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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  November 5, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PST

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he ran a very good race. he had obstacles. the democrats really unfairly put obstacles up and hence a kennedy left the democrat party for the republicans. he is a very smart guy and very popular, too. we introduce him and the place goes wild. we love having him and musk, we love him. rogan and kelly. this is a movement, very inclusive. this is the greatest political movement in the history of our country. and even you people, some of you are fair sometimes. but it's the greatest movement in the history of our country and i've made that statement a thousand times. it has never been challenged. it is the greatest movement and we are going to make america great again. thank you all very much. thank you. thank you. nice to see you. >> thank you.
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>> harris: well, that was a pop up press gaggle we saw with the former president after he just voted in palm beach, florida. and his third run for the white house. hoping to return to the oval office. you saw him there along side the former first lady. he took a lot of questions. we will get into it with the couch. i will leave you with these words. i would like to tell people who are in line, especially republicans, to stay in line. from donald trump. hello everyone this is "outnumbers" i'm harris faulkner. with kayleigh mcenany, sandra smith and emily compagno. jonathan turley is here. law professor and author of "the indispensable right." that was a lot of questions. what did you make? >> kayleigh: it was, it was interesting to see him in the scenario. at 525 amg capital he landed on
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his plane. probably got no sleep, let's be real, and took questions. look i'm thinking a lot about today. as riding into work, i looked this up, how many election days have we had in presidential history. 60. think about that sixty times in the history of our republic you have had an opportunity to cast your vote and set the direction of this country. someone who is a political nerd my entire life. i had a ronald reagan quote book in high school. i remember where i was for election days. eight years ago i was working for cnn. i watched faces melt as donald trump became a reanother. four years ago i was with the former president. we went to grand rapids the night before, like last night. we went to the campaign headquarters in virginia. today he said he will do the same. go to west palm beach. sixty times in our history. it's so important. no matter who you vote for, show
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up and vote. sixty days. today you determine the future of our great republic. >> harris: i appreciate that. i see tears in your eyes. it means a lot. >> kayleigh: it's a big tka*eu. >> harris: when the former president said, i think i ran a good campaign. then he launched presently into the current border policies. at the polling place, like only he can do. on very little sleep. i imagine for everyone on the campaign. >> the funny thing i think he does well without sleep. this was a good press conference. he was measured. for the most part he was subdued. he made very good points here in fast order. how he does that on a lack of sleep, i'm not sure. we're all facing sleep deprivation and not performing nearly as well. it's interesting -- >> harris: thanks. >> -- it's interesting this is my fifth or sixth presidential campaign. i know it's a lot for everyone else here this. one has that feel.
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it has a feel, i don't know how you feel. to me it has that 2016 feel. you know 2020 didn't. this is something about this election that had that same aspect to it. you can't put your finger on it. >> harris: can i ask you specifically about a feeling people. have said they don't trust their feelings at all. >> i don't trust the polls at all. in 2016 i walked out of this building, there were hundreds of people outside. i stood there in disbelief. walking in. it was a beautiful scene. thinking i never saw a movement like this. >> harris: emily. >> emily: i agree with you. it struck me when president trump was speaking. i ran a good campaign. he said, we have good policy. i agree, it feels different. think to myself the last four years we have been through a
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lot. before that we were through a lot with covid. more specific the frankly bloat of the regulatory state. how deeply every american felt the impact of the federal government. people would say the difference between democrats and republicans how you steward your tax dollars. i don't feel the impact of the
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it feels deeply inspiring and that freedom is just around the corner. >> harris: you know molly, it wasn't lost on a lot of people after four rallies last night everyone had a chance to digest who he was during the campaign because of what we saw from him, aside from the rallies was nfl games. there was a big one last night. i won't brag, kansas city. anyways, you had the free put backs from nbc after they cheated and gave one candidate something they didn't offer to another on snl on saturday night. then donald trump gets 90 free seconds during nascar and nfl on a sunday in prime time. then i saw his ads again. i don't live in a swing state. i mean if the middle of the country is playing football we
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all see that hopefully. >> we have no idea what will happen today. i'm taking a brood view. eight years ago knowing nobody thought donald trump would be president. the people elected him president to take on what was seen as a corrupt regime. whether it was the
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>> harris: -- white house races in his state. caldwell talked about his hometown, chicago, illinois. he's not surprised to see the lines long, long, long. in early voting they have been. the intensity of people being curious around the issues and wanting to vote is a blessing for our country. we are a republic this. is us walking our freedom and making our voices heard. when donald trump was asked today in the pop up gaggle news conference. he said i don't need a speech for winning and losing. i can do this. then he took a dig.
