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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  March 10, 2025 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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>> 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 is
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brittle in the east end. thinking much. that's the scene, coping for the best. thank you lee. ♪ ♪ >> are you expecting a recession this year? >> president trump: i hate to predict things like that. there is a period of transition, because what we're doing is very big. beat we are bringing wealth back to america. what i have to do is build a strong country. you can't really watch the stock market. if you look at china, they have 100 year perspective. we may go up with some tariffs, it depends. we may go up. i don't think we will go down, but we may go up a. >> dana: president trump playing the long game, as he transforms and rebuilds the economy, and lays a solid foundation for america's future. that is his goal. welcome to a brand-new hour of america's newsroom, i'm data pinot. >> bill: good morning to you, monday, new week begins right now. i'm bill hemmer. president trump setting a new course as he moves to revamp the nations he got me, indicating it could take time to transition as he plays -- as he evens the
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playing field for american trade. markets reacting to his game plan for long-term change, down again this morning. that has been the trend as of late. >> dana: it comes as china tariffs targeting u.s. agriculture products take effect today. >> bill: mark meredith with more on that and a lot of reaction. hello to you, good running. >> reporter: good running to you both. your right, a lot of reaction. increasing questions for the white house coming from lawmakers, business owners and even voters about what this increasing tensed trade fight could mean for the global economy. president trump telling reporters last night that americans need to focus on the long game. >> president trump: i think the tariffs are going to be the greatest thing we've ever done is a country. it's going to make our country rich again. all i know is this. we are going to take in hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs, and we are going to become so rich you are not going to know where to spend all that money. >> reporter: as bill mentioned, the markets not thrilled with this. "the wall street journal" pointing out today the president regularly bragged about the stock market perform its in his first term is playing down its
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importance to his second term agenda. a small number of republican lawmakers have spoken out against these tariffs, while democrats are out in full force saying he is off again and off again taxes recan trading infusion worldwide. >> there's reckless change and then responsible change. the way he's off again and on again, pounding canada as if they are exactly as big as china just creates this chaotic feeling. >> reporter: speaking of canada, it has a new leader. over the weekend mark carney was chosen as the country's new prime minister. carney now vowing to take on trump's trade war directly. >> america is not canada. canada never ever will be part of america in any way, shape, or form. [cheering and applause] >> reporter: another story we're watching is the fallout over elon musk and the doge effort. he was spotted returning to the white house after spending the weekend with the president down in florida. the visit is notable after multiple cabinet secretaries reported the urge to the
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president to rein in mosques firing power. while trump and musk claim there is no bad blood, we know officials in these cabinets are basically try to figure out what kind of authority they have what it comes to layoffs going forward. the president telling them last week that they will have the final say. bill? >> bill: thanks, mark. nice to see you on the north on of the white house leading the coverage this hour. thank you. >> dana: it must be monday, kayleigh mcenany is the coast about numbered. the treasury secretary was also on friday for a long session with msnbc. watch here. >> there's going to be a natural adjustment as we move away from public spending and private spending. the market and the economy have just become hooked, and we've become addicted to this government spending. there's going to be a detox period. >> dana: president trump reiterated this with maria. >> what do you specifically want america to look like in four years? when you are done? >> president trump: i want a dynamic country where the
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private enterprise carries the day, not the government. i want a strong country militarily. we are doing a series of incentives tax incentives and things, tax bill will be very important. the democrats will fight us all the way. >> dana: i noticed a messaging pivot over the last several days from the president. what is happening? >> he kind of echoed what we heard from. that is a smart messaging. to manage expectation, no one knows what's going to happen. tricky question. he doesn't have a crystal ball,'s why thought he handled that nicely. there is a messaging shift. one in line with the reality. but i think the president, as he went on to say, at china has a 100 year plan. we have a quarter to quarter economic plan. that's exactly right. key has the long game in mind. but in the short term, what i would do is -- i know they want to get immigration bill through congress, but i would focus exclusively on taxes. we are one month in five days away for the beautiful day, tax day.
