tv Fox News Live FOX News March 1, 2025 9:00am-10:00am PST
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the government is addressing it right now. they're looking to import eggs from other places, that's number one. and they're looking to replace the birds as quick as possible. but that's going to take time. i think six months from now, we'll be talking about egg prices back down 50% from here because i do believe that this disease is not going to be long lasting. i'm no doctor, but usually goes by the wayside. molly: i hope so. gary kaltbaum, thank youfore your insight on a saturday. thank you for watching. i'm molly line. stay right here for your latest news. fox news live continues. we have griff jenkins coming next. ♪ >> a fed ex cargo plane was forced to make an emergency
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landing in newark, new jersey after the engine burst into flames. they believe a bird flew into the engine. no one was hurt and air travel in and out of newark was back to normal within an hour of the incident. there are no reported injuries. we'll bring you more on this story as we get it. and preliminary autopsy results have ruled out carbon monoxide in the deaths of oscar winner gene hackman and his wife betsy as investigators continue pour over evidence found around their partially mummified bodies. elon musk appearing on joe rogan's podcast for a marathon three-hour sit-down, the two men coming to agreement on u.s. spending and doge and more. welcome to fox news live. i'm griff jenkins. we'll have more on those stories coming up. we begin with a fox news alert.
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ukrainian president is meeting in the u.k. with prime minister keir starmer after the dispute with president trump in the oval office. this leaves the future of russia and ukraine in doubt this weekend. lucas tomlinson is in palm beach, florida where we start things. hey, lucas. >> good afternoon, griff. president trump is at his winter white house in mar-a-lago, sticking a tee in the ground today, one day after that unprecedented, as you mentioned, meeting in the oval office. nobody has seen something that contentious in the white house ever. the meeting went off the rails 40 minutes in, as a reporter asked president trump if he's aligning himself too much with vladimir putin. president trump responded he's trying to keep in the middle between ukraine and russia. and vice-president j.d. vance jumped in and wants to see diplomacy rule the dale and then president zelenskyy
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offered somewhat of a history lesson, calling him j.d., did the cease-fire violations about 25 to date and that's when president trump responded with this. >> you don't have the card right now. with us, you start having cards. >> not playing cards. >> and you're playing cards. you're gambling with the lives of millions of people. you're gambling with world war iii. >> now, zelenskyy left the white house a short time later on trump's orders. the planned press conference and lunch were canceled and the mineral rights order was not signed which brought zelenskyy to washington. later on the report with bret baier, he said he wanted security guarantees included in the agreement. >> i said that we have to sign this document and we are ready for this and that this will be the step for step to security guarantees, but it's not enough, i think so. maybe i don't know something. >> zelenskyy says it was not
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enough. now, democrats have pounced and said that zelenskyy was set up in the oval office with that meeting with the president. >> president trump become a lap dog for a brutal dictator in moscow. it's got to be hard for americans to understand how the white house has just become an outlet for kremlin propaganda. >> so while president trump is here in palm beach, president zelenskyy is in london meeting with the british prime minister and took a phone call with the n.a.t.o. secretary-general who told zelenskyy he needs too repair relations with the u.s. administration, and with the n.a.t.o. secretary-general says russia is making more weapons in three months than the entire n.a.t.o. alliance does in a y y y year. griff: lucas, any indication
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that we'll hear from the president today? >> we could get some statements or follow-ups more about zelenskyy in the next hour. i'll talk to you about what president trump said on his way out of white house last night, griff. griff: all right, lucas tomlinson live for us in west palm beach. thank you. for more let's bring in today's foreign policy panel. former ambassador at large and coordinator for counterterrorism, nathan sales. senior director michael allen and former pentagon press secretary, sabrina singh. thank you, we have the best foreign policy panel than any channel because all three of you have played an integral part in the meetings and preparations that happen before an event like we saw in the oval office which i think for all of us, we were stunned to see how it went south. ambassador, i want to start with you though, what lucas was references and that's kind of where it ended and that was when president trump was outside the white house waiting
