Skip to main content

tv   FOX News Sunday  FOX  September 29, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PDT

10:00 am
g this season. can xfinity internet handle it”" great question, dave. for full analysis, let's go to the “telestrator.” at xfinity, we know the game's only live once. and nothing's more annoying than glitching or buffering. that's why we built xfinity internet with the fastest speeds and ultra-low lag for non-stop action. can i have a turn now? in a minute, my turn's not over yet. i thought we were a team? well, we are! i do the telestrator and you do the “tall talking.” “tall talking?!” there it is! >> i'm shannon bream. angel takes out the head of hezbollah. and they are now vowing revenge. >> would lebanon and the entire
10:01 am
region going into a wider escalation. they are on the side of lebanon. and resistance by all means. >> hearing from then with the hezbollah leadership compound in beirut. the commissions committee member on what will happen next in the volatile region. then j.d. vance and tim walz about to go ahead tea pet and they're only scheduled face-off before election day. foot both vp candidates said to debate before election day and with the voting already underway in more than 20 states. we'll talk with the trump vance cade events. >> there's a lot at stake in this election and one is the security of our border. >> vice-president harris charles of the border try to close the gap with trump on immigration. our panel weighs in on that in the shocking new numbers showing there is more than 13,000 on
10:02 am
citizens can -- convicted of homicide partly roaming in the u.s. and our sunday special... >> you can't be serious. you think i could make a formidable kennett for the presidency? >> will take you behind the scene at the theatre where an assassin took the life of our 16th president. it's a message for a divided times. >> the parallels are too many to count. >> all right now on fox news sunday. ♪ >> hello from fox news washington take the quick look at your headline the southeast is cleaning up behind the widespread path of destruction from the hurricane. more than six people are dead from florida to virginia on that debt told is expected to climb. early estimates for the damage between 15 and $26 billion. several dams across the region are threatening to break from all the record flooding. if you can help, please visit red cross/forward to find out
10:03 am
how you can donate money to the recover -- recovery efforts you can also hold up your phone and scanned that on the screen. people are still without power george and the carolina are hard-hit millions of americans still displaced out of their homes. some of the remnants were making their way up the east coast today with more chances of local flooding in local areas. turning to the middle east that is really military announcing they killed yet another top ranking hezbollah official in an air strike capping off with the back terror group which lost its leader. with the israeli strike friday. in a moment we'll get reaction from chris who sits on the foreign relations committee. hello tray. >> good morning shannon. over the past when he four hours hezbollah positions have been targeted across lebanon, they rocked this guideline this
10:04 am
weekend. targeting the strongholds with another hezbollah commander just after israel confirm cited they killed the hezbollah leader this is now giving the region a new phase in unproductive chapters with that same strike the deputy commander in the irg see also killed prompting more fears they could decide to directly retaliate for the killings. there may not highly for a possible response but a senior defence official told fox news over the weekend that despite the continued rocket fire from lebanon the belief is hezbollah's to disorganize at the moment to launch a serious counterattack of their own. this comes as reports say that they are conducting limited minor ground operations into lebanon for the ground ovation. thousand those really troops are currently staging on the northern border is a call for a cease-fire.
10:05 am
>> would you want to the missile attacks in the red sea? >> when the war unravels further they continue to evacuate southern lebanon and southern beirut with the displacement a family in the heart of the lebanese capital. the most vulnerable residents with nowhere to go. >> we are here because in our area those strikes and bombings and yesterday strikes were unbelievable. we had flood before and then went back to our homes and then they got more and more intense so we came here waiting for netanyahu to stop the bombing so we can go back home. the united states is clearly looking for the demotic off-ramp to have a broader regional war across the middle east and prevent israel from entering lebanon on the ground. shannon? >> thank you very much tray.
