tv Americas Newsroom FOX News February 26, 2025 6:00am-7:00am PST
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supporting that can go to my foundation to learn more about that. >> steve: for the movie it will open in selected theaters this friday, two days. how can people find the theaters, gary? >> you can go to look it up on -- look at my x feed. there is a link there that contains all the theaters you can put in your zip code and find the theater. >> brian: brothers after war.com. another great project. >> ainsley: he put in 150,000 from his foundation to make this movie. thank you for all that you do. >> ainsley: we can't wait to see it. >> steve: that wraps up three hours. let's do it again tomorrow. >> ainsley: great interview with marco rubio. >> bill: great show, good morning. house got it done. republicans advancing the trump
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agenda. step one is done. they passed a key budget resolution, the blueprint for what the president calls the big, beautiful bill. the next step is to hammer out all the pesky details. more with lisa mcclain, house republican chairwoman and we'll get into it in moments. here we go. gangs all here is, 37 days since the inauguration, president trump convening his first cabinet meeting. elon musk will be there and on the invite list. that kicks off about two hours from now. good morning, everybody. wednesday in new york. probably where you are, too. bill hemmer, good morning, welcome to our program. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." midweek, lots happening. >> bill: think he brings a chain saw? >> dana: to the cabinet meeting? better be on time. if you know, you know, don't be late. it is mostly locked an loaded. a few nominees are awaiting confirmation. the meeting comes as doge continues the shake-up of the
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status quo. president trump addressed the blowback yesterday saying he takes responsibility. >> president trump: you know the old statement the buck stops here, right? i can say the same thing. the buck stops here. we have to find out if people are getting paid and they're not working. >> dana: peter doocy is reporting live from the white house this morning. hi, peter. >> good morning. as the trump team assembles for the first time since he got back to the west wing, the president is looking at this crew and he thinks they give him a certain advantage over the cabinet he had when he got here in 2017. >> president trump: i think this is deeper. i think it is better because it is deeper. i had some people i didn't really like too much in my cabinet but i didn't know washington that well. i was a new york person. i knew new york intimately but i had to rely on people. i had great people. >> everybody coming here today inherited agencies president trump suspects are bloated with waste, fraud and abuse.
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so he has elon musk in the room to update these guys and girls on the cuts. >> elon considering he is working alongside the president and our cabinet secretaries, this entire administration will be in attendance tomorrow just to talk about doge's efforts and how all of the cabinet secretaries are identifying waste, fraud and abuse at their agencies. >> 21 federal workers who don't agree with the doge mission who were at the agency before elon musk arrived have resigned and the deadline remains unclear for additional resignations for federal workers who don't respond to the email asking for five bullet points from last week. >> president trump: it is somewhat voluntary but if you don't answer, i guess you get fired. what it really is, do people exist? we have this massive government with millions of people and nobody knows who is working for the government and who is not. >> well, nobody knew who the
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administrator of doge was until now. a long-time government employee who pre-dated elon musk's arrival. it is amy gleason. cbs news got her on the phone. she didn't have a comment but she was in mexico. >> dana: all right, thanks for that update. >> bill: james freeman assistant editor. noah rothman, senior editor. you are real. want to point something out. there is so much action in congress now that we need to pay attention to how slim the margins are. democratic congresswoman from california gave birth a month ago and she brought her infant to the floor of the house last night to vote. republican from california was in the hospital with an infection and he came with a walker in order to vote last night. that's how slim the margins are. here we go. call for number one. today the federal government exceeded $1 hundred million in