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april 15th. focus on no tax on tips, tax on social security, no tax on overtime. that is a winner at a time when the american people really are staring out high prices. >> bill: good point. the house working on that right now. meanwhile the democrats, they are saying they are winning. here's hakeem jeffries over the weekend. watch peat they are on the run in terms of the economy. in fact,, donald trump and republicans are crashing the economy in realtime in terms of health care, particularly as it relates to medicaid. we have them on the run with respect to the g.o.p. tax scam. we will keep our foot on the gas pedal. >> bill: tax scam. i don't know how that's going to fly if they are able to do all of this, tax on tips, social security. that's going to be very popular for americans. >> if they put a narrow bill on the floor, just on that, excluding some immigration stuff, you might see a world where you have some leftist
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politicians, congressmen, may be senators that get on board. that would throw hakeem jeffries messaging out the window. when he says the g.o.p. is on the run, both houses of congress, the g.o.p. controls the presidency, 6-3 constitutional on the supreme court. he sold in meetings last friday, very unhappy meetings worries having two pareto members about their behavior. it doesn't seem like the red side -- the blue side seems to be having more internal strife. >> dana: all they had to do on the democratic side when the president gave his joint session speech was not become the story. and yet they are still the story a week later. i don't know who is on the run here. >> exactly. still this story. they put out -- you could say mildly effective messaging of 20 democrats all talking about high prices. trying to move the messaging from biden had high prices to trump at high prices. if nothing else, they are on message. but then al green came and stomped on that. the other members not standing for daniel's, the young boy, the 13-year-old cancer survivor.
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they stomped on the one message they had where it was all in unison. >> bill: a major story happening this afternoon. the accomplice, the u.s. believes is responsible for killing routine u.s. service members and 160 civilians is going to appear before a judge. i don't know what the biden team is doing for three and a half years, but if this is the guy they apprehended him in a matter of five weeks? six weeks' time? >> a huge deal. countries are on notice. this president means business picky captures terrorists. you look at his foreign policy, he is able to square away the war in ukraine. it is rough getting their, but i think he will get there. apprehending this terrorist, 13 soldiers we lost at abbey gate. this is a big and monumental deal. what it takes a long? this is the president who got many others. >> bill: kash patel's post, report five years later justice for the 13. that was the key line. >> dana: president trump met with the families of those 13, no doubt a big day for them. thank you.
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see you on outnumbered at noon. meantime elon musk joining larry on fox business today. it will be a live one on one exclusive interview at 4:00 p.m. eastern. >> bill: as we mentioned, a moment ago one of the alleged masterminds behind the deadly kebble airport bombing will be before a judge today. david is live a district court alexandria, virginia. hello there. >> reporter: bilk a good morning to you. this is a detention hearing for mohammad sharifullah that begins today at 2:00 eastern time here in northern virginia, about 10 minutes outside of washington, d.c.. he touched down on american soil, you can see this was in the middle of the night just hours after president trump's joint session to congress. he was met by attorney general, kash patel, tuttosi golbert pick according to court document he was one of the architects behind the suicide vomit on august what he six, 2020 when they killed 13 u.s. service members and 160
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civilians. at the abbey gate of the international airport. u.s. troops are pulling out of afghanistan. federal prosecutors say sharifullah worked for isis-k and could spend the rest of his life behind bars if convicted pick according to prosecutors, in an interview with fbi agents on march second of this year, just eight days ago, sharifullah waived his miranda rights, spilled the beans admitting to helping prepare for the attack and helping look for american and taliban checkpoints. 30 say he told other isis-k members around was clear, and the attacker wouldn't be attacked in. at 30 say was also involved in helping to plan the 2016 bombing outside of the canadian embassy in cavill, afghanistan. at least ten killed. and a city hall outside of moscow and a local suburb of moscow, were more than 120 people were killed. they say those connected there had connections to sharifullah, will be in court today pick expecting to go about 45 and it's her so. but the headline, he could be in
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life behind bars if convicted. we do not expect him to get any sort of release at all today. we expect him to remain in custody pending trial. >> bill: we will see what comes. thank you. david in alexandria, q. ♪ ♪ >> the whole world gets the message that this isn't joe biden's world anymore. this is president donald trump's country, where we have a border, where we have laws and it applies equally to everybody. >> dana: two illegal immigrants arrested for allegedly killing a good samaritan. their rap sheets a mile-long. >> bill: also the search is on after a university of pittsburgh student goes missing during a spring break trip to the dominican republic. >> dana: and the push to make america healthy again, focusing on what's on your plate. secretary rfk jr. meeting face-to-face with the heads of major food companies. >> should i be so privileged as to be confirmed, we will make sure tax dollars support healthy foods. we will scrutinize the chemical additives in our food supply.
