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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  January 21, 2025 9:00am-10:00am PST

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a national prayer service at the national cathedral in washington. that's on his first full day in offers. the white house says the president is planning a massive announcement on infrastructure and they have yet to disappoint on their massive announcements in the last 24 hours. trump is already flexing his presidential powers, signing a series of executive actions following through on major pledges that he made on the campaign trail in a stunning fashion straight from the resolute desk. this is "outnumbered." i'm kayleigh mcenany. joining us is journalism fellow for the steamboat institute. steve hilton, pox fox news contributor, all of us fresh back from d.c. president trump got right to work on inauguration day to usher in what he called a golden age of america.
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thousands descended on d.c. and trump wasted no time signing sweeping and historic executive orders for all of america to see. here he is, president trump had a little bit of fun throwing some of the official pens he used into the crowd at his rally. the list of executive orders he signed just hours into his presidency rolled back biden's most controversial and unpopular policies and kicked off trump's agenda. some included declaring a state of emergency at our southern border, putting a federal freeze on hiring, ordering federal workers to return to the office in person five days a week, declaring that the federal government would only recognize two genders, withdrawing from the w.h.o. he called that a big one. and once again, holding the
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united states out of the paris climate agreement, a move that drew major cheers from the crowd. >> thank you, sir. the next item here is the withdrawal from the paris climate treaty. [ cheering and applause ] >> kayleigh: emily, i was looking at the clock when i joined jesse last night right as this was happening and i was, like, it's been eight hours and 36 minutes to be absolutely precise since he's been president, and he's said more in eight hours and 36 minutes than biden has said to the press in eight months. i mean, to watch him, signing the major changes to the government and in between, fielding questions from a hostile press corps. >> the amplification, the enormity of the volume of work that this president puts forth, how true to his word, it's
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incredible and i loved how engaged he was with all of his supporters that were there, the fact that he signed so many there in the arena with everyone cheering and clapping and supporting. it felt like the super bowl times a million and we are all on one team. and it was the most positive, cordial, joyful experience i've ever been a part of where everyone together was truly recognizing that only the dawn of this golden age but how quickly things are actually getting done. that these eos and all of these laws and withdrawals and the like are making a difference immediately and that's what we're going to see right away is the impact. >> kayleigh: steve, peter doocy got the moment of this free wheeling press interaction when he asked president trump, have you gotten a letter from biden? he just stumbled upon it in the moment. watch this. >> reporter: president trump, did president biden leave you a letter? >> president trump: he may have.
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don't they leave it in a desk? i don't know. oh. >> reporter: what's in there? >> president trump: thank you, peter. it could have been years. wow. thank you. >> reporter: do you want to read any? >> president trump: maybe we should all read it together. maybe i'll read it first and then make that determination. peter, thank you very much. i may not have seen this for months. >> reporter: happy to help with the passing of the torch. >> kayleigh: i mean, he should have read it right then and there. >> it's just amazing. you know, i think we all are lost for words, not just because we barely had any sleep s he's amazing and just to pick up on that part of it, it just shows how comfortable he is, how comfortable he is in that role. from the minute he's back. and actually, for me, the moment when he sat behind that desk, that's when it really sunk in. he's back. america is back. he's the president.
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but he's so comfortable both in terms of the way he behaves and the relaxed manner but also in terms of using power to good effect as emily was laying out. it is absolutely magnificent to watch this in action. and i think everyone is just so infused by it. it's providing inspiration. i think you felt that all through washington d.c., and to me, it feels so deeply american. everything about it, the schoemanship, the swagger, the confidence, the ambition. it's so american and because he's got this fierce patriotism, that really shows. >> kayleigh: something else that's very american is the first amendment, the freedom of the press corps, and let's take a wide shot of the oval office right now. this was yesterday during the signing. you see the white house press corps surrounding the oval office desk. i mean, the pitch of the white house press corps is there screaming. they're almost excited, harris, because they finally have someone answering their questions. you can't say this man doesn't give access.