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to get on marine one and he had this to say. listen. >> how long do you think it will take for-- (inaudible) >> he says he wants it now, that he wants to come back right now, but i can't do that. griff: so, ambassador, what was your reaction to what happened and also, where does this go now? can the deal get back on track? >> well, griff, my reaction was disbelief. these things are highly stage managed orchestrated events, every time you have the president of the united states sitting down with a foreign counterpart, nothing goes to chance. unfortunately, that's not the way this played out yesterday and look, maybe i'm old-fashioned, maybe it's the way i was raised, if you're a guest in somebody's house you don't fight with them. and i think that president zelenskyy missed an opportunity to get an incredible win that could have put his country on a path towards a just and sustainable peace. i say this as somebody who has supported ukraine for the past three years and wants to see an
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outcome here that preserves ukraine's sovereignty and integrity. unfortunately by getting into a fight with the president by getting into a fight with the vice-president, president zelenskyy set back ukraine's cause. griff: was it disrespect in your mind? >> i think anytime you come to the united states asking for help, you have to be grateful for the assistance you've been given. you're not here to dictate terms, you're here as a partner, a valued partner to be sure, but not as somebody who is here to dictate terms to the united states. griff: sabrina, i want to go to you. obviously, i want your take on what happened, but also the whole part about senator graham who has been one of his strongest supporters and made multiple trips to ukraine now coming out and saying, hey, i told president zelenskyy don't take the bait, don't let this fall apart, just get the deal done. here is a little bit of what senator graham had to say. >> somebody asked me, am i embarrassed about trump?
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i have never been more proud of the president. i was very proud of j.d. vance, standing up for our country. we want to be helpful. what i saw in the oval office was disrespectful and i don't know if we can ever do business with zelenskyy again. i think most americans saw a guy that they would not want to go in business with. griff: so, as we point out, graham's been such a supporter of zelenskyy in the thing now is, once you lose a guy like graham, that's not good. what's your reaction to all of this? >> look, i think to what was being said earlier, there's a lot of work that has to be done on preparing this relationship now. i think both sides are going to have to take a look and see how we can come back to the table. i think that president trump is someone that likes his ego placated and certainly, that did not happen in the oval office yesterday. and i also think it's very hard to sit there as a leader who has overseen a war for three years, lost hundreds of thousands of soldiers, men and
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women on the battlefield, and you know, to see this kind of revisionist history presented in front of you and not push back. that being said, should it have played out the way it did? no. so in terms of senator graham, he has been an ally of ukraine. i hope that, you know, temperatures cool and he does come back to the table. at the end of the day though, when it comes to president zelenskyy, that's a decision that ukraine has to make about their future and it's very hard to have an election right now when you have russia occupying 20% of your country. griff: that's a good point. michael, i want to ask you sort of, and i know you played a big role in meetings like this. you know, do you feel like because the meeting was pretty good for about 30 minutes until it ended the way it ended. what's your reaction to what happened and also, you know, last night my colleague bret baier gave zelenskyy three different opportunities to apologize, essentially, as mark
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thiessen said, it's like a drowning man refusing a life raft. should zelenskyy have been different last night? >> yes, first of all, he can apologize without gro feel grovelling. he advanced arguments and trying to debate this this public. that's a fundamental mistake. you're supposed to stay disciplined on what your message is in such a high stakes meeting when the media is there, so he should have cleaned that up. and i think that zelenskyy just also needs to understand where donald trump is is he wants to be between the two parties. he sees himself as the honest broker to end a conflict. what you saw zelenskyy say over and over yesterday was, wait, we're the ones that got invaded, why would you not be on our side, we're your historical friends, shared values with you. instead of trying to argue against where trump's position is and the paradigm for how he's going to solve this, i think he just needs to be able
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to accept this is how trump is going to play it and i need to be seen as not the obstacle to peace, but as someone who is welcoming peace because if you give-- if you give putin a chance to be on the world stage for a little bit, he's going to be the one that's recalcitrant, starts to reject all sorts of trumpian terms, so zelenskyy should play this a little smarter and let putin's obstinance rise. griff: it's a great point and as we understand it, it was going to be the minerals deal and then that would lead to a cease-fire. and it seems that zelenskyy's sticking point, ambassador, he doesn't want a cease-fire without specific security guarantees, as i can best sort of lay that out. secretary of state marco rubio talking on another channel, saying they should have just done the deal without what happened on friday and bring zelenskyy to the white house.
