tv Americas Newsroom FOX News November 7, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PST
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no injure eaves we'll report on right now. everybody is doing good. no significant injuries i've been told throughout the incident. >> 0 containment. 1,000 firefighters here. red flag warning until 6:00 p.m. tonight. on the weekends on shore moisture. next 24 hours dangerous situation. >> bill: thanks, best to all of those folks in southern california. thank you, sir. >> dana reads sports. >> oh, surprise. >> dana: i missed this. remember an australian break dancer? she is announcing her retirement. she was mocked for her unique dance moves after she received 0 points at the olympic games and faced allegations she manipulated the selection process in order to compete. the australian breaking organization they call it denied she did that but, i mean, come
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on. >> she is a trend setter there, right? breaking the mold. >> dana: goodbye, see you. >> bill: new hour begins now to you, danamarie. >> dana: president biden is about to address the nation to offer his view of the election results one day after calling president elect trump to offer congratulations. he will deliver his remarks in an hour at 11:00 a.m. eastern from the rose garden. concession and recrimination. the order of the day for vice president harris and democrats as they start to come to grips with a decisive defeat at the hands of president-elect trump. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. >> bill: good morning to you. thursday. >> dana: do you feel like you finally took a breath? >> bill: a little bit. might need the weekend, too. i bet you need a weekend, too, america. this year's election result delivered a harsh verdict to the democrat far left wing. results in two states yet to be
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decided. they also may break red. stand by. all across the voter map harris falling behind with key groups who helped send biden to the white house translating to major game-changing gains for trump to send him back. democrat dean phillips earlier today said it is clearly that his party has lost touch with everyday americans. >> i don't know why democrats have not learned the lesson of what really matters. we have to listen. bernie sanders hit it on the head. we have lost touch with the core of america. and that is showing through in a lot of elections right now. >> dana: mark meredith live in washington. hi, mark. >> dana, good morning. there is a lot of soul searching occurring within the democratic party. tuesday's sweeping result got everybody wondering what will come next. during her concession vice president harris called on democrats to organize and mobilize. some in the party think it is time to distance themselves from the far left. new york congressman ritchie torres posted trump has no
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greater friend than the far left which has managed to alienate historic numbers of latinos, blacks, asians, jews from the party like defund the police or river to the sea or latin x. bernie sanders socialist released a scathing letter insisting the party is out of touch writing. it should come as no great surprise a democrat party that left working class people will find the working class has abandoned them. some members of the squad think the problem was not with candidate harris but rather the messaging. >> she ran a campaign that -- she was tasked with an assignment that was nearly impossible. and she made it possible. this race was so close. >> our voter analysis shows the most pressing issue this cycle was the economy followed by
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immigration. top democrats say to them it still not clear why they lost. >> we are going to have to sit down as a democratic party and look hard at why that didn't compel more folks to come out and vote for democratic candidates. >> we'll be looking to see if president biden why he thinks voters abandoned democrats when he reacts to the results in a little less than an hour from now. >> dana: great to have you on the show today and thanks for everything you did through the election. >> bill: a map here. two states haven't been called but they look good for trump frankly at the moment, nevada and arizona. arizona count slow, okay? in nevada you have to get the vote in from clark which is las vegas. go ahead and focus on this part of the country, this part of the country, and then we'll go out here, all right? so this is 2016, all right?
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this is trump's victory. see that? okay. not bad. i was terrible at art, by the way. clear that. this is 2020, all right? biden's victory. remember here, here and here. put it in action. see that? okay. it's obvious to me, right? here we are in 2024. let me put it back, a blue wall, georgia and this is the american southwest that we're still waiting on here. pretty interesting. on election night talking about the realignment of america is always moving and in flex and we saw it move yet again. what we saw are some similarities in the states similar to why we were eight years ago. within the demographics themselves of those who voted we showed you time and again how trump did better with blacks, latinos, women, younger people in america all voting in his favor, which is why that map developed the way it did.
