tv FOX News Sunday FOX November 6, 2022 10:00am-11:00am PST
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>> shannon: i'm shannon bream, election day is two days away with balance of power in play and races well within the margin of error. >> democracy is on the ballot for all of us. >> shannon: candidates crisscrossed statesesa both parties fight for control of the house and senate. >> i'm here to ask you to vote. >> you are going to vote in the true slate of republicans up and down the ballot. >> shannon: live reports on the closing arguments in the tightest match ups. >> john fetterman is wrong with. >> if you have never lived in
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pennsylvania, how can you fight for pennsylvania? >> shannon: ask the sunday pallel if either side can move in either way. >> i would vote for john fetterman for many reasons. >> shannon: a warning from a leading house democrat about the stakes on tuesday. >> losing this democracy could very well be the end of the world. >> shannon: congressman jim clyburn joins us on what his party will do if they come up short and oklahoma's race for governor heats up with surprising surge by democratic challenger in a very red state. >> i'm critical frankly of this governor. my opponent couldn't see a path forward for herself as republican, she switched parties. >> shannon: we'll t down with kevin stitt on his re-election bid. and all-star election team tell us what to look for as votes are
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being counted, all right now on "fox news sunday." ♪ >>hannon: hello, from "fox news sunday" election headquarters in new york, after month months of uncertainty midterm are here and much focus on the balance of power on capitol hill. take a look at now, deem hold eight-seatdvantage in the house and senate remains in 50/50 split with vice president giving democrats deciding vote when necessary. all this could change. fox news power rankings predict 47 senate seats to the democrats, leaving four toss-up races, senate could go either way. we'll break it down with guests from all parties and pollsters and senior political analysts. we begin with team coverage from states with must-watch senate and gubernatorial races.
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brian is live in philly on the biggest senate race. brian. >> brian: with pennsylvania senate race tied, former president obama and president biden and donald trump spoke on behalf of john fetterman and mehmet oz. >> president biden: decrats up and down the ballot, elect them. john's stroke did not change who he is, didn't change his values, his heart, his fight. >> pennsylvania desperately needs dr. oz in the u.s. senate, he could be the tie-breaking boat. >> john fetterman has talked about dr. oz's personality and character and fighting for abortion rights and oz made referendum on biden while
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promising to lower crime and inflation. the race could be decided in pennsylvania suush abouts where doug mastriano could hurt oz, control of the u.s. senate is at stake and could take days before we know the winner thanks to the mail-in ballot process and threat of looming legal battles. shannon. >> shannon: thank you very much, turn to ayesha hasnie live in atlanta. good morning. >> the races in georgia could be heading for a runoff, the race for u.s. senate, according to fox news polling, herschel walker has momuntum and closed gap with raphael warnock with inflation at the top of mind for voters. walker has shored up his base despite serious allegations
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about forcing two women to get an abortion, he denies that. neither candidate is polling over 50% and rick scott tells me voter turnout is imperative to avoid a runoff. >> are you ready for a runoff? >> we're ready for a runoff, i believe we will not have a runoff, he will touch everybody he can touch and get everybody out to vote. >> race for governor is rematch between two big names and stacey abrams, who made voter suppression her signature issue may lose to governor brian kemp. kemp is up six pnts in the latest fox news poll and shannon, neither is polling over 50%, this race could be heading for a runoff. shannon. >> shannon: take us into december. time for our sunday group, senior political analysts brit,
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dana perino and juan williams. great to have you with us. talking about enthusiasm, the turnout, these polls are close, that has to happen. polling looks at enthusiasm gaps in key states. georgia, republicans have six-point advantage and arizona eight-point advantage. look at pennsylvania, brit, you spent a lot of time there, it is basically a dead heat. >> brit: it seems to be, pennsylvania race and things were the ray they used to be, not the number of polls we have now, as a political journalist you look at landscape, issues and candidates and figure out who looks like a winner. john fetterman doesn't look like a winner, however, the polls say otherwise. oz is a candidate, controversy about him, whether he lives in
