tv Outnumbered FOX News November 6, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PST
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>> kayleigh: history has been made. donald j. trump has been elected the 47th president of the united states. he becomes just the second president to be elected in nonconsecutive terms after a big victory. trump made extreme your gains in state after state and that helped him become the first republican to secure the popular vote -- listen to this -- since george w. bush 20 years ago, two decades, and he achieved that. he surpassed the 270 mark needed to win after carrying north carolina, georgia, pennsylvania, and wisconsin. we are still waiting for nevada, but that's sort of the key swing states he will neck and he could win all seven
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he could win every single swing state. we'll see if that happens. it further cements his return to the white house as argued leave the biggest political back in history. that's before we get to the demographic shifts. i'm kayleigh mcenany here with my cohost's harris faulkner and emily compagno. also joining us, sandra smith, coanchor of speech 27, and brian kilmeade, "fox and friends" cohost, and host of "on at brian kilmeade." you get mandates at certain times in our nation's history, and a mandate is when the american people overwhelmingly say yes to you as a person, yes to you as a party. i think it is fair to say that indeed president trump has a mandate. let's start by bringing up the popular vote. here's where the cat stands this hour. you see president trump has win the popular vote. that number of course will change. i mentioned those three states
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we are still waiting on. here is nevada, and what you see here is president trump with about a 5-point lead, though it still being counted north of 90% reported, and then you go to arizona. look at that. a 5-point lead. votes still being counted. then you get to michigan where it is a tied race. votes still being counted, but harris faulkner, if this is not a mandate, i don't know it is. >> harris: well, i'll tell you what people are staying in unity. they didn't feel heard. i think we were finding out exactly who that was, and it's just not to the left believed was not being heard. they thought that abortion in the beginning would be enough for women. it wasn't, because in the end you told women you think they're stupid, that they can't do anything but lie to their husbands if they choose to vote their own way and vote for kamala harris. you didn't respect women but you said you wanted to fight for women. it is a dichotomy and a collision of messaging that came from the left, and it was all about how many boxes they can put us in, and america said no.
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if there is a mandate today, see us as individuals who say we are struggling. see us as individuals who say we have the american dream and interest rates, prices. see us as individual people, not black, not hispanic, not this box, not all those things, that america first. you cannot love this country if you don't love the people in it. you can't. there's no loving america without loving americans, and that is where i think the left fell down. the mandate is you've got to love us all. >> kayleigh: emily, when i look at president trump and what he has ahead of him a second term, he has a lot of big policy things to achieve, rectifying the economy, the border. i think he'll do all of these things. when i heard last night, and i think this is so important and what will make trump a great president, uniting the country. we are that last night, we heard the message of uniting the american people, uniting the country, and i want to get to this. we will come right back to you. we are waiting to hear from
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vice president kamala harris. she did not address supporters at her headquarters last night. you saw that, she said she would speak today. we can now confirm, we thought this would be 6:00 p.m. eastern time that she's going to s but indeed it is 4:00 p.m. eastern time at howard university. last night we know there's not a concession call, we do have reporting that she's going to concede today, emily. i wonder why she waited this long. it seems a little late. i would note in 2016 at the top of trump's speech he talked about hillary clinton's place in history, about her accolades. he was very gracious and i think that we would have heard that last night if kamala had made that outreach. >> emily: i think frankly that she is stunned. not only that she is stunned, but that she never thought, and i dated her campaign or much of that party, think that they would lose so resoundingly through the voices of the american people to someone that they had vilified, that they had characterized into such a demon and a villain. but what americans had was the
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experience of the presidency of donald trump under which the economy flourished, and our tax dollars went somewhere under which there were deliverables on things that were important to the american people like jobs at home, thriving 401(k)s, an economy that was robust where it wasn't prohibitive to become an entrepreneur. the list goes on. we also had a campaign by donald trump that was ran through the voices of the american people. as he said, his best revenge would be success. so the american people knew not only did they have something to go on, and actual expense with this person as president, but they had that promise, that would be delivered, the success of the american people. that is what president donald trump's success is also. and you contrast that with kamala harris, whose vice president he was four years of abysmal numbers, really challenging and stressful times for the american people. when they were shown that a priority that a ministry she was illegal migrants, that the priority of those people where those with multiple degrees, for