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>> dana: maybe one day you can show us how a boy becomes a man on the illustrator. a good one, america. we might save it for friday, maybe tomorrow on the board. want to bring in bari weiss founder and editor of the free press and i'm a happy subscriber to your podcast. you are doing amazing work. you think about this stuff a lot. put up fox news voter analysis showing gains in key groups so you had young people, black voters and latino voters to the point it is like there is no more segregating it out. to me there is a working class who said america, pay attention to us. >> yeah. i think the narrative that issued forth from the legacy press over the past eight years was that trump was kind of like the last gasp of a white majority america. and you just cannot make that argument anymore in the face of these election results. yet what is so unbelieve ashley
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or turn on msnbc or watch late night or hear people from the places i used to work they say the problem is not kamala heifer or the democrats. the problem is not an elite. that many americans frankly, including a lot of alienated democrats are pissed off about telling the problem is the voters and that the people that voted for trump in this country are racist, misogynistic. bigoted, desiring and authoritarian fascist regime. i think that's not looking at reality. it is basically saying more cowbell. it is saying the beatings will continue until -- >> bill: i was trying to find the quote we found earlier today. they nailed it. i will dig it that pile. >> too many papers. >> bill: you mentioned liberal media outlets.
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if you listen to them today they are asking the question whether the progressive movement is dead. the reason they're asking that question is can the democratic party win on this progressive policies again. what is your view on that whether or not you need to step into it, lean into it or run like hell. >> of course democrats can win. they can win by embracing actual progressive policies. in other words, policies that advance the interests especially the economic interests of working class americans. that's what the democratic party was always about. why is trump winning? he has stolen a lot of the ideas of frankly the old school democratic party. he ran on things that, you know, 30 years ago would have been considered mainstream democratic ideas, strong border, the idea of elevating the working class, the idea of tackling inflation, the idea of more isolationist policies. these were not traditional republican policies.
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how can progressives win again? by looking at what went wrong here and taking this moment and allowing it not to be a retrenchment of the idea of half of americans want a fascist regime. they don't. they want a good life for themselves and their families. actually looking in the mirror. it turns out that running on these extraordinarily niche issues, gender fluidity or defunding the police or where people get excited about don't actually matter or frankly feel profoundly out of touch to ordinary americans. if progressive is about these niche you find on campuses you will continue to lose if you double down on that. >> dana: democrats used to focus on inequality but chose to look
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at gender and -- want to play this for you, a montage of late night hosts. i'm seeing this cold. i read it but want to sight. let's play it. >> hi there. how are you doing? if you watch this show regularly i'm guessing you aren't doing great. yeah, me neither. >> well, guys, last night america decided to get back with the crazy x and elect donald trump as the 47th president of the united states. >> it was a terrible night for everyone who voted against him and a bad night for everyone who voted for him. you don't realize it yet. >> dana: i could write better jokes. >> one of the great stories of this election frankly is the rise of new media and the power of new media. you had one campaign. this has nothing to do with love donald trump or hate donald trump. objectively they ran a campaign in which both candidates, vance
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and trump went on three hour-long podcasts with people like vance and tim dillon and embraced a new media. platforms like x and then you had another candidate who was scripted to within an inch of her life and only sort of in the last several weeks of the campaign when they realized they couldn't run on the fact she wasn't the other guy, they sort of started -- she did some things. but look at the numbers. the people that you just showed, they are not speaking to the average american voter. they aren't even speaking to massive numbers of people. >> dana: i feel like they are spitting into the wind. that's the election result, too. >> yeah. to me if you can't look at what happened on -- i've lost track of days. you have tuesday night and that does not -- >> bill: i think that's what dean phillips was trying to describe a moment ago in the
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sound clip. >> in the face of new information it is a good thing to ask yourself if you need to revise your priors. if you are not doing that, continue to -- you will continue to see the same results. >> bill: nice to see you again. hope your life is good. >> dana: great to have you on set. >> bill: president-elect trump turning from white house victory to building his cabinet. senate republicans hoping to kick start the new administration with confirmation hearings at the top of the new year. bill melugin, they started this back in august. trump learned from the first time and now 2.0 might be a much more experienced commander-in-chief as he goes in in january. bill, good morning. >> good morning to you as well. they're certainly ready. winding down with the celebration phase and want to get to work and starts with making picks for the future trump cabinet and the transition team says they are well underway with that. they say in part quote in the days and weeks ahead president
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trump will be selecting personnel to serve our nation under his leadership and enact policies that make the life of americans affordable, safe, and secure. now some of the names being tossed out for potential cabinet picks include north dakota governor dougburg um. vivek ramaswamy. elon musk and rfk junior. donald trump junior says he will be heavily involved in the process and surround his dad with america first folks who will be good for the country. >> i will be heavily involved on the transition. now that we know who the real players are and the people who will actually deliver on the president's message and the people who don't think they know better than the duly elected president of the united states. i want to make sure those people are in his cabinet and make sure those people are in this administration. >> guys, we can cross one name off the list.
