tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News February 2, 2025 4:00am-5:00am PST
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rachel: well, it's the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this, president trump scores another win as venezuela says they'll take back deported illegal immigrants, and they will even pay for the transport. [laughter] charlie: plus, vice president vance is heading to east palestine, ohio, tomorrow two years after a devastating train derailment rocked the village. joey: and will punxsutawney phil see his shadow? janice dean's there, we check in with her all morning long. the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend, it starts right now. ♪ if. ♪ welcome do my if house -- to my house ♪ baby, take control now. ♪ we can't even slow down. ♪ we don't have to go out ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody. a little florida can -- [laughter]
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to open up the morning with you. he loves coming to "fox & friends." joey: all i can think about is todd piro's ripped pants -- [laughter] rachel: todd and adam go off every time he comes on. joey: he framed those pants. rachel: did he really? joey: yeah. it's the most todd piro -- rachel: i started dancing and fully embarrassed my kids. [laughter] don't ever do that again on a stage with florida. [laughter] joey: are you to going to dance, charlie? rachel: yeah, this is the part of the job description. charlie: i don't -- i'm not very smooth on the dance floor myself. rachel: you're going to pull a brian kilmeade, because we all started dancing, and brian kilmeade, he pulled an irish. he just disappeared. charlie: yeah. the irish exit is very important. [laughter] in dancing situationsment i have no problem with that. rachel: yeah, well -- charlie: embrace that. rachel: sometimes you can get away with it and sometimes you can't. like pilates.
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we're going to be talking about platte if tease later in the show because a lot of men are doing pilates, and a lot of women want them out of the studio. we'll talk about why -- joey: they get out of the gym, we'll get out of the studio. rachel: it has to do with sweating. charlie: because men sweat too much? rachel: yeah. we're going to talk about it. it'll be something, it'll be a challenge to your yoga-pilates journey. the women -- charlie: pilates. rachel: these are tough transitions. joey: they are. [laughter] rachel: we're going to move on to venezuela. which is in the news again because this time donald trump has been wanting venezuela to take back with illegal immigrants. but first, he made sure that we had american prisoners, hostages i should say, held by the illegitimate a maduro government, and he said he was -- he negotiated to have them returned with ambassador
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ric grenell negotiating that. here's trump on truth social saying venezuela has agreed to receive back into their country all venezuela illegal aliens who were encamped in the u.s. including gang members of tren de aragua. venezuela has further agreed to supply the transportation back. we are in the process of removing record numbers of illegal aliens from our country and all countries are agreed to accept these illegal aliens. charlie, can you take any more winning -- [laughter] charlie: yeah. i am not tired of winning. i thought it was really interesting that when grenell got a plane and went up there, he was greeted by maduro himself. just from a state craft standpoint, that's a big deal. you send your envoy, and then the president comes out. rachel: yeah. charlie: kind of interest egg. rachel: there was a lot of controversy around that, because we don't actually recognize -- charlie: which is why they had to send ric grenell. a. rachel: correct. joey: maduro comes out and legit
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legitimizes him as a leader. rachel and and i were talking about this in the commercial. you know, you go through the '80s and '90s, all the attempts of regime change in central, south america. you go through the 2000 and what we've done in the middle east, and it just doesn't work out for us. maybe not legitimizing dictators, but trying to overthrow or stage a coup or support those that are, at some point you've got to let people decide their fate for themselves and work with whoever comes out on top. rachel: make no mistake, the venezuelan people are brave, they're fighting hard. they are being led by, like, truly outside of donald trump the bravest person in the western hemisphere is maria machado who is the heart and soul of the opposition movement. she's come on fox noticias multiple part-times, on this show as well -- multiple times. there are definitely people from that side, that movement who are not happy that this happened because they don't want anything
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that might give any kind of legitimacy to maduro. but donald trump's saying i'm going to prioritize america first -- charlie: exactly. rachel: -- and i think he'll deal with maduro later. maybe not, as you said, in an '80s-style regime change, i think we're over that. but definitely people understand the moral crises there and are on the right side of things. and he's taking back -- and they're taking back illegals. joey: chuck norris is getting old, so i don't know if we can send him down there again. got a dozen movies of -- you don't know what i'm talking about -- rachel: i don't. joey: chuck norris, he spent a lot of time down there. rachel: i do know chanley painter. joey: yeah. okay, so all this and and another suspected tren de aragua member has now been arrested in colorado. rachel: that's right. and border czar tom homan's encouraging more state and roque police departments -- local police departments to help with mass deportations. charlie: chanley painter joins us with details.
