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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  November 6, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PST

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administration. poll after poll. economy number one concern, immigration two. energy up 30%. president trump said he will make energy policy the lynch pin of his plan. >> we have more liquid gold, oil and gas, than any country in the world. we will be paying down debt. we'll be reducing taxes. we'll leave the greatest economic comeback in america history under donald trump's leadership. >> we have not heard from vice president harris. we expect later on today. there is no public schedule events for president biden. his first event on his schedule is at 2:45 for his briefing. >> brian: can't wait for that. more on this on the radio from 9:00 to noon. >> steve: i think i might look at my 401k today. >> lawrence: so much joy today. >> ainsley: have a great one.
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>> we'll keep our promises. nothing will stop me from keeping my word to you, the people. we will make america safe, strong, prosperous, powerful and free again. >> bill: that was around 3:00 a.m. america waking up to an election result we haven't seen in more than a century. former president trump becomes president elect trump. number 45 and now number 47. defeating kamala harris and capping a stunning political comeback. don't know where you were last night or early this morning but we're back at it from new york. i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: surprise, we're here again. the president had a huge night. at this moment the electoral college stands at 277 to 226. a cheer and decisive win. trump taking the stage after
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securing wins in several swing states we've been telling you about. addressed his supporters rallying around a candidate who defied the odds putting his victory in historical terms with a dose of divine intervention. >> there has never been anything like this in this country. we overcame obstacles nobody thought possible. it will be remembered as the day the american people regained control of their country. it was an historic realignment uniting citizens of all backgrounds around a common core of common sense. we'll make our country better thaner has been. when i said that many people have told me that god spared my life for a reason. [cheers and applause] and that reason was to save our country and to restore america to greatness. >> bill: now his opponent, vice
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president kamala harris has yet to comment on the race. she hasn't made a concession. she will address the nation today. we're standing by for more word on that and the time. as soon as they become available we'll let you know. as for the electoral map the votes in michigan are still being counted in arizona and nevada. we'll show you where they stand coming up here. >> dana: in congress republicans have won back the majority in the senate. it will be key for president trump getting his cabinet confirmed. control of the house is still up for grabs. >> bill: where to begin on this day of history? peter doocy reports from the white house. bill melugin from palm beach where a new political dawn is now upon us. bill. good morning. >> good morning to you. there is no sugar coating it. it was an outright rejection of the biden-harris administration and their policies. donald trump is on track to win both the popular vote and the
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electoral college. fox news was able to make the call just before 2:00 in the morning. a short time later trump went on to victory stage in west palm beach and thanked the coalition that has him now president elect. >> they came from all corners, union, non-union, african-american, hispanic american, asian-american, arab american, muslim-american. we had everybody and it was beautiful. i will govern by a simple motto, promises made, promises kept. we'll keep our promises. >> trump's watch party in florida kicked into high gear after he won the all important battleground state of pennsylvania. just a short time before that he won georgia, north carolina, it appears he is on track to win several other battleground states. maybe even win all of them. it was quite a different scene over at the harris campaign watch party in d.c. take a look at this.
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it turned into a ghost town over there at howard university. the crowd started shifting when she lost key battleground states and the campaign said she wouldn't speak last night and left everybody hanging and never showed up to her own watch party. back live, guys, ever since last night my phone is blowing up with texts from border patrol agents and ice agents feel like they've gotten a morale boost and feel like they can do their jobs again once trump takes office. as for vp kamala harris the trump campaign is telling fox news as of this morning they still have not heard anything from harris or her camp. radio silence so far. >> dana: wow. >> bill: you led the way reporting from the border for four years. bill melugin in palm beach. >> dana: peter doocy live from the white house. is it quiet there too, peter? >> except for the guy doing the street sweeper. but he comes with the house. it has nothing to do with the candidates. you will hear him in ten
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seconds. we would play a bite of vice president harris last night about the results but we don't have any. last night after the results were known and shortly -- shortly before we called it the results were becoming known after midnight they sent a campaign co-chair out to say this. >> we still have votes to count. we still have states that have not been called yet. we will continue overnight to fight to make sure that every vote is counted. she will be back here tomorrow to address not only the family and supporters but to address the nation. >> somebody else who hasn't spoken yet is joe biden. he watched returns come in last night. officials read out a handful of coolest he made.
