tv Outnumbered FOX News March 12, 2025 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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♪ ♪ >> emily: hello, everyone, this is for 30. am emily compagno if my cohost, kayleigh mcenany and harris faulkner. joining us today, lara trump code cohost of "my view with lara trump" and kevin o'leary, chairman of the "kevin o'leary adventures." president trump taking a wrecking ball to the department of education. his administration effectively cut the d.o.e. workforce i half. this marks the first step in the ultimate plan to dismantle the entire department. he said the current education system is failing our nation students. to the scores don't lie. only 31% of american fourth-graders are reading at proficient level. 28% of eighth graders passed
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math and in new jersey the teachers union got what it wanted, no more basic reading and writing requirements for the teachers. and in connecticut, a student is suing after she says she was allowed to graduate with honors, despite being illiterate. education secretary, linda mcmahon, agrees with the president and she says it is time to shut it down. >> is this the first step on the road to a total shutdown? >> yes, actually it is because that was the president's mandate and directive to me is clearly to shuhe department of education which we know we will have to work with congress to get that done. but what we did today was to take the first step of eliminating what i think is bureaucratic bloat. but, we wanted to make sure that we kept all of the right people, the good people to make sure outward facing programs, the grants, the appropriations that come from congress are all being
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net. net of that will fall through the cracks. >> emily: lara trump, a new era that will serve the nation states. just before let's hope so because the longer the department of education in existence go to the larger it has become, the worse the students performed. though stats are terrifying, actually, 30% of students are able to read at proficient level and 28% at proficient in math, that is abysmal, terrible! president trump is saying, this is broken and i want to fix it and it would be better going back to the states. when you talk to parents around the country, parents pulled 77% and they nearly every state they are in favor of school choice and want to know where to send their child appear to no parent should be able to send to a failing school if that is what the department of education has afforded every student. >> emily: kevin, they came out yesterday with epa results and we sell heartbreaking reality for american students and it
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confirms the pandemic so many students left behind and relevant being brought up, a fall further behind. we pump billions of dollars into the d.o.t. and plus $190 billion in pandemic funds and the test scores are lower. >> kevin: we had this problem long before the pandemic. they were 110 million high schools and one in california and texas most of the policies made. unfortunately test scores in math and reading, which we actually monitor through high school, adverse what we spend, in any other t20 country we are in the bottom quartile. the system was broken before and i tell you why, i spent most of my career in education. we were at the software for schools. but you will hate what i say here but i don't care because it is the truth. the unions and teaching keep mediocrity in the system. can we have some of the worst teachers in the world sitting there getting paid and we can't
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fire them versus the ability to pay much more to a great teacher. a great teacher is priceless and every parent knows that in every state in every school, but i would guess and this is tough love here, 30% should be gone. we should take their salaries and give it all up to the remaining teachers because they can't even afford to live near the schools in some communities. great teacher is priceless! why aren't we paying them a lot more? we need to break the union, mediocrity in education is festering because at the union keeps horrible teachers at their jobs. okay, bring on the emails! [laughs] >> harris: i'm getting a ton of emails from canada over the tariffs i keep reporting on so i join you but that. >> kevin: i tell you the truth. >> harris: what you are talking about is so transparent during the pandemic and we got
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to know who is teaching your kids. up close and personal, what are the habits of the teacher now that she is in the kitchen teaching my kid on that kitchen island, i get to see what they are missing in terms of the communication from the teacher. they say, hold office hours, even online, and then you couldn't find them after a certain hour of the day. my big question is always been ledoux who is watching the people in charge of our money at the department of education? because you are saying we are spending x and we are getting x - 50. so how do we out of them? >> kevin: i pay $100,000 to many great ones in my community. the teacher in the same town is making $50,000. to that is crazy! great teacher is worth a quarter million with bonuses because they advance children through the system on testing scores to get them into high schools. finally into card demo colleges. it is the cornerstone and we
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treat them like in terms of pay. but is crazy. >> emily: , let's talk about malignant tumors allowed to fester. i argue yes that d.o.e. is what we are talking about. when you go to washington, d.c.,, but is hard for americans to picture, but you go see the humongous buildings that take up entire blocks that represent the centralized government, centralized entity that we are paying their overhead and hundreds and hundreds of employees and wife to your point do we need that when we have a system that can be nimble and serve locally and we are talking not only that but a bloated union that has donated to the democrat party. these fat cats have been institutionalized and fighting tooth and nail to prevent from having the mail that is placed before them three times a day taken away unaccounted with an appropriate stewardship. >> kayleigh: the department of education has 3,500 employees. despite that huge number they
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are the smallest agencies. what "the washington post" said, they describe these cuts of employees as the largest in department history and of a magnitude rarely contemplated before this administration took office. thank goodness, "washington post." when you think about this, i think about the last four years what we have covered, the insidious ideologies and critical race theory, teaching one student to dislike another student based on the color of their skin. i think about gender ideology. i think about pei, these insidious ideologies that infiltrated the school system, much the school system. every time that happened, your taxpayer dollars paid for that! i watch unelected bureaucrats last night not from boe but a different agency and the fact she doesn't have influence and power. guess what, you are unelected bureaucrats and you don't get influence and power! the person he gets power is the president of the united states and who he appoints.