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>> well, that's true. i liken it, though, to being in a lifeboat and you need a captain. we were definitely in lifeboat type situation under biden with the border, the economy, inflation, all of it. now there's a captain at the helm who can get us to the shore. have you ever heard of the senior executive service agency? i had never heard of that. 7,000 employees just got cut. you know what their job is? efficiency. that was their job. and i was reading that. 7,753 career ses employees and their salaries range from about 80,000 dollars up to $246,000. with many of them in that 150 to 200 range from what i'm reading. why does that matter? because even before doge can really make its mark and get credit for it, you know they've been talking about this behind the scenes, and, you know, i agree with the thinking that he
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started the minute he lost that last election. and he's had four years to think about how am i going to fix what biden's going to break? he was right. biden was breaking us. >> speaking of biden, we were covering a lot on the air and the focus was trump. but this kind of went under the radar. this was biden's final remarks before leaving d.c. watch this. >> the point i want to make clear as we all do have more -- we all have a lot more to do. we heard the inaugural address today. there's a lot more to do. >> he has a lot more to do. is he aware he's not the president? and how is he going to do the lot more he has to do? >> kayleigh: no, thank you, joe biden, you have done quite enough. i think that is the message that the american public made very clear, including yesterday when trump began signing his executive orders and you had this thunderous applause as action was beginning to be taken. and it was amazing that the executive order that got the
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most applause from the crowd both within the capitol rotunda and later at the capital one arena was this executive order laying out that there are two biological sexes. and it is wild to think that just simply stating that biological reality is enough to gain a standing ovation from the crowd. but it just goes to show how crazy our politics and our culture has become over the past four years. and this executive order really is worth reading in full but one of the really important points that it makes is it not only specifies that radical gender ideology has done significant harm to women's spaces, women's privacy in particular, but that it is really wreaked havoc on our society at large. by making us deny a very basic truth about who we are and after the image that we were created in, and it's really a compelling order and i'm very glad to see the trump administration take this significant step back towards truth. >> kayleigh: you often see on the rally stage the idea that the biological men are men and women are women, you know, if i would have said that to you eight years ago, you all would
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have thought i was crazy. here we are. he's not crazy. and he won the election. president trump's border crackdown has officially begun. more on that next. [ ♪♪ ] i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks! —uh. —here i'll take that. [cheering] ensure max protein, 30 grams protein, 1 gram sugar and a protein blend to feed muscles up to 7 hours. ♪
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president is walking to that very fast beat. the crackdown on our southern border is in play. trump promised to start closing the border on day one and he did. trump issued several executive orders to help stop the crisis officially declaring it a
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national emergency. by shutting it down, i mean, if you're trying to come in illegally into texas, that el paso where they've seen a lot of fentanyl, it temporarily closed completely. >> it shows you what can be done and what should have been done for the last four years. it's so infuriating. in one sense. >> were they lied to or not know how to do their jobs? >> this is what people -- they just think surely the most basic of things to close a border. that's why it's so great to see it. the tangible manifestation of the change in policy terms. the other thing i would note on this particular issue, you know, coming from california, is very interesting, of course california still has the ridi ridiculous sanctuary laws put in place 2017 statewide. what's interesting is that you don't see anything like the volume of resistance between the mayors of the big cities, not
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from the mayor of l.a. -- she's got other things to worry about. san francisco, san jose. they're very silent, they're saying, we got to focus on our cities. we're not going to get involved in pushing that. >> just real quickly, but gavin newsom is certainly not. >> he is. he's looking at his future political ambitions. >> it's true there was a leak a few days ago about some of the major cities that the trump administration plans to start raiding with ice and on that list, chicago, detroit. i haven't heard any detroit officials come out in opposition. the scaled protest i haven't heard yet. of course i think we can expect a lot of resistance from the media. we started to get a glimpse with the videos of the emotional migrants who were moved away. donald trump is not to blame for enforcing federal immigration law. joe biden is to blame for convincing these people to
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abandon their livelihood to make that very long trek to spend the resources to come to their southern border illegally. the cvp one app was never a legal process. joe biden lied to them. he is responsible for the devastation. >> biden's own brand of agency of chaos. >> huge chaos. there was supposed to be raids to their point in chicago according to "the wall street journal."
