tv CBS News Roundup CBS January 21, 2025 2:42am-3:30am PST
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>> reporter: in september i spoke with some folks there about the issues. and stumbled upon the station house off u.s. 19 in forsyth county. it's a place where the shrimp and grits were abundant. and so was the support for donald trump. the main concern for butch and judy harrell, the border. >> you're paying for all these immigrants, you're keeping them up in a hotel, giving them food, giving them health care. free. >> reporter: before trump's inauguration i took a quick break from cooking my own meal to see how butch and judy have been doing. >> you wake up on the day after the election, trump has been declared the winner. what's your emotion? >> grateful. >> yeah. happy. >> grateful. >> what is your biggest concern or worry for the next four years? >> the first thing that pops into my mind is just pushback. >> your top worries or concerns,
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would one of them be that congress will not get the job done? >> oh, yes. >> that's always a concern. but i feel like if anybody can make a change definitely donald trump is definitely at the top of that list. >> what's your fondest wish for his presidency? >> that the economy will turn around and everybody can live. i mean be able to afford things. >> tony, just like georgia wisconsin went to president biden in the 2020 election but swung back to president trump in 2024. while i was in the badger state i stopped at greenwoods cafe in the rural town of reedsburg. where i helped myself to some pancakes fresh off the griddle. there i met susan roloff. >> do you believe that we as a country are ready for a woman to
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be president? >> i don't think they are. i live in a small town and i hear people talking. a lot of them are factory workers, men -- you know, women are [ bleep ] when they're in positions of power. >> reporter: roloff voted for harris. so i was curious to see where she stood today. >> how did you feel waking up on election day? >> oh, sad. crying. sad, sad, sad. hopeless and angry at predominantly women for not standing up for a woman. >> i remember speaking with you and you said that you didn't think white women were ready for a woman president. and 53% of white women voted for donald trump in this election. >> i knew it was going to come because they couldn't even vote for hillary clinton. how are they going to vote for kamala harris? >> do you believe that we will ever have a female president in your lifetime? >> in my lifetime? i'm hoping to live till i'm 100. but no, i don't think so. >> reporter: nate, i visited
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pennsylvania one week before the election. pennsylvania was considered the state that would decide this election. its 19 electoral votes went to donald trump. >> anything exciting happening in town on tuesday? >> reporter: in bethlehem i visited the tavern at the sun inn and met mark will webber. he voted for kamala harris. >> are you worried about the country? >> i'm worried. i'm worried, yes. >> do you think we'll be okay? >> i don't know if we'll be okay. i checked my visa and i can stay in new zealand for 18 months. but honestly, it will be hard for me to embrace this country if trump wins. it really will. >> reporter: sitting nearby was his friend jim stucklis, who spent his whole life as a registered democrat. this election he voted for donald trump. >> i never voted for a party. i always voted the person.
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am i happy with trump? hell, no. you know, the guy's -- the guy's the guy. he's a billionaire and he's not one of us. i'm tired of everybody walking into our country illegally. and getting everything for free. >> reporter: we checked in with both, who you should know remain friends today. >> you seemed conflicted even then about voting for donald trump. >> yes. >> but you still thought he was the right candidate. >> yes. and i still do. compared to what we had. there have got to be better people out there to run this country. i hope donald trump becomes a little more mature. >> do either of you think donald trump can unite the country? >> i not only don't think he can, i don't think he has the will to do it. doesn't want to do it. and i think honestly, and this is really pessimistic, and i hate to say it, but my gut feeling is that long after trump is gone the poison that he has let leak into the cultural fabric will continue.