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pennsylvania and all that, he is competent, competent on debate and his opponent is struggling in stumbling and having trouble understanding and needs closed captioning, you couldn't think it would be that close, polls say it is. >> shannon: dana, are warned, be patient, this will take days the way they count ballots, it will take time before we know what happened there. >> dana: republicans says republicans are their okay coral, keep the seat, path to majority is clearer, they have other states to play with. if it doesn't happen, that might be more difficult, although some races look good in other places. the thing about pennsylvania in terms of pack your patience tuesday night, you might be able to know quickly the house what that is going to look like, but the senate side, without results from pennsylvania and if georgia is going to runoff, you may not
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know until early december who is going to control the chamber. >> shannon: it keeps us busy and well fed. all of the big guns are coming out in pennsylvania, current president, two former presidents, celebrity endorsements, it is interesting "washington post" says, biden struggling to energize crowds, he's been flooded with reqsts from various campaigns and many keeping their distance from biden were eager to have obama, why is he the biggest draw years after he was out of office? >> juan: he has ability to take shots president biden does not have as the president. he does say some wild things, president biden, but president obama has celebrity quotient, if you want to factor that in, he's an icon, i think the most popular figure in the democratic ranks. the point of our
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conversation is about turnout and i think we've set a record for turnout in the midterm elections. numbers on the board indicate high level of enthusiasm, shannon, it is high, i think among democrats. look down, you say same as before, democrats were enthusiastic to vote against trump and extremism and republicans have come back and are enthusiastic to vote in part because they decided to come home, they have come home to candidates which mcconnell called them questionable quality. a lot of republicans say, i vote republican, i don't like democrats, i'm voting republican and this is what we've seen in the last phase of this campaign and why it is so, so close. >> shannon: one thing that happened during the primary contests was that democrats spent a lot of money to get people more extreme, more maga, thinking they would be easier targs, wall street reporting
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on the new hampshire race that is tight. ms. hassan's campaign so sure they wanted to face mr. bolduk, they spent $3.2 million in the primary, republican primto attack his leading opponent, does this come back to bite them? >> brit: it could, if some candidates they promoted end up winning, what you don't know, how well another candidate would have done, in other words, more conventional candidate republicans offered had won the primaries, they might be doing even better, you don't know that. i think basically the idea of trying to promote candidates you want to run against in the other party is cynical and not good for -- not good for democracy. >> shannon: speaking of that, juan, one report out in newsweek said $40 million democrats have
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spent on people they call election deniers, if they are backing folks, are they not responsible in part for that? >> juan: no, if you get into a fight, you go up against the weakest opponent so you can win. for democrats and you will hear this when you interview congressman clyburn, democrats view trump-backed republicans as extremist, threat to democracy. i think 70% think there is a threat to democracy. that is part of closing message from democrats and in terms of strategy, the candidate make it harder for suburb annites and moderates to say, vote for that so-called extremist. >> shannon: former president on the campaign trail, president trump in florida, new nickname for the governor
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ron-de-sanctimonious. >> not tired of winning, governor ron desantis you proven conservative policyings work, florida is better for it, vote for ron desantis. shades of 2024 and taking sides there, dana. >> dana: if this in 2022, what in 24? presidential election will get underway right after the midterm, president trump may not want to work and i don't know if ron desantis will throw his hat in the ring, we have not heard from him yet. republicans have to get back to unity after tough primaries, that was the case in pennsylvania, where oz and dave mccormick battled it outnd oz got beaten up and had to crawl back and he is basically tied if not one point ahead of john fetterman. in florida, ron desantis likely
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to win that gubernatorial seat, that election has not been set yet. republican unity is what a lot of republican vors want right now, they would like to push back against biden administration is bad for their livelihoods, their safety, the worry about the border, that falls into desire to see republican unity going forward. >> shannon: panel, thank you very much, stay with us issue quick break. up next president biden delivered dire warning about democracy ahead of the midterm, we'll sit down with congressman jim clyburn who is raising eyebrows with his comments about what happens if republicans win big. ♪ ♪ you don't ha to wait until retirement to start enjoying your plans. with pacific life... ...imagine your future with confidence.
