tv Americas Newsroom FOX News March 21, 2025 7:00am-8:00am PDT
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it has been brought under control but the power knocked out to the airport. we're seeing at least two of the main terminals have no juice at all. diverting or cancelling hundreds of flights stranding hundreds of thousands of passengers. some planes diverted to other airports here and in europe. some planes sent back to departure airports. one plane from dallas had to return back to texas. no suspicion of foul play concerning the fire but the u.k.'s counter terrorism unit is at the scene leading the investigation due to this came in a statement in the government's words, the impact on a critical piece of national infrastructure which heathrow is now. airport is closed until at least midnight tonight local time. there is no word, however, when the power will be back. that could cause problems for
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days to come. back to you. >> sandra: wow. all right keep watching for all of this. >> bill: what a mess, huh? trump administration gearing up for a legal showdown today in federal court as the white house challenges the order of a judge to block the deportation flights of alleged gang members to el salvador. story is ongoing now. new hour begins on friday. dana has the day off and back on monday. i'm bill hemmer live in new york. >> sandra: i couldn't think of a better way to start my friday. good to be with you, hemmer. >> bill: you are sucking up. >> sandra: i'm sandra smith. this ongoing court fight centers around the legality of using the alien enemies act as the basis for the deportation. the judge calling yesterday's response to his list of questions woefully insufficient. the white house firing back questioning judicial authority. >> the district courts of this country do not have the authority to direct the functions of the executive branch period.
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a district court judge can't pretend he sits in the oval office. each branch has different duties. no district court judge can assume the duties of the president of the united states. we're hoping the supreme court will provide that clarity. >> bill: okay. justice correspondent david spunt is a busy man. let's begin this hour with you live in d.c. hello. >> hello. we'll head over there in a few hours. hearing kicks off at 2:30 in washington. tension between a d.c. federal judge and d.o.j. hitting new levels. the judge says d.o.j. yesterday missed an important deadline and delivered a late response that he called insufficient. judge james boasberg overseeing the case involving the two deportation flights of suspected venezuelan gang members scolded the d.o.j. for their response yesterday which he says was late. boasberg last week ordered the two planes to be turned around. two were already outside u.s. airspace and landed in el salvador. on those planes those people now in a u.s. salvadoran prison.
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they were removed under the alien enemies act with an envision of the u.s. boasberg wanted the d.o.j. to answer questions about the flights. where and what time did it leave u.s. airspace? d.o.j. invoked the states secrets privilege that allows the government to withhold national security information in court. boasberg wrote in a tears order yesterday that quote the government evaded its obligations. when he received notice yesterday from an ice official in texas that the government would invoke the state secret doctrine, his apparent frustration grew. he wrote this is woefully insufficient to begin the government cannot proffer a regional ice official to attest to cabinet level discussions of state secret privilege. todd blanch saying there are cabinet level discussions going on and the hearing is at 2:30 today and see what happens if front of the judge. >> bill: laying the ground work
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for us in d.c. >> sandra: more on this let's bring in shannon bream. great to see you on this friday morning. please do set this up for us as we anticipate this hearing this afternoon. >> as david reported, you got that attesttation this morning. will it satisfy the judge? we'll have to see. he says i'm somebody who is aware of what is happening at the secretary or cabinet level about this conversation using the state secrets doctrine here. we'll see if that is enough of an appeasement for the judge who has been very unhappy from what he has and has not gotten from this administration. federal judges do have a lot in their toolkit if they think someone is not complying with their orders. there are contempt situations. i don't think the judge is there but inching toward frustrated with the administration. i can't wait to see what david gets from the 2:30 hearing. >> bill: that's going on.
