tv FOX and Friends FOX News November 8, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PST
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♪ >> brian: 7:00 a.m. on the east coast, friday, november 8th. and this "fox & friends." just got that president-elect did it again. susie wiles will be the first woman to ever serve as white house chief of staff. >> lawrence: plus, liberal ivy leaguers having a meltdown canceling class over trump's win. it's not surprising when this is what they have to listen to. all day long. >> stop talking to men. divorce your husbands. >> i'm tired and i'm done. [laughter] >> ainsley: and a fox news alert, israel evacuating its citizens after violent mob attacks at a soccer game in
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amsterdam. the second hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. the biden administration is being called out rhetoric following president trump's historic win. >> brian: peter doocy noticed it. >> the white house are accepting the results of the election, but they are not yet accepting the possibility that maybe some of their rhetoric over the last couple weeks was a little overheated. >> we all get knocked down. but the measure of our character as my dad would say is how quickly we get back up. remember, a defeat does not mean we are defeated. the american experiment endures. we're going to be okay. but we need to stay engaged. >> is the message to people who are fearful based on what the messaging was about. >> well, now, you are just twisting everything around and
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that's unfair. >> jacqui: how is that unfair? >> no, no. jacqui, it's unfair. i have been standing here trying to be veriful respectful what happened the last two nights -- two nights ago. >> peter: there you heard, michael bloomberg the millionaire he says now it probably wasn't great to cover up president joe biden's infirmities until they became undeniable on live tv. and on the first bite there, from president biden's remarks from the rose garden at no point did he say he was pleased with the way things turned out. but, before and after, he was talking about this race, that he was squeezed out of, his big smile kind of said a lot. back to you. >> is he a genuine threat to our democracy, and that's not hyperbole, that's the god's truth. >> donald trump is existential threat to our democracy and our most fund mental freedom. >> is he a genuine danger to american security. >> our fundamental freedoms are
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on the ballot. and so is our democracy. >> peter: and we played those out of ordered. but you can see there that they have gone from saying if donald trump won that america was in danger. to we will help him take over. this is just the way that things go. we'll get him next time. back to you. >> brian: right. peter, have people read into why jill biden was wearing a red dress to vote? was that the only thing she had clean? was it one of those things where it was -- should we read into that? >> peter: i don't know. i don't know if it's the choice of color or that she had a big smile walking out of the polling place. i don't know what to read into that. she has not said. she did campaign for kamala harris. so we will put that out there. i don't know about her wardrobe. i think they have a dry cleaner here. >> brian: they do. >> peter: maybe we can go and check the pockets to see which sample ballot they gave her
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there in wilmington. >> brian: see if she talked to our fox news voter analysis people. >> ainsley: you made great points though, all the rhetoric was so hateful and how dangerous they are for america. and then yesterday he is like we're going to be okay. everything is fine. we're fine. >> brian: good news is it's not 2017 anymore, 201 anymore. i think the american people understand who donald trump is and isn't. you can't be spun. you can't be spun. you can't say january 6th every single day. >> lawrence: i do find it very awkward that you have grown adults that need therapy over the elections. >> ainsley: oh, my goodness. >> lawrence: it's nonsense, canceling class? i mean, are you serious? we went through four years of a candidate that i didn't particularly like but i didn't need therapy for it. deal with it, accept the verdict of the country. try support the president where can you support him and move on. >> ainsley: i mean, my goodness, that's why i think people like donald trump. he was shot and stood up and
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said fight, fight, fight. he is strong and then when you watch some of these images on social media we have a few of them. watch this. >> stop talking to men, divorce your husband, leave your [bleep] boyfriends, leave them. they don't give a [bleep] about you. i promise you, come over to this side. i will bake cookies, i will shave your head. >> i know you are looking for what did we do how do we fight? i don't know. i don't know what to do. but i'm tired. and i'm done. this country is done. it's gone. it's lost. and it's lost forever. >> we are about to enter a political period that will have consequences for the rest of our lives. we cannot give up we now find ourselves in a time in history that has precedent and we find
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ourselves, i believe, in a time where there are, let's say, piers in history of mass movements of people that mobilized to protect one another in times of fashionism and totalitarianism. >> lawrence: this is the problem. if the democratic party continues to cater to those type of people, they are going to keep losing. i mean, just the reaction shows you these are the same people that want the wokeness. that wanted the border to be open. that wants the trans ideology stuff to be in the classroom with children. you have to reject this side of your party if you want to start winning average day people. >> brian: especially she is an average person. she was a bar tender. she should understand working class. >> lawrence: west chester. >> brian: how i lost the working class in america. how i lost the people that actually worked for tips.