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>> reporter: i.c.e. agents in denver, colorado, arrested the suspected tren de aragua member from venezuela, he was taken into custody last night in awe roar pro-- aurora. the suspect faces property damage and domestic violence charges according to agency and will remain in i.c.e. custody pending a hearing before an immigration judge. this all comes as border czar tom homan is encouraging the state and local law enforcement across the country to help with trump's mass deportation of criminal illegal migrants while speaking at the national sheriff ares' association saturday. watch. >> we're happy that you can detain somebody with a contract with us as long as you follow your own state's standards. if that's good enough for a u.s. citizen, it's good enough for us. so that's going to change. so your detention standards, your state detention standards is what we're looking at. >> reporter: and since trump took office nearly two weeks ago, the administration's
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crackdown on illegal immigration has led to more than 7400 arrests by i.c.e. agents across the country, and according to the agencies arrest numbers range are from 900-1200 a day as compared to a daily average of 311 in fiscal year 2024. guys? charlie: wow. thank you, khanly. -- chanley. charlie: you spoke earlier to patty morin, mother of rachel morin, about that selena gomez -- rachel: crying instagram -- charlie: yeah. whatever you call that thing. and the importance of putting the focus on the real victims of this illegal immigration. rachel: yeah. >> my daughter suffered greatly at the hands of open borders because of the last administration. and there are many americans across the country that have lost their mothers, their wives, hair daughters, their children
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to this invasion of illegal illegal immigrants. he needs to know that my daughter, her children no longer are a mother -- have a mother, that they have to grow up and live without her love and her support. if she feels sorry for her countrymen, it should be americans. because, yes, even though her genealogy says that she's mission can -- mexican, she's an american citizen. so why isn't she protecting the lives of the american citizen? rachel: wow. charlie: and, of course, the idea that, you know, in the united states with the crime that a lot of these illegals bring affects many in the hispanic community more than other communities anyway. but i think it's really interesting, and this is what, i think, so unique ab president trump is, the first thing that he did when he came on the scene was to call out the media.
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and the media, the idea that they would rather focus on sob stories about illegals who are being deported instead of the true, horrifying, nightmarish stories about people like her daughter and others who have suffered under these policies as a direct result of the intentional policies of people like joe biden. it's just appalling. rachel: and it's wonderful that the white house decided to respond to that. serena -- selena gomez, you know, is a very influential person on instagram, in pop culture, in youth culture. and to respond and to humanize rachel morin and all the, victims and their families, i think, was wildly important. j.d. vance has doubled on this, and he has been engaging in, i think, one of the most interesting discussions that i've been seeing online which is he has been a calling out those
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on the left like selena go e mess and saying -- go e mess and saying there is an order of love. and love, it's a very, you know, he's bringing thomas aquinas back. he's saying, you know, you first start with your immediate family, and then it moves out to your neighborhood. and then it moves out to your town. and then it moves out to, you know, your state. and then the it moves out to your country. and then after that you can care about people, you know, start to care about, prioritize those in other countries. and i think that's what patty morin was getting at. you may be of mexican descent, selena gomez, but you are an american, and you don't seem to care about my daughter who is a fellow citizen. bravo to her and bravo to j.d. vance for articulating it. they haven't seen this debate online, you really should go and look at it. we should break it down because i think it's amazing. joey: yeah. he's getting flak because he's saying it's actually, many his p
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a christian -- rachel: it is. joey: responsibility through approximate similar proximity is the last paper i wrote in college when they told me i could leave that prison was about this, proximity and the responsibility of the relationship between the two. for me it was, hey, i just fought two wars in the middle east, a place that i feel i have no connection to, and now our home is in a place where i don't recognize if it. so how can we reorient our priorities. i don't think j.d. vance is wrong at all, and i love that her mom brought in such an eloquent and not in a hateful way. listen, you're an american, why don't you care about americans? rachel: yeah. joey: we're going to turn to the latest tragic story in our cunninger we're going to turn now to philadelphia where the ntsb is continuing their investigation this morning into the medical jet crash that killed seven, hurting at least 19 others. charlie: nate foy is live there with the latest. nate. >> reporter: hey, guys. the sun is up, the investigation
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continues, and many of the people injured in that jet crash are still recovering in city hospitals. you mentioned the newest numbers. unfortunately, 7 people died as a result of that accident. and 19 others injured. those numbers evolving, we are expecting another update from city officials coming up at 11:00, so that's manager to keep an eye out for. -- something to keep an eye out for. the ntsb is still trying to figure out what went wrong, and there's a crucial piece of technology that is still missing to investigators. here's the ntsb chair, jennifer 40 manty. >> the debris is scattered, it is very dangerous. over the next several days, possibly extending into weeks, we will be collecting that debris, loading it onto a truck and moving it to a secure location so that we can begin to do our evaluation. i do want to mention we are still looking for the cockpit if voice recorder.
