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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  January 24, 2025 4:00am-5:00am PST

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a chewy order is on the way for radar — who knows that sounds means... kibble... squeaky toy... ...and birdseed. delivered fast — at prices everyone loves. for low prices. for life with pets, there's chewy ♪ ♪ >> ainsley: it is 7:00 a.m. on the east coast. it's friday. january 24th. >> and this is "fox & friends." attorneys for the accused idaho college killer are trying to get the most important evidence tossed out of the case. the father of one of the victims joins us ahead of the hearing today. >> and, the cold temperature in washington won't stop today's march for life. rachel campos-duffy is there live from the ground with a preview of the event. >> brian: plus, ice rounding up over 500 illegal immigrants in one day. and the border czar has a few words for all of them. >> i'm not going back to haiti.
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>> well, you are wrong. he is going back to haiti. [laughter] >> brian: second hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. >> ainsley: today, president trump is making the first trip of his second term strong and storm ravaged western north carolina before heading out to los angeles to survey damage from the wildfires. >> lawrence: and those trips come after trump expressed frustration with fema. >> brian: jacqui heinrich is in hard hit asheville with the details. hey, jacqui. >> hey, good morning to you guys. yeah, this community is still picking up the pieces. fema placed more than 13,000 households in hotels since hurricane helene. but, early this month, about 3,000 were reportedly told that their vouchers were up and they had to get out with only days' notice and nowhere to go. they are reportedly about 2700 people left in the program.
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and congressman chuck daughters who represents this district. is he a republican. said he had to lobby fema to give people 21 days notice if they had to get out. he said that that agency agreed but there had been consternation that fema's disaster response has been biased against republicans. recall, the agency had to fire an employee after someone on its hurricane relief team said not to visit florida homes with trump signs during hurricane milton. and congress has been weighing plans to condition aid following the fires in california. president trump said this week on fox that a shakeup for fema is ahead. >> fema has not done their job for the last four years. i had fema working really well. we had hurricanes in florida. we had alabama tornadoes, but, unless you have certain types of leadership it gets in the way. fema is going to be a whole big discussion shortly i would
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rather see the states take care of their own problems. >> conditioning aid is a controversial proposal. historically congress has passed supplemental disaster funding on a bipartisan basis. and biden's fema chief of staff warned that picking winners and losers would erode public trust in the federal government. but california's fires are going to be the most expensive disaster in american history. and president trump threatened to withhold help if the state doesn't amend its water and forest management policies. governor gavin newsom says he is going to meet trump on the tarmac this afternoon, when he heads there after his stop in north carolina. a lot of relationships in the trump world. a lot of relationships. of of trust. i communicate with a lot of the folks oaround him. folks that have his ear and influence. so, i don't want -- this is a side show, a lot of this stuff. but i know it's a show that probably will be the focus of that little bit too much tomorrow. when all i care about is what
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key can do together. >> there aid trump's ping to lead dhs kristi noem. confirmation hearing. she would not politicize disaster aid but she side stepped a question from a democrat on whether she would defy such an order if she got one,. >> jacqui, one of the things i wonder about is how the people it's tough. i know you just got there feel as though how their local governments interacting with fema got off to such horrendous start and we heard the story about them being kicked out of temporary housing last week which was ameliorated. >> jacqui: that's right. i'm actually going to be speaking later on this morning with congressman chuck edwards and the little that we know of the conversation he had with fema. he had to actually tell the agency, hey, you got to let people know with more than a couple days' notice if, you know, it their vouchers are up
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and got to get out of these hotels there is a housing crisis in this community that would indicate maybe not so great communication, he is the u.s. rep from this district on a local level. maybe different conversations. but we should learn more detail later this morning when i speak with him, guys. >> lawrence: you know, jacqui, when i was on the ground. a lot of folks said they didn't see fema. we found out from the whistleblower and one of the ladies got fired that there was actually instances where they saw trump signs and in front ofe yard and telling people don't stop by those doors. i guess my question is when the president comes to meet with the folks today, is he going to be meeting more with the people and. leadership: >> jacqui: we don't have too many details yet about the president's trip. we know he is going to be surveying the disaster areas both here in asheville and when he gets to california. so we will see who greets him on the tarmac in both places. i think to your point the