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why are you not responding to them? why are you keeping amazon out of long island city in new york city? why are you doing that? so, it's not only aoc that is the problem. what about some of these ivy league schools, they realize there is some trauma on campus. and they have reacted, ainsley. >> ainsley: first one, listen to this. an example of what a professor sent to students at columbia. i have decided to cancel our class today. i had planned an alternative lecture on modern polling methods and their blind spots. it feels a bit tone deaf to deliver it today. be good to yourselves and check in on your friends. and apparently some of the jewish students at columbia are upset why didn't you cancel class when we were being yelled at, we were being scared for our lives. and they are saying you are canceling class because some people feel like trump should not be the president? meanwhile, we couldn't even go on campus and you didn't cancel
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classes then. >> brian: i wouldn't be surprised. so gains in new york city for the president 30% of the vote, gained in every bore roe, especially the bronx. looked at anti-semitic and anti-american protest really? i used to vote democrat. i'm going to flip. i think the president added like 8 points to the new york jewish vote. >> lawrence: we got to stop paying for these skiles, if you are a parent out there, you can't be sending your kids. i understand they are supposed to be prestigious, look at what they are teaching, this is a hard professor as well. as we recover from election night. this is crazy is this a disease or something? and process the implications of trump's victory. please know that class will proceed as usual today. except the classroom will not be for credit. feel time to take some time off as needed. >> brian: a bunch of weak people. this isn't after 9/11. this is after an election which was overwhelming. can't be with well a nail-biter to the end. princeton university, princeton
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was my home. this was in the princetonian we have been hearing about lots of anxiety from students about the election and felt like listening circles -- oh my goodness. [laughter] >> brian: listening circles can be a helpful way it to allow students to process and get support from one another. >> lawrence: this a weird group of people and they call us weird. i just don't understand a party, a movement, a group of professors that entire theme of their campaign was democracy. saving item crates. and we had a democratic process -- with a landslide. it wasn't even close. we are talking about your blue wall that you guys -- and a clean sweep. and you don't respect the will of the people? >> ainsley: ari fleischer when you interviewed him this morning, he made a good point, fascinating. when you look at who voted for kamala harris, the numbers are interesting. it flips. wealthy, wealthy, wealthy people he said. >> brian: over 100,000. >> ainsley: college educated and he said people without religion.
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>> brian: yeah. support for latino vote went up 41%. people under 50,000. the president dominated for people under 50,000. so that's why when mayor pete was on a few days ago and said the president got go in there if trump wins and give more tax cuts to his billionaire friends? what are you talking about. the people who benefited the most middle class, every bracket benefited. and if you go his rallies, there is nobody rich there these are working class people. so, unless they think america has got 70 missile the dumbest people ever, this is what they're saying. with you there were people like david axelrod that i think are going to do legitimate evaluation, david plouffe, legitimate evaluation. i think these people are totally deattached and i question whether they should stay in america. >> ainsley: they don't know what middle america is like. middle america does have religion. they like god. they like it take th their chiln to church on sundays it teaches right from wrong. >> lawrence: brian talking about all the talking points put out
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before the election. i hope it gives us some type of comfort. i was worried, honestly, the mainstream media -- they were so aggressive with the celebrities and i mean it seemed like -- i mean, ainsley, you go through every day the lies that were told, national abortion bans, project whatever. 2025. just over and over and over. but the american people, they are smarter. and they rejected all the talking points. >> ainsley: what does that tell you? you make a good point, think about all the channels, abc, nbc, cbs, msnbc, cnn, all pro-kamala. all of those channels, they had an opportunity. those were free advertisements for her. and she still lost. the american people are smart. >> lawrence: they are smarter. >> ainsley: they know they are better off under donald trump. they knew putting her back in was not going to change anything, she already had an opportunity. >> brian: funniest thing watching abc when wisconsin and michigan were going the other wait a minute they kept the guy on the board forever. check milwaukee again.