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annual rent savings for underutilized leases totaling 3 million square feet, 7250 current lesss plenty of available office space for the current workforce. you did the math. how does that add up to you, noah? >> this is where doge and gao, which does this accounting and audits overlap. vacant properties the gao has said we can afford to get rid of some of this stuff. to the extent doge has been politically valuable. it is scandalizeing the nation around the stuff gao finds on a regular basis, lighting a fire under some cuts. the degree to which people hate to hear this. 100 million represent represents a big chunk. fed rat government rail government? in the relative terms that the federal government is set to spend $7 trillion this year 100
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million doesn't cut a lot. 84 billion might. but we have to get there and needs congressional buy-in to be permanent. >> dana: gao estimated that improper payments by federal agencies were 2.8 billion since 2003. a lot to be gained from that. doesn't get to the nut of the problem that noah is talking about but still worth doing. >> the only criticism of the doge initiative. easy to forget there is no argument that the amount of fraud, the amount of improper payments are massive. democrats on the house oversight committee say it's over $2 hundred billion a year. gao says over $5 hundred billion. gao puts out the list every year of problem areas and some good progress there in terms of savings. most of the items on that list have shown no improvement or gotten worse since 2023. i think that's another example of why you need doge besides the fact you mentioned we're
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spending $7 trillion a year, the government is collecting a little over 5 trillion. costs have to come down. part of that will be reductions in the workforce. >> bill: governor newsom will do a podcast apparently. he told "politico" i'm asking the same questions you are asking of me. where the hell is the democratic party and what are we doing? i'm having the same conversation. i thought it would be more interesting to do it publicly. he will do the podcast with interviewees with members of the maga movement. effective? >> perhaps. he is styling himself as somebody who is accessible. does outreach to republicans and maga movement. talks a lot to sean hannity and debate to ron desantis he reaches out and engages. you have to win those exchanges. the governor's performance in the debate against desantis wasn't memorable. didn't reflect well on him.
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what he did was retale donald trump's attack on desantis to a different audience. the president was doing show prep for him. >> dana: our audience would have seen jamie dimon yesterday saying you have to have outcomes. i would say gavin newsom's big problem is the outcomes. the most visible one most recently are the fires in palisades. >> he may get more flexible. he is not running again for california governor. like to look more centrist if that's possible. he may find he can get a lot more wins working with trump than working with the bureaucrats and politicians in his own state. he has had a hard time getting the california coastal commission to enable rebuilding. he has had to send multiple executive orders saying i meant it. give people relief here. i think it's very possible he is seeing better relations to
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washington with a chance to get wins politically. >> bill: thank you both. they do exist. >> even respond to emails. >> dana: no one is questioning you guys write a lot. i read it all and i love it. as the trump administration ramps up the crackdown, some migrants are giving up midway for their journey to the u.s. why are they turning around? >> it's a huge change, dana, to see migrants turn around before reaching the border. migrant traffic at mexico's southern border down 90%. similar numbers in panama. both countries officials say they see reverse migration. >> if we have to pay for a flight, we pay for it. we don't care but many people are coming back, a lot. >> this woman made it from venezuela to mexico but failed to enter the u.s. illegally.
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now she is turning back. >> it's true. i wanted to arrive in the united states to have a better life but i couldn't. >> these migrants from south america are giving up hiring boats in panama headed home. new border patrol chief michael banks says reverse migration is happening throughout central america including honduras. >> in the first two weeks of february they witnessed over 500 migrants turning back south. >> seeing images like this, the end of catch and release, ice arrests, checkpoints on the interstate, thousands deported by air, many migrants are leaving mexico by bus. >> this area south of san daig last year was overwhelmed by migrants. today empty. >> we've seen a 95 plus% decrease in traffic that's coming through the darian gap. >> the pipeline is drying up at least for now. >> no more catch and release.