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feeling -- this feeling under biden's fema support republican communities and so, of course, whether you have local officials like california governor gavin newsom scram bling to the tarmac to meet trump it's their concern they are going to need help from the federal government and wanted to get ahead of those conversations, on the local level it's the people who live here who are still months later. this is japanese restaurant behind me, it's a shell of a building now. there is rubble all over this parking lot. and so, you know, they are the ones who really have to live with this every day. and we'll see who else shows up to greet the president beyond those local officials when he gets here. >> ainsley: thank you so much, jacqui. i hope samaritan's purse, franklin graham will be with them. >> lawrence: doing a great job. >> ainsley: talk to the locals and officials to find out how he can help them with federal
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money. let's talk about the panama canal. we built this a century ago. and america did. and it connects the caribbean to the pacific ocean. allows for all of our goods to be passed fly quickly without having to go down and around. so, we built this. and then jimmy carter negotiated a deal with panama canal to say can you slowly have control of this. that was in 1977. they took full control of it in 1999 and trump is calling that a foolish move since we were the ones who built this in blood, sweat, and tears. well, the problem is now, there is a company based out of hong kong that operates two of the ports. one on each side. and we are worried, president trump is worried about chinese influence. panama has said this is yours. done audit on hong kong company and trying to show there is nothing nefarious here if you can trust that. they are making a lot of money, panama is because of this hong
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kong company. parent company is one of the largest con glom member rats in hong kong that's a concern. >> lawrence: here is the president saying that the chinese are essentially running it. >> teddy roosevelt came along i'm not knocking teddy roosevelt he spent the money made during the mckinley years. he did a lot of great things like building the panama canal. the most expensive thing relatively speaking, the most expensive thing we have ever built is the panama canal. >> sean: you are serious about it. >> unfortunately jimmy carter gave it away for $1. oh, no. we dr. to take it back. china is running the panama canal right now. that wasn't the deal. it should have never been given. the deal was not that china is going to run the panama canal. >> brian: right. so a couple things. land bridge hutchison companies the two companies china owned hong kong based that run both sides of the port. the and all of the sudden our fees are going up. they say it's a water problem. we got to do that well, that's not going to be okay.
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number two, and this is what is so great about what the president is doing the big picture. they are part of the belt and road program. that was a china program put together for developing nations. they will build the bridges, build the tunnels, help them with infrastructure and in turn they get influence with that country. panama it is in communications controlled by huawei $1.4 billion into the small central american nation. and we just turned away. multiple administrations have just ignored panama. and now the president is saying, look, when i look at my national security. >> lawrence: that's right. >> brian: what going on here? why are the fees so high? what is he is doing working it right now. i at this point in time back. what he is going to end with they got to define who these companies are and let them know they have no control over it they they don't want to negotiate they are foolish. panama is in a good spot. investment from china and america's interest. if it's trump in panama he is working both sides getting maximum you money. it's our national security that's at stake.
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it's not nice to have panama. no one wants panama. what we need is the canal for access. if we can't get it, we are totally shut down. and 9 other thing is that is where marco rubio's going. >> lawrence: 100 percent. >> brian: anyone doubt rubio is going to be implementing trump's foreign policy vision only two took two days. >> lawrence: look at the things is he rolling out in the state department. why are we paying fees at all after we gave it to them. i mean, you would think that there would be some leverage there alone on the fees being paid. right? >> brian: i saw a story back in the 1970s when he -- when jimmy carter was there. there were massive protest. panama is like it's our canal. you built it. teddy roosevelt did it, i got it. but we want to own it. so it looked like jimmy carter didn't have much of a choice at that time because we would have had to have our military there just to secure the port workers because they were being targeted. we would call it terrorist activity.