10:06 am
joining us is the member of the relations committee. good to have you. >> it's always good to be on with you. >> starting what they set the u.n. just days ago. >> as long as they choose the path of war, israel has no choice and has every right to remove this threat and return our citizens to the home safely. this is exactly what we are doing. >> he went on to ask them to imagine what would happen if towns like el paso and the san diego border towns were taking fire and turned it into complete ghost towns. he said american officials would not stand for that for a single day and yet this demonstration would call for a cease-fire since october eighth. why should we asked them to stand down is at the right thing to do? >> with president biden that i join in saying that the leader
10:07 am
of hezbollah is a murderous terrorist who had american blood on his hands from the attack on the marine barracks and he's killed thousands of innocent civilians. lebanese syrian as well as israeli. writing rockets and missiles onto northern israel since october seventh. i think israel is justified in their strikes against hezbollah. they call for a cease-fire is really because of a concern about a ground invasion of southern lebanon by the idf might well turn into a long and grinding war of attrition and concerns about iran way well retaliate. president biden vice-president harris are clear we will stand by your ally israel and defend them against attacks by iranian proxies or direct attacks from iran. >> they see it differently. then have the building to fully trust us at this time. here's what he said yesterday.
10:08 am
>> they want to throttle back israel and their ability it's a very sad fact that they don't trust the united states under the leadership of the president biden vice-president harris. >> don't need to ask your permission but we are finding out after the fact, what do you make of your colleagues assessed with the thick hit trust us? >> no one has been stronger in coming to the defence of israel with after the hateful attacks and then president joe biden vice-president kamala harris with the first-ever direct attack on israel by eemeen, the biden-harris administration coordinated that insurer one of the 300 missiles that they launched at israel hit any significant target or cause any major damage going to the entire
10:09 am
period there is a period attacks by hezbollah and hamas and by those in the red sea. they should trust us there has been moments of tension because you don't inform us of what's happened before they do. those question of course about the number of civilian deaths in gaza and what they have ground on. the idea that there should be any question about joe planning kamala harris standing strongly i israel with the right to defend themselves from the attack is just nonsense. >> i want to turn to the form hot spot with ukraine and russia. meeting with the candidates and going deeper into russia. putin out today for the kremlin saying that they are considering changing the policy and guidelines will become so the use of nuclear power. is this a threat?
10:10 am
are they bluffing? what you think the ministrations should do with respect to line these weapons for further use into russia? >> we need to be careful. he needs to take risks and gambles. the world and i'll expect them to engage in the full broad strike -- broad spectrum in gate -- invasion back in 2022 and president biden vice-president harris have a sample like global coalition of 50 countries to defend ukraine to support them in that fight for freedom. the more alarming things president trump and his running mate j.d. vance have said is they somehow will bring this war to an end in a day and j.d. vance in the senate has questioned if we should continue to support ukraine's fight for freedom. it's important we give them the weapons tools and the freedom to use those weapons in order to
10:11 am
win the war against russia. i respect president biden gets more detailed briefings and i do on the potential escalation and when putin makes threats to potentially use tactical nuclear weapons, he has a very tough balancing act to strike. >> we encourage by the meeting between president trump and president zelensky. they had some kind of meeting of the minds president trump says where they are overall getting this thing ended. even zelensky feeling like it was a good meeting. >> i'm glad they met it's important that they are having conversations with republican and democratic leaders and the candidates to be the next president of our nation. in the clip you're showing right now president trump said i'm a good friend of putin's and we can see them stiffen up and i hope of a better friend of ukraine then you are of ukraine
10:12 am
under putin it was an awkward moment. putin has carried out horrific attacks in ukraine. we should not have president of the united states saying he's seeking to be a better friend of lead putin. >> on asked what our own border. there's pretty shocking for most americans with the noncitizens here that have already been convicted of a crime and are not in custody and that's what their numbers convicted of homicide. what can and should we be doing about those getting upset talking with the mass deportations were targeting people that have been convicted of murder and, should we have an effort to get this done? >> thanks for a chance to talk with this. >> didn't might not be in custody but most are in prison. the state federal are local prisons and they will be