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check grand rapids, wait a second. i told you. ballot problems, anybody have a hanging chad we can focus on for a second. the poor by was sweating. i got nothing. this is the vote. which is crazy. >> lawrence: i'm still on my joy train. i have joy for the american people. i spent a whole week at the dnc with false joy and the people talking about that the country is so well and the economy is so well. i'm so glad that we got a reality check right now. >> brian: you wonder who is more joyful, joy reid or joy behar? if you can write us friend at friends@foxnews.com.com. >> ainsley: sean calls her joyless. joyless behar. >> brian: watch that show a lot. >> ainsley: her show or his show? every night. president-elect donald trump has made his first major administration decision naming a campaign manager, susie "washington times" as the next white house chief of staff. and this makes her the first woman ever to hold that pets tinge just position.
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>> lawrence: brooke singman has the story on that. >> brooke: susie wiles has a long history of leading republicans to victory. a long-time florida based republican strategist who ran president trump's campaign in florida in 2016 and 2020. and she served as a senior adviser and campaign co-chair in 2024. she also played a key role in helping rick scott and ron desantis win their gubernatorial races in florida. she began her career in 1979 as an assistant for congressman jack kemp before joining ronald reagan's presidential campaign a year la later. despite her huge role in the g.o.p. she is rarely seen in the media. trump and others have all of a sudden called her the ice maiden because of her powerful role in the party. fun fact she is the daughter of legendary nfl broadcaster pat summer real. many names floated who will join including florida senator marco rubio weeing going to start
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getting those decisions and i will be working with him one way or the other. >> virginia governor glenn youngkin says he spoke with president-elect donald trump about joining the upcoming administration but he says he is committed to serving his full term as governor. guys? >> ainsley: thank you, brooke. >> lawrence: yes, ma'am. [laughter] >> ainsley: brooke, sorry. we were listening partly -- partially. >> brian: as you fill out the roster. i think rubio is going to be strong secretary of state. but i think doug b burgum people are going to be surprised. is he going to be with us on later. more expanded role than you would think. he was a finalist to be the v.p. rubio the finalist v.p. they stayed loyal and kept campaigning. >> ainsley: one could be secretary of state, one could be what? >> brian: energy is certainly something that he would do easily because he north dakota. but commerce and energy together? also, i notice he has been
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traveling the globe a lot. so, i'm wondering. >> ainsley: ambassador? >> brian: ambassador somewhere? >> ainsley: u.n. ambassador. >> brian: which the president with nikki haley made a cabinet position. doing policy in new york. >> lawrence: i almost think -- very superstitious. there was no handouts of who is going to beat who before the election actually happened. but, the campaign trail was almost used as an audition for people for cabinet posts. >> ainsley: right. >> lawrence: talking about having a bench. the republican party does have a bench. you see all these people that were on the short list to be the vice president i guaranteed. >> ainsley: vivek never talked badly about him. >> brian: brian tulsi. >> ainsley: tulsi. i wonder if elise stefanik would join the cabinet? >> brian: she is destined for bigger things the u.n. would be it. the thing to worry about is that period of time when you have the special election. so only have four votes and period of time when mike waltz
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was named and the way schumer was dragging this out. for example darrell issa never got a vote. do you know he was trade representative. he pulled it off. after a year and a half, he went back to work. that's w what happens. you have to hand off your job. do your background check and you wait. i'm wondering if there is a deal can be cut early with schumer saying listen, can we do this quick? yes or no can we do this quick? because it hurts the country. we got a situation in the middle east and europe that cannot have a gap. >> lawrence: should have a simple majority now because they changed the rules. going to benefit the republicans in this process right now. >> brian: yeah. >> lawrence: getting more and more seats. i think it's 53 seats now within the senate? >> ainsley: good for susie wiles. she will be the most powerful woman in washington. lawrence lawrence the most antiwoman candidate we're told is now putting someone as chief of staff. two women ran both successful campaigns as well. >> brian: youngkin out, cotton
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out, and kevin mccarthy out. thank you but don't make me an offer. i'm not going to do it. >> ainsley: republicans expanding senate majority after senator elect dave mccormick huge win the race was called yesterday. huge win in pennsylvania. but control of the house is still up in the air. >> brian: to a degree. madeleine rivera is live in washington. maddy? >> madeleine: hi, guys, good morning. there are two senate races need to be called in arizona and nevada. in these contests, reuben gallego and jacqui rosen slightly ahead of republican challengers. majority next year senate republicans are already looking to first big order of business picking a lead senators john thune, john cornyn and rick scott are all vying for a place. mitch mcconnell thune is seen as a frontrunner and asking president-elect trump not to publicly weigh in on the ballot elections which are done in secret. scott meantime says he does want trump to back him. meantime, as democrats play the blame game dave mccormick
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explaining why he defeated senator bob casey in pennsylvania what made the difference people want change. elected president trump. the same with me deeply distressed by the skyrocketing prices. the wide open border, the war on fossil fuels. change in common sense leadership. >> turning now to the house, control of the lower chamber is still up in the air. republicans and democrats are projecting optimism. speaker mike johnson is already asking republican house members to reelect him. house minority leader hakeem jeffries for his part is holding out hope they can eke out a win saying they are waiting for results oregon, arizona and california. current balance of power 211 republicans to 199 democrats, there is more than two dozen races. still on call, the magic number is it 218. lawrence, ainsley, and brian.