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which hardworking americans had to pay during the debt -- the list goes on what priorities were enlisted by this administration. and a campaign that did nothing to rectify or change that. a campaign that put in the cross hairs, as spoken by joe biden, president donald trump. it didn't put americans at the forefront. it didn't put policy at the forefront. so the choice was clear for many americans, do we move forward with the experience of this president we had before where our grocery bills were lower and our kitchen tables were less stressful? combined with a champion of us and our voices? or do we revert back? and the choice was clear for the majority of americans in the popular and electoral vote. >> kayleigh: sandra, i was fascinated last night when you are shooting the data from the fox news voter analysis. it illustrated a tectonic shift in the demographic alignment with parties in this country. i just did some rough back-
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of-the-envelope math, and it looks like with latinos trump did 13% better. among black americans he did 15% better. then you get to those under 30 and he did 19% better, and according to some exit polls he's the first republican -- listen to this -- and history of our country to win latino men. >> sandra: they took the hispanic vote for granted. this is something that started to pop up early in our fox news motor analysis that started to tell the story of the night. i have the piece of paper i kept with me last night because the national hispanic vote, wow, was is telling a story early on. harris was leading with hispanics by 16 points. all of a sudden we looked and biden in 2020 was leading by 21. so she's underperforming there. hispanic women, harris was leading by 24 points. biden won by 34 points in 2020. she was lagging by 10% with that vote. hispanic men, at that point in the evening that we were digging this up, she was up by six points and on hispanic men.
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biden won by 19 points. this was an early sign that there was a shifting demographic. i have this piece of paper. the poles were closing in georgia. i'm digging through the data along with our team. the black vote in georgia, wow, did not tell an early story of the evening. harris was down eight points in georgia with the black voters. she was down 13 points with black men. georgia, can i remind you how democrats were ignoring the economy and some of these key battleground states? people are saying, look at me, i'm working hard but i can't keep up with inflation. george's inflation, their prices were up more than 20% during this presidency. kamala harris neglected to address that. in some cases, when she was asked about how to fix the economy while trump was promising to do so, go to my website. she did not articulate a plan that people wanted to hear to specially bring down those prices. and that was a struggle for so many voters when they went to the about box.
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>> kayleigh: brian, i'm a floridian so i naturally look to my home state for trends. when i looked i saw osceola county, huge puerto rican population. biden won by 14, trump was up i went. i went to hillsborough county where i'm from, suburban if not urban. he was winning by three. then i looked at miami-dade county. no republican has won that since 1988, the year i was born, by the way. donald trump won it last night. >> brian: you guys make great points. a couple of things are going on. it must be outst astounding to n the other channel until people for the last eight years, this is the where sky ever come he belongs in jail and i'll prove it to you. the russians given that election. if you believe that he won the election, he didn't win the popular vote and he only won by 78,000 votes. and he has been a mess saying he's been impeached and all these things, more votes and everybody else, then goes -- after putting it through the lawfare, comes back and now
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goes ahead and beats you in every single battleground state. it's just a matter of time. bring the senate with them, and everything you've been saying, they said, i'm not listening to you anymore. because it's like when the parents lead you wrong too many times. maybe i've got bad parents. we are not going to listen to you anymore, we're going to make our own decision. so they wanted to marginalize and say, you didn't get the popular vote. he got the popular vote. you didn't win the battleground states, won all the battleground states. you don't win minorities. made huge progress in minorities. so every single step of the way you wired the game. you will not the electoral college and popular vote, gains and everything a minority class. tell me where he's illegitimate. unless you are so embarrassed by your country that you're going to fulfill your promise and leaves. from rob reiner to alec baldwin -- maybe not this time. there is a list of like 12 celebrities were going to leave the country, and you might want to do that because the country has spoken overwhelmingly. >> kayleigh: has a mandate to
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lead, an opportunity to unite the country, and the line of the night to me, this will be remembered as the day the american people regain control of their country. that was president donald j. trump last night. up next, the liberal media reaction to a second trump presidency. it's kind of wild, next. 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. join us in making a difference.