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you will be returned to your country and spreading like wildfire all over social media. >> why take the risk of making an investment why the odds are negligible. no asylum. no free buses or hotels, and now we're deporting people to any country they pass through. how long it will last, we don't know. right now what the administration is saying and doing is having a massive deterrent effect. >> dana: fairly easy to do that. >> bill: another initiative. president trump announcing a new immigration idea. for $5 million you might be able to buy a gold card visa for the u.s. >> we'll be selling a gold card. you have a green card, this is a gold card. we'll put a price on that card of $5 million and give you green card privileges plus. it will be a route to
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citizenship and wealthy people will be coming into our country by buying this card. we think it will be extremely successful. >> bill: i don't know how that squares with birthright citizenship and the battle over whether or not that should still be part of our constitution. >> dana: there is the border security issue and then there is a overall immigration overhaul the country needs, which is how do we find the skilled workers we want and also the people who come like our ancestors did that clawed their way through, worked in the coal mines and figured it out. there is a lot to be said about a big comprehensive thing. one of the ideas that fits into that. >> bill: bring the good folks is what he is saying. >> dana: best and brightest. >> bill: 11 minutes past the hour. let's get to this. >> it appears this was a failure of the flight crew from flex jet to listen and abide by the
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instructions of air traffic control. >> bill: i think i've watched this 20 times already. >> dana: i watched it once and couldn't take it anymore. >> bill: a near miss between two planes on a runway chicago midway raising new questions yet again about concerns regarding air safety. that is a close one. also this. check it out. >> some people have been keeping up with sort of, you know, the shortage of eggs and so they aren't surprised. other people, you know, are upset because food is really expensive. >> dana: sticker shock for a staple. the trump administration is unveiling a new plan to bring down the price of eggs and agriculture secretary brooke rollins with details next. >> bill: fight for fairness in women's sport hitting a blue wall. how they are defining the executive order. >> it doesn't surprise me new jersey, which wants to be the california of the east coast, is
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>> bill: so we have ourselves another air scare in the u.s. this time chicago's midway airport. a southwest airlines planes nearly colliding but pulling up right before that smaller jet crossed its way. what all went down. mike tobin. what have we determined thus far? >> we know right now this morning that the passengers on board southwest flight 2504 starting to share their experience. one thing is clear. they didn't understand the close call they had. it was just before 9:00 a.m. at
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midway airport. 2504 was inbound from omaha, nebraska. just before the rubber met the runway an alert pilot noticed a jet was in the runway. executed a precautionary go around that people inside the plane said the crew was very calm and all they really knew is that they had a delay. >> i hear the thrusters going and we're back in the air. kind of viewed it as a non-event. no big deal. what is going on now? but didn't realize the magnitude of the situation until you saw the actual video footage. >> audio with the tower the jet was told to stop before the southwest flight landed. the pilot didn't understand the instructions the first time but seemed to understand when the
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tower repeated this instruction. still ended up in the landing path. >> turn left on or away for left. cross and hold short of 31 center. >> left on four left cross the 22 or 13 center. >> negative. cross runway 31 left. hold runway. >> announcing the ntsb and faa were both investigating transportation secretary sean duffy assembly of god to emphasize that pilots needs to follow instructions. >> that pilot southwest airlines is pretty smooth. well done. mike tobin, thanks. more answers to come in time. thank you, sir. >> president biden didn't have a plan for avian flu. brooke rollins and i are working
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with all the best people in government and academics around the world to have a plan ready. the biden plan was just kill chickens. and they spent billions of dollars just randomly killing chickens within a perimeter where they found a sick chicken. >> dana: the trump administration unveiling a new strategy fighting bird flu. it has wiped out millions of chickens to help send egg prices soaring. joining us is the new agriculture secretary brooke rollins about to have have the first cabinet meeting of president trump's second term. let me put up you are no stranger to this. the price of a dozen eggs is $495. you just announced a new plan. what's in it and how soon can people see some relief? >> thank you, dana. what a joy and blessing to be on with you today. if you don't mind first i want to show this chart if you can see it. this is -- shows the price of
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eggs over the last 40 years. as you can see, the price is pretty static for 40 years, 50 years actually and all of a sudden under obama went up. trump went down. biden skyrocketed. i want to provide context before we talk about the plan. listen, avian flu has been catastrophic for our poultry egg farmers. at the end of the day policy matters. the egg prices we're seeing now was a long row of overregulation, too many rules, too much government. that's part of this plan as well. as we talk about avian flu hitting every single american family and every single household in this country, just this morning in front of 500 people at the ag commissioner's conference in washington, d.c. we talked five prongs. i will talk about it in the cabinet meeting. first we'll invest from usda a significant amount of funds to bio security. that means the spread of the virus only happens through wild foul for the most part. what can we do at usda to help