10:13 am
deported as soon as they finish serving those terms. under this demonstration they prioritize the deportation of those who have committed violent crimes. and they have deported them at a 50% higher rate and making that a key priority. >> with senator langford and those of the negotiated. we have $20 billion more being invested being prioritizing the deportation of the criminals. summing all the should want. that didn't pass and they said don't pass it. but they made it clear that they would sign that bill into law. >> many republican colleagues to they would not have voted for this anyway because they felt they contain many magnets to bring people here in the permits and they already think it's out
10:14 am
of control. they asked questions about its we're not enforcing the current law them i reinforce the bill if it was passed. if you hold the senate maybe comes up for another boat and we'll be watching that. >> we will and will make a stronger. >> thank you. the secretary say joining us. good heavy with us. what you make with the center had to say about the fact that biden-harris administration has been full-throated and unequivocal in supporting israel? >> good morning shannon. santa gray's nice man but he just living in a fantasy world. the most important or the iranians and hezbollah. they have felt free to fire missiles into israel and killed 1200 israeli and send hold americans hostage with the uranian regime today. with the cease-fire and what they speak about i think we
10:15 am
should be saying it plain and clear. finish the job. and the biden administration cease-fire had gone into effect the entire hezbollah leadership would be alive today if they agree to the cease-fire. that hamas had demanded and united states had supported. make no mistake about it we know history. the history from 1967. we know from 1973 there's only one thing that will protect israel and make that middle east more prosperous and peaceful and that's the demonstration of power with the adversaries. >> they asked iran to directly strike they didn't want do that because the president was here speaking at the u.n. in the u.s. now those questions if hezbollah has disabled today and i move forward with that. is a quote from the executive vp of the institute here talking about this saying if it becomes clear that they can't defend
10:16 am
themselves with the bombing in beirut then the justification for staying out of the war has collapsed at that point the credibility with the rest of its partners of regional militant groups would collapse or risk collapsing if they do not react. do you worry about where this has pushed iran to and what happens next? >> they pen and a reigning sympathizer for a long time working closely alongside the leaders in the country. the way to convince iran to stay out of this conflict is to demonstrate americans and the israelis together can hold the leadership to account and have these costs on them. with united states preparing to support that. and recognizing they too can just united states of america.
10:17 am
pushing back with the biden-harris administration what's allowed for the nuclear program to build but there's only one way. he had the boat pressure on them and deny them resources. you cannot hand them billions of dollars and then tell the israelis to stand down and have any prayer that not only will israel do well, but hezbollah and they killed more muslims than just about everyone over the past decade. this is a regional challenge one for the world to finish as a mistake and only creates for the risk of ex-galatian. >> it seem wise for netanyahu to speak about the people of iran and the people of lebanon wanting to rescue them from their oppressors to. to your points. thank you. >> thank you shannon. >> coming up we hit with live reports from the trump and
10:18 am
harris in the battleground states. will talk with the trump fan story get of alabama. stay with us. ♪ >> announcer: on your tomorrow n. you have... the fearless investor. the type a cpa. the bootstrapper. the bootmaker. yeehaw [narrator] but many do have something in common. we all trust schwab with our wealth. [narrator] thanks to our award-winning service, low costs and transparent advice. every day, over a million multi-millionares trust schwab with more than two trillion dollars of their wealth. what do people want more of? more “oh yeah!” more laughs. more hang outs. more “mmmmm, so good!” yeah, give us more of all of that little stuff that makes life so great.
10:19 am
but if you're older or or have certain health conditions, you also have more risk from flu, covid-19 and rsv. but vaccines help keep you from getting really sick. and that, is huge. >> woman: why did we choose safelite? we were loading our suv when... crack! safelite came right to us, and we could see exactly when they'd arrive with a replacement we could trust. >> vo: schedule free mobile service at safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ by the time this ad is over, karen will know if that feeling in her chest is afib... or just the end of a stressful day. (nature sounds) (cell-phone notification) it's that easy.