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so they had to have some way to fix it. but this is not where -- this is not, accord tog the deal that we signed. >> we interviewed republican senator eric schmitt earlier in the show. because he has -- he has introduced a first ever resolution he just did this yesterday. is he asking panama to expel the hong kong companies involved. listen to this. >> this has been a concern for a while. in that china effectively has control of the panama canal. they control ports on either end. why is that important? because most of the goods and services or most of the goods that we transport to the park, they go through the panama canal, our navy goes through the panama canal. when we foolishly gave it away, the one condition that was insisted upon is that the canal would remain neutral. it's not neutral anymore. it's part of china's belt and road initiative. build airports. if you criticize the ccp you may not get flights anymore. build infrastructure that they can turn it on and turn it off. we simply from a national security perspective cannot have
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that situation with regard to the panama canal. what this resolution calls for is, they need to expel all of the chinese influence and companies that currently have operational control of that canal. >> lawrence: this is a larger conversation when it comes it the chinese. not only are they trying to buy land in america. put plants here. they're okay the college campuses as well. it's a national security threat. and i also agree with brian. tiktok does pose some type of threat. so do a lot of companies as well we need a holistic approach come batting china. >> brian: i urge china to check out the tiktok news feed there won't be one american point of view on it only china. guess what else they did? also no longer recognize taiwan in panama. what happens is these developing nations can't make their payments so china takes back ownership of what they built. it's an extortion plot the mob made famous. they are only doing it as a country. ask you some of these developing countries, nobody is happy with
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the belt and road program they get a new airport but they can't afford to keep it or pay for it. so china gets control over it. >> ainsley: many of those migrants coming across the border are coming from china. that comes to this. donald trump duke office on monday. ihas already arrested hundreds and hundreds of illegals here with criminal records. just in the last 24 hours, 538 arrests and 373 detainers logged. >> lawrence: that's new right there. and the detainers as you know in the sanctuary cities which there is an arrest warrant put out by the feds, a lot of sanctuary cities will not honor the detainer. so they have already gotten over 300 detainers honored that doesn't include the arrests they have been able to make of criminal aliens. if you see some of these guys that they are arresting. we are talking about rapists, murderers. people that are wanting for assault as well. so these are violent offenders. and they do not want to be deported, brian.
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>> brian: right. they don't. in newark, new jersey, the mayor is complaining that they weren't told that they were going to have an ice presence in the area. >> lawrence: who cares. >> brian: just make it so much harder by not cooperating. so, here's the message -- i don't know if you saw this yesterday. some of bill melugin's great stories. one of which had a guy who was screaming about i'm not going to back to haiti, i love biden, i love obama, i love you, i hate trump. listen to tom homan's response. >> i'm not going back to haiti. [bleep] bro, you feel me? yo biden forever. thank obama for everything he did for me, bro. >> well, he is wrong. is he going back to haiti. can i tell him that told him secure border before. securest border in the history of this nation. ice officers are finally getting the h handcuffs taken off of him and put them on bad guys throughout the country. >> lawrence: what model citizen this guy was. this was so predictable. i remember when i was down in texas. covering when the haitians came
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across. remember, they were under the bridge and you had thousands of them under there. they were already getting into criminal activity. they were hosting their gangs and taking women's purses. do you know when whip gate. the reason they got involved on the hollers they had stripped the woman's purse away from her. they had already started to take the food away water away from people under that bridge. now these people are in the country and as you can see he doesn't want to go back. there is a new sheriff in town. >> ainsley: is he recognizing why is he in this country because of joe biden's policy and now trump saying you are out. trump halls said that he might have to stop sending money to these sanctuary cities that are not protecting the american citizens, instead protecting the illegals that are here. many of them with criminal records. there are 170 sanctuary jurisdictions across our country. >> brian: right. the problem is with that, he did it the first time, too. gets caught up in the courts. so they sue back. works its way up. ultimately they could not overturn this sanctuary cities. what they are doing is getting the worst of the worst.
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and they are getting the criminals out. and as harold ford said last night, i recommend my democratic friends do not get involved. there is nobody that should be going to bat for transnational gangs killers, rapists and child abusers. or sex traffickers. >> lawrence: they are under estimating the last time they got away with it because there was no media strategy. you got someone who is a proin tom homan when it comes to border security and also media strategy. so they are pumping off videos of the arrest. they are putting out the mug shots and the offenses that they have created. so, if you want to defend these guys and the liberal media, if you want to be a liberal politician defend these people i don't think the american people are going to have the same view. also, remember the narrative that was going to be abuela and the children that were going to be deported you haven't seen that yet. >> ainsley: you know what? america spoke. trump won by a landslide. and this was one of the main issues that we heard every time we were out there on the road.
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all right. thousands of pro-life supporters are expected in d.c. today for march for life where j.d. vance is slate to the speak and president trump will address the crowd by video. >> brian: "fox & friends weekend" co-host rachel campos-duffy is live in washington at the national mall. rachel? >> rachel: good morning you guys so excited to be here at the 52nd march for life the activists that are here going to march. also excited because j.d. vance is going to join them as well as donald trump. he will be giving a video address from the oval office. but they worked hard to get donald trump and j.d. vance elected get a pro-life president and vice president. and boy donald trump is showing his pro-life cred this week not just with this address but pardoning pro-life activists who have been targeted by weaponized department of justice, by the joe biden administration.
