tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News November 7, 2024 4:00pm-5:01pm PST
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from the river to the sea. again, make people uncomfortable. i think the democrats right now are in a tent and looking for some sunshine. >> bret: yeah. that's going to be a story for some time. former president trump, the president-elect, got the biggest jewish vote in a long, long time. panel, thanks so much. tomorrow on "special report," everything you want to know about the possibility of mass illegal immigrant deportations. what that looks like. remember, if you can't catch us live, set your dvr 3:00 p.m. on the west coast and 6:00 p.m. in the east. follow bret baier exclusive behind the scenes photos, videos. good time up in new york for all the election stuff. thanks for inviolate us into your home tonight. that's it for this "special report," fair, balanced and still unafraid. "the ingraham angle" starts now. ♪ ♪ >> laura: good evening, everyone, i'm laura ingraham. this is "the ingraham angle"
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reporting from washington tonight, thank you as always for spending some time with us. now, this is a fox news alert. i guess mark cuban was on to something because donald trump is so threatened by strong, intelligent women that he just announced his first major staff pick and it's his campaign chief susie wiles. now, susie wiles will be the chief of staff of the white house. she is a political veteran. tough as nails. and this is something that you have to know about susie. she is a rarity in politics. why? she never wants credit. she just wants to get things done. now, one of her top conditions for taking the job, apparently, was that she wanted to be a real gate keeper for, you know, people who can walk into the oval office, people who can't. and the quote is: the clown car can't come into the white house at will. a source telling cnn. all right. that means gone is going to be the stream of informal advisers, friends, relatives, you know, we all have them but in the white house it gets very chaotic who
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had access to president trump during his first term. and sometimes complicated the job for his chief of staff. so that will be a change. now, wiles kept the campaign really disciplined and focused on the road and to great success. so congrats to suzie. and in more news tonight, a huge senate pickup in pennsylvania. where republican dave mccormick has unseated incumbent democrat senator bob casey. now, of course, trump won the key battleground state by 2%. but many thought that casey with his last name, of course iconic in the state, his father was governor, would be able to hold on but no, it was not the case. joining us now pennsylvania senator elect, i love saying that dave mccormick. congrats, dave. senator elect, sorry. what made the difference here. i know you are giddy tonight. >> yeah. good evening, laura. thanks for having me. i think what made the difference is people want change. they -- i think they represented that desire for change by
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elected president trump. i think the same with me. they are deeply distressed by the skyrocketing prices, the wide open border. the crime in our cities, the war on fossil fuels and they want change and common sense leadership and that's why i think they elected president trump and i think that's why they have elected me and, you know, i got to tell you, i'm honored to do it, i'm so excited. critical time for our country, and honored to represent the great people of pennsylvania. regardless of party, by the way. represent, you know, democrats, republicans, independents. >> laura: you bet. >> my pleasure to represent every single one of them. >> laura: senator casey has not yet conceded his campaign said as the pennsylvania secretary of state said this afternoon there are tens of thousands of ballots across the common wealth still to count. the race is within a half a point and cannot be called while the votes of thousands of pennsylvanians are still being counted. we will make sure every pennsylvanian's voice is heard. senator elect, any concerns
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there? >> well, you know, listen, the reason i think the a.p. called the race is they saw the same thing we saw. which is i have 30,000 -- more than 30,000 votes lead in the race right now. and the outstanding counties cambria county, which i'm winning 75% of the vote. and there is 20, 30,000 more votes to be counted. so there is no mathematical path for senator casey winning. and i think that's why the a.p. called it. that's why we have had so much confidence. but, listen, i lost an election by 900 votes. so i know -- i know you have got to process it. i know senator casey has got to process. this and he has been in elected office for 30 years. his family has had a great history of public service. so you know, he will have to find his way to the right answer. but i think the math is indisputable. and i think that's why the a.p. called it and why we are confident moving forward to start preparing to be the next? senator from pennsylvania. >> laura: senator, republicans
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have for -- race after race, year after year. they have kind of written off philly and the joke is you can always find the votes in philly, always a running joke. late at night can you find the votes where you need them if you are a democrat. but you did find some fertile ground here for republican growth. again, why is that and what can republicans learn going forward into the midterms? >> well, listen, i tried to campaign across our great common wealth and those suburbs in the cities, i didn't think those were fertile ground for us, even though they are majority democrats. these problems, whether it's skyrocketing prices or the crime or obviously the fentanyl that comes from the wide open border, those are affecting all of pennsylvania. and so, i started, you know, my race, i started to talk about issues and leadership. and the kinds of common sense solutions we need problems. i think that appealed to people. and, listen, i also think they don't want career politicians.
