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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  March 10, 2025 6:00am-7:01am PDT

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when i took the tap it away. as a psychiatrist i said i have to do better. you don't want the becoming addicted because they do what we do. they see us on our phones, they want to be on phones. >> really hard though. what you think about video games? some have little consoles or nintendo switch? >> video games are also really immersive. the more seamless it is, the more interactive it is, the more habit-forming. you want to limit your time on any screens for children. make sure they are getting nature, make sure they are in the world talking to other kids. you want to make sure they are developing as total human beings because the brain doesn't really form until 25. that's a lot of time they could be learning and soaking up positive things. >> i've also heard -- i found as a parent playdates are good. than they are playing with dolls, playing with toys. thank you so much. pick up her book, called high-functioning. things for coming by. >> thanks for having me. >> thank you. have a good day. we will see you tomorrow. ♪ ♪ >> bill: thank you ainsly. good morning everyone.
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the trump administration launching a crackdown on anti-semitism, and it starts at one of america's top universities. that's where we start today. kolby had a great weekend. i bill hamrick at good morning. we sprang forward this weekend. >> yes wedin. >> bill: how was that for you? >> dana: no problem. have to get up, pace herself, get outside to reset yourself. >> how few manual clocks you have in the house any more. >> i have one. and i did it. now after six months, might microwave at home will be corre. i couldn't figure it out for the longest time. but there is more important things then that this weekend. ice age interesting a palestinian resident from columbia. he led the protest a plunge the campus in the chaos. [chanting] >> bill: that was the action from a year ago, and kalil's attorney says that i.c.e.
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arrested him on orders from the u.s. department of state. secretary of state marco rubio saying the department will be revoking the visas and green cards of hamas supporters so that they can be deported. >> dana: fortunate this morning, special envoy to the middle east steve witkoff is on deck. first to alexis mcadams live from columbia university in new york city. goodman, alexis. >> reporter: good morning. after months of protesting, mahmoud kalil is no longer on colobia's campus with his megaphone. he is behind bars in i.c.e. custody. take a look here. we didn't have to look far to find the video of kalil because he's been talking on campus to the media as far back as april. key was one of the leaders of the pro-palestinian protests on this ivy league campus. key also helped set up the gaza solidarity encampment, remember that? all of the tents that led to a lot of arrests at columbia. explaining the group would not stop until they divest from israel. speaking here about what he says was his right to protest.
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>> what we know, all students on u.s. colleges in the u.s., they have the right of freedom of expression. >> reporter: he was one that did not cover his face, stouffville 30s knew who he was. student groups posted this on line. they wrote that he was quote of ducted by dhs. but he was arrested by the feds for leading activities that authorities say aligned with hamas. a foreign terrorist organization. khalil's attorney says the agents revoked his green card and his student visa. secretary of state marco rubio says his agency will continue investigating and revoking those visas, and/or green cards, of hamas supporters in america so they can get deported. this comes after the trump administration cut at least $400 million in federal funding and counting to columbia university, saying listen up and do your job. kelleigh the ivy league school they didn't protect jewish
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students. >> every federal criminal or statute to go after these anti-semites. these people who hate jews. we are going to stop it. we we are going to stop it immediately. not just taking away their money, but we have pushed out a strategy to remove these professional educators. >> reporter: so what happens next? khalil will have to go in front of an immigration judge, okay. then we are told by his lawyer they don't know where he is right now, they thought he was in new jersey but he could be as far away as louisiana. we will keep it on that. mode protests as people under scheduled for days known campus, but in new york city. >> dana: thank you for keeping us up to speed. appreciate it. >> hamas did orient a long-term truce, as they called it. a truce where we would ensure that they are in a place where they can't hurt israel. part of that was rebuilding gaza, but the discussions
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revolved around a few things that i think might actually end up being some of what you see. >> bill: on that topic, trump administration moving to revive the cease-fire talks between israel and hamas. not easy. special envoy to the middle east is steve witkoff, he meets with the negotiators this week in qatar enjoins us now. thank you for your time. we know your plain leaves in an hour, so there's a lot to get done. let's get to it now. here is what the u.s. goals are for phase two. we want, as a country, releasing all the remaining hostages, extended the cease-fire until after ramadan and passover, develop a long-term truce to end the war. the israelis believe there are 59 hostages still being held, 22 of whom are alive. one includes an american, need alexander, screen left here that we are showing on our monitor. hamas is really to accept committee to govern, that was suggested they are willing to give up some control.
