tv Americas Newsroom FOX News February 18, 2025 6:00am-7:01am PST
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giving my kids a smartphone. delay those as long as possible. late adolescents. household narratives. once those kids get smartphones it is constant friction, constant arguments, get off the phone. the temperament in the household has gone from calm to hostile. >> ainsley: is it okay to give our children our smartphone just for a little bit during the day if they want to watch something? >> you know, that's -- it's not about the technology and phone. it's about the eight or nine hours a day kids are spending on it. if you have a glass of wine with dinner. that's fine. eight glasses of wine with dinner every day we have a problem. it is the amount of time they are using it and it's very hard to manage it. >> ainsley: thank you for coming on. great advice. everyone have a great day. we'll see you tomorrow. >> drop it. come on.
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>> bill: that is an extraordinary point of view. a passenger crawling out of that delta plane with his iphone camera rolling. it landed upside down. everyone on board is okay. waiting to find out what happened and we have a couple videos to share with you this morning. angles we have not seen until now. good morning everybody. i'm bill hemmer live in new york. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." breaking this hour we're getting new video showing the moment that this all happened captured from the cockpit of a different plane parked nearby. watch here. >> oh no, no, no, no, no.
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>> bill: it's extraordinary. you never see that. >> dana: thank goodness. >> bill: it happened yesterday afternoon. everybody knows that. the flight out of minneapolis into toronto. a snowy and windy day there when suddenly the plane with what appears to be a hard landing of sorts ended up belly up. listen. >> didn't say anything? new york city there was no warning. we were coming in for a landing and when the plane came in, it was -- we hit the runway really hard and like extremely hard and we popped up and it felt like we were leaning to the left and then what happened was it was incredibly fast. there was a giant fireball down the side. i could feel the heat through the glass and then we were going sideways. i'm not sure how many times we tumbled but we ended upside down. i was hanging in my seat belt upside down. >> dana: at the time of landing wind gusts were topping out at
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40 miles-per-hour. these planes, however, are built to with stand strong winds. >> a bombardier, common airplane carrying 76 pass eners. four crew members. 18 people of the 80 on board were injured. >> dana: nate foye is standing by in toronto. >> good morning. the sun is up and investigation continues led by canadian federal authorities, faa in a support role. you mentioned the injuries, 80 people on board. 18 injured. officials say the injuries range from minor to serious. none believed to be life threatening. brand-new video. take a look as dash cam video shows the plane come down and land really hard on its side. the wing detached, plane instantly is engulfed with fire and slides down the runway. it leads to the crucial moment when the people on board need to get off.
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look at this. >> drop everything, drop it. come on. >> you see the cabin crew doing a phenomenal job leading that effort and then also people helping each other out, which was crucial because keep in mind, this plane was belly up. people had to not only evacuate but had to do so while dangling upside down. had to unbuckle themselves and help each other. one passenger talked about that effort. >> the most powerful part of today was there was just people, no countries, no nothing, just people together helping each other. >> i mentioned the transportation safety board of canada is leading this investigation. faa is also at the crash site assisting as there are questions, as bill mentioned, about the role that weather played.
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the runway was covered in snow. wind gusts were at 38 miles-per-hour and audio shows the air traffic controller warning the pilots about the wind but the fire chief in charge of toronto airports last night said something that confused people about that theory. listen to this. >> it's really important that we do not speculate. while we can say is the runway was dry and there was no crosswind conditions. >> that is going to be a focus of investigators as toronto pearson airport is operational today. two runways are closed as this investigation proceeds. this now makes four plane crashes in north america over the past month. this particular kind of plane is in the same family of aircraft as the plane that was involved in the midair collision in washington, d.c. we'll send it back to you guys. >> dana: thanks. keep us posted if you get more.