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well, donald trump is only the second president in u.s. history to serve non-consecutive terms in office. tony dokoupil spoke to three historians to get their views on the legacy of the 47th president. >> when you think of presidents who have been part of politics at this level over more than a decade-long period, you have to go to teddy roosevelt, franklin roosevelt, reagan. these are big figures. trump just on the numbers would seem to be entering into that group. >> consequential. he's not a one-off. he's not ephemeral. we will be looking at what he has done to politics for decades, centuries to come. >> i think he represents extremes in terms of how you can use presidential power. the same way we look to richard nixon as sort of a measure of what a president would dare do, we're going to think about donald trump in the same way. >> also in terms of party politics it will be hard to talk
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about the republican party in this era and only see the face of ronald reagan or either of the bushes. you're going to see him. >> does donald trump now represent a new era of american history? >> it is a new style of politics that i think we're still figuring out how to reckon with. we don't actually know what's been broken open. we know what's been broken. but we don't necessarily know how the story ends. at the end of trump's first administration you felt like you could say okay, i know how this story ends. and now it's kind of an open question. >> president-elect trump has said he will pardon many if not most if not all those who were convicted for taking part in the events of january 6th. we think of the pardons after the civil war, of confederate officers and soldiers. you think of the pardon of richard nixon, jimmy carter pardons draft dodgers, people who didn't want to sign up to fight in vietnam. all of those pardons were highly controversial at the time.
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and yet many historians would say today that they were the right move to bring the country together and to speed the healing process. is there a world in which a pardon for most or all of those who participated on january 6th is actually viewed favorably by history? >> i don't see a way in which you can easily come to the conclusion that this was, a, about healing the country and, b, that it will have that effect. >> maybe you needed to see richard nixon trial proceedings for america to really sort of come to terms with what happened. instead it was easier perhaps to move on. if it does seem to dissipate and we don't pay much attention to january 6th anymore i would say maybe it means that a lot of americans might come to the conclusion that we were unwilling to face what it actually meant, that americans were willing to do this. i think that's at the core of this as well. >> so a moment one could try to shape the course of history is certainly an inaugural address.
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>> ask not what your country can do for you. ask what you can do for your country. >> can we solve the problems confronting us? well, the answer is an unequivocal and emphatic yes. >> what makes for a memorable and historic inaugural address? >> i think about speechds like fdr's first inaugural. >> this great nation will endure as it has endured. >> or barack obama's first inaugural. >> today i say to you that the challenges we face are real. >> which really were those the nation is in crisis. and they both came in and said we can do this together. and hitting that note. like figuring out what the thing is that's crying out to be addressed and actually addressing it. >> in donald trump's first inaugural address the phrase that i think is most memorable probably is american carnage. >> this american carnage stops right here and stops right now.
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>> what did that phrase tell you? >> i think when you think about all of the campaigning and what his supporters were saying about what was wrong with america and that he too also in this speech makes this case that the nation's in a crisis, imbued with more meaning than what you see just looking at the text. >> it was a very bleak way to both talk about the country and the campaign and open up your presidency. and i do think that reflects how he governs. and he uses that to then basically say turn to me, as he said in 2024, i'm your protector. >> can you still say that america is on a journey of progress and improvement and better days are ahead? >> i wouldn't say that right now. because we've seen in american history times when things got a lot worse. i mean, jim crow is an excellent example. democracy was sort of violently put on hold for 80 to 100 years. we feel like a society that's barely holding on.
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and we can either make a choice to hold on and really shore up the ground beneath our feet or let go. and i don't think we've made that choice yet. >> you know, you don't get to where we are today if lyndon johnson doesn't put himself behind the civil rights act of '64. so to think of is it cyclical or which way are we moving kind of misses the agency of people who brought us there. and we've made progress. i do believe that. but it's fragile. it's tenuous. and if we don't uphold the progress it can be reversed. >> that was tony dokoupil reporting. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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airports protecting u.s. agriculture from possible invasion from pests and disease. natalie brand introduces us to one member of the beagle brigade. >> reporter: standing guard at international arrivals -- >> no? okay. >> reporter: the beagle brigade is on patrol powered by their keen sense of smell. >> oh, we've got pork floss. >> here we go. that's a good boy. >> reporter: the hounds are on the hunt for fresh produce and protein from abroad. >> meat is not allowed to come into the united states. so the pork that's on the rice, that's not allowed. >> reporter: not allowed because it could carry foreign disease or pests that pose a threat to u.s. agriculture and the environment. >> danny did a good job. >> reporter: this passenger was sent for extra screening, where additional prohibited items were detected. >> we're looking at fresh fruits, vegetables, meats, anything you might be able to plant in the ground. that might do harm to the u.s. agriculture industry.