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but as late as last week, i think they were still demanding the idf leave the gaza strip entirely. i cannot see that being a starter for the israeli government. do you? >> no it is not a starter, bill. a starter is hamas demilitarize and, not rearming, leaving all of their arms on the ground and leaving gaza. that is the start. >> bill: okay. do you believe hamas is willing to accept the idf and a peace deal? or some soda of negotiated truth that would lead their military in gaza? >> i believe they have no alternative, bill. there is no rational choice for them other than to leave. if they leave, that i think all things are on the table for a negotiated peace deal. that's what they are going to need to do. >> dana: i know that you and president trump are both businessmen, you think deadlines
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help make things work. that worked last time in terms of getting the hostages out by a certain day. but then hamas has messed around with a few things. when it comes to this next phase, what is the deadline now? >> dana, i like your use of the word fudged around. would say that substantially understates their behavior pattern. but with all of that say -- said, i would say to you yes that we need deadlines. that's what has to happen. people have to understand that we accept a certain behavior pattern. first of all, the way these hostages are being kept is unacceptable. we've interviewed all of the hostages who have been released. the conditions are deplorable. many of the hostages come out, they are sick, they haven't eaten, they haven't been given medical care. it's a terrible proposition for them. so that's just simply unacceptable. >> dana: do you know what role
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iran is playing in this? i know that you will be talking with the qataris. do you trust the qataris in this? >> the qataris have been great. he's mediated many crazies all over the world, he and his team. doesn't get the credit for it. we give him the credit. they've been outstanding in the way that they've engaged with us, with the israelis. to get the hostages out so far that we've been able to get out. and i think they've been really an important part of the peace process. but there are other nations in the middle east who have also been important. the egyptians have been very, very relevant. general hus sun and his entire team, is the director of intelligence. the saudis have helped. is a total effort. >> bill: let's move to russia
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because this is part of your week as well. at the moment, is the u.s. government fully sharing intelligence with the ukrainian military? >> my best understanding, bill, is that we never shut off intelligence for anything defensive that the ukrainians need. sold that has never been shut off. and i think you will see the national security advisor, mike waltz, in the secretary of state marco rubio, who are on their way to saudi arabia as we speak for talks with the ukrainians, that topic will be on the discussion list. >> bill: the same true for weapons in that were? >> i would assume so. when you say the same for weapons, you are talking about whether the spigot is shut on or off? >> bill: correct.
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>> i think aid was shut off for a bit of time. i'm not really sure where we are. that would probably be a better question for our national security advisor. >> dana: when it comes to this meeting in saudi arabia, is it possible that you would be able to have the united states signed a deal with zelenskyy there in saudi arabia? or as president trump suggested, possible that zelenskyy would return to the united states. could that happen this week? >> dana, i would certainly hope so. i think part of a mediation like this is to move the two sides closer to narrow the diffe differences. we've got a long way to do that with the russians, and i'm really hopeful, all the signs are very positive from zelenskyy, from his next in command, from the europeans. and i think we are going over there with an expectation that we are going to make substantial
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progress. i am certainly hopeful for that's. >> bill: last question on this then, president trump sat down with maria over the weekend. specifically on this topic and said this. 's. >> president trump: we gave him, in my opinion, $350 billion. europe is in for $100 billion. we gave him $350 billion. >> do you expect zelenskyy to come back? do you expect to do the rare-earth minerals deal? >> president trump: i thing so. biden should have never put up $350 billion. all he had to do was stay even with us. they are in for 100, we are in for 350. and we have a notion in between us, we are not in the danger they are. >> bill: coming back to the same question. doesn't get done this week? >> i hope so. zelenskyy sent a letter to the president. he apologized for that whole incident that happened in the oval office. i think that was an important
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step. there's been a lot of discussion between our teams and the ukrainians and the europeans, who are relevant to this discussion as well. i would like to describe it as progress. and so i would hope that there is a deal. what is on the table, what's important to discuss are obviously security protocols for the ukrainians. they care about that. the territorial issues, the utility plan. these are not complicated things. they just need to be put on the table and everybody needs to be transparent about what their expectations are. then we can begin to have a discussion around how we compromise. >> dana: now your plane leaves in 48 minutes. i would ask you this, what is your best tips for dealing with the jet lag you surely must have to deal with? [laughter] >> i think you just submit to it. you get used to it.
