tv FOX and Friends FOX News March 12, 2025 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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also national security, about 30 seconds to you, congresswoman? >> absolutely. this is a great bill by ashley henson. tremendous representative from iowa. really important we bring our supply chains back in every way we can i have a bill called the pills act which does a similar thing. brings our supply chains back. vital vitamins and medicines that we make should be made in country with all of the provisions that we have, the labor standards, the fda, all the standard we have to make these things excellent, safe for american citizens. we aren't getting that kind of oversight and security when they're produced in places like china. >> todd: right. it creates a situation where if they want to turn the screws on us, they can. and that puts us in a horrible situation when it comes to negotiating. congresswoman claudia tenney we appreciate it? >> thank you so much. >> todd: carley, don't forget to set your dvr 5:00 a.m. every morning so you don't miss a minute of "fox & friends first." >> carley: "fox & friends" starts right now.
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♪ >> ainsley: good morning. it's 6:00 a.m. on the east coast, it's wednesday, march 12th. >> and this is "fox & friends." we start with a fox news alert. surveillance video shows what appears to be the last known images of that missing pittsburgh college student in the dominican republic. what we know about the new person of interest in this case. >> lawrence: and large crowds gather in new york city to actually support the anti-israeli protester arrested by ice. we're live outside the new york city courthouse where the judge will hear the case today. >> brian: do you see them going at the cops, too? they should be in jail. i have a sense they were let out. bernie sanders has lived through the end of the world, world war ii. the cold war and 9/11. so, how can he possibly say this? >> these are, you know, the scariest times in my lifetime, that's all. so, it's not only the power of money. it's also combined with that the movement toward
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authoritarianism. >> steve: okay. you are not supposed to talk in a library. >> brian: exactly. >> steve: "fox & friends" for a wednesday starts with this am animation. >> brian: i think special exemption from a socialist. >> steve: shhh. >> brian: you are right. the trump administration's new 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports go into effect overnight and the european union responding with $28 billion on tariffs on u.s. goods. >> ainsley: lucas tomlinson joins us live with the latest. >> good morning. the european union announced retaliatory measures that the trump administration put those 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminum products in place. there is a statement from the white house about ontario's about-face. after president trump threatened to use executive powers to retaliate with a colossal 50% tariff against canada, ontario premier doug ford spoke with secretary will you tell nobody
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convey he's backing down on implementing a 25% charge on electricity exports to the united states. lutnick and ontario's premier doug ford are scheduled to meet in washington tomorrow. >> i thought this was the right decision. they understand how serious we are. we have both agreed let cooler heads prevail. we need sit down and move this forward. >> lucas: the markets were down again yesterday. the dow lost 478 points. the s&p 500 and nasdaq were also down. the dow is down 3.6% since trump's return to the white house. the s&p off 6.4%. s&p 500 enjoined all-time high on february 19th. >> also dropped and markets are going to go up. they are going to go down. >> yeah. >> do you know what? we have to rebuild our country. our country has been stripped of its jobs, of its factories. i'm tired to see where they build apartments, cheap apartments in an old broken down factory. >> now today president trump welcomed ireland's prime minister to the white house
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today. irish government critic of israel and led the case against benjamin netanyahu leading to israel closing its embassy in dublin. the white house has called the case against bibi illegitimate and baseless, guys. >> steve: all right. lucas. thank you very much. lucas just mentioned that the e. is responding with something like $28 billion with counter terrorists. and they have put together a 99-page list of stuff that will impact americans more than it will impact europeans. everything from lad ladies' blos and canned fowl, duck and stuff like that to raspberries. things that we like and we are going to have to pay more for going forward. but the europeans, not so much. >> ainsley: this is all part of the art of the deal. trump knows what he's doing. he's only been in office for five, six weeks now. he's saying trust me. going to be painful in the beginning, pay more for some items. but, in the end, it's going to be worth it.