10:20 am
peace of mind that fits in your wallet. kardiamobile card is on sale now at kardia.com or amazon. and now, kardiamobile card is hsa/fsa eligible. >> as a vp candidate to pay for their debates they are running mates have been hard at work trying to win over board -- voters in the states. president trump held a rally saturday. meredith rowling this evening.
10:21 am
good morning. >> with vice president harris they're spinning more time and energy trying to win over voters on the three key issues. harris was touring the u.s. southern border. they blame harris who they've dubbed the borders are for the massive influx in the recent years but now harris is trying to shift the blame to the former president trump. >> the american people deserve a president who can actually cares more about the border security them playing political games. while we understand many people are desperate to migrate to the united states. our system must be orderly and secure. >> on the cost -- economies tells the crowd she supports capitalism a direct response that will -- to trump's chlan that she the socialist.
10:22 am
and on the past pledge to end the filibuster rule deposit legislation she says would restore roe v. wade. coming up tuesday night at the and only vice presidential debate with tim walz again street events. with the debate trip -- prep 90 minutes and there is no studio audience. the both candidates. >> that can make it very interesting. live in nevada. >> we got wisconsin pennsylvanian back here to wisconsin. that's the schedule. in erie, pennsylvania. with this focus event in wisconsin where they ridiculed
10:23 am
vice president kamala harris on her visits to the border. >> she is a disaster. and she will never do anything for the border. and she didn't even want to get here next of her poll numbers were tanking. >> with the bipartisan bill. they want to run on a problem instead of fixing it. with a rally in pennsylvania he's prepping for his attack with tim walz. wisconsin is a key swing states it was pennsylvania. the new fox news polling they're leaving trump by two percentage points among the voters among likely voters a fortnight percent each. >> come back to fox news sunday.
10:24 am
>> appreciate you have any. >> quite a game last night. of the risk of alienating a lot of people. we are tied but while. >> between president trump to visit look yes. he was there. just incredible. obviously than this game will go down as one of the best cultural ball games ever played. i think is still reverberating this morning. you should have heard it when they announce president trump. i think the cheers were something helically registered on the richter scale. it was just an exciting made all the way around. >> a big see the game last night. he's polling well but the polling shows in georgia he is a bit of a problem. the areas dealt with the three points to the vice president in part as the gender gap with women who say they don't trust you or the g.o.p. with the issues of abortion with the
10:25 am
candidates adding fuel to the fire was some comments he made there. wises messaging on this in particular not working? how can the g.o.p., is it possible to fix it? people just don't trust you guys on that one. >> we are going to continue i think to grow in the polls here and as we're going to talk with these issues and get a message out to voters, they will see her president trump stands on this. there's been no stronger supporter of ivf them president trump. whccurred in alabama president trump came out immediately and said he strongly supported ivf. and he wanted the legislature to act. they acted in six days of that shannon. and our public our republican legislature and republican governors signed ivf protection into law. we continue to talk what this. with that nationwide access. and the truth is democrats continue to use this issue as a
10:26 am
scare tactic because ivf is legal and accessible. in all 50 states. and they have made it perfectly clear making it perfectly clear in that case. >> this is something where they continue to point to this and say republicans are not want to protect ivf, why did you say know? >> i'm so glad you brought this up. this is politics at its worst. and you think about what they're doing instead of putting the funding bills on the floor they are so critically important to actually doing our job for the american people. and set up in the national defence authorization act on the floor so the service men and women can be the best trained equipped and ready across the planet. putting this on the floor we do every five years. our farmers are hurting. you can talk to any farmer and they say its challenging to make ends meet. we know food security is national security. instead of putting these bills on the floor, he chose to put an
10:27 am
ivf bill on the floor for a showboat. let's not protect religious freedom. with the bipartisan issue. we do this consistently. this time they chose to rip this out. there has been no more vocal supporter outside of president trump then myself getting to 60 votes in united states senate and not one new member of the democratic party came over to try and garner enough votes for 60. with anything else. just the summer of scare tactics that they have moved into the fall of fearmongering. they're stoking fear that should not exist with a politics that they lose when chuck schumer is in charge. >> jamie harrison feels good
10:28 am
about where they are. obviously the senate is in play as well. they're hoping to flip it but he says he's feeling bullish a place like montana and ohio even florida and texas and missouri. as a possible that they are overconfident? is this another midterm 2022 when it did not materialize the way they hoped. when it comes this issue of abortion that is on a lot of state ballots as well they feel put them overtop. and that they can maintain control of the senate. >> i was with steve last night who's the chair for montana. he is working diligently to ensure we make sure we take back the senate and of course, we hope to do this in a big fashion. he's being diligent in every single sector. we are taking nothing for granted. even where we are ahead we are working like we are five points behind because shannon, we believe the future of our country depends on it.
