tv Fox News at Night FOX News March 7, 2025 8:00pm-9:00pm PST
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los angeles and this is america's late news, "fox news at night". breaking tonight, 1 police officer dead, another injured after sources tell fox news that a 14-year-old boy fired 29 shots in new work, new jersey. the suspect reportedly was taken into custody. we are working to confirm the details of what exactly led to the conflict. we will keep you updated on the breaking news throughout the hour. plus this... >> it's time to stop this madness, it's time to hold the killing, it's time to end the senseless war. if you want to end wars, you have to talk to both sides. >> trace: president trump pursuing -- and multiple war-torn regions, indicating today he wants a new agreement with iran to prevent them from getting a nuclear weapon. >> there will be interesting days ahead, that's all i can tell you. we are down to final strokes with iran, at final moments. we can't let them have a nuclear
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weapon. >> trace: trump putting pressure on putin, telling both russia and ukraine to get to the table before it's too late. >> they are bombing the hell out of them right now and i put a statement and a very drunk statement, you can't do that. we are trying to help them -- very strong statement -- ukraine has to get the job done. >> trace: now to the portal -- border battle where kristi noem says two people in her department are facing prison time for allegedly leaking information about i.c.e. rates. and the cause of death for oscar-winning actor jean hackman and his wife has now been revealed. we will have breaking information on that in moments but we begin with senior national correspondent kevin corke live in dc with trump's new messaging to iran and russia. good evening. >> reporter: good evening, happy friday. to quote the late great monty hall, let's make a deal. that appears to be president trump's position on russia, iran and ukraine for that matter. the oval office chat today, the
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president questioned whether ukraine, you know, war-torn and in his words with no cards to play, whatever make a deal to end the war. he's pushing them. in fact he went so far as to suggest that dealing with russia might be even easier, though he threatened them with sanctions if they don't come to the table. he also warned iran time was running out to make a decision about it's nuclear future, suggesting he's open to talk but failure could spell real trouble for the regime. meantime on tariffs, a president warned that in addition to reciprocal levies on all global trading partners in april, canada in particular could face additional tariffs much sooner should it continue with it's plan to hit the u.s. with counter tariffs related to the first wave from washington. as for d.o.g.e., the ongoing cuts to the ranks of government workers, that continues, though the president rejected today suggestions that elon musk and secretary of state marco rubio had a clash at a cabinet meeting
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over cuts and best practices, though he did acknowledge, trace, disagreements are part of the process when it comes to, you know, getting things right. >> trace: big part of the process. kevin corke live in dc, thank you. let's bring in former trump campaign deputy communications director caroline sunshine and former la g.o.p. vise chair daily wire actor siaka massaquoi. thank you for coming on. caroline, i want to put this up, "the new york times". elon musk versus rubio. going on to read, simmering anger at the billionaires unchecked power spilled out in a remarkable cabinet room meeting. the president quickly moved to rain in mr. musk but the president, the one who moved into rain in mr. musk said it never happened. watch. >> mr. president, since you last spoke about it yesterday, some details have come out about your cabinet meeting with elon musk and some clashes potentially between secretary rubio.
