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tv   America Reports  FOX News  November 5, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PST

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a. 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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"america reports." ♪ ♪ >> it looks like republicans have shown up. in force. so we will see how it turns out. it seems like they have really shown up in force. we had a gate great campaign. great policy. we want people to come to our country but they have to come in legally. we want strong borders. >> laid out a path and been very clear. she wakes up every morning thinking about you. >> the best way to heal the rift in the country is to try to govern the country as well as we can, create as much prosperity as we can for the american people and remind our fellow americans that we are all fundamentally on the same team however we voted. >> john: it is election day and the race for the right house is now in the hands of the american people. here's a live look at new hope, pennsylvania, where voters are making their voices heard in one of the states that will be crucial for either candidate's path to victory. hello.
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i'm john roberts. i can't believe we are actually here. >> sandra: here we go. a big two hours. >> john: it's like your birthday, takes all year to get there and all of a sudden. >> sandra: excitement definitely building. i'm sandra smith. this is. >> nine. americans have been voting for weeks. more than 18 million of them have already cast their ballots in battleground states thanks to early voting. >> john: making a choice on which candidates vision is right for the country's future, meanwhile control of congress also up for grabs which could have a major impact on the winning candidate's agenda. >> sandra: we have, get ready for it, an all-star lineup of guest with key analysis to the next two hours. >> john: a team of reporters across the country in those all-important swing states beginning with our national correspondent bryan llenas in bensalem, pennsylvania. bryan, how are things looking there? >> john, look, the turnout here has been steady in bucks county, one of the most important swing counties in the nation, a
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philadelphia suburb. both campaigns have really targeted voters here, a 50/50 kind of county, and there is evidence today after speaking to voters that maybe the strategies from both campaigns have worked, to some extent. for instance, we run into former president trump supporters, a lot of them male, young, and this is what they had to say. >> are a lot of guys coming out for trump? >> definitely i would say more of them are coming out to vote this time than they have in the past and i would say most of them leading trump's way. >> i think a lot of young folks are coming out for trump. a lot of young folks have woken up. >> i own a business and can see the economy, when he was the president, it's a big diff difference. >> that last gentleman is 32-year-old, he is voting in his first election. he is exactly who the trump campaign had been targeting, a low propensity voters. now vice president kamala harris has spent a lot of time trying to go after moderate voters in the suburbs here and there is evidence that may have worked.
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we spoke to a mom and a son. they are both voting for harris, and senator bob casey democrats, but they are voting republican down ballot. >> i believe that at least in kamala harris offering to have a seat at the table for moderate republicans such as myself, i believe that she actually has intentions of getting things done. >> i'm a democrat, and i voted, split half and half. it's hard to find anything, really, that's in the middle, and i'm hoping that we can all get back to that middle ground again. >> and while the polls are open for in-person voting until 8:00 p.m., so too is mail-in voting. you can turn in your mailing ballot until 8:00 p.m. allegheny county they are counting male-in ballots, 200,000 ballots. the update there, they've opened up the outer envelopes to all of those mail ballots and the scanning of the ballots for tabulation has already begun.
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results, though, will not be posted until after 8:00 p.m. now back out here, there have been some election issues to report on. in cambria county, mostly, a software malfunction with scanning completed ballots lead to a judge to extend voting from 8:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. all voters who vote after 8:00 p.m. must fill in a provisional ballot. this means, potentially setting up the stage for a legal battle later. those votes will determine whether or not they count at a later time and in a race that is divided by tens of thousands of votes, every single one matters. >> john: bensalem, pennsylvania, could be the keys to the kingdom. sander? >> sandra: another top prize in this election. georgia. the peach state emerged as a a battleground, flipped blue in 2020, voters have six hours to cast their ballots. danamarie mcnicholl in smell though, georgia. dana marie, has it been crowded?