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and to fly an immigrant back, guess how much it costs an hour on a flight? $17,000! >> are they flying first class? >> $17,000. that's what the head of ice told congress in 2023. there are so many insane facts that tom homan and steven miller are going to have to get over and challenges, i think they'll do it. and one of the most important things is steven miller, he just said yesterday, if you're coming to this country, turn around. go back. go back. >> that's still cheaper than cities like new york paying for the education. >> a hundred percent! that's like a first class ticket. >> going to dubai. >> on emirates. >> i'll say first, importantly, the city attorney, michael gates, of huntingdon beach, he has just sued the state of california over the sanctuary city designation. so we are seeing, i believe, that he will be a leader in that capacity of cities rising up against these ridiculous
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sanctuary state and city designations. secondly, you know, note along with president trump's executive orders, the designation of narco cartels as terrorist organizations which allows us to then combat them with troops and we know that we don't really have specifics yet of what that looks like. but my point is that as he sort of locks up the border and starts triaging, then dumping out, you know, the -- cleaning up the abscess that is all of these illegal criminals in here, the reality is, we talk about money, is that the narco cartels are loathe to part with their billions of dollars' worth of income in these illicit industries of not only drug pushing, but human smuggling. and that is a big fight. and i don't think any of us want to get back in those regan years of what that looked like. i'm excited for, now that we have common sense back in the white house and the administration, a really comprehensive, intelligent and diplomatic collaboration with the south and central american countries, including a refusal to work with china to combat these terrorist groups because it is these cartels that are at
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the root of what's going on with our border. >> that's a really good point too because when the drugs leave the shores of the other countries, because they like -- china likes to use -- skirt around. they wish that they could have that southern port of vietnam. when they finally leave that part of the world and those drugs reach here, the cartels have been lacing them with all sorts of things to get them more infused and make them more deadly. and it's china that we're fighting. so of course we're going to send our military to the border to fight that first wave before it gets here. you explained the legal part of it. i think americans explained the safety part of it. so now we're there. coming up, the controversial pardons from both trump and biden. yesterday. next.
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issued throughout inauguration day from both president trump and president biden. we are live at the justice department with more details. >> >> reporter: two presidents signing controversial pardons, one moments before leaving office, the other just a few hours after taking office to now former president biden with the announcement of pardoning five members of this family. the announcement came from the white house about 20 minutes. the two spouses pardoned for any nonviolent offense as far back as 2014. earlier yesterday, biden pardoned general mark milley, mark fauci and liz cheney. these shouldn't be as an acknowledgement they en gaujd in any wrongdoing nor should acceptance be misconstrued as
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any offense. he fined his own controller pardons, 1500 wiping the slate cleaned and the pardons to release those from prison, some who physically attacked police officers and trump commuted the sentences of fourteen people, including the top leaders of the oath keepers and proud boys included. emily, vice-president, then vice president-elect j.d. vance told our colleague, shannon breem, on fox news sunday, a couple of weeks ago that those should not be pardoned for committing any violent acts against police officer and pam bondi says she condemns any violence against police officers. back to you. >> thank you. steve hilton, what do you make of biden's pardons? >> well, first of all, i would like to contrast them. there's a very simple and clear difference. the trump pardon, whatever you think of them, it's the delivery of an election promise. he said he would do this in
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pretty much every rally. biden said he would never do anything like this. it's the exact opposite. trump is doing what he said. biden is doing the opposite of what he said. and it's par for the course with him. the further point with this corrupt family, they're years of corruption, exploiting public office for personal financial gain. of course it's an admission of guilt. the facts were already there. it goes back beyond 2014. so i would say watch out. i think that they need to be made an example of because the way that the bidens have their snouts in the trough for so long is totally undermines faith in our -- of course it's true that lots of people in washington do this. but they do it more. fifty years they've been at this. the whole family enriched by public service and it's incredibly important it doesn't let that just slide away. >> harris, president trump tore into biden over the last-minute pardons.