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vrabel soccer fans were attacked by protesters. so far over 60 people arrested. disgraceful. matt finn is live outside of tel aviv. matt? mat mat brian, israel's national airline has added multiple emergency flights to the netherlands throughout the day today to pick up israelis who are still in the amsterdam area after this violent attack in the early morning hours is it being described by the kingdom of netherlands as anti-semitic crime. the amsterdam police chief said moments ago five people were injured and treated in the hospital. 20 to 30 minor injuries. the violent happened after israel's largest soccer team mccaby tel aviv played against amsterdam ix. amsterdam won 5-0. israeli fans being kicked and stomped on the ground. running and even jumping into
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amsterdam's famous canals to escape. a cab driver offered him a safe ride on the way back to his hotel. >> we went to the hotel and sought demonstrations, really terrifying. mat mat now, there are reports that israeli fans were chanting and arab slurs and ripping down palestinian flags. the minister of foreign affairs writes it strongly condemns anti-arab actions. carried out by supporters of israeli football club in amsterdam. now, we expect a regularly scheduled flight with israelis from amsterdam to arrive here in the next couple of hours. we hope to talk to people who experienced this and we'll bring you updates throughout the day. brian? >> brian: incredible, matt, thanks so much. didn't see that coming. 25 minutes after the hour. hamas swiftly calling for an end to the war with israel following trump's victory saying quote palestinians look forward to immediate cessation of the aggression against our people. especially in gaza. what can we expect to change on
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the world stage under a trump presidency? retired four star general, fox news strategic analyst chairman of the institute of the study of war general jack keane joins us now. general, first off, what's your interpretation of that statement from the palestinians, from hamas? >> i don't take it seriously. i mean, we have been down this road before. hamas' position has been pretty steady. you know, since the last hostage release last year, their position has been hard fast that they will only deal with complete israeli withdrawal and cessation of all military activities. that has been their position position. i'm assuming that's the direction they're heading and this is more a fig leaf than anything else. >> brian: let's talk about what could change under a trump administration. after all, we had four years of a test run. what could change right away, for example, over the next four years? number one, have you always come on and talked about how discouraging it was to see the defense budget not keep up with inflation. >> well, the first thing is the
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trump administration, what they will be dealing with that they didn't deal with in their first administration was china, russia, iran and north korea working together, co-including, cooperating together. and not only that, but they have become so aggressive and so assertive because they believe the united states leadership is weak, they believe we are politically dysfunctional. and that they can take advantage of our vulnerability. it's not isolated that there is war in ukraine. that russia invaded ukraine. that iran has operationalized all of its proxies to drive the united states out of the middle east and also to destroy the state of israel. and president xi is threatening war in the indo-pacific region to take taiwan by force if they don't willingly capitulate. all of that has dramatically changed in the last four years. and the trump administration is going to have to deal with that as their number one we geopolil issue in terms of national security threats to the united
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states. they have to restore deterrence. and that has to start with military capability, certainly. and you mentioned it. the last four years, the budgets have been flat. no increase. china is outpacing us, you name the platform and they outpace us in it dramatically except for submarines. the air force and the army are too small. the navy doesn't have enough ships. the defense industrial base needs to be replenished. it takes money to do it. when we play war games, publicly recorded. we run out of offensive missiles in a war game against china in two weeks. i mean, that's the reality of the erosion of the military capability that has taken place in this country. we have to fix the pentagon's ossified business practices. it's risk averse, it's too slow to get a platform. it takes years. you look at the commercial sector, and how quickly they can turn a platform, it's