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>> bill: wait for briefings when they arrive. we want to share that video we showed a moment ago. so unusual to see something like this. roll it and we'll watch together again. >> oh, oh, oh no no no no. >> bill: it is hard to know what happened here. one of the passengers traveling on board that plane said the landing was very forceful. sometimes when you are flying and you feel that runway more suddenly than you would normally. maybe that had something to do with it. they say there were no cross winds but said the winds were gusting up to 40 miles-per-hour. who is to know? this is something that you never get a chance to see, dana. >> dana: what a miracle that everybody survived and thank goodness for that. >> bill: yes indeed. crj class is one of the reasons why air travel in america has
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been so accessible in the last 20 years, i would argue. they can go into a lot of smaller airports or mid size airports and really center part of the country. i'm on a crj every time i fly back to ohio. sometimes they can be cramped but the 900 version has a little more room inside and a little more room in the baggage compartment above you, too, which is always great. the thing about those people landing with their seat belts strapping them to the seat is extraordinary. >> dana: thank goodness. >> bill: more coming out on that. meanwhile in washington, a ton of news to get to. let's roll down d.c. lean now. doge claiming that estimated savings for taxpayers now totals $55 billion and counting. meanwhile federal judge appears unlikely to block elon musk and doge from accessing data or making personnel decisions, several federal agencies. that ruling could come in any
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moment as we watch that. first jackui heinrich live in west palm beach with the news at this hour. jackui, good morning. >> good morning, bill. attorneys general from 14 states are trying to stop elon musk and doge from accessing the systems at seven federal agencies putting employees from that agency on leave. the judge isn't convinced of imminent harm. the white house is arguing not the administrator of doge or doge employee. a new filing they say he is a special government employee and senior advisor to the president similar to anita dunn for president joe biden. the president has credited musk with his work on doge many times. musk revealing on x yesterday the social security database shows 20 million americans listed as 100 years or older 3.9 million age 130 to 139, 3 1/2 million age 140 to 149,
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and 1.3 million who are 150 to 159. the white house press secretary karoline leavitt says doge isn't digging into the social security books but payments going to dead people and to protect the integrity of this system. >> rest assured to all the people watching your show tonight if you paid into the system honestly, you will continue to receive your social security checks. do not buy into the lies from the legacy fake news media who are trying to fear you and scare you into believing otherwise. this is what we've seen them do about president trump for years with every promise that he has made and he is going in there to protect your hard earned money. that's the ultimate goal. >> meantime doge is working to access i.r.s. data allowing employees with the appropriate approvals and clearances to comb through tightly controlled files that include bank records and taxpayer information.
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critics are warning any errors there could cause huge disruptions to the tax filing system. doge estimates it has saved the federal government $55 billion by identifying waste, fraud and abuse. they are now also looking at $4.7 trillion in payments to a treasury line item that was often made blank leaving it untraceable. their work there continues despite the continued pushback. >> bill: big hole in that answer as of now. see how it gets filled in. jackui, thank you live in florida. >> dana: let's bring in republican senator from oklahoma. hoer is ron wyden, democrats senator from oregon. is the i.r.s. considering giving doge team members access to i.r.s. data reprieveal system? if so, why? what is the answer to that? >> they're not. every employee that has access to the i.r.s. system are employees that were properly vetted, had a proper clearance
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and moving forward. that's not elon musk right now. the white house has hired an employee specifically working with doge. but they have all the clearances and have access they need to gain the files and then they are simply bringing the data to doge as a whole and saying this is why weather we're at. when we estimate between 20,300 billion of missed payments from the i.r.s., that's a huge gaping hole. that is what they admit to having missed payments on. i've always said this. if you can show that you are doing 200 to 300 missed payments why can't you identify where it is coming from? what elon and his team at doge is saying let's identify them and stop it. that simple. >> bill: 4.7 trillion that jackui was reporting there in the line that was left blank, do you have confidence we'll find out it was going to the appropriate place or not? that's a huge amount.