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pardoning many of them. and also, you are seeing on the hill. the passing of the infant born alive survivor protection act. an act that will save infants who survive the brutal abortion procedure and hold doctors accountable for not providing the life-saving care they need after surviving that abortion. so, and by the way, we are also going to have josiah with us. josiah is going to join us in a few minutes here. we're going to interview him. he is an abortion survivor. he survived an abortion. he is now a cad. and we are going to talk to him and his experience of what he thinks about what is happening in the pro-life movement. >> brian: all right. thanks so much, rachel. it's going to be a big day. you know, you even look warmer now because you are -- sun is up and it's close. meanwhile carley shimkus is close. >> carley: good morning i do. start with a fox news alert. right now israel is waiting for hamas to provide the names of
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the four hostages the terror group will release toilet. the hostages are expected to be four women. hamas was also expected to provide israel with the status of each of the remaining hostages. set to be freed but some reports say hamas could only provide the number of those who are still alive. new overnight the head of the world health organization announcing cost cutting moves after the u.s. withdrew from the agency. those measures include hiring freezes and reducing fend spending on travel. the u.s. was the world health organization's biggest financial backer. president trump decided to cut ties during his first day in office. accusing the agency of mishandling the covid-19 pandemic. and other international health crises. and did you hear about this? the associated press says it will use trump's name change for mount denali but will not use it for the gulf of mexico. the new guidance will now call north america's tallest mount mount mckinley as it was
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originally named in 1917. but they are refusing to use the term gulf of america. signed orders to officially change thoses names. mount mckinley had been called denali since 2015 when then president obama changed its name to match the traditions of the indigenous people of alaska. and spirit airlines telling passengers to please get dressed. brian, they are taking your line. the airline has updated its policy to ban what it deems to be lewd fashion choices. oh boy. the new rule for passengers boarding while barefoot or inadequately clothed. kick people off for wearing inappropriate gear or having a tattoo that they consider to be offensive. everybody wake up, get dressed and then board your flight. >> brian: right. here's the thing. i think i should sue no one was saying it until i said did on the show. >> carley: copyright it.
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>> ainsley: they are updating their contract carriage for passengers. that's what they are calling it. no crop tops no, see through clothing no. exposed breasts or buttocks or other private parts, lewd, obscene or offensive clothing or tattoos. one guy kicked off for saying f hate world tour. the flight attendant was offended and said you need to take your hoodie off and he refused. according to this article "the daily mail" he was kicked off. >> lawrence: they have known to be a little trashy on that airline. so i'm glad that they -- yeah they are. very trashy. i went one time on spirit when i was in college. i was trying to get a good deal and then they make you pay fee force every other little thing. did you go on there and it's like a mess on the plane. so, i'm glad that they are moderating a little bit. >> ainsley: cleaning up their reputation. >> lawrence: cleaning up their represent accommodation and hopefully clean up service as well. >> ainsley: i love. this remember back in the day when i in never flown on a plane and watch people say they are going on a trip and they would dress up and wear suits and
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women would look really nice. and now you go on a plane and people are in pajamas some people come on barefooted. >> lawrence: you are not pro-pajama. >> ainsley: i'm not. >> brian: even in australia. they gave me another outfit. they give you -- they are like please change. the other thing is, my goal out of all the airlines, why is spirit airlines having standards on dress code? you would think it would be more luxury airlines. my first airline was branis when you are tired of luxury. just put something on. they are telling you what to wear. that's a bridge too far. >> lawrence: i like it. and i think there should be decorum. i'm not saying you can't wear sweats but pajamas are made for home. >> ainsley: someone their pants are too low and see the top of their rear end. >> lawrence: she means if they are saggy. >> ainsley: i don't want to see
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some man's rear end. >> brian: what if they are in really good shape? >> ainsley: that's a different story. [laughter] >> brian: straight ahead. can the u.s. support ukraine's war against russia without spending taxpayer dollars? general jack keane thinks so. he's here to talk about it.do ♪ w from hr to payroll, adp designs for the next anything. when you really need to sleep. you reach for the really good stuff. zzzquil ultra helps you sleep better and longer when you need it most. its non-habit forming and powered by the makers of nyquil.
