing when people go to the polls, jesse. >> jesse: what do i know? >> jessica: very little. >> jesse: walked right through that one. >> jessica: open door. it. >> jesse: just like your border policy. >> greg: i feel like i am on an episode of "friends." >> jesse: got it. >> jessica: okay -- i feel like the way that you guys are talking about her indicates that this campaign is not just being responsive to intel they are getting and
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that's actually how you can end up being successful. >> judge jeanine: she says she is not going back, what is she not going back to? >> jessica: we are not going back to when donald trump was president, not the chaos of it, he was unfit to be president. she is right now plus ten on bringing the country together. that comes from somewhere. plus nine on looking up in the middle class. these are things that can help her on election day when you have a double hater for instance that shows up at the polls and says i think kamala harris cares for people like me where donald trump cares about the interests of people like him, i.e. rich people. i hate the rich! until i become one of them and then i love them so much. i just think that they are doing the absolute best they can with the information they have and then the republican side will probably be happier if donald trump was closing on his economic message. you say i don't know what kamala harris stands for, watch
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her closing level leading with the price gouging, going after that and lowering prescription drug prices, protecting your social security and your medicare, those are all strong messages that are motivating voters. >> judge jeanine: go ahead, greg. >> greg: i don't think you can compare the campaigns, because donald trump's campaign was much longer. longest in history, longest in history. kamala only had to do it for 60 days and barely showed up. you know, i learned a lot in this segment. i did not know any of that stuff and i have nothing to add. i will add this. the real closing argument to me as one of extortion. it has that feeling that if trump wins, we will scream and cry and burn and riots, just like we did in 2016 for three years and i do think that has an effect on people. it has an effect like i just really don't care that much about who wins. i just want to be left alone and
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i don't want people yelling. i don't want protests. so you know what, i think that's the strongest argument for kamala harris is that there is an ambivalent a portion of society that does not want to be harassed by liberals, and so the liberals are going to be screaming and saying it's on you if she loses, so it's like fine, whatever. i will vote the crazy lady in. >> judge jeanine: boy is that scary. coming up, kamala ascending will ferrell out to threaten the voters. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪)
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grand canyon, a staggering 26 points, and doug emhoff is making his closing pitch to win over young men and claimed the former president to be fun. >> when i talk to young men about who might be taken by the fund side of donald trump such as it is, the dancing, the going to the wrestling matches, going on the podcasts and trying to portray himself as someone who he really is. he is not your friend. the policy is that he is talking about will not help them in the economy. the policy as he is talking about have nothing to do with him. >> dana: and will ferrell is cutting this ad for harris. >> your vote will make the difference. that means you, carrie. oh, blah, blah, no i'm just one person. no, shut the [bleep] up, gary. >> dana: is gary the new karen on the pro side?
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>> greg: it is the new karen. in this gender gap, i was going to ask you during the break but then i lost interest. for women is it mostly the strongest part of the democratic party are single females? correct? >> dana: yes, but that could be changing a little bit in this particular election. >> greg: i just find it interesting that i grew up, the elite female would mock women who saw value in a husband as a support structure for raising a family and making a life, and what did they do, they were place has been with government. >> dana: like julia. >> greg: and their compassion and caring got co-opted and gained by the government who then shifted their empathy towards people who do not care whether they exist or not, in ten years, your abortion one not be saying happy birthday to you. so it's like, going to embrace the things for these
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pseudo-freedoms that you have, but you will lead a lonely life. >> dana: in one of the things, jesse, that kamala harris and walz wanted people to look at had 72 pages, photographs throughout it. there was not one man in any of the photographs of the whole economic plan. what does that tell you? >> jesse: did you really go through the 72 pages of this? >> dana: no, i got a statistic. >> jesse: i believe you, i don't understand why kamala has never personally tried to appeal to men? she just deputize is bill and dougie, all of these guys, she never tried. it's kind of like the border. she never tried. men will vote for women. i would vote for judge jeanine. i would vote for dana perino. if megyn kelly ran for president, i would vote for megyn kelly. jessica, i don't agree with your policy is, but i would vote for sarah huckabee sanders.
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if i lived in arizona i might vote for kerry lake. >> jessica: what? >> jesse: i knew you would say that, but i would. because i care about the economy and the border. but she does not even try. if this is supposed to be a close election, why would you not try yourself to appeal to men? men are very open-minded, despite what women say. >> dana: why is she not trying to have -- >> jessica: i think she is trying, she is just not pandering and end of way. >> jesse: she is pandering to everybody else. >> jessica: that was until there was a complaint that there was not a specific plan for black men. >> dana: weed is the answer? >> jessica: it was more than we need and you all know it. everyone likes money. on a normal day you would say that the only color that matters is green and then you want to bash kamala harris -- >> jesse: not welfare. >> jessica: this is not about
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welfare, and also a lot of republican voters use entitlements, which is what we are calling it, so we are not being disrespectful. using male surrogates make sense. the gender gap i assume will be historic. the question is how much ground can she make up in the survey from today, trump was up four points with men and she was up 11 percent with women. do i think it will be that small of a gap? no, but it is suggestive of moving in the right direction. they were looking at enthusiasm across genders the last six or seven cycles and in 2020, so this is sure voters who rate their interest at a 9 out of 10, 2020 was basically tied across the genders, 2024, 74% of men said that 80% of women. that's what you saw in the circle and i will see, i think that trump still wins iowa, but if you have that gap in enthusiasm difference especially granny gap, those women -- >> dana: granny gap. >> greg: it that's disgusting.
