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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  January 31, 2025 7:00am-8:00am PST

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louisiana purchase in 1803. colonel andrew jackson's victories during the war of 1812. ♪ >> maybe not so iranically nationalism has played in gulf politics. >> that's right. unfortunately nationalism has had some significant cost. we turned the gulf into a giant oil field. we've over developed this coast. >> he says history is history. what matters now is sending a message to the future. >> to our children and grandchildren who we are, who we were and always been and who we will continue to be, america first. we need to be first. >> a need many are interpreting in many different ways. back to you, dana and bill. >> bill: beautiful place.
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we'll see how it goes. >> dana: americans want answers on the horrific plane crash over washington. how the trump administration is promising to deliver on that. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. >> bill: a tough week and tough couple of days. bill hemmer, good morning. crews recovered both black boxes from american airlines flight 5342. as mourners hold vigils for the 67 killed. president trump and his administration vowing their deaths will not be in vain. >> we'll find out how the disaster occurred and insure nothing like this ever happens again. >> our mission is to understand not just what happened but why it happened and to recommend changes to prevent it from happening again. >> we will not accept excuses or passing the buck. >> we should have the pause until we get to the bottom of this.
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we have to train safely. something like this can never happen and it is completely unacceptable. >> dana: senator roger marshall is on deck. rich edson at the pentagon and go to madeleine rivera at reagan national airport. good morning, maddy. >> good morning, dana and bill. the ntsb their main focus is finding any perishable evidence. divers are back in the water this morning dealing with rough conditions like rain and wind. the findings of the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder from the jet are huge. sounds from the pilot, plane and altitude. investigators are looking for the data recorder from the blackhawk. staffing levels at the air traffic control tower at dca are under the spotlight this morning. there are reports one controller was handling the job of two people during the time of the crash raising questions over whether staffing was normal. here is what the president of the national air traffic control association had to say. >> it is not uncommon for us to
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routinely combine positions. there is usually someone in a supervise re position looking at the overall workload to make those determinations what positions we need open and when we need them own. >> flights in and out of reagan national airport are consistent. some delays and cancellations, of course, that could be because of a number of reasons. we have spoken to some passengers and they have a mix of emotions. listen here. >> there is mild anxiety but probably still just left over from hearing the news. i feel horrible for all the people it affected. but i think i have a better chance of winning the lottery than going down in a plane today. >> i feel fine, confident in everything that the airport does, i have always felt safe flying so i'm not anticipating any problems. >> many of the victims' families are arriving here in d.c. getting briefings from the ntsb.
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they will likely have a news conference later on today and of course we'll be watching out for that. back to you. >> bill: in addition to the ntsb you have a military investigation underway into the cause of the collision and the movements of the army blackhawk helicopter involved. senior national correspondent rich edson is live at the pentagon on that story today. >> the pentagon says investigators are focused on the altitude of the aircraft. with the investigation ongoing president trump posted the blackhawk helicopter was flying too high by a lot. it was far above the 200-foot limit. that's not really too complicated to understand, is it? secretary of defense said pentagon is still looking into all this. >> we're looking at altitude. the president was clear about that. someone was at the wrong altitude. investigation will help us understand that. was the blackhawk too high? was it on course? right now we don't quite know.
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>> defense secretary pete hegseth said while there is a pause on this specific exercise, training throughout the military will continue. the pentagon described the blackhawk flight tuesday as a routine nighttime qualification flight taking the pilot through airspace that they would have to fly through as part of their job. president's nominee for army secretary suggested the military should examine whether to move training flights away from d.c.'s commercial airspace. >> we might need to look at where is an appropriate time to take training risk. it may not be near an airport like reagan. >> eaves was an instructor with 1,000 hours of flight time on the blackhawk. ryan o'hara was the crew chief and we're waiting on the name of
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the third pilot. >> dana: senator roger marshall from kansas joins us. we're sorry for the heartache your constituents are feeling. staffing was not normal at reagan airport tower. the report said that one controller was communicating with both helicopters and planes and those jobs are typically assigned to two people, not one. do you have any thoughts or more information about that? >> i do. first of all just again to echo condolences to all my family members and know we are with you. that we will get through this together. but you are absolutely right. this is a problem. typically there is one person monitoring the helicopters and one person monitoring the commercial jets. i think it goes way beyond that. there is a ceiling for all helicopters at 200 feet. why was that particular helicopter above 200 feet? why didn't air traffic control pick it up? why are we allowing these type of helicopters into the busiest airport runway in the nation? it makes no sense to any type of
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americans. it is a common sense issue. i'm calling on the military to stop. i don't want your helicopters where my people are landing. when you talk about transponders, why do we let military aircraft into the airspace without transponders that communicate with commercial jets. if you don't want to use them stay out of the busy airspace. i appreciate president trump's transparency and taking accountability here. >> bill: two years a ago a pilot wrote i can't imagine what business is so prosing these helicopters are allowed to cross the path of airliners carrying hundreds of people. right to your point. jackui heinrich in the briefing room. >> are you aware of any performance issues or disciplinary actions taken against anyone working the towers last night or flying the plane?