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>> no clash, i was there. you are not supposed to be asking that question because we are talking about the world cup. elon gets along great with marco and they are doing a fantastic job. >> trace: but you know the media can't wait to bring up trouble. the sources tell me there was a clash. >> obviously i was not in the room and neither were the people who wrote that article or any of their anonymous sources so i don't think it's surprising to see this lack of journalism integrity coming up of "the new york times". i think they would have been smart to take a page from "the washington post" who jeff bezos recently said we are going to redirect our opinion pages to focus more on things that the american people care about. clearly "new york times" has not learned the lesson but i think this peace was obviously intended to paint negative picture of the administration, make it look chaotic and there's already back -- in fighting. i think they failed to do that because anyone who knows
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president trump leadership style knows that if any of that did happen, actually i think one of his best qualities as a leader is letting his top officials debate and have differences and let the best idea win. that's what president lincoln had. >> trace: robust debate is what he is so in favor of. fox news, the headline reads, d.o.g.e. waste, government paying for idle accounts. d.o.g.e. says government paying for 11,000 plus adobe acrobat licenses with zero users plus more idle accounts and now let's go to the d.o.g.e. tracker, the famous one. here it is. 105 billion in savings so far. 10,400 plus total initiatives. it sounds to me like a lot of pushback against d.o.g.e. everybody wants them to be fighting elon and everybody else. but they have accomplished a bunch in a short amount of time. >> you know, it goes to show how successful they are, that they have to drum up a story of even
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if something happened, it's like that's normal, you have big time ceo who's used to running his own company in making his own calls and you also have a guy in marco rubio who's been in politics his entire career and he's used to moving in a certain way. if this is all they have, it tells me even more that man, the waste and fraud that they are going to continue to find is scaring the heck out of these people and i'm here for it. i love it. >> trace: it is a waste and fraud of ink and paper in a lot of places around the country. meantime fox news writes the following here, asked to government watchdog says trump had a right to fire their going on to say trump has the right to fire. one of the governments watchdogs fired by trump not only declined to sue him but filed a brief, an amicus brief supporting the administration's ability to terminate his role. not only did he not take legal action, he's out saying i mean i know when i have the right to be
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fired. >> it's pretty convenient that most of the liberal mainstream media and democrats are silent on this case a cousin doesn't fit the narrative that d.o.g.e. has been a constitutional crisis, the president trump is a dictator. this is in opposition to that. the president, i had the honor of serving president trump's white house and when you are there you remember that you are there to serve at the pleasure of the president. it's an honor and a privilege and it can be taken back at any time. president trump is in the right here legally i think periods right to do this is protected under article two of the constitution, supreme court precedent and i think it's the inspector general act of 1978, recently amended in 2022 by, this was when joe biden was in office, to say you can do this. >> trace: there you go. you did your homework. i want to play the sound bite quickly. this is the president talking with -- erring on sunday. >> why did you rollback or put a pause into some of the tariffs
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until april second great. >> because i wanted to help mexico and canada to a certain extent. we are a big country and they do a lot of their business with us, whereas in our case it's much less significant. we do very little with canada by comparison. and i wanted to help the american carmakers until april second. april second it becomes reciprocal. what they charge us, we charge them. >> trace: i have to go but you think it's a good idea for the president to pause the tariffs? >> i think it was to move it back a bit because it showed initially that he was serious and he gave them, he's given them time to get their act together. we see how serious they are. if they are not, april second, let's go. it's on them now and he gave them a little bit of space so now you can't keep saying he's a dictator, hitler, all this stuff, he's very magnanimous. >> trace: but they will still keep saying it, we all know that. thank you guys, thank you both.
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they have lost such credibility. frankly what nicole wallace said, i've never been a fan of hers. and she's not very talented. what she said the other day about that young man is disgraceful, she should be forced to resign. and rachel maddow should be forced to resign. nobody watches her anyway. it's not possible they pay her as much as i here. certainly she's lost all credibility, both of them. what they said the other day, they should be forced to resign. >> trace: new tv ratings are out showing president trump was onto something when he talked about msnbc host nicole wallace and her shocking response to a 13-year-old boy honored at the presidents joint address to congress. let's bring in political strategist and podcast host tiffany marie brannon along with district media group president beverly hallberg. thank you for coming on. tiffany, nicole, he's right, nicole wallace, the numbers just