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son: i said i'm fine. ♪ dad: you can talk to me. son: it's been really, really hard for me. >> harris: who we are finally set to hear from vice president kamala harris later today. she'll be speaking at her alma mater, howard university, where people waited for hours and then had to leave because she didn't show up last night. anyway, she's talking today at 4:00 p.m. eastern. as of now, kamala harris has still not publicly conceded or made remarks after losing to donald trump. we have not confirmed if that concession phone call has happened yet, but we were told it coming. her fellow democrats were already starting to play the blame game.
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peter doocy is live outside the white house white house. >> yes, harris, we are getting a first draft of the harris campaign autopsy, as a campaign cochair is coming out to blame voters for not appreciating what the president and the vice president were doing to address the economy, something they will not do is say that biden could beat trump. >> frankly, a lot of folks not recognizing the real progress that was made by president biden and vice president harris, i think it is hard to look back and talk about what could have or might have or should have been. >> we would love to play a bite of vice president harris reacting to last night's results, but there are none. just before the results were called, the harris campaign sent a cochair to address a dwindling crowd at harris hq, and this is what he said. >> we still have votes to count. we still have states that have not been called yet.
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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 hq family and her supporters, but to address the nation. >> a theme of the historically brief harris campaign is that president trump -- she said president trump did not respect the results of free and fair elections. so far she has not said anything about this one, but she is poised to certify its results in january as president of the senate. harris? >> harris: steve doocy, thank you. did i call you steve? i'm sorry. that's peter! can you bring him back? [laughter] oh, peter! >> i've had worse by people at this white house! [laughter] >> harris: but still! i love you both come of that i do know you a part!
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come on! anyway, bye, peter. oh, man. my husband is watching that, as also. he's like, get more sleep. the liberal media are doing what you might expect. introspection is good. what do you think? watch. >> people woke up this morning with a dream and are going to bed with a nightmare. >> black voters came through for kamala harris. white women voters did not. that is what it appears happened in that state. >> let's be absolutely blunt about this. there were appeals to racism in this campaign, and there is racial bias in this country, and there is sexism in this country. >> the country we have lives in two totally separate information ecosystems. whatever happens, we will have to really understand the information consumption that young men have and why they think the economy will be better under donald trump when it never was. >> that's what makes the timing,
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i think, of president biden's decision to step down after the debate something that, if she loses, will be under a microscope. it's one of the big questions moving forward. >> if she were a 6'4" white man from arkansas, or from florida, and she ran a good middle-of-the-road campaign, talking about reaching out, do you think she'd be losing by that much? if she could chew tobacco and carry a shotgun and talk about football and be a guy's guy? you tell me. >> as a woman of color, i was so hopeful that a mixed-race woman married to a jewish guy could be elected president of this country. i think it had nothing to do with policy. i think this was a referendum of cultural resentment in this country. >> harris: i'm speechless. i mean, emily, if it had been a tall white man -- you want to know who plays the race card?
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come on. >> emily: the cultural resentment i heard was from everyone that we just heard in that montage. that is exactly what the american people rejected, which was shoving people into very hideous, very stereotypical, very degrading boxes. it was painting with a broad brush stroke entire skin colors and geographical locations and education realms and everything. the american people are so exhausted by that narrative, that very stale, toxic, divisive narratives. that's what they rejected. and donald trump has rejected it, too. the president has committed to unity. the chaos that was consistently referenced by the left, that was sown by the left. under president trump's watch that was not chaos stuck by his followers are him. we were at peace globally and within the country. it was a very specific source,
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and we had a bunch of them just now. >> harris: i'm just trying to figure out who they love. they don't want the 6'4" white man from arkansas. they are mad that i guess that's what it would have taken for it win. they made black men angry. latino men. who do they love? i guess i don't know what box -- that is disgusting. kristin welker is only one who pointed out, sandra, that this might have been a failure of democratic principles to put the guy often sighed and put her atop the ticket without a vote. if she was legitimate trying to drill down on what happened -- >> i think you have to immediately point out the data speak for itself. there was a sizable shift in the minority vote. hispanics and blacks come only from democrats for the republican candidate for the white house. that's showing up in all the data. i don't care where you look. what i heard was the media telling american voters, you are wrong. if you voted for trump, you are wrong. you are not capable of thinking for yourself is what i heard there.