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majority to candidates in delaware. nothing on his schedule for the rest of the week. we don't know when harris and walz will talk today but expect her to accept the results. they saw the writing on the wall and why they were not as responsive. the campaign had a huge team of lawyers ready to mobilize and address any challenges but it doesn't sound like they will be called upon. >> dana: all right. i will be paying -- we'll pay a lot of attention to what all spills out of the white house. thank you so much, peter. >> bill: on the board you can say this was a night of history, a night of generational change, perhaps. we'll see about that over time. it was a night where you can go to different places on this map. a lot of people did not expect. let me start here. florida, miami-dade. they went republican and they went republican for the first time in a presidential level since 1988. one data point. osceola county along the i-four corridor south of orlando,
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florida. they went with trump. there are in the county itself 50% hispanic. of the hispanics 30% puerto rican. remember all the stuff going back to madison square garden? 30% puerto rican in osceola county. in north carolina we were checking out this town and county last night. it's rural. it also has a strong minority population, 47% african-american. this is anson county. they have gone republican twice since the 1890s. last night was the second time. out here along the border in texas, another fascinating development. this is starr county here on this part of the border, right? trump won it, okay? they have not voted for a republican since 1876.
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that's how far reaching this victory was for trump last night. stay down along the border. you see all that red? this is eight years ago and hillary clinton. see that? four years later a bit of a mix there. and now in 2024 it is almost all red along the border there in texas. you have these little data points. hispanics, african-americans, you got the border issue. puerto ricans, they were so maligned in the last week of this campaign but they didn't vote like it last night. bring in harold ford and karl rove. thank you for being with us. >> we were in different hotels. >> i was at home. i live here. >> bill: tomorrow line thought. >> you mentioned starr county. last voted for a republican president in 1892 when grover
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cleveland was trying to get back in the white house and harrison was president. it voted republican because it was a port and the port inspector, the person who collected tariffs wanted to keep his job and got his friends and neighbors to vote republican. the county in america with the highest percentage of hispanic population, the highest of any county in america and also the county that has voted for the democrat party longer than any other county in america. no other county has had a record of being in the democratic column from 1896 to today. >> bill: call up one. fox news voter analysis on immigration. in 2020, 3% said it was the most important issue. last night dana it was 20%. harold, what are you thinking now? >> good morning and glad to be with you. thanks for having me. last night i thought a lot about this over the last few hours. i couldn't sleep when i got home.
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i got home really late. and i think to myself this was a rebuke last night of democrats and republicans. those of us who come from the traditional aspects of our party. donald trump is asking and more importantly his supporters are asking the country to listen to them. listen to him. i've talked to a lot of democrat friends this morning and i've listened to them express concern and angst and disdain and even anger about where we are. my only thinking is i thought and prayed about it this morning as i talked to my kids cooking breakfast this morning and taking them to school, how do we consider the architecture and options to address problems that people are really dealing with? i didn't see anything on the street this morning in new york. i didn't hear or feel any kind of uncomfortableness. but something in our country is asking those of us the -- the
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traditional parts of our party is dead. donald trump is saying to the country and parties and supporters, listen to us, respond to our problems, and address our problems in a very different way. my party's knee jerk reaction maybe kamala harris got it too quickly or shouldn't have been the nominee. maybe that's true. >> dana: maybe she shouldn't have picked tim walz. >> maybe that's true. something else is going on that i think we as a country have to listen to and be willing to respond to in a different way. i don't know the answer this morning, bill ordain yeah, but i know this. something has happened and we have to respect it, accept it, and figure out ways to move on. >> dana: it will be fun to do all that with you in the coming months. i want to ask karl about kamala harris's decision to not address her supporters, not to call president trump. not to give him a chance to have an election night victory party.