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they want change. and i represented change. you know, i was someone who was saying we don't want to make incremental changes. we need to shake things up. and that's my campaign. >> laura: and you were actually showed up in philly, and in some of these tough neighborhoods, where, again, republicans don't like to go there. but you actually campaigned there. that also sends a message to people that they are not forgotten. it doesn't matter if you didn't vote for them last time around. you are not forgotten and i think -- and i'm going to talk about this in a moment. this has to be the strategy going forward in every state across the country. do you agree with that and then you can answer about how soon fracking is going to resume. >> well, listen, i absolutely agree with that i think -- i think party affiliation is up for grabs. i don't think people identify themselves as clearly as republican or democrat. they want problem solvers, and so whether it's the jewish community or the trade unions, or the african-american community or the hispanic
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community, i looked at all of those. as a place where i could bring leadership and common sense solutions and so, i spent a lot of time campaigning there and fortunately it paid off. i'm honored about that. in terms of fracking, i want to have the conversation stop being about banning fracking. which by the way can you ban fracking without actually banning it. ban it with red tape. >> laura: yeah, regulations. >> i want to talk about doubling, tripling, quadrupling fracking in pennsylvania. we need the pipelines, we need the energy source to create great paying jobs. we need it to be energy dominant from a national security perspective. and that natural, beautiful clean natural gas is the key to reducing carbon emissions around the world. so i think it's a great opportunity to offer something to pennsylvania but also the rest of the country and the rest of the world. >> laura: senator elect, do you believe that you can work with your colleague -- soon-to-be colleague john fetterman who had some populist tendencies.
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you hear them come out every now and then. as well as people like chuck schumer but specifically your colleague from your state? well he has not always been nice to me on social media. but i absolutely think that i will be able to find ways to work with him. we probably disagree on 90% of things no doubt. he has a very different view of economic policies. he is much more of an devout socialist. and i'm certainly think preenterprise is the path to the future. he has been incredibly strong on fighting back on anti-semitism. he has been incredibly strong in support of israel. he has been one of the rare democrats actually called out the crisis on the border. so, i think he is a man that speaks his mind. i admire that and when he speaks his mind about something where i think he and i can work together, i will be the first to try to do it. listen, these problems as i said don't lend themselves to one party. they are problems that effect everybody. so, you know, i'm going to be one who fights on principle for what i believe is right, but i'm somebody who knows you have got
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to find common ground with others to be able to make things happen. >> laura: yeah, especially on those jobs in pennsylvania that you all need desperately. good paying jobs. and fetterman should be in favor of all of that senator elect, thank you very much. congratulations. you worked your butt off. thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. >> laura: you're welcome. and now, california, here we come. that's the focus of tonight's angle. ♪ >> laura: all right. it's not even been, what, 48 hours since we learned that donald trump blu blew the doorsf the presidential race. our so-called experts kind of remain in a suspended state of shock. shocked by president trump's strength across pretty much all demographic groups. >> donald trump has, in 2024, put together a working class coalition of white working class voters and working class voters of people of color. >> the democrats are in danger of becoming a regional coastal
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party. >> curious visit by donald trump to the south bronx to have a rally back in may and a lot of people who didn't get it said what's he doing there? well, it's clear what he was doing. he was sending the message to people there, to latino americans, to black americans that i see you. i hear you, i care but. >> laura: well, not only did trump grow his support among hispanics, among young people, african-american men. he grew his support in deep blue states that he lost. in new york, where trump lost by almost 23 points in 2020, on tuesday, he cut that margin in half. and then in new jersey in 2020, we're saw a little bit of this with that governor's race that was so close. trump lost by a whopping 16 points to biden. but this time, he came within five points of harris. this is incredibly encouraging for republicans. now, basically the same story in illinois where trump also cut his deficit there by about a half.