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kind of -- it was a mistake. you go after it and you are so eager that you have to say something about, you know, the 13-year-old boy. you just have to leave it alone, say good for him, good for the kid. instead you have to try to hit trump and in hitting trump you do yourself a disservice. >> we've seen that she's a desperate woman who is making a very poor play on her show. to also add insult to injury, she apparently does not know the definition of the word terminal. d.j. has terminal brain cancer, he's not going to grow up to be a 95 girl policeman who can be used as some sort of politicized weapon example to try to insult trump. this is a child, a tragedy. for her to do that shows exactly why she's bailing as a journalist. >> trace: not reading the room and it's sad. you think somebody -- the democratic party is not getting good advice. these people at msnbc are not getting good advice. california congressman posted this on x, jim barrett a flight
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attendant politely chased me down in chicago airport laying ",sir,, i am a democrat but the way the party behaved was embarrassing, made us look heartless, i don't care who is up there, you stand for the boy with cancer, the more rational and get your act together." he's embarrassed, the party is embarrassed because there's a lack of leadership. your thoughts? >> this democrat is exactly right and i know not just as i was watching d.j. daniel, not just be honored but also become a secret service agent, i was crying. i think a lot of people were. i stood up and cheered myself. this isn't hard. even if democrats planned to stay in their seats, how can you not be moved by that moment? it's been interesting, you hear some prominent democrats on the airwaves talking about democrats being in declined, not being able to find their way out of this. they are at a fork in the road and they need to decide whether or not it's going to be hating trump all the time or they are going to come to the table with
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ideas and maybe even compromise and work with him. >> trace: it's amazing to me. i was watching the view, scanning some of the sound bites, joy behar and the view, they are back to, if you can believe it, they are back to calling trump supporters trash. watch this. >> my friend is a trump supporter. i won't give them a kidney. the thing about it is it's not just about politics, it's about morality, ethics, cruelty, discrimination. [applause] >> those are personal human values. >> trace: you have no morals, no ethics and you are cruel if you are a trump supporter, and they were applauding in the audience there. >> because, you know, let's play the same old tune we've been playing for the last 4-8 years, that will really help us as we are failing on the view. joy behar, how i love you. you see this from them and you see it in the fact that they are incapable of recognizing that democrats did not stand up for
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women and children, but we are the bad guys. >> trace: it's amazing to me that in all the democratic stuff, the screw ups, people are like it's embarrassing but nobody said they are cruel and they have no morals. it's uncalled for. beverly, here's the democrats, i guess it's the greatest hits of the week. we should just have a drumroll for this, here are the greatest hits of the week. watch. >> choose your character. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [singing] >> [bleep] that ain't true. >> [bleep] that ain't true. >> scientists, doctors, students, share in the hopes for a much brighter day. >> trace: the last one is francis collins.
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pretty good. but what do you think of that? 20 seconds for you. >> i don't think they will be able to sing their way out of the problem they find themselves in but keep on with these videos, he putting these dance videos out there where they are choosing their fighter. they are not going to win. the more we cringe, the more the republicans get ahead and trump is definitely in the winning sea right now and democrats have lost their way. >> trace: tiffany marie brannon, beverly hallberg, good analysis, thank you both. the trump administration cutting more than $400 million in federal funding from columbia university over the university's failure to protect students from anti-semitism on campus. chanley painter is live in new york city with the breakdown. >> reporter: the $400 million it cut are just the beginning according to an announcement by the multiagency task force reviewing columbia university's grant funds. all due to "the schools
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continued in action in the face of persistent harassment of jewish students." columbia currently holds more than $5 billion in federal grant commitments. in a statement the university is pledging to work with the government to restore it's funding, saying they "understand how serious this announcement is and are committed to combating anti-semitism." earlier this week president trump warned schools and universities to take action to stop illegal protests on campuses or lose federal funding. protesters were arrested at barnard college, an affiliate of columbia, after pro-palestinian agitators attempted to take over a campus library. columbia confirming four of it's students are now suspended and earlier today the secretary of education had a productive meeting with the university's interim president. >> trace: chanley painter live in new york, thank you. ♪ ♪