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now, as far as canada's concerned premier of ontario, doug ford, as lucas was saying he is going to sit down with howard lutnick, our secretary of commerce tomorrow, and they're going to discuss the renewing of the usmca because on april 2nd we have those reciprocal tariffs that will take effect. that's the deadline. so they're trying to sit down at the table and make a deal before. and the ontario premier, he said i spent 20 years living in new york city or new york, he said, in chicago. he said i want to apologize to the american people. i love the american people. i absolutely love them. >> lawrence: i think the president is redoing the way republican politics typically was, which is he is fighting for the worker of the country. these used to be democratic voters. he has made a promise to all of these union people that not only am i going to get manufacturing back in country, but i'm going to ensure that you get those jobs as well. and so, i think the one thing that the administration could do a better job in is messaging the
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type of pain that we're going to feel. i think the overall message of saying, look, i'm fighting to make sure that the jobs, that the workforce stays here in the country, that america is not getting screwed over, i think that's resonating. how are we going to make sure that we are not going to get hit with these tariffs because we know it ends up being a tax on us. how do we avoid that? if they get that part of the messaging down, i think the american people are going to back this 100 percent. >> brian: wall street will get used to the pace. they are not used to the pace. not much was happening for the last four years. things were telegraphed. budget process, tax cuts. your economic plans, spending plans, infrastructure deal. they knew it was coming. it passes, and then they see the impact. now the president is dealing with individual skirmishes while getting set to lay the groundwork for the reciprocal tariffs which are going to be wild. if indy is giving us 50% on all our cars we will hit you with
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50%, too. and then the theory is we are going to go down to the same level. both sides will go why don't we bring it down? another thing, by friday, if there is no budget impasse and get a c.r. until september, that will be an increase. if they decide on april 1st that there's no more tariffs between canada and mexico, because you're cracking down on fentanyl that, will be an increase. then you will see a huge boom when they pass one big beautiful bill or at least one of two. that will be increase. when they get a free trade deal with england which i think is imminent, not going to be done under democrats because they left the european union, that will be an increase. so, i think what the president is saying and if you look at his body language, he's not panicking. he's not worrying. he is not in to the play by play big picture we are privatizing the economy, bringing manufacturers back. and it's not easy. >> steve: right. that's his approach towards tariffs. he has been talking about tariffs for a long time. the lead story right now that just went up on the "wall street
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journal" talks about how senior white house officials had been getting panic calls from ceos, members of the republican party, business leaders and stuff like that. they say you've got to calm down the markets because we understand you want tariffs, but it's just the on again, off again nature of it that jitters the markets. you know, like yesterday, when it was going to be a 25% tariff against canada and then he said it's going to be 50%. by the end of the day they changed their minds again. many people in the president's circle have abandoned efforts to get him to reverse course on tariffs, instead what they simply want is they want a more predictable tariff agenda. just say okay, this is going to be the policy and stick to it. everybody will be in line as long as it doesn't keep changing. it's the changing nature that has spooked the markets and all the so-called trump bump, big gains since he was elected, they
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are all gone now. >> ainsley: something else that's important to donald trump and he ran on this was eliminating the department of education. he says we don't need it. he wants states to be in charge of our schools. and we interviewed the secretary of education, linda mcmahon last week, and she's saying this is just president trump's mandate. she is doing what she was told. yesterday they announced they fired more than 1300 people. 1315 workers were fired yesterday. here she is. >> that was the president's mandate as directed to me. clearly is to shut down the department of education, which we know we'll have to work with congress, you know, to get that accomplished. but what we did today was to take the first step of eliminating of what i think is bureaucratic bloat. that's not to say that a lot of the folks, you know, it's a humanitarian thing to a lot of folks that are there they're out of a job. but, we wanted to make sure that we kept all of the right people and the good people to make sure that the outward facing