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>> one thing about a dollar, bill, it's always traceable. this wasn't a dollar in cash, it was a dollar that was transferred from one account to another account to account another. eventually you can find the path that it goes down. like tracking. you can track it down eventually and get to it. obviously they did this on purpose. they did it on purpose. at the end of the trail with 4.7 trillion. you can't fathom that. there will be a lot of fraud, waste and abuse there. it is what president trump brought to the american people. he said he would drain the swamp and get government working for the people again and expose the fraud and abuse. that's exactly what he is doing. by the way, he brought on the most successful ceo in our lifetime to be the consultant which keep in mind, bill, companies, corporations all over the world always hire consultants because when they come in they look at it from an
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unbiased perspective and simply look at the numbers. when you are a business owner you get emotionally involved in things. when you are a politician it could be your pet project you don't want to get rid of but doesn't mean it's right for the american taxpayer. >> dana: let's switch topics. we led the show with the plane flipping upside down in toronto on that landing. swell sell said. how many airliners crashed before trump got into office. when does trump take responsibility for the next plane crash? pete buttigieg said the flying public needs answers. how many faa personnel were just fired? what positions and why? what do you make of that? >> first of all, pete buttigieg was a mayor and the only qualification has no right to say anything. 90% of the workforce working from home. sean duffy is trying to bring
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accountability back to the agency. i do want to make a point the f.a.a. has 45,000 employees. 400 was laid off. every one of these were in their probation period. not one critical person was let go. and buttigieg knows that but doesn't care to do it. as far as swalwell says, a guy who dated fang fang that was a chinese spy has no room to say anything about anybody. he is just reckless and trying to get attention because he knows his time has passed. >> bill: thanks for coming back. markwayne mullin, republican from oklahoma. sean hannity has the interview tonight with president trump and elon musk together. the entire hour. here is a preview of them talking about the democrats' reaction to the current administration. watch here. >> now you will rescue astronauts and now again you do all of this. i would think liberals would
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love the fact that you have the biggest electric vehicle company in the world. >> i used to be adored by the left. not anymore. not these days. there is this whole -- interesting cult trump derangement syndrome. you don't realize how real this is until you can't reason with people. >> bill: that's a good one. make sure you check it out tonight at 9:00 eastern time exclusively on the fox news channel with sean, elon and donald trump. right here on the fox news channel. >> dana: there is a brand new episode on the perino on politics podcast. my guest and i talked about doge and fema and listen to it wherever you stream your podcasts. >> she has a role, i have my role. throughout this entire ordeal which no american should have to go through. i didn't do anything wrong. i stood focused on what i was
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elected to do. >> bill: governor kathy hochul is weighing the possibility of removing him from office. that's the reports we're getting now. who the governor is meeting with in new york city today. that's intriguing. >> dana: freezing weather the ham purring response in the southeast. >> bill: what the new dnc chair is saying about the party's current struggles. >> so many parts of our coalition left us this last election cycle. that's an indictment on the democratic party. we have to do a better job.
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marco rubio, mike waltz, special envoy steven witkoff. >> we'll appoint a high-level team from our end to work through the end of the kwon flicked in ukraine in a way that's enduring and acceptable to all the parties engaged. >> month after month after month in the killing fields of eastern and southern ukraine is unacceptable. it is not in the interest of either country. it is not in the interest of the world and certainly not in the interest of the united states and europe. so all of those things will drive the negotiations going forward. >> bill: a lot of things to point out here. just to repeat there. nato membership said to be unacceptable by michael waltz and saying russian controlled parts of the country are lost. in addition the president of egypt announced i guess two hours ago that he was flying to saudi arabia. maybe these talks only not just continue but maybe expand. stay tuned for more on that as we get it. >> dana: today governor hochul
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meets with new york city leaders as she weighs the fate of embattled mayor eric adams. she announced the meeting hours after four of adams top deputies resigned. the cover of the "new york post" today fall from grayci. of course they are always great. alexis mcadams is in the new york with more. >> big news day here in the big apple. new york governor kathy hochul hasn't said she will remove mayor eric adams but looking at next steps during these meetings today. that's why we're outside her office hoping to get a question in. we'll see what happens. this is the latest statement coming in from the governor herself talking about what would happen next. she says i recognize the immense responsibility i hold as governor and the constitutional powers granted to this office. 235 years of new york state history, these powers have never been utilized to remove a duly elected mayor overturning the will of the voters is a serious step that should not be taken
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lightly. calls to remove mayor adams are getting louder. check this out. [shouting] >> that's some of what we saw at city hall yesterday. the crowd calling for adams to be removed saying he has been compromised. this comes as allegations swirl here in new york city. the mayor accused of making a deal with the justice department to drop his criminal case only if he would help the trump administration enforce their immigration policies. adams was just on "fox & friends" and said he never made any type of deal pushing back talking about the months what he said for his prosecution based on politics. >> my family went through the level of pain and uncertainty that no family should ever go through. i have never lost my faith. never surrendered. and that's my message to you.