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he said only the left needs written speeches. >> kayleigh: i'm glad you brought that up. i was thinking in my office about the conversation i had with ivanka trump. i wrote about this in my first book. i was curious about donald trump's speech 2016. he knew he had won. there was one hotter. there was one about unity and healing. he ripped up the hotter speech and he said today i want to heal of country. he praised hillary clinton for her hard work and healing our wounds. we don't know what will happen tonight. our republic will survive. our country will survive. anxiety is googled more than ever before, now. i get that. the one piece of advice i have as a person of faith. my pastor said. tuesday we vote. wednesday god is still on the throne. >> harris: i love that. any last word before we move.
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>> yes, part of the dynamic i think is whether overkill will have an impact on people. you know when others bring us together you have people like the arizona attorney general recently saying she was going to investigate trump for a threat against cheney. a criminal threat. many of us said at the time, look this isn't even close. just days before the election you have a law fare threat. i think a lot of people do want to come together. the question is whether the overkill at the last minute will remind people we need to do better than this. we are better than this, as a people. >> harris: that's one reason i would argue the "garbage" comment from the current president of the united states and timing 7 days out was complicated for kamala hare and is her team. election coverage continues. we don't know how it will happen. we do hope everybody votes. with joe rogan's last minute
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endorsement of donald trump we ask, what will it matter? what will it mean for the presidential race, next.
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presidential race, next. dad: hey boss. you okay?
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son: i said i'm fine.
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♪ dad: you can talk to me. son: it's been really, really hard for me. >> you are looking live at vice presidential candidate tim walz and his wife who are campaigning at the capitol diner in harrisburg, pennsylvania. speaking to voters making his last minute or final push to sway them to vote for his ticket with kamala harris. we're continuing to monitor movement of all candidates throughout the day. keep it here on fox news. we will bring it to live and breaking analysis. onto this former president trump picking up a last-minute
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endorsement from joe rogan. throwing his vote after he appeared on his podcast. writing this on x. the great and powerful elon musk. without him we would be f delete ed. he makes the most compelling case for trump i have heard. agree with him all the way. yes, that's a endorsement for trump. trump responded to the endorsement live on stage in pittsburgh last night. watch. >> trump: thank you, joe. [cheers and applause] >> trump: that's so nice. he doesn't do that. he doesn't do that. he tends to be a little bit more liberal than some of the people in this room. i had a lot of fun. he was amazing. he was, it was a three hour
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interview. he doesn't do endorsements but he did an endorsement. i want to thank joe rogan. that's fantastic. [ applause ] >> harris, he talked about it last hour in the informal gaggle when he casted his ballot. >> harris: he did. he talked about it in detail with closing remarks last night. moving ahead the people representing and how vast the audience was. he appreciated. he said it was an honor to get people to speak for him yesterday and to be endorsed like that. i'm paraphrasing him a bit. he used the word "honor" in terms of the late breaking news that even elon musk sat for hours with joe rogan. so, it is interesting. it is. i thought joe rogan wouldn't endorse anyone. kamala harris had an opportunity here. she missed it. the president, the former president was able to capitalize
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on that. perhaps, we will see how much it matters. >> the question, kayleigh, is quality not quantity. we don't the impact. joe rogan has almost 19 million subscribers. the point is the quality of that. we have talked about how i characterize him having a subscription to curiosity. it's not a influencer with a million subscribers this. is someone leading the thought train of curiosity so one can argue 19 million people follow him for una bashed truth. for presenting facts unaltered. what say you? >> kayleigh: i love the description. i'm a subscriber to curiosity. i think the joe rogan endorsement means a lot. does it move x number of votes? who knows. joe rogan is the ultimate man of the people when you saw the shot of donald trump in pittsburgh you saw the men in hard hats behind him. these are people who presumably