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programs, the grants, the appropriations that come from congress, all of that are being met and none of that is going to fall through the cracks. >> lawrence: so there has been a lot of panic. not when it comes to rank and file voters that are out interest, but when it comes to the teachers union. perfectly explains it all. the teachers union education department to their will and shut it down to throttle their power. this is what it says, every increase in washington's education spending helps union causes. for some people, -- for so many problems with the american education system, unions will claim that the trouble is a teacher shortage. then lawmakers for taxpayer cash as a solution. yet, no matter how many staffers are hired, achievement gaps remain. test scores in math and reading today are at a near historic low. it's true we get the national report card every single year. no one has ever been able to
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explain to me why are the charter schools and the private schools having lower pupil dollars but, yet, their performance is going up, yet, the public schools here, every single day, they get the traditional funding, their scores are going down? it's not a money issue. it's a management issue. >> steve: yeah. in fact, you know, it's different from every school district. you're talking about charter schools. in new jersey, i think it was just about two years ago, u.s. n"u.s.news and world report" rad all the schools. and the worst performing school in new jersey was a charter school. so they closed it down. if you are, you know, you get a pell grant or a student loan or anything like that and you are worried about, well, the department of education, that's who essentially by statute makes sure that i get my money. she made it very clear, linda mcmahon did and what they have put out since then is that anything that is mandated by congress student loans, pell
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grants, funding for special needs students, those programs will continue. it's just trying to make things more efficient. they are trying, as she says, in that soundbite eliminate the bloat and in washington there is a lot of it. >> brian: 50% of the workforce is out and guess what more paired down. linda made it clear that's her mandate. apply to the states number one, no one feels good when you lose a be jobs i imagine they might adjust a little bit. this seems much more organized. she said i look at doge as my audit. i feel like i'm under an audit when i have doge there. and i want to hear what they have to say to lean out the organization. you're going to be very happy in the states. just like the pandemic. the president said, listen, you guys understand your people, you know the topography, here is your money. these states are going to be happy to have a little bit more control if you're in the right state. maybe some parents are going to want to move. i just looked at some of the headlines. this is what prompted action in january 29th. u.s. children fall further behind in reading. make little improvement in math.
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"wall street journal" american student math skills slide down world rankings. december 4th, u.s. student reading scores drop to worst in more than 20 years. how could you say the status quo is okay? it's not. meanwhile -- i'm sorry? >> ainsley: real quickly. the department of education is closed today for security reasons. we don't know exactly what happened. the department didn't give any details about what the security concerns were. but they did shut the doors. i don't know if people are upset from being fired yesterday. >> steve: they told people to take their government issued computers home with them. they just don't want want a scene. ultimately if test scores go up -- and that really is our grade card and donald trump's grade card too -- if scores go up and every exception they will, that will be part of his legacy. i was able to get the scores up using less, you know, people at the department of education. and he had been talking about it, and, if it works out, it will be fantastic. >> brian: four tesla cybertrucks torched because elon musk owns
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them. last week seven tesla charging stations near boston set ablaze. hundreds of protesters gathered outside of tesla showrooms in manhattan, in colorado a woman put a nazi swastika on as many teslas as she could find. 39-year-old man accused of vandalizing several tesla vehicles over in like line, massachusetts. why? because elon musk started doge, a government efficiency program and they feel like this is the best way to get back on him for trying to reduce the deficit i'm starting to question the left when they say they want want to go after the carbon emissions and all of this tesla. the most common car many electric cars base off tesla.