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>> reporter: christopher brewer, the customs and border protection agriculture brand chief at washington dulles international airport, showed us some items confiscated over the years from decorative eggs. >> due to things like bird flu, prohibited. >> reporter: to herbs, plants and souvenirs like this woven hat. >> these are made out of reeds, dried reed. we're concerned about a little tiny mite, red palm mite. >> reporter: brewer calls his team the last line of defense protecting a multibillion-dollar industry that feeds the nation. >> it may seem like a little thing oh, i justbrought my sausage in. but it could turn into a big thing because most of the diseases involved are highly contagious and easily spread. >> reporter: it's the job of these highly trained beagles including phillip to stop that from happening. >> the thing that surprises me the most about the ability of these dogs is just how sensitive their noses are. >> reporter: cbp agriculture specialist valerie wu is phillip's handler. >> phillip has found a single grape in the bottom of somebody's purse.
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or one time he found a handful of blueberries. things that don't give off a whole ton of odor and he can still find it. >> reporter: a bust that may seem benign but could harbor a potential threat thwarted by this little guy's nose. >> good job, phil. let's go. >> reporter: natalie brand, cbs news, virginia. some very cute dogs doing a very important job. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you the news continues. for others tune in later for "cbs mornings" and follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪
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hello and thanks so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york. and this is "cbs news roundup." here are today's top stories. donald trump is sworn in as the 47th president of the united states, setting out to reshape the nation's institutions. trump starts by signing hundreds of executive orders, claiming a mandate to unravel president biden's legacy. and he issues a sweeping pardon for nearly all january 6th defendants including some of the rioters who attacked police. it was an historic day for america as donald trump was sworn in for a second term. the nation's 45th and now 47th president. after being sworn in president donald trump declared, quote, america's decline is over and told a bipartisan crowd he intends to be a unifier.
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cbs's nancy cordes reports on the events of the day from inside the white house. >> i donald john trump. >> do solemnly swear. >> reporter: the nation's 47th president was sworn in at 12:01 p.m. with chief justice john roberts administering the oath just as he did eight years ago. >> so help me god. >> reporter: j.d. vance was sworn in by supreme court justice brent kavanaugh, becoming the third youngest vice president ever. >> that i will bear true faith. >> reporter: with every living president looking on president trump condemned the past four years and declared this the start of a golden age. >> america's decline is over. >> reporter: he said the election gave him a mandate to dramatically remake government, starting today. >> first, i will declare a national emergency at our southern border. we will tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our
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citizens. >> reporter: roughly 800 people squeezed into the capitol rotunda, forced inside by frigid temperatures. among trump's invited guests, a row of tech titans who were seated in front of his cabinet picks. trump described his win as divine intervention. >> those who wished to stop our cause have tried to take my freedom and indeed to take my life. i was saved by god to make america great again. >> reporter: 20,000 supporters watched on the big screen from an arena nearby as busloads of trump aides got busy at the white house and quickly took over the white house website. there were striking moments. the departing president and first lady welcoming the trumps to the white house and riding with them to the capitol. transfer of power traditions that did not take place four years ago when an angry trump