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bucked union leaders and said i support trump. joe rogan has the number one podcast in the world for a reason. he's authentic. he's real. he's a man of the people. i think that means a lot. harry at cnn had a interesting analysis. voters moving from joe biden to donald trump in the poles, there is one commonality in the profile. they have a favorable view of joe rogan. think the independent minded centerrists who are subscribers to curiosity, as you say emily, look at joe rogan and could be suede. think it's a huge deal. i wish it was before election night. >> kayleigh mentioned the unions. you compare the joe rogan endorsement. we have the washington post not endorsing anyone. union leaders. it's a differing landscape this time around. do you think that impacts any candidate.
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>> the washington post and others decline to endorse because they realize they're so ridiculous over the years they have lost in thraoupbs. they're unable to control the conversation. joe rogan had donald trump on for three hours. he had jd vance on for three hours. really long form opportunities to get to know the candidates. compare that to 60 minutes, donald trump didn't waste his time with. they're corrupt presenting the news. 60 minutes is watched by a lot of people. nowhere near the 200 million podcast downloads that joe rogan gets every month. >> what do you think? >> i find this particular election fascinating. the cult rat aspects are unique. you have rogan vs oprah right. you have established media and new immediate. rogan as you said is the center of gravity. that's where media is now.
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people have left mainstream media. they're walking away. where are they going? they're going to joe rogan. this election is fascinating. you feel there is a cultural reset going on. you have all of these celebrities lining up on one side. you have figures like elon musk and being joe rogan on the other side. what is it about them that resonates with the american people? i think it's the cultural reset that it's not just anti-establishment. that people have begun to look to different quarters for leadership. that includes media and leaders. >> harris: think they can't be canceled. >> that's probably true. >> they don't have a represent a come tkpwgroup of power. you have people saying i refuse to be put in a box. they're independent thinkers and collect interesting freedom of
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thought, unique individuals around them to foster that information rather than getting a script from on high. >> harris: didn't joe rogan first endorse rfk quickly and then not endorse. >> yes. >> harris: what was going on there? >> kennedy withdrew. nobody expected him to go for trump. least of which was trump. i think he was honestly surprised and delighted by it. >> yes. more to come including this. vice president harris had oprah winfrey at her campaign rally last night. the former tv host is being accused of fear mongoring to sway female voters. stay with us.
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how easy it can be to find your medicare match. this is pretty amazing. i can go on a vacation with this money. i have quite a few prescriptions.
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it's just a crazy thing. i say this more for you. paper ballots, same day voting, voter id and be done. same day. by 10:00 o'clock everybody would be -- you're talking for about 8% of the cost. it would cost 8%. think about that for 8% you get a better product. we will have to look at it. >> the heartbeat of your organization, sir. >> trump: you're the heartbeat too, aren't you. alex. how is alex. are you surprised? >> sir, you built the greatest political movement in history. everyone here is working super hard for you. you're our inspiration.
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>> trump: thank you, that's very nice. and i hear the social media has been unbelievable. >> you make it easy for us. >> trump: joe rogan, he's a great guy. that was a big thing. he does that. he doesn't do that. he did that. i think it meant a lot. so we're all over the country. i hear it's all red. we don't -- we went in with a very big lead. we just have to keep it i hear it's beyond that. it's a movement. there hasn't been a movement like this. we will turn this country around. we won't people who murder people into our country, drug dealers come into our country, terrorists come into our country. little things like that. we are doing well. we have time to go. let's make sure, let's make sure that we have this under control. some of you, i will see tonight. i imagine, i hope awful you.