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>> reporter: yeah. and that voice recorder will show pilot communications as the plane went down less than a minute after it took off, can and that will go a long way to determine what happened. the explosion from the crash resulted in five home fires and destroyed several cars. at least one person in their car a was killed in addition to the six people onboard the medical jet. that included a young girl who received life-saving medical call care at shriner's children's hospital. a hospital spokesperson tells "the new york post," quote: she'd been with us four months and had formed some deep bonds with a lot of people here. we also learned that hospital staff held a sendoff party for her just hours before she got onboard that medical jet to go home to tijuana which, of course, she did not make it along with her mother and the four crew members who also perished in that crash. we'll send it back to you. rachel: yeah, heartbreaking. hey, nate, thank you for all these excellent reports over the last couple of days. >> reporter: you got it. rachel: israeli prime minister
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benjamin netanyahu is heading to meet with president trump. >> the fact that this would be president trump's first meeting with a foreign leader since his inauguration is telling. the decisions we made in the war have already changed the face of the middle east. our decisions and the courage of our soldiers have redrawn the map. but i believe that that working closely with president trump, we can redraw it even further and for the better. rachel: tomorrow netanyahu will meet with trump's special envoy for the middle east to discuss a second phase in israel's ceasefire with hamas. the church of an episcopal bishop who lectured donald trump, or president trump during the national prayer service, reportedly used millions from various taxpayer-funded government programs to resettle illegal immigrants through programs trump has now temporarily paused. good. the church, under reverend
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marian budde reportedly earned $53 million from government programs to resettle more than 3,000 people in 2024. it sponsored over 6,000 individuals from 48 countries. by the way, catholic relief services on that as well. catholic charities, i should say. neither catholic are, nor charity -- charlie: it's an ecumenical grab. rachel: yeah. and a study the revealing that owning cogs -- dogs can cut your risk of dementia by 40%, but owning a cat doesn't make a difference. [laughter] where is pete hegseth, the cat guy? which makes us think, charlie, you may have been right about the last week. [laughter] shar shar she doesn't like me. she hates me. rick: she's saying, please, like me. rachel: you really wan him to hold that. charlie: this is the like i'm a cat person -- dog person because cats are duplicitous.
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rachel: why don't you like cats? if. charlie: because they're duplicitous. joey: that is hilarious. i watched that, and i thought, charlie did not understand the assignmentment. [laughter] rachel: no. i don't think our guest, the big cat person, was happy with your response. she thought it was a lot of cat bashing. all right, the study says dog ownership helps exercise the brain, and it increases human-to-human interaction a leading to reduced risk. i believe that. i believe that. jees jee there's a common sense explanation. cats think for themselves. dogs are -- most of their personalities are to make you happy. cats are cohabitating with you, dogs are dependent upon you. you can turn a cat out, and there would never be a mouse around your property, it'd be the happiest cat in the world. it doesn't have the deal with you, it's got food all over the place. a barn cat, that's the best animal you can have, but you're not going to be friends with you.