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what have you been seeing? >> sandra, let me tell you, it has been slow at this voting site, a suburb outside of atlanta, because a majority of georgia voters have already cast their ballot. 4 million people have early voted. today only about 1.5 million people are expected to vote in person throughout the state. large early voting numbers, as i mentioned, should lead to quick results tonight, according to the georgia secretary of state who says 70% of our votes should be tabulated by 8:00 p.m. historically, georgia works quickly. 95% of ballots were counted on election night in 2020. both trump and harris campaigns have poured enormous resources into georgia, where president biden won in 2020 by less than 1%. that's a little over 11,000 votes. senator j.d. vance spent election night even in atlanta, both present a candidates visited over the weekend in
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their final effort to win over e confident in their candidate. >> i believe that kamala will work to make things better, not only for myself, a common person, but also the future generations coming. >> i voted for donald j. trump because i believe that he will do the best in his power to serve our country. >> now in georgia, a candidate can request a recount if the margin of the race is within .5% -- percentage points. a recount was requested back in 2020, georgia the last state called 60 days after the election. it has not been smooth sailing everywhere, to polling locations in fulton county had to temporarily close after authorities got multiple bomb threats. they investigated. they found no threats, but the georgia secretary of state just confirmed that these digital
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threats came from russia. sander? >> sandra: all right, danamarie mcnicholl in snellville for us, thank you. john? >> john: people go to the polls, the economy sure to be eighth major factor for voters. to candidates with two drastically different agendas. the host of "making money" on fox's nest. "wall street journal" today, a mother and a daughter voting different ways. her and her daughter are casting opposing votes, big divide the economy. america still is great, says a 58-year-old bookkeeper in pennsylvania who voted for kamala harris. it is on believably come on ungodly expensive, says alex, 32, in arizona. going to vote for former president donald trump, it is flipped, usually the older voters who go republican and younger voters who go democrat, but in this case it is the younger voter who is really feeling the squeeze and wants a change.
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>> a big reason for that is the biden-harris policies have overwhelmingly rewarded folks with assets and usually older people. housing market, stock market, when you put trillions of dollars into an economy, you can say i am helping you, joe or paul or whoever, but they understand, the architects of these things understand that as soon as someone gets this money, they are going to go to the mall, and eventually this money makes its way to the top 1%, right? so that is by design. in the meantime, might go to the mall, on a cruise, but ultimately what most young people are dealing with now is inflation that even some of their parents have to deal with, 4-year high inflation, yesterday we wanted something that was really fascinating. the average age of the u.s. home buyer right now, 56 years old. that is the average age. if the six years old. now before people were complaining, hey, my grandpa, my mom, they all got to buy houses at much cheaper prices. even now they are completely wiped out --
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>> sandra: but not first-time home buyer. >> first-time home buyers way below historic levels, anyway. i'm just saying the average age of -- first -- it doesn't matter, young people are out. they have been shut out of the american dream, and they are pretty smart. they kind of understand something is wrong. okay, the median net worth is $7,500. for someone in their 60s, the median net worth is $440,000. 28 years old, thing he will i ever get to $440,000? >> sandra: exactly. >> john: i bought my first house at 23 and i was making pennies but they were affordable. >> sandra: you could do that. inflation in the battleground states, this is going to tell a big story tonight and obviously our fox news voter analysis will have those questions that we put to voters about these high prices and how it affects their votes. some of the battleground inflation, 20%, the exception of pennsylvania just below, more than 20%, in most of those
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states, charles. >> inflation and then things like in those states, manufacturing is quickly important. we keep hearing about a manufacturing renaissance and yet manufacturing jobs are disappearing at a rapid rate right now. manufacturing data is absolutely awful, just off the chains awful, and these are the kind of things that will move swing states. i think one of the big problems is think about, since 2009, our debt has grown 200%, government debt, our gdp has grown 200%, even more skewed since 2020. so the government keeps taking on debt. when you create debt, you create money, that's money, and it goes into society, and somehow, someone is making a lot of money off of it. what are we looking at today? sky-high stock market, sky-high real estate, so if you own these assets, you are doing great, so you want a government that is printing money and printing money in printing money but there is a negative part of that, and that is the inflation part, and the jungle's are so smart, they are saying hey, these current policies means i
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will always be renting a shoe box apartment with a couple of roommates. >> john: so in the last few weeks, since she became a candidate, where does kamala harris really stand on the economy? to find that out, let's go back in the wayback machine, august 4th, 2023. watch this. >> all that, ladies and gentlemen, and everyone else, that is called bidenomics. [applause] that is called bidenomics, and we are very proud of bidenomics. and as today's jobs numbers make clear, bidenomics is working. >> john: all right. we love bidenomics. >> give me a b, give me ai. >> john: for all of the dodging and hedging, that is where she is on economics. >> this gets us to nominal data, the numbers are fantastic, we grew the gdp by 5%, data adjusted for inflation, which is what we call real data because that is what real people live