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the "fox news @ night" common sense department thinks it's about time columbia university is facing consequences for failing to protect students from anti-semitism on campus. the trump administration is now canceling $400 million in federal funding to columbia. common sense understands that columbia is still going to make payroll, considering it has a 14 billion-dollar endowment, but along with the fort -- 400 million, another 5 billion in federal grant money is also under review. maybe that's why columbia is rattled. in fact columbia is so rattled it's now issuing a statement saying the university is "committed to combating anti-semitism and ensuring the safety and well-being of our students." so for 18 months, students have been subjected to anti-semitism, intimidation, physical abuse, and now columbia is offering protection? the school has had dozens of
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opportunities to make it right yet trump had to make them pay for columbia to make it right. common sense thanks that's wrong. remember, anti-semitic protesters a set a tent city, they occupied historic holes and when columbia finally expelled the instigators, the radical faculty pushed back and got them reinstated. allowing them to graduate. common sense thanks this will cost columbia dearly, but forget the dollars, this is already cost columbia dearly. without let's bring in the former secretary of education, the nation's first drug czar and the man we like to call the smartest man in the room, bill bennett. always great to have you on the show. i want to begin with the $400 million that the administration, trump administration is taking away from columbia university. i know they still have 14.3 billion-dollar endowment but
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$400 million for, you know, anti-semitism is a pretty big hit. >> yeah well it is a big hit and don't you know they feel it. i will be very surprised if they don't react. you know, show me the money. when the money is being withdrawn, my guess is they will act. by the way, in terms of numbers, the 10-year commitment to columbia from the federal government is $5 billion. with a b. that commitment can be withdrawn if it's in violation of federal law such as civil rights violations, which is what we are talking about here. >> trace: it seems to me that columbia is putting out some of these notices saying they would like to have some conversations with the administration, that they would like to rectify this. do you think there's away, a road back for that? >> maybe. they are late though. how long have we've been watching this? a very long time. i think they are in violation and i think they should pay a penalty so they never do it
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again and the other universities may learn from it. >> trace: we keep talking again and again about maybe the end of the education department. it might go away and you have, you know, this idea that it might take months, it might take weeks, what do you think about that? >> we just talked about an example where the federal government is empowered. here the administration has limitations. the department of education was created by federal legislation. maybe do away with something called the department but you can't do away with the functions that it's performing, unless you revamp them, change their heart and soul, their substance. but you still have to do those things like aid to poor children to go to school. you can voucher rise that. keep the grants for poor kids for college. other programs you can change.
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but to change and get rid of the department altogether requires 60 votes for the filibuster. you probably can't get it. >> trace: lastly i want to talk about the new test score labels. seeking positivity, ditching the word standard for things like below basic. what's going on? how about just teach my kid to read and write. >> we ought to call things what they are. do you remember the f? i don't imagine you ever got any, you were a quarterback, but some of us based these in our careers. it's a reminder that you have to get your act together. to simply say, you know, not great or not up to par, soon they will be calling below basic, which is what the national assessment calls it. just short of excellent. that would not be an accurate description. let's use words in a meaningful way and the way they were intended to be used. >> trace: bill bennett, great to have you on as always, thank
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you. >> thank you, my pleasure. >> trace: breaking tonight, the cause of death finally revealed per gene hackman and his wife. the breaking details on that coming up, plus president trump urging russia and ukraine to come to the table now before it is too late. and later in the nightcap, democratic senator says she can't embrace trump's popular ideas because he's mean. what do you think about senators ignoring good ideas because they don't like the person who came up with the ideas? let us know x and instagram @tracegallagher, we will read your responses in the nightcap. now for our friday q&a, submit a question or comment about "fox news at night" to my socials, @tracegallagher and we will answer them later in the show. meantime, we will be right back. ♪ ♪ when i posted on tiktok that went from maybe a few hundred people knowing about my product to millions. if it was not for tiktok, i can truthfully say
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♪ ♪ >> trace: breaking tonight, one police officer killed, another injured in a shooting in newark, new jersey. the shooting happened we are told just after 6:30 p.m. and report say a suspect was also shot at the scene where a hand gun was also recovered. the suspect we are told fired about 29 shots and is just 14 years old. as the information comes in on this, we will bring it to you throughout the show. meantime in his pursuit of peace in eastern europe, the president is getting tough with russia following their major attack on ukraine's energy infrastructure. christina coleman is live with details on the new information. >> reporter: that's right, president trump wrote on truth social "based on the fact that russia is absolutely pounding ukraine on the battlefield right now, i am strongly considering large-scale banking sanctions,