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the "washington post" had been reporting that senator tom cotton was being looked at for secretary of defense but lucas tomlinson reports sources are telling him senator cotton asked the trump team to withdraw his name from consideration for that for family reasons. he wants to stay in the senate as well and is potentially looking at a position to run for in senate leadership. send it back to you. >> bill: thank you. it will all come true over time as it continues to develop. thank you in florida there. >> dana: i'm obsessed with this case. moments ago daniel penny arrived in court as his subway choke hold trial resumes in new york city. we have the latest on that. >> bill: explosion and wildfires and forcing thousands to evacuate in southern california. we'll get you the latest. the sun is up right there and get an idea what we're in for today. >> dana: the promise of a new trump administration sending stocks soaring yesterday. layer kudlow on what's fueling the excitement among investors.
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visit finishyourdiploma.org to find free and supportive adult education centers near you. >> bill: fast moving fire now forcing thousands from their homes in southern california. a live look now in ventura county. powerful winds whipping the flames just north of los angeles. threatening thousands of homes and farms and ranchs. a thick plume of smoke rising hundreds of feet into the morning light blanketing entire neighborhoods and limiting visibility for firefighters as we go in on that. crews racing to homes threatened by the flames to save lives. officials using all resources, including water dropping helicopters and fixed wing aircraft. the fire is still burning out of control as william talked about 30 minutes ago. we need to get a fix on it now in southern california. 7:20 out there.
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10:20 in new york. >> the economy, taxes, how business is treated. >> it just came down for taxes. >> i want a better economy for my family and employees. >> democrats didn't look at the issues happening for people. >> dana: when the voters tell you what's on their minds you should believe them. the issues that prompted them to vote for former president trump are the ones they were telling us for many months. economy and jobs and almost 40%. immigration is next at 20%. abortion and that was number one for some people but not enough for the democrats, 11. climate change and health security. that's the lagging one. people on the democratic side say it is so important. and the condition of the economy. it is one of the reasons you had a feeling it was not going to go to democrats' way. not so good or poor at 64%. that's a lot. the democrats would take you to
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the fed report out of st. louis and say look at this statistic. everything is fine. that didn't work, either. better able to handle the economy 41% harris, 50% trump. when voters are telling you the economy was the issue, the result shouldn't be that surprising bill. >> bill: u.s. stocks soared yesterday after president-elect's stunning win. dow earning its biggest gain in two years. they like the pro-growth policies and going after regulation state. larry kudlow knows it well. you going back to the white house. i woke up this morning, does larry want that job again? you might be the guy. he said. >> i love fox. i love fox. that's, you know, fox is a great place. fox has been great to me. >> bill: why don't we leave it
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there? >> i love being at fox. >> bill: you are a great contributor for us on days like this, too. two things to run past you and get your take. chris coons, democrat from delaware said voters just didn't notice how much we did for them. >> what i was seeing and hearing, a big focus on the economy and inflation. and frankly a lot of folks not recognizing the real progress that was made by president biden and vice president harris. we've seen landmark bipartisan legislation signed into law reducing prescription drug prices for people. capping the price of insulin, investing in infrastructure but they didn't feel it and didn't give us credit for it. >> bill: inflation reduction act and on and on. "wall street journal" editorial board. democrats, blame yourselves. democrats decided to use taxes from plumbers and welders to forgive college loans for
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lawyers and grad students in grievance studies end quote. nailed it, larry, did they not? >> by the way, the story came out i guess tuesday, either monday or tuesday that biden-harris was going to have another cancellation of student loans totaling something like $125 billion. that fell in the cliff as exactly right. most people don't -- didn't go to college and didn't have student loans and many people who did go to college paid off their student loans or were working hard to do it. and the supreme court has ruled and district judges have ruled that they don't have the authority to cancel these student loans. that whole story completely backfired on them time and time again. >> blind policy and lost young voters along the way anyway. as they said let's turn the