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farmers insure that don't happen? we have 150 pilot projects. only one of those has gotten the avian flu. now we put that on steroids and spread it out to america. second, we go through some significant repopulation insuring that the farmers that had to depopulate, that they have what they need to immediately repopulate. immediately start getting hens again and third is deregulation. the egg industry is over regulated. too many rules on the books. they were always focused on safety and look at biden and obama era putting more government on them. fourth bringing in some eggs, importing some eggs in the short term. talking to several countries around the world that can get us eggs right away. it wouldn't be a long-term fix but immediately begin to bring those prices down. fifth, the long-term of this. you can't play whack-a-mole all the time. you have to think about how to fix it for america for five or
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50 years. we're investing a lot of money into vaccine and therapeutic research to see if there is an answer to this right away. all things considered, we see a significant plan with significant funds moving ahead and the american taxpayers, american consumers and american poultry farmers have relief coming right around the corner. >> dana: do you think it might be time to revisit what kevin has yet was talking about. the policy for a long time and good intentions doesn't allow immunity that those survive to pass on. is it time to change the policy where you just kill all the chickens >> that's part of the research piece. we'll have pilot programs around the country that work to prove that out. the avian flu is an extremely fast spreading virus. within a couple of days it spreads so quickly that most of the chickens have died anyway. but there are some farmers that are out there willing to really try that on a pilot as we build
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the safe perimeter to see if there is a way forward with immunity and genetics and dna become part of this. a big change in terms of policy. >> dana: what about people looking into the possibility of having backyard chickens but as you said the wildlife is the ones that really pass along the bird flu. is that a safe thing for people to do? >> it is a safe thing. that's also one of under prong three the deregulation piece. we want people to become backyard farmers. we want moms and dads and kids. we have had backyard chickens for my four teenagers since they were little kids. it is a wonderful potential opportunity. we want to make sure it is safe and want to insure we're putting all the protocols in place that isn't making this flu issue worse. we feel good about the plan and lifting those regulations off to allow the households to do it themselves. i think it could be a neat silver lining in this whole episode. >> dana: it is an emergency and you have the cabinet meeting. love for you to come back. i want to talk about preserving
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the family farm and many other issues. >> love that. thank you, dana. a joy to be on. >> bill: how about that? pam bondi issuing a warning three more states comply with president trump's transgender athlete ban or face legal action. potential legal court battle. a former government contractor leaking the information of more than 400,000 taxpayers. why trump's i.r.s. is now pointing fingers of blame at the obama and biden administrations. >> look what they did. look what this guy did to the president of the united states and 405,000 other americans. it's like you're with us every step of the way. ♪ (man) cooool. ♪
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this with a boy dominating females and winning podiums and championships that rightfully belong to these girls. >> dana: maine state representative joined us earlier this week. she is increasing criticism raising concerns over a trans athlete and now the maine house is -- she is no longer allowed to vote or speak on the floor until she apologizes but refusing to do so and called out the house speaker on the floor last night. >> can you imagine trying to put your best foot forward but knowing that the outcome was already pre-determined by natural biological advantages. >> government requires a bond of trust and respect between citizens and legislators. high moral and ethical standards producing the public's confidence should be observed, end quote. sharing images of kids online
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without their consent is a clear violation of that trust. >> dana: libby says she plans to regain her voting and speaking privilege and we'll follow that story. >> bill: the state of maine not the only state bucking president trump's executive order. the association that regulates high school sports in new jersey refusing to change policy. alexis mcadams live in hoboken for more of that story across the river. >> good morning. the battle is happening across the country. it is happening also right here in new jersey where biological boys can still compete in girls sports despite that executive order we've been talking about. we spoke with some athletes, high school athletes in the state why isn't this state listening to the federal law? watch. >> i think it is so unfair and just stealing opportunities from women in sports and instead of empowering them. >> the new jersey association that regulates the state's high
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school sports says it will not change current policy that allows any transgender high school student to participate as the gender they identify with. the policy has been in place for more than a decade and says there have been zero controversies so far. this policy defies federal law going against president trump's executive order to keep men out of women's sports setting the stage for yet another legal battle. attorney general pam bondi is threatening legal action if states do not comply. she wrote a letter to leaders in maine, california and it doesn't tolerate officials who don't obey the federal law. >> it doesn't surprise me that new jersey, which wants to be the california of the east coast, is also continuing to adopt these policies and not accept the fact that america does not want this. america wants fairness. >> so what happens is the
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question if these states don't comply with federal law. the trump administration says they will withhold funding from the states. trump said that to the governor of maine. she wasn't happy about that. that could happen in new jersey as well. according to state records new jersey is expected to get more than $1 billion in federal funding this year for education. we'll see if any of that is withheld. send it back to you. >> bill: watching that from there. thank you. >> dana: let's bring in fox news legal editor kerri urbahn. listening to the representative from maine. i know a pole-vaulter in high school. it would be helpful to her family if she got a scholarship to go to college. i was thinking about her watching that. if this happened to her and she didn't get the scholarship because a trans athlete got it over here is outrageous. pam bondi is trying to fight this. legally does she have a chance to get the states to back down.