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>> since the d.o.j. asked a judge to drop the charges against adams, there has been fallout. this week four deputy mayors on your screen resigned. following top d.o.j. officials that stepped down last week. so back out here live we'll continue to keep a close eye on this. if adams is forced to leave or resign from office public advocate williams would take his place as acting mayor until a special election or general election held. we also know there is a status update and hearing tomorrow with the mayor on his criminal case. >> dana: you have a big job today keeping track of all that. >> a plane crash, it's upside down. >> 80 people evacuating that plane. remarkable. amazing to watch this miracle of survival. as you watch this video here, which is brand-new to us at the fox news channel. the best view of all this. right side of that plane
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critical to study. matthew buckley, f-18 pilot and your call sign is whiz. let's tap into your big brain. run the video again. i think the focus is on the right side of the plane. you can tell us yes or no or why. i want to quote one of the people on board said the landing was very forceful. what do you see, whiz? >> well, bill, in afsh yeggs we have a saying any landing you can walk away from is a good one. this was not a good landing. the last flight data i've seen has an 1100 foot per minute rate of decent. landing that hornet about a aircraft carrier was an 800 per minute. this is an incredibly steep rate of descent for this type of aircraft and gusty conditions to 25 to 40 knots and a recipe for
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disaster. >> your rate of descent would be much less than what you observed from the date why from this plane that you know of. >> absolutely, bill. if you've seen a carrier landing we maintain a can standee angle of attack. airliners pull back on the nose, reduce the power and do a flair. when you look at this video there wasn't that much of a flair going on. you can see the right wing, the right main landing gear hit really hard or sheer off and then that's when you start to get the tumbling. >> bill: the crj series is why air travel continues to be more popular. 700, 800, 900 keep getting better, too. i don't know if you agree or not. experts on the air last night were saying this plane has gotten better and better with each iteration. one gentleman suggested that the seats on this plane can with stand 16gs.
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does that sound like something that you can relate to? >> bill and dana, as you know air travel is incredibly safe. it is more dangerous driving to and from the airport. crj is a very safe aircraft. it depends on who is sitting in the front. the air crew. endeavor air. delta connection. these aren't delta pilots. a lot of regional crews are building their hours to go fly for the main line, delta, fedex, american, united. they are a little less experienced. when you get into some varsity or sporting conditions like gusty winds and a pretty steep landing like that, recipe for disaster. when in doubt, go around, right? you have the gas. if this landing is looking bad go to full power and try it again. >> bill: pop one more question. the last incidents we have seen.
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midair collision in washington, d.c. plane crash in the philadelphia suburbs, you have the crash in alaska, the plane in vegas with the motley crue jet and the delta jet flipping in toronto. we had gone so long without any talk of any incident. you talk to a lot of people. what's going on? >> well, bill, you forgot to -- we had an f-18 hornet in coronado last week. both pilots ejected safely. three or four weeks ago we had an f-35 they jackeded. if we spread these out it would be a quick blurb in the news on onto the next thing. no rhyme or reason to this, bill, but it's very interesting that they are all happening together. each one of the ones i just laid out and you laid out has specific causes and we call them
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links in a chain. if you take one of the links in the chain out you don't have the mishap. we piece together some of that stuff here, d.c. crash if the -- if you spread these out it wouldn't be hitting the american public as it is now. i understand. >> bill: thanks. call sign is whiz. appreciate your analysis today. matthew buckley, pilot out of florida. thank you. >> from the top of my stairs you could hear sounded like the ocean. we have to wait, you know, let it recede i guess. >> dana: tennessee and kentucky still reeling from deadly floods and bracing for freezing temperatures the. we'll go live to the devastated region next. a key ruling coming any minute. federal judge set to decide on a request to block elon musk and doge from accessing federal data and firing workers. constitutional law attorney
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>> bill: there is more news in the middle of the country that's not great for the folks in tennessee and kentucky. parts of the kentucky -- tennessee underwater. now a winter storm sweeping across the central part of the country. arctic chill. from rives, tennessee, jonathan serrie is there. >> good morning, bill. the floodwaters are going down. now emergency managers are warning about bitterly cold temperatures. today governor bill lee will be surveying storm damage in several parts of tennessee including where i am and also scheduled to stop in clarksville about 100 miles to the east of me. both areas significantly affected by flooding over the