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with. i saw something interesting last week. a piece, thinking about talking about some of the things she wants to do like saying $20,000 for black men to start a business. >> john: illegal. >> i saw this great piece in the nfl, all of these young quarterbacks who have been benched. and so many of them, what do they all have in common? they say they don't have anyone on the team who is really great that can nurture them. all we are talking about is economic policy to give people money, they are not prepared for. everything she is talking about is a solution, $25,000 for a house or $20,000 to start a business, you are going to hurt people more than you help them. >> sandra: charles, that is a heck of an election day suit. [laughter] >> i'm up all night. >> sandra: glad you voted today. >> thinks a lot, sandra. >> sandra: millions of americans heading to the polls. speaking of which today. but will bad weather across the heartland keeps on voters home? >> john: they are tough folks out there. plus go after months of being the democratic nominee and yet
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another campaign tone ship, two undecided voters know enough about president harris to vote for her? we will ask harris surrogate maryland governor wes moore up next. >> sandra: the border crisis top of mind for voters this election. judge jeanine pirro will be here on the impact it is having and has had on every american. >> we need to take care of our senior citizens, and i don't want to see that money going to an illegal immigrant. we need to close that border, and we need to close it right away. >> i am very protective of my own children and all of my students, i want them to be safe, grow up in the environment like we all did, that sense of community, and not have to fear community, and not have to fear that stuff comin lord, we trust in you. we give to you everything. our leaders, our president, our country. we give it all to you.
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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. it's time to grow your business. create a website. how?
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♪ ♪
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>> sandra: election day is here, but some americans still do not know where vice president harris stands on some of the key issues. we are going to speak to the maryland governor wes moore in just a few moments. but first, peter doocy is live at the white house. he's got more on all of this. peter, did harris clear up anything in her final message to voters? >> not exactly, sandra, and there has been this idea that harris was not going to talk about trump so she could keep the closing message completely a positive about herself, but that has ended because she is doing a handful of battleground state radio interviews today, and she is talking about trump and the criticism he has of her. >> i'm not going to get distracted by that noise. and it is, it's really demeaning for them as much as anything. like, you let that come out of your mouth? >> vice president harris remains risk-averse, never really explain her evolution on policy,
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never really going off script at her rallies, and according to "the new york times," having a hard time sticking the landing on something silly. the subway takes podcast never wound up posting the interview with harris because things seem to have gotten so awkward. the times reports what happened was a dispute over harris' take brought by the host said he had been told the vice president would be taking a stand against removing one's shoes on airplanes. when they sat down, harris had surprised him with a different take that "bacon is a spice." to senior campaign officials said the topic was raised in advance. they disputed that. as for the current president, biden, he is here today. staff has been telling us that he is going to watch the returns come in with longtime aides in the white house residence. something he is not going to hear, though, in the pregame coverage of these polls closing, that is his name being used by the vice president. she completely ignored him when she was in scranton,
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pennsylvania, yesterday, his hometown, and we have not been hearing her salute him or say "thank you, joe" in any of the closing interviews today. sandra? >> sandra: noted. peter doocy at the white house. john? >> john: maryland's democratic governor and harris surrogate wes moore. governor, good to see you. the last time we had together, we were sharing the stage at the coast guard foundation dinner. thank you for your support of the coast guard. >> always. >> john: i wanted to play this, which is part of kamala harris' closing message, which she says is about unity. listen here. >> as president, i pledge to seek common ground and common sense solutions to the challenges you face. i am not looking to score political points. i don't believe that people who disagree with me are the enemy. i'll give them a seat at the table. >> john: governor, given what
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she, biden, tim walz, mark cuban, and others have been saying about trump and the people who support him, critics say that rings a little hollow. >> well, i think one of the most important jobs of whoever the president-elect is going to be has got to be unifying the country. you know, thing we know in this country is deeply divided right now. it shows itself during presidential releases every single cycle, but we know that this year there is something different. that's also taking place. so i think it is important for the person in their final arguments, and i think she is making that and being very clear on that in her final argument to the american people, that she understands that part of her job is she has to be the president for all people and has to bring people together because it is not just something that is necessarily required for this country, it is necessary and required for good policy to actually happen and i think shed why it that is circling argument.