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♪ ♪ >> bill: now to this update that could impact what is expected to be one of the highest profile criminal trials this year. defense lawyers for ryan routh, the man charged with attempting to assassinate president trump in florida, were given access to tour trump's golf course. the attorneys visited the course last week in west palm beach. prosecutors saying that is where ryan routh was laying in a wait with a rifle while the government played golf that day with steve witkoff. secret service agent spotted him and shot at him, propping him to run away. his trial is scheduled for the month of september in florida. ♪ ♪ >> dana: we are learning more about the two men accused of murdering a man who tried to stop them from stealing his
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neighbors catalytic converter. sources tell fox both men are in the u.s. illegally, and one had a dozen outstanding ice detainer's. this is a problem thrilled the country. in la with this story. hi william. >> reporter: dana, the six wary policies of california once again front and center, as police try to figure out why these career criminal illegal immigrants were out free when they killed a good samaritan who was just tried to stop them from stealing a neighbors catalytic converter. hears the surveillance video from that night. shortly after 3:00 a.m., johnny sanchez, the good samaritan in blue, he tries unsuccessfully to flag down that fire truck. then when he walks around the front of the preesed to confront the thieves, he is shot the thieves then pull away and agree camry. police arrested two suspects. sources tell both are in the u.s. illegally with multiple ice deportation detainer's. area police and sheriffs ignored the state law. con the left, a guatemalan national arrested at least 15
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times on gun, grand theft, burghley and drug charges. on the right was jose sara via. numerous arrests for grand theft, felony possession of a gun,, so and property, felony hit-and-run during a police pursuit. sanchez was the sole breadwinner for his family. he leaves behind a wife and two sons. one suspect is scheduled to appear in court tomorrow, the other today. both illegal immigrants in california licence plates, court-appointed defense attorneys, plea deals, and they got probation according to deputy d.a. who set on x both got limited time in county jail, but not state prison time because of democrats sponsored laws to empty the state prisons, and both were shielded from deportation, again because of state and local democrats support for sanctuary laws. data? >> dana: keep us posted. lickable lumis. >> bill: four marrelli caddy sheriff. how are you doing?
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thank you for coming out today. can i put this up again. coffer two. one of them is a elemental and national kick he's been arrested 15 times. the other one is from el salvador who has been arrested 12 times. what are they doing on the street? what are they still doing here? >> this is the product of biden's open border policy. the sad thing is the immigration activists who are flooding the streets with picket sides and everything, they don't acknowledge that these people exist. that is a frightening thing to me because they are out there. there's transnational gang members, we know there's burglary tours. those people who come here for the sole purpose of committing crime. yet the activists believe that all illegal immigrants should tood deserve protection and taxpayer-funded stay here while they are committing crime which is mind-boggling. >> can you tell whether or not i.c.e. has had an impact on your part of the country?
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>> it is starting to have an impact. it will have greater impact once these ice detainer's -- we need to convert some of them into criminal warrants. because then there is no ifs and/or bonds. local law enforcement has to honor criminal warrants. ice detainer's, once a person time elapses in custody, there is no constitutional way to detain them solely on the basis of a detainer. i sehested do the hard work and get these people on criminal warrants. that way they are not in and out of jail like nothing. >> bill: apologize for interrupting. can the state of california or the city of los angeles stop that? >> they could put a big stop to it because the senate bill, the california values act from back in 2017, that is nullified by biden's open border policies and the flood of criminal immigrants all over this nation during criminal acts like this. we need to go back to the table
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to figure out a way to basically separate the people that are here just trying to earn a living, living in otherwise crime free life, of the people that came here to commit crime. for that, local law enforcement does have to work with federal immigration enforcement. otherwise they should remain separate. >> bill: another question about the border. we saw the dramatic drop, as we lost our guest there. hang on, we will try to get him back. great. i can see you, the screen went black. last year was 189,000 across the border, this year some ridiculous number. pulling it out of my head but i think 8000. the point is, it has dropped precipitously in a matter of months. can you tell that in california? >> not yet. some of these things take time to evolve, because california has been a magnet for illegal immigration going back decades. la county alone has over a
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million undocumented, that's 10% of la county's population is undocumented. it's going to take a while to see the fruits of the trump administrations labor. i'm hoping within a year or two we will start to see some positive results. >> bill: the catalytic converter, one last question here. it is my understanding it has rare-earth material that it's made of. if a criminal is going for that, apparently this happens in a lot of places in the country, how much money can you make? just for selling a catalytic converter? >> sadly, it in the legal market they run for about $1000 to $1200. but you go into the black market, you might get $50 for the catalytic converter. $100 tops. it is really a travesty with people losing their lives over it. but it's profitable for people that are involved in this. >> bill: wow. or who are desperate. thanks for coming on.