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page. what's trump going to do? what should we expect? >> well, you know, i thought the stock rally yesterday was really interesting. mr. trump is going to move at least on the economic front you can expect him to move quickly to line up a big tax cut bill and you can expect him to move quickly to line up a major effort to deregulate essentially take all of the $2 trillion of biden-harris regulations and take them off the books. that can be done by executive authority. so i expect to see quite a lot of tax cuts and deregulation. you are also going to see permitting reform. that will reopen the spigots for fossil fuels, for leases, for pipelines, for lng and lng exports which the biden-harris people closed down. cheaper energy is one of the things that is going to boost
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consumer profits and pocket books. >> bill: you know oil, $3.20 a gallon. how soon can that get below $2? >> well, give it a little breathing room. it won't happen everynight. there is no reason why you can't get back to where trump add it in 2020, for example. it averaged a little over $2 a gallon. it will take a little bit of time. the other thing i want to mention, though, very important in this. there is going to be a big budget cutting exercise, all right? republicans in the senate and the house will be working with president trump's white house and this is the elon musk commission on government efficiency. he has already been working with transition people. his target is a $2 trillion reduction. they'll go after programs that
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have been obligated but not yet spent out. a lot of that will be around the climate change, green new deal, terrorism that they put into place. things like the misnamed inflation reduction act. all the pork barrel stuff in the chips bill which really has very little to do with chips. they will go after that. and i don't think wall street understands how powerful this movement is going to be to downsize government, to get rid of unnecessary programs, to start moving the deficit share of gdp down to start moving the debt share of gdp down. these are profoundly pro-growth and anti-inflationary. anti-inflationary. i think these are very important issues. people perhaps are not giving enough credit to it. tax cuts for growth, 100%.
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deregulation for growth, 100%. open up the fossil fuel spigots and nuclear power movement gain ground. terrific, 100%. budget cuts, 100%. the stock market was up 1500 points yesterday saying welcome back, mr. trump. welcome back, president trump. we want growth and you are going to give it to us. >> bill: thank you, larry. >> it was a big welcoming. >> thank you, larry, for coming on today and see you at 4:00 on fox business. thank you, larry. >> dana: president biden set to address the nation for the first time since the democrats' election losses. we'll bring it to you as it happens. speaking of those losses, democrats now pointing fingers on what went wrong with the harris team.
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from the rose garden addressing the results of the election. some harris allies pointing the finger at the president. we want to bring in hands nichols, axios political reporter. there is a lot more to come. one thing. david plouffe said that it was a privilege to spend the last 100 days with kamala harris and the amazing staff who left it on the field for their country. we dug out of a deep hole. not enough. devastating loss. thank you for being in the arena. jackui heinrich said that obama staffers are trying to pin blame on biden for harris's loss. one called him a sanctimonious a-word and find it unproper dictive. joe biden is the president of the united states and won without you. he successfully beat donald trump, something he never did. so this i guess is to be expected a little bit, but tell us about the scope and scale of
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it. >> that's the key question, dana. the scope and scale will escalate if people go more on the record with those biting harsh comments, right? you read the initial plouffe statement and it is not that over the top. it is congratulating his team. someone in biden world and jackui has a live wire took offense at that. i'll look to see how many recriminations there are going forward and how public they are. underneath the surface, there is a lot of frustration on both sides. i think one thing overlaying all this is this sort of acknowledgement that the size of the margin of donald trump's victory is a pretty strong indication that tactically the campaign probably couldn't have done a whole lot more to win. it could have been decided a year ago or two years ago. kamala harris or joe biden if he was still the nominee was facing a big uphill battle. >> dana: is there anyone on that white house complex who thinks wow, maybe our policies were to
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blame? >> we'll find out. no one is saying that publicly. i will ask now for six months off to write a book on the biden administration. that kind of reporting takes a long time and i suspect ultimately we'll find out where the original sins were. was it the size of the stimulus project. the afghanistan withdrawal, biden's decision in thanksgiving of 2022 after the mid-term election where democrats performed a lot better than expecting, was it his decision then to stay in? that is what most folks are 0ing in is. if he opened up the process and a a primary kamala harris may have been the nominee and maybe things would turn out differently. the direction of the country and margin of votes donald trump had a lot of head winds at his back. >> dana: my old friend said that the about biden. he shouldn't have run.