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get rid of the bureaucrats and to lara point government give it to the states and i'm comfortable with my governor leaving things at the smaller level than unelected bureaucrats out on cable news lamenting the fact she doesn't have enough influence and power over my children. >> harris: she's got the time. >> emily: california stores the link scores are lower than the national average. you can see the pointers off and see what needs to be localized and helped. onto this next, bernie sanders has lived through historic events, but he says right under trump, wait for it, most terrifying. ♪ ♪ s) we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client'' best interest. (fisher investments) so we don't sell any commission-based products. (other money manager) then how do you make money? (fisher investments) we have a simple management fee, structured so we do better when our clients do better.
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♪ ♪ >> kayleigh: senator bernie sanders is 83 years-old and lives through significant events i think is fair to say. in fact, he was born just months before pearl have voter. it happen in december so he was a 2-month-old. you live through the cuban missile crisis when the soviet union and the united states on the brink of nuclear war. and he lived through sept september 11th, those horrific terrorist attacks on our country. senator sanders says right now under president trump is the most terrifying time of his life. >> these are the scariest times in my lifetime. that is objectively the truth. he is now trying to end what the founding fathers were pretty
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smart about, creating a form of government where there were checks and balances, legislative body and executive body and judiciary. so he is moving aggressively in all of these areas. yeah, there is gravity in my voice, these are scary moment. >> kayleigh: and whether you can call that objectively true with a serious face as if it is objectively truthful statement to say, this is scarier than a time when thousands of americans died and terrorist attacks. when i look at this, there is hyperbole and hyperbole and politicians is that a lot. and then there is insanity and this is the latter. >> lara: this is less hyperbolic and crazy, that is true. you know what i think was gary, kayleigh to live for the last four years and kamal on the other size in my side and we don't know who was in charge of the country. we found out joe biden apparently using auto plan to sign most of the documents that had his signature on it except for the one he removed himself
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for running from president. very interesting there. that was scary and the fact we had someone in office to the rest of the world saw the weakness as a country, we are lucky nothing terrible happen in the united states of america. that our adversaries did not take advantage of us the way they probably could have done. that was terrifying. this is absolutely crazy and what president trump is trying to do is set this country on the right path. to make sure the four years he spent in office or four years rectifying the damage of bernie sanders party that he ran for president the democrat party, they had taken this country in a bad direction that we have for years to fix it. that is what president trump is trying to do. >> kayleigh: that is exactly right. i think about the other side of al and they put forward... locked again for a response to president trump and she has a so-called moderate and outperform kamala harris by a full percentage in 83 counties in michigan. she is supposed to be the moderate voice but let's bring
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in the communicator of the democratic party. >> we are about to tintern 250 years-old and we are pretty young for a country. these are angry teen gimmick teenage years. we are going through push and pull, happy and sad and what do you do when you have a teenager who is threatening yourself and others, you try to get them for this. period alive and brain fully formed and come back here until. >> we are pendulum swinging. >> kayleigh: brains are not fully formed and those who voted for trump, analysis to teenagers without fully formed brains. i want to bring up the popular vote for trump 77 plus million voters. i don't think that is wise to put an assertion of teenagers who without fully formed brains periods be young because, don't degrade the 10-year natures because they are the wave of the
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future and she is on her way out. when you talk about scary moments, that should be frightening to anybody in the democratic party. that the ideas are being stifled by this kind of stuff. i don't know, but is like an endless, just search of "i'm angry and i just have to use all my words but they don't make any sense and i'm even angry at teenagers and this and this and that." where are the ideas from the party? where are the things worth fighting for if they have a plan? and by the way, i would get the scariest points for bernie sanders when they had to pick hillary clinton over him. the party kept him down. we had so much popularity. at that convention and at the dnc convention in philly that year, i remember on the floor he was not far from me, he and his wife koji who looked to be sad. they didn't choose him. you are not there flavor and you think he has the flavor now?