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charlie: snakes are good. jee e yao jee you're crazy. the only good snake is a dead snake. rachel: we are moments away from finding out whether or not -- you've got to help me with this, joey. joey: pungs if tawny phil -- rachel: will see his shadow. charlie: will it be six more weeks of winter or an early spring? if. joey: janice dean joins us live from gobbler's nob, and she's punxsutawneyed out. janice: oh, no, it's just starting. the groundhog is at his little space where he's going to come out and tell us whether or not it's going to be six more weeks of winter or an early spring. i've got 10 -- i've got 50,000 of my friends here including this young lady. what's your name? >> emma. janice: where are you from? >> [inaudible] janice: are your toes cold? >> very cold. janice: are you still having fun in. >> yes! janice. are you excited for the
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[inaudible conversations] >> hear ye, hear ye, hear ye. now on this february 2nd, punxsutawney phil, the seer of seers, prognosticator of all prognosticators was awaken from his wintry nap at dawn. phil looked to the sky and then speaking the proper scroll which reads -- what a way to start a sunday fun day. [laughter] you always said you'd make it here one day. to this place barely big enough to contain ya to this sweet punxsutawney pennsylvania -- [cheers and applause] we're all here with the elements
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combined where mother nature meets father time. to hear the truth, are those gray skies? only i know you can't trust a.i. [laughter] it's groundhog day and maybe life is on a loop. but i miss my burrow, i miss my coop. so i'm headed back down, there's a shadow up here get ready for sick more week of winter this year -- sick more weeks of winter this year! [background sounds] awed i awed tiff -- janice: okay, here we go. six more weeks of winter, and
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i'm not surprised, to be honest with you, because this groundhog has predicted an early spring two years in a row. but what a day. i mean, i think we've had 50,000 people here at gobbler's knob. and, charlie, they're already starting to exit. it's crazy. within minutes, gobbler's knob is going to be completely empty. but i will tell you it's one of best events that i have ever covered. doesn't matter who you voted for, how much money you make, you're all here to watch a groundhog, and that's really special. that's all about america, any friends -- my friends. winter! winter! charlie: you put your head down, you look exactly like punxsutawney phil. there it is right there. janice: thank you, my friend. happy groundhog day. charlie: mother nature meets father time. we've got more news from joey. joey: i'll take six more weeks of winter.
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i'm good with it. vice president j.d. vance and other trump administration officials are set to visit east palestine, ohio, tomorrow marking the second anniversary of the tragic train derailment. it comes as the city and norfolk southern have now reached a settlement. >> as party to the agreement, norfolk southern will provide the village with $222 million that belonged to our community -- 222 million and will be used to strengthen our future. the past two years are tested us, but they have not defined us. what defines us is our strength, our determination and our commitment to moving forward together. joey: ohio senator john husted will be meeting with officials on the ground, and he joins us now. senator, i know that you're a newly-mintedded senator, but this issue isn't new to you because you were lieutenant governor for the past several years. give us an update what's happening in east palestine. >> well, the people of east palestine are resilient. the cleanup has taken two years
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to fully get accomplished, but they're trying to rebuild and restart their community helpfully better than it was before. that that's their aspiration. and on monday, j.d. vance and i and senator moreno p governor dewine and new epa director lee zeldin will be there to talk about our commitment to to make sure that people know that the east palestines of the world -- not just east palestine, but any community in need -- is going to be supported by this administration. joey: what is the state of the town, the village two years later in i know that the original controversy wasn't just that it derailed, but there was a decision to release a bunch of dechemicals for safety reasons, and the railroad company, they pushed that. they pushed that decision. finish now the ntsb says that might not have been necessary. so that's the real rub there, is the release of the chemicals after the derailment. what is the state of the town in do do they have water? are people who had houses there, are they able to come back? where are they?