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>> shannon: the nation is watching to see which party will win control of the senate, right now it is a jump ball. the power rankings show the house is looking more concern. power rankings have 26 house races toss-ups, either party could win. fox projecting best case scenario for democrats, they could win 212 seats, that would give republicans a majority, a
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slim one. best case for republicans, 249 seats, leaving democrats with littleenge for second half of president biden's term. the next guest says this could be disastrous for the country. joining me is congressman jim clyburn. welcome back to "fox news sunday." >> thank you for having me back. >> shannon: comments you made a couple days ago. >> this is what happens in a country that follows what happened in germany in the early '30s. this country is on track to repeat what happened in germany when it was the greatest democracy going, elected a chancellor who co-opted the media and that is going on in this country. that is what will lead to the destruction of this democracy. >> shannon: you made comments
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about hitler and nazi-ism in recent years and gotten pushback from jewish organizations and others who say it belittles the suffering of the holocaust victims and many lost. your thought? >> i've talked to many jews in my congressional district and they are supporters of mine. they know this stuff causes those kind of deterioration in democr democracy. this is not anything about how difficult it was, i talk about slavery and how difficult it was. but to discuss the facts of what is going on here, election deniers setting up procedures and committees can overturn results of election, to call the press the enemy of the people to
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co-op evangelicals and i grew up in a christian faith, born and raised in a parsonage. i know about religion and i know there is always an attempt to coop religion and that is going on here and people want to deny, that is fine, but facts are very clear, i studied history all of my life. i taught history and i'm telling you that i see here are parallels to what the history was in this world back in the 1930s, in germany. >> shannon: okay, are voters listening to this message to infer from what you are saying if they don't vote for democrats in this election, they are supporting something akin to hitler? >> if they don't vote against
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deniers, from liars, we know they are lying. this was cleanest election in the history of the country, donald trump's own appointee said cleanest in the history of the country. if they are lying, denying, trying to delete, trying to nullify votes, vote against that foolishness. >> shannon: okay, congressman, to look back on some conversations about election deniers we've talked about democrats spent $40 million making sure some of those pele got through primaries so they could face off in the general election, do democrats bear some responsibility for putting those people on the ballot? >> shannon: you spent millions to get them there, where they are in the general election ballot. >> you know, i read about that,
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i believe you should always try to best position yourself to win in the general election, i'm not a proponent of that process. i understands r understand it takes place on both sides, i'm not a proponent of it, i understand it. >> shannon: i will play language from democrats about what is at stake in this election. >> democracy as we know it may not survive in arizona, that is not an exaggeration, that is a fact. >> but, there is something else at stake, democracy itself. >> losing this democracy could very well be the end of the world. >> shannon: were you asking voters to set aside what they feel about the economy? the "wall street journal" has this piece, voters sat through this movement many times now and know it is anticlimactic ending and searching for spare change to cover grocery bills.
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set aside economy and crime and vote for your the world is ending? >> nobody is saying the world is ending. >> shannon: you did say it could be the end of the world. >> no, democracy will be ending, the world will continue to exist, the world was here before hitler and the world was here after hitler, that is what we're saying. the world will not end. the kind of world and country we have, decide how do we want to exist in this world and that is what we're talking about, this hyperbole, is not part of what we're saying here, we're talking about what kind of country we have and world we have. >> shannon: to be clear, read your quote, losing this democracy could be the end of the world, direct quote from you. >> end of the world, come on. >> shannon: a lot of voters feel that way, when you say that.