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no! the end of your political career wanting to be president, that is pretty darn scary. >> kayleigh: it is and scary to some but certainly not me. we no longer have rosie o'donnell in the country. watch this. >> i am in ireland. it is beautiful and warm, not physically, but it's actually quite cold. i moved here january 15th. it has been really wonderful here until i meant the process of getting my irish citizenships i have irish grandparents. when it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights there in america, that is when we will consider coming back. >> kayleigh: i mean, emily, to quote a great famous line from presidential primary, only rosie o'donnell. >> emily: i think it is so rich. i love ireland, he doesn't? if
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you are talking about conservative government that government is extremely conservative system. i'm not sure what when she talks about safety what she is talking about. that is besides the obvious where we talk about businesses, too. you know who left ireland, the businesses driven there by the prior administration. going back to the rich concept of the individual speaking points, bernie sanders talked about terrifying element based on the power of the oligarchy. this is someone himself resides in the top 1% of the country. i think that is that they'll year we are seeing, the failure to see it as restoration of the power to the people. this is for the first time that dismantling of that incredible tumor height wielding these as a central government enabling the americans to feel their votes are hurting them into field their voice is actually matter and have an impact. that is the most terrifying to them when you get to that route, all it shows is what they are afraid of the, the power arrested away from them and back
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to the hands of the american people. >> lara: to rosie o'donnell, we have a great property in ireland. >> kayleigh: you didn't actually get away from donald trump. >> harris: and the white house right now. prime minister right now. >> kayleigh: trump could ask the prime minister, kevin, for full citizenship. >> kevin: i have an irish passport and i, too in very proud at that because my father was in the o'leary. i have to share some stuff, we buy ads in every tuesday we get the engagement. bc what is trending and why. there are three politicians that beat every other in this country and they are masterful at it, aoc, bernie sanders, elizabeth warren. they are the best marketers of any -- i don't agree with their policies go to but what they do
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is say outrageous things. they get network coverage and they take the content and repost it with their message and they drive engagement and five, 10, 20, 25 villas at a time come roaring end. they are geniuses that what they do. we should all learn you don't have to love them, but elizabeth warren, she is killing it right now. unbelievable what she is getting. >> harris: bernie is a president couldn't get there. >> kevin: he didn't get there by and he knows what to say and make people crazy. >> kayleigh: if they don't have it in the market they don't know how to sell it. president trump meeting with irish prime minister in the oval office. we will bring those remarks when we have them. more "outnumbered" in just ata momentte. like you know to check your outfit first before meeting your girlfriend's family. that's a tough one to recover from steve.
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of a brand-new test light and show of support for advisor, elon musk. he showed off several at the white house. you may have seen that. it was all over social media. he decided to go with a red and black model x. >> thank you. >> wow! that is beautiful! this is a different panel. everything is computer. that is a weird, wow! >> harris: elon musk look so happy that my, sweet. president trump says he's going to stop the violence happening at tesla dealerships nationwide. watch as. >> mr. president, talk about the violence going on around the country at dealerships? some say they should be labeled domestic terrorists. >> i will do that. i will stop them. if we catch anybody doing it
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because they are harming a great american company. >> harris: while trump wants to come down hard on the criminals go to the suspect accused of arson at one colorado tesla dealerships was just allowed to walk scot-free. police arrested suspect, lucy grace nelson in connection with four incidents of vandalism. however, nelson was out the very next day. the police chief went after nelson's lease with this quote, it is incredibly challenged to keep safe from copycat behavior when no repercussions to lawlessness! emily, they need to to close on this one. >> emily: i want to explain to viewers why the individual was released. it was personal recognizance and their respective of the bond, irrespective of the payout the judge set, but is a contract the judge can execute on behalf of the defendant and say i trust you will come back to court. all you need to do a sign on the diebold line and say you come back and you are free to go.