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>> john: but if she is calling trump a fascist by association all of the people who would vote for him support fascism. do you believe that? >> well, i think she has responded to something that was said by donald trump's former chief of staff. she is responding to the fact -- >> john: she was asked, do you think he is a fascist, and she said yes. >> and again, i think she is responding to the words of people like general mark milley and people like general sam christo, and people like admiral still read us. i'm an army guy. and these are names that are hallowed names inside of the military community. >> john: with the exception obama fired -- >> their life. [laughs] but that is a collection of names that frank lee for everybody who has served, we keep those names, that's rare. and so when you are hearing people like mark milley, when you're hearing people like john kelly, when you are hearing people like the admiral who are saying that they believe that a return for donald trump
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to the oval office would actually be a danger to this country, i think that is something for a lot of us. not just democrats, it is independents, does give a lot of people pause. >> john: something oprah winfrey set as part of kamala harris' closing argument last night, listen to this. >> 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. >> john: governor, i got to spend some quality time with you, you are a prime candidate running for president in 2028, you don't believe that for a second, do you? >> i think that is a response to what donald trump has said, when he was speaking to a group, this will be the last election you have to vote for, i think there
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is a certain seriousness, i know he will say it in jest, but these are comments when the president of the united states or a person aspiring to be the president of the united states says something, people take it seriously. the words of presidential candidates, these things actually move markets must i think it is important for people to understand, as you are going into that ballot box and making a very private and solemn decision about who you want to be, a nation, not just president, who you want to be our militaries commander in chief, you have to factor in and think about since everything in life is a fundamental policy decision, whose values do you trust? who do you think has both the temperament to be able to bring us together and the intent to bring us together? >> john: for what oprah said to come true would have to be a failure of every institution that has been hallowed in this country since 1776. i just don't think that could possibly happen. maybe i'm wrong. >> no, listen, i don't disagree with you that what it would take
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for that to happen would be significant, what i do think it underscores a larger point. our democracy is fragile and something that is the greatest heirloom that all of us as americans have inherited from those who came before us. we didn't create democracy. it was given to us by the ancestors and those who came before us, so it does become important for us just like any other heirloom that you protect it, nourish it, and pass it off just as beautiful to the next generation. >> john: a lot of people might disagree that american democracy is fragile, thank you and we will see were the results take us tonight. >> i appreciate, good to see you again. >> sandra: americans heading to the polls in this historic election, once results start to trickle in what should we be watching? we are going to ask karl rove. he's going to take us through the map and the timeline of the evening. >> john: plus former president trump casting his ballot today in florida after holding his last campaign rally in crucial michigan last night. grady trimble on the ground in
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michigan. grady, exciting to be there today. >> john, it sure is. this is the state where former president trump chose to make his closing argument to voters. that shows you how important it is, as they head into the polls today, we will tell you which issues are top of their mind in the wolverine state. that's next.
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>> they've never actually seen anything like it. it should be good. it should be good. i want to just thank everybody, regardless, we just wanted to come over and pay our respects. >> hard work. i know it is ours to ours, and i know how hard my husband is working nonstop, so i thank you for all of your support. great job. >> john: farmer president trump and former first lady melania trump thanking voters from his campaign headquarters as we turn to michigan where voters are turning out at the polls in a state where trump closed out his
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campaign. 15 crucial electoral votes on the line, along with a crucial senate race. grady trimble is live just outside detroit in michigan. grady, it is going to be a big day there. >> it is. these suburbs outside of detroit are going to be crucial because obviously this is the county that we are in is one that president biden won back in 2020, and likely harris will win it again, but what former president trump is looking to do in these detroit suburbs is kind of cut into that lead, and the fact that the former president chose michigan to close out his campaign for the third time in a row shows you how important this state is going to be. he actually took the stage just after midnight today on election day, spoke for about two hours, wrapped up what could be his last rally ever in the very early morning hours of this morning. here in michigan, former president trump has been trying to win over autoworkers who disagree with their unions
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endorsement of harris. he had someone on stage was a member of the uaw, the head of the group called autoworkers for trump. the former president is also trying to court arab american voters who are unhappy with the biden-harris administration's handling of the war in the middle east. in the states tight senate race, those are key issues for republicans hopeful mike rogers. his opponent come on the other hand, congressman alyssa slotkin, has been hitting him on abortion, but rogers tell me split ticket voting in michigan could work in his favor. >> i think there's a chance, if harris wins, we can win. there has been about 350,000 voters that have both, we have contacted, they have contacted us, that are leaning in this kind of odd harris-rogers voting bloc. >> yeah, we will see if that happens. roger says he is pretty confident after the early voting numbers, especially for in-person early voting here in michigan, which was a first in this presidential election.