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>> president trump is not sure spending anything on nato as ukraine because a major policy focus for the administration. >> they are not protecting us. we are protecting them. so i don't think we should be spending, i'm not sure we should be spending anything but we should certainly helping them. they should up their 2% to 5% the united states spent $200 billion more than europe. why did we spend more? because biden never asked europe to spend more. >> brian: new op-ed general jack keane and marc thiessen lay out how the u.s. should arm ukraine without using american taxpayer dollars. just take some time and read. this it's brilliant. retired four star general, fox news senior strategic analyst general jack keane. general, we have given $183 billion in aid, and it's not charity, it's to help ukraine win how can we move
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forward thoughtfully using russian assets to finance ukraine's fight? >> let me give credit to my colleague marc thiessen a brilliant journalist as we all know and outstanding fox news contributor. of the 183 billion, the vast majority of that money has not gone directly to ukraine. it's gone to the defense industry to build back storage the weapons that are in storage that we are giving to ukraine and then they build those weapons back the modern version of it and provide that to whatever service provided those weapons out of the united states arsenals. what we are proposing i think has a little bit imagination to it in the sense let's take the whole issue off the table in terms of taxpayers funding completely there there are 300 billion russian assets. 200 billion is in belgium. they have been living off the interest of that. and that is an absurdity in and of itself. 5 billion we have of russian frozen assets.
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the other 95 is spread around a number of european countries. some of the european countries are opposed to giving up these assets and funding the war in ukraine. one they don't want to set the precedent but, i mean, war in europe? we haven't had war in europe since world war ii? i think there is a precedent being set and i think we got end the war, period. let's get past that issue. think about that. i mean, that -- the beauty of that is why take russian money and we fund the war in ukraine and also the necessary reconstruction that has to be done russian money they invade ukraine and they are paying for it. the next program we have a direct loan program we unleashed in world war ii still on the books if we wanted to use it. doing a direct loan. give the audience an idea. $11 billion we are providing a direct loan to poland for them to buy tanks, apache helicopters and other things from us.
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2 billion to taiwan. and about a billion to romania. this is a direct loan program with interest that we get paid back and they buy our stuff. the ukrainians have $26 trillion in natural resources geological survey. huge credibility done by a canadian company. they have the largest deposits of uranium, significant iron ore, significant lithium i could go on and rare minerals. use that as collateral and charge them interest just like we are doing with poland. we can take taxp taxpayers' dols off the books. entering the third year of the war. the other things the ukrainians want to do is build their own stuff they built, listen to this, brian. they built 1.4 million drones this year they intend to build 5 million drones next year. and your own defense industrial base. we could help fund that and they pay us back with interest this is an issue whose time has come and president trump is the right
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person to do this. we got push the europeans into it but he has the leverage withed your honor means seen it with nato. 400 billion since start upping their game in terms of funding. this is the time to do it. >> brian: they have so much natural resources and they know how to work and they will do it and good for it. lastly,real quick, general, do you think the white house is briefed on this to a degree and do you think the -- do you think europe understands what this proposal is and zelenskyy knows what it's about? are all the parties aware? >> i have spoken to top leadership in ukraine about this. they are all in. the europeans are very much aware of their. and they likely are expecting president trump to push him on this issue. certainly president trump's team is gathering to be sure and he has to put that team together and let them bring him options. i have had a conversation with the president about this myself
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but let his team come forward and put the option together and show the details. show them where the law supports all of this right now i think it's a very viable option going forward. >> brian: three star general kellogg is the one who is leading the charge. to an agreement and some of the toughest language yet president trump to vladimir putin came out over the last two hours. so encouraging and so well thought. a plan that can work. hopefully people are willing to implement it. thank you so much, general have great weekend? >> yeah, you too, guys have. a wonderful weekend. thanu. >> brian: it so worth reading it what's at stake and how we can do it. straight ahead, coming up on "one nation" saturday night don't miss it piers morgan exclusive interview with us from england pfeffer accepts of trump. stephen miller part of his plan to do these mass deportations of these criminals and so much more. he almost writes everything the president says. stephen miller will be with us, too. devin nunes a significant role with this administration. also the attacks on kash patel e