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so, as these numbers settle in, you have to wonder do democrats or their informal advisers they recognize some of the problems you could hear that in those clips that we played. do they really show signs of understanding what substantively went wrong? >> trump very good sending cultural signals. every democrat i talked to we cannot win if our people are not on these podcasts these bro path ofs. >> they are on tiktok and whether it's teenagers or college kids or people in their 20's, and donald trump is a superstar. >> we got to watch this. >> it's not about politics, it's not about policy. it's about a pop cultural movement. >> laura: again, i don't want to beat up on people who lost this race, but that's a total misreading of the situation. the only reason trump could have those moments, those viral moments, is because he, in fact, offered the right policies. and he had a fantastic record on
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inflation, on wages, and the border. and as for sending cultural signals, well, that wasn't it either. he spoke to the real concerns of people. he didn't just say i care about you. he spoke to their concerns. and then he took it a step further because he advanced common sense solutions. boys shouldn't be in girls sports. dei is unfair and unworkable. your taxes are too high: i will change all that that was clear. but, you know, messaging is important. but what the democrats had was not a comms problem. remember, that's what the biden-harris people kept thinking over the last two years. if we only had a better comms strategy. that was never it. it was always the policies that wterrible. biden harris wrexd the economy. they slung open the border. they did ton purpose. hispanics understood what was going on. young people saw what was going on. and more women recognized all of
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this than the democrats ever predicted they would. yet, there is little to no recognition. still expressed over the past two days of how calamitous all of this was to working people. by the way, the working people of all background who began to flee their democrat party in wisconsin and michigan, pennsylvania and beyond. by the way, their messaging on abortion? how much did we pear about abortion over the past five months? it was totally off and frankly, in the end, i think a lot of women were insulted by it. >> question about whether or not women were going to come out for kamala harris. whether or not men were going to come out for kamala harris in a post roe world on that issue. and if you just look at, for example, suburban women, they, according to the national polls, they went for trump. >> laura: yeah, well, guess what? women actually see the grocery
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bills. women understand the heating oil costs in the winter. they get all that they see the problem with migrant crime. they are not one issue voters. they never have been. we tried warn the democrats. they didn't listen to us. now, the stark reality for them is a huge opportunity for republicans. so after three and a half years of high prices, the open border, enthusiasm for the democrats, i mean, it's just -- it's astounding. it took a major hit across the whole country. and meanwhile, trump grew his support for the g.o.p. everywhere from brooklyn to philadelphia, to cook county in illinois. so here's an idea. when trump, you know, realized finally okay, i won this thing, and now we know he won. here's the next tour. i know they are tired of tours and rallies, maybe. why not go to the major blue cities that he never really had the chance to visit during the campaign? go to boston, go to san
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francisco, go to l.a., go to chicago, spend some time in seattle, maybe even portland, oregon. go places like that. go there with all this momentum in the wind he has at his back and make it very clear that he loves those cities. he loves the people of those cities. even if they didn't support him. and is he proud to be their president. and that he is going to do everything possible to serve them and their interest during his time in office. cities have to be rebuilt. they have to be rethought. and he is a perfect person to do it. and he should, yes, and everyone always says i'm crazy when i say this. he should make a big play for california. whereby the way we heard today that gavin newsom is setting the stage for massive resistance against the trump agenda. we know that's all about gavin and 2028. buff the truth is, well, gaviglio's party lost support in
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2024, even in california 56% ofe vote counted he has 40% of the vote. so i think the time has come to really go after the vote in california. in a common sense, populist attractive way. bring it home. bring california back to the g.o.p. that's where it belongs. i will send elon musk out there. i would sent vance out there. spend lots of time. lots of energy talking to californians. especially to the growing hispanic voters in southern california. and the 2028 olympics are going to be out there. so it gives you a great chance. and while we're at it. why not have the 2028 convention out there? i know, we just finished this race. i know. i'm thinking of 2028. because the more money the democrats spend to defend california, the less they will have to create havoc for good candidates in the rest of the
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country. so, republicans have nothing to lose and everything to gain. by making an all-out effort to flip california. and my friends, it's time to end the division between the red states and the blue states. bring the country together and, if anyone can do this, trump can. and that's the angle. joining me now, lara trump, rnc co-chair. laura, i know you are thinking i just got finished with this race. and ingraham is already pushing me on 2028. but it's a compliment to you because of the great success the party had in growing its base and beyond to all these demographic groups that sometimes have been written off by republicans to be perfectly candid. so, how does the party plan on taking this success and blowing it out to really, really go after some of these bluer of blue states? >> yeah. give us an hour, laura.