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i will see you tonight. it will be great. the first lady is coming with us. she is really impressed by the job you have done. would you like to say something, honey. >> a great job. thank you so much for your support. it was hard work, i know. it's hours to hours. i know how hard my husband is working. nonstop. thank you for all of your support. great job. [ applause ] >> trump: yesterday and the day before you actually, the day before too, we did a lot of rallies. they're big ones. full rallies. so we got in about 5:00 o'clock in the morning. we left michigan. i think michigan will be great. especially since we killed the biggest factory that -- think anywhere at anytime. which would destroy them. we did that without being
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president. so, that was a big thing. i think michigan will be good. they were all looking really good. susie, i can't think of anything weaknesses. >> no not so far. >> trump: no weaknesses. would you say good. [ applause ] >> trump: well, we just wanted to come over and pay our respects this. is great. we will see you tonight. hopefully they will get these expensive computers going. you know the reason you use computers is to make time so it's fast. you don't use them so you have to come up with an answer three days later. that's a little scary. they say, what are they doing. you use a computer it calculates quickly. you use paper because you save costs. the paper turns out to be quicker than the computer there. is something wrong with that. we don't liking that. there are a lot of things that are happening in our country that have to be changed. we will do it. we will do what's right for the
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country. i think that's why we're doing well. we will see if we can close it out. wouldn't it be nice if after spending billions of dollars that they could have a computer give an answer like 10:00 o'clock. doesn't make sense, does it doesn't make sense. it's crazy. thank you, very much. we will see you later. have a good day. you are going to be watching. they're watching to make sure there is no cheating, right. no cheating. thank you, everybody. i like that. [ applause ] >> harris: so the former president going by the headquarters in west palm beach, florida. thanking all of the people who have gotten him here this election cycle with messaging, energy, their time with voters. he wanted to give them a thank you. at one point he said there has never been a movement like this. you're the heartbeat of my organization. you have that there, kayleigh. >> kayleigh: alright. are you looking now, an aerial
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look in fact at cranberry township, pennsylvania. voters in this community will play a crucial roll deciding which candidate will take the state. on a stage in pennsylvania last night, i couldn't believe this. oprah winfrey added her voice to the unhinged hysteria that trump is a threat to democracy. >> if are you watching or hearing me right now, and you haven't already, you have got to vote. and listen, i know some of you feel burnt out, bruised, maybe in consequential. nothing is further from the truth. we don't get to sit this one out. [cheers and applause] >> if we don't show up tomorrow, it is entirely possible that we will not have the opportunity to ever cast a ballot again.
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>> kayleigh: we won't ever vote again if her side doesn't win. i mean, that's crazy. we will have another election. we always do, four years from now. if she's talk ing about the women vote. not sure what she is talk ing about here. we have a 19th amendment in the country. the chances of over turning that. i would like to fact check oprah. constitutioncenter.org. the odds of a constitutional amendment being repealed is like a person living to 80 years old, struck by lightening during their lifetime. unlikely. >> the problem is we have seen this before. the "the indispensable right" the book i just finished. rage politics. rage rhetoric. we have had it before. it's not unique. people don't admit they like the rage. it's contagious. if gives you the license to say and do things you wouldn't do. oprah is the latest voice in the
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panic politics. it's losing residence with people this. country has been through over two hundred years of strife, wars, depressions. thing that would reduce most countries to a fine p pumic e. we're here because we have a system to survive. smart people like oprah fuel this hysteria. instead of telling people we will be okay. we have something unique here. we are unique as a people. let's have this election. let's feel the passion. let's come together as we always. have in order for the united states and where oprah says we're going, you would have all three branches fail together. every operative constitutional officer embrace despotism. that doesn't strike me as being particularly likely.