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district judges, 650 roughly and i think 98 different jurisdictions. i had no idea there were that many district judges. shannon, a couple things. what the president said earlier. unlawful nationwide injunctions by radical left justice could lead to the destruction of the country. stop nationwide injunctions now before it's too late. josh hawley, republican from missouri. they might push legislation on this. watch his point. >> what the district courts are doing is wrong, unconstitutional. i want to be real clear. this isn't about congress taking away power courts currently have. this is about congress reforming and stopping the abuse. these district courts, these are the entry-level federal courts. they do not have the authority to go out and to say mr. president, you can't do this, we'll bind everybody nationwide. >> bill: i don't know if they
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can get that through, maybe. go three years ago supreme court court justice kagan. >> this can't be right that one district judge can stop a nationwide policy in its tracks and leave it there for the years it takes to go through normal process. >> bill: the other night, shannon, bret said the court has never been asked to rule on this. does a district judge have the authority to preempt an executive action that would pertain to the entire country, not just one specific area? go ahead. >> justice cawing an is not the only one. thomas and gorsuch have been vocal. they think it's time for the court to weigh in on that very question. listen, one of the things that is a vehicle coming up through all of these cases with respect to the trump administration, may be their opportunity to answer that question because recently with the usaid them allowing a
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lower court judge to tell the trump administration they had to pay out some $2 billion if foreign aid funding. you remember just a couple of weeks ago very -- i think that if the right vehicle shows up for this question the supreme court is ready to get into it. >> sandra: your thoughts on this columbia university activist arrested by federal immigration authorities being held in louisiana. we know obviously a lot could happen today and learn what his fate is. tell us your thoughts on that as we anticipate. >> secretary rubio and the administration are citing something within the naturalization act that gives the secretary power to get somebody deported for the country if they think there are adverse foreign policy for them being here. that is what secretary rubio cited for the reason this
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potential person is being kicked out of the country potentially. so we'll see how they articulate what that means. you know, there is a big concern this could be a first amendment speech issue. where do you draw the line? we'll see that battled out in court. >> sandra: reporter brooke taylor on the ground judge granted continuance because the attorney asked for more time to reveal. the judge decided on april 8th to have a hearing. >> a couple more weeks at this and hopefully we'll hear more of an explanation what the trump administration's argument is. if they are successful it could apply to people all across the country. >> sandra: thank you so much. see you "fox news sunday." always good to see you. we'll be watching. thank you. less than an hour from now president trump and hegseth set to give remarks at the white house. we're watching for that. we'll bring it to you when it happens. now this.
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>> it's about the civil rights department, the department of education that makes sure that we don't have a situation where a person is ex courted to school with police. >> if you have a kid with special needs or disabilities you will not get funding for iep programs. >> just taking the opportunity for kids that don't have it. >> i haven't heard anyone say how services will be delivered to the 49 million children who rely on special education. >> bill: a lot of reaction, democratic reaction the e.o. signed yesterday by the president. established in 1979 by congress the department of education was created then. this is how it could be restructured. how it could be, okay? all those points you just heard right there. office of civil rights possible you could take that division and move it into the department of justice. over here you could take special education and kids with needs
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put it under the department of health and human services. now you start to get an idea how to wind this down. more, too. student loans, billions, trillions of dollars depending on the year, federal student aid could go into small business administration or commerce or treasury or maybe a little bit for all three. the point being is that what the white house is saying is that the department of education could be restructured entirely and they could remake the game for how they take billions of federal dollars every year and funnel them out to the states. there lies the question, can you do it through congress and make it permanent? lydia hu on how it might happen. >> we have a new fox news poll showing us how voters feel closing the department of education, 65% of voters are opposed to it. breaks out like this. 92% of democrats opposed, 33% of republicans and 81% of independents. you are right. ultimately congress would have
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to approve the department's closure. president trump's order yesterday is a step toward dismantling the department. the order directed indication secretary linda mcmahon to facilitate the closure as per mitted by law. >> we'll do everything legally. he would like for me to move as swiftly as we can because he believes the sooner that we can close the department, the more efficiently we can have funds distributed to the states and perhaps they will even have more funding when there isn't the overhead and bureaucracy from the department of education. >> federal dollars pay for less than 14% of public education. the department of education spent $268 billion last year. here is how that broke out. office of federal student aid spent most inside the department, 160 billion in the last fiscal year. funding mostly student loans and pell grants which are available to students with financial need to pursue college and trade
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school. 83 billion paid for special education programs and funding for low income areas. more than 20 billion spent on services for students with disabilities. importantly, president trump said yesterday spending on programs like these will be preserved, management of these programs directed to other agencies as you pointed out. president trump raises concerns about growth in spending per student without seeing improvement in test scores. his goal shrink the department of health of education and get the money straight to the states. >> bill: so the programs for the vulnerable and all that money that covers them would not go away. it would just come under different management in washington. is that a fair way to say it, lydia? >> i think so. that's what president trump said yesterday when he said these types of programs would be preserved. he wants to look at putting them under the management of different agencies and what secretary mcmahon is exploring. >> bill: have a good weekend. lydia. thank you.