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listen here. >> this agreement could have been signed five days ago, but they insisted on coming to washington and it was should have been a very clear understanding you don't come here and create a scenario where you're going to start lecturing us how diplomacy isn't going to work. president zelenskyy took it in that direction and it ended in that result. it's unfortunate. griff: get your quick responses. should it have been done differently? >> yes, if this is the alternative, going off the rails and blowing up in spectacular fashion? yes. sign on the dotted line and this would tie between ukraine and united states. the europeans said security guarantees and that's 90% of what zelenskyy wants, he should have taken the deal. >> and this is one step forward for united nations potentially security guarantees, but the
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administration has been pretty clear they're not committing to that, but you had european allies that was going to apply security assistance and this deal was a way to move that relationship forward. at the end of the day, what played out in the oval office was completely astonishing and that deal was sort an opportunity to repair and move forward with the u.s. and ukraine together. griff: mike, i'll give you the last word. if you can add into it, what happens if the u.s. ultimately abandons ukraine? >> and i think we will have trouble. you heard the reporters ask what would you do if russia threatened poland or the baltics, and that's what we, it united states to look at russia invading and the knock-on effects of abandoning ukraine. and our asian allies need to
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know that the yoo it's is with it all. and quick work by the ukrainians and look for in the next coming weeks. >> it may take more than a little diplomacy to get this back on track, with an oval office meltdown, if you will. thank you for your time and we'll see where this goes. all right. the vatican says that the pope had a peaceful and restful night. he had another setback in his recovery. jeff paul is in rome with the latest condition of the pope, jeff. >> yeah, griff, after several days of slow improvement, pope francis suffered from his second medical crisis in the span of a week and the latest, the vatican saying that he received nonventilation,
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essentially a mask that went over his nose and mouth to help him breathing. he had a broncospasm, the air going to the wind pipe, and caused vomiting and inhalation. and he remained cooperative with doctors trying to help him. he spent 15 nights in the hospital in rome and catholics continue to show up to pray for the pope's recovery. >> we're one with the pope in this situation, we come here to pray for him as we believe that we cannot show in his suffering, but in solidarity through his faith. >> given his age and past respiratory problems, the pope's full recovery remains touch and go. he's not out of danger just yesterday. we're expecting an update within the next hour, griff. griff: jeff paul, live for us in rome.
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jeff, thank you very much. we're learning new information as a santa fe county sheriff updates a timeline of when gene hackman likely died. we'll take you live to new mexico for the latest next. in every gmc sierra. what we choose to know, we know completely. we are professional grade. i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks! —uh. —here i'll take that. [cheering] ensure max protein, 30 grams protein, 1 gram sugar and a protein blend to feed muscles up to 7 hours. ♪ you might know harbor freight for affordability. what you might not know is performance and durability goes right along with it. you see, we test. and then we test again. world-class engineering and rigorous testing to ensure our tools perform at the highest level and stand the test of time without testing your wallet.