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my gosh, we just finished this one. [laughter] i agree with you. we have always had to be forward-thinking if we're going to win. that's why donald trump won this election. he did go -- you know, you talk about the south bronx. that rally in the bronx was really epic and it really caught the democrats off guard. and he did go to other places. now, you are right. he didn't go to every blue city in america. he went a lot of places. he showed up in atlanta. he showed up in detroit. he went to these places because he believed that he had to ask for people's votes and he want them to know yes, i'm here, i want to hear from you i want to be your president and obviously played offered saw how numbers of people come out for donald trump truly were historic. in almost every voting bloc donald trump gained voters. this party gained voters. and we want to expand the base of the party. this is a party for every person in america. it doesn't matter what you look like. it doesn't matter your religion, it doesn't matter -- we don't
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care how love. we want you in this party and we want you as a voter. i think donald trump, he has always said the success will unify us. that will happen during his second term in office. i think at love people are taking another look at the republican party because we are a party for everybody. >> laura: yeah, so that moment for him in detroit, with the pastors, the south bronx, you know, he spent a little bit of time in california. but you see my point. that you all put together a strategy based on the 50 state strategy. it was a national campaign. republicans kept making the mistake of going regional. you went national and i think that completely took the democrats off guard. i don't think they were ready for it. and i think you -- you rocked their world because they had more money. three times the money y'all had. so you had less money. had you fewer volunteers at one point. and, yet, you had the policies and committed people on the ground to make a difference. that stunned me. i got to say, just the
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organization of it lara, you have never done anything like this before. what was the one thing you learned from these last two years? >> e my gosh, i mean, i have learned a lot in the last nine years, certainly all of us in the trump family have. i probably know more about election integrity than i ever anticipated. i think that had to happen in this election. look, we had to restore people's faith in our electoral process. and i really feel like we did it this election. we wanted to send a message out there to people don't even try it. we also had to reassure our voters yes, when you come out and vote, it is going to be worth it. your vote will matter and your vote will count. i think that was very powerful for a lot of people. so, i probably had a quick lesson on a lot of things those of us in the trump family are very quick studies. we have had to learn and pack it all n the past nine years. it's really been an honor. i mean, i was honored to be a part of this team. i think it's absolutely incredible. it's historic, and i'm incredibly proud, of course, of my father-in-law, no one
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deserves it more than he does. >> laura: lara, your reaction to the susie wiles pick for chief of staff just like with you and with kellyanne and all these people over the years i guess he just doesn't like strong, intelligent women. >> yeah. yeah, sorry to tell mark cuban about that. this is a great pick. obviously susie was a reason -- one of the billing parts of our campaign and one of the big reasons that donald trump is going to be the 47th president. she is going to done incredible job. honestly i was sort of shocked to know there had never been a woman as chief of staff before. so congratulations to susie wiles. she deserves it. and, leave it to donald trump of all people, laura to appoint the first woman. glass ceiling broken: >> laura: he went get credit for that tulsi gabbard has a lot to say about this and more coming up. ♪ or tired? with miebo, eyes can feel
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♪ >> we have accepted a narrative that despite an actually great economic recovery, the vibes don't feel good. so we want to reject it and get something else. what will the future hold now that america has just decided that we are going to f around and find out. >> laura: i don't even know what that means.