10:29 am
when you hear chuck schumer and kamala harris saying that they will break the filibuster to do radical things weather its gas cap powered cars over -- off the road, whether banning fracking when we -- know we not only need to be energy independent we need to return to the energy dominance at president trump, we look at the border. we know what's at stake. president trump with vice president kamala harris' supporters are. they ran this last year for the numbers we had with that point with the murderers convicted murderers with 16,000 convicted
10:30 am
our country is not stronger, it's not safe. we fardy her on the show literally the world is on fire under president trump. we got to see what peace through strength meant. putin never invaded ukraine under president trump. we saw the middle east with the abraham accords. moving the embassy to jerusalem, there is no more pro-israel president then president trump. is the look when you watch this debate on tuesday night, when you see tim walz b.s. the question we better off then we are four years ago he, just like kamala harris will not be able to answer that question because the answer to that is no. >> let me just a couple things.
10:31 am
>> they save any were incarcerated i very quickly want to give you a chance to respond to what he said to ukraine. that president trump does not have the best interest of those folks at heart. there was meeting with president zelensky what they were about the trump and vance position that it will include seating territory to putin as a way to end this whistling that the ukraine people do not want to accept. quick comment for ukraine? >> there is a reason putin only invaded ukraine under obama, biden and then underbite in harris. they respect president trump and i believe lee putin does as well. i know president trump met with zelensky. he understands the importance of standing firmly with our allies. you look at what joe biden has done and kamala harris, slow walking resources to ukraine, and they are disastrous with her withdrawal from afghanistan.
10:32 am
it's great a ripple effect across this globe where people don't respect us. the moment president trump gets back in office, they would protect and stand firmly with the servicemen and women and he will back the blue. we will have law and order once again savour streets and a more peaceful globe guaranteed. >> about five weeks ago we will see with the markham people decide thank you for your time senator. >> thinking -- thank you shannon. >> thousand support workers can walk off the job is really is tuesday throwing a wrench into our economy just weeks before the election periods on the panel here to debate the political fallout if dockworkers make good on their threats to strike. ♪ (vo) a law partner rediscovers her grandmother's artistry and establishes a charitable trust to keep the craft alive for generations to come.
10:33 am
from preserving a cultural tradition to leaving a legacy, a raymond james financial advisor gets to know you, your passions, and the way you enrich your community. that's life well planned.
10:34 am
10:35 am
it is inevitable. they will grow up. (♪) discover who they are (♪) what they want from this world. and how they will make it better. and while parenting has changed, how much you care has not. that's why instagram is introducing teen accounts. automatic protections for who can contact them and the content they can see. (♪)
10:36 am
>> is present i won't only be running back this bill but i will secure our border. >> letting in many migrant criminals into our country. you can have her as your president, she doesn't know what the hell she's doing. >> vice-president harris and president trump making the case that they are the ones to beat for the border crisis. it's time for our border group. molly hemingway.