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>> president trump: no. i hope that is not the case in this case. certainly over the years it has been the case. it is the case with respect to close calls and it is the case with respect to circling for hours on end. we need the smartest people. we need both psychologically smart and brilliant period. >> it was oval office, what do you make of that comment wand should we take from it? >> i think all of us want people with the highest training and abilities to do these really tough jobs. i want my pilot to be the best pilot. i want their position based upon merit and mental capacity. i have sat in some of the air traffic control places and it is a tougher job than a physician. their job was harder for me moment after moment and hour after hour. it takes a special person to do these jobs. the president hired i believe over 100 of these air traffic controllers last week realizing there is a problem and i appreciate him raising the bar for what we expect there out of
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these air traffic controllers. >> dana: what do you hear from people back home? how are they coping? >> still just in shock. again i'm a physician. this is typically anger and denial happening right now. we're circling the wagons. we lost 75 people in a tornado before. 1970 ooh football team had a crash and claimed the lives of 31 young people as well. we're circling the wagons, it is time for faith. our hearts are broken. i spoke to the mayor this morning and she is bringing this community together and we're all on our knees today so humbled and grateful for the life in the country god has given us but understand i don't think this accident should have happened. i think it could have been prevented. >> bill: thank you for your time and kind words about the folks back home in wichita. roger marshall on the hill,
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thanks. >> having been the victim of government overreach and a weaponizeed system of justice i know what it feels like. i will insure, if confirmed, that no american is subjected to that kind of torment. >> dana: playing politics at the f.b.i. how the issue is taking center stage at the confirmation hearing for president trump's pick to lead the agency and whether he is winning over the skeptics. shannon bream on that next. >> bill: president trump's cabinet is coming together. senate is gearing up for big votes on monday. which way will they go then? >> dana: the search for answers, the latest on the investigation into the tragedy in washington. what clues could be emerging. >> we will get to the bottom of what happened here. it is completely unacceptable in our nation's capital or anywhere. the military trains robustly and we won't stop training. there is a pause on this unit on this exercise, something like
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>> bill: confirmation hearing for rfk, jr. getting heated. vermont senator bernie sanders and him squaring off over big pharma donations. >> will you guarantee do what every other major country does. >> bernie, the problem of corruption is not just in the federal agencies. it is in congress, too. almost all of the members of this panel are accepting, including yourself, are accepting millions of dollars from the pharmaceutical industry. >> oh, no, no, i thought that would -- i ran for president like you. i got millions and millions of
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contributions. they did not come from the executives, not one nickel of pac money from the pharmaceutical. they cam from workers. >> the single largest accepter of pharmaceutical delays. >> bill: sanders denied those today nations on were personal contributions of people related to the industry. kennedy had his turn as well during that exchange. now this. >> i do believe they will get across the finish lawn but we have to fight for each one. the advice of consent power of the united states senate should not be used to block people because you have one policy disagreement on one issue. you don't get to make these decisions, president trump gets to make these decisions and he already has. >> dana: president vance confident the trump cabinet will come together. president trump added to his team yesterday with the senate confirming doug burgum as interior secretary.