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sanctions and tariffs on russia until a cease-fire and final settlement agreement on piece is reached. to russia and ukraine, it to the table right now before it's too late." the overnight attack comes days after the u.s. suspended military intelligence and eight to ukraine in an effort to get their country to reach a peace deal with russia. today a reporter asked trump if he thought vladimir putin is taking advantage of this pause in military aid and intelligence. here's trump's response. >> i actually think he's doing what anybody else would do. i think he's -- i think he wants to get it stopped and settled. >> reporter: national security advisor mike waltz weighed in. >> the president has been crystal-clear and he's been clear to all sides of the fighting has to stop. both sides need to get to the table. >> reporter: this war has gone on for too long, for more than three years now at this point. >> trace: christina, thank you. former u.s. attorney for violent
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crime and heritage foundation senior fellow cully stimson along with atlanta council senior fellow ariel cohen. i want to play some sound. this is the president on whether he believes that vladimir putin wants peace. >> president putin is bombing ukraine. do you still believe him when he says he wants peace? >> i believe him. i believe him. i think we are doing very well with russia. but right now they are bombing the hell out of ukraine and ukraine -- and finding it more difficult frankly to deal with ukraine. they don't have the cards. they don't have the cards. >> trace: and yet if you go on you have the president saying that he wants to implement sanctions on russia. what do you think of this? >> i think that putin is the aggressor. this is not only about ukraine, this is also about the balance of power in europe and therefore the balance of power in the
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eastern hemisphere. this is putin trying to tilt the balance of power against the united states in favor of russia and russia is a part of an anti-western coalition with china, iran and north korea. >> trace: we are still talking about the subject of russia ukraine peace. national security advisor mike waltz was talking about the peace talks in saudi arabia when he mentioned this... >> the president has been crystal-clear and he's been clear to all sides, the fighting has to stop, both sides need to get to the table. secretary rubio, myself and ukrainian delegation will be meeting in saudi arabia next week to get these talks back on track, it's a cease-fire in place and drive peace home. >> trace: but then you read what vladimir putin wants, he wants security guarantees just like zelenskyy.
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he also wants to maintain, keep the land they have already taken. what do you think about these negotiations next week? >> the amazing thing to me is that the critics of the way this has been handled did not say much when it came to biden and european leaders, feckless, nonpushing to get a deal done and end the war. so when you step back and think about trump's negotiating strategy here, he engages in a push pull to both parties. he's pushing putin, he's threatening putin and yet he's saying he has the cards. he's pushing zelenskyy and yet he gives him an oval office visit. he's talking to him about how america can secure them by doing the rare earth mineral deal and so there's a push pull aspect here. he's ran on this, he's trying to deliver on this and interestingly enough, the e.u. is stepping up defense spending now because of this. things are starting to fall into place hopefully. >> trace: it's interesting
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because saying there's this push and pull, do you see an appetite on all sides for this thing, for this war to end? >> the ukrainians cannot indefinitely fight russia especially when the united states yanked our intelligence support and our military supplies. it will take the europeans a long time to build up their own industrial base of their military and supply ukraine. i hope and pray it will happen soon. i doubt it. in the meantime, putin is grabbing as much territory as he can in ukraine. it's not going well for russia. russia lost 700,000 killed and wounded in this war in three years and it -- only took 20% of ukraine when they intended to take keep in three days. biden did not supply enough weapons and support for ukraine
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to win against russia. >> trace: i hear you and i've got to go but i want to get -- let me just get cully stimson his take on this, talking about iran. trump saying iran is literally -- they could square a deal on this nuclear weapon deal over iran, what do you think about that, is that going to happen? >> i hope so. it's an interesting overture. we keep hearing and we kept hearing during trump's first term and all throughout biden's that they are a month away, two weeks away, a week away from break out and so i think this is an act of exquisite diplomacy to try to get them to realize that this madness has to stop. the world cannot tolerate a nuclear armed iran. we will see whether he can avoid this. >> trace: cully stimson, ariel cohen, thank you. coming up, we finally know what happened to gene hackman and his wife. the cause of death has been revealed and it's not what many people thought.