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when i look back at the data -- this being an election about change, and the fnva revealing that the court or of the population and our respondents said they are looking for total upheaval. more than half said they want substantial change. they're talking about 82% of american voters who don't like the way things are going right now. in fact, when we asked them about the direction of the country, voters said 70% of them said we are on the wrong track. that's the media saying we didn't get this right. if they're trying to correct course for their party, they have to look back at that message they are putting out to voters who clearly were feeling differently than they were able to identify during this election cycle. >> harris: that is so beautiful he put, too, because that's what kamala harris and joe biden did about the economy. bidenomics is great! you not even feeling that. you're imagining it. >> brian: i don't think they understand. trump won. you don't have to lose, but
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trump won it. they like trump. they like his attitude, his strength. they like the persona out on the world stage. there's a reason why he is averaging 30,000 people at live events. they don't come there because they are bored. people really like the guy. he got more popular votes, more electoral votes. his crowds grew, his popular to group. the policies are apparent and transparent. you don't even have to put on the country because you don't like the results. trump won. it's like blaming the refs after you lost 50-0. you didn't compete. your candidate was bad in the white house, your candidate was dead when she was working the guy with a 32% approval rating, and then you put her out there and expect short-term memory loss, that she was not an effective leader in california, or in washington. so they like the other guy. i'm sorry. you don't have to put down the country. >> harris: kayleigh? >> kayleigh: for the media you would think this is a moment for self-reflection, but instead we
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got marginalization. the worst comments that were made were not what we played. listen to the worst comment made by joe scarborough. "a lot of hispanic voters have a problem with black candidates." that's called stereotyping. you want to know what reverend al sharpton said after that? he said this. "some of the most misogynistic things come from black men." that is called stereotyping. there's no place for that right now. it's a time of self-reflection. maybe we should change the name "morning joe" to "mourning joe" with a u because apparently that's what they decided to do all morning. they are deeply in mourning. the headline that media test has hit its lowest point, the media is the least trusted civic or political institution in the country for a reason. i remember four years ago, eight years ago, when "the new york times" put out an apology letter and said they would engage in self-reflection and try to better gauge the country after trump's win. they didn't. you've had a decade, "new york times," cnn,
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"morning joe." instead of reassessing you have doubled down on partisanship and the country has rejected your mode of operation. >> brian: you might as well watch "fox & friends" but you have no choice. >> kayleigh: idea, with steve doocy, and you, and ainsley. >> harris: you got me already! who thought we are friendlier. we are not mourning. >> harris: republicans have officially clinched control of the u.s. senate, paving the way for the g.o.p. to shape policy at our nation's capital. we will take a look at that in the u.s. house, because bicameral majority is a whole different ball of wax, too. iberogast bloating iberogast thanks to a unique combination of herbs, iberogast helps relieve six digestive symptoms to help you feel better. six digestive symptoms. the power of nature. iberogast. for more than a decade farxiga has been trusted again and again, and again. ♪far-xi-ga♪ ♪far-xi-ga♪
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>> emily: republicans not only won the white house last night, they also gained control of the senate. right now the g.o.p. has at least 52 seats in the upper chamber, and we are still waiting on results for a number of key races, so that number could grow even higher in the coming hours. and for the first time in 18 years, there is going to be a
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new republican leader in the senate. mitch mcconnell is stepping down from the roll, and just last hour he spoke about the election results. >> i think it was a referendum on the current administration, in part. people were just not happy with this administration, and the democratic nominee obviously was part of it. >> emily: kayleigh, what do you see coming round the corner? >> kayleigh: what i see coming around the corner is the importance of having the united states senate. 51 is the majority republicans have now. they are likely possibly to pick up two, maybe three more seats. maybe one. nevertheless, do you know what this means? supreme court justices. this means the supreme court will have a conservative majority for a decade, for a generation. it's a huge deal. the filibuster will remain in place. you had that for mitch mcconnell. it was very important. they will to there will be
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respect for our democratic norms and institutions. it's a huge win. he picked up the house -- and we are up to 52 senate seats now -- trump has a mandate to lead legislatively and the workingmen's economic agenda will put a tail and behind the second term and become a reality. >> emily: it is so exciting to me in particular harris. the speed we can make strides to reduce that bloated administration state that president trump has talked about, the actual measurable results, that means that it will be so much faster with that majority, so exciting to see the real impact so soon for the american people. >> harris: and i would say that the speed uc really does take a bicameral majority. so we'll have to see if the house can be held on by the g.o.p. so we are watching for that, too. but it certainly helps. what the senate leader mitch mcconnell just said, too, there will be no added states to give one side and advantage, as well. that was part of the legacy he wanted to leave behind. no filibuster, as you heard