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and what we heard they still -- radio silence. nothing from her. what's going on? >> there must be a lot of bitterness there. i don't blame her in a way. she thought she would win. they were out there saying we'll take this whole thing. look, she has not had the benefit of a long primary campaign and a long general election campaign. she was a presidential candidate for just over 100 days. why is that a disadvantage? look, if you get into this contest and have to slog for month after month in early primary states and focused on the general election you have an understanding of how gigantic and enterprise it is and how fortunate you are to be there but no guarantee of success. i think she came into this thing with a bang and she thought she was going to win this thing handily and she has not been prepared by the agony of a long
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campaign for this moment. >> bill: two more things here. right track/wrong track. canary in the coal mine. voter analysis taken over a period of seven or eight days among more than 100,000 people in all 50 states, 70% say wrong direction. another thing. among hispanics trump gains six points, among black voters he gains seven. probably more among black men, harold. >> it goes again to the point i think people are hurting in many ways. they are concerned about not only national economic security issues at home but national security issues. i think are eager and hungry for a different set of answers and thinking. for those who thought that an african-american woman would gain the support of african-americans just by definition and by virtue are just wrong. donald trump has introduced something in our politics that
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he probably introduced years ago but we're just now fully accepting and understanding it. so again, i say to my party and even say to those in the other party we have to figure out ways to address this and deal with him and work with him and work with the people and address the aspirations of those who supported him, which when i think when we look at this we'll find that he attracted a coalition of people unlike a republican has attracted for many, many years and what you said over there on the board and karl affirmed is only another illustration of that. >> bill: very thoughtful. thank you harold and karl. >> dana: great to be with you guys last night. what a team. really great. i'm awake. >> bret and martha did a great job. >> dana: michael whatley will have some things to say. he is from the rnc. >> we see a very strong early vote turnout and strong absentee ballots across the country now. we were way ahead of where we
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were in 2016 or 2020. right now it looks when you combine the early vote and absentee votes we'll have an outright win in north carolina going into election day. same thing in nevada and arizona. these numbers that we're looking at, the real metrics, we like what we're seeing. it puts us in a very good position to win this thing on election day and we are work every single day. >> going into election day you will have an outright lead? >> that's what it looks like >> bill: in north carolina, >> north carolina, arizona, nevada. >> dana: michael whatley made that prediction last week with us and he called it. donald trump taking north carolina early on in the night. nevada and arizona are getting close but too close to call. in nevada we are looking at what could be decisive but we're waiting, is that right? >> nevada is up five favor him. i think it is hard for her to make up based on what i'm seeing out of clark county. same for arizona and maricopa
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county as it stands now. >> dana: michael whatley is here with us now. first, congratulations to you. >> good morning. >> dana: i know it's a hard-fought end. you nailed your numbers. tell me a little bit more about how you guys were able to figure that out and why the kamala harris team got it so wrong and as karl was saying didn't prepare her for the possibility of this loss? >> well look, we saw what we saw because it was the numbers coming out of the voting process, the number of absentee ballots requested and returned, the early votes that were cast. we layered that on top of voter registration numbers and the polling numbers to have a really good sense of where we needed to be and the conversations we needed to have. on top of everything, you have to remember donald trump. he was the guy that was out there talking directly to every american family, every voter in every one of these battleground states. three rallies on friday, three
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rallies saturday, sunday and four on monday. nobody worked harder than donald trump to connect directly to the voters about the issues that they cared about and that's why we see, you know, all seven of these battleground states will end up with donald trump. >> bill: have you considered yet the realignment that we watched if realtime as of last night? not just with the states but perhaps inside those numbers within the states themselves? >> yeah, this is a fundamental realignment of american politics. donald trump has built a common sense coalition. you look at the numbers we saw, historic shift with black votes, hispanic voters, asian american voters because of two things. one, we see that those communities are affected by gasoline prices, grocery prices and housing prices that go through the roof when kamala harris casts the tiebreaking vote on inflationary spending and they don't like the illegal
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immigration. every state is a border state. donald trump reached out to those voters. he went on alternative platforms. he went to the national association of black journalists and did events in downtown philadelphia and downtown new york, he went to the bronx, chicago and atlanta. he took every opportunity to talk to these voters about the issues that they care about. >> dana: and michael could you speak, you are the chairman of the rnc. the presidency winning that was the most important. but with that comes the united states senate, we're waiting on the u.s. house. karl rove was telling me the republicans have done very well in the state houses across the country. when you talk about political realignment, it is not just happening at the white house. apparently it is across the country. >> absolutely across the country. this is donald trump's party and we are very happy that there is going to be a focus on america and there is going to be a focus on american families. >> bill: thank you for being with us and your prediction was
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correct. michael whatley, thanks. >> dana: congratulations to you. >> totally ecstatic. >> there is nobody in my opinion that can get things back the way they were four years ago. >> we love everything he stands for and we're so anxious to have great leadership again. >> bill: a sample of the first reaction from americans this morning to the historic political comeback of now president elect donald trump. >> dana: the harris campaign reeling after a major loss in pennsylvania. we'll be right back.
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dad: hey boss. you okay? son: i said i'm fine. ♪ dad: you can talk to me. son: it's been really, really hard for me. ago we haven't called three states. a reason for that. alaska notwithstanding here. this is michigan, okay? you've got a raw vote total of 91,000. wayne is the biggest county outstanding.