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this is no time to pull punches or be concerned about anyone's feelings. he and his staff have done an enormous amount of damage to this country. it might be a while for democrats to come to grips with this. >> yeah look, i didn't see the date on that quote. he didn't say it publicly in 2022 and 2023. when reporters were reporting and trip down memory lane. early 2024 if you reported something that was cast and maybe raised questions about biden's age, about -- raise questions whether he was the best candidate and basing it on people telling you this, people came down on you hard and the implication was always that oh, do you want trump to win? there is a lot of negativity on any -- a lot of criticism which we can take and should be able to take on reporters that questioned and were basing it on real sourcing about biden's
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fitness to go the distance and win a campaign. the whole country saw it during the debate. >> dana: every day from the press briefing room karine jean-pierre said i don't know what you guys saw, biden runs circles around us in the white house all the time. it wasn't believable. i'm sure your book, if you write it, will be great and here is to asking mike and jim for six months. all right, hans. >> a yeefrment >> dana: have a great day. >> bill: kris martin took a tumble in australia yesterday. roll it. here we go. >> whoa! thank you for catching me. thank you, guys. >> bill: he is okay. just a tumble. >> dana: gutfeld loved that
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video. >> bill: he is okay. we had another one a couple weeks ago. olivia rodrigo. her tumble was tough. oh, there it is. different shot. >> dana: not easy to fall in public. glad he is okay. election day data is rolling in in two battleground states nevada and arizona remained uncalled. can the president elect sweep the swing states? a military judge restores plea deals for 9/11 terrorists. how families of the victims are reacting to this controversial move. >> they should have never cut the deal in the first place. talk to the families. don't act like we're the ones on trial and the boogieman. with tremfya®, most people saw 100% clear skin... ...that stayed clear, even at 5 years. serious allergic reactions and increased risk of infections may occur. before treatment, your doctor should check you
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>> dana: brian kohberger is set to appear in court minutes from now accused of murdering four college students fighting to take the death penalty off the table. good morning, dan. >> brian kohberger will be in court today for a hearing that could mean life or death or him in boise started in minutes at the top of the hour. defense team filed 13 different motions attacking the application of the death penalty not only here in idaho but acrows the u.s. where it is still used a total of 21 states. an example of the argument they are making. statutory aggravating factor is unconstitutionally vague if it fails to principled guidance between death and a lesser penalty. they are relying on multiple murders, heinous or cruel, disregard for human life and threat to society. fox digital spoke with a death penalty expert. >> the trial court is going to
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follow precedent of the idaho supreme court and the united states supreme court. but i think what it does is it begins to lay the ground work for appellate review on these issues. >> there are currently nine inmates in idaho on death row. the last execution there was in 2012. there is one scheduled to take place next week. unlikely the arguments that will be made today will have any effect in the death penalty will be taken off the table. that won't happen. the trial is scheduled to start next august and we'll see what happens if he is convicted and sentenced to death what the appellate courts may do with the argument made today. >> bill: day 11 in new york city for the trump trial of the marine veteran daniel penny. court is underway now. he is charged with second degree manslaughter after the deadly choke hold of a homeless man, jordan neely on a new york city
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subway. getting a lot of attention in the city. judge janine is watching this as well. good morning to you. here is a witness, a teenager described as age 19. i got scared by the tone that he was saying talking about penny -- apologize, neely. i have seen situations but not like that. another one, staff sergeant new york police department, right? he was an apparent drug user and very dirty. i didn't want my officers to put their lips on his mouth. they could get aids or hepatitis. chest compressions would be enough to get him awake. >> the first witness was a teenager and you could see in the video that she had taken. i want you to think of this trial as a puzzle. the main part of the puzzle is everyone on that subway train, when it was locked underground,
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dark and jordan neely comes on and says someone is ready to die. he lunges a at a woman with a baby in a carriage. rosario said she was so nervous she felt she would pass out. hid her face in her friend's chest. she prayed for the door to open. then what you have are people who then kind of come around when it stopped and they start taking pictures of what is going on on the subway car not on the car at the time of the incident. those people are on the outside aren't essential to the case. but what rosario judge is communicates the incredible fear. when she is videotaping with one hand the other hand is shaking violently like this.