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take a look. >> president donald trump: i didn't know that he gave a pardon to his family because he did it during my speech. >> reporter: he didn't tell you? >> president trump: he didn't tell me. they released it during my speech. i mean, during my speech. so all i could do wasay, excuse me, i would like to come back and speak some more. so, no, we were surprised about that. it's bad precedent, obviously. that makes him look very guilty. i could have pardoned my family. i could have pardoned myself, my family, and i said, if i do that, it's going to make me look very guilty. >> you know, he took the whole party down with him too, because now they're tainted with the legacy that they have to clean up on aisle seven. now they know how the press secretary used to feel. but, you know, what happened in 2014? i went to know more about even previous, what is he protecting everybody from knowing? and could they still do an investigation? it's never too late to do something great. maybe you can't legally go after
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them. >> there's a very specific answer, if i may, on the fauci. that is the year that fauci commissioned the bad coronavirus research that led to the pandemic and that was the year that the obama administration banned that kind of research and fauci went around the ban. >> wow. >> for the record, this is only obviously pardons of federal crimes, so states, have at it. >> all right. i want to get this in. so back in december of 2020, as former president biden was preparing to take office, remember that he expressed concern that trump might issue a wave of pre-emptive pardons to family members. reminder. >> well, it concerns me in terms of what kind of precedent it sets and how the rest of the world looks at us as a nation of laws and justice. but look, our justice department
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is going to operate independently on those issues that how to respond to any of that. i'm not going to be telling them what they have to do and don't have to do. it's not my justice department. it's the people's justice department. in terms of the pardons, you're not going to see in our administration that kind of approach to pardons. >> so first of all, pot calling the kettle black, kayleigh. but in the narrative, even today in the left-wing media, it has said that the reason president biden did that is not of an admission of guilt, no, it's because of the acknowledgement, the expectation, that president trump would wield the justice department as a weapon of lawfare. >> basically they're worried about trump doing exactly what they did to him and his family. and again, it's the blatant dishonesty from biden here that is so unsettling. you know, the news of these pardons came out as trump was getting ready to swear in, and i
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was watching this unfold as the news came out, and i sat there watching it and i was almost getting emotional because i realized what we had been spared from for another four years. and these pardons were such a mask-off moment from the biden family and from the biden administration that this is genuinely how he perceives his position and his power. he does not believe that he's constrained by the rule of law. he does not believe that he has to worry about the consequences of his actions except insofar as they affect himself. and again, like his random declaration that we have a 28th amendment is another great example of this. he believed that he was a unilateral authority and he did not care who was affected by it. and i really do believe that if his administration had gotten another four years without having to worry about any political or social constraints, such as winning re-election, it would have been a bad four years for this country. >> let's chat about these january 6th committee members who got pardons from biden. so i collected some receipts. liz cheney said, as you will
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see, scott perry requested a pardon from trump. scott perry vehemently denied it. the inference was something was nefarious. she gets a pardon but calling out someone else. you go over to none other than adam schiff, this precedent of giving blanket pardons is something we don't want to see. let's give one to adam kensinger who said i only know of one reason to seek a pardon, about a us you are worried of guilt. this is what you all said to republicans. now you've received pardons. look in the mirror. kettle, look as at who's in the mirror who has called them out. there are 21 pro-lifers that biden put in prison, innocent individuals who sang about jesus christ in front an abortion clinic in a hallway, not in the clinic, it was a peaceful protest. we played it on the show. those individuals should be receiving pardons. we're a week ahead for the march for life and i hope that the trump administration deeply considers these peaceful christians in a peaceful protest who were persecuted by president
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biden. they should be freed. >> what perfect timing to do so in one week at the march for life. we'll hope for that. guys, president trump has returned and so has the resistance. self-ided resistance. elon musk's department of government efficiency has been hit with multiple lawsuits just minutes after the president was sworn in. more on that next.
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>> president trump and elon musk's department of government efficiency, doge, was hit with its first roadblock just seconds after the new administration.