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>> well, for the most part, life is back to normal except for some of the residents whose homes were really close to that site. they've relocated. but you hit the point that was the problem, is during the biden administration there was -- i remember this distinctly. governor dewine was on the scene, he couldn't get the information from the epa and the federal officials the determine whether or not they needed to do a contained burn or whether this site could potentially explode and cause a great deal more damage. it's easy to have the hindsight on this, but at the time if you recall the biden administration wasn't engaged. it took joe biden over a year before he visited. joey: yeah. >> it took secretary pete buttigieg 20 days before they showed up. we just couldn't get information at the time x that's why i'm glad that lee zeldin will be there is and j.d. vance because
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we can talk about how to appropriately respond to crises in in this country because the previous administration did a really poor job at it. joey: we absolutely have to learn from things like this. in the meantime, people in that town are still living with it. the city has settled its haut, almost $14 million has already been spent, but there's also a $600 million class action lawsuit from the private citizens with the railroad company. it's stuck in appeal. do you have support for them on that? where do you think that's going to go? >> well, certainly they're going to be compensated for the damages. i think the fight is over what an appropriate level of compensation is, and that will get worked out in the courts. but norfolk southern was, you know, slow to respond at first. i think they tried to may makeup. they've worked that out with the mayor and the community and hopefully they'll work it out with the citizens. joey: yeah, let's hope so. i hope folks are at least repatriated their losses and
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it's healthy to live there. that's a big concern. >> yeah. joey: senator, thanks so much for joining us, and bring us an update after the visit. >> will do. joey: yes, sir. abby hornacek joins rachel for pop culture round-up. there she is. ♪ ♪ members save up to 40% on hundreds of items in store and online, because you're a big deal. so join for free today and save now before rewards week ends. ♪ empower ♪ hey, i got her a little something. a little something, dad? oh, umm. hi. walt rolled his 401k accounts into an empower ira and it's grown nicely. so i say, let a gramps be a gramps.
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♪ rachel: well, it's time for another pop culture round-up, and joining me today is our friend from fox nation, abby hornacek. thanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me, rachel. rachel: let's get right to it. we're going to start off with melania trump's stunning white house portrait and the backlash it's getting from, of all places, vogue. what's vogue saying? >> you know, it's so unfortunate
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because you would think a magazine like vogue is all about female empowerment through fashion, and instead they're acting like the mean girl. that's a powerful picture, i'm sorry. is it not? it's the more unfortunate because, of course, jill biden was on the cover as first lady three times. she has yet to be on the cover as a first lady, and if you look at her catalog of philanthropic endeavors, it blows everyone out of the water even before she was first lady. rachel: here's what a vogue actually said. they said, quote: the choice to wear a tuxedo as opposed to a blazer or a blouse made her look like a freelance magician than a public servant. melanne ya still struggles with sawtorial messaging. >> what's wrong with manager a magician? we're going to need a lot of magic to fix our country after biden. rachel: michelle obama, poised to become the most transformative first lady this if history, that's how melanne a ya -- >> let's give melania a chance,
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shall we? rachel: and, by the way, she's worn tuxedos before. do we have that picture, guys? oh, we couldn't get to to it. let's move to this, because pete buttigieg and aoc are reading the tea leaves here. they've both removed their pronouns from their bios. why? >> you know, i don't know. pete buttigiegs has had his pronouns on his bio since 2019. i'm not invested in that, i read that. but you have the look at the timing of that. he's eyeing that senate seat in the swing state of michigan, so seeing that michigan went to trump this last election and trump is really hammering down on the dei, i think this is a tactical move. removing it, maybe focus on the economy because that's what michigan voters want? rachel: yeah, well, he threw the his husband off of profile. >> i know. different twitter -- rachel: as charlie said, replaced him with rocks.
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>> is sean upset he had to remove his pronouns? rachel: no pronouns ever in that guy's bio. new york magazine cropped black party goers out of an image, this was a story they did called, you know, calling the -- these beautiful maga partiers during inauguration the cruel kids' table. and then they basically tried to present if it as some sort of, like, white thing. but it turns out the party was sponsored by c.j. pearson, a friend of this show, who's black. and they crossed him out. there he is. >> you know, i did try to give them the benefit of the doubt at first, rachel. i was like, okay, c.j.'s head is turned, maybe it does show more faces. even so, don't you think in your article you would interview the organizer of the event? especially seeing how much donald trump flipped the black vote this election. you have such an opportunity to interview a young conservative black man and ask why that is. rachel: well, here is what c.j.