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remarkable, compared to the three or four times it takes the pentagon system and the other thing is, it's too costly. and we have got to bring in modern commercial business practices into the pentagon with innovation and certainly technology. those are some of the things that have got to be done. the top of mind issue really is our -- the increased threat from those four countries and how aggressive they are. >> brian: also on another note, cancel those cultural and social programs at the dod. hurting spirit and they are counter productive, right? >> oh, yeah. listen. the dei programming, well-intentioned but the united states military is the most racially integrated institution in the united states of america. that's been written about in multiple books. it is a meritocracy. it doesn't tolerate white supremism. this has been a false issue from the outset and frankly very
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disturbing to our members inside the military in doing that. i think the trump administration will likely take issue with paying for transgender members to physically transition. and using taxpayer's lars to do that and taxpayers dollars to have its members get an abortion out of state because it is prohibited in the state they are assigned. it's not the issue of transgender. it's not the issue of an abortion. it's using taxpayers' dollars to facilitate something like that. i think they will probably take issue with it. >> brian: i think you're right. it's going to be a lot to do with the right secretary, they could start reforming and get the most of the dollars in the pentagon and start establishing deterrence. just by saying you are going to spend, that will started the process. general, we will talk more about this. always keep up with the wars with the institute study of war you find out the latest. thank you so much, general, have a great weekend. >> yeah, you too, guys. good weekend for you and the team.
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thank you. >> brian: absolutely, yeah. it's going to be exciting show saturday at 9:00, one nation, amongst my roster of guests senator joe manchin, the party he just left. what is left of it? he is going to talk about it. senator tom cotton why did he pulling himself out of the run of the secretary of defense. fresh off visit to tel aviv is going to put it in perspective what it was like at mar-a-lago when trump won. robert davi what does it like to be a celebrity if you go and endorse a candidate do you pay a price? did he pay a price for supporting trump? tomi lahren as well saturday at 9:00. straight ahead on this show, the "fox & friends weekend" crew joins us next to discuss the mainstream media reaction to trump's victory. we were going to supply head shots. what if we got you live and they agreed to it. we are so lucky. dia ♪ all my favorite people, too. ♪ i got the power of 3. i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight.
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♪ >> janice: good morning, everyone. we're going to talk about the weather. first, we're going to say hi to my friends. where are you from and what your famous. >> christine fromless. >> and suzanne from louise. >> alicia from maddy. >> par it unburg. amy from spar it unburg. >> jesse from spartanburg. >> very nice. >> abby from spartanburg. >> i love it. >> who are ran from texas. >> who is the birthday girl? [cheers] >> janice: congratulations i know you ladies were behaving yourself. i didn't say that because you weren't. take a look at the maps. you are in new york. you are allowed to not behave sometimes. 70 degrees in new york. potential for showers and thunderstorms across the central u.s. and a blizzard for parts of the colorado, rockies. also watching raffaele in the gulf of mexico but it's going to weaken and not going to effect
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anyone. do you love "fox & friends"? [cheers] >> janice: yea. do you love lawrence? [cheers] >> janice: send it back to lawrence. >> hi, lawrence. >> lawrence: south takeover, texas, louisiana. >> everybody is here. >> janice: i love it. >> lawrence: thanks, j.d. the ladies of "the view" still trying to unpack donald trump's historic win with this bizarre explanation, watch. >> i could think in this postmortem that needs to happen with democrats why wasn't she given more lead time. why didn't biden give her six months or a year to run. >> what about postmortem on the republican party. >> they swept though. latinos in texas district has 97% latino went 75 percentage points for donald trump, why? >> misogyny, that's why. >> no, it's on the border. the border crisis is on their doorstep. and they are begging people to care about it for years. >> misogyny and sexism, that's what that was.