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the concept is usually reserved for single mothers and people who will come back to court. they were a supporting factor that point and they need to be back to provide for their family, et cetera. but is not for lucy grace bombing tesla's. this was gross misjudgment of the purview. the sheriff is absolutely correct. if there is no deterrence and if the laws are not enforced, who is to say this will not spread like a fire storm throughout the country, which importantly it unless there is a difference. >> harris: i don't know the pilot politics at the judge, but i might as. lara you know who that sounds like? 8 million people that come across the border and given court dates with an agreement to show up. that is not working out periods before it is not working out. i hate this guy was of course let out and it is a guy lucy grace, trans woman. but the whole idea that this is
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happening in america, this is a form of domestic terrorism. terrorism is whenever you attack someone or vandalize property like this all in the pursuit of a political goal. we know this was not happening to tesla dealership prior to elon musk working alongside president trump at doge. president trumps that the people likely behind this, he believes people are actually behind this and trying to find this and get it to catch on around the country. probably the same people who were behind the summer of love riots where we sell vandalism all over this country. the same people aggravating and causing disasters on the college campuses, anti-semitism. he thinks it is probably the same group of people and we can allow stuff like this to happen in america. yes, he will go after them. >> harris: find it rich politically speaking elissa slotkin does not see this as a creep up on the streets. she accuses trump supporters -- >> lara: talk about acting like a teenager.
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here just be when my teenagers would not do this and this is insane. i understand the legal point, i totally do but that is a slippery slope. >> kevin: she is not free. is it a he or she? >> harris: they cross the border illegally and don't have to. >> kevin: i don't want to get it wrong, he or she. >> emily: the individual or dependent. >> harris: you know what it is, i suspect that went for. >> kevin: they have to come back to core eventually. it is not just dealerships. my son works for electrical engineer for elon and they are protesting manufacturing sites as well. the amount of heat elon has taking and it is transparent to everybody and doing what every family in america has to do, find waste and cut cost. the abuse he is taking for it gets intense and more intense everyday. at the end of the day, he's helping every taxpayer. it is a very difficult situation. any mandate given whether space
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or internet in the sky or tesla, he has delivered on his mandates. this guy can execute. let him do his work and back off is what i say. it is anybody's benefit whether democrat or not, republican or independent, he is saving you money! he is saving you money! you might not like how the sausage is being made. get over it! >> harris: but we get to see it. that is what president trump promised is transparency. i'm with you. i always like to use the person's name to lucy grace is how we will roll. >> kevin: whatever, i want to make sure i get it right. >> emily: msnbc played donald trump's clip there, president trump and afterward, so if you are engaging in a form of protest, this is domestic terrorism! when you are lighting cars on fire, that is not a form of protest. that is equivalent, msnbc, see if mx cnn firing a protest where
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a guy literally standing in front of a building on fire. it is so nonsensical! that the media's going with a protest label, i want to praise ro khanna a democrat zero tolerance for spring cars and lighting chargers on fire is wrong, period! all democrats could condemn it. thank you for putting politics aside and call it what it is and i wish your party would join you periods they went wild tesla's are being targeted as part of td i know someone called the protest but i call it rage against elon musk. he is about to launch a mission to bring back to american stranded in space. come on, that is nonpartisan and certainly everybody can get behind that next. ♪ ♪ t.
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♪ ♪ >> harris: all right coach at that song will totally make sense and a couple of seconds. just hours from now highly anticipated mission to bring home two astronaut set to launch. senior advisor to the white house, elon musk baked spacex falcon nine is on the launch pad. on the left side of your screen and it was and make its way to the international space station. after a a few handover activities we are told in real time it will finally bring back butch wilmore and suni williams. god bless them. that is a long time to be stranded hundreds of miles above planet earth. more than nine months. i mean, wow, a whole human life.
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of time if you can believe that. musk said he would try to bring them back soon but was blocked by the biden administration. you know what, the astronauts themselves confirmed that story. >> we offered to bring them back earlier but it was rejected by the biden administration. >> why? political reasons. >> wow! >> i can only say mr. musk is absolutely factual. ♪ ♪ >> harris: white in the world would former president biden not want a homecoming on his watch? is he okay? skater that is not the question i can answer today. i wish i had an answer to all of that. this is outrageous, actually did find out. i cannot imagine being these two astronaut step up there and they were supposed to go for eight days but they had been up there nine months, this is crazy.