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some of the toughest votes are still to come. chad pergram has an update. >> as you say the senate knocked off another nominee. they confirmed doug burgum as interior secretary. democrats are dug in against three nominees starting with rfk, jr. to run hhs. >> there is clear and compelling overwhelming evidence that he is unqualified for this position and that it would be dangerous to give him the responsibility of being the top healthcare official in the united states of america. >> kennedy's nomination vehicless some republicans including health committee chairman bill cassidy, a doctor. he agrees with kennedy on improving food quality. kennedy's decades of opposition to vaccines is another story. he warned of the consequences if people die because they refuse vaccines. >> i've been struggling with your nomination and tell you an
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associated tragedy that will cast a shadow over president trump's legacy which i want to be the absolute best legacy it can be. so that's -- you may be hearing from me over the weekend. >> fox is told privately kennedy failed to move the needle of bipartisan skeptics. there could be bipartisan opposition to director of national intelligence nominee tulsi gabbard. they pressed her about traveling to syria. >> would you view this trip as good judgment? >> yes, senator. i believe that leaders, whether you be in congress or the president of the united states can benefit greatly by going and engaging, boots on the ground, learning, listening. meeting directly with people whether adversaries or friends. >> kash patel appears to be in the best shape of the three most controversial nominees. republicans criticized
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aggressive tactics by democrats. >> they absolutely came to play political theater. you have people already trying to run for president. they didn't actually take the time to get down to the nuts and bolts of what he would be doing at the f.b.i. we didn't hear a question how to prevent another new orleans. >> other nominations on are a bipartisan confirmation. confirmed chris wright and doug collins as v.a. secretary and kash patel awaits a committee vote. >> dana: the cabinet comes together. >> bill: shannon bream is the anchor of "fox news sunday." good morning to you. and there is more, okay? kash patel, here we go. talking with amy klobuchar from minnesota. >> false accusations and grotesque mischaracterization. the only thing this body is doing is defeating the credibility of the men and women of the f.b.i.
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that i would somehow put political bias before the constitution are unfair. i have endorsed by over 300,000 law enforcement officers. >> that's how that went. "politico" came up with this one. kash patel's hearing expected to produce fireworks was mostly a dud. what was supposed to be a blockbuster eviscerating trump's f.b.i. picked turned into attempts to create a viral moment that never came to pass. what did you make of it? >> listen, we all know and viewers know a lot of these confirmation hearings are about trying to create a viral moment. the fact is some of these votes will be so tight and some of the issues are really controversial that you need to hear probing questions but you also need to hear the answers. i think chad is right. kash patel had the best week of any of the nominees. there are very few people who came out of the hearing that had real concerns afterwards. different than what i've heard
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from folks on rfk, jr. and tulsi gabbard. those two who will a much tougher time. >> dana: here is senator collins on what she have is thinking. >> i have not made a final decision. i had two hearings at the same time today, tulsi gabbard and rfk, jr. i need to get the clips of both hearings of the parts i missed. she responded well to my questions but i haven't seen her responses to everyone's questions. thank you. >> dana: it's almost as if some of the republicans would rather not talk about it. how do you think this one goes? >> of course, senator collins is one of those key critical votes. we have seen that with a handful of how far can you get to the edge without having to call in jd vance, the vice president or
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are you beyond that point? tulsi gabbard has the toughest mountain to climb. you had people openly saying afterwards like langford saying i have more concerns now she has answered my questions. so i think that she treaded into some areas that were now -- more voices on the gop side saying are a no vote but a lot of people haven't got on the record yet. >> bill: the heavy hand from the white house. the president is riding high now and he could bring some pressure on people like senator cassidy. i could see him publicly expressing his displeasure with what he has heard and still voting for him. that is with a possibility. >> it's very possible. senator cassidy one of the medical doctors on the senate. his voice has a ton of weight and sounded he was trying to get
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rfk, jr. and get on the same page. he came away saying i have real concerns. right, is there enough public pressure, private pressure on him? we have heard talk from a number of people close to the president on down saying if you vote no on these nominees you will be primaried. >> dana: john fetterman will be a guest on "fox news sunday." his opinion was rfk, jr. did not have a great hearing. >> i will be interested to see. i will ask him and senator graham where they plan to vote on the three we heard from this week. senator fetterman has been a key cross over vote much to the consternation of his party. he was at the laken riley signing this week. a key vote on the icc in the senate this week. we'll see if we can get answers where their votes will land. >> bill: fetterman has been asked if he will cross over the party line. he said he would make a terrible republican. so good luck with that this
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weekend, shannon. >> i'm wearing a hoodie on sunday, see you guys then. >> this kind of heavy traffic is not unheard of. but we understand that it has been under staffed, ntsb persons have testified before congress that this is a problem where we have perpetual understaffing of our airports. something has to be done. >> dana: the jam-packed air traffic at reagan national a big focus of the investigation into the deadly midair collision. ntsb is pouring over data from the plane's black box. investigators looking at whether the blackhawk helicopter was flying outside of its flight path. a former ntsb investigator on past warning signs and growing search for answers.