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you've got a lot of the vote in here now just about 10% still out there. i don't know if she can catch them in michigan. let's say she can. same for arizona. checking this out here. raw vote total 104,000. maricopa is where you get all the votes. 60% of the state. he has a lead there, two or three points. same for nevada. here is a 60,000 vote lead. almost five points. clark county, las vegas, where you get 70% of the total vote statewide, i don't know if she can catch him there. where does that take us? let me do the path to 270 we are doing late at night. dana, i just think right now there is a really good chance once alaska chips in here, michigan stays the way it is, arizona stays the way it is, nevada stays the way it is you
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are at 312. that's an electoral landslide as they say. very important for trump to have this. you think about the number of people who consider him a divisive political leader. an electoral landslide and win the national votes. win more blacks and hispanics and enables you to govern more effectively when you go back to d.c. on the 20th of january. >> dana: a lot happening in the next several week before trump returns to office. battleground states certify election results this month. want to bring in kerri urbahn and andy mccarthy and want to get to trump's legal battles with you guys. let's take you through the certification election results quick. on the dates november 22nd, november 25th and december 1st. this is when these states georgia, arizona, michigan, wisconsin, all that happens. if you look at this calendar you have the electoral college vote december 17th. new congress seated january 3rd. january 6th is when electoral
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college votes are counted and january 20th is inauguration today. kerri, to me given this decisive result. all of that should go very smoothly? >> i think so. there is a lot of talk about how this decisive victory for donald trump was an indictment of the biden administration and the last four years and all that. i would say it's an indictment of the american justice system, really. for the last eight years we have watched attorneys general, watched state and federal prosecutors lower the standard of justice and abuse their positions to do everything they can to to get donald trump. people have characterized it as a lawfare campaign. with only one exception all the cases they brought have been untested legal theories. in other words, they have tried to apply the law against donald trump in ways they have never applied against anyone in their states or in this country. and they dramatically failed.
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while donald trump was a big winner last night the justice system was the big loser and i think it will take use for the justice system to recover its reputation in this. >> bill: three weeks from yesterday judge merchan was set to sentence donald trump. one includes prison time. he has options. what happens now? >> a few steps to play before that happens, right? a week from yesterday, a week after the election merchan is supposed to decide the immunity issue. now if passed prologue he will decide against trump. immunity is supposed to be instantly appealable. so i think what trump will try to do is go to the appellate courts in new york and further to get the sentencing put off. the felonys no matter how they
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portray them to the jury are not serious enough that he would get instantly detained under new york law. he should get bail pending appeal. the appeal will take a couple of years to play out. i anticipate that the justice department, it really should be the biden-harris justice department but the trump justice department will argue in the courts in new york under the supremacy clause that case should be suspended until after he is out of office. >> bill: what about kerri's point how much of a setback law fair in america is. >> it's why the popular vote is so important. lawfare is a failure. the public has pronounced it to be an unamerican failure. if it's a chapter we never see again the country and system will be a lot better. >> bill: take you to wall street opening bell and when it goes, we are looking at a major jump in the dow 30, the s&p 500 and
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the tech-heavy nasdaq. this was up 3% overnight for a whopping 1300 points. you might remember eight years ago. futures were way down at midnight because most people thought trump was going to lose. and then when he won, the futures went down even further. but before the sun came up that next morning, the futures popped because they saw the potential of tax reform and fewer regulations. and if you listen carefully to the joe rogan podcast last week the thing trump talked about the most what he learned about government during his four years in office about economic policy is that it really wasn't the tax reform or some other policy, it was cutting through the regulations that enabled american business to prosper and what he said is that he found that regulation was the true
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engine driver of the american economy when he was in office. >> dana: you had larry summers telling the biden-harris white house early on this inflation reduction act won't reduce inflation beautiful it. since may of 2021 people have said inflation is their biggest issue. the market is showing and you are more the market guy than i am, businesses and investors want certainty and they did not want the green new deal. you look at some of these automakers the week before the election they announced they would stop production on the f150. come on. >> bill: ford, how deep red, white and blue can you get but ford? we'll see how it goes throughout the day and get in later with our money people to tell us what he does on tax reform, right? it will expire next year. >> dana: he will also have the senate and maybe the house. >> bill: a good chance. what is your policy going
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forward on that and also the issue of regulation? that's that for now. put that to the side. late last night check this out, too. >> this is a shellacking for the democrats tonight. it was a total misread by the coastal strategists when it comes to how to target working class voters of color. >> dana: shocked democrats are trying to figure out where vice president harris went wrong and now they are pointing fingers. >> the blame game has started. i hate to say this but i'm not sure how many tim walz contributed to the ticket. where our founder discovered a retired teacher living. no home. no health care. so she said no to this injustice and yes to transforming lives. it's this drive, this compassion that inspired aarp. today, we empower people to choose how they live as they age. as a wise friend and fierce defender, we advocate for better health, financial security, and stronger communities. aarp.