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the left is blaming everyone, everything trying to find somebody to blame for kamala's loss. they still haven't realized that they are totally out of touch with the concerns of every day americans. >> somebody who is going to be voting for kamala harris came up to me and said oh my god, trump is going to win. i go why is that? i went to the grocery store. butter is over $3. i kind of laughed. >> it's 7:00. >> what that. >> it's $7. >> butter is $7. >> yeah. >> is it framed in gold? >> laura: okay. did he not realize that gas had gone up. i realized that gas goes up like several times a week. joining me now tulsi gabbard, former democrat, co-chair of trump's transition team. okay, tulsi, maybe that was like a joke. i can't really tell you about it does kind of bring to bear what's really at stake in politics in general. do you really get what bothers the american people and have a solution to fix it but they
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still think this is largely a communications problem with the america people. your response to the head scratching on the other side? >> that clip you made from msnbc first really kind of said it all is they continue to think that they're awesome. they did a great job. look at this huge economic recovery. why don't the american people know this or appreciate this? they are so out of touch with the hardships and the reality that the american people have been living through over these last four years. they sit in their ivory tower eating their cake and look down on the people who are struggling and suffering saying well, gosh, i don't know what's wrong. the reality is that president trump went out and traveled across the country. he listens, he sees people, and he recognizes the challenges they face and tells them that he will work for them. he has got a four year track record of doing that during his first administration. they believe him when he says i'm going to bring down the cost
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of living. they believe him when he says i'm chit committed to preventing world war iii. kamala harris, i don't think she ever once mentioned nuclear war. not during her four years as vice president and not during this campaign. president trump almost everywhere he went talked about the seriousness of the threat of nuclear war and that we are closer to the brink than ever before. because of kamala harris and joe biden, and that he will do all that can he to prevent nuclear war. these are the kinds of things that drove people from across party lines from across the demographics to say yes, my vote is with donald trump. >> laura: you know, i think a lot of folks in the democrat party weren't as much concerned about making america economically strong again or certainly not making america great again but they were very worried about making ukraine and safe again this is. so reaction. >> one of our closest democratic allies, ukraine now depends on a man who has criticized ukraine,
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has attacked the support we have given ukraine. >> i'm heart broken for the people of ukraine because i am terrified about what is going to happen in the trump administration. >> ukrainian soldier in the trench as their ally just abandoned them is wondering what i'm going to do next. >> laura: tulsi, has donald trump abandoned the people of ukraine or will he? >> donald trump is standing with the american people, laura. i was with people in western north carolina in and around the communities surrounding asheville the day before election day. and do you know what i heard from them? they are coming home from funerals of their loved ones. they are telling me hey, we still have over 500 beam who have not been found in the wake of hurricane helene and it's been over a month. why aren't those talking heads talking about the american people who need a president who has their back? president trump has their back and this is why he has earned their trust and their
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confidence. >> laura: tulsi, i know you are not going to answer this but i'm going to ask anyway. can we see you or will we perhaps see you in the administration? >> that's a question only president trump can answer. >> laura: will you take, you know, like a lower level job like special assistant to the undersecretary at hhs, something like that? i'm just teasing you because he doesn't like strong intelligent women. >> right, yeah, exactly. clearly and congratulations to susie wiles. she is fantastic. i have sown joyed working with her. she is a straight shooter and i'm looking forward to seeing her as chief of staff. >> laura: her source was quoted as saying the clown show is basically not going to have access to the oval office. essentially i'm paraphrasing. the words "clown show" was used. is that a good thing? >> you know, she works very well with president trump. i think she did -- she is a great credit to winning this
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campaign and being able to make sure that the train didn't go off the rails i think she is going to do a fantastic job as white house chief of staff. president trump seeks counsel from those that he wants to. but susie wiles will provide great leadership on his behalf in running that place. >> laura: tulsi, always great to see you. congratulations all the hard work you put in. >> laura: trump elected again not even 48 hours ago. is he already securing the border. how can that be? we'll explain it, next. ♪ there are some things that work better together. like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. voya helps you choose the right amounts without over or under investing. across all your benefits and savings options. so you can feel confident in your financial choices. they really know how to put two and two together. voya, well planned, well invested, well protected.