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left early. >> 2020 -- by the way, that election was totally rigged. >> reporter: cbs's nancy cordes. president donald trump wasting little time getting to work on executive orders. he signed hundreds of directives including one that eliminates birthright citizenship. the aclu and other organizations have already filed a lawsuit in opposition. covering the president's first official orders is cbs's natalie brand in washington. >> so help me god. >> congratulations, mr. president. >> reporter: donald j. trump took the oath as the nation's 47th president and laid out his vision for a second term. >> the golden age of america begins right now. >> reporter: president trump detailed his priorities during a 30-minute inaugural address. >> today i will sign a series of historic executive orders. with these actions we will begin the complete restoration of america and the revolution of common sense. >> reporter: many of trump's
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some 200 executive actions undo former president biden's policies, who departed the capitol after the peaceful transfer of power. ♪ president trump signed some actions in front of supporters packed into washington's capital one arena. >> the first item that president trump is signing is the rescission of 78 biden-era executive actions, executive orders, presidential memoranda >> reporter: many traveled from out of state to be here for this moment. >> we're huge supporters of trump. and he's done a lot for us. and so this is the least i could do. >> reporter: while the move indoors because of the extreme cold brought changes to the day, a raucous campaign atmosphere filled the arena, celebrating president trump's return. natalie brand, cbs news, washington. in his first moments in the oval office president donald trump pardoned more than 1,500 defendants charged in the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol. in addition to pardons, trump
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also commuted six convictions. one of those was former leader of the proud boys enrique tarrio. earlier in the day outgoing president joe biden issued his own presidential pardons. details now from cbs's scott macfarlane. >> the president of the united states. >> reporter: moments after taking the oath president trump made another promise of clemency for his supporters who attacked the u.s. capitol and police. >> you're going to see a lot of action on the j-6 hostages. >> reporter: in some of his final acts in office former president biden issued pre-emptive pardons to shield the members of congress who investigated the january 6th attack, of this staffers and the police who testified publicly about their injuries. the chair and co-chair of the house january 6th committee said the panel has been pardoned not for breaking the law but for upholding it. biden also approved pardons for dr. anthony fauci and former joint chiefs chairman mark milley, who'd been critical of trump and whose portrait was suddenly removed from the walls of the pentagon after trump was
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sworn in. the pre-emptive pardons drew criticism from trump's republican allies. >> it puts a burden on that person to accept or reject that particular pardon. i think that's putting people in the wrong position. i was disappointed to see that happen. >> reporter: but as trump resumed blasting january 6th committee members and democrats as law breakers -- >> the unselect committee of political thugs. >> reporter: -- democrats defended biden's choice. >> candidate trump was very explicit that people who he regarded as political adversaries he was going to use, quote, his justice department to prosecute. that's totally across the line. >> reporter: minutes before relinquishing office former president biden also pardoned family members including his sister valerie and brothers francis and james. house republicans had investigated james, accusing him of making false statements during a probe of the president's son hunter. but former president biden called the probes of his family baseless and politically motivated. a crowd formed at the washington, d.c. jail monday
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night in anticipation there would be some prisoners released from january 6th. there are only a handful of them held there. but there are dozens inca incarcerated in federal lock y -ups from texas to louisiana to michigan. scott macfarlane, cbs news, the capitol. and while president trump was taking up residence in the white house, his first cabinet nomination was being approved by the senate. in a unanimous vote marco rubio was confirmed as the next u.s. secretary of state. senators went back to work on monday night after trump's inauguration to approve rubio's nomination. straight ahead on "cbs news roundup" -- the wildfires raging in southern california have made an already bad housing crisis even worse. we'll take a look when we come back.