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are you a green politics or greeny period? do you want to eliminate the emissions, period? >> ainsley: now the left hate the evs? you think of an ev you think of a tesla. because he is trying to save our country money which they apparently don't like. they don't like him anymore because they hate trump so much. here is donald trump talking about the acts of violence against these dealerships. >> talked about some of the violence that's been going on around the country at dealerships. some say they should be labeled domestic terrorists. >> i will do that i'll do it. i'm going to stop them. we catch anybody doing it, because they are harming a great american company. when you hurt an american company, especially a company like this that supplies so many jobs that others are unable to do, when you do that, those people are going to go through big problem when we catch them. we have a lot of -- we have a lot of cameras up. we already know who some of them are. we are going to catch them. and they are bad guys. they're the same guys that screw
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around with our schools and universities. the same garbage. and no, we are going to catch them. let me tell you, you do it to tesla and you do it to any company we're going to catch you and you are going to go through hell. >> steve: okay. so think twice if you're thinking about torching a tesla place or throwing a molotov cocktail. so there you saw the president yesterday in the late afternoon, south lawn, where they had an array of five different teslas, including a red, white, and blue one. and the president picked the red one. he bought it, apparently he wrote a check to elon musk for it right on the spot. >> brian: he doesn't like direct deposit, he said. i love what sean did. he bought a tesla, right? >> ainsley: two of them. he bought one for radio that he is going to give to someone who wins that contest. >> steve: that's cool. >> ainsley: personal one. is he selling the other car and replacing it with the tesla. >> brian: friends@foxnews.com. this guy is trying to donate his time and expertise to the
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country getting no money. and his companies are paying the price. let alone him not being at the head of it. one of the supporters on the radio show the dollar loan center they bought $250,000 worth of tesla stock. and they went out and bought a brand new vehicle for their fleet because they are so outraged about what is happening. >> lawrence: because it's nonsense. >> brian: they are not cheap but they are great cars. >> ainsley: $35,000 for cheapest one he said. >> lawrence: he doesn't need this. he does not have to do this. he doesn't have to help the country. he can just be a scientist and just stick to that but he's doing this because of the mission. he says that the america cannot survive down the path that we are heading. >> brian: this is crazy for a guy to come in and try to make the government more efficient and now he is enemy number one. >> lawrence: stupid. >> brian: what is going on in the country? >> steve: he's all in. it was reported yesterday that apparently donald trump was told by elon musk -- elon said i'm
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going to donate another $100 million to your political operation because i believe so much in your current agenda. he has already ponied up 250 million during the campaign. elon musk all in. >> ainsley: only thick they can go after donald trump with right now. >> brian: i know. he is henry ford. is he benjamin franklin. what the heck? >> ainsley: 17 minutes after the top of the hour to another alert. the fbi is joining a search for missing of university pittsburgh student sudiksha konanki who vanished in the dominican republic last week while on spring break. newly released surveillance video from a resort in punta cana shows the last images of her on the day of her disappearance. the footage shows her walking to the beach, as you can see, with a group of friends. the sheriff from her hometown in virginia has named a person of interest. the 24-year-old iowa man is seen in that video with his arm around her. and he is believed to be the last person to see her before she went missing. a spokesperson for the loudoun
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county sheriff's office saying, quote: this is still a missing persons case. not a criminal case. but sheriff chatman wants to make sure the investigation is comprehensive and includes all possible assets and techniques. we are working closely with the fbi on all of this. according to the local reports, she was on the beach in the early morning during a power outage at that resort. she was staying there, which reportedly disabled some security cameras and systems when they had the power outage surveillance video was not available. >> steve: very unfortunate. >> lawrence: as predicted he is going to be named a suspect or a person of interest. he is the last person to see her. and, ainsley, you mentioned this yesterday. i can't get over the three story lines. and maybe it's because alcohol was involved. so initially he claimed that he vomited due to the rough surf and returned to shore asking her if she was okay. then he later said that he felt