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three lawsuits! already alleging that doge does not comply with the federal advisory committee act. also known as faca. don't mispronounce it. the plaintiffs claim doge did not meet transparency requirements such as having a charter fairly balanced membership at a designated federal officer to call meetings. in other words, they like the people who are already have jobs that maybe are not doing well to be in the room. one lawsuit goes as far as to say this. doge's stacked membership far from being fairly balanced. that is small government crusaders with back grounds in either the tech industry or the public and politics. sounds like a superhero type of situation. >> also the idea that other agencies are fairly balanced is laughable. this is the entire problem that trump has been getting at. i got to ask, where were the lawsuits worried about, you
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know, constitutional governance when biden decided to implement student loan debt forgiveness in defiance of a supreme court order that said he couldn't. where were all of the concerns about overreach when biden decided to open wide the southern border and illegally let millions of illegal aliens into the country? no, it just goes to show that trump was right in his inaugural dress. there is a keeply embed establishment in keeping the gravy train running. >> it always has people accusing others of conspiracy theories. red state, blue state. deep state. emily? >> i have to say that this is where the crucial notion of the courts being objective -- or should i say not activist judges -- comes into play. as well as the national labour relations board. we talked about this before, you talk about the joke of fair balanced agencies. the nrlb has been depending on the administration. i have together faith in the
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legality and constitutionality of doge but as a former federal attorney that was tasked with cleaning house, i know how hard it is to remove people. or i should say it's easy to remove but then you get a lot of blowback and you have to stay strong. this is why president trump's 45th reign was so important because the judges he installed "k" can now hold the line. >> i had mentioned that senior executive service with those 7,000 plus employees. he's got his eye on that, but you pry up a good incident bring up a good point. it may not be as easy as you think that it is not working. >> yes. steve? >> it's just laughable. if you read what they would like this process to be, basically they want to put more bureaucracy around the process of reducing bureaucracy. the second point is this is what again, he ran on this. no one could have been in any doubt about what was proposed here. this is the election outcome. he wop won. he gets to do.
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>> i saw the president, this is all going to be about you knowty. there was a little of that and i liked seeing that. but almost in addition to the -- i saw a fight in him. i saw a grit in him. this is putting democracy forward before he even took office. they think they can file lawsuits and guess who's staffing that, former biden administration officials. they're ready to fight. but that man knows they're ready to fight. he's ready to punch back against the american people. >> i've been saying, it's like a new chapter of lawfare. we are getting our first look inside president trump's brand new oval office. that's where he was looking for the office that biden left behind and he had to go on an easter egg hunt to find it next.
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[ ♪♪ ] >> we we were having to go accapella like carrie underwood. president trump's inauguration parade may have been forced to
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move indoors due to the cold but the pomp, the circumstance, the pageantry, they were on full display. usa chants erupted when the president trump made his capital one entrance. >> crowd: usa! usa! is >> they gave a big round of applause when they introduced his son, barron. [ cheering and applause ] >> trump even turned his day one executive orders into a show bringing a desk and a chair on stage. at the commander in chief ball, the 47th president cans danced to 78 to the campaign trail
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favorite "ymca" he did it with a sword after cutting the celebratory. and ♪ [ ♪♪ ] >> kayleigh, my husband said you've got to zoom into this dance. let's pull it up. i want to pull up the bow of that sword dance. you can see him spinning it around in the air at one point. wielding it. and you see the military officials behind him looking like don't bring that too close. hilarious. i think this was such a great moment. i was there for the commander-in-chief pal when he came out with melania for the first dances. the room was electric. he is just soaking it up. he's in his prime.
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i really do wonder if it took the past four years of biden administration for us to get to this point where he is celebrating. he is on top of the world. and he's ready to get to work. >> at one point it looked like he did a golf swing with it. >> he did! we showed it. with the sword. >> i echo your sentiments. the ball. all the medal of the exuberance gratitude, the excitement was so palpable and what i love is that we're seen as commander-in-chief, has already got to work. he did more in eight hours than president biden did in four years and yet he still has lefty. he still has joy. he's celebrating there and enjoying himself. he's not there. he could be really bitter. he was put through the ringer. we know that the past administration tried to do a lot to remove this individual from
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complete society and yet, here he is. not only returned to the people's house, in full glory, but also having a great time doing it. seeing the people's house, we've heard the picture of the new oval office and i had a little déjà vu that looked identical to four years ago. i don't remember walking on that patterned rug to brief him for covid. that was a gift nancy reagan gave to her husband, ronald reagan. you see the gold couches and a gift from queen victoria in the 1800s. that's vintage trump right there. >> it's light and i think it captures the sense of optimism just in that design sense. it's really interesting. there's the feeling of lightness and positivity and just i want to echo what you were saying. it's just on a personal level it's so great to see that he's so happy. i just feel happy for him and his family. after everything they've been through. and all these years, when he
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didn't have to do. we should be happy on the personal level and after that, these incredible iconic moments and these images in this whole sequence, mcdonald's and the garbage truck and the high vis vest and now this. absolutely amazing. >> these were going into the crowd. >> he gets where the american people have been in the last four years. he understands it. and he taps into, yes, it's joy, but it's also going to be okay. it's going to be okay. we're resilient. we're going to snap back. when you saw the tops of all of those military leadership and rank and file as they were looking up, some with their hats on, when you saw the tops of their heads, and they all looked up the stage at him it was just humbling in that moment. for someone who grew up military, it was humbling to see a commander-in-chief say, i get you. i get you. and i got you.