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>> we have hundreds of people in this investigation. the most important thing right now is to obtain and preserve any perishable evidence so that
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when we come off scene we can start to analyze it. >> dana: passenger jet and blackhawk helicopter crash investigation is in full swing. 67 people were killed. other clues are yet to be found. we go to grady trimble live at reagan national airport with an update. hi, grady. >> good morning. a lot of questions about air traffic control staffing teev time of the crash because there is a preliminary faa report that reportedly says staffing levels were not normal when the collision happened on wednesday night. one person was apparently communicating with both planes and helicopters when normally two air traffic controllers handle those responsibilities. so that is something that the ntsb will be looking into as part of its investigation. the agency says it is normal for air traffic control staffing
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levels to fluctuate throughout the day based on factors like weather and the time of day. overnight the ntsb required the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder. they will use that to piece together a timeline in the moments leading up to the midair collision. it is still unclear why the american flight, which was seconds from landing and that blackhawk helicopter performing routine training, why those two aircraft were flying at the same altitude. sean duffy says both aircraft were on standard flight paths but reports the helicopter may have been flying too high. duffy met with some of the families who lost loved ones in the crash yesterday. so did ntsb member todd inman. he plans to do so again today. >> right now they are still arriving and shell shocked. it's understandable.
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we have a duty to provide as much information for them as long as they need it. their biggest concern is their family members and identification of those bodies. the medical examiner from d.c. was there last night with us. >> the ntsb tells us it hasn't yet recovered the black box there the helicopter. it knows where it is but now the priority is retrieving victims from the potomac. the agency brought in a blackhawk pilot who works for the ntsb and the expert they'll turn to with any questions regarding that particular aircraft as part of this investigation. he flew in from alaska yesterday. as far as we understand, he is here in d.c. now helping with the investigation. >> dana: grady, thank you for the update. >> bill: biggest challenges now to try to solve the deadly mystery. dr. allen deal, former ntsb investigator comes to us today. thank you for your time. one thing i'm curious about and
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hasn't been confirmed. if they were wearing night vision goggles in an area so populateed you can imagine how much you would see through these goggles. i usually associate them with going through houses in anbar province in iraq or flying over the desert in afghanistan. you have experience with night vision goggles. could that be a factor? >> oh, yeah, it certainly could be. of course, this is what the ntsb will have to establish with the help of the army. they will have to establish whether or not the mvts were down. like binoculars and we've seen them with them flipped up. this is an annual check ride. the lady who is getting the check ride, the student if you will, she is actually a qualified aviator is getting an annual check ride, part of which
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requires certification, as i understand it, on them. so we need to know whether or not they were actually in use and that will have to come from the analysis of the helmets and autopsy and so on. >> bill: so you were with the ntsb. here is the current chair talking about this yesterday. watch here. >> i think the press also likes to state what probable cause is before we get to the probable cause. so what i'm going to say is you need to give us time. you need to give ntsb -- it's not that we don't have information. we do have information. we have data, we have substantial amounts of information. we need to verify information. we need to take our time to make sure it is accurate. >> bill: two more questions. one very specific about what she just said there. we have information and data. how much do they have right now, doctor? >> obviously i'm not working for them. i don't know. but they want to verify the
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information. we've heard about the altitude issues and it appears that the helicopter had climbed past 200 feet. this is the kind of stuff that the ntsb will be very meticulous about verifying before they announce it publicly. it is very much a work in progress, ntsb is very diligent. >> bill: last question from me. you have seen the nighttime video where you can see the helicopter moving maybe it's a period of 20 seconds, maybe 30, maybe 18. i don't know exactly. but you can see it moving. it is almost on a bee line before the collision occurs. how is it possible to be in the windshield of that cockpit and not see that plane? do you have an explanation for that? >> well, that's certainly what the ntsb will have to establish. they don't have the recorder from the helicopter. i understand it has an advance black box that will have both
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voice and systems reporting so that will be the critical issue. also notice in that video if it's the one i'm thinking about, there is a third aircraft. you only wonder if maybe the helicopter crew thought they were looking at the american airliner when in fact they were looking at another airliner. i'm speculating here. they knew they would be behind the other airliner, thought they were safe and unfortunately maybe the structure of the helicopter blocked their view of the american airliner. that's what the ntsb will have to establish. there is a way of doing that. it is not real complicated. they know the out of cockpit view from the pilot and co-pilot side and analyzing that and why they aren't saying much right now. they haven't even read the data from the helicopter and that will be critical particularly the voice recording aspect of the helicopter recorder. >> bill: great points. dr. deal, thank you for your time. appreciate your expertise.