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sick, left the water and he last saw her in knee deep water before passing out. then, the third story is, in another version he says he saw her walking along the shore before he fell asleep. so he has three different story lines right now. he's the last person to see her that we know of right now. the police are going to have a lot of questions. >> brian: if you are going on spring break, do not leave your friends and do not let a friend stay behind. you can't allow this to happen. >> steve: there are a lot of parents who don't let their kids go to spring break. let's just hope they will find her. >> ainsley: yes, please. >> brian: carley shimkus you have the other breaking news. >> carley: listen to this, guys. the nypd arresting around a dozen pro-palestinian demonstrators after they blocked the street in downtown mid-atlantic in support of detained activist mahmoud khalil. according to police one person was charged with disorderly conduct. another 11 were issued summonses. they are protesting the possible
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deportation of khalil, who is a former columbia university grad student who led student protests. a hearing is scheduled this morning in manhattan federal court regarding his arrest and potential deportation. in about 50 minutes have a live report from outside the courthouse. the trump-backed bill to fund the government through september is headed to the senate after passing the house in a narrow 217 to 213 vote. it slashes nondefense spending by $1 billion while boosting defense funding by $8 billion. >> this was a big vote on the house floor. the republicans stood together and we had one democrat vote with us to do the right thing and that is to fund the government. this was a clean c.r. it freezes funding. it's a responsible thing to do. >> carley: this is a major victory for house speaker mike johnson who will join "fox & friends" later this morning. don't miss it. and florida lawmakers are now advancing a bill to rename the
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gulf of mexico the gulf of america. the name change would apply both state laws and education materials. the move comes after president trump's executive order and has the backing of governor ron desantis who has already used the name, the new name in official orders. if approved, the change would take effect in july. just in time for the fourth of july, guys. >> steve: indeed. thank you very much. meanwhile, this is big. we have been waiting for this. the countdown is finally on for the spacex mission that's going to bring home the starliner astronauts whose 8-day mission wound up being a nine month mission. >> brian: boeing should be paying for this. ashley webster is live in titusville, florida ahead of tonight's launch. ashley? >> yeah. you think you have had some bad trips. well, they say in the space world that this is kind of a gift if you like. they get to spend more time in space. you know, it's 279 days and counting. to your point, it was supposed to be only 8 days.
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all looks good for the astronauts butch wilmore and sunny williams, who have been up there since june 5th at the international space station. they are -- were supposed to come back on a boeing starliner that started to have problems. that was brought back last september empty. so they have been up at the space station ever since. and you would think that, boy, you know, how do you last that long in space when you are only planning on 8 days. astronaut bullpen will more says you know what? we plan for every contingency. listen. >> we came up prepared to stay long even though we planned to stay short. that's what you do in human spaceflight. that's what the human space station is all about. planning for unknown unexpected contingencies. we did that. >> well, the replacement crew will take off at 7:48 p.m. eastern time. it all looks good. they did a precheck flight yesterday. got the thumbs up. and the weather, too, more than
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the 95% chance of the weather being perfect. so all things considered, butch wilmore and sunny williams may actually put their back on earth maybe some time early next week. back to you. >> steve: ashley, since they technically have been at work nonstop for nine months, do they get overtime because they are going to be loaded. >> well, that depends on the budget. if elon musk and doge has anything to do with it, probably not. >> brian: thanks so much, ashley. 23 minutes after the hour now. awaiting an important inflation report this morning after markets sunk again yesterday. >> ainsley: this just short-term pain for long-term gain? fodges business' jackie deangelis is here to explain, next. ♪
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>> steve: well, president trump is defending tariff trade tactics despite major stock market tempe turbulence this we. >> tariffs are having a tremendously positive impact. they will have and they are having. we have car companies that are not building in mexico now they are building in the united states but the biggest win is if they move in our country and produce jobs. that's a bigger win than the tariffs themselves. >> steve: co-host of the big
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money show jackie deangelis joins us now. >> good morning. >> steve: so the markets are terrified. they can't quite figure out the tariff stuff. he's very clear. they're gonna go through. so, what do people need to do? >> i would just say this. we have seen volatility before. and i'm not going to down play what's happened over the last couple of days, but sometimes with the stock market and i have been watching it since i was a teenager for the last 30 years. it takes one thing to trigger it. especially now with al gore redd-it mechanic training. the computers start working people to pause and take a big breath and take a big picture. the s&p 500 up 20%. well over 20%. last year and the year before that the markets are spooked here. they don't understand how the tariffs are going to play out, what that will mean for business, what that will mean for consumers. if you look at the bigger picture of trump's economic plans, you raise revenue from