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>> kevin: "gilligan's island"! >> lara: but you are in space, kevin. they are gracious when you listen to them. we know the mission and we come prepared here until they were not prepared to stay up there nine months, god bless elon musk and by the way, elon said the only bucket that can get them back is his dragon x spacecraft. the only went to bring them back down. where is nasa and what had they been doing? why is everything they have done certainly to get them up there and stranded is failing question marks the one that is such a question on so many different levels. because an innovation we are the best in america! we literally have rocket scientists and have proven their grace on this planet and beyond. but if they been doing the last four years before trump? >> kevin: actually, this reflects on boeing, a company that built the craft that took them there and can't take them back. if you look at the boeing stock
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over the last seven years, that is where money goes to die. to the interaction between the public in the sectors, particularly for the shareholder, the largest company boeing 5% waiting and when it started to go awry with everything else and do nothing except continue to go down. the organization even in building the air force one, the management of boeing made it a fixed price. inflation kept going higher and higher and higher to maintain this. and now, the company is losing billions maintaining an aircraft allegedly around the world to periods before they were supposed to have it done already, by january. >> kevin: it is bad for shareholders. tarelon to execute and one last thought about the astronauts, within the astronaut community, actually would like to stay to break the record in space. they have been there so long.
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it is mixed emotions coming back. >> harris: how close are they question what do you know? >> kevin: the russians still have the record so it will be tough. they have been up there a long time and in that community .0001% of the population ever gets to fly that will. that they are going to be a little -- she will hear from them to say, you know what, i could have stayed another three months. i could have done it. it is a weird think that it is an honor to be put in space. to get to be the person who asked that the long it is like brady winning the super bowl. >> harris: usually as lara pointed out, it is with planning. >> kevin: lara is right about that. >> kayleigh: that is the point to me and i was reading an article back in august when nasa said you could be here until february 2025. imagine that that punch i'm about to miss -- >> kevin: we are in march
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here. >> kayleigh: you missed halloween, labor day, christmas and butch as two daughters. former astronauts got stranded and once at the toilet broke while they were up there and it was horrific and they had to use bags and it was challenging and they have no idea how to do it. >> kayleigh: that is a bad image around lunch time here to there is not many areas of privacy and the only area of privacy is a small, little stall pier to the astronauts at the thing you don't think about when stranded, you are not supporting your own body weight. you cannot stand, you cannot lay down or sit down so it takes 2-6 months to adjust him very own body weight when you get back to earth. no doubt they want to break records but there is a lot of logistical challenges. >> kevin: they will be greeted by everybody including you guys when they come back and you ask them if they missed the ride and they will tell you, you know amongst astronauts it is a big deal. >> harris: i'm sorry, emily only a few seconds before we
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look at the bilateral meeting between ireland's prime minister and president trump, emily. >> emily: it is such a specific breed, astronauts. we talk about that discomfort theologically, guys go to they signed up because they love it and it is they are dream peers of the private and public sector and the right private sector spacex over boeing can produce extraordinary results. the flight surgeon told me they are excited because they get to do their experiments that they couldn't with eight-day duration. when you think about in history, you think about the youtube program again representing private government and extraordinary accomplishments and for instance, got captured and the mercury program with loss of life and spacex walk in with innovation comes a risk. my point in fighting that is to say safe return of these astronauts by elon musk's incredible feat that i hope the
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entire world celebrates. that precious life and that celebration at the spacewalk and exploration that represents how many dreams and future dreams of generations to come that i think the celebration is most important here and to please not stymie in any way those with dreams to innovate. i hope nasa and spacex and everyone keeps getting on board and keeps taking risks and that no one growing their explosion that they have no final essay because those are the ones that fall by the wayside when you reach these heights. >> harris: when you said netflix, i was thinking of -- have you seen it? >> kevin: there is an old saying on an aircraft, if it is not boeing, ain't going. that doesn't exist anymore. that doesn't exist anymore. >> you know the secretary of transportation press release came out a few hours ago he will be, sean duffy will be tomorrow.