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said about it, abby. >> they wanted to perpetuate the narrative that the maga movement is nothing more than some white supremacist, racist cult, is they deliberately raced the black people from these images. rachel: here's why i think they did it, they're jealous. peanut butter and jealous. these people are beautiful, and these losers at a new york magazine wished they were there -- >> that was the most mom phrase of all time, i love that. [laughter] rachel: she's momming me now. >> it's a great thing. rachel: all right. let's move to this because charlie wants to pick up pilates, but a lot of tiktokers or women are going on to tiktok complains about men in the yoga room. listen. >> i just took a hot yoga class, and there were many guys in the class. particular man before class started, heavy breathing, slurping his water. it is a peaceful, zen yoga class. my must you -- why must you take
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up more spacesome. >> if a man is in my pilates class, my day is ruined, canceled. >> the take notes, charlie. [laughter] rachel: we talked about this earlier. the women are saying the men leave puddles of sweat, and they're just mad about it, and they slip on the sweat. >> i was gonna a say i'm all for men getting in shape, nothing against men. but at the same time, you do reverse triangle and your foot lands off your mat and you slip because there's a puddle of man sweat, it is unfortunate. sorry, guys, i apologize -- rachel: charlie -- >> -- i say keep the men out. [laughter] rachel: keeping men out of women's spaces. that's a theme of this show. [laughter] thank you. out of pilates studios. more "fox & friends" coming up. charlie's in trouble. [laughter]
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and medicines like botulinum toxins, which may increase the risk of serious side effects. chronic migraine may still keep you from being there. ask your doctor about botox® today. learn how abbvie can help you save. ♪ if. charlie: democrats choosing pro-labor progressive ken martin as their new dnc chair, and he certainly seems to fit in with the rest of the party when it comes the why harris lost the election. >> how many of you believe that racism and misogyny played a role in vice president harris' compete? [laughter] -- defeat? [applause] if. >> okay. so that's good, you all pass.
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[laughter] charlie: democratic strategist and pollster doug schoen joins us now. so, doug, do you have any sense from that meeting and this election of a new dnc chair that the your party is figuring it out? >> no, charlie, i don't. i listened to what ken martin said, i listened to what the candidates said. they have no understanding of why they lost, why they took a drubbing, why they lost working class, minority voters acrosses the board and why all three branches of government are now in republican hands. i think this is a repudiation of my party and the failure to understand that, to me, is a clear sign that the party doesn't get it. charlie: so, you know, obviously you know these polls better than anybody, but i have to say i was absolutely shocked the look at these numbers where you have democrats now suffer oring an unfavorability of 57. that's 26 points underwater
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compared to republicans who are usually the ones who suffer double-digit underwater with voters. finish but they're at about parity with maybe 2 points underwater. have you ever seen -- i can't remember a time with i've seen democrats in such a tough spot. >> i haven't seen the democrats in this tough a spot, charlie, along with a failure to understand how bad and dire the situation is. when i went to work for bill clinton in 1994, this had been a recognition -- there had been a recognition that that during the early '90s the clinton presidency got off track, went too far to the left. there was a democratic leadership council in the '80s to reposition the party. but we have no such movement now to get the party back to the center, the recognize -- to recognize the importance of illegal immigration to voters, the importance of getting
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inflation under control, prices under controlment you don't hear that, and you sure don't hear any strategy to get working class and minority voters who defectedded to trump back from the republicans. charlie: yeah. >> it's really a tone deaf party, charlie. charlie: yeah. it's rest interesting, you know, when you look back at that period, bill clinton for whatever flaws he may have, he was a brilliant political thinker, a brilliant political tactician, and he would be pulling the alarm right now. and i look at the party today, and i don't see any democrat in the party who is inspiring and has sort of political guts and smarts to do, to turn things around right now. >> you know, i don't either. clinton in interviews has acknowledged that trump was on to something with the way he talks to voters, the issues he talked about a, and there is no one in the democratic party -- maybe john fetterman. i don't see him as a