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the tariffs and it helps feed other things that go on. >> steve: sure. >> i point to the canada example because the back and forth, and the negotiation process is working. it bringing canada to the table to have a conversation. i have said to the start these are proposed tariffs. let them be actually implemented before parties have conversations and agree to different terms. >> steve: as we know mr. ford, the ontario premier yesterday he said at one point because it was back and forth, back and forth and all this stuff plays out in real time on tv these days. all right, fine. i will pull the plug for electricity for 1.5 million americans who get electricity from canada. within hours, they completely did a 1800 because they realized, you know what we have got to sit down. we will come to a number. trump might want 25%. ultimately, that's just where you start. >> right. >> steve: tell us where it is going to end. >> he is letting you inside the board room as he did inside the
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apprentice, for example. see these negotiations play out. this is what happens in real life. it's not always easy. it's not simple. parties don't agree on the first day. it takes time. >> steve: indeed. all right. speaking of time later this morning. the consumer price index is going to come out. its inflation. what are we previewing. >> tariff impact certainly isn't going to be in this number. we still are dealing with inflation problem in this country. oil prices have come down $66 a barrel. president trump is going to take them down even farther than that i'm not so worried about what we see in this number today although the markets will be looking at it very closely. i'm more concerned about the long term. i think the things is he doing policy-wise, he wants to create a growth economy, he wants to bring manufacturing back home. he wants to bring energy costs down. reduce regulation. so that all these things can play together with potential tariffs to make the economy stronger and better. everybody needs to kind of just pause, let him do thinks thing, it's only mid march right now. you don't snap your fingers and
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fix the message biden created in four years. >> steve: you know, with the market uncertainty, it would be a bad day to retire. so don't retire this week and maybe today, look at that, there is green down in the corner today. that's what we want to see. >> that's the thing. can i make this point? everyone i talk to on wall street says this. this is a tremendous buying opportunity. we may see some more selling and more volatility, so i'm not necessarily saying today is the day. you will see these bounces because there is a lot of cash on the sidelines that's looking to get in here. so, when stocks are battered, people look for bargains, that's the scariest time too get in the market but often the best time. >> steve: lots to talk about at noon on "the big money show." >> we will see you then, thank you. >> steve: it is 28 minutes before the top of the hour, carley joins us with news about a captain. >> carley: got a big update here, steve. british police arresting a cargo ship captain monday's fiery collision with a u.s. flagged oil tanker in the north sea. the container ship owner says the captain is a russian
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national. the rest of the crew were russian and filipino nationals. the 59-year-old was taken in on suspicion of manslaughter after search and rescue and rescue operations for a missing crew member were called off. that person is now presumed dead. officials say the portuguese ship crashed into the american tanker causing multiple explosions. the national transportation safety board is calling for immediate changes at reagan national airport saying the helicopter routes pose intolerable aviation risk to safety. that comes mid-air collision black hawk and passenger jet that killed # 67 people the transportation department saying it will immediately update routes and follow the recommendations. and this also comes as major u.s. airliners are seeing a slow in command for air travel. bookings initially fell after the d.c. crash and dropped again last month after delta's crash landing on a snowy runway in
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toronto. those are your headlines, steve, over to you. >> steve: all right, carley, thank you very much. >> carley: you're welcome. >> steve: a fox news alert. this video is believed to be the last time captured on video that the american college student who is now missing in the dominican republic was seen. a private investigator is going to tell us what this means for the investigation into where is she? good ranchers is delivering american sourced proteins ♪ and many of us don't give it a second thought our meat and seafood is individually portioned and vacuum sealed, locking in freshness and flavor, allowing you to feed your family with what you need while reducing waste visit good ranchers dot com and discover american meat delivered
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of course khalil a foreign-born activist helped lead protests. around on saturday even though he has a green card. sources tell fox news he was being investigated as a potential national security threat. the department of homeland security saying in part, quote. khalil led activities aligned to hamas, a designated terrorist organization. senior white house correspondent peter doocy asking president trump about this and trump is promising even more arrests of terrorist sympathizers. >> i think we ought to get them all out of the country they are troublemakers, they are agitators. they don't lo our country we ought to get him the hell out. i heard his statements, too. they were plenty bad. i think we ought to get him the hell out of the country. >> khalil's lawyers have filed motions challenging the arrest arguing it violated their client's first and fifth amendment rights and to have khalil brought back to new york. after he was transferred to an ice detention center in louisiana. now, other activists are