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you follow the lead of our boss, donald j. trump, and you just keep on going. do what he does, and just get on with it. exactly correct is. >> bill: hoping for success this week. come on back when you can. thank you,'s are. >> thank you so much. ♪ ♪ >> dana: breaking right now, the trump dhs is launching a new self deportation app for illegal immigrants, giving those of the u.s. illegally and incentive to cooperate. live in la with more. hi bill. >> reporter: nordic to you. this is pretty remarkable. the trump administration has taken the controversial cell phone app for migrants that the biden administration was using and repurposed it into a self deportation app that is officially launching today. we are getting an exclusive first look at it. take a look. the app is now called cbp home. it allows illegal aliens in the u.s. to register to self deport.
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they fill out biographical information, including their countries of citizenship, which country they plan to return to, their alien registration number, their contact information, and allows them to upload photos of themselves to confirm their identity. all of it is submitted to cbp, and they leave the country. you might be asking yourself, why would an illegal immigrant want to self deport? dhs says if they leave now, they will have the opportunity to return to the u.s. legally in the future and chase the american dream. if they don't leave, they will be found, arrested, detained and deported with a permanent ban on entry into the united states. in a state with the fox news, dhs secretary christine olmstead and part quote the biden administration exploited the cbp one app to allow more than 1 million aliens to illegally entry the united states with the launching of the cbp whole map, we are restoring integrity to immigration system. if they don't self deport, we will find them, deport them and they will never return. the biden administration use of the app allowed more than 40,000 migrants to come to the u.s. at
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a port of entry every single month. that total nearly 1 million migrants by the end of his presidency. president trump terminated that app immediately upon taking office, leading to scenes like this showing migrants dismayed at the border on the day of his inauguration as they learned their cbp one appointments were canceled and they were never coming back. dhs tells me any migrants who had that cbp one app on their phone will see it automatically update to this new self deportation app starting today. dhs can also use the data from the prior cbp one registrations to track migrants for removal. in a nutshell, trump just took biden's program which was bringing migrants in, and he has purposed it to get them out. back to you. >> dana: i started hearing some radio ads mirroring some of the ads from the new secretary on cable. they are on radio, going to be in those countries as well targeting them so that they know not to come, or to go ahead and get themselves out of the
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country. thank you, bill. >> bill: 15 past. u.s. college student gone missing in the dominican republic. she was there with friends on spring break. what they are saying about her disappearance. >> dana: another wildfire outbreak, this time on new york's long island. cal the national guard is stepping its. >> bill: also the postmortem continues. tim walz admits the harris campaign, he believes, could have done better. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> dana: fox news alert. the u.s. secret service shooting a man near the white house yesterday in what officials say was an armed confrontation. officers found the man near the eisenhower executive office building, when agents approached
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him he pulled out a gun and exchanged fire. president trump was not in washington at the time. the gunman was rushed to hospital, and his condition is unknown at this moment is. >> bill: 21 past now. a search underway in the dominican republic after a university of pittsburgh college student went missing about a week ago on spring break. her parents say they fear the worse. former homicide detective ted williams on that in a moment, but first the news in the story based on what we think we know at the moment. following all of that here in new york. nate, what we know now? >> reporter: good morning. it is all hands on deck to find 20-year-old sudiksha konanki. the university of pittsburgh student was last seen early thursday morning at a beach in pooed to canada. authorities say they interviewed a young man who went swimming with her right before she disappeared, and they are now working to corroborate his story. he is from virginia, and the virginia attorney general tells fox this morning they have not given up hope.
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>> our one goal is to find her and hopefully safe and sound. but we have to have a broad search, and that's what we -- the federal authorities are working with the dominican government. >> reporter: here we are, monday morning, still no answers. there are reports that local authorities believe that she may have drowned. officials in loudoun county say there's no evidence to support that. a dual unit is an indian citizen, she is 5'3", and was last seen wearing a brown bikini like you can see here. here is what we know about the timeline. she arrived in the dr one week ago today, and then at 415 surveillance shows are going to the beach with seven people. last seen 35 minutes after that at 4:50 a.m. before being reported missing at 4:00 p.m. later that day. her father tells abc this morning that the trip was going great, until it wasn't. [inaudible] everything was going okay.