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>> kayleigh: not likely at all. the home of rage rhetoric is "the view." they saying that trump would over turn brown vs education. on the show i want to play the first lady jill biden echoing what oprah said. >> we can't take things for granite. again think of the supreme court. for god's sake, talk about things getting worst. can you imagine more republicans on the supreme court. no. we will lose all of our rights. we're talk ing about womens rights, gay rights. we will lose -- voting rights. >> kayleigh: we will lose all of our rights and voting rights too. >> i firmly believe everyone has the right to say whatever they want to say. i was talk ing about the lower impact of the propaganda press. there are a lot of people who only listen to shows like this. they only hear what oprah is
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saying. should their is downright irresponsible. particularly in a climate with two assassination attempts against the person they say is such a threat to democracy. it would be great to have debates and discussions about how to handle foreign policy. or as kamala hare and is joe biden has done, cooperated with social media companies to sensor. this is not helpful. it's not going to help people accept election results should they lose. >> harris: that's a good point. >> kayleigh: emily, the irony is i remember tim walz talking on this weird video game, talk ing about getting rid of the fill buster. filibuster. >> it's obvious and quick tore us as we talk about it. the concepts put forth by the left are the most frightening.
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those arresting the power -fl people. i agree with you. rage is the currency. the reason it's festering in this country, it's outside those grounded in faith and outside of these things that are ephemeral. i believe deeply rights have been totally at stake. here is why. it's the taliban who has removed the rights of women to vote. goods to go to school that. occurred in the dirth of leadership under kamala harris' watch. the hyperbole is that's facing humans now. that's facing our allies. what we abandoned under kamala harris' watch. the sky is falling climate change. it was oprah who cleared the island to her house. the hypocrisy of the left have
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caused the fear mongering that president trump would take from us. that's the opposite what would happen. it's deeply disheartening. people do listen to that dribble. i hope not today. i hope the truth succeeds. >> kayleigh: after shouting fastism. kamala harris should have had a word with her surrogates. >> harris: she is doing seven radio interviews. trump is out there voting and in front of the people. she hasn't given an official news conference. being with reporters on a day like today. he can just automatically answer questions. look you can grade how he does or if you like his politics. it's harder to grade her today, she isn't out there with reporters. the seven radio interviews, my ignorances. i don't know the questions they will ask and how many are by reporters. i know they're in communities
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not reaching as many people as joe rogan's podcast. i think you hit the nail on the head, jonathan turley, i feel panic. we don't know how this will turn out. where is the panic coming from that oprah, a woman who normally doesn't thirst for relevant see. cy.she has her name in her own magazine. what is causing her to panic and say democracy will fall. republic will fall if you don't vote our way. i don't understand it. panic politics. you hit the nail on the head. >> kayleigh: the nice thing is we have a four year experiment with trump and we can all still vote today. >> emily: americans told pollsters during the campaign the top issue is the economy. vice president hare and is former president trump made it central to the final pitches to
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volters. ed lawrence has the details from the white house now. ed. >> you know you may get into the car, go to the polling site, pay for gas for the car, done with it go to lunch, pay for lunch. make lunch at home where you bought groceries. for many americans the price what had you pay could determine if you vote for trump. trump is pounding the over all prices since vice president kamala harris took office rent sup, energy prices up 30%. you can't spend what americans are feeling. the former president feels the election boils down to one question. >> trump: are you better off now than you were four years ago? because over the past four years americans have suffered one catastrophic failure. be trail and humiliation after another.
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kamala has delivered soaring prices. >> now vice president kamala harris wants you to forget she has been in office. offering to turn the page from the administration she has helped run for four years. pushed by hollywood stars. singers like perry and beyonce. the economies didn't affect them. her plan to fix it doesn't have a lot of specifics. >> together we will build an economy and bring down the cost of living. we will band corporate price gouging on george raoez. groceries.we will make housing e affordable. >> her message is trust her to make this economy she wants. the vice president thinks she needs more time to bring down costs. back to you guys. >> emily: thank you, ed.