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weekend. the governor will be meeting with storm survivors and local officials. while discussing recovery from the floods, officials in tennessee and neighboring kentucky are also keeping a close watch on cold temperatures and snow in this week's forecast. >> what this means is water that's out there, we still have a lot. can freeze. we'll see black ice in different places during both the days and the nights and how old it is going to get. remember, the extra snow we are going to get. >> as floodwaters slowly recede in rives, tennessee some residents are getting their electricity restored and returning to their homes. many roads in the area are still cut off but the cleanup, bill, is well underway. back to you. >> bill: it will take a lot. thanks for being on the ground today yet again in tennessee. thank you. >> dana: we're awaiting a decision from a federal judge on a request to block elon musk and doge from accessing data at several federal agencies or from
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firing workers there. she is set to rule this morning. joining us now is fox news contributor jonathan turley, constitutional law attorney and professor. president trump is likely to win these cases. the democrats is the only card they have to play and taking it to the courts. >> i agree. this is a level of denial that borders on delusion. this is a person who was elected by the majority of voters on a platform to reduce the size of government and to root out waste. well, you have to look at the books. you have to look at the receipts. you need to have designated people look at where this money the going. a judge can try to stop that. that judge will be quickly reversed in my view. he is well within his article two powers. >> dana: we'll wait to see on that. the other thing is you think the judge, who knows trump from other cases, one of the things
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judges don't want to do is be reversed. >> that's right. she has received a great deal of criticism about her handling of the trump case and also statements she made before she was given that case about president trump. i don't know how really that impacts her. i think the greatest weight on her shoulders is the fact in my view the constitutional lines here are clear. you must have this authority as the head of the executive branch. and for a court to micro manage that authority runs against centuries of precedent. >> dana: want to ask you about this. you have a new column out. let me show you the headline here. vance rightly excoriates europe and what values are we defending? this is based on his speech he gave last week. even if you disagree with me these institutions have revealed themselves to be so brittle. the far right keeps getting closer in france. wake up.
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he gave a speech where he said the values that we share in free speech are the ones that are at risk if they don't change things. you want to defend him. let me give you a chance to do that. >> it was an historic speech by vice president vance. 1963 john f. kennedy went to berlin saying he was going to stand with the rights of free speech and other rights of those behind the iron curtain. vance went in this case munich saying i'm american and will fight for free speech. you can't claim to defend democracy when you are eviscerating the very right that defines us. i just had -- i wrote a book recently that talks about germany, united kingdom and our other allies where free speech is in a freefall. this was a very welcome speech for the free speech community
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not just in the united states but in europe. i'm hearing from a lot of my colleagues in europe saying that this was a true churchillian moment for the free speech community. >> dana: what did you make of cbs sunday show margaret brennan, the host, suggesting it was free speech that basically caused the genocide of the jews? >> well, i almost spit out my coffee when i heard that line because, of course, the first thing that the nazis did was to crack down on free speech, to deny it. censorship is the harbinger of authoritarianism. i don't know what point she was making but the nazis knew free speech was the enemy of totalitarian rule. so the idea that somehow free speech invites fascism is an old saw used by the anti-free speech movement particularly in germany. look at germany.
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they have had a robust censorship system since world war ii. a recent poll shows only 17% of germans feel comfortable stating their views in public. they are silencing the wrong people. >> dana: thank you for joining us today as the debate continues hot and heavy here. thanks so much. >> drop it. come on. don't take anything with you. >> bill: you heard her drop it. get moving. this stunning video shows passengers escaping the plane that flipped on the runway in tonight. the man who shot the video coming out of the plane will join us live. his experience firsthand. plus a controversial comparison. msnbc analyst saying doge is the federal government equivalent of the botched withdrawal from afghanistan. try that on for size. spectators ben domenech will react. he has some thoughts when we continue.
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>> the country is under assault. they're not at the gate anymore. they are in your bedrooms, living rooms and businesses. they've got your data. >> bill: there you go. on and on it goes. democratic lawmakers and analysts making to the airwaves and now the streets to demonstrate doge. ben, good morning to you. saw my first protest on the streets of manhattan yesterday. didn't see any of this stuff leading up to the election. it is back here. here we go, msnbc analyst sizes it up this way. watch. >> this does remind me of the federal government version of afghanistan draw dawn. the way we went about doing it was horrible. we could have done it in a better way. >> what are we, three weeks into this give or take? >> look, i respect her.