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trump campaign feels the same, john, so we will see if that optimism continues as the polls close tonight. >> john: both sides are saying they are optimistic. where does that leave us? dead heat, i think. grady trimble for us, grady, thank you. sandra? >> sandra: at this point no choice but to be optimistic. just hours away from the first polls closing. what should we be looking for as the results start coming in? we are at the touchscreen. karl rove is joining us. fox news contributor, former white house deputy chief of staff, joining our election coverage all night tonight, as well. first up, let's give people the timeline of the events tonight and the closures that we will be watching when polls close first. you are watching indiana. we are going to dive into that because that is one of the first to close, 6:00 p.m. eastern time. we are going to go through georgia, north carolina, pennsylvania, dive into michigan because this is the order of tonight, and karl, what i love is you are going to give us something to watching indiana for some early indications over what is happening, in particular
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this county right here. why are you watching hamilton county in indiana? >> i am watching hamilton county because in 2020 donald trump took the county by 13,000. go back to 2016, he took the county by 30,000. against hillary clinton. this is a suburban county, northwest -- northeast of indianapolis. and in may, 120,000 republicans in indiana voted for nikki haley when she had no chance of getting a delegate, was out of the contest, but a third, 34% of the republicans in hamilton county voted for nikki haley when she was out of the game. so are they going to be republican defections? >> sandra: hamilton county, that's obviously just north. marion county, home to indianapolis. we will be watching that when polls close at 6:00 p.m. eastern time. back out to the maps because one of the key battleground state the first of the night we will be watching together is georgia, of course. this is one to watch not only
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for turn out, but black turnout, as well. karl, give us something to watch here as i know some of these key counties. >> part of the atlanta metro area, but it is small and it is going to report first, overwhelmingly black. it will give us a sense of how his black turnout going to be? >> sandra: just shy of 3% of the entire population. >> last time around 26 teen hillary clinton won 72-13. pop it forward to 2020, 85% to 14%, 95000-19, are the number of voters going to be larger this time around and is that margin going to be the same? if it is not, if donald trump's number goes up, it might be because he is making headway with young black male voters. >> sandra: obviously we will see some of the surrounding counties. what happens with cobb county is going to tell a really interesting story, karl. >> the big part of atlanta, dekalb county, another big part of the metro area, and when you get into gwen it county, the
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biggest, largest number of republicans in any county in the state, still democrat, in the north of there you have foresight and cherokee counties, watching all of those to see is trump performing better than he did last time around? forsyth and right next to it is cherokee. >> sandra: karl, this is good stuff. back it out, georgia and north carolina, the trump campaign sees a path to victory if they are able to secure georgia, north carol hanna, pennsylvania, we would be next up 30 minutes after georgia waiting for north carolina to close. what are you watching here, highlighting buncombe county, a lot of campaigning. >> asheville, a liberal county, we will be looking to see how many votes were cast, this is the area of the state hit badly by the hurricane, hurricane helene. just south of there is a republican stronghold. of henderson county. there is avery and a couple of others.