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they have the same reaction. >> if that is a quote from me, i misspoke. it won't end the world. >> shannon: that is good news for everyone heading to the ballot box on tuesday. >> teach history, we live in worlds that we do not like. live through slavery, they did not like that existence for 250 years, but it was not the end of the world, may be the end the world as they would have it, it will not end the world. >> shannon: all right, we are reassured to hear you say that, sir, thank you for making time for us, congressman clyburn. >> back with our sunday group, brit, reaction to mr. clyburn's remarks? >> brit: i've always liked jim clyburn, very nice man, came
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through as he was saying goodbye to you today. what he is saying is utter nonsense. >> shannon: he said it is utter nonsense. >> brit: talking about the end of democracy and we hear democracy is on the ballot, democracy is the basement and what you are arguing an exercise of democracy in which people vote for candidates is the end of democracy? it is utter nonsense. >> shannon: juan, that is language you heard from multiple democrats saying it, including the president who gave the last closing remarks, that is what he spent time focusing on. >> juan: we're talking about your honor itout and energizing people and makeshifting some persuadable, shannon, in the aftermath of something like the attack on paul pelosi, i think i've seen numbers and polls indicate half of americans think there is a probability of real violence post-election if people say i don't like the outcome or
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think the outcome was a result of fraudulent voting. when you understand tensions are that high, there is potential for violence or real attack on politicians and know about increasing threats to politicians in the country, that is why you are hearing that message loud and clear from democrats as they try to persuade people to say, you know what, there is something going on here, this is not your ordinary election. i agree with brit and i agree with correction from congressman clyburn, this is not the end much the world, people think something different is in the water? yes. >> shannon: juan and brit, we've gotten them to agree. dana -- >> we've been friends forever. >> shannon: you have, both great guys, dana, republicans could be the dog that much cas the car, especially on the house side, they have to governor, based on the margin they end with "washington post" says new maga
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candidates are poised to rule the house gop, hard line congress could elevate impeachment, investigation and debt ceiling showdown, house does potential speaker mcconnell handle this? >> dana: "washington post" missed opportunity to talk about most diverse class of candidates the republican party has ever seen, women, african americans, indian americans, different faces about to win, before we say three people are going to ruin democracy. democrats knew they were likely to lose the house and maybe th senate in the midterm, that is how it works and hyperbole has to be taken back, sometimes you say things you wouldn't want to say, voters will have a chance
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to their voice heard, effectiveness of end of democracy has been so weak, the most effective messaging has been maggie hassan, senator of new hampshire, voted with joe biden, 96.4% of the time, that is why democrats are whining they mighth an election >> shan by democrats trying to get bulldok through. panel, thank you, see you next week. up next arizona is one of tuesday's biggest battleground with toss-ups, live report plus myne-on-one with governor stitt, he is in a tight race there, we will bring up pollsters on what to make of the data, he is wi us, it is all in the final stretch next.
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party to run against the sitting republican governor. we will speak with that governor, kevin stitt about his fight to stay in office. first live in tucson, arizona, where the fight is generating headlines there. >> absolutely. good morning, shannon, two candidates for governor could not be more different katie hobbs and certified president biden's arizona win in 2020, a victory former local news anchor cari lake denies happened. they brought in former president obama to help out and mark kelly watched a lead over blake masters disappear in the final weeks. masters surge came from more appearances with lake, the combative lake has been a headlining draw in her own right. all of this is happening as
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incumbent governors find themselves in tighter races than expected, inflation and frustration has reached a fever pitch, making argument for another go at the job is proving quite difficult. shannon. >> shannon: thank you so much. joining us now oklahoma governor kevin stitt. welcome back to "fox news sunday," warn our viewers there is delay between the two of us, good to have you back. >> great to be back with you guys. >> shannon: governor, how are folks doing in southeast oklahoma? i know you had horrible storms issue massive tornado rolled through there? >> yeah, i actually was down in southeast oklahoma yesterday visiting the folks on the ground, getting generators and state resources. i had a call with fema director
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and homeland security. it was oklahoma standard i saw first hand, helping each other out, they were there with chainsaws and clearing debris and working with utilities to bet gabbing on. it could have been worse, we had one fatality, we are praying for him and his family. >> shannon: praying for your state, the pictures are heartbreaking. the good folks rally to help each other out. your race, oklahoman saying stitt should stay to second term after trump won oklahoma by 33 points in the 2020 presidential election, begs the question why is this such a tight race? >> first off, we think the silent majority are going to come out and we'll have a great night tuesday night.