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>> reporter: today the dominican air force and navy are assisting the national police and other rescue agencies. for drone teams are also working to find konanki. the loudoun county sheriff's office as the investigation is considering everything from an accident to possible foul play, and they are reviewing all video and phone records, and continuing to interview witnesses. bill? >> bill: nate, thanks for working that story. nate four with more. here's danya on that b6 former d.c. homicide detective and fox news contributor. just want to put up for everybody this timeline again so that everyone can see she arrived a week ago today. when you think about what you know now, ted in terms of an investigation, where would you be focused? >> good morning. have to tell you, this is a parent's worst nightmare. when a child goes for spring break to a country, a foreign country, like the
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dominican republic, they don't know the layout of the land and then goes missing. at this stage, what they are doing is, i'm sure, focusing in on the young man that she was with, allegedly, on the beach. she allegedly went down to punta connor with six -- five of her girlfriends. also talking to those individuals. would have to believe that they also are talking to individuals lack in this state. she's from the loudoun county area. they want to talk to individuals there to see about her physical and mental state of mind. >> dana: let's listen to the attorney general of virginia who was on fox and friends. >> there's so much we don't know. the principal thing that you do in a situation like this, the fbi, and partners in the dominican republic civil defense and dominican navy are searching for them, by collecting as much information, putting together a footprint of exactly what and where she had been.
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all the way leading to the point of her disappearance. >> dana: ted, from your experience -- let me say we have a description. 20 years old, 5'3", beautiful smile on that young woman. in general, do we have good relationships with the dominican republic when it comes to these kinds of investigations? obviously a popular vacation spot for americans. >> dana, we do have pretty good relationship with the dominican republic. i can tell you, i have been down to the dominican republic on numerous occasions. this happened in the early morning hours of thursday, 4:00 or 5:00 in the morning, and i can tell you knowing the dominican republic as well as i do, would not be all that time of the morning. i think the dependent -- dominican republic is like any other place, it can be a very dangerous place.
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their crime is certainly on the ops in the dominican republic. all of those things have to be taken into consideration in this investigation. >> dana: a lovely young woman, and we will continue to follow the investigation as it develops. ted, thank you for joining us this morning. >> my pleasure. >> bill: 26 past now. the wheels of justice finally moving. the suspected terrorists responsible for the deaths of these 13 u.s. service members is do in court today. plus the embattled la democratic mayor karen bass finding herself in the middle of a new controversy. did she delete text messages while los angeles was burning? >> i felt absolutely terrible not being here for my city. when i say it was a mistake, absolutely. the idea that i was not present was very painful. on hallow this year? you bet brother. stay prayed up. yeah, you know it. hey, father.
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recession? you kind of hesitated. >> president trump: i tell you what, of course you hesitated. all that it was this. we are going to take it hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs, and we are going to become so rich you aren't going to know where to spend all that money. i'm telling you. you watch. we are good have jobs, we will have open factories. it's going to be great. >> bill: that was on the plane on the way back to washington last night. earlier in the day, maria's interview aired. she asked him about a recession. he did not rule it out, the possibility of one was why the follow-up came last night. here is what is going on on the market now. down about 1% of the dow, nasdaq training lower by about 2%. i think the nasdaq might be bumping up against correction territory so far year to date. we should track that. tariffs are the issue, we don't know how it will turn out with canada or mexico or china for that matter. canada has a new leader, as of yesterday. he was talking tough against the u.s. mexico's leftist leader had a
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huge rally in mexico city over the weekend. she was talking tough. onward we roll into the unknown, shall we say. >> dana: indeed. and also, at this. meantime elon musk will be joining fox business today. it will be a live one on one exclusive interview at 4:00 p.m. eastern right before the five. >> bill: looking forward to that indeed. meanwhile you've got house democrats now digging in their heels over government funding bill, with a deadline a few days away. they are refusing to sign off it entirely unless it includes checks on elon musk and doge. chad burgum live on the hill with more on that today. good morning. >> reporter: good running. democrats are using the government funding vote as leverage to protest doge cuts. they demand restrictions on what doge can do. and an end to layoffs. ironically, a shutdown could knock federal workers off the job. >> no, straight kahli enough were conflating about a few
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thousand layoffs are willing to throw a million people by voting for a shutdown. let them explain that to the american people. the republicans are going to act like grown-ups in the room and keep the government funded through the end of the fiscal year. >> reporter: it is about the math. house republicans need nearly all of their members to vote yes, if democrats won't help republican thomas massey is a no unless he gets a quote lobotomy. most republicans will stand by the president, but he's unsure about a shutdown. >> it could happen. the democrats want that. they want to destroy the country. i can't tell you, but it could happen. a shouldn't have happened, and it probably won't. i think this e.r. will get past. we will see. but it could happen. you never know. the democrats are out of con control. >> reporter: at least seven senate democrats are necessary to join all republicans to break the senate filibuster. it is a tough vote for democrats, especially since the g.o.p. historically counts on help from the other side.