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>> it will be a battle. that scenario you went through, that's actually happened. there have been girls who lost scholarships and now out of college so they can't do anything about it. it was devastating to them. the girls in connecticut, the first to bring this kind of lawsuit. believe it or not it is still going through the second circuit. i think politically it is a wynn for a trump administration. with each letter and filing and statement and then the resistance that follows americans are reminded that democrats want boys in girls sports is a losing political issue. legally, though, it is going to be a fight and ultimately have to be decided by the supreme court. here is why. there are some unfavorable decisions out there right now for girls. secondly, there is a decision by the supreme court several years agau authored -- if it is illegal to discriminate on the basis of sex it is also illegal
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to discriminate on the basis of gender identity. a huge win for people who identify as trans in general at the time. conservatives were upset. they saw the writing on the wall. what will it mean for girls sports and probably why justices alito, cavanaugh and others dissented. if the supreme court takes it up. i think they will even though they declined thus far, i don't see them siding with the girls on this issue. we'll have to wait and see. >> bill: wow, okay. the polling numbers. should not be allowed, 79 pers percent americans surveyed. 94% of which is republicans. 64% is independents and 67% democrats. the office of special counsel wants to keep his job. what's the rub here? >> a great case as far as the constitution is concerned. the very simple question before the court is does the president
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or does congress get to decide who the president fires and how they go about doing that? today the order has expired temporary forcing the trump administration to keep the man in his job before an anti-trump judge, judge jackson. i don't see her really waivering on this. the supreme court even thief they declined to get involved this far did indicate an appetite to get involved. this is one of those things that will go before the supreme court. how long, though, that takes is up in the air. >> dana: yeah. speed things up. we're in trump time now. kerri, thank you. >> bill: migrant encounters at the border falling dramatically. dhs reveals another new tool. look at the numbers, wow. another new tool to try to keep the country safe. >> the wins keep coming because we have a president that believes in this country and listened to the american people and actually brought the kind of success that this country was so
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they must announce that they are here and if they do so, they can avoid criminal charges and fines. >> bill: kristi noem back on the job. the action on immigration in one week's time. she is talking about the reinforcement of the alien registration act. been in practice before. trump administration is bringing it back. pete hegseth, secretary of defense was in gitmo this week. you heard about the several hundred venezuelans cycled in and out of there. more migrants taken out this week. the gold card proposal. pay $5 million you may get access under certain conditions to u.s. citizenship. 90 illegal aliens arrested in texas. only 90 in the state of texas. important for that. we'll swing here. the southwest border encounters we found one year and one week ago to the day. this is february 15th, last year. in one day 6700, all right? on saturday for the entire
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border not just what we saw in texas, the entire border 200. a decrease of 97%. mark danelles a sheriff in arizona, southeastern section of the state. good morning to you. it is quiet. you can tell us how it looks to you. you talk about messaging and engagement and consequences. why do all three of those matter? >> well, it's collective. you look at the last four years, bill and dana where we've been. we had intellectual avoidance and abandonment with epic consequences. now a president that is engaged in this, prioritized it with intended results and why you see this. it prioritized it with people behind him. refreshing here at the border. >> bill: if we were down there today, would we see much? or would we just be bored? >> i don't know if you would be bored.