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evacuating 15 junior high students from this burning bus. the flames started behind one of the rear wheels prompting this driver to quickly get the kids out of harm's way before the fire spread. no one was hurt and the cause of the fire is being investigated. the driver asked to remain anonymous. and questions are swirling as new mexico authorities probe the death of gene hackman. this, as investigators rule out carbon monoxide poisoning as the cause of death for hackman and his wife. matt finn is live with the latest on this in new mexico. matt, what can you tell us? >> well, griff, the possibilities are endless here. exactly what happened. this is the entrance to gene hackman's neighborhood. it's about a 10 to 15 minute drive outside of santa fe and once you get here to the entrance of his gated community, you've got another drive until you get to his actual house, so very clear
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that gene and his wife betsy wanted privacy and that's ultimately what they had because authorities now say they may have been dead nine or 10 days before they were discovered in their home on wednesday. now, the running theory this week was perhaps gene and betsy died from carbon monoxide poisoning, especially after one of gene's daughters said she suspected toxic fumes. but yesterday the pathologist ruled out carbon monoxide poisoning and pointed to evidence from hackman's pacemaker when he died. >> both individuals tested negative for carbon monoxide. an initial interrogation was conducted of mr. hackman's pacemaker. this rebuild that his last event was recorded on february 17th, 2025. i was advised that a more thorough investigation will be
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completed. >> so that february 17th date is when authorities are kind of agreeing was the likely day that gene hackman passed away. investigators are and doctors are likely going to be able to pull more data from the peace maker. gene was found on the floor in his mud room, sunglasses nearby. the responding officer says it seems like he suddenly had fallen, but the pathologist said that gene and his wife did not have injuries. and his wife was found in the bathroom with scattered pills on the counter top. the pills taken from the home were tylenol, thyroid and high blood pressure medications which one expert tells fox is not usually associated with an intentional overdose. and the sheriff says that gene and betsy did not have any cameras inside or outside of the home in this remote location and that would have greatly helped in this investigation. in one interview gene hackman
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ultimately left hollywood because a stress test showed he needed peace and quiet. griff: so many questions around this mysterious death. matt finn. thank you. health and human services secretary robert f. kennedy, jr. is calling for an end to the measles outbreak and he's pledging 2,000 doses of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine to help with the spread. and claiming the life of a child, making it the first measles fatality in the u.s. in a decade. coming up, federal workers are again asked to justify their work to doge and elon musk appears on joe rogan's podcast and explains why doge worries elected officials. >> our elected officials have
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very little power relative to the bureaucracy, until doge. so, doge is a threat to the bureaucracy. sore throat got your tongue? mucinex instasoothe sore throat medicated drops, uniquely formulated for rapid relief that lasts and lasts. that's my babyyy! try our new sugar-free cough drops. instasoooooothe!
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>> elon musk saturday down for a marathon podcast with joe rogan to talk about his bid to slash government spending which he says will save the country $100 billion per year. madeleine rivera is here with a three-hour highlights from that conversation. it must be difficult to choose certain sound bites from such a long sit-down. >> it definitely was a challenge, griff. in this conversation, elon musk slams the federal government saying some of its practices would never fly in some businesses and he's doubling down to cut costs which he says is worse than he thought. >> i did not think it would be as bad as this. look, the good news is that
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it's a target rich environment for saving money. >> musk once again took aim at usaid as more worker cleared their desks in the wake of employee and contract terminations and he called it a ponzi net unsustainable in the future. musk says that doge's actions are necessary to keep the u.s. from eventually going bankruptcy and some of those cuts are not mandatory, but he says it's what departments usually follow. democrats argue that's unconstitutional, saying that it's congress that has the power of the purse. >> there should be an up or down vote. in fact, everything that doge has found let's do an up or down vote on it, where people stand on defunding this on keeping this program. that's how it should happen. >> and told that they want more streamlined communication for doge, and doge faces questions over its transparency, a federal judge is ordering