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i would never go to that website. >> jessica: you told me about it. >> dana: there other option is to send out tim walz and that's not going that great. >> judge jeanine: tim walz is pathetic. i want to talk about my experience. i ran for office five times in the county of a million people which is larger than the congressional districts and when i ran for judge, i would become the first woman in the history of the county to be county judge. the questions that were asked of me were who is going to take care of your children? we absolutely had to have a press conference with my then husband to say, my children will be taken care of, okay. now i beat that guy and i trounced them. i do not use a male surrogate to go out there in a role that no other woman had ever had. then when i ran for d.a., the question was she going to be tough enough to ask for the death penalty? and so i had to go out there and prove i was tough to men and women. i was sensitive, and i was
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tough. i was compassionate and i was firm. and i want every one of those elections hands down, but i did not need a male, i did not need anybody. i was smart and a woman and i could do it in high heels. so all of this nonsense that we are talking about what gender gaps and everything else is just nonsense. if americans see someone strong who is smart, who can get the job done and if they believe her, and she is genuine, she will win. but if she doesn't have any of that stuff, she's going to lose. and you can explain it about gender or anything else, if she loses, it's because she was not the candidate for the job. >> jesse: to judge jeanine! >> dana: if you hate those campaign text messages we have stuff are you coming up right after this. ♪ ♪ the next president of the united states is
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(♪♪) behind every splenda product is a mission. helping millions of people reduce sugar from their diets. now try a sweetener grown by u.s. farmers. introducing zero-calorie splenda stevia. at splenda stevia farms, our plants are sweetened by sunshine. experience how great splenda stevia can be. grown on our farm, enjoyed at your table. (♪♪) ♪ ♪ >> jessica: just one more day until we can finally stop getting those annoying campaign texts, unless you have been living in a wi-fi dead zone, they are blowing up your phone in the final campaign days. i'm excited to have no texts anymore, as anyone else afflicted by the text?
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>> judge jeanine: i am. i get loads of them from anybody. >> jessica: and you can't block them. to be on the more you disturb me, the less i want to support you. that's it, period. leave me alone. >> greg: the only text i keep getting is from kudlow asking if i am up. it's like larry, come on. >> dana: i think that this is totally broken and people are over it. and to the republican side has had a long issue with returns. it's not as much on the democratic side, they fall for it everything the time because democrats are apparently okay with it. but republicans are like no, guys. >> jessica: we are so worried. >> jesse: i think he should be well-funded to stop the steel in case there are any shenanigans, so if he does get beat up, i might have to do it. >> jessica: okay, jessie's phone is available for the fraudulent story. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ >> greg: omt, dana. >> dana: we had the new york marathon. congrats to all the runners, especiallies the ones with the medals today walking around the city. >> greg: losers. >> dana: this is what happens in prague. this is how they really compete to show us how much better europe is than ours is. do you know what a penny. jean it has five exclamation points how great this is. >> greg: is that it? no podcast? >> dana: tom bevan real clear politics just posted. >> greg: watch it. i doubt i will be on tomorrow night. guy, kat timpf; let's do this, very musical moment.
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a grim experience happening in australia. take a look at the lead singer of cold play that's chris martin up there walking around, enjoying himself. he is obviously quite -- oh, and then he dies. passed away. chris martin is dead at the age of 38. >> dana: greg? >> greg: cold play will not be going forward. they have decided to cancel the tour, there is no more cold play. all right. chris martin. where are we? judge? >> judge jeanine: earlier today, i sat down to do a live special on fox nation. the special is called immigration nation america in crisis. i got together with two women. >> greg: me too. >> judge jeanine: rachel campos-duffy did her special on immigration inc. did i mine on sanctuary america where i talk about the homicides and the murders and rapes. the full special is available now. it's called immigration nation,
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america in crisis. worth watching. i thought it was interesting. >> greg: jesse, how did you feel about cold play breaking up? >> jesse: devastated. i had tickets and now i don't know whether a to do on saturday. i love judge's pose like this where her lower lipsticks out. so strong. >> jessica: you look great. >> jesse: that picture, look at the lower lip. >> jessica: that's a painting? >> judge jeanine: actually it's not. some guy painted it. >> jesse: oh, jute bye, jumps over him backwards. look at that have you ever seen that in the nfl before? never in my life. tonight, "jesse watters primetime," no time for johnny soundbite? >> greg: no, thank god. i have seen enough of him. jessica, you have three seconds. >> jessica: the detroit pistons had to take the subway because of the marathon. >> greg: yeah, biden's america. >> bret: greg, you should just come o
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