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>> this is not the outcome we expected at all. we weren't expecting a blow-out at all. one of things top of mind is the choice of tim walz as the vice presidential candidate. a lot of people are saying it should have been josh shapiro. a lot of people are wondering what would have happened had shapiro been on the ticket. it would have signaled to the
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american people she is not the san francisco liberal trump said she was. >> dana: post-game analysis on harris campaign has already begun. there is more to come. democrats are looking for someone to pin the blame on. mary katharine ham and charlie hurt are here. i think tim welts -- >> i think the problem was much larger than that and i don't think a bigger pick would have solved it. it was a wholesale misread of the electorate and how everyone moved and some of the talk i was hearing last night from democrats he needs to deliver a unifying message when he comes on stage. what they always say. he unified the most diverse coalition that republicans have ever had. a growing coalition in support of him and against many of the crazy things that democrats had been doing and ineffective things they had been doing that was hurting people and they weren't talking to people about those issues.
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kamala harris refused to talk for the first month of her very truncated campaign. i just don't think you win votes that way. >> dana: nope. >> bill: she is right about this when it comes to immigration and inflation, when it comes to living in big cities and looking around and thinking just a couple of years ago it wasn't like this. and now it is. when you talk about like transgender rights and you think about your own kids in schools and whether or not they can say something or whether they should refrain because they don't want to be subjected to the verbal abuse of their classmates. >> dana: the concept of protecting girls' sports. when did that become controversial and suddenly it is. republicans are on the right side of it, which is kind of amazing. this was not some right wing conservative wave across the country. it was a common sense -- it was like a rising of all boats that went across the entire country both in conservative places but
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more importantly in blue states where you have like in virginia where all but 11 states donald trump out performed his performance four years ago. new york is -- he closed the gap in new york by 13 points. he lost it by ten points as opposed to 23 points. where we stand right now is new york is closer after the result -- looking at the results last night, new york is closer to being a red state than texas is to being a blue state and if that doesn't tell you something about the sort of common sense. it is not a right wing message but a common sense message. >> dana: if you're a democrat and were listening to democratic media or on the algorithms feeding you the information and oprah saying the country will fall apart and cease to exist because he is so right wing. it seems common sense when you look from our perspective but if
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you were them you have to wonder how much money did they spend? billions of dollars on the biden-harris campaign over the course of time and they got it so wrong. they have no one to blame than themselves, i think. >> they have been used to telling themselves stories and bullying other people to believe those stories and i think the bullying part is what a lot of people were reacting to. some of this may be a little bit of covid backlash that is delayed that we thought maybe the youngkin campaign in virginia is all we would see from that. i think there is a reaction to being treated as sort of like pathogens for a while and told to stay in your house and all these things and it builds up and people could see that they were kind of full of it. a lot of democrats need to examine where they get their information and maybe they could get on the same press release list i'm on where you understand the conspiracy theory is truth earlier than they do. >> bill: one of the guests on msnbc this morning says the progressive movement in america
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is dead. >> 2016 donald trump won on the issues, 2024 he won that race on the issues again. and when you go down the list of progressive issues, none of them are winners. by the way, not only that, but she campaigned on a weirdly america first campaign saying we won't take your guns away from you or tell you what kind of car you are going to drive, i'm going to seal the border. for fracking. the problem was nobody believed her. everybody thought she wasn't going to really do that and full of b.s. >> bill: thank you for the ride. fox news alert right now. show you the markets and take a look at this panel right here up 3% in 12 minutes of trading, tesla is up 36 points, all right? huge rally on the street as
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traders on a buying spree after trump's victory. mr. wonderful kevin o'leary was waxing poetic about america last night. he will be here. >> we have to put our country first for at least a period of time. we have to fix it. together we can truly make america great again for all americans. so i want to just tell you what a great honor this is. i want to thank you. heartburn makes you queasy? get fast relief with new tums+ upset stomach & nausea support, and love food back. (♪) follow my finger without turning your head. no, just follow with your eyes. i don't think you understand what i'm asking. i don't think you know how owls work. get two pairs of progressives and an eye exam for $149.95 at america's best.