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>> lawrence: while sunny hostin blamed latino and misogynism. some blamed sunny for asking kamala this question last month. >> would you have done something differently than president biden during the past four years? >> there is not a thing that comes to mind. [laughter] >> lawrence: i can't get enough of this. let's bring in "fox & friends weekend" co-host pete hegseth. rachel campos duffy, and will cain. i'm sorry, i'm still on my joy fest right now. what do you think rachel campos-duffy about sunny hostin's viewpoint? it's misogyny. >> rachel: misogyny not the border. patriarchy not the price of egg. transphobe i can't not having men in girls sports. it's racism, not endless wars. this is what they do. right? anybody who actually knows latinos was not surprised, real latinos is not surprised by what happened on tuesday. but sunny, even though she is
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latina, she is in a bubble. she is in a manhattan wealthy elite bubble. she is not coming in contact with regular hispanic americans. i'm going to give you three numbers that i think explain everything from this last election. and they are about kamala harris. we hear a lot about how kamala, you know, didn't out perform biden. what she did in a couple categories. people making over $100,000. she beat joe biden. he won by 5 points. she won by 8. post grads. she won them by 24 points. but, get this number. she won people who say they had no religion by 40 points. she is totally -- her and her campaign totally out of step with hard-working, working class, hispanics. that says it all. suffice it to say, guys, how great thou art was never sung in the kamala campaign headquarters. >> lawrence: later on in the show when going back it with
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sunny hostin she says have you talked about the trump people? she says, you know, we won. well, the republicans won. so, i don't think they understand how this works. when you lose, there needs to be self-evaluation. you don't get to ask the winners to self-evaluate why they are celebrating. >> rachel: good point. >> will: postmortem. what about republicans? postmortem. guess what you see? if you cut open the republican party right now and do an autopsy, guess what you see? ws just pouring out. ws. the senate, the house, and the presidential level. you know, lawrence, i want to come on. i think i did this yesterday with varney and just say sunny is the obvious racist. everything about her is shallow, n color. i don't want to do that anymore. do you know what i think? it's obvious to everybody watching. sunny hostin has turned herself into -- do you know how we have the old man setting on the front
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porch yelling at cloud thing what is that for female? she is face frozen, no eye contact. condescendingly looking down her nose, telling everybody that they are beneath her and i don't know what you call that female version of it. but i cannot believe executives at disney go write seven figures for that one. we need to keep that on the air. >> lawrence: that is a good point, pete, how did these people -- the never trumpers, all of these -- how do they have jobs? their analysis was so off. talk about a complete rejection. >> well, because even the bubble needs a qazi foil. so within the bubble you hire someone who actually hates the base of the republican party to say that they're republican to get along with all the democrats who hate all those republicans and call them names and say as rachel said, they are just misogynist patriarchs get along to go along you know. this abc, msnbc, cnn all democrats from the producers on up to the folks on air.
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they hate what happened on tuesday night. and sunny hostin did what most will do if they want to put their head in the sand. it's their problem. it's the voters' problem. it's not mine. well, their brains are broken. they have been broken since 2016. thousand now they are just in a puddle and ultimately there is no postmortem they are capable of at this point. which means they will continue to run up against the wall of the american people who simply want the basics, they want safety, they want sovereignty, they want more of their own money. >> lawrence: go ahead, rachel. >> rachel: the problem for them this is a generational problem for them at this point. once you get a hispanic, like my father did in 1980, came from a democrat copper mining democrat family. he voted for ronald reagan. and from that point on, he was like -- he became a swing voter. wait a minute, my values are with this party. and not -- he never went back to the democrat party. his kids, his grandkids all voting conservative. so, the problem for the democrat
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party is a whole lot of democrat latinos voted for donald trump. and now they are conservative curious, republican curious from this point on. and that's going to be a challenge for them electorally. they won't have them lock step as they had them before. >> lawrence: a complete rejection. i'm going to be watching you all this weekend. as the now president-elect saying it's great chemistry. it's great chemistry between you three. i watch every weekend. >> will: it did say that. >> lawrence: it is true. it's true. i will be watching y'all tomorrow morning. see you all. >> pete: sounds good. >> will: thanks, lawrence. >> lawrence: how will the trump big win affect the sentencing here in new york? we'll discuss with shannon bream, next. ♪
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♪ >> ainsley: president-elect trump's historic victory is impacting the future of his legal cases, including his new york sentencing. judge merchan is expected to issue a decision early next week on whether or not to overturn the conviction. and decide if trump gets a new constitutional protection as president-elect. joining us now "fox news sunday" anchor and fox news chief legal
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correspondent shannon bream. hey, shannon. >> good morning, ainsley. >> ainsley: good morning. this is so interesting. he wanted this case so badly. he wanted conviction. and now he has to decide, the pressure is on him now, should he overturn this? and he has to decide by tuesday. what do you think he will do? >> well, listen, ainsley, in covering the trial there in new york and watching judge merchan did not often rule in favor of the trump legal team or of the president now president-elect. so, we're all watching and waiting to see what he does with that supreme court immunity decision and applying it to this case in new york. where there are will are these 34 convictions. does part of it. re-examine the evidence? or does it get rid of it all together. we just don't know what is going to happen. if he keeps that case intact, remember he has also set november 2 #th as a sentencing date for the president-elect. all of this is unchartered territory because you have got somebody who is now going to be the next president of the united states facing very real criminal issues and we just have to wait and see what this judge does.