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out of la. nice to see you again, alex. thank you. 23 past. ♪ ♪ >> are you going to resume to ukraine if they sign the minerals deal? >> president trump: i think they will sign the minerals deal. but we want -- i want them to want peace. right now they haven't shown it to the extent they should. >> dana: president trump signals a rare-earth minerals deal could still be struck with ukraine, but will ukraine play ball? plus a clock is ticking for friday's federal budget deadline. house republicans have a plan, but will they be able to stick together and get it to the finish line? >> it is going to past. republicans understand we have got to move this forward so we avoid a government shutdown, so that we can move into president trump's agenda. it's time. yes, the time has come for a fresh approach to dog food.
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sudiksha konanki. university of pittsburgh student last seen early thursday morning on the beach in the dominican republic. she allegedly went swimming that morning with a man, a man who has been questioned. the indian embassy leading the investigation with assistance from local law enforcement and investigators from the state of pennsylvania. we will stand by for more information on her fate. now this. ♪ ♪ >> we never shut off intelligence for defensive -- for anything defensive that the ukrainians need. there's been a lot of discussion between our teams and the ukrainians, and the europeans who are relevant to this discussion as well. and i would like to describe it as progress. so, i would hope that there is a deal. >> dana: breaking on america's newsroom last hour, steve
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witkoff telling us he and his team are hopeful progress with ukraine can be reached this week during talks in saudi arabia. bringing in dan hoffman, former cia chief of stations and fox news contributor. steve wodd. [coughing] those commas last hour. you think a deal as possible this week? >> all right, honestly don't think we are going to see a deal this week. we may see some movement and some agreement on what it's going to take for ukraine to sit down at the negotiating table. but we haven't seen any evidence that russia is done raining downhill on ukraine's infrastructure and their civilian population. the special envoy, witkoff was right about not halting intelligence to help ukraine defend themselves. but buy night dying ukraine intelligence to strike over the border inside russia, that meant russia could use 300 miness inch which is their defense to strike ukraine, which is what they did over the weekend and killed
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tens of ukrainian civilians. that is the challenge we face with that decision. it is a risky one. >> dana: can i ask you about, i read over the weekend that even though we stopped that type of intel sharing as you described nack our allies could still do that. is that happening? share u.s. intelligence. they are not doing that. really, that was the game changer. back in the summer of 2022, when we started to supply ukraine with some munitions that they should have had a year beforehand, as well as the intelligence that was the start of the game changer. i will also say, this is the failure of the biden administration as long as it takes strategy. that was not a good one. that made a lot of americans think we were involved in another forever war pick we could have sped up the process by giving ukraine what they needed when they needed it,
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instead of needlessly delaying the provision of air defense and some offensive artillery we didn't give them at the time. >> dana: dad, one other hot spot in the world, iran. president trop asked about it by maria. watch here. >> president trump: there's two ways iran can be handled, military early are you make a deal. something is going to happen one way or the other. i hope that iran, and i've written them a letter saying i hope you will negotiate. because if we have to go in militarily it's going to be a terrible thing for them. >> you wrote a letter to the community? when did you send that letter? >> president trump: yesterday. >> dana: this is from the iran supreme leader. some coercive governments insist on negotiations. such negotiations are aimed are solving issues, the him is to exert dominance and pose what they want. for a coercive governments negotiations are a means to impose new demands. around will definitely not fulfill these new demands. now thanks to israel, iran is
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definitely setback. but as mark dulewich said, ceo foundation for democracy, saw this earlier, iran is on its knees but not yet on its back. how do you expect this discussion to go between the two countries? >> i think it will be pretty slow and painstaking. one of the failures of the jcp away was that it did not address iran's ballistic missile program, no are iran's proxy terrorists like the houthis and hamas and hezbollah. that's got to be a concern for this administered in. they said they would consider negotiation over the nuclear issue alone, and iran is now a nuclear threshold state. but i don't think that's going to be enough of the trump administration. you are right, i think iran is on their knees, but they are still shipping a lot of oil to try to pick we have to deal with that. and thinks to israel they don't have any air defense. this is the right time. the president is 100% right.