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i don't respect the man on the clip before. this is something that needs to happen. if we didn't have a congress that could actually deal with government spending in the way it ought to, it really would be something that could happen in a more bipartisan manner, people negotiating through these things. as we've seen for decades now, this is a congress that bounces from just one continuing resolution to another. doesn't actually deal with any of these questions. doesn't cut the things that are obviously wasteful and obviously given to fraud and so, of course, you'll have something come along eventually that will do the thing that the american people have been demanding in election after election, which is to cut government and cut this waste, fraud and abuse and it is going to do it in an aggressive manner. elon's approach is the silicon valley approach of moving fast and breaking things. i also think this is a situation where there are so many bad
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things that are going on, that there is actually going to be very little that's broken that will affect the lives of the american people. that's the only point i think at which this is going to become something that is unpopular. i think americans largely are going to approve of what doge has been doing and will continue to do in terms of trying to get rid of the fat in our government. and get it back to the point where it is actually serving the interests of the people. >> bill: pardon for the interruption there. your latest piece. trump's 100 days of shock and awe, resistance has gone out with a whimper. you write trump is moving fast and breaking washington brains. make your point. >> i just think this is a situation where the resistance that existed in 2017, 2018 just doesn't exist at this point in the same way that democrats would like it to. i think that there are a lot of people who frankly did not expect the level of popularity that his policies would have
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when he got back into the white house. the reason that he has received that level of popularity is because he is doing the things that people want and doing them aggressively. now, he has teed up a number of different lawsuits and challenges that are going to take place in the courts. but i think that the attitude of this administration and the white house is they want to get to the supreme court on some of these things as quickly as possible. jonathan turley was saying they believe they have the right of the argument and that they'll win at that level. i frankly agree. >> bill: "new york times." two of them for you and get to carville. time says democrats fear they are missing the moment to remake the party. beneath it as president trump steam rolls over the priorities democrats say they could miss the opportunity to undertake needed reforms and learn lessons. this from sunday morning. venting at democrats and fearing trump liberal donors pull back cash. they were talking about big
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money donations and small money donations and a really long and well sourced article, i would say, too, a lot of quotes on the record. carville suggesting you kind of get out of the way. watch. >> how should democratic politicians respond to this? and what i think they should do is what we call in rural america play possum. let it go. don't get in the way of it. as we like to say, don't just stand there, do nothing. let this germinate. we don't need to get in front of it. this freight train is moving, let's just get out of the way and then we'll have time. >> bill: he has a couple of clever lines there, ben. but his theory is that this is not going to work. >> smart guys, obviously. the democrats would be wise to listen to him. one of the things to keep in mind they are dealing with a
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party where as of today, at least in very, very early polling, you see someone like jasmine crockett having higher levels of percentage of support for the next presidential nominee than a governor like wes moore, someone who could appeal across partisan lines and bring back a younger male demographic. that's a real problem for this party. the left flank will continue to be a thorn in their side. until they figure out a way to navigate away from it they won't be able to appeal to the center of the country. >> bill: nice to see you, ben domenech. check out his piece. it is out there right now. >> dana: delta airlines says 19 of the 21 passengers transported to local hospitals after the toronto plane crash have been released this morning. good news. much more on this in moments. massachusetts largest teachers union is under fire accused of offering anti-semitic materials to members.
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>> dana: the largest teachers union in massachusetts is under investigation for anti-semitism. bryan llenas has more. hi. >> union has yet to apologize for providing anti-semitic educational resources to its 117,000 teach he teachers and staff on its members-only website. this poster shows a fist ripping the tongue from a snake and calling for unity in confronting zionism. the snake was used during nazi germany to symbolize jews. it appears to show a palestinian with a rifle. poster reads. what was taken by force can only be returned by force. here former president joe biden is labeled a serial killer for his support of israel. at a public hearing by the massachusetts legislature's special commission on combating anti-semitism, the union's president, who is jewish, became defensive when confronted. >> you agree this is
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anti-semitic imagery, correct? >> i'm not going to evaluate that. >> if the dollar billfolded up in the star of david. is it anti-semitic? i think you nodded your head yes. >> i know you would like to. i understand the back and forth you are trying to get away from the central point which is that we provide imagery and resources for our members to consider in their own intelligent, professional way. >> it is anti-semitic. >> the union resources are incredibly one sided and anti-israel and fears it could make its way into the classroom. the union president said is union is not saying teachers should use these resources in the classroom but meant to educate them on the conflict. >> dana: that's disturbing. and this. >> forceful event where all of
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