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planning a protest right across the street from where i am here. hearing here set toe begin at 11:30 a.m. and certainly expect those protesters to be out here in full force before then. ainsley, back over to you. >> ainsley: all right. thank you so much, todd. a fox news alert. newly released surveillance footage at capturing the final moments of missing college student before she disappeared on spring break in the dominican republic. now local authorities have confirmed a person of interest. a 24-year-old man who was scene with his arm around her in that video. and the loudoun county sheriff's office says this is still a missing persons case. not a criminal case. international private investigator j.j. arms joins us now. good morning to you. >> good morning, ainsley. how are you? >> ainsley: i'm doing well, unlike her family. it's just tragic. and as a woman who is, you know, traveled with groups of friends before on trips, it's just very scary. what would -- how would you handle this case if you were on it, first of all?
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and what stands out to you as a private investigator? >> very easy in a case like this to jump to conclusions. you have to make sure that you stick to the facts. you stick to the evidence and, if possible, one possible, you stick to the forensics in this cases we have got some good leads, we have the benefit of surveillance video throughout the property, which has enabled us to get some timelines on when she was last seen with her friends, when she was with -- last at the beach, who she went to the beach with. and, you know, that has provided a gentleman now who is being described as a person of interest. yesterday he was still being said that he was not a suspect or person of interest. when you say we have good leads what do you mean by that. >> i'm not saying i have good leads personally. i'm saying the leads that come out through news reports as far as video surveillance possible suspect in the case those are the leads i'm talking about. >> what about i read that the
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private investigator that handled natalee holloway's case he was saying if she were in the water, the body would have washed up by now. do you agree with that? >> that's one of the things that sticks out to me when you are an investigator differently. you know the possibilities, you know the different scenarios that lie beneath the surface. typically in the body of water when a body sinks gases start to build up in the body even if the body is weighted down it tends to float up after 3 to 4 days. of course, you have another incident. reminds you have the natalee holloway case because so many things similar. worst case from a crime standpoint because you are right on the ocean. if she did go out in the ocean which is what was reported, that area is known to have rip currents, went in there in the dark and alone supposedly, she
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could have been swept out to sea. of course when you are dealing with an ocean as opposed to a still body of water like a lake. you have a lot of other variables that come into play. >> ainsley: sharks and marine life as well. he has three different stories, one swept away by a wave. another one where he last saw her in knee deep water you can't be swept away by knee deep water. thanks so much for coming on, jay. >> thank you, ainsley. >> you are welcome. senator bernie sanders lived through the cuban missile crisis and 9/11 but says this is the scariest time of his life? wait until you hear his reason. oh, it makes me want to tear up. i swear to god, there ain't no way ♪
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jennifer january good morning, everyone. happy wednesday. we have a lot going on this week. the potential for severe weather today. we have a spot here across the ark-la-texs in oklahoma. could see stronger storms. the main event will come later this week. as we go through today, especially the afternoon, the potential for large hail, mainly damaging winds and isolated tornado. our next system moving into the west, that one means business. that's the one that is going to bring the possibility for heavy snow, blizzard conditions and a severe weather outbreak. so not to mention heavy rainfall for california, including
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southern california and we are concerned for flooding and perhaps mud slides and rock slides across the burn areas. here is our big weathermaker on friday. a very powerful system injects from the rockies. brings us blizzard conditions for the upper midwest and a severe weather outbreak friday, saturday and sunday to some very heavily populated areas. this is sunday, so parts of the i-59 corridor could get in on this. want to make mention, yet again, the possibility for a multi-day event not only hail, damaging winds, heavy rainfall but tornadoes, several of them, and maybe long lasting, life-threatening. have a way to get your watches and warnings and we've keep you up to date. brian kilmeade over to you. >> brian: thanks so much, janice. meanwhile this, back to politics. 83-year-old bernie sanders has lived through some of our nation's biggest wars, 9/11, but apparently this is the scariest time of his life. >> these are, you know, the scariest times in my lifetime. that's all.