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>> ainsley: if he does decide to continue on and then we reach that deadline of the sentencing on november 26th, and he does sentence the president, what happens then? >> well, it would be highly unlikely, regardless of any of the other circumstances and facts that he would actually sense him to jail. president trump is a first time offender. he would be deemed a quote elderly offender. it's unlikely that would happen. other things could happen like probation or fines. and even that would be interesting to see if that's where he decides to go. but, all of this could spend years tied up in an appeal situation. and i would imagine if there is a sentence, if the case moves forward, that's going to take a long time. >> ainsley: yes. good point. there is a story in "newsweek," this is headline, justice sonia sotomayor retire after a trump win. she is only 70 years old. ruth bader ginsburg, she decided not to do this. they tried to push her out. she was 87 years old when she passed away. sonia sotomayor is 70.
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she is young. she is saying let's do this. do it during lame duck replace her with a younger democrat. >> yeah. ainsley this there are all kinds of potential risks to this. justice sotomayor has not signaled she wants to go anywhere. recently in arguments she seems completely engaged and up to her normal self-for this job. you know how this works. sometimes the public pressure as it did with justice ginsburg has the opposite reaction people anything and don't want to go anywhere. it's very tight in the senate. you could lose, depending on who president biden would nominate if you could convince justice sotomayor to retire. you know, you could use a joe manchin, a lisa mur cow city a susan collins. this is so tight i don't know if democrats want to take that risk. she seems like she would be health and intellectually she would be fully equipped to go another four years. i think she probably gig digs in. >> ainsley: i would think. so no senator seems to be offering to be the person to put his or her neck on the line
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publicly they don't want to be the one. joe biden is the one who recommended kamala harris and we see how that worked out. >> shannon: yeah. it's just such an unchartered territory because, listen, it was very close when we lost justice ginsburg and the then nomination and confirmation battle over justice amy coney barrett. so, you know, there will be those if they decide to back this plan to say we have done this on this expedited schedule before. but the senate is so tight, it's no guarantee that whoever the president picks he would actually be able to get across the finish line. do you want president trump to start a new term if you are a democrat with an open seat on the supreme court? >> ainsley: she probably going to dig in. she is only 70 years old. donald trump will be in office for four years. thank you so much. catch shannon in weekend on sunday. fox news. thank you. good to see you too. have a good weekend. hand it over to carley. >> carley: san francisco mayor london breed losing her re-election bid to the more moderate democrat whose name is
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daniel lurie. he is the air to levi strouse he won this race despite having no prior experience. breed conceded last night. >> being mayor of this city has been the absolute honor of my life. i am really grateful and excited about what is happening in this city. it's starting to look good and feel good and the city is on the rise. >> during breed's time in office san francisco has seen a mass exodus of major retailers, as well as a significant increase in crime. stocks soaring to new records, record highs on thursday. amp the federal reserve cut interest rates by a quarter point. this is the second rate cut this year and fed chair jerome powell says he is not going anywhere, even if president-elect trump calls for new leadership. >> some of the president-elect's advisers have suggested that you should resign. if he asks you to leave, would you go? >> no. >> can you follow up on -- do
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