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outside of these two blue dots there, sort of western north carolina is from the republican peer i'm going to be watching, over here, wake county, where raleigh-durham is, and then watching two counties right h here, which are wilson and nash, which are predominantly come have significant black populations -- >> sandra: so close. >> there is a bitter divide, shouldn't say bitter, deep divide between rural whites and rural blacks -- >> sandra: and nash is just north of there. look at the difference there. >> 120 votes. >> sandra: 120 votes. >> is black turnout dropping in these areas? white turnout dropping? both of them growing question rick. >> sandra: karl, appreciate this, give us a lot to watch, seen on the desk tonight. john? >> john: only things to watch for tonight. voters enjoying call him weather, but forecasters warned things could be a little different for those in the heartland. fox meteorologist adam klotz
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live with more. folks are going to have to be tough today to get out to the polls, adam. >> absolutely the truth, john. the big weather feature hanging across portions of the middle of the country. that's the spot to watch, impacting as far as swing states go, some of those states getting up around the great lakes. probably the worst of the weather across the some states, battleground states, you are looking at wisconsin, temperatures on the low side, 40s, rainy, kind of a raw day. the whole system spilling a little into michigan, as well, but the front, temperatures a little warmer, and of course the farther off toward the east, the better it is, detroit dry, the west side of the state a little rain here, that is certainly the case up in the you p, as well. an important state, you are looking at beautiful weather across the state today, maybe a couple of isolated showers, looking at north carolina, the only rain activity is western north carolina, getting into some of the mountain ranges, asheville seeing a little bit of rain. further south and georgia,
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another spot with the weather is largely looking nice, nothing to be impact there. jump really quickly to arizona, weather looks nice for them, and of course nevada, a little bit cooler but no rain and i think the weather swing to be okay there. really areas around the midwest, those are going to be spots we are tracking some storms, john. >> john: we will keep watching. adam klotz, keep you on the job, thank you so much. next, this. >> my top issue right now is health and safety for our children. we really need to take our country back. >> we want to afford a home. interest rates too high. inflation has crushed our dollar. we can't afford that down payment, that mortgage payment. >> sandra: i love those segment on "fox & friends," hearing from the voters, weighing in on their top issues in this election is near the every metric suggests the election is just too close to call, but are some major patterns may be getting missed here? we will ask larry kudlow what he is looking at. he will tell us exactly what is on his mind on this election day. >> john: plus the rule about georgia's highest court could impact voters who received their
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>> i have to say, three cheers for the georgia supreme court, where common sense ruled the day here. >> it's pretty frustrating because it's deja vu all over again. we are talking about the same places and the learning curve seems particularly long for some of these places. we do have, i think, some overachievers. i think georgia, florida, virginia, those are systems that have shown tremendous success so far. >> sandra: republicans winning a key legal battle in georgia, where the state's highest court
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has ruled thousands of cobb county voters who receive their ballots late will not have their votes immediately counted. if their ballots are not returned on time by today's deadline, which is 7:00 p.m. andy mccarthy, former assistant u.s. attorney and fox news contributor is here. ante, always great to see you. people are worried about what's happening out there, so what can you tell us first about that particular case? >> it's yet another one of these cases where the issue always comes down to is it the voters fall because they didn't comply with exactitude on the rules for mail-in ballots and remote voting? or is it the governments fault, the state government in this case, that they didn't comply with what they were supposed to do in terms of deadlines? and that ends up deciding a lot of these issues. there is no actual right to vote by mail, so it is really the voters' obligation to comply with all of the little rules and regulations about how you fill out the ballot.