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the reason it is a tight race, there has been unprecedented dollars spent against me, tune of $50 million to spread lies and chaos, that is like $600 million being spent in the state of virginia. the disinformation is unbelievable, they are sending out fliers to people saying i'm going to close rural schools, nothing could be further from the truth, i put more money in education than any governor before me, we're proud of our record. i have the largest save ings account in history. we are 11 in the country of people moving to oklahoma, the economy is going well and they are conflating the issue and some lies and chaos being spread is making it tighter than it should be. >> shannon: talk about your opponent, joy hofmeister, she
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switched to the democratic party and here is her explanation for that. >> our governor hijacked the republican party, he is driving our state into the ground, i'm aggressively moderate, always has been. >> shannon: she said you pulled the party too far to the right and she couldn't stay anymore. your response? >> well, listen, if believing in traditional family values and not having men compete in girl sports is pulling too far to the right, i don't see it, oklahomans overwhelmingly agree on family values, if believing in smaller government, lower taxes and deregulation is pulling us right, i will stand for that. those parties attacking oil and gas industry, jobs in oklahoma
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and not having an honest conversation about what the american people need to be energy independent, that is the real extreme party and they are the ones causing 40-year high inflation at the gas pump and grocery store and all about the democratic party which my opponent couldn't see a path forward for herself, ended up flipping parties and oklahoma can see right through that. >> shannon: most well loved and known former congressman, football star jc watts, made an ad endorsing, he is republican, endorsing the democratic party. >> i'm republican then and now, i'm voting for joy hofmeister, this scandal and corruption is just too much. >> shannon: a federal audit
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found the state mishandled covid money, criminal investigation into state contracts with a barbecue restaurant and your opponent accuses you of funneling subsidy benefits to your own businesses, i want you to respond to the accusations. >> again, oklahomans are too smart, this is election season with $50 million in special interest trying to buy this election for my opponent. of course they are coming out with that stuff. jc watts, it is disappointing, he is on the board of paycom, those are part of the folks trying to buy the election, like the soros company. he is a contractor with some of the other democratic operatives, no surprise there. oklahomans can see through that and that is why americans are
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disappointed with lies, chaos and distrust of polls and things going on. >> shannon: governor, it will take a second, i need to interrupt you hear and make sure you answer, that was federal audit, there is state audit and give us specific responses to the accusations. >> yeah, here is the deal, i'm so proud, i started my company with $1000 and a computer shortly after college, we've grown that to 1000 employees today. long before i became governor, we have quality jobs programs with 600, 700 companies and that was put in place long before i ran for governor. so twisting the truth with something that our company and the private sector got in place long before i was governor, along with every other company
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that qualifies in the state of oklahoma is nonsense and oklahomans can see through it. >> shannon: one of the most unusual races to watch. we will watch it, thank you governor stitt for making time for us, good to see you. thank you so much. >> shannon: bring in a couple pollsters to talk about this race and many others, kellyanne conway and democratic pollster america penn, which governor race is most interesting? kellya kellyanne conway >> you see lee zeldin in a state, new york, we have not had a republican governor in 20 something years, keeping it tight with kathy hochul and oregon, we haven't had republican governor in 40 years. in nevada, attention to laxalt