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edward mentioned the use of celebrities to energize voters. beyonce, bruce spring sting, leo dicaprio. they have all been called on. that has democrats concerned that the vice president maybe out of touch. >> the other thing that makes me nervous in 2016 we had a star studded event on the edge of the election and lost the state. i don't think people understand, working people have to choose do. i go to the cool concert and pay for babysitting for that or figure out how to get to the polls. i don't liking the star studded events. i can't show how they help us win. perhaps helped us lose last time. i want people knocking on doors and fighting for this thing. i'm just nervous, nervous, nervous. >> interesting in terms of the googling anxiety and nervousness, kayleigh.
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after the dnc and rnc discussing who was on stage. we talked about the real americans. the average americans representing don anne ald trump's campaign. the single mom with three jobs. those mourning. perhaps the left is catching on a little too late though? >> kayleigh: maybe. i was reading a fascinating piece. the new york times kept up with undecided voters. today they told us the decision. a 78 year old man in pennsylvania there was a 58.01% to vote for trump. didn't think of him as maga. he waited for kamala to be on the stage and she didn't provide answers. he decided to vote on trump by a whopping 51% chance he voted for trump. a 24 24-year-old sited the same
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reason. she didn't tell me how she would change the economy from biden. it was the economy, the moment on the view when you heard kamala say i wouldn't do a thing differently than joe biden that made the difference with the new york times voters. >> emily: as well, we heard get back to the economy. that's you. you're the one in the white house know. voters to your point had something to refer back to with president trump. four years of prosperity. the last four years under kamala's watch no matter how hard she distances herself. >> joe biden is 40% approval rating. she his vice president. she never showed she was different from this person. people say the economy was so important. important in 2016. it's important now. having the celebrities. nobody doubts life is good for celebrities. i'm sure everything is going
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great for them. when people are motivated to vote based on inflation, inability to buy a first home. all they hear from kamala harris she will make the first home $25,000 more expensive, or whatever the plan is. it's not moving the needle as she would like. >> you talked about traveling the country and giving speeches. >> i don't think this is working. you don't call people garbage. or tell women they're dumb or not strong. all of the messaging to a large number of americans you need to listen to cardy b. i'm not sure that will resonate. that's one of the reasons this election i think will be studied for generations. something is happening in this country. something that hasn't happened before. it's not just the movement from mainstream media. it is the essentially a reinvention that people are trying to do here. the funny thing is it's not that
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group of people so enraged. the rage doesn't define us. free speech defines us. the constitution defines us. something drives us with this movement. it's not even donald trump. something more seismic is happening. that's why it feels more like le 2016. anything can happen today. anything could happen at this point. despite a billion dollars. the media, the celebrities. it's a jump ball. >> harris: really quickly i want to get back to what you were saying. she missed the opportunity to define how different she would be from joe biden in the first few weeks of her campaign. it would have been perfect. look he backed off the ticket. he knows i'm different. i mean, how long did it take me to say that? just last week after the garbage comment. she could of just -- let's get away from the engines.