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if the government is the responsible party, if some bureaucracy doesn't get the ballots out on time, then that's not the voters' fault, and that is when the courts are more likely to intervene and extend time. >> sandra: gotcha. >> john: in this case, the court said we are not going to extend time, which brought this from the cobb county board of the elections chair woman who said, because the order only addressed the motion for a stay, we will anticipate the supreme court's final ruling to see whether it ultimately allows these voters additional time to return their ballots or whether we must only count those received by the close of polls tuesday, which suggests those ballots that come in after the polls close will be sequestered pending a decision by the supreme court, and they better do that quickly because georgia, sounds like they're going to count their ballots quickly this year. >> i think, john, what you're going to see more as we get later into the day, maybe even later into the evening, and time has been extended, if you have
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people who are still online, there is going to be an issue about whether and when those votes count, so i think what you'll see is they will make accommodations to have people vote provisionally. they will do these provisional ballots. as you say, they will segregate those, and let's all hope that it won't make a difference. the margin is big enough, all of the stuff we are talking about here is academic, right? if the number of provisional ballots is less than the margin of victory, no one needs to worry about it. so the real litigation will come down to if it's razor-thin and the number of provisional ballots is greater than the margin of victory, you are going to get some heated litigation. >> sandra: all of this obviously brings up questions about election integrity, and this is a question we have put to voters in all 50 states in our fox news voter analysis. we will see what that looks like tonight after the polls start to close. we will have a better idea of where voters stood on this issue. lara trump from the trump campaign said this earlier today
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about that. >> we already this morning from the rnc had to do a little work with our attorneys because our poll watchers, if you can believe this, and i'm sure people can, were being prevented from entering the buildings in eight different counties, so we had to act in a moment's notice. >> sandra: i see you nodding in agreement. >> i just think all of this stuff is good because it keeps people on their good behavior, which is what the best thing about the monitors is. if we get to the end of the rainbow and the only person who remembers that i was here today is my mom, that's like a good day for the country, right? [laughter] >> john: you wrote a column where you talk about the doj wanting to put their own monitors in missouri and texas. they solve the texas problem but misery is still. >> this is one of the things, if doj is doing this because there is hard evidence that they think their civil rights violations going on, it is totally appropriate for them to have monitors. but if they are doing it in a political way, to suggest that
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red states are involved in some kind of voter interference, that's something obviously doj shouldn't be doing, but i think with this justice department, you can'discount it. i'm glad to see that at least in texas that got resolved. >> sandra: thank you, andy. good to see you. we will remember you were here. [laughter] >> mom well. >> john: it may not be a presidential swing state, but there is a senate showdown brewing in florida. we are live in the sunshine state coming up. when migraine strikes... do you question the tradeoffs of treating?
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>> john: breaking moments ago, is really per mr. benjamin netanyahu announcing that he has fired his defense minister, you up a lot. trey yingst is live tel aviv. what's this all about, trey? >> a massive story out of the middle east, is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu has fired the country's defense minister you off the lot, just got a statement from the previous defense minister, he says "the security of the state of israel always was and will always remain my life's mission. last year, netanyahu fired gallant. this comes amid the backdrop of rising regional tension in an ongoing war that has started nearly 400 days ago. as the israelis braced for a
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possible attack from iran. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has immediately replaced gallant with the country's foreign minister and we wait to gather more information from the prime minister's office. >> john: trey yingst, thank you. sandra? >> sandra: a pivotal electoral and senate race in nevada. jeff paul is in las vegas for us at this hour. jeff? got to see, where are you? there -- after mack. >> sander, we are live aloud outside of allegiant stadium, home of the las vegas raiders and today the biggest and most expensive pulling place in the country. so far more than 50% of people here in nevada have taken advantage of early voting but we are still seeing a steady stream of folks showing up to vote in person. in fact a short time ago and comment democratic senator jacky rosen showed up to the football stadium to castro ballot.
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she is also reminding folks they can show up, register to vote, cast their ballot all the same day, election day. >> not aware of any problems here in clark county or in nevada. we haven't heard anything. lines, of course, all of the polling places have been busy during early vote, people are casting their mail-in ballots. >> rosen's opponent, republican sam brown, was up in reno, nevada, to cast his ballot and asked about t any sort of voting issues or any sort of distrust in the election process. >> i'm confident that nevadans, and frank the americans across the country, we are going to go through this process. we are going to vote. we are going to participate. and our country is meant to make a choice. i believe most people are prepared to live by that. >> polls close here in nevada at 77:00, 10:00 eastern. should start to get results a little while after that. sandra? >> sandra: already for us in
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las vegas. jeff paul, thank you. >> john: a lot on the line the election day as america decides whether to send former president trump back to the white house or elevate vice president harris to the top job. judge jeanine pirro, larry kudlow, deroy murdock, and michael whatley all standing by with new analysis, all coming up. ♪ ♪ better in as little as 2 weeks. so this is better. even this. dupixent is an add-on treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma that's not for sudden breathing problems. dupixent can cause allergic reactions that can be severe. tell your doctor right away if you have rash, chest pain, worsening shortness of breath, tingling or numbness in your limbs. tell your doctor about new or worsening joint aches and pain or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines including steroids, without talking to your doctor. ask your specialist about dupixent. hi, i'm damian clark. i'm here to help you understand how to get the most from medicare. if you're eligible for medicare, it's a good idea to have original medicare. it gives you coverage for doctor office visits and
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