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officials connected to doge in a lawsuit that blocks access to sensitive data bases and doge employees have to go through the same vetting process that other federal employees have to go through. also, there are reports that federal employees could get a second e-mail this weekend asking them to list their recent accomplishments. this time the e-mails will reportedly come from agencies, not the office of personnel management which could carry more teeth. griff: we shall see. maddie, thank you. >> you've got it. griff: all right. for more let's bring in today's political panel. with us ceo of compass strategies, luke ball and an analyst. thank you for being here. doge isn't slowing down and i don't know if you got to hear any insight from the elon musk,
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joe rogan podcast. he laid out what is happening and you've got the reality of the fact that what musk is doing out of executive branch, more than really congress has done in years and yet, it begs the question, because you have experience on the hill and on the house side. is it time for the house to catch up to what musk is doing or is musk allowed to be running loose despite democrats' anger? >> i don't think that musk is necessarily running loose. i think that the american people elected this because trump for months said if he were put into office he would sick elon musk loose on the federal government. and the mentality towards doge has been nothing short of beltway entitlement. if the federal government were a corporation it would have more legitimacy from some of the organizations for a long period of time. when you peel back the layers,
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you realize it looks more like enron than a better business bureau organization. so much waste, fraud and abuse. i don't think it's beneficial for the american people to have our tax dollars continuously pour into these entities in the federal government that seems to waste it all of the time. griff: the enron analogy is interesting. and i want to play for you, congressman rich mccormick of georgia, republican. you're hearing some actual members of congress on the republican side that are questioning what is happening in doge. here is rich mccormick. >> we have to be careful about the message. there are people that are republicans and people just good americans who work for the government that have been taken by surprise and they didn't have time to adapt and even though we may have to lay them off we shouldn't be celebrating. taken willy nilly. these are people with mortgages and children and house payments and all kinds of things. griff: ari, what do you make of that and will this ultimately,
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elon musk and doge cuts, become a problem when real people are losing real jobs? >> elon might have given a lot of money to the trump campaign, he got a nice little cushy appointment even though it's not an official appointment, but he's going to do a lot to help elect speaker of the house hakeem jeffries. that's what he's doing. griff: why? >> in less than two years, the midterms coming up. a third of the senate and entire house of representatives getting reelected and they have to stand reelection. there's a reason members elected members article one members the people who are protectors of the purse are worried about this. you've got 6,000 veterans and veterans families losing their jobs. you've got charge numbers of americans who don't live in the beltway, about 80% of federal programs and these employees are outside the washington district, the washington dc, maryland, virginia district. so, when you go to georgia, where congressman mccormick is from, when you go to my home district in southern california
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when you go to a lot of districts, democratic or republican, a republican party that's got a three or four-member majority in the house of representatives razor thin is going to have to worry about how people are going to react and people are going to lose their jobs and lose a lot of their benefits. we're talking critical benefits, these aren't just government handouts to people who don't need it, this is critical care. i don't think that luke would have taken the same position had he still been working on the house side. >> i would have. >> what do you say. >> when i go back to talk to people in wilmington, north carolina or people electing republican representatives, they say this is what i voted for. i understand in the short-term some federal jobs may go away because that's reinvested back in the economy and reinvested. >> how so? how reinvested? >> it's reinvested into the taxpayers' wallets. when you cut loose people in charge of nuclear watch dogs. >> those people--
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>> let me finish, how do you reinvestor when you get rid of the watch dogs who make sure ebola doesn't come to the country. i'm a center democrat, i like to get rid of the waste and congress wouldn't have done it in a million years because they have to get reelected. what elon is doing is a little reckless, i want some transparency and slowly. the founding fathers did a great law because they did it so fast. griff: we will see about that. elon moving fast. breaking moments ago, ukrainian president zelenskyy at 10 downing street met by prime minister keir starmer and you can see him walking up to 10 downing and meeting prime minister starmer here. he's going to sit down and start talking. of course, the prime minister's first question is what happened yesterday in the oval office and perhaps he will ask him,