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the caravan shrunk down to about half its original size. hmmm. and obviously the biden administration they are not going to do anything to stop the ones who do show up. nbc news already says dhs is working on what they're calling contingency plans for this surge of migrants, questioning whether the numbers will overwhelm the system and just force agents to release them into the u.s. with court dates set years into the future, which, of course, they will never show up for. joining me now texas lt. governor dan patrick. dan, i call him alejandro my your welcome to come right in. because, basically if you are making your way to the border, they will figure out a way to allow to you stay here. but they tried to leave people to believe before the vote they had really gotten tough on the border. what do americans need to understand tonight in these 74 days before trump is inaugurated? >> well, the american people and thanks for having me on, laura,
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of course. the american people need to understand that over the last four years, somewhere between 16 and 18 million people have come here illegally. we don't know where hundreds of thousands of children are they are probably being sex trafficked, sadly, tragically. we know we have apprehended a terrorist crossing the texas border. we know we have criminals committing horrendous crimes all over the country. and tonight, i'm so relaxed. i'm so at ease. because i know the cavalry just arrived on tuesday night. america has gotten a reprieve and donald trump is going to come in here and this is going to get shut down. trust me, we spent $4 billion in our last budget and we have done that now three sessions, i think, in a row to secure our border. that's money we could use for our taxpayers. $4 billion to cut taxes, for our infrastructure. so i'm going to guarantee the american public tonight donald trump, president donald trump, greg abbott and dan patrick are going to close this sucker down. and so, you know, a word if anyone wants to translate to
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them to the criminals that have come across the border. you might want to try to illegally go back into mexico. because we're going to throw you out. we're serious. >> laura: how is that going to work, dan? so deportation, of the numbers of people that we're talking about, which is millions, practically speaking, how will you assist the dhs in removing people including, you know, mostly, i guess it would be mostly single men who have come here, but families have come here as well. small children who are in school. how will that look? >> so, most of them have been single men. and we're going to focus on those criminals. we know most of the time where they are. we're going to find them and deport them under federal law, number one. i wrote and pals add bill last session. the senate passed the governor signed it. allows our law enforcement to apprehend people. it's at the supreme court now. we won one court battle we think it will be upheld. we will put our law enforcement
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into the mix, too so we can grab them and either arrest them if they have committed a crime or turn them over and they will be sent back unlike the administration has done. laura, understand this that when we put our national guard down on shelby park, there were 5,000 people a day coming across. when we went, in we cut it down to 10 people a day. abbott, dan patrick, president trump we know how to get this done. it's going to be shut down when he gets in here. laura, he has changed the whole border politics. starr county is not the most hispanic county this the country he won it it 57%. >> i said is he going to sweep every state and get 312 electoral votes. i think it worked out that way. >> laura: it did. >> i had faith in lara trump they did a great job. whatley the whole team. i had faith in the american people they would stand up and take their country back they
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♪ >> i think there is, again, a 50-50ish chance judge merchan probation sentence. even if the judge does hold this on november 26th and even if the judge says i hereby sentence you to x in prison, donald trump is not going to serve that time while is he in transition as he is now or certainly while he is president. >> laura: well certainly while is he president. leaving open the possibility that, you know, say they are wanting this, they are salivating over this that somehow the statute of limitations for these absurd in these absurd cases is paused and then trump goes off in an orange jumpsuit after he has a successful second term? this is insanity. joining me now chris landau former supreme court clerk and former ambassador to mexico. chris, we have been covering this, it seems like forever together. respond to that this quixotic dream of still putting trump in
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prison. >> listen, the hard core that's the way they put themselves to sleep with those dreams of him in an orange jumpsuit. laura, the good news and big headline is that lawfare backfired massively on the democrats this election season. this was going to be their image wand to try to get rid of donald trump for once and for all. and if anything, it just made him stronger. and i think it's so healthy for our political system to have lawfare decisively repudiated in this way. >> laura: fani willis got reelected i didn't know she was up for re-election. apparently she got reelected handily. the american people in general they want to determine things at the ballot box and all of this looked like a giant pile-on from the beginning. yet, there is talk among some of these so-called legal experts on the other netted works of pausing the statute of limb lims
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is that even possible? >> laura, this is all garbage. these lyle experts could talk to each other. these cases were on life support before trump won the election. one the two offal cases already thrown out by the judge because jack smith's appointment was unconstitutional. the other one got gutted by the supreme court's immunity ruling. fanny smith's case in georgia got gutted by her own improper conduct not to mention the supreme court's immunity ruling. and alvin bragg one in new york where, you know that, sucker is like a target-rich environment for appeal. putting aside the fact that that's also impacted by the supreme court's immunity ruling insofar as some of the evidence that was used there. so, putting aside the elections, laura, these things were going down for the garbage cases that they were. any serious lawyer would tell you, anybody other than the most fevered partisan. again, i suspect now that the democrats saw it didn't work, that it's going to be like that
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homer simple meme where homer is backing into the bushes, saying never mind, nothing to see here folks. >> laura: well, chris, as always, it's great to have you on. thank you very much for the analysis. liberal women have a plan to make men pay for electing donald trump. i will tell you about it, next. ♪ have you compared your medicare plan recently? with ehealth, you can compare medicare plans side by side for free. so we invited people to give ehealth a try and discover
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>> laura: some woman or so wound up about the results of tuesday's election is adr swearing off men for good. >> stop dating command, stop talking to men, stop having sex as my guide towards her husband's, breakup with your boyfriends. >> no getting married, no having kids, no having s word. ♪ ♪ >> laura: that woman was cutting her hair off? bold.