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you wouldn't see what you saw a year ago. a year ago we had two to ten pursuits a day. now what we is two or three pursuits a week. what a drastic difference. 45% of my bookings in jail were border related. we booked 4,170 people for border related crimes in three years. remarkable numbers. we aren't seeing that now. waiting for the stats to come up. the numbers will plummet. >> the arizona governor had a change of tune here. this is a sound bite now after the election. the 18th of november. watch here. >> we will not be participating in misguided efforts that harm our communities and i've been incredibly clear about that. >> bill: that was about mass deportations, etc. she has a change of heart now. she is your governor. a democrat. how much did this surprise you and what do you think she will do when she carries it out?
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>> over the last two years she has been in office the arizona sheriffs have worked hard to get her to message with us, to work with us and partner with us. when this executive order came out yesterday, which i will be blunt on this. we had talked about doing a statewide task force. she brought that to our attention as sheriffs. yesterday she brought it forward. i still don't know what the operational plan is and looking for details. bottom line is we welcome that engagement because whether you are democrat, republican, independent we have to protect our communities, citizens and this country when you look at 50% of all fentanyl is coming through the four border counties in arizona. last year an 80 million fentanyl pills came through arizona. >> bill: sheriff, that's something you have to deal with. the smuggling is still an issue. if she is now telling you she will fight back against the cartels, stop the drug smuggling, work on the human
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trafficking, that must be a good thing for all of you working that border. maybe it was a stunner of a turnaround but she has seen the light of day, i would say. >> 100% correct. it is welcoming the fact that again i hope her colleague democrat governors throughout the states see this. public safety is not politicized in the fact that based on poilu particulars. it is based on people and the rule of law. we can get our country back when it comes to arizona and throughout the country. i welcome this from the governor. looking to see what the details are. we'll partner with our governor to protect our citizens. >> bill: remember the line elections have consequences? what happened in arizona from 2020 to 2024. trump flipped it. how much do you think that matters now? >> it matters. i think she is hearing that. the will of the people speak, you have to listen whether you like the outcome or not. in this country and communities, bottom line when people speak as
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a democracy we need to follow suit on that. it made a huge difference in our state. they saw the tragedies we've been seeing statewide. again, sad to say where we've been. refreshing where we're going. >> bill: a different day. sheriff, thanks for your time. we'll stay in contact. do not miss laura's interview with defense secretary pete hegseth. she takes an inside tour of gitmo. should be interesting, huh? 7:00 eastern here on the fox news channel. see it later tonight in prime time. this now. >> dana reads sports. >> dana: it was an amazing weekend at penn state university where student athletes helped raise money for childhood cancer awareness and research. the football team got in on the fun with dance routine saturday night and then the men's lacrosse team crushed it with their coordinated outfits on stage and the men's gymnastics team stole the show with their version of olympic star's
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dancing with the stars. he was on last season. by the end of the weekend students raised more than $17 million all for the kids. i found that on an instagram page, a young woman who does amazing reporting from these sports events. $17 million raised for childhood cancer. congratulations to all of them. they practiced. loved it. >> bill: well done, guys. we're awaiting president trump's cabinet secretaries at the white house. the first meeting together since he took office 37 days ago. we got cameras rolling, dana. plus f.b.i. liedership said to be investigating a plan to infiltrate president trump's first campaign. a honey pot campaign run by the former f.b.i. director. what's this all about? we'll report, you decide and more. we'll let you know what's being said next. oh yeah. consolidate bad debt and save money for your next goal.