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thank you. >> dana: president trump expanding his immigration crackdown at record pace. how he is preparing to send tens of thousands of illegal migrants to guatemala bay. outrage to house migrants at a taxpayer funded shelter. >> i am now terrified, i have never been afraid. i'm terrified for me, for my students. i will have to move. or chronic kidney disease, farxiga can help you keep living life, because there are places you'd like to be. (♪) serious side effects include increased ketones in blood or urine and bacterial infection between the anus and genitals, both which may be fatal, severe allergic reactions, dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections, and low blood sugar. stop taking and tell your doctor right away if you have nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, tiredness, rash, swelling, trouble breathing or swallowing.
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[shouting] >> bill: this is a community board meeting getting heated in the bronx here in new york.
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residents pushing back against the city's plan to open a male-only migrant shelter paid for by the taxpayer. eric shawn is live in new york city to give us the lowdown. will it happen? hello to you. good morning. >> good morning, bill. well, they don't want them. residents outraged over a massive men's only migrant shelter that is set for their neighborhood. [applause] [shouting] >> that was the angry scene at a community meeting in new york's city bronx this week after people were told the city is converting a huge former warehouse building into a center to house more than 2,000 migrant men. the city says 90% of migrants who live here are asylum seekers and will have a 30-day limit. locals say they're being used as
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a dumping ground for migrants adding they fear for their safety. >> do we know who the child molesters are or the rapists or the violent people? do we know who they are? >> the number of migrants having in new york has slowed. the city is closing 13 shelters and removed some of the men from those facilities that will be shut to live here. even though the city says migrants are screened for health, mental health and other issues, bronx officials like democratic congressman torres say so many men concentrated in one place is just too dangerous. >> the encampment and randall's island was a hot bed of gang activity. so instead of reducing gang violence in the bronx, the city is relocating gang violence in the bronx, which is the the
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opposite of public safety. >> the city closed another big migrant shelter in brooklyn. shootings and robberies near other migrant shelters and even though the numbers are dwindling new york city is still taking care of 47,000 migrants in the system. >> remarkable. thanks, eric. >> is there a possibility that will increase? >> president trump: it could increase. countries that won't take back their criminals that they sent into us. they sent them to us. they put them into the caravans and they came in. they were sent by those countries. then they will be met very harshly with sanctions, etc. >> [inaudible question] >> president trump: it will be up pretty quickly. not very much.
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>> dana: president trump expanding on his plan to use guantanamo bay to hold criminal illegal immigrants. confirming those efforts are ongoing. joey jones is a fox news contributor and good friend. want to play a little bit from pete hegseth this morning on his old show "fox & friends." >> as we identified criminal illegals in our country, military is leading forward to help with moving them out to their home countries or somewhere else in the interim. if they can't go somewhere right away they can go to guantanamo bay. it is a perfect transit point to temporarily house the worst of the worst until we move them back to their home countries. >> dana: what do you think of this plan? >> sounds like a great idea. it is unfortunate that something as valuable as asset as guantanamo bay is has become a spooky don't talk about it, it is terrible because we didn't let known terrorists sleep peacefully while they were
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there. i don't shed a tear for any of the people that were ever interrogated there and won't feel bad for illegal criminal migrants going there to hang out while we figure out what to do with them. >> dana: i think it is important, too. i think because of the stigma against guantanamo bay over the last 15 years, people have misunderstood how important it is strategically especially to have a presence there. >> yes. absolutely. there are 30,000 beds there. capacity for 30,000 beds. the exact right message. if you think about crossing our border as a criminal. and granted maybe the one criticism if you listen to karoline leavitt, everybody that crossed the border is a criminal. do they mean everyone they feel like they don't have a place to send. i personally don't care. it sends a message if you cross into our country illegally you won't just get put up at the hilton in downtown new york. you may go live on a military
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base on the coast of cuba. >> dana: we just showed that -- the community meeting in the bronx where they are talking about a migrant facility that would host all these people. now again the status of criminal status, wherever that falls, the community is freaking out. they would not freak out if it was in guatemala guatemala bay. blumenthal was asked about this. >> what do you think of president trump moving 30,000 migrants to guantanamo bay? >> i think donald trump is flailing in immigration, in freezing funds, hiring freezes, a raft of illegal executive orders, firing inspectors general. what we're seeing is lawlessness and recklessness. >> dana: when he said the first thing he said there is donald trump is flailing in immigration, joey. give you the final word. >> yeah, just let me say if you
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campaigned for 40 years letting people believe you served in vietnam when you didn't your wisdom doesn't go far with me. it shows the body of congress is left up to 200,000 people here and there, the majority of americans wouldn't have someone like richard blumenthal serving them. he is a senator but wrong on this just like apparently most things in his life. >> dana: joey jones, have a great weekend. thanks for being here. >> bill: mexico and canada are bracing for the possibility of tariffs starting tomorrow on saturday. everyone is trying to predict what that might mean for the price of gas and for energy. lydia hu has details on that. what are you finding out? good morning.