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>> it has been -- this was a calculated event. he had been working up to this i believe for years. >> bill: the father of one of those college students murdered inside their home at the university of idaho. speaking out on the case against the suspect brian kohberger, the evidence he says that amounts to a quote trophy. >> sandra: remember the plane that landed upside down in toronto last month? what a preliminary investigation is revealing why it happened. >> bill: d.o.j. announcing charges against three people in attacks against teslas in america. will that deter future violence? >> we have will charged multiple people. get ready. more coming. we'll find you and if you are an organized group funding this we are going to find you, too.
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>> drop it. come on. >> sandra: that was the scene last month when a delta plane crashed in toronto. we're learning more about why it happened. investigators saying the plane defended too quickly in high winds and landing gear collapsed when it touched down before it flipped upside down. a report shows the fast descent triggering the jet's safety warning systems two seconds before touchdown. officials are still looking into the final cause of that crash which all 80 people on board that plane did survive thankfully. what a scene that was, my goodness. >> bill: amateur on servers. you could tell it was a hard landing on the right side and put a lot of pressure on that wheel and they had no chance after that. >> sandra: wear your seat belt. >> bill: this now from idaho that will captivate the country
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come late summer. watch. >> i have see somebody that was making himself a trophy. i know the timeline, i know he had just returned to the crime scene and he had came back. he had realized nobody had called 911. i think he knew they were still asleep and to him that's his little trophy to let them know that hey, i got away with it. >> bill: that's the father of one of the women that give details on the night she and three others were murdered. they plan to present a cell phone picture of brian kohberger taken hours after the killings. you are watching that now. some evidence he bought the same type of knife found at the scene months earlier online. katie and paul, welcome to both of you and hello today. the father says making himself a trophy. paul, what do you think of that
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comment? how do you piece that together? >> let me take the eyebrow piece. what happened here is one of the roommates in her description of what she saw the night of the murders describes the perpetrator in the house apparently brian kohberger, innocent until proven guilty. she describes the person as having an athletic basketball type build and bushy eyebrows. whether the dna should come or should not come into court. irrespective of that they were going down this route and they had a couple of things to put together that got them important search warrants, the bushy eyebrows is one. they found the bushy eyebrows, the car. when they found the car that could be a possible over in washington pullman, university of washington where he was working, they found a car. he goes to the car, they look at his picture, bushy eyebrows, we
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can start doing search warrants relative to this guy. a separate track of investigation and getting them close to brian kohberger. >> sandra: this is the 911 call. some of it. let's listen together. >> tell me exactly what's going on. >> one of the roommates is passed out and she was drunk last night and she is not waking up. i saw a man in their house last night. >> she is not waking up. >> okay. one moment. >> sandra: clear up what was originally described as this bloody scene but yet there was no detail or description of a bloody scene in that phone call to the 911 dispatcher. your thoughts on what we heard there and where this puts this case. >> there is a little inconsistency based on what we hear on the tape. it is not clear whether the folks on the phone were actually
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next to the roommates and were directly observing or relying on other people in the house saying they weren't waking up. i'm sure the defense will try to make hay about the fact these roommates waited a long time to call 911. at the end of the day it won't overcome all the forensic evidence to ties kohberger to this. there are questions there but not enough to sew that reasonable doubt about what they did. >> bill: do you agree the sheath found in the home is the the best piece of evidence yes or no? >> it seems consistent. now, there is evidence about his amazon purchase history and if that comes into evidence and ties that weapon to his purchases certainly it is a smoking gun. >> bill: go back to the timeline on screen. these murders occurred on november 13, 2022. we may not get a trial that begins until august 11, 2025.