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presidential candidate, but i see him as the only credible candidate who understands our -- or elected official who understands the importance of reaching out to president trump, agreeing with him where you can, disagreeing where you should and understanding that his issue base represents broad mass of the american people. if. charlie: yeah. and, obviously, john fetterman is not sort of the charismatic character finish. >> no, he isn't. charlie: -- a bill clinton was. but like you point out, like bill clinton, he understood voters or and he drilled into them. thank you so much for joining us, doug. >> thank you so much, carly. charlie: okay. joey. joey: fetterman for president, i don't know, that doesn't sound terrible. thanks, charlie. turning now to your headlines, the president of the national air traffic controllers' association is sounding the alarm over concerns of staffing shortages in the wake of the devastating mid-air collision washington, d.c.. he says, quote, i'm here to tell you there are not enough traffic
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controllers, and we absolutely have to the continue addressing it. this comes after news that the reagan national airport controller tower was understaffed at the time of last week's devastating crash. and the department of defense is instituting a new program where where every year a media outlet from print, television and radio will rotate off the pentagon to give other organizes an opportunity. this year "the new york times," npr, nbc news and political -- politico, they're on their way out k. and they're going to be replaced by "the new york post," one america, breitbart and the huffington post. those are your headlines. all right. punxsutawney phil as has made his prediction, six more weeks -- yeah -- of chilling winter. janice dean and governor shapiro are live from from gobbler's knob if next. ♪ i could use some back then right now ♪
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predicting six more weeks of winter. joey: punxsutawney phil. janice dean is live along with governor josh shapiro. janice: governor, what do you think? sick more weeks of winter. >> that's what phil said, it must be true. welcome to punxsutawney. janice: i have done this many years, i didn't think i could find someone more excited than me. >> this is unbelievable. 50,000 people from across pennsylvania, the country, the world, coming to punxsutawney to find out what our official state meteorologist has to say -- janice: i can't believe he's right next to us. he looks like he wants to get out of there. >> he's like royalty, by the way. janice: identify got to talk about your tweet about peta tata. why? what did you think? he is treated like a king. >> he is treated like a king. by the way, i'm the governor of pennsylvania. phil's got better health care than i do. the inner circle treats him great. and i've got to say, i think it's disrespectful, what they said about this amazing
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tradition. you've got 50,000 people from all different walks of life coming together to be joyful, to celebrate, to appreciate a riggs. by the way, it started in the 1880s right here in pennsylvania. so if you're coming for phil, you're going of to go through me. janice: i loved it, social media loved it, and who wants vegan cake? >> yeah, i don't know. i don't know about that. janice: i have to say condolences for the losses that we had many philadelphia. what can you say, it's a bittersweet moment. >> yeah. today we're celebrating with such joy, but just miles away in northeast if philly, there's been a lot of pain and anguish. we continue to try and lift everyone up in the community in prayer. we saw a tragic aviation accident, but we also saw just neighbors doing wonderful things to look out for one another. that's the northeast philly way. that's the pennsylvania way. i've spent a lot of time over the last 48 hours in northeast
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philly, i'm heading back there, and is we're going to continue to lift up the community. janice: i'm glad you came today though because one thing is for sure, it doesn't matter what you voted for, how much money you make, to come here and celebrate, the it's really -- you can't describe it. >> you can't, and that's the joy of this place. you've got people from if all different walks of life. as you said, people with different political persuasion, whatever. everybody is here together to be together and to enjoy this great tradition. janice: one more question. you know i'm in the forecasting business, so i forecast weather. in the political world, what might you be doing in four years? [laughter] >> you know what i'm going to be doing in four years? i'll be right here in punxsutawney, pennsylvania. janice: that's a really good answer. thanks for coming on "fox & friends." >> good to be with you. come to punxsutawney next year. rachel: thank you, janice. charlie: very sly. rachel: yeah, very sly. that's an interesting -- it's an
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interesting line he has to talk -- to walk, charlie. charlie: yeah. i mean, it's like, how do you not -- that's a gimme right there, the groundhog day event, for any politician. joey: well, he'll be there in four years, we'll be right here in four or five minutes. just stick with us, for "fox & friends." stamps.com gives you a lot of flexibility. e and schedule free carrier pickups on your time. (♪) start your risk-free trial today
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