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okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪) >> dana: fox news confirming president trump will meet with the ceo of nvidia today at the white house as some lawmakers work to restrict experts of the company's computer chips. is this a big deal?
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tell us why? >> a very big deal and he is the first visit of the ceo to the white house. they'll talk about artificial intelligence as well a what the chip maker needs to grow his industry in the united states. that's a big deal for president donald trump. they will also talk about the power needs for chip makers. nvidia has data centers, that's the big next thing and if the chinese were able to get nvidia chips. the f.b.i. is investigating if china bought chips from nvidia. president trump wants to see us as the leader as well as bringing advanced chip making to the united states and what the ceo needs is a big part of that. >> dana: edward lawrence, thank you. >> bill: interesting meeting to watch. president trump has threat ened
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the 25% tariffs on canada and mexico set to take effect tomorrow. some of them we're told. he is still weighing whether or not to include oil. canadian leaders warn that could sharply raise the cost of gasoline here in america. lydia hu reporting from the great white north in calgary. good morning there, what are you finding out? good morning. >> good morning, bill. excluding oil and energy products from these 25% tariffs that are possibly starting tomorrow would be significant. even though the united states is a leading producer of oil for the world, we also consume a lot, too. we produce 13 million barrels of oil a day but consume closer to 19 to 20 million barrels. we get a lot of it from canada bringing in 6 1/2 million barrels of oil. 3.9 million come from canada. if those 25% tariffs apply to
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canadian crude oil consumers could bear the burden. it could lead to an immediate jump in u.s. gas prices by as much as 30 to $0.70 per gallon and most of that canadian crude oil comes from alberta, canada. the premier, the governor of this province, has been warning against tariffs on oil. listen here. >> i would say that the americans should want to get more canadian energy because that allows them to exert their influence using energy internationally in a way that the president talks about energy dominance. i don't think americans can energy dominance to make sure we are backfilling. >> a little more how the backfilling works. canada and crude oil trades at a discount and sells for $13 cheaper than a barrel of
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american oil. so we buy it for cheaper from canada and that allows america to sell our more expensive oil on the global argument. the tariffs would eliminate the competitive advantage we'll see what happens. negotiations are ongoing. >> dana: incredible assignment and i'm here looking at you. i know you can tell you are cold from your little nose. what else do you know about the possible tariffs on lumber? >> yeah, these tariffs are wide reaching. they could include lumber, agriculture, also include steel and auto parts. that is an interesting point because the auto parts are so integrated in trade. they trade across the border seven to eight times and there are economists warn the tariffs could raise the price of a car by maybe $3 thousand. something else we're keeping an eye on. >> dana: lydia, thank you.
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>> bill: enjoy calgary. nice to see you. >> dana: she is cold. before we go. some of hollywood's brightest stars sharing the stage for wildfire relief in los angeles last night. billy crystal sending a message of hope at the fire and aid benefit. >> with your help around the country and here in the room we'll laugh again, we'll listen to music again and we will be okay. >> dana: biggest names in music performing. nirvana united to respond to the fire victims. 100% of the profits will go to the relief effort. another busy week and another one in the books for next week. have a good weekend. thank you for joining us. >> dana: harris faulkner will take you through the next hour. a busy day. >> harris: we begin with a fox news alert with president trump in the lead for fast

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