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you can actually see it in the video. she is so petrified. so they refer -- someone didn't know penny's name. another witness didn't know his name. they referred to the defendant danny penny as the white guy. the prosecution rolls with it throughout the whole course of the direct examination. you don't do that in a case where there are undertones of racism and people outside the courtroom yelling justice for jordan neely. all you do as a prosecutor and you say to the witness are you referring to anyone in the courtroom? do you recognize that person? let the record reflect he is referring to the defendant, danny penny. now he knows he is mr. penny. they kept pushing the white guy thing. there are all these subtle things going on in the courtroom we might not see that are sending signals to the jury. but yesterday was -- monday was all about the prosecution presenting its case. they know that jordan neely needed to be constrained in some
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way. that everyone on that train needed to be protected. the issue is whether or not danny penny held on too long. i think what this case is going to come down to is the actual autopsy report because the defense attorneys are saying wait a minute, he didn't die from the choke hold. now we know he had a pulse when he was on the floor. as you just read from that sergeant, the sergeant didn't want any of his people his police officers giving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation because he believed the guy neely had lived on the streets had aids or i think it was hepatitis or something and they didn't have the protective masks from the police department, which would have allowed them to give him cpr. so there is a lot going on right now. we're right at the beginning. a lot more to come. the thing that is still clear people were petrified. someone can come in later with video saying he was holding onto him. i don't think he should have done that. you weren't on the train.
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>> dana: you said there are racial undertones of this but also these people who live in new york on the jury. they are seeing the city's broken down mental health system. how the left continually says it's okay to let people in jail to get out of jail over and over and over again and know what it is like to be on the streets or subway with people like that. >> we're coming right off of the pandemic at this point and people are petrified and people are getting thrown in front of subway cars and trains. you have homelessness, mental illness, drug abuse, and you've got violence going on unprosecuted. unpunished. >> bill: we'll lean on you as it goes on. >> dana: we're moments away from president biden's remarks in the rose garden one day after vice president harris conceded defeat to president-elect trump.
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nation from the rose garden on what looks like a gorgeous day here in the late fall in washington, d.c. so we'll bring it to you as soon as it happens. the first time he speaks since harris's election defeat to donald trump. >> bill: okay. quick moment here. i will show you the races we haven't called just yet. maybe give some clues why that is. this is nevada. you've got 90% of the estimated vote out. clark county, vegas is where you get the votes. as you see right now so harris leads in clark county by about two points. it appears that donald trump has a really good chance to flip that state of nevada with about a five-point advantage now as opposed to four years ago. same for arizona. very similar dynamic shaking up here. you have more of the vote out. 30%. this is where you go to get the vote in arizona, maricopa county, okay? trump leads in that county we'll
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see whether or not it sticks. it looks like he is on track for a five-point swing in those states and if that holds he will win both of them. pennsylvania cambria county, this is trump this year. the outstanding vote is not normal for the rest of pennsylvania, only in this county east of pittsburgh. 37.7, eight years ago. 37 point three. why am i showing you this? we haven't called a senate race in cambria county. i will show you why. this is dave mccormick trying to flip that seat. right now pretty good performance by mccormick. sorry, that's incorrect, indiana county. cambria county 23%. mccormick has a good chance. had a very good chance of maintaining that but there is a law in pennsylvania if you are
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at.5 or under you get an automatic recount. that's very possible. >> dana: are those mail-in ballots they're waiting for? >> bill: they had a problem on election night. things were delayed. you have half of it out there and we'll see. it is a heavy red county. it seems to favor mccormick. >> dana: a friend of mine yesterday as you look at this you would rather be dave mccormick than bob casey right now given what is potentially out there and left to be counted. >> bill: i would agree. speaking with the mccormick campaign yesterday. district in philadelphia were still outstanding. when his campaign was convinced that the number in those precincts is not something that could upset his current track with casey. that was their take. >> dana: if a recount is triggered most aren't successful. they almost never result in a change in the declared winner. >> bill: the reason we showed
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you the white house. we're getting ready for event number three. trump coming out at 3:00 in the morning, you got kamala harris coming out yesterday afternoon when we were on at 4:00 and then president biden will come out any moment now. >> dana: so he will give these remarks today at 11:00 a.m. harris faulkner will take you through that and we'll give you to her next. see you tomorrow. >> harris: we begin with this fox news alert. at any moment president biden will address the nation for the first time since the president-elect donald trump had his victory. it was a massive blow to the democratic party. democrats lost the white house, control of the u.s. senate, and they could still fail to win back the majority of the house. some of those races are still too close to call. i'm harris faulkner and you are in "the faulkner focus." after vice president kamala
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