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what in the world takes three years to bring a high-profile case like this to trial? >> it is a death penalty case. they will check every box. there will be a lot of appeals and the stakes are very high. remember something also that they got to change a venue from the original venue. they put that in. a lot of the case had been adjudicated and moved the thing to a new county and in this instance they relitigated a lot of the stuff. specifically the genealogical dna. in the first instance the judge had said i will let in some of these evidence for purposes of argument but understand he said this. it had nothing to do with the probable cause for arrest of brian kohberger. he shut that door. we relitigated that. however, it is going quickly towards trial. we'll see the august 11th trial. this judge has had enough to w the tactics of the defense. not clear -- it can be televised, it will be up to the
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judge. >> bill: very good points. want to wrap it up? >> the case has to be handled properly. it is the prosecution's case to lose here. so much great evidence. the way prosecutors lose cases is because of procedural and technical issues. it would be devastating if there was a conviction and got overturned on appeal because of a violation of kohberger's right. they have him cornered from all sides from what we can see from the forensics they've collected and the history they put together and the timeline. i see it factually strong. pit falls for the prosecutors and they have to be very careful. >> sandra: political violence tar guesting tesla. three people facing federal charges over the vandalism. a judge blocking the epa from clawing back billions in climate grants. kim strassel will weigh in after the break. >> we are oh he identifying over 2 billion grants that i've canceled inside of both the
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spraying flonase daily gives you long-lasting, non-drowsy relief. (psst psst) flonase. all good. >> bill: breaking news. white house announcing a moment ago johnson & johnson will make a $55 billion investment in the u.s. over the next four years. president trump is pushing this stuff now in a big way. every day. it is the latest of major companies announcing investments in the country since trump took office. the white house calls it the trump effect and they would be right thus far, right? johnson & johnson big announcement today. that's happening there. a judge blocking the epa and lee zeldin from canceling billions of dollars in climate grants awarded under president biden. rich edson has the fallout and that and more from washington, d.c. rich, hello. >> good morning, bill. all part of a multi-billion dollar fight over a major piece of the biden administration's
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legacy, $20 billion greenhouse gas reduction fund designed to spend federal dollars to leverage private investments in clean energy and gotten attention of the current president of the united states. >> president trump: 1.9 billion to recently created decarbonization of homes committee headed up and we know she is involved just at the last moment the money was passed over, by a woman named stacey abrams. have you ever heard of her? >> the president called it part of appalling waste. lee zeldin referenced that to power forward communities. power forward referred us to abrams' role as a senior counsel for only one of the groups under the broader power forward communities coalition and there is no evidence she engaged in illegal activity. the largest recipient of greenhouse gas reduction fund
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money the climate united fund. it partnered with an electric truck startup. its ceo and co-founder is a biden donor. they have robust processes to insure grants are awarded and charging provider and not receiving funding from climate united. climate united power forward communities, coalition from green capital received a total of $14 billion from the biden greenhouse gas reduction fund suing the epa after the administration froze the grants. a judge temporarily stopped that money from being clawed back. >> dana: kim strassel is here. this is a quote from the editorial board "wall street journal." biden's dark climate money and the epa. if liberal groups want to defend their right to taxpayer dollars
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americans might find it instructive to discover how the biden administration green new deal really worked. i never met a taxpayer who doesn't want to know how their tax dollars were spent. >> this is a perfect example. it is very instructive. this was an out and out slush fund. kind of remarkable how brazen the biden administration was just handing this out to progressive allies. this was $20 billion going to just a handful of entities. your reporter mentioned climate united getting 7 billion of that. this entity didn't start until 2023. no real work to its name. most of these funds are connected to prominent political activists or biden donors. it seems incredibly clear this money was simply being funneled through as a way to give power
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sprinkling money to groups to make them more powerful in the political sphere. >> sandra: this is part of lee zeldin on the court ruling. they handed inexperienced non-governmental organizations tens of billions in taxpayer funding in a manner that deliberately reduced the ability of epa to conduct proper oversight. i won't rest until these hard earned taxpayer dollars are returned to the u.s. treasury. he is on it. pam bondi has announced charges against three suspects for the tesla attacks that we have seen. obviously this is all happening as we see a rise in political violence across the country. the map of attacks on tesla vehicles that we know so far and tesla facilities. bill last hour spoke to a tesla owner saying he is an overday american who had his car attacked. >> i didn't before, but now when you have an experience like this
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you start to feel like maybe you are. it doesn't give me any hesitation, however, i have a family and it does give me hesitation for whether they are going to continue to be safe. >> sandra: he was asked do you feel you are targeted? he didn't say he felt so before but does now. why is this happening, kim? >> this is something that both sides of the aisle should be strongly united in condemning. people should be applauding pam bondi if there are indeed folks that are being taken and charged. they will get their time in court and can defend themselves. if this is happening there needs to be some really harsh penalties. we are a nation where we thrive on open political disagreement, civil debate and when you have political violence or i also like to put this in the category of intimidation. we see it in many different forms. it is designed to shut you up, make you stop, punish you for your political views.