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this is our best chance to strike a good deal. but if we can't make it, there is the potential to launch military strikes. iran is more vulnerable now then they've ever been. and in spite of the tough talk and posturing from their supreme leader, they know it. >> reporter: dan hoffman, thank you for joining us on a monday. lots going on. >> bill: very important. thank you, dan. savannah white is working late. that is today's celebrity news. the "wheel of fortune" cohost pulling back the curtain on her work schedule. give this a listen. >> thirty-four days per year. that's it. [laughter] >> how many in a day? >> six shows per day. >> bill: there is. 34 days per year times six. do the math, dana. >> i still love that show. >> bill: 18, carrie the one, 214 shows. that's a lot. >> dana: you just carry the one on national television? >> bill: carry the torch one know what i did. she has cohost of the show for
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40 years. imagine having a job for 40 years? she's really lucky. she's really good. myrtle beach xl carlotta. good for. >> dana: she kept the accent which i left. washington, d.c., clean it up homeless meant camps. of the president turned up the pressure there. of sure people are happy about that. the democrats in danger of shrinking their tent further? who is sounding the alarm may surprise you. >> we need to be advancing policies and making the arguments about what we have to offer. not just simply study back and letting them collapse over their own corrupt weight. to me that's not enough.
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♪ ♪ >> dana: a maryland resident testing positive for measles after returning from international travel. health officials say the case was confirmed at dulles airport, and they are trying to track down anyone who may have been exposed to the highly contagious disease. that big airport, international departure lounge, that on a it down. >> bill: now meanwhile in her first media interview, saying no remorse for the murders of her two youngest children. >> in the place where they died, were either? >> what place was that? what place was that?
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do you have any idea? >> i'm asking. >> do you know? you are pretending like you know. >> it doesn't matter. i'm not pretending ideal. ims can you a question. did you watch your children die? >> that's a really sad questions be mike it's a terrible question. it's what i hate to have to ask, what we've been talking about all of this. >> i was not there is. >> bill: she is known as the doomsday mom, convicted of killing two of her children and conspiring to kill her husband. the former wife and 2019, she had been sentenced to life in prison in 2023. the so-called cult mom will stand trial in arizona for allegedly conspiring to kill her fourth husband, charles vallow, and her nieces ex-husband, if you can keep all of that straight. ♪ ♪ >> dana: get this. washington, d.c., is cleaning up homeless encampments. this after president trump threatened to force mary mary allows her to take action. hears that story from
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washington. i don't know if people realize how bad the homeless camps were there in d.c. >> good morning, more than a dozen across the city. this has sparked president trump's efforts to make d.c. grade again by bringing federal workers back to the office, along with cracking down on crime and clearing the homeless encampments. in fact this one behind me, dana, sits between the watergate building and kennedy center and georgetown picket is slated to be cleared out in 48 hours on wednesday. this follows video friday, take a look, d.c. work crews clearing tense a debris near the state department. after trump called on mayoral -- the mayor to take action, saying this in a social post. we've notified the mayor of washington, d.c., that she must clean up all of the unsightly homeless encampments in the city, specifically including the ones outside of the state part mint and near the white house. if she's not capable of doing so, we will be forced to do it for her. bowser says there's already work
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to do it. >> we always clear homeless and cabins. we always do. we do it according to protocols that have worked in the district, that won't have the effect of just moving people around, but trying to get them housed. >> reporter: to that point, the city had posted a schedule of clearings in february and march. take a look at this. video this morning, crews beginning to paint over the large black lives merrill on 16th street, steps from the white house. it will take weeks but beginning this morning bowser announced plans to do this last week following g.o.p. threats to cut down on transportation funding. as for the people behind me at this encampments, in 48 hours when they start to clear, mayor bowser says she hopes to get them in a shelter or ultimately permanent housing. >> dana: griff jenkins, thank you. >> president trump: the other night i made a speech. the republicans were going wild, of the democrats were having