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of course, he will take a look at the company with the concerns of transportation on earth so i previewed that a bit. >> kevin: exploration skills matter and that is why elon is taking care of the problem. >> emily: that program rest the rest of the astronauts' lives and they will be monitored by nasa and flight sergeants. and senator kelly is. it is a program the rest of their life to monitor -- >> lara: that will be interesting because they challenges they face up there in the toilet nomadic toll it takes on your body and the radiation alone. being in outer space and you get to fly on an airplane but to be out there i'm very curious to see what they come up with and report back. >> kevin: and his good health. >> kayleigh: i love my feet on planet earth. i love your enthusiasm, emily. >> harris: that reporting on space, we anticipate that all of
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that and i can imagine you mentioned the families. i can imagine. it is one thing to sign up for it and you'll look forward to it and all of america is rooting for you. what is that light, you come back and your children are a year older. >> kayleigh: it takes a toll on your marriage is strained at 103 days and had an agreement on the marriage and look this can last a month but longer than that. >> ha >> harris: president trump moments ago meeting with the prime minister of ireland meeting in the oval office. >> president trump: ireland is a special place and he is a special guy. he did at the hard way also and served and took a little time off and served again. i heard about that. that happens. he has done well, and we know each other from a long time ago. but it is a great honor to have you on the oval office and heavy at the white house. we have tremendous business relationships with ireland and it won't make get stronger the relationship we have personally and otherwise is very, very strong and very, very good.
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i want to welcome you to washington, d.c., and to our country. thank you very much. >> thank you for to wit is a great honor to be here to celebrate st. patrick's with you. thank you for your hospitality. the warmth of your reception. i commend you in terms of the work you are doing, particularly in terms of peace which we announced earlier. i think that is going well and you and you really have the first 100 days have government, you have done extraordinary things quickly. everybody is watching with that respect. >> president trump: thank you. >> it is an honor to be here. >> president trump: it is an honor to have you here. special people, special people, i know a lot of irish and growing up in new york, i know a couple year that used a live in beautiful ireland but now they are here but love your country very much. they have a great feeling for
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your country. >> they have and they come back and stuff like that, and checking with their families. >> president trump: great, fantastic. i don't know if i will ever see it again. maybe i won't go to but i think i will. we look at there. it is a beautiful place, wonderful place. any questions? >> reporter: [inaudible] given the fact it has a massive surservice. [inaudible] >> president trump: i don't think he looks nervous to me and he wouldn't show it. we do have a massive deficit and very smart, they took our pharmaceutical companies away from a president that didn't know what they were doing.
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tibbett is too bad that happene. it is a tremendous job. looked, the irish are smart, smart people. you took the pharmaceutical companies and other companies, but through taxation, proper taxation, they made it very good for companies to move over there. we had presidents and people involved in this that had no idea what they were doing and lost big segments of our eco economy. the european union treats us very badly. they have for years. i saw that. i had it out with them in my first term. we did well the ad to solve other problems, emily did. the european unions have been very tough. it is our turn. we get a turn at that also appear to but they have not been fair. they sue our companies and win massive amounts of company. they sued apple and win $17 billion and use that for
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other reasons, i guess to run the european union. they are not knocking it and they are doing what they should perhaps for the european union. but it does create -- we will be doing reciprocal tariffs. whatever they charge us we will be charging them. nobody can complain. it doesn't matter what it is, if they charge us 25 or 20% or 10% or 2% or 200%, that is what we are charging them. so i don't know why people get upset about that because there is nothing more fair than that. they had a problem with ontario. and they dropped that when i let them know what we are going to be doing, they drop that immediately i'm glad because electricity you should not be playing with because it affects people's lives. actually, their life, it can depending on it can affect their life so we can't do that. it doesn't make sense that our
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country allows electricity to be made in another country and sold to us. they did that deal for the united states? we looked at that long ago and i said, that is not something very smart. we have had a lot of bad trade policies. and yet, we are doing well very well right now. they are doing well because i had won the election. if i did not win the election we would have a bad period. the stock market was going down because of the really bad for coyears when you look at inflation and all the other problems. inflation, wars and other problems. but we will have good years. i don't know if you sell a little thing like the cost of eggs, little to you but big to people out there down almost 30%. in the last few days. we got it down. we have a great secretary of agriculture and we do a lot of things. i got the cost of eggs down