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>> funding the government is the moment of maximum leverage for democrats in this first year of the ministry should. which means we have to get wynn's bit of middle-class. protect them from the chaos and corruption. we have to protect social security. they will try to privatize it, mark my words. and we've got to prevent tax hikes on the middle class. >> reporter: the bill renews all bite and level funding. it includes new money for the military. most republicans are willing to vote yes, because a shutdown would undercut the president's agenda. bill? >> bill: i heard a lot of democratic lawmakers over the weekend hesitating a little bit to say yes or no on that. >> reporter: little on the fence there. >> bill: you're right about that. nice to see you on the hill. ♪ ♪ >> terrifying. what you are seeing on tv is a good taste of it. to see someone in front of you covered head to toe, you can see only their eyes. you have no idea what they are going to do next.
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we can't negotiate with these people. we cannot take a middle approach. there must be a hard-line approach. if you violate the rules laid out in the student code of conduct, you shall face the consequences. >> dana: chaos at columbia university propping the white house to take action. i.c.e. agents arresting protest leader mahmoud khalil. his attorney says the administration is moving to cancel his green card. a columbia graduate and reporter and assistant editor for the free press. so good to see you in person. his attorney says isis arrest the attention of mahmoud follows the u.s. government open repression of student activism and political speech, specifically targeting students at columbia for criticism of israel's assault on gaza. that is his attorney. how do you see it? >> thank you so much for having me. listen, this is someone who has been the engine behind so much of the violence that we have seen on campus since octo october seventh. no one is telling khalil or students like him they can't
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peacefully protest, or even say things we disagree with. what is happening is violence, it is harassment, it is trespassing and causing thousands of dollars in property damage, and sending public safety officers to the hospital. we are not talking about free speech anymore, we are talking about crimes. >> bill: you graduated from columbia, so you're very familiar with this. the head of the columbia jewish alumni association said every american citizen should be concerned with students encouraging terrorist activities on u.s. soil. kia agree. was he encouraging terrorist activity? it was he just protesting israel? >> listen, in the hall a few days ago and in the library three days ago he was handing out flyers from a hamas media outlet, which is not an exaggeration. literally the hamas logo on these flyers. these are people that call october seventh a glorious day. they are carrying hamas flags. if that's not espousing terrorist activity, i really do not know what is.
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>> dana: want to ask you about this because over the weekend, a thing friday, the trump administration she canceled $400 million in federal funds. here's what john fetterman, senator from pense evina, supporter of israel said. columbia let anti-semitism run amok takeda to lunatic fringe and paid for doctors. leadership allowed those to take over the campus and terrorize jewish students. now columbia pays for its failure and i support that. what did you hear about this? was it a wake-up call for columbia? maybe there's a monetary cost what they are doing? >> listen, i think this is very much a follow-through on the threats they have gotten. i think it for sure came as a surprise. like the senator said, the federal government has no obligation to pay american tax dollars to an institution that is violating civil rights of its students. that is what happened. in fact they have an obligation to not pay an institution that is filing civil rights of students. >> bill: columbia has a lot of money, huge endowment pick if the government takes
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$400 million away from your former school, now being an alum, what is the impact on columbia? >> honestly this is a message, and two as you said there is an enormous endowment. they have $5 billion in government funding. really, this is about professors not being able to conduct the research they are able to conduct. it's about not attracting the top talent, because the school will no longer be able to provide the kind of funding, the kind of benefits that universities with federal funding can provide. >> dana: did you always want to go there? was it like a dream? what you think about it now? >> i have enormous shame, to be complete the honest. >> bill: shame? >> yeah. i thought really hard for the things that jewish students are fighting for on campus for four years. i really empathize. i know people who have left campus for what they've had to face. i see this as a long overdue wake-up call for the administration.