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i think that's bigger than the joy. >> commander-in-chief that they can believe in. that's what they now have on january 21st, more "outnumbered" next.
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>> date two of the trump administration. when will it begin? tom homan joins us pure into the northern border turning violent and deadly. border patrol agent killed in vermont ahead of border patrol union is here. president trump with a big announcement this afternoon. is it infrastructure week all over again and how quickly can president trump turn around the economy? charles payne with his thoughts. i'm john roberts. come join sandra and me for "america reports" and we will see you then. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> last but not least president trump and first lady melania having a moment at the commander-in-chief all. trump sported a classic black tux casino and milani and a custom strapless black gown. the first couple received a thunderous ovation from the crowd as they took the stage celebrating their return to the white house for the first dance. all of the big fashion moments at trump's inauguration in one particularly stole the show. first lady melania drums at a custom-made hat throughout the day leaving many wondering what it stands for and what message she was trying to send? president trump was quick to make a joke and complement his wife's fashion choice. >> we went out to the helicopter and i said, goodbye. and the wind is blowing like crazy and with the hat she is wearing, she almost blew away.
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[laughter] she was being elevated off at the ground. she almost blew away. no, so we all appreciate it because she's been a great first lady. a beautiful and a great first lady. >> emily: among the glitz and glamour, there was pennsylvania democratic senator john fetterman. stating i guess you could sate completely to himself. i swear in ceremony in his signature. basketball shorts, hootie mccurdy, and sneakers, harris. >> harris: i am okay with that. i love come as you are, but this was a moment. this was more than trump becoming president. he survive two assassination attempts. i think he can put some pants on. i'm not singling crazy and make them satin or silk that cover up your needs. >> emily: come as you are but
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to harris' points out, it is a pretty important day and do you put pants on for anything? >> emily: to. >> kayleigh: it was freezing there and i don't know how he did that but melania trump, the black-and-white thinking that it seemed to be, the first and second iteration into me a symbolism. i watched wonder w wonder woman and it is like you tried to bure and i'm still thing at the scene four years but look at me now as she walks out. i am here. i am here to stay and i'm your first lady. i loved that she looked beautiful. >> emily: i think undeniably she is truly one of the most gorgeous women on the planet. her fashion has been impeccable. do you think the media will give her a fair shake and acknowledge those facts? >> i think it is possible. let's not, you know, hold our breath. it is part of the general forming of the hostility.
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if i could pick up on the mail fashion aspect here. you didn't see, harris, because we were not in the same space but i dressed up. >> harris: i did see you and you looked beautiful. >> and a shirt and a tie which i never wear. >> harris: i didn't know it was you. >> exactly but i got a lot of feedback, we love you, steve but incredibly uncomfortable in that stuff. it was a sign of respect for a special day and normal will be resumed tomorrow and here i am. >> harris: so fancy because your shoes are shiny in your jacket. >> emily: to that point, if steven hilton can put on a tight, could john fetterman put on a tie? >> he absolutely should dress professionally and lauren sanchez who is a passionless or at the inauguration. i will not show a photo. >> harris: you didn't like the? >> lingerie at the former presidents inauguration is a little bit inappropriate that my fashion winner was ivanka trump
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with aubrey hepburn inaugural ball dress. and oscar delorenzi some of the designers with melania trump and others, would itself refreshing to see the designers come out and be supportive of president trump's family after the way they have been vilified by the entire pop culture. it has been great to see. >> emily: i think that shows as we have been talking about how much that family has been that through and generosity shines through. if it were me or sicilian, we would hold that grudge forever. but the trumps really generous looking at the next four years with optimism, joy, grace and aptitude to. >> harris: and perhaps. >> emily: speaking of getting to work, thank you for watching us and don't forget to ddr that shows when you can't watch us live but for now, here is "america reports." >> john: emily, thank you at any moment we will hear from someone and secretary marco rubio in the next fe

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