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why didn't you just get the deal done? what did it turn into the contentious showdown just quickly because we're a little short on time, but luke, your thoughts on what happened in the oval office yesterday and where this goes? >> two things can be true here. number one, you can hate what putin has done to ukraine and zelenskyy had the diplomacy of a bowling ball. we have to recognize that zelenskyy is trying to represent the interests of the ukrainian people, but trump is coming to the table and saying, look, there was no table before i came into office. biden was blowing up with zelenskyy on the phone during his administration because zelenskyy was ungrateful for the funds sent over to him and my question is how do we stop world war iii. how do we get to a point where we make sure there's peace around the world and that the united states is instrumental in that, i believe as it stands right now, zelenskyy will not come to the table unless he's given everything he wants and
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more and i don't believe that's realistic. griff: see what happens. >> he was wasn't ungrateful, tens of times he has thanked the american people many, many times. we cannot lead if we treat our allies like this, canada, u.k., european union, and every democratic ally is angry with us, at us. and you're right people voted for this, eggs to come down, they didn't want chicken foreign policy in the white house, this is leading from behind. i was critical of biden because of inaction. this is not just misfeasance, this is malfeasance and lying down the carpet for putin. >> or-- >> and you set me up and we are going to talk eggs and we've got the minister of public safety from canada here and we'll talk about the tariffs. tuesday is going to be a big
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day. thank you, great discussion as always. >> it's common sense to acknowledge the obvious biological differences between men and women, in fact, it's necessary to secure genuine equal protection for women and girls. griff: in a move that sparked protests in the state capitol, governor kim reynolds changed clears up a conflict of laws keeping transgender people out of women's restrooms and locker rooms and blocking participation in women's sports. it goes into effect july 1st. >> jewish students speaking out after a group of pro palestinian protesters ak pied a building at barnard college's
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manhattan campus this week, cla shalling with staff and sending one employee to the hospital. the protesters were demanding th the-- history course in january. and a fox news alert. ukrainian president zelenskyy meeting with prime minister keir starmer of the u.k., this following that heated exchange. let's listen in now and hear what they're saying. >> thank you very much, keir, prime minister, happy to be here and i saw a lot of people and i want to thank you, the people of the united kingdom, such big support from the very beginning of this war, thank you, your team, and i'm very happy that his majesty the king accepted mine tomorrow and thankful you organized great summit for tomorrow and we're
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very happy in ukraine that we have such -- we sign with you historic document, yeah, yeah, we have only with you such documents, with united kingdom so we're happy and we come to your support and really, really, really happy that we have such. thank you. >> thank you. >> all right. that's the greatest. as you see, president zelenskyy with ukraine prime minister keir starmer. we'll bring you more as we continue to follow that overseas. meanwhile, a notorious mexican drug lord is arraigned in brooklyn after a surprise visit to the united states. we'll tell you more coming up next.
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interstate 40, which connects the state to tennessee has partially reopened five months after hurricane helene. the road remains limited to one lane in each direction, as crews continue repairs on the eastbound side of the freeway, much needed update. mexico extraditing nearly 30 high-level cartel members to the u.s. this week at the trump administration's request. mexico is staring down tariffs as they're cutting down on production. >> the handover of the cartel members from mexico is being considered an early sign of more cooperation from our southern neighbor in the war on drugs. among those extradited, an infamous drug lord, raphael
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quintero, and the surprise extradition brought 29 cartel members to eight different u.s. cities to face charges. quintero is the founder of the notorious sinaloa cartel and has been on the fbi wanted list with a $20 million bounty on his head. he was previously convicted in 1985 of character straighting the torturing and killing of undercover agent. he served 28 years in prison over the murder and released when a court overturned his sentence in the killing. he denied involvement in the death, but was recaptured for returning to drug trafficking. for past five years quintero had u.s. drug trafficking charges hanging over his head. >> you can never kill a dea agent and you will never get
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away with it. we will never allow that to happen and we will never forget. >> his widow, mico, said she's been waiting for this day for 40 years. so in that statement, in that interview, she said that she hopes he never leaves jail because he got to live his life and her late husband did not. i want to mention, griff, that others extradited on thursday include people from five of the six organized crime groups labeled foreign terrorist organizations by the white house earlier this month. the cartel members face life in prison or the death penalty if convicted. back to you. griff: yeah, and you know, i apologize for our viewers. that sound bite didn't play from kiki camreno.