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>> bill: they've taken action and we will see what follows here. things were coming on. >> dana: thank you, maya. >> nice to see you guys. ♪ ♪ >> announcer: dana reid sports. >> dana: maya, stick around for this because it was a battle for bragging rights in los angeles. >> inside. one-on-one coverage. going to make her work for it. 1000 career points at ucla or lauren betts. 13 -- 13 this half. let's it fly. revenge is sweet for ucla! >> dana: ucla winning its first big ten championship, reading crosstown rival usc 72-67 pick the victory was for the bruins and only sweeter since they lost both regular-season games against usc's. >> bill: there we go. it is march madness. which i know you've been waiting for all year. >> dana: i heard it was st. john's for the win. he didn't really say that. but he said it's a remarkable
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story of athletics there. >> bill: patino is back there too. >> dana: i don't know. >> bill: we will throw all the names for you. >> dana: that's probably the best way to do it. >> bill: it has happened yet again, illegal immigrant with a lengthy rap sheet arrested for murder. a live report now out of la and let you know it's happening there. the democratic blame game continues. the failed vp hopeful is to malls, now revealing what he thinks is the reason for harris' loss. >> president trump: there something wrong with him. i can't even believe it. they lost an election in a you landslide. makes me feel safe and protected out there. that's why i never leave home without a photo of the little ones. bracelet from my husband. lucky rabbit's foot. lucky rabbit named sfoot. it's swedish. that's a whole rabbit. named sfoot. well, there's really no need for a lucky charm when you ride. not when america's #1 motorcycle insurer's got your back.
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we're just going to ignore the fact that carl has a rabbit. named sfoot.
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♪ ♪ >> democrats are still dropping the ball over their messaging. they cannot get it together. the party striking the wrong tone on everything from fairness in women's sports to other hot button issues, giving critics a field day pick alexandria hoff's live in washington with more. hi alex, good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you. the female sports issue has come to symbolize the democratic messaging problem. a majority of democratic voters, as we know, support single-sex sports. still some politicians are doubling down, while others are watering down. >> i wouldn't be here i think without the leadership training that i got in women's sports.
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but for me, it's like let the local community figure this out. >> reporter: california governor gavin newsom was far more direct last week excluding from his party, calling males competing with women deeply unfair. that's despite his state being one of 24 that allow it to happen. democrats rejected legislation to reserve female sports for biological women. newsom's public turnaround through off house minority leader hakeem jeffries when asked. >> i haven't seen his comments. what democrats opposed was unleashing sexual predators on girls throughout the united states of america. >> reporter: this is a perplexing response for many, but an argument the democrats and jeffries have made before. that by banning males from female sports, students would somehow be violated by coaches seeking to check which sex they are. jeffries comment came the same week as a registered sex offender in virginia was in
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court for allegedly exposing himself to women and girls in multiple locker rooms, which he gained access to by claiming to be a transgender woman. many democrats are calling the sports issue a nonissue because there's so few transgender athletes in college. that maybe the case of the college-level, ucla estimates 122,000 transgender athletes play at the high school level. >> dana: also, the whole women in sports thing is the biggest deal. all of those women, none of them had to compete against transgender males. anyway. a little aside. plus he looked great and the seasons color, butter yellow. thanks, alex. >> bill: former vp tim walz saying he and his running mate kamala harris played it to save. he blames their election loss on the pair's lack of media appearances among a few other things. airline down he good morning to you. nice to see you. political, to malls as sharp critiques of the campaign of 2024. called for number 2, here is the quote. we as a party were conscious,
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both mainstream and nontraditional media. during the 24 campaign he said in football parlance we were in a prevent defense to not lose, and we never had anything to lose because i don't think we were ever ahead. that's a revisionist view of that. what do you think? more podcast would've brought more votes? >> a can you blame him for hiding her? she was the worst candidate ever. she cannot get through an interview. she did do the call her dottie peck us is but $100,000 on a set that even the host of the podcast was like why did you build this? but they had to hide her. there's two issues here. what is the fact she couldn't do an interview. the other is lack of authenticity because they don't realize nobody trusts celebrity politicians like obama's anymore pick people think the media are full of an. when you don't do rogue and, who onto theo, whatever guys, then you are losing a demographic of people that think everybody who's a politician is completely full of it. if you don't reach those people, you will lose.