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kayleigh say. so those are policy point, but he said, i've been here long time. i have been the leader, i have been the ranking, i have been all these different positions, and now i realize that i can bring forth the one dream i really had, and that was to leave behind a majority as i exited to my successor. so that is just an amazing point on two things. i was really touched by that, actually. >> emily: leaving after the super bowl. kilmeade, the judicial imprint is really important, to kayleigh's point. president donald trump installed more judges proportionately then any predecessor, especially on the democrat side. and with all the uproar over roe v. wade, the reality is that it restored the power to the people. so we can look forward to, instead of activist judges all over the place, really putting in that imprint to judiciary throughout the country that will ensure the constitution is protected and the power of the
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people's hands is projected for a generation to come. >> brian: it's probably the time that they're going to step aside, at least another two years because they have the senate confirmation and they'll have the majority. the other question is about the senate itself. dave mccormick, last hour they said there is no path for casey to keep that seat. so it's a matter of time before we get to 53 in this country with republicans. then you wonder what's going to be happening over in nevada or sam brown is still eating. there could be 55, and within i think 18,000 votes, mike rogers in michigan. so this also builds on the popularity of donald trump. if donald trump isn't popular, this is not happening. it doesn't show a million times and all the states. these people are not going to be successful. so i do think this is a little bit of a rebuke of, pack the court, get rid of the electoral college, add two state. and i really care what you want to say. i watched jamie raskin on hbo with bill maher. he says, that's our plan. we are ready for it.
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america had a different idea. >> emily: sandra, it's also a reflection by the hard work of the g.o.p. in terms of recruitment and in terms of campaigning throughout the country. speaker johnson played a big part in that, and now what is looking forward, what's around the corner, the hard work that can be executed on behalf of the american people because of the hard work it was put in place over these last years. >> sandra: hard work and messaging. i was digging into the ohio senate race where republicans were able to flip the seat there. the union vote was down seven points for the democrat in that race, sherrod brown. there was a big story about the youth vote in the senate race, as well. brown won the youth vote by 28 points back in 2018. he lost them by 2 this time around. that is a huge story in one senate race. >> emily: a colossal c shift that represents where the american people are right now, looking forward to change. back to how we were. and so much more. what does trump's victory mean for his lingering legal battles?
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>> harris: despite his victory, president-elect trump is still facing a slew of legal cases, including those 34 felony counts in new york for falsifying business records. david spunt is in washington, d.c., with details on how the president-elect will win -- how the win, rather, will impact those cases. david? >> hey, harris. a judge at the end of november has a sentencing scheduled for president-elect donald trump on november 26th. it is pretty obvious that trump's attorneys will ask for some sort of delay or something given the fact that he is now the next president of the united states number 47. but we have some news about special counsel jack smith, this
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man right here. donald trump said recently that he would fire jack smith "within two seconds of taking office." he found out that he may not have that opportunity. the reason is that the department of justice where jack smith works cannot prosecute a sitting president. fox news was told that jack smith will be gone from his post as special counsel, meaning the cases will be gone before trump takes the oath of office at noon on january 20th. this is the document case, though that was dropped already by judge aileen cannon back over the summer, and it is on appeal. but also this case for trump's alleged efforts to try to overturn the 2020 election. so given the fact doj policy says you cannot prosecute a sitting president, expect jack smith's case is to be done. the last on this is that atlanta case that deals with the 2020 elections. that is a local georgia case. we have seen over the last year how that has played out with
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fani willis, nathan wade. that has many problems, many different delays. so the bottom line for my story to all of you right now, donald trump's legal problems have essentially all gone away since he won last night. harris? >> harris: david, thank you very much. i want to take it out of the legal lane for a second, brian, and talk about h how the voters look upon these issues. >> brian: do you notice that they never said -- and she rarely said convicted felon? keep brought it up a couple times in june. after that you don't even hear it. once in a while you hear someone say that. one of the celebrities would say something like that. but for the most part they must have tested terribly. one of the reasons is it makes you examine the case. why is he a convicted felon? you want to have that argument? you don't need a lawyer or trey gowdy or to have kayleigh mcenany retained to understand that this was a frankenstein case that never should have been tried. he looks like a synthetic person.