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. the blast of arctic cold that forced president trump's inauguration inside has brought bone-chilling temperatures to much of the country. a massive winter storm is now expected to dump six inches of snow on houston and new orleans. red flag warnings are also posted again in southern california, with high winds expected to fuel the wildfires. those fires have destroyed thousands of homes and made an already dire housing crisis even worse. cbs's tom hanson reports. >> have you had a chance to let yourself process or grieve? >> mm-mm. no. i can't afford it. >> reporter: grief isn't the only thing out of reach for ariel hall, who was thrown into a real estate market as hostile as the flames that tore through her altadena duplex. >> have you looked at zillow or
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anything like that? >> no. knowing the challenge i'm going to have, we won't be living in a safe area or a place that has grass. >> reporter: hall and her 12-year-old jade escaped their home where the single mom paid more than $1,000 below market value. >> i make $3,700 a month. and what, the average two-bedroom is 2,500, 2,800. it's unrealistic. >> reporter: as the smoke clears the scale of loss is coming into focus. 12,000 homes gone. even before the fires los angeles needed to build 450,000 affordable housing units to meet demand. on average, a new apartment building takes four years to build. >> oh, my god. >> reporter: those were the only three words realtor robin walter could utter as we drove with her to see her neighborhood in the pacific palisades for the first time. >> this is a housing crisis on top of a housing crisis. >> reporter: 97% of l.a. hospitalholds can't afford the mortgage for the area's average home price, nearly a million dollars. >> is there anything the city
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can do? >> we're maxed right now. it's overcongested, underin underinventoried if that's a word. and -- this is crazy to see. >> i've been homeless before. it's so triggering to have vowed to myself i would never have us in this kind of situation again. so we're just desperately looking for permanent housing. >> reporter: in search of a house to make a hey, i just got a text from my sister. you remember rick, her neighbor? sure, he's the 76-year-old guy who still runs marathons, right? sadly, not anymore. wow. so sudden. um, we're not about to have the "we need life insurance" conversation again, are we? no, we're having the "we're getting coverage so we don't have to worry about it" conversation. so you're calling about the $9.95 a month plan -from colonial penn? -i am. we put it off long enough. we are getting that $9.95 plan, today.
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one of the biggest honors on inauguration day is to sing the national anthem. donald trump picked one of his favorite performers. ed o'keefe introduces us to christopher macchio. ♪ >> reporter: christopher macchio's tenor tones are the soundtrack to some of donald trump's biggest moments. ♪ god bless america ♪ from a victory party just after the election. to trump's emotional return to butler, pennsylvania. where he was nearly aassassinated last summer. and now the inauguration. >> i do see it as a responsibility. ♪ my home sweet home ♪
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>> reporter: macchio still rehearses near where he grew up, on long island. ♪ you've been musical your entire life? >> it was only in high school that my voice that i had tried to keep secret was discovered and the trajectory of my life and aspirations changed radically after that. >> does it look the same to you? >> it looks exactly the same. >> reporter: macchio credits his high school choir teacher with sparking his love of opera after he initially refused to swing in front of the class. >> so i started singing for him, and he just -- his jaw dropped. he couldn't believe what he heard. and he went right over to the file cabinet, started pulling out sheet music, music, paper flying everywhere, and went over to the piano and started playing different show tunes. ♪ if i can make it there ♪ >> reporter: his talents led macchio to trump when he got a last-minute invitation to
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perform at mar-a-lago just months before the businessman became a candidate in 2015. >> one of the members suggested me. and i performed for over 1,000 guests that evening. and afterwards donald trump took the microphone and announced to the crowd that this guy's got a tremendous voice, magnificent. >> reporter: since then macchio became close with the trump family, which led to him performing at the 2020 republican national convention. >> what is it that you've seen that maybe other americans haven't seen? >> his grace and generosity that i think other people might not have had that -- a similar opportunity to observe. >> there are going to be people who watch this who think nice guy, great voice, but if he likes trump he is someone i can't support. what would you say to those people? >> it's my intention to deliver a performance both at this inauguration and going forward that really lends itself to a
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unifying dynamic. >> reporter: the shy kid from holbrook, new york will now be listed with some of the greats who've sung at past inau inaugurations like aretha franklin, lady gaga, and fellow opera singer jessye norman. >> it's a big leap and a tremendous honor and it really validates the faith that that teacher had in me all those years ago. ♪ and the home of the brave ♪ >> that was cbs's ed o'keefe.