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worked with kash to stop the russia hoax before it actually resulted in impeachment. and charly arnolt will give us the latest-on-the media. coming up history, liberty and laughs. i want everyone to join me. fox nation will stream it february 15th in jacksonville, florida, and do it again on march 22nd. inspirational, motivational and patriotic. live on stage, brian kilmeade.com. straight ahead, the march for life happening today in our nation's capitol and some big names will be there. none bigger than rachel campos-duffy will be covering it. she will be with us next. ♪ copd is an ugly reality. do you have his medical history? i watch as his world just keeps getting smaller. but then, trelegy helped us see things a little differently. with 3 medicines in 1 inhaler, trelegy keeps airways open for a full 24 hours
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>> ainsley: we are back with a fox news alert. new evacuation orders issued for some residents who live near the new wildfire that flared up close to the border of u.s. and mexico in san diego county hitch threads of firefighters are working to get the already burned through 800 acres and zero percent contained. meanwhile the hughes fire in l.a. county has reached 36 percent containment and thousands of evacuees were able to go back home this weekend rain help the firefighters janice telling us all we'll it would trigger the mud slides. check back in with our senior meteorologist for our fox weather forecast. janice? >> janice: we are grateful for the rain and hoping it is beneficial. certainly across the burn areas we have seven wildfires burning this time yesterday three. the latest was the hughes fire now over 10,000 acres burned fire weather alerts for one more day. winds will shift to on shore flow and we have rain in the
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forecast for the first time since october. we are going to see some snow pack in the mountains and that's going to be ongoing off and on through the weekend into monday a little concerned with maybe lightning dry lightning a concern could spark more wildfires hopefully it will just help firefighters in the area. so saturday, sunday, we do have the low risk for a flash flood and then, you know, an inch is great news excellent news as i mentioned a lot of that moisture cannot be absorbed where the wildfires have burned and that acts as run off and the potential for not only flash flooding but mud slides and rock slides. keep you up to date. there is the forecast. again rain in the forecast as we get into the weekend and monday. real quick, the president is going to be in the los angeles area today and the north carolina region where temperatures are still below freezing and people are without a home. glad we are shining a spotlight on both of these areas devastated by weather related events. ainsley over to you. >> ainsley: i am too.
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thank you so much, janice. >> janice: of course. >> ainsley: a few hours thousands of pro-life supporters are expected to march in d.c. for the march for life. the rally comes just one day after house republicans passed a born alive bill which grants life-saving treatments to infants who survive abortions. josiah presley who is a survivor abortion is in d.c. to share his story today but first he joins rachel campos-duffy at the march for life. hey, guys. >> rachel: hi, ainsley. it's great to be here. you see the stage right behind us the plexiglass up because j.d. vance is going to be speaking here in just a little while. but with me here is joe cypressly who you just mentioned. he is an abortion survivor. and we brought him here. is he going to be speaking on the stage. i thought we would bring him in to tell a little bit of a story right now. joe sigh a welcome. >> thank you. >> rachel: tell us about your story and how you found out that you had survived an abortion? >> yeah. so i'm adopted. and when i was 13 years old my
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adoptive parents they told me more about my adoptive story and told me about ohow two months into my birth mother's presidency with me in south korea she decided to have a dnc abortion. a type of abortion where the doctor goes into the mother's womb and rips the baby apart and. they thought according to plan and send her home. a few months later she realized she was still very much still pregnant pregnant with me. rach itch what were the physical impact. >> growing up i had deformed arm. whether or not that's a direct cause of the abortion we are not sure. as a young teenager hearing this, i definitely blame the fact that i had a deformed arm on her anger toward her. there was a lot of pain and hurt that came along with that for a number of years. >> rachel: you worked through a lot of that. you are now a dad. you have a 2-year-old child and you are about to have another baby. your wife is about to have another baby. what's your message for america we just passed this bill no democrats, only one -- i should say only one democrat voted to
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protect infants like yourself who survive this brutal procedure. what's your message regarding that and also what is your message to the crowd? >> yeah, my message in general would be just we all have a voice. we don't need bigger voices, we need more voices. and you have been given a voice. you have a spirit of influence and you are called to use that voice. i would ask you use that voice to be a voice for the voiceless. >> rachel: wonderful. it's beautiful. we are looking forward to your remarks. thanks for joining us here. >> thanks for having me. >> rachel: i'm so glad you are alive. >> me too. >> rachel: all right. back to you guys. >> ainsley: we are so glad he was born. wouldn't that be with a great show if cameras followed a family young teenager who wanted to have the baby and adoptive family takes the baby and you learn their story? >> rachel: yes. amazing. that would be an amazing story. >> ainsley: i would watch it. >> rachel: you feel it out here even in the cold, ainsley. >> ainsley: i know. you have nine babies at home. thank you so much, rachel.