10:37 am
chief of the federalist. forward 2020 harris target. we've heard these numbers. the hs is taking issue with them. but if we are talking about people who are released into this country, elise from ice custody, on the issue of homicide, the letter that had all these numbers and it said this. most noncitizens convicted of homicide are typically not eligible from iscsi when limited circumstances i.c.e. officers may use their discretion in making determinations and release noncitizens with conditions. it sounds like an acknowledgement that some of these people convicted of homicide are free in the country? >> yes even senator koons was saying only a majority of people what we have seen the last four years as an absolute explosion on the nondetained list from 3.2 million illegal crossers in 20,227.4 million i think it is now. this is a result of millions
10:38 am
upon millions of people going into the border. this could be from prior to the harrison administration, but we have 1300 convicted murderers nearly 16,000 convicted. they de 6000 people convicted of dangerous drug crimes. whether this happened in a different country or this country, this is clearly not a key he says immigration policy and clearly result of the biden administration going out of its way on day one, biden and harris, they work to remove all the protections the trump administration had painstakingly provided. and kamala harris says she opposes migrant attention fist -- detention facility she doesn't support the wall. she compared to ice to the kkk and things they should be abolished she wants free health care for illegal border crossers that includes in her mind sex change surgeries, paid for by taxpayers. this is a radically different position then the trump administration which sought to control the border. >> in the border patrol
10:39 am
reactions going to visit arizona. they call it a slap in the phase not only to the border patrol, but to americans as well. she says they didn't only ignore the problem, she helped create it. >> she's trying to reframe the debate away from the issues that they are talking about in areas that are more in her background that are more in her court. she wants to talk well fentanyl and she also talk about transnational crime. why is that? the biden administration crackdown on china they say when it comes to fentanyl precursors in the country. when they talk with the record as attorney general on transnational crime it allows you talk will going after drugs, guns, as well as the trafficking of people. why did you go to arizona? when you look at the polling she is down to point steep trump in the state of arizona. in the "usa today" university poll, that was six points. this is on the margin of error but importantly look at the issues in this pool. 15 points down when it comes to the issues of immigration.
10:40 am
>> they put this up. with the key battleground states we asked this question about who is better to control and help with the border. trump is a 15 north carolina up 15. pennsylvania of 17 on that issue. >> what you're saying is harris turner show up these -- or up these vulnerabilities. you saw her do that on the economic part where she released a report but also with a visit to the border. they've been hitting her on not visiting the border for some time. remember her first major misstep as vice president in 2021 when she gave the interview and she said i haven't been to europe either. there is no world where she's going to overtake donald trump among voters on the border. we are seeing her embrace a different tactic to say that we do need enforcement on the border. a sharp departure from what she ran on and how they have talked about changing the entire system. if she could cut into some of
10:41 am
this lead. she won't overtake him. with this game of inches in the polls, then maybe she elise gets another two points or three points that could carry her. >> that could make a huge difference. she might have another headache on her hands if there's a huge dockworkers strike. the white house saying they are staying out of it. viscous out of the labor voters on harris who is trying to shore up support for the blue-collar workers who could decide the election. we have her the dire predictions about no vegetables or bananas or core parts. and hitting on the economy. >> this is what most economists are saying. this would be one of the most dangerous economic decisions. this is affecting 70,000 workers in contract negotiations of expires of course on tuesday which you know is five weeks out
10:42 am
from the election. another two months out from the christmas season. you're seeing a administration that wants to support both sides in this negotiation. the vast majority of the organized labor is behind the vice president for her commitment to cyst it -- staying with workers. one the first -- first vice presidents to stand on a picket line with striking workers. but certainly this process will play out in the next 48 hours. >> they say if trump tries doing thing about this then democrat should try to use his labor policy about finding the striking workers for his attempts to curry favour with the working class voters. >> the best possible situation we can get if they intervene as the status quo. we'll be able to keep getting things into the ports. this noneconomic success story. it does use holly for people to problems that this economy has had over the next several years
10:43 am