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number two is there a 30 million felons in this country, many which are trying to get a second chance at life. when you diminish somebody was allegedly convicted of a felony, you are ripping them and their family who are trying to make it in life and feel a lot of headwinds. so that is one of the reasons why that dog didn't hunt. >> harris: i also wondered, kayleigh, if there wasn't some sort of containment theory about how much lawfare was against him. he would always use that line, "if it happens to me it could happen to you." i wonder what people's perspective of that was, if it would be their own personal assumption, too. >> emily: to. >> kayleigh: i think they realize this is the heavy hand of government that could come down on me, as well. it kind of went under the radar. we played it on the show. i thought it was really important. when the crowd at the trump rally was chanting "lock her up," meaning hillary clinton, donald trump waved off the crowd and chose not to go after hillary clinton. it wouldn't have been good for the country. that was donald trump's reaction. then i read in "the new york times," katie rogers -- i still cannot get over this prelisten to this
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closely. "mr. biden privately told his close circle of advisors that trump posed a threat to democracy, should be prosecuted for his role in the events of january 6th. according to two people familiar. he also told confidantes he wanted ag merrick garland to stop acting like a ponderous judge." biden backgrounded to "the new york times" that he wanted trump prosecuted for generally six. donald trump told a rally crowd, we won't lock her up. it's not good for the country. i'm thrilled today because lawfare has gone to the grave. no more lawfare in this country. >> harris: sandra? >> sandra: bill barr hopefully is joining us on our program this afternoon. >> harris: oh, good! >> sandra: he says prosecuted should do the right thing, and dismiss these comp cases, respect people's decision. that the former ag and state prosecutor should help the country move forward. he makes this case to fox digital, a fascinating read if you could take a look at it.
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it is on foxnews.com right now. he said the american people, when they cast their ballot in this election, they knew the allegations against him. they should put these aside and let him do the job the people elected him to do. >> harris: interesting. i will tune in for that, too. >> sandra: hopefully he has time for us. [laughter] >> emily: i agree. the only people who are using the phrase "convicted felon" are members of the mainstream media. i read that a lot. but the reality as well is that the son of the current president is also a convicted felon, so i think the glass house analogy rang true for the campaign of kamala harris. the reality, to your point, most americans know someone who's been convicted. the fastest growing populations in our incarcerated systems are veterans and single mothers. it is very real, the plight of those being prosecuted in this country. frankly, for absolute crap. people like the elderly pro-life
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demonstrator, the wielding and weaponization of the administrative state and the prosecutions by the doj under this current administration have know no bounds. donald trump was absolute the right to say this prosecution of me, you are next. we all saw it during those four years. frankly the americans saw through the sham that was the franken sign prosecution. they also saw, however, the case that's not going away, which is hunter biden. the real evasion existing, this is what i want my tax dollars to go toward, helping americans to thrive, and those that really break the law to be put behind bars. not as criminals running rampant, not those that have had issues with the regulatory state. for the average american voters like myself, who needs to be free and who needs to actually have accountability for their actions? donald trump, now that he is safe and sound in the white house moving forward, absolutely. those sham prosecutions will fade away because they were shams to begin with. if they actually had teeth, they wouldn't have. >> harris: it is such oppositio what the left was
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saying about who broke democracy, the existential lifeblood of democracy that they said they were trying to protect. this would go against that if you are going after your political opponent. that is pretty damning, what you read. >> kayleigh: damning. no one reported on it other than us. >> brian: what about the civil case? they try to take $900 million. >> harris: up next, the voters got the last word. up next, the markets are on fire since the president-elect's big win. we will get into it ♪ ♪
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>> in a little more than two months, donald trump will claim the mantle of 45th and 47th president of the united states. how did he sail the victory last night? what does it say about our nation, and where are we headed as a result? what will kamala harris say when she takes the stage later today at howard university? we've got the latest in democracy '24 just ahead. i'm john roberts. come join sandra and me at the top of the hour for "america reports." we will see you in about 9 minutes. >> we are never going to stop fighting for you, for your dreams, for the future of your children, and after the greatest political comeback in american history, we are going to lead the greatest economic comeback in american history under donald trump leadership.