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she couldn't. it i think the biggest reason why is because rogan for example would've pushed her, or i would've pushed her, on joe biden's cognitive decline. she was directly involved on that. when i think is the grid's political cover-up of our time, and she would've had to answer for that. >> dana: agriand probably more to come on that later today in terms of the cover-up. one of the things, a theory that iran by bill. tim walz has been talking more because kamala harris hasn't said anything. as if she didn't own explanation to everybody about what was happening. and if she still wants to be in the party, she's going to have to say something at some point. he said i will fill the vacuum. i think tim walz has some saving face to do because the kamala harris campaign to blight him to pander to men with silly stereotypes, wearing hunting gear, haphazardly loading a rifle in a desperate attempt to get young men on their train and they flocked to trump because of the authenticity issue. jen said, my generation, you cannot pretend your way through marketing. it has to be real, it has to be
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relatable. that's why joe rogan was a very keep media appearance she missed. of course she made up excuses as to why that was, logistics and travel. but that's the biggest podcast in the country. young men did determine this election in many ways. the call her daddy podcast appearance, wasn't a good idea from a pop-culture standpoint? yes. but you know to seal the interview she did do were hyper curated, polished, and the set -- >> dana: and on a teleprinter's 1.5 billion by the way. karen bass, a lot of people wondering about these fires and what they were doing at the time. squeezing the story and quickly. the "los angeles times" reporting her text messages were deleted. she and her office have said she was encaustic and mitigation to that period. it's impossible to know exactly what she was communicating because her messages were not saved. that's according to a city lawyer. her phone is said not to save text messages, according to her lawyer. >> if she was going to be one of those democratic fighters, she
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could be the deleter. she is the mayor, inkamp delete messages if you're doing official business on your phone. >> dana: like hilary clinton. >> she didn't use bleach fit and scrub it. you have to preserve this stuff. this is public information. this is a cover-up. the question getting back to the slime all gavin knew some is what is he do about this now? does he throw her under the bus to save himself? because really, he can't run for governor again. he wants to run for president. does he throw her under the bus? a rickl against two of them. and nicole shanahan is funding this, rfk's former running mate. she got a lot of cash, a lot of people very unhappy with karen bass. what's worse? deleting text messages or partying it up at a cocktail party while your city burns? that's really the question. >> it isn't over yet because there's a lot of coverage over the weekend about what some residents are having to decide right now. rebuilder not? >> of course california's regulations when it comes to rebuilding. environmental codes have always been the way of common sense
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policies in california can't conveniently they've lifted some of those rebuilding regulations, which proves the point that they didn't need them in the first place. but we need transparency from this mayor, from this governor because we still don't know whether he was aware of the warning. >> bill: dug yourself a whole and just keeps on getting deeper. >> dana: you can find the emails, believe me. >> you can. >> bill: unless you wipe them like a cloth. anyway, happy birthday. >> piers: he birthday! >> bill: >> dana: president trump a transition before the benefits of his tariffs. caileigh here on that. you'll love this! centrum silver is clinically proven to support memory in older adults. so you can keep saying, you mastered it! you fixed it! you nailed it! you did it! with centrum silver, clinically proven to support memory in older adults.
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cb, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. detectives are now trying to figure out arson played a role in these fast-moving fires. behind me is a torched trailer of one business owner who watched as the flames came dangerously close to destroying even more of his livelihood. >> my god! my whole place! [bleep] >> reporter: miraculously, that building was spared. but cirillo did lose wood and other materials. fire officials say a total of four fires were burning on sunday across eastern suffolk county, fueled by low moisture and strong wind gusts. new york governor kathy hochul declared a state of emergency, which is still in effect. at the height of the crisis, 90 agencies were responding on scene. today fire officials are keeping an eye on those hot spots, with weather conditions expected to be on everyone's mind. >> bill: all right, it i

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