with inflation being a problem and people being unable to buy homes. so is just reminding people during the trump administration the economy was firing all cylinders during the biden harrison administration it's been rough. even if there is all the port workers strike it will still just be how it should be. >> we have to go but i want to see a chopin to thank the presidential debate will move it out at all on the ticket? we will also watch it right? [laughter] >> i will say don't anyone to hurt their main candidates. >> doing no harm tuesday night. panel, stay with us. ukrainian president hedged his bets this week meeting with both presidential contenders here in washington as the two sides might have very different ideas of how this whole thing with russia should end. ♪
10:44 am
10:45 am
10:46 am
♪ >> i have a message for the tyrants of iran. if you strike us, we will strike you. there is no place in iran that the long arm of israel cannot reach. >> we want peace for all and seek no war or quarrel with anyone. >> these really prime minister
10:47 am
netanyahu dueling speeches there at the u.n. amid growing tensions in the middle east. we are back with the panel. a lot of the reporting has been the white house we new for months has been very intense with netanyahu but it seemed to hit a new high when they decide to go after hezbollah and not get on board with this topic of the cease-fire. >> the white house is under the impression that this cease-fire proposal they laid out with the e.u. and nine other nations, israel was on board with that. netanyahu originally comes out and rejects the proposal moves in them continue to strike ever since. the white house's view on this is the politics inside of israel for netanyahu are very complicated for him and that's why you're seeing these differences play out in public. but moving forward now with these recent strikes, the white house did not know about this yesterday until it was already out of the way in the questions that u.s. officials now have our what happened with hezbollah. now they are really trying to
10:48 am
figure out what happens next and the u.s. officials don't think they are in the mood right now talked what a cease-fire what they are trying to do in the u.s. is lay the groundwork for when this can happen. >> "the new york post" has been very critical of the way the administration is handled this saying it biden or harris had any true compassion, any desire for real peace and notches or three week djokovic cease-fire for anti-israel voters, they would encourage israel to finish off the terrace and maybe even help. instead the pentagon says that they provide intelligence or other support for the israeli operations in lebanon. kevin koe. >> only that's the case. secretary othen often hasn't had no less than three these conversations with the idf. that support for these really forces remain steadfast in lockstep. you saw this down last week with the president's remarks in support of israel and on the sidelines obviously with the
10:49 am
support of ukraine. you compare this to the language coming out of the trump campaign with the supports remaining steadfast. there is a contrast i think with the world stage with this messaging withers no daylight between this and administration and it supports of the state of israel. >> i couldn't agree more that there is this between the trump and bonham barrett -- administration. you'd remembered they had peace breaking out all over the world. they had peace breaking out in the middle east with economic agreements between israel and all of its neighbours and isolating iran and you didn't have putin invading ukraine. with this select -- election top consequences. with the button harrison administration you have tremendous war and you have a risk of world war iii breaking out. this has been a disaster for the people of ukraine. a million casualties you lost so much of the population. he have the economic catastrophe and there is no statesmen talking a how to end this
10:50 am
conflict with the least damage possible to ukraine et cetera donald trump. >> he met with them at the current administration i would have loved to be a fly on the wall with that's between president zelensky and -- trump -- and seals and trump. >> the body language looked okay at best but speaking with folks that are close to the former president, they were offended right of how this all unfolded. for zelensky to visit pennsylvania, battleground state that trump had just been campaigning and signing artillery, on the government plane with none in the delegation, alongside josh shapiro, that was just a tough one. tensions remain. but at least they're somewhat of this. >> it seems the bipartisan support there's enough on the helm or weapons going that way. we'll see if they decide to allow further use of the weapons
10:51 am
they have sense. thank you very much panel we will see you next sunday. behind the scenes look with a new play here in the nation's capital as the actress becomes abraham lincoln bringing the legacy of the 16th president to lights at the very sight of his death. ♪ >> announcer: you might mostly but what happen here at ford theatre but there's plenty you don't know about the life of president abraham lincoln. coming up will take you inside a new production here that has some surprises. ♪
10:52 am
10:53 am
♪ >> it too many years since a bullet cut abraham lincoln's life short. dr. scott is bringing the 16th president's legacy and message back into the spotlight. as he betrays lincoln and a one-man show at the theatre the site where he was mortally wounded. it's our sunday special. >> i have to be honest jesse. i must admit the taste is in my mouth a little to become presidents.