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♪ ♪ >> trace: more then a week after their bodies were discovered in their new mexico home, medicals -- medical doctors have revealed were killed gene hackman and his wife betsy arakawa. back to christina coleman with new information. what are we learning? >> reporter: we've got a lot of answers tonight. authorities determine betsy arakawa likely died a week before her husband. they determined she died of a rare respiratory illness caused by viruses transmitted to humans through contact with infected rodents. the sentence can be deadly for people -- symptoms -- >> they can transition into that pulmonary phase where they have fluid in their lungs and around their lungs and at that point a person can die very quickly. within 24-48 hours roughly speaking without medical
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treatment. it's not uncommon to find someone down on the floor as part of a terminal collapse, so to speak. that may very well have been what happened. >> reporter: authorities say 95-year-old gene hackman likely died a week after his wife on february 18th. >> he was an advanced state of alzheimer's and it's quite possible that he was not aware that she was diseased. he was in a poor state of health. significant heart disease and i think ultimately that is what resulted in his death. >> reporter: authorities have not yet determined what caused one of their dogs to dive. >> trace: christina coleman, thank you. we have identified two leakers of information at the department of homeland security who have been telling individuals about our operations and putting law enforcement lives in jeopardy. we plan to prosecute these two individuals and hold them
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accountable for what they've done. we are going to continue to do all that we can to keep america safe. >> trace: homeland security secretary indicating she is serious about shutting down leaks from her department when it comes to immigration enforcement operations. let's bring in marine corps veteran kate monroe along with former dhs deputy assistant secretary jonathan fahey. thank you for coming on. these are people that are supposed to protect people. homeland security, right, they are supposed to protect people, not in danger americans over some ideology. >> i was an intelligence in the marine corps and that something i never would've thought to do but we have so many enemies within. if you look at everything that's going on in the government, every single department has people like this in it. we need to get them out, we need to weed our garden better and have people who stand for our own national security and sovereignty. >> trace: what kind of i find remarkable is the fact that these are people who work for
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the department of homeland security and they know that leaking this information can put their colleagues, and put agents in jeopardy. >> that's what is so shocking and shameful about this. they could put their colleagues in jeopardy, they put members of the public in jeopardy and the harm that they caused by these leaks still exists because people may have gotten away because of this and they may still put law enforcement agents in harm, so they certainly deserve to be prosecuted to the fullest they can and held accountable not only for them but also to send a message that this will not be tolerated anymore. >> trace: meantime colorado has tried months may be years they've tried to knock down this whole theme that venezuelans are causing chaos and terrorizing apartment buildings in colorado but now the colorado district attorney put that to rest by saying the following, watch. >> the truth is, venezuelan gangs did take over the running of about 2-3 different apartment
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complexes. it seems like one would be too many but it was 2-3 so to suggest this is not an issue is fake. it's a giant issue, a growing issue and this sort of ignorance is bliss approach to the sharing of information with i.c.e. only serves to make us less safe. >> trace: again you had these colorado politicians to this day saying no, that was -- that was overblown, that was just trump. it was not, we went in and we talked to people in these people said yeah, they are terrorizing us and yet that's the problem. >> the truth is, the left has been lying to us for years. just recently you saw nine young people get slain in mexico, brutally by the cartel. these are the type of people we lead into our country that are now occupying apartment buildings in colorado. enough is enough. we have to go until the work is done and get all of these people out of our country immediately. >> trace: yet they will go to the ends of the earth to protect them including leaking because they just well.