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i want you to hear what i have to say. as this harris would of done that. as this harris she didn't do that. then we have a muffled message. it's not how she would, blah, blah. no i'm not like that man that called you garbage. i want to you hear me. turn off the engines. it's her plane. she can do what she wanted. it's the forcefulness as a leader we don't get from her. where is the closer prosecutor. where is she? >> kayleigh: apparently she didn't separate herself more is because of her loyalty. the loyalty may send her on a cross country move back to california. >> voters don't need loyalty they need lower prices. >> harris: or both to them. >> exactly. next we hone in on pennsylvania. that would be the battleground state that decides the race for the white house. out of control. get a newday 100 va cash out loan at lower mortgage rates to pay off those
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>> alright the first poles close in just over five hours. can you believe that. that's when we will begin to find out who the 47th president will be. >> we have an all-star lineup ahead to walk you through the closer hours. >> looking forward to that. the legal battle is in full swing. we will give you the latest where things stand. >> one way or another donald
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trump says this will likely his last campaign. >> lots ahead for you in the next twoe hours. join us at "america reports" kicks off in eleven minutes. >> see you then. >> kayleigh: we're back with a look at the early voting numbers. over 80 million votes have been cast in person and by mail. expected to drop from 2020 where 70% of those who voted early or by mail during covid. voting is under way in pennsylvania. former president trump won there by less than a percentage point in 2016. only for president biden to care is by a picke percentage point n 2020. vice president kamala harris spent the entire day in
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pennsylvania for events. going as far as to knock on doors for support. >> how are you. >> hi. >> oh my goodness. >> kayleigh: some say it appears a little staged maybe this is why. >> sorry for the intrusion. >> hi. >> how are you. >> how are you. >> oh you want to do the door knocking. >> kayleigh: pushing them back in, to knock on the door. >> my gosh that's the cringe moment that represents two things. number one the american people are sick of the contrived stage craft. they want and deeply crave and
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deserve a leader that is real and authentic. donald trump is real and authentic. wildly popular because he's himself. the second thing, this is a lesson how the inter actions go with this person is president with world leaders. that's fr frightening. i don't want my leader cackling when she meets the foreign heads of countries. think americans want that too. >> kayleigh: harris, the lead the tkepl k democrats lead -- te comfortable with the gender gap. >> harris: the gender gap has been real all along. we did the faulkner focus all women town hall. the difference you point out is slinking. it was kamala leading by 20 points with women.
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trump lead by 16 points by men. now it's 16 for each. where did she lose four percent? i'm curious to know about that. look, for the safety of the candidates and particularly one who has had two attempts on his life, donald trump, i'm not offended all that much if someone is vetted who is close to them. i'm fine with that. what is going on with this womens team, there are melt will videos with staged moments. i don't understand it. does no one like her. look girlfriend, i will make sure there isn't a camera on you to stage this. if it's staged for safety, i get it. i want them to be safe. if you are doing this for the neighbors to get it on camera and nobody cares to make sure only the camera guy gets it, who is running the show? i asked this question about the white house. i ask it about her. she is in the white house. >> that's why she couldn't do the the three hour joe rogan
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podcast. can't stage that. and the senate race with casey and mccormick. hugely important. >> who ever wins pennsylvania is over whepl willingly the presid. that's why they invest so much. the donald trump has a senate race that's close. incumbent senator and a strong challenger there. pennsylvania hits all of the issues people care about. border, economy, otherwise. we are just t all comes down to that. the quicker the results are reported the better. >> kayleigh: it would be nice if they counted like florida who does the early vote count in advance. professor turley. >> the gold standard, georgia, virginia, florida. they learned a lot four years
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ago. they have new systems and they're doing really well. still we're talk ing about places like arizona. the learning curve is still extended. why, what does it take? elon musk captured a booster rocket on what looked like a barbecue tong. that's rocket science. that's tough. getting these things together isn't at tough. one would hope we would do better. we will do fine regardless of the flaws. we have seen problems with balloting. one area of pennsylvania looks like they will extend voting. the scanners are not working. we have had some access issues. those are problems we have seen, so far things are going remarkably well. >> kayleigh: you mentioned florida and georgia. governor desantis and governor kemp. they have nailed it you are looking live at drone footage of cranberry township in pennsylvania.
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no one knows veterans like newday usa. speak of the big is finally here and fnc is the only place to be. we have all the coverage of the 2024 presidential election. bret baier, martha maccallum take over at 6:00 p.m. eastern as the polls close, and then hopefully very soon the results start to come in, we will take you through the wee hours of the night and beyond with the best analysis in the business. i will be there with you throughout the night, hearing our voters' voices. a live audience with me, you know how we do it on the falconer focus, we do it on election night, we find out what swayed them and their vote for president. we really were the most cricket issues of the race. now "your world." ♪ ♪

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