10:54 am
but there are other men far more capable than i am. >> reporter: he's known for taking audiences back in time. with the hit science-fiction series quantum leap. but this fall the longtime veteran astage and screen shares a glimpse into the past with mr. lincoln and intimate one-man play that pulls back the curtain on the triumphs, tragedies, and decisions that shape of history's most reviewed leaders. in our most divided moments. >> you are a seasoned award winning actor but how do you tackle something like this? >> it's daunting... not the fact of doing a one-man show by doing lankinen. this goes from all different aspects and approaches in his life. times in his life you're memorizing the gettysburg address, that's one kind of work because in your head he did know. and i'm talking to mary lankinen. >> adding to the onstage
10:55 am
performance is the venue. the very sight of the lincoln assassination. >> the gravity of being in this place is partially because of the history. >> that's the lincoln box. that's the sacred space up there. >> but you mentioned it is referenced in the show? >> yes very much. almost right from the get-go. i think it was important to do that. because otherwise it just looms over the whole show. and the show is in about that. we don't know what got us there, you don't happen to that man. before. >> looks like people will be entertained but they will be educated at the same time. >> they are. >> educating audiences with what happens in our nation's history is a critical part of the theatre's mission. it features a a one-of-a-kind museum where dozens of artifacts with a pistol used by john wilkes booth offer a unique view
10:56 am
into a country torn apart by war. the fatal struggle to put it back together. >> this is so much more than a theatre here. it's really special. >> it's a working theatre but it's also a history place, museum... and to be able to see, this is the knife that john wilkes booth held up and yelled hundred 60 years ago! we have that here! >> despite the tragic past they say that political violence is not the main take away from this historic space. >> we use as assassination as an entry point but what we really want to talk about is lincoln's legacy. you look back at him and you think you know, he was just a man. >> that along with the unshakable resolve in the face of war, political division, and personal heartache, is what the leading man hopes the audience discovers about the president. >> i didn't know you loaded his cabinet with people he ran
10:57 am
against. so he had voices in there all the time constantly that have the other side of an opinion. or didn't necessarily have his back. i didn't know when he lost his second son that he was heard it -- heard at night howling in pain. you could hear him outside the white house. he dealt with so much death in his life. and figured out how to keep going because he believed in something and he believed he had a mission. and he stayed with it. >> reporter: to many, the mission of divided -- having a divided america is daunting just as in 1864. >> we think of president lincoln and just how deep the divisions... house with this country was, do you see parallels now? >> the parallels are too many to count. we are in a time where it seems a lot of people feel like there is no going back over all the rhetoric, we can't reach across
10:58 am
the aisle, we can't solve this problem. the civil war was pretty serious. you can get worse than that. i think at the end of the day, we have to say that in this -- this plays about that, but there is hope. >> there is hope. he plays at the theatre until the 13. you happen to find yourself you in the nation's capital you can get more information and tickets and the museum as well and just a quick note my podcast live in the broom drops today i sat down with the fox news chief foreign correspondent to discuss his brand-new book black saturday. he and his team have been covering the massacre and all the follow for nearly a year now. block study takes you inside the conflict with the stories of real people across the region and it's available starting tuesday and you can preorder it now get the book anywhere you like to get your books in the podcast where you like to get your podcast. tuning to fox news democracy 24 special coverage of the
10:59 am
vice president told debate simulcast. this begins tuesday at 8:00 p.m. eastern and i'll be here and all the fox local stations 9:00 p.m. for coverage. that's it for today, they give are joining us, i'm shannon bream and we will see you here for the next fox news sunday. ♪
11:00 am

56 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on