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an update in the idaho murder case. will the defense's attempt to throw out key evidence derail the prosecution? the father of one of the victims will join us ahead of today's hearing. that's next. ♪ serving customers with top tier mobile service is our business, but our mission is to honor and serve patriots. patriot mobile gives back to organizations that defend our god given rights and freedoms. with dependable nationwide coverage on all three of the major u.s. based networks. you get the same great service with a higher calling. go to patriot mobile dot com now and make an impact every time you use your cell phone.
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♪ >> carley: turning to business headlines, costco shareholders rejecting a proposal that would have urged manage document evaluate the risks associated with its diversity initiatives. according to the chairman more than 98% despite warnings by conservative research group that the policies carry reputational and financial risk to the company and therefore to shareholders this comes as a growing number of taking a live look at the u.s. debt clock here. $14 billion and counting, that's how much the new doge clock is saving american taxpayers within the hour, the doge clock hassed of 1.ed ad to the u.s. stoble anyone at us debt clock.org. and jetblue is now the first u.s. airline accepting venmo to pay for flights. it's part of a push to attract younger, customers can use the
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payment service for online books company plans to roll outs the feature on mobile app. in the coming months. those are your business headlines, lawrence over to you. >> lawrence: thanks, carry. suspected idaho killer bryan kohberger due back in court this morning for a second day of a critical pre-trial hearing and defense is pushing for nearly all of the evidence against him to be thrown out. potentially derailing the prosecution's case on trial in august. kaylee goncalves one of the lost lives in the 2022 attack. her father, steve goncalves joins us now. good morning, steve, it's been a while since we spoke. how are you holding up? >> one day at a time. but feeling good, you know. getting close to the trial is a nice change. >> steve, we have been waiting for justice for your daughter. what do you make of this procedural move bryan kohberger
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and his attorney to get the evidence thrown out. without that evidence it's like a slam dunk for his defense. >> that's exactly how we feel. you know, i have talked to my legal counsel. and this is their last hurrah. this is their last go for it. challenge everything, nobody wants to go to court with d.n.a. at the crime scene underneath one -- nobody wants to do it. so they are trying to get that thrown out. hippler has done an amazing job keeping this on track and getting it ready to where we could have a court in the summer. you know, things were a little wild there for a while. lots of delays i think we are back on track. defense tries last hurrah and doesn't go their way. there is talk about pleas. who you would you feel about a plea deal in a case like this?
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definitely not for a plea. they have put us through hell. i mean over two years they have made us go across the state of idaho. we have done everything by the rules. i don't want to believe now that we got them they are going to have to deal with their consequences their decisions, i'm not looking to make any plea pleas at all. >> we talked many times can you tell us our yens that are new to our case what your daughter was like? you know, she was the american girl. the girl that went to work. she worked at a coffee stand, so she did that. she went -- saved all her money so she could go to college. we helped but she knew at the very beginning she was going to have to. she had four siblings. so she is the american girl that would serve you coffee with a smile and help you get a good day started. and she was a dean.
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she was doing amazing at school. her only mistake was to go to bed that night and somebody broke into her home and killed her. we're thinking about her today. when you get an opportunity to go in the courtroom today? >> we'll be in the courthouse. don't think we will get into the courtroom. we will have some meetings planned to speak with the prosecution in the state. the a.g. as well. but, i don't know if we'll actually get into the courtroom. i don't think they will let us. in i think there is some issues with the cameras. they want to turn them off they didn't want to have people coming in and out of the courtroom. as far as the scheduling goes, if that what keeps everything on schedule, we'll make that compromise but eventually, yes, we do want to be in that courtroom. it is our daughter. we are the true victims as far as surviving victims. so we prefer to be there.
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>> lawrence: steve, if you didn't put the media pressure on this case we probably wouldn't have reached a conclusion. we appreciate it. please keep us posted, brother. >> thank you. you have been here from the very start. i appreciate that. >> lawrence: you got it, brother. i will be here until the end. more "fox & friends" coming be .
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