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google searches the movement originating in south korea, have spiked since trump one of the election, no sex, dating or marriage with men or children. in other words, a changes it. joining me now, correspondent for the federalist, you a personality, although, are you heartbroken now you don't have a chance with all these angry liberal woman? >> in their terms are acceptable, where do i sign? the ironic thing about this, they think they are punishing trump supporters, the reality we are the ones adjusting this saying if you don't want an unwanted pregnancy, simply don't have sex with many don't want her child with big this will affect that beta liberal men who only want to use a woman for consequence free sex. i saluted them, i wanted them to stand up for themselves and they have my complete endorsement
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pier mac way always stick to dating to conservative woman, they already have these values, seem happier and a lot more attractive. >> laura: i may or may not have warn a trump baseball cap in the grocery store just to see the reaction, and i have to say, i was surprised i did not have a lot of negative comments. >> had a couple really positive comments from minority workers at the grocery store which kind of tells the story about the selection, we were told angry woman would save us from donald trump, that was a "new york times" on monday. what happened? >> goldberg as the expert. all these woman you mentioned part of this movement, if they want to change their gene for that is fine, that's natural selection. these women were exploited for being low informational motors, they were sold a lie that he would sign a national abortion ban, all of this was trying to scare voters into voting for kamala harris group and she tried saying everything would
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be, okay,, a lot of voters had bought those lies. they should be disgusted with that campaign for lying to them and misleading to them and leading them scared in the dust. >> laura: apparently a lot of schools and colleges trying to get some comfort and aid to distraught students, at the prestigious georgetown university they were offered at lego station, coloring books, milking cookies. they can get art therapy and post election process think. university of oregon had an actual therapy dock on campus, although young people need help apparently, or just liberals. >> my home state of michigan i spent a lot of time at the university of michigan, it is not surprise me too much from the students that have seen walking around the campus, but the bar has been lowered in so many ways for these university students. they should be challenging
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themselves and engaging a hard ideas, really should have the fortitude to deal with election results they had lost. it is sad to see this but hopefully next four years they will gain some great and get through this doubt sucking on their baby their baby bottles. >> laura: i want you to take a look at trump supporters for voters ages 18-29, kamala harris beat him by only six% which is shocking compared to joe biden beating him by 25% of just four years ago. she thought she would win generation z huge, what happened? >> trump redefined what it means to campaign, he was going on to, men--- men age 18-29 tend to listen to. he showed you don't have to go on these propaganda narratives, you can go to these podcasts and expand your base, he comes across as authentic and likable and decides you want to graduate college, pay your bills and outlive at home with mom and dad? my economy will make that happen for you.
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>> laura: although it wasn't just a forum of the podcast which i think was important, it was the policies he talked about. he did not talk down to women or young people, he said i want to be your protector, it's like i will keep you safe, make sure you have more money in your pocket, and force the border, eventually you will like it even though you don't like me. 10 seconds can you grow this voter block further? >> absolutely the policies of trump how about -- help all americans, all creeds, all races. he will be the president for all americans he has made that clear and he will do it again and am so excited to see it the five is so great to have a both on, both future bright lights in this country. thank you. that is all for us tonight, remember it as an american now and forever, check me out on instagram and x, jesse watters takes it from here. >> jesse: welcome to 'jesse watters primetime'
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