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taking on cortez-masto and cari lake and the senate race there. presided over the state losing ns of thousands of businesses never coming back after covid lockdown, he got a d after the lockdowns and people are concerned about the education . guy named joe lombardi, he was a sheriff since 2014, has law enforcement and military backgrnd and doing a gotted job holding cislac responsible thachl is one i'm watching. >> shannon: mark? >> half a dozen fascinating governor's races, i zoomed in on new york. kathy hochul was substantially well ahead and lee zeldin has focused on single issue, crime, and it is good demonstration of can this issue of crime really change politics as we know it,
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particularly in new york. and look, even if he comes thin single digits, it will send a mes message to democrats you can't ignore crime people see in their daily lives. >> shannon: polls show substantial swings and whether the methodology of the poll, spot on, one in the "wall street journal" this week finds white women in suburban areas make up twenty %, favor -- moving 27 percentage points away from democrats since the august poll. is that outlier? is it accurate, whether you want to believe it or not? >> people don't realization most elections voted solidly or republican and impression was they didn't and when democrats made headway in e last midterm that was the story, they bounce
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back and are interested in how do we protect our kids, crime, inflation, economic sues, how do i put food on the table, the fact they bounced back is significant finding, i believe probably true and will make the biggest difference in this upcoming election. >> shannon: that group is most motivated to get out and vote, "washington post" said 95% of americans do not pick up calls when they get them. i don't pick up the calls either. "new york times" had a piece that said idea of nonresponsive bias, in 2000 29 white registered democrats were more likely to respond than white republicans, that nonresponse bias looks as though it is back and white registered democrats were likelier to respond than republicans, how tough, kellyanne conway, does it make it for you to do your jobs? >> it has been tough and "new
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york times" is trying to do cya, they said trump had 8% chance of winning and 15% chance of being president, he won michigan and became psident. they are doing this in a way they can't be wrong. many americans want to express themselves and feel they are rticipating there voice matters. it is dangerous and disappointing to hear democrats scaring people away from voting. they are saying election deniers and americans are looking at them and saying you are inflation and recession deers and reduced test score deniers, that is why a lot of women are willing to come to the poll and say, i'm swinging over and the issue uncomplicated and straightforward, inflation, economy, crime, it's immigration and education. parents, a year after glenn
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youngkin won that race, shannon and mark, parents are still parents and upset about what they see as a hangover from all of the lost learning and test scores and they don't understand why kids are back in classroom, the left is attacking curriculum instead of lost learning issues. >> shannon: mark, you wrote a piece on fox news.comthat talked about inflation and vote who care about the economy most, you warn it will come back to bite democrats? >> absolutely, it is the number one issue in the country, and the fascinating thing, democrats said threat to democracy is what they are running this campaign on. i think the biden administration did student loan, rijuana pardon and million dollars of gaout of the petroleum reserve, did not confront these issues directly in a meaningful way, they became inflation deniers and i think that is stupid strategy, we will see whether or not i'm right and
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that was probably one much the worst strategies i've seen in a midterm or they were right, had tough issues and deced to avoid them. >> shannon: the president's final speech, look at prime time speeches calling the nation to pay attention, closing argument was about divisive issues and aimed at people probably going to vote democrats anyway, missed opportunity? >> they have voted in early voting, democrats have an advantage, they banked early votes, probably pro-choice voters went early, it is the wrong message for this country and democrats expand number of messengers and never got to the core message animating and motivating americans, people feel they are drowning economically and looking for pockets of air. you will have a good republican night on tuesday and i think governing majority and realinement for hispanic and women voters who gave democrats a chance and they ignored me.