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>> breaking news, as former new york governor andrew cuomo officially announces a run for new york city mayor, making the announcement on x, putting it out there. of course, you will recall that cuomo was the governor of new york from 2011-2021, resigning amid sexual harassment allegations. we shall see where this goes. he is the next-- second person in the mayor's race bid. curtis sliwa already in it as well. it's interesting to see that andrew cuomo making a foray back into politics. we'll continue to follow this. >> is there, from the talks with canada and mexico so far, are you not seeing the progress
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that you wanted in order to-- >> i don't see it at all. no, not on drugs. we've done a great job, if you look at tom homan, he's been incredible and kristi, they've done a great job in terms of the border, but the drugs continue to pour into our country killing hundreds of thousands of people. griff: president trump threatening tariffs on canada and mexico, an additional tax on china for curbing the flow of fentanyl into the u.s. and we're honored to have the public safety minister. mr. minister, we're thankful you're here, and you're sort of like the kristi noem of canada. and tariffs on canada could be as early as tuesday and canada says you're doing a lot to crack down on the border which president trump has called for. you recently appointed a national canadian border--
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or fentanyl czar to try and bring things down. tell us what is being done? what do you want the administration to know that's been done to help you perhaps persuade the president not to bring the tariffs? >> thank you for having me, first of all, griff. very kind of you. we do have a fentanyl crisis, as does the united states. and i want to commend the president for raising his concerns about this crisis and taking the action he's been taking. we have been accelerating our investments in the border. we've brought a whole series of measures to strengthen that border. it's a strong border, but we want to make it stronger. we're sharing just in time information between the united states and canadian border and we have a fentanyl czar to put together moving pieces. last week we criminalized our cartels and applied to them a terrorist ranking in our system as well, and that led to immediate arrests. so we're seeing some very, very, very interesting early
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developments to show that these measures just in time sharing of information with our american counterparts, the cartels and many others are having quite an effect. griff: and mr. minister, you had the announcement just this week of a national fentanyl sprint taking thousands, tens of thousands of pounds of pills, and tell us what the accomplishments you're seeing recently. two of our agencies, canada border services agency and your cbp and royal canadian mounted police have come together, two different spheres, multi-modal, some postal other things, and the fentanyl sprint yielded a large weapons cache and drugs. so, altogether, we're very much accelerating and upping our game, griff. we're doing it jointly. one thing we know for sure, this fentanyl crisis is in both of our countries and we have to
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address this together why we were here all week meeting with legislators and officials in the white house and beyond to share progress on the border. griff: bottom line, mr. minister, how concerned are you that this isn't enough for the trump administration and that these tariffs may go forward. >> look, we can only control what we can control. the president is going to make his decision, respect that, but we're working very hard on the border and the fentanyl crisis. i think it's important for americans to remember it's an opportunity for us to of a continental security approach. this is important for our future. it's a rough and tumble world out there. we're together. canada and united states have been there together for over 150 years. we think it's important to keep that relationship strong. griff: so canada's cracking down. you're taking a page from the trump administration and designating cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. was it president trump's really push that moved canada in this direction? >> we were well underway, but there's no doubt that president trump's priority in this area
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helped accelerate a number of our investments. we think it's the right thing to do because like you, it's a scourge and it's a tragedy for too many canadian families and american families. griff: mr. mcguinty. thank you, we've got to pay some bills, coming up, reaction from both sides of the aisle for the trump-zelenskyy face-off and more. fox news continues next. and what matters most to them matters most to us. it's no wonder we have a 4.9 out of five client satisfaction rating. ameriprise financial.
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