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it has nothing to do with safety but everything to do with this leftist far left ideology, they don't care about the americans but they desperately care about the people who are here illegally. i want to play this side-by-side because it's kind of interesting because on the right-hand side is what the border looks like today, the left-hand side you can see this is in december of 2023. so, you know, a year and a half ago and it's unbelievable because they were literally posing for the cameras and now on the right-hand side, that's what the border looks like, there's nobody there. the people who do come don't pose for the cameras, they hide from the cameras because they know they will be turned back around. you talk about a difference, a stark difference in presidential leadership. that is it right there. >> you said it great. the difference is presidential leadership because nothing else has been done in terms of congress or anything else in president trump has ended this which goes to prove the point
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that a lot of us have been making all along, that the biden administration was doing this intentionally, which makes it even more shameful and shocking when you think of the gang coming over, you think of lakin riley, all of it could have been prevented. right now they are preventing the next people coming in from killing young innocent americans. >> trace: yeah. jonathan fahey, kate monroe, thank you both. meantime one senator dismissing trumps popular ideas because of his demeanor. what do you think about your elected representatives ignoring good ideas because they don't like the person who came up with the good idea? let us know x and instagram at -- @tracegallagher, we are back with the nightcap crew, which includes you. but first to our friday u.n. day. here we go. cathy says if you could choose a song to play every time you enter a room, what would it be? like my walk off. i like this. i'm kind of a led zeppelin fan so i would go with ramble on because it's a theme in my life. you get up and go to the next
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place in the next. william, how much time does it take to coordinate the guest lineup? i have to tell you, our guest bookers are great but it takes more then a day, sometimes several. brendan, alina, you've got johanna, gillian, and i'm telling you they are pretty good at this. bath says, tell the rabbi i always love his contributions, all of your regulars and guests are great. so i might a regular viewer. the rabbi appreciates that. we will tell him next time. doctor dan says who is julie? her segments are fabulous but she's more mysterious than batman. who is this jilly person you keep talking about? she's actually right there, the senior producer of the show. she is our jilly d.o.g.e. police leader. she's on great work on that as has the entire "fox news at night" team. that's a control room in washington, dc. we are in los angeles, they are in dc pushing all the buttons.
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personal or professional. kirsten gillibrand says she can't embrace trumps popular ideas because he's mean. what you think about senators ignoring good ideas because they don't like the person who came up with the good ideas, chanley painter? >> be professional. senators are elected to represent their constituents best interests, not to make choices based on their own personal vendettas. >> trace: very true. kevin corke. >> i've been punched in the face plenty of times, grow up, deal with it, go with the best policies. don't get caught up in personality. >> trace: and we are outnumbered. just you and me against the world. here we go. beverly hallberg. >> i think these are unhelpful ways to determine policy but if these are the new rules, democrats have to be careful because americans thought it was mean they did not stand for d.j. daniel. >> trace: when they talk about ousmane in this whole equation. tiffany.
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>> i think at this point we really see that they are children throwing temper tantrums when they are being voted into serve the american people. i think we should get some adults who will serve the public. >> trace: kate. >> i agree. what a bunch of children. we saw that at the state of the union where they would not stand for the little kid. what do you stand for? grow up. >> trace: the families, it was kind of sad. caroline sunshine. >> i'm tired of this. it's b.s. it is, total b.s. >> trace: broken system. >> broken system, thank you. the democrats need to get some new material. they have jumped the shark. >> trace: a lot of people even democrats were like that was a bad week for them. we asked what you think, dock says chanley painter -- sorry, we were going -- says maybe
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democrats just need to start bringing emotional support animals to sessions. jim says this is how you become a former congresswoman. -- says that seems mean. phil says exactly why they lost the last election. k says prideful, i've been there, i thought he was rude but then i saw what he did for our country. okay. and -- says they need to be voted out. paul says that is called ignorance and selfishness, they are in the office for the people. good point. sean wraps it up saying i have disagreed with potus, trump's personal life, however i would never let that minimize respect for his brilliant ideas. and there you go, friday night, everybody was here and thank you for joining the nightcap. thank you for watching america's late news, "fox news at night". i'm trace gallagher in los angeles, have a great weekend, we will see you right back here again on monday night. ♪comiishe ♪ wash flies through 99% of grease and grime in half the time. yeah, it absorbs grease five times faster.
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