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>> dana: we're in the analysis phase of the election, a historic election with president trump winning decisively. let's look at the demographics. he gained with nearly all the demographics including women, not a huge amount but two. men three, non-college educated. so if you are thinking of people who might have been in the rank and file of the unions, working class people, they are for trump plus six. this to me is decisive. hispanic voters plus six. black voters plus seven. it was in the data and president trump captured something and probably be able to keep them. this was a big one. a huge part of the reason that
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trump beat harris is because young voters went for trump plus ten. and bill, 40% of those young voters said that the economy was their number one issue. they've been saying that all along. all these people said this all along. i don't know why the biden-harris team didn't listen to them. >> bill: when compared to four years ago you're right, kevin o'leary is with me now. if you are running a football team you want to put your best player on the field and make sure they are prepared and you were saying that she was not prepared for that moment. when you look at those numbers that dana was pointing out over there, what do you think? >> what i think the democrats missed was when you look at job creation in america 62% are created by small business, these are first and second generation family businesses, they are the backbone of the american economy. they are not stupid. they understand the difference between 21 and 28% corporate tax
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rate because they pay that. they also understand the difference, this is very important, taxing unrealized capital gains. that i can assure you was a lightning bolt through that constituency. i'm an advocate for small business in america. that freaked them out. they thought it was unamerican. it wasn't really the american dream to have the government take money from you before you've realized anything was a real shocker. you may remember, including she put proxies out there and advocates to try to pull that back in saying look, i didn't -- i'll never do that. congress will never pass that. but that really affected the psyche of the american small business family and it cost her a lot. >> dana: it certainly did. if you look at the fox news voter analysis on the economy,
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housing costs, very or somewhat concerned at 79% and cost of food and groceries 91%. and healthcare costs 84%. we don't even have in here car insurance. all those issues really big. what can president trump do upon taking office that will help maybe alleviate? is there much he can do? >> yes, lower input cost of energy. every sector of the american economy uses energy. if he keeps true to his promise not just oil but natural gas, we have a power crisis. so every single business large or small is paying more for power. it's inflationary. if he does this and drops the price of energy down, this will be immediately have an impact on the american economy. i believe he will do that and i'm very excited that he would do that. i deal with this every day and i must tell you something that i'm excited about. i didn't want to leave here until i knew the outcome of this election. i'm going on a fundraising tour
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to geneva, abu dhabi tonight. i get to go there saying it's 21% tax rate like it has always been. please bring your money to america. >> bill: gasoline across america, how long before he can get it back below two dlrs. >> the minute they see this happen there will be pressure because he will lift regulation. i hope he considers reopening the anwar narrative to reduce national debt. when they see it come the forward markets will drop the price of gasoline and unprocessed oil. i'm very excited about this energy part. he can actually implement that and execute on that almost immediately. i would love to see doug burgum as secretary of energy. i know he is out there. i've worked with him in north dakota. i would love to see him do it and i hope he takes that
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mandate. >> dana: thanks for being with us. >> bill: let us know what they say now, okay? >> dana: we're waiting to see vice president kamala harris. she is expected to address the country at some point today. still we don't have any word from her. still congested? —nope! —uh oh. new mucinex 2-in-1 saline nasal spray. spray goodbye. aaaaaaahhhhh! new mucinex 2-in-1 saline nasal spray with a gentle mist and innovative power-jet. spray goodbye to congestion. it's comeback season! ♪ with fastsigns, create factory grade visual solutions
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>> bill: president-elect donald trump has flipped pennsylvania. bryan llenas reporting in philadelphia this morning. what's the reaction there? hello. >> bill, good morning. it was a real win in terms of what former president trump was able to do here. he won the most votes by a republican candidate in pennsylvania ever. and he also had the largest margin of victory by a republican candidate since president ronald reagan did it here in 1984. he won over 3.4 million votes in pennsylvania. 50.8% of the total flipping pennsylvania red. how did he do it? democrats were touting extreme
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high voter turnout in philadelphia hours before the polls closed. that never happened. trump had his best showing ever in philadelphia wiping 20% of the votes gaining 20,000 more votes. harris did not get the huge turnout she needed. bucks county flipped red for the first time since 1988. as for the senate race fox hasn't called it yet but dave mccormick is leading democrat senator bob casey by one point. trump improved with latino voters winning 39% of the hispanic vote. four points higher than 2020 despite the fact, bill, that democrats here on the last days really believed that that puerto rican insult joke at the rally would move latinos. it turned out many latinos could not afford to be offended. inflation winning the day. >> bill: good work. nice to see you in philly today. see you

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