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all of those freedom of expression, freedom of association is at the basis of the american essence and so there should be real condemnation and punishment for those that seek to disrupt it. >> sandra: hard to believe it is happening. kim, thank you, good to see you. >> thank you. >> bill: 23 minutes before the hour now. vanna white is in the news. she spun the wheel of fortune when it comes to her wardrobe sharing how many dresses she has worn on the show. that's the news. she says she has worn more than 8,000 gowns over 40 plus years. >> sandra: i believe it. >> bill: do the math quickly. i don't know what it comes out to. >> sandra: 8,000 dresses, 40 years. >> 200 shows a year? a lot of dresses. the wardrobe has to stay on set but has worn some of the dresses for events like the emmys. >> sandra: was the question how
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many dresses a year? it's 2,000. >> bill: here is what i think the answer. >> sandra: i pride mysely math. >> bill: i have seen your office. she beats you, believe it or not. >> sandra: i host a lot of shows. >> bill: you could give her a run for her money. keep going, vanna. here we go. >> we as a community must choose and vote for democrats and elected officials who know how to stand for the working class. >> sandra: she is a key member of the squad and has a defiant message as the democrats infighting intensifies. can the party unify or will it splinter more? former house speaker kevin mccarthy is here on that. the trump agenda rolls on looking to boost production of critical minerals right here in the u.s.
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>> bill: university of maine now has agreed to comply with president trump's executive order to keep transgender athletes out of women's sports. this comes after a department of agriculture put a temporary pause on funding for the university. the usda claims the university in full compliance with the
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executive order. the chancellor saying they are relieved to have come to an understanding to put the compliance review behind us. remember that give and take that the president had with the governor of maine at the white house? it looks like that has been resolved. hum. from the state of maine. all right now smitty. >> sandra: president trump signed and executive owner to expand the production of critical minerals in the u.s. reducing reliance on foreign sources. fox business's edward lawrence has this at the white house. this is becoming a more fascinating story. where is it going next? >> it is fascinating. the president is using the defense production act to speed up the production and mining of rare earth minerals is. the president invoked the wartime authority. the u.s. needs critical minerals going forward to survive in the future. the new mines and processing centers for critical rare earth
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minerals are bogged down in regulations and restrictions. china controls about 60% of rare earth mining and 85% of the processing worldwide. these are elements in everything from fighter jets that u.s. makes to cell phones that we all use. that and china's verity actions worry republicans. >> they leverage students in america, tried to leverage our own military through bribes. so they are very aggressive in in way. >> the need for it part of a peace process between ukraine and russia. a joint economic venture for america and ukraine to partner over energy, infrastructure and rare earth mineral projects. >> president trump: one of the things we're dealing is signing a deal shortly with respect to rare earths with ukraine, which they have tremendous value in rare earth and we appreciate
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that. and we spoke yesterday with as you know president putin and president zelenskyy and we would love to see that come to an end. >> the president trying to make the u.s. are he lie on itself for those critical needs, not anyone else like china. >> sandra: edward lawrence live at a sunny white house there. thank you. >> we need a democratic party that fights harder for us. that means our communities, each and every one of us choosing and voting for democrats and elected officials who know how to stand for the working class. >> bill: now this has become a bit of a tour in the american southwest. a.o.c. and bernie sanders urging democratic voters to elect them willing to stand up to president
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trump. i have a few clips to play. number one is a democrat from colorado jason crowe. look how he frames what the democrats need today. >> we are looking for the grand slam. our version of donald trump. the great or tore. maybe that person will come along and build a -- consolidate support around the country but probably not. we'll have to work hard in tough places. we'll have to go to places where we are uncomfortable. places where donald trump is winning and make a case one person at a time. >> bill: interesting commentary. slotkin on the infighting. >> i can't chain myself to the white house and become an activist full-time because you and others here will call me for things that you need. all of those things require me to be more than just an aoc. everyone you mentioned has a lot of words but what have they actually done to change the
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situation with donald trump? >> bill: there is a lot there in both of those comments. what do you hear? >> the thing i hear is president trump has literally broken the democrats. there is no leader. there is no message. their poll numbers continue to drop. even the democrats did not say we need chuck schumer or hakeem jeffries out there. those two, their days are number. the real leaders are aoc and bernie sanders. that won't get the majority of america. it shows that election was a tremendous election but now that the president is in office, how he has been governing, securing the border, looking at critical minerals. no men in women's sports. the president can get these items done because they haven't moved through congress. >> bill: the tesla story hasn't ended.