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their little signs up. the little tiny signs. i said, it is unbelievable that they don't get it. they don't get it now. i think they are going to end up being a minor party if they keep going like this is. >> bill: the president with maria be arguing the democrats could be a minor party if they don't revamp their message. what about that? a democrat of california, how reading. thanks for saying yesterday. so you yesterday and sunday with shannon breen. you can address the major minor party, or you could address van jones, who had this morning on sunday. >> look, man. we are screwed. the democrats don't know what to do. this is a nightmare. we thought we would at least have hakeem jeffries and the speaker's chair to hold him back if we didn't have kamala in there to do the right thing spece five what now, sir? >> look, parties go back and forth in american politics.
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as you know, guy stood up for the boy with cancer, i stood up when the president walked in. that's not where we need to make worry, we need to make argument on the economy. the president also said he's not sure if there could be a recession. you got unemployment taking up, you've got inflation taking up, consumer confidence is down. trump team is calling those short-term adjustments. that is concerning. that's where the democrats need to focus. what is our economic vision? >> bill: okay what is that vision? want to get to that because alyssa slotkin says you guys are on your back end. watch. >> i don't think it's a secret the democrats have been on their heels since trump won the election. i think it is on us to be clear about, not only leadership, and there's lots of leaders in both parties, but also a strategy. we are still finding our footing. i think you can't get better until you admit you have a problem. >> bill: what is the strategy? i mean, is it possible i
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carrville said? are you going to go on the offensive? >> i think the strategy is deployed now some of the policies aren't working on the economy. you can't cut $880 billion of medicaid, that means the closures of hospitals and people being kicked off health care. >> bill: we don't know that's happening. >> the republicans passed that budget. they just passed that budget with their numbers. $880 billion in cuts. you can't have blanket tariffs on allies that ultimately gives grocery stores the ability to raise prices. but then we can point at where they are making mistakes, we also need to point out our vision pick we have a vision to become a manufacturing superpower by investing in new steel industries in this country, by having new shipbuilding, by having new aluminum pick we have a vision to make sure every technology. a rep and silicon valley with the future of ai, we should be setting up ai academies in different places pick we have a
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vision for making child care affordable, for making health care affordable. that's what the democrats need to be focused on. >> bill: some ideas sound really good. can i ask you something you said to shannon yesterday. the al green center last week, you didn't like his behavior. i heard that loud and clear from you. you didn't vote to censure him kick you said i didn't vote to censure him because he did not engage in violence or something like that. he was asked to leave and he left. wouldn't have required him to act out physically in order for you to approve a censure? >> no. my answer was criticized, probably not my best one is what i was trying to say. he spoke out, we have a robust first amendment that protects political speech, but he disrupted the proceedings. it was totally justified for speaker johnson to remove him from those proceedings because he was speaking out in an inappropriate time and manner. but because of my commitment to robust political speech, i think a censure goes too far. it would be a permanent market,
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it would be chilling for speaking out. that to me is a balanced view. if he continues to do it repeatedly, maybe there's a view for censure. i don't think given the first amendment traditions that a censure was justified. >> bill: what will happen next year? why did the democrats walk him in? >> they should have. there certain things -- >> bill: who made that call? >> i assume it was our leadership who appoints that. but here is the point. i will tell you what they were thinking, and maybe you would agree. certainly you would agree that elon musk and the president should come to congress before engaging in not spending congressionally appropriate money. that they should make sure they are listening to court orders. there is a genuine concern, real concern among people in our caucus, that they are not following the constitution separation of powers.