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[applause] >> emily: that's vice president elect j.d. vance, vowing to jump-start the american economy in his victory speech. it consistently polled as the top issue to american voters, and president-elect to trump's victory has already made an impact. his win turbocharge the stock market prayed look at this. with investors appearing bullish on a second trump term, the dow has soared hundreds of points to an all-time high, along with the s&p 500 and nasdaq. thank goodness we have with us an economic expert in sandra. break us down. what does that excitement mean? >> sandra: i was watching the dow futures all night last night. they were rallying as the results were coming in. this is a market that knows that growth is good. we are going to have larry kudlow on later. to the electorate, they sense something wasn't right with the promises that were being made. what is one of the biggest
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problems right now? people can't get into a house. a first time home, maybe they're looking to get a bigger home. it want to get out of their house because interest rates are up to contain inflation, housing rates are at all-time highs. it's unaffordable. it's the unaffordability crisis that larry keeps writing about. if the plan to fix all that was to give things away -- people are smart enough to know that's not going to fix the problem. maybe for a minute, but if you give me $25,000 to get into a house, you give my neighbor or my friend and my coworkers, it's just going to push the price of the houses up. so they were kind of onto that. trump and his campaign were touting pro-growth policies. let's cut taxes, rollback regulations, get oil flowing again, let's get those gas prices down. and clearly that is the message that worked with american voters. this has sort of been the trump train. the market has been following some of him in the polls and showing up in the markets today. >> emily: showing up huge.
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there's always an emotional quotient around elections and sort of a high of hope. that is what some on the left have been saying. but the reality is the specificity she articulated, that trump policies represented as well as what we saw during his four years of presidency, that is why the market is so excited. because they know for real at that impact is like. >> brian: the way i understand it, cutting regulation's is going to be as big as anything. then oil stocks are going to be great. the other thing people like is a definitive outcome. people are worried about a long, drawn-out riot aplenty situation. but now we know exactly what it's going to happen. the other stock that people are talking about is trump media. i think he made another billion dollars because everyone says, we are going beyond truth social. if the president is on truth social. but if he's not the president, he's got to deal with court cases, maybe i'll dump that stock. you're probably better off getting it and holding onto it now. >> emily: to kilmeade's point, did definitive in its with which this president-elect has maintained american jobs,
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manufactured here, the tariff quotient with china and the like, it is very clear for once and for all how america stands economically. and in the business global market pray that is huge for this market. >> harris: i had an interesting conversation on voters voices last night and i had to do with tariffs. he said trump is all wrong on this because it'll drive the prices of everything up and tariffs are bad. if you put a tariff on mexico or china, do you think it makes a safer? the border, because they are our enemies. but the prices are going to go up. so i said, what you're saying is you want to find some equilibrium through negotiation to make sure that you are safe and they prices stay low. it was just a question. >> emily: more to come. stay with us, guys.
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showed you at the top of the hour, it was not avnet, 48-48, it has been called for donald j. trump. making him one state closer to picking up those seven swing states we still await two remaining swing states, but he 5 electoral votes this hour. also of note, in the house of representatives, we have three individuals, round republican, to democrats, who have secured their seats, one is john james,p happened this hour, the seventh district, and one house pickup happened, tom barrett in michigan. house speaker mike johnson telling me this, we are tracking all outstanding races. i am confident we are going to keep the house majority. that's house speaker mike johnson. we will track it on fox news and we will report when we have news as to where the house of our present is will go. thanks to everyone. now here is "america reports." ♪ ♪
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