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with so much more than vitamin c. be ready to fight back with emergen-c and for on-the-go immune support try emergen-c crystals. no water needed. before the november election we introduced you to some folks who live in neighboring communities but in totally different worlds when it comes to politics. we asked them to watch each other's cable news programs to better understand how the other side sees things. well, tony dokoupil went back to see how they now feel now that donald trump is president once again. >> hello. >> hi, guys. >> hey. >> reporter: when we first met dana miller and lou demoore, they had basically one thing in common. >> we're living in an uncivilized nation. >> when before did we ever think like that? >> reporter: miller watches msnbc and voted for harris.
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demoore, a fan of fox, voted for trump. >> there she is. >> reporter: now with inauguration day upon us -- >> i'm going to say we all won, everybody in this room won. >> reporter: both are still processing what happened. >> i'm kind of shocked that all those states went red. >> reporter: and for miller what she may have missed -- >> you said you were shocked. do you think your source of information prepared you -- >> not at all. >> no. >> i couldn't watch the news for two weeks. i was -- everything that i was told wasn't happening. >> reporter: demoore says he knows why harris supporters like miller felt so blindsided by the results. >> the country obviously spoke. i think you guys should just start telling a little bit more of the other side. you can't just be -- you just can't be knocking trump every time you guys come on the air. you can't be doing that. because people get brainwashed by that. >> you guys is a real big tent. right? they're not all the same as me
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personally. >> i love you guys and i watch yous every morning. i'll say it again. >> reporter: but even now the way miller sees it republicans are overstating their accomplishment. >> america has given us an unprecedented and powerful mandate. >> 1%. he won by 1.2%. >> it's still millions of people. >> it is millions of people. but i'm looking at the percentage. >> seven swing states. what else does he have to do? >> reporter: she also wonders how trump voters can be comfortable with a president who once famously said he'd be dictator for a day. >> he's a family man. he's not going to be dictating. i mean, he made that one comment that day and everybody took it out of context. >> he believes that he is going to be an oligarch and that he is setting himself up to run the country indefinitely. >> it's not going to happen. i'll come here and put all new heating and air-conditioning in this house if that happens. >> that's a valuable promise. >> it's on tape. >> and they don't just argue. >> out of context.
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>> and argue. >> i can't. >> you will. >> reporter: over the facts. >> not a convicted felon. >> yes, he is. >> no, he's not. >> reporter: they also disagree about america's future. >> how are these four years going to go? dana. >> well, i made sure that i have plenty of hair color in my bedroom. okay? so i don't turn totally white overnight. i feel like he gets so spiteful at times that he doesn't look at the best interests of every single citizen. whether i voted for you or i didn't vote for you. >> but will he accomplish his goals, his promises? will he deliver? >> he'll deliver on some of the things because he's going to surround himself with the people that are going to allow him to continue those promises. yeah. do i want to see him withhold funding from ukraine? which might start world war 3. okay? god, i hope he doesn't come through on that one. >> 80% of all the promises he made are going to come true. he's going to drop the price of gas, which is going to drop the
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price of a lot of goods. drill baby drill. close that border day one. i think he's got a better team than he had the last time. he's got to just get everything fixed. it's got to be reset. >> so are you saying in four years we're going to have a conversation and all the things that you believe are going to happen will happen? >> most of them. the guy's never lied yet. i mean, this guy came into office and made promises. promises kept. >> lou, zero lies? there's not a misstatement? >> exaggeration? oh, the guy's king of exaggeration, yes. >> you know this is all on your plate now, right? so you better come through because -- >> we could come back here every six months if you want. moving for the next four years. >> that was tony dokoupil in new jersey. stay with us. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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heidi covey: so, i have an eye disease that causes blindness. i have moments where i get a little bit sad because i just can't see things that i used to. dr. stanley taught me to trust in the lord even when you don't want to. god is such a faithful father. nothing that happens to us isn't without his eye upon it.
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