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substantially in so many other things. another big thing i'm happy about is oil is down to $65 a barrel. that is faster than i wanted to. lee stepped on the gas in order to get oil. so what is happening. energy comes down, prices will be coming down with it. in a short period of time, we have donna good job with it. i think the tariffs, again receptacle. i think that tariffs, in some cases a little bit beyond reciprocal because we have been abused a long time. we have been abused along time. and we will be at the is no longer. >> reporter: are you going to retaliate -- >> reporter: would you describe this meeting by telling -- what responsibility do you feel to the civil servants who have now lost their jobs and many worked at the
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department of education? >> president trump: i feel very badly but many of them don't work at all. too many didn't even show up to work. many of them never showed up to work, kelly, unfortunately. and that's not good. when we cut, i had a number of meetings with a lot of people over the last couple of months. when we cut, we want to cut and we want to cut those not doing a good job. we keep the best people. linda mcmahon is a real professional, actually very sophisticated business person. she cut a large number but kept the best people. we will see how it all works out. our country was run very badly and whether that our contracts we signed that were so bad, so obviously bad. i go through them in speeches and i could go through them all day long. i could read from billions and hundreds of billions of dollars and all of that fat and waste
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and fraud and abuse is being taken out. but it is incredible what is happening. now, department of education may be more so than any other place has a lot of people that can be cut here to the number one not showing up to work, number two,t doing a good job. if you take a look at, take a look at the education process and if you look at the charts because they have numerous charts where they do the top 40, we are at number 37, 38, 39, 40. recently during biden's last few days they hit last, number 40. yet, number 1 cost per people. so it is bad. we have a dream and you know what the dream is? we will move the department of education into the states so that the states instead of bureaucrats working in washington, so the states can run education. and you have norway, denmark, sweden, and you have various,
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panel in the, countries and you also have china that does well n education which is a pretty big tribute to china i must say. 1.4 billion in the top ten and it is amazing. so we can't blame size anymore. normally you blame size. it is to bed. how can you do it? china does it. we think when you move that back to iowa, indiana and all the states that run so well and i can name 30 may be almost 40. those will be as good as denmark and as good as norway. they will be as good as any, i believe as any. then you will have ten that will be so great. he will have five not good at all, but we will work with them and get them to be good. what we want to do is always school choice but school choice, we are doing it, but we want education to be moved back where the state run education, where
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the parents have the children will be running education. we where governor is doing a good job will run the education. i drive through the city and i see like so many buildings, department of education, big buildings. by the way, they are empty and no one shows up to work. i think linda did a good job. >> reporter: do you have a meeting scheduled for conversation? >> president trump: i won't comment on that that we had great success yesterday. we have a full ceasefire if it kicks in, but we will have to see. it is up to rationale. we have a good relationship with both parties actually. we will know people will go to russia right now as we speak. hopefully, we can get a ceasefire from russia and that will be 80% to get this horrible bloodbath and it is a blood bath that taking place over there.
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on average, 2,000 to 3,000 young people a week are being killed. that is stupid or that would not happen if i were president. so we have people going over there, mr. vp, do you have anything to say about it because you are very much involved? >> well, we have some conversations happening on the phone and in person with the representatives over the next couple of days. is the president said we are in a good place the ukrainians agreed to cease fire. we will see if we get the russians to agree to a cease-fire and we will have news when we find out the news. >> reporter: he will keep a cease-fire considering the past -- >> president trump: we haven't spoken with substance because we found out unable to get ukraine to agree. we will know soon. i have positive messages but a positive message means nothing here to this is a very serious situation.
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a serious situation that could lead to world war iii. and biden should not let it happen. incompetence allowed it to happen. they october 7th in the middle east shouldn't have happened with israel. the horrible leaving come of the way they left, afghanistan should've never happened. inflation should have never happened. we have grade inflation numbers, by the way, just got released. inflation is way down. and it is based on what we have done. and we have done it in a very short period of time. we have virtually no inflation. for four years behind no inflation and when these characters took over we went from no inflation to the worst inflation probably in the history of our country. so it's very interesting. go ahead. by the way, i have to just speak of inflation. i love socks peered what is with these socks? [laughter] >> it is in honor of -- i'm trying to stay focused but the socks.
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>> reporter: the united states an important role in the peace process. [indistinct] >> president trump: ? what? what are they boycotting? >> reporter: gaza -- >> president trump: i haven't heard that. >> to the president on the peace initiatives, the one thing we have learned in ireland about the peace process that you have just spoken about and i recall it back in the early '90s, when the first tentative steps to get peace in ireland, people criticized people like johnny hume or people like alvin reynolds, but they kept going. and we got that ceasefire, it took time to get the peace settlement but the guns went silent. the war in ukraine is a devastating war on young people, and
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