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that's subject tialy the truth. it's not just they want to get tax breaks to billionaires and cut programs for working people. frankly, that's happened before. >> yeah. >> you combine that with the power of the oligarchy in general, you combine that with mr. musk owning twitter, and able to sent out his messages to hundreds of millions of people. it's not only the power of money, it's also combined with that the movement toward authoritarianism. >> brian: wow. remember the days when they controlled twitter? fox news contributor guy benson is here to rant. guy, scary? are you scared? >> not like bernie sanders is. not even close. and i'm not sure if he actually believes that. i think that's what he is saying at the moment because is he getting him attention he does want to attack the system and the people involved in it each
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under his own explanation he finds this moment scarier where the american people made a choice and election results are following through and carrying out, he sees this as more frightening than some of the other major world events he has lived through in his long life already. i'm not sure many other americans would agree with that but probably a lot of elements of the democratic base would reasonsy bias. reasons resent is i bias. focus many people in the democratic party base are looking for from their party and not seeing it many other places. so, that's at least one thing, is he reading the moment and reading the room of his own base better than other democrats. >> brian: is he a guy vehemently anti-israel and outwardly a socialist. is that your leader at 83? >> maybe part of the reason is he concerned three houses. he has done very well as a
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socialist in this country. maybe now through policy things might move in different direction for other people. for rich people like himself, i think he will be okay. >> brian: let's talk about this, in case you are wondering what rosie o'donnell is doing with her future and where she is now. here is your answer. >> i'm here in ireland and when, you know it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights there in america, that's when we will consider coming back. protect your sanity is all i can say. protect your sanity as much as you can. >> brian: so your thoughts about her move? >> so, two things here, brian. number one, it was about 20 years ago, donald trump and rosie o'donnell had a vicious feud with brutal insults flying back and forth. if we do a status check on that feud, donald trump has just been elected president of the united states for the second time and rosie o'donnell has fled the country.
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so, i think he probably got the better end of that battle. the second thing and this might be a little surprising to viewers, i want to give her credit. i want to praise her a little bit because we're talking about her for the first time in a long time so congrats on that. more importantly, as long as i have been politically aware, brian, we have heard from various celebrities through the years if a republican wins x election i am leaving the country, right? they make this threat, this claim, this vow. and then, of course, once it happens, they are comfortable here, they are cushy, they didn't really mean it, it's all hollow. in her case she has actually done it, right? it wasn't just an empty threat. she has packed up and left. so, good for her. she actually followed through. >> brian: okay. that's interesting. but, if you are looking for her, it's ireland, saint patrick's day. i'm sure she is going to have great time. great time for the irish lady from long island. thank you so much, guy, look forward to your radio show come up at 3:00 today guy benson
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show. march 22nd, back on stage with fox nation, st. louis, missouri, at the factory, hope to see you there, brian kilmeade.com. also on the 21st in dayton, ohio, whio listeners hope to see you there in dayton, meanwhile tickets are available. fox nation will have specials for anyone who comes. meanwhile straight ahead, big win for trump's agenda as the house sends funding bill to the senate. speaker johnson tells us how republicans got it done. ♪
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