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i don't know where it ends. there is a democrat who stepped forward this week. ro khanna, you know him well from your home state of california on one of the panels at cnn the other night and this is what he said. watch. >> i'm not going to root against tesla. 20,000 people who work in my district who make a living off this. they are building electric vehicles that ultimately are good for the climate. i have huge, huge problems with what elon musk is doing. have the protest and conversation and criticism. don't take it out on a company where you have workers, where you have engineers, where you have scientists which are creating wealth for the country, which is helping the climate. >> bill: that was wednesday night. then we got musk saying thank you, ro khanna for supporting the people and customers of tesla. you heard what he said. i have 20,000 people who are constituents of mine who make a living off tesla. they are out there torching cars and keying them and taking
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sharpies and writing nazi on it. it has to end. i imagine since ro khanna -- now that he has broken the wall, others will follow. what do you think? >> i think they should follow. common sense and what america wants to see. you don't want to root against the number one car company in america. there are republicans and democrats working there. the next step democrats have to do is denounce what they are doing to these cars. they are putting people in jeopardy that own these cars and torching cars. i give pam bondi for punishing these individuals. i hope they show symbolism if they do this they will be punished and there will be accountability for this. this has to stop. democrats have to stand up and fight against this terrorist activity that these individuals are doing. >> bill: i think that will be the next page in the story, i do believe. nice to see you today, kevin. you are enjoying the sunshine of
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>> harris: showdown between the executive and judicial branch over presidential power. a hearing today on the flights deporting illegal aliens accused as gang members. president trump lashing out at the judge in that for usurping the power of the presidency. the d.o.j. arrested three people suspected of vandalism in the rampage of violence against tesla vehicles and dealerships. it is fitting the description of domestic terrorism. why are democrat lawmakers so silent on protecting americans driving those cars? congressman andy biggs, steve hilton, benjamin hall, "the faulkner focus" top of the hour. >> bill: see you in a moment here. crazy story now. a former university of michigan
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football coached charged with hacking in the thousands of accounts that belong to student athletes. and then downloading private information, including intimate photos. how did he crack this system? garrett tenney has the story. good morning. >> the scale of this alleged hacking scandal is just massive. over the course of eight years, federal prosecutors say matt weiss downloaded the personal information and medical data of 150,000 student athletes from 100 universities and allegedly used that information to break into the social media and email accounts of more than 3,000 athletes most of them women to search for and download private and intimate pictures and videos. according to the indictment he kept notes on the individuals who pictures and videos he
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viewed this scheme allegedly started in 2015 when he was a coach for the baltimore ravens in the nfl and came to an end in late 2023 when a university of michigan employee informed police about a possible computer crime that led to the f.b.i. getting involved and the coach being placed on leave. the 42-year-old is charged with ten counts of identity theft, 14 counts of unauthorized access to computers and if convicted he faces up to 70 years in prison. we have reached out to his attorney and let you know if we hear back. >> bill: what a story. thank you, garrett tenney live in chicago on that and more. thanks. >> sandra: democrats taking action to sway male voters to the left after republicans made headway with the voting block. mark meredith is live in washington. how things change. >> you are right. when we think of battle of the sexes, reality shows or sports. both major parties it is gaining on advantage. since november democrats are doing soul searching look to win
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over more male votes. voter analysis president trump had a 12-point advantage with male voters just last cycle. among those concerned with the gap connecticut senator chris murphy speaking out about this and spoke to the atlantic. he said the party is losing male voters in part even talking about the need to improve the lives of men could run afoul of the word police on the left. potential 2024 presidential candidates are also taking notice. michigan's gretchen whitmer and -- >> the data is telling us that we need to have a greater statewide focus on supporting and elevating our men and boys. it is not just that in maryland -- participation is nearly the lowest we've seen in two decades. >> bill: trump administration
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doubling down on efforts to reach men speaking with more male influencers. >> we actually think god made male and female for a purpose and we want you guys to thrive as young men and as young women and we will help with our public policy to make it possible to do that. >> have to wait to the mid-terms to see whether or not the strategies pay off. >> bill: before we go now want to have a look at this. look like a scene from mission impossible. it is a group of raccoons walking across utility wires. i see it now. >> sandra: that can wreak havoc. >> bill: those guys are nuts. l.a. neighborhood. not sure how many critters made it to the other side. >> sandra: they are smart animals. they wash their food before they eat it. thanks for having me. >> bill: have a good weekend. here is harris, bye-bye. >> harris: we begin with a fox news ale
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