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$0 copay for routine vaccines and telehealth visits. plus, your doctor, hospital and pharmacy may already be part of our large humana networks. so, call the number on your screen now to speak with a licensed humana sales agent. wouldn't you love benefits like $1200 a year to help pay for eligible groceries, utilities, rent and over-the-counter items? so, if you have medicare and medicaid, call the number on your screen now and speak with a licensed humana sales agent. if you're eligible, they can even help enroll you over the phone in a humana medicare advantage dual-eligible special needs plan. so, call now. humana. a more human way to healthcare. when you're in the military you're really close with your brothers and your sisters that are in the military with you. and when you get out of the military, you kind of lose that
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until you find a new family. we can talk about our struggles and the things that we did overseas and not everybody can do that. adam! how's it going, brother? we live pretty close to each other. so he's always coming over. when i go to jack's house, we watch a lot of football, hang out. we go outside the friendship has kind of grown into a family i was overseas on a deployment. i got separated from my marines and i got hit in the neck, and it broke my neck and paralyzed me. 14 years ago, i was on a training mission. did a military freefall, and i had some faulty equipment. i hit the ground. going, 30 to 40 knots and was instantly paralyzed. i met jack fanning when he invited us to park city, utah, through his foundation. i was able to actually get on the mountain and ski with my family,
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i can't put into words what that meant. i got paid in the military to do crazy fun stuff. and after my accident, i'm still that same guy. and when i was able to jump out of a perfectly good, helicopter, at 10,000 feet, i did it. i was talking to some vets last week amazing how we have these houses where they can come over because they■re in chairs too. carpet and wheelchairs don't mix very well. tunnel to towers, they got rid of all that. they redid my whole bathroom. that's probably the favorite part of my house. i thought they were just going to do the upgrades. but the surprise to me was they paid off the entire mortgage. when they told me they're going to pay off my mortgage, i cried. please contribute $11 a month by visiting t2t.org now
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>> president trump: trump was right about everything. just came in. somebody said -- this was sent in by a fan. i said i think we should make some of them. but we were pretty much. you want one? >> dana: light hearted moment. president trump showing off his new trump was right about everything hat. enjoying the fact that they had to cover it. they had no choice. they were in the oval office. >> bill: the big reveal.
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you can't go anywhere. >> dana: all caps. >> bill: that was howard lutnick to his left. newcomers secretary and robert kennedy as well. see what theme comes out next. this is one of the worst kept secrets in america, roll it. let's get to it. >> look, sean, after a lot of prayer and thoughts with my family and my friends i'm here to announce my candidacy to be the next governor of the great state of florida. >> bill: it has been out there. a lot of people talking about it. byron donalds announcing he will run. his intention to run for governor next year setting up a showdown with the wife of ron desantis. danamarie mcnicholl is live in miami with what could be an interesting race. >> good morning, bill. the race is on for florida governor. congressman byron donalds the first candidate to announce a run. he already has the support of president donald trump behind him. last week the president endorsed the three-term congressman.
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calling him a total winner highlighting his commitment to the america first agenda. >> my focus will be making sure every child has the tools available to them to be proper fishent in math, reading righting and reasoning >> on hannity we got a look at donalds political priorities. continue environmental restoration and position florida as a financial hub of the world with an emphasis in crypto currency. while governor desantis can't run again due to term limits he hasn't signaled support for donalds but has hinted his wife casey would make a worth' candidate. >> she is somebody that has, i think, the intestinal fortitude and dedication to conservative
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principles that you know anything we have accomplished she would take to the next level. >> she has not yet announced a run for governor. if she does jump in, this could set up a major political battle between two forces in the state. >> bill: well, maybe they will have at it. we shall see in time. thank you. nice to see you danamarie live in florida. >> we got it done. we had the number of votes to move the process along. passing the budget resolution in the house will go to the senate. the first important step in opening up the reconciliation process. we have a lot of hard work ahead of us but we'll deliver the america first agenda. deliver all of it, not just parts of it and this was the first step in that process. >> dana: dramatic scene on capitol hill. big victory for house republican leaders as massive budget resolution advancing the trump agenda with trillions in tax
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