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insulting raffle of the country is no way, democrats have enraged people, republicans have engaged people. they had 100 million voter contacts and 1 million volunteers and opened 38 community centers in the rnc, you can find out what the difference in republican and democrats are, this is a failed strategy. >> shannon: see what works tuesday night and days and weeks and mae months to follow. thank you both, kellyanne conway and mark penn, thank you. up next, team that will lead our coverage tuesday, take a deep dive into election night and how it could play out, they are next. and we would experience turbulence. i would watch the flight attendants. if they're not nervous, then i'm not going to be nervous. financially, i'm the flight attendant in that situation. the relief that comes over people once they know
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how states run their own election and how quickly mail-in and absentee ballots are counted. what should we expect? our team who will lead us, bret baier and martha maccallum, good to see you guys. bret, preparing people to be patient. >> bret: yes, it is very possible we've seen evolution on how the states have dealt with elections, but a couple of them are already warning us, when the secretary of state gets out and says listen we might not have it depending how close it is, other side is that it we may see this wave develop and we could make calls earlier. we will be cautious and try to get the vote totals, we have a system in place that is really accurate, we're trying to be first, we're going to be right. >> shannon: if dust is not settled in pennsylvania or georgia, martha, we're looking at what we lovto do,
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continuing election coverage. >> martha: you haven't seen any candidate get over 50, that is the threshold, we may hit rewind is see a runoff in december for the senate candidates, that is something to watch. also going through state by state and looking at when they count, start counting, some don't start counting until 2:00 in the afternoon on election day and some allow absentee ballotses until november 18th. if a wave develops, we may see where this is going in terms of majorities in the house and potentlly in the senate, but there may be races we can't call yet. >> shannon: digging into the data day after day, we love this stuff and key races are within the margin of error. a sense of how things are closing? >> bret: it does seem republicans had just a great
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past three weeks od a great sum. and now it interesting part is we have so many polls that are tracking roughly the same, if they are way off, we've got major issues with polling. and we'll see. i think we'll know early in the night how the night starts to unfold with early closings. >> shannon: atlantic had an interesting piece talking about people who are superstar losers, beto o'rourke and stacey abrams, it doesn't matter if they win on tuesday night, they developed a different celebrity within the party. >> martha: i don't know, that may be the case going into tuesday, some point as a politician, you have to win to have that kind of gravitos to stick around temperature has sepated from the senate race
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in terms of what people want from their governor. brian kemp has done an interesting job with disputes he had with former president trump and his ability to speak to the people of georgia. when you think back to what he did in covid, opened up schools early and found ways to give people tax rebates, an interesting dynamic. and stacey abrams continues to talk about voter suppression, which resonates with some voters in georgia, but look at the polls, looks like kemp's argument is winning at this point and we'll see what happens. >> bret: we are considering the clyburn hawaiian shirts, good look. >> shannon: talking about control of the senate, joe manchin, quickly, back and forth with him and president biden now. >> bret: president biden comments about coal plants being
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shut down, and manchin's statement about the president was really stunning and then the white house walked it back saying he's misunderstood, it was not what he meant to say. three days before the election, that is a big dust-up in coal country, we'll see how it play out. >> shannon: all right, if they wind up with senate that is tied and senator manchin is part of that, where does he go? he feels burned based on that statement. >> martha: reminds me of hillary clinton sitting around the table and them saying, you took away our livelihood, this is sensitive territory for democrats and tone-deaf statement on behalf of the president this close to the president and we have a walkback, it is a question of how in tune democrats are with where voters are in their hearts and minds and whether that
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sync-up is happening and joe manchin has been better figuring out where his voters lie for sure. >> bret: we know what the administration wants to do, it is just not today, say whatting he said raises eyebrows in those states in particular. >> shannon: and martha said another walkback by the president. thank you, we'll see you, join bret and martha on fox news channel for democracy 2022, countdown to the midterm, breaking down the races and the battle for control of the senate and house and my colleague bill hemmerand i will join you, as well, we will look ahead te election special, i have all the details next.
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step 1: greet your shrimp. step 2: bid your shrimp farewell. reeepeeeat. ultimate endless shrimp is ending soon. it's now, or next year. welcome to fun dinin >> shannon: quick program note, join us for democracy 2022 special coverage this tuesday night fox news channel. bret baier and martha maccallum lead coverage 6 p.m. eastern, we have reporters othe grounds across the country to bring the latest news in what account be a long and historic night and join me tuesday night on your local fox station for updates on the biggest stories. that is it for today, i'm shannon bream, we'll see you back here next "fox news sunday."
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vo: climate change is fueling a wildfire crisis. destroying our forests. threatening our communities. polluting our air. prop 30 taxes those making over $2 million a year. no one else pays a penny. 30 will reduce the tailpipe emissions that drive climate change. and prevent wildfires and toxic smoke. so we have clean air to breathe. this is about our kids' future. omar: prop 30 helps contain fires and combat tailpipe emissions. vote yes on 30.
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