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my point -- they said let's engage in not escorting him in. i think we should have escorted him in and maybe show to the mac in public we have three branches of government and that needs to be upheld. >> bill: come on back soon. i heard a lot of democrats over the weekend being asked whether or not they would vote for this continuing resolution. a lot of them were hedging. adjust leaves open the possibility that some in your party could vote with republicans this week. you see that happening, yes or no? >> not on this current form, not with medicaid cuts. not with the cuts they have. >> bill: they didn't say it that way. we will see how it goes. thank you for your time. i'm out of time today. talk again. >> thank you, bill. >> bill: dana? >> dana: the justice department is scrabbling to investigate rising egg prices. plus a famous family is getting a lot of attention now that all three eagles have landed. ♪ ♪ ♪ birds of a feather. ♪ we should stick together.
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♪ ♪ most people don't realize how processed typical dog food is. at the farmer's dog, we believe dogs should be able to get their daily nutrition without the excess processing. ♪ (♪) you know that thing your family does? (♪) yeah, that thing. someone made it a thing— way back in the day. but where did it come from? and how did it get aaaall the way to you? (♪) curious? ancestry can help you find out... with detailed dna results, and inspiring family history memberships. what are you waiting for,
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a sale? well, lucky you.
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>> harris: president trumpsaid f translation and more goods in the usa making america good again. to the benefits of tariffs will take a bit of time. plus the president making good on his promise to support foreigners who support terrorists. on student visas, they are out in a fresh round dam on crime fighting amongst themselves. when strategy is emerging but we can't use the words on tv. congressman lance gooden, leo terrell, jaclyn deangelis, "the faulkner focus" at the top of the hour of. >> bill: senator roberts kennedy jr. making the america happy again in the grady trimble is watching from the hhs departt
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and d.c. hello. >> belle, good morning to you. i'm expecting to be extremely tough and honest conversations between secretary kennedy and major food company leaders that might be an understatement because for years kennedy has gone after them sort of blaming them for the health problems that americans face. who will be in attendance today in the meeting? we expect the leaders from general mills and pepsico to be there. to the consumer brands association, which has been pushing for the meeting will also be in attendance. to that group represents some of the biggest players in the food industry including craft times, coca-cola and others. we don't have exact details what they will discuss. we know rfk jr. has been clear food companies need to simplified process foods and be more transparent about what is going into those foods here just because something is poisoning the american people.
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me know the primary cause are changing from supply, the switch from highly chemical intensive process foods. we have 10,000 ingredients in our country in our foods. the europeans only have 400. >> in today's meeting is the first face-to-face meeting between kennedy since he was confirmed and the major food companies which he has gone after for years. it could be interesting, bill, we expect read out from the super brands association. >> bill: i am willing to learn and paying attention and then i will make my own decisions bear to thank you, grady, nice to see you at the head of hhs, dana. >> dana: the justice department with soaring egg prices and whether a producers conspiring to restrict supplies to keep the prices i. madison alworth from
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fox business, was this a hangover from the biden administration? >> definitely, dana, we have been dealing with the bird flu since 2022 but the reality prices have skyrocketed. take a look back in december. a dozen of eggs $4 and then the latest total, about $7 for a dozen of eggs. we have seen such an increase in prices and why the department of justice is opening an investigation. they are looking whether major producers are violating antitrust laws by sharing information about supply and pricing approach is applied being the number of eggs. when a flock is introduced to the bird flu, they killed the entire flock. i have mary josephine and the owner, $1.50 to all dishes they can, egg, cheese $1.45. what is the reaction from customers? so far, so good they are well aware of the egg prices so we haven't got much pushback
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that about two weeks ago, we started this and mostly everybody understands. >> thank you so much. the u.s. government looking into an investigation and talks with turkey with import of more ads that you need a billion eggs to make a difference of so for now higher cost for bacon, eggs, cheese. >> dana: you have been hungry so thank you, medicine. >> bill: is asking for salt and pepper. >> bill: a four-way good oh, 0 . they share 3 for 3. >> dana: a good year. >> bill: they welcomed and eaglet and big bear valley. >> dana: maybe this eagle will win the debt ncaa championship. the super bowl and now this. >> bill: beautiful. >> dana: harris faulkner is up

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