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benz benz but th and it's kind of funny because i've been charged with everything else but that.vered from me, so he could testify against me. i understand what he's doing to save hisself. would i do it? i don't think so. but for each his own. what i don't understand is this is the life you sign up for. you want to go getting in trouble. and then all of a sudden, you can't take the heat and you turn around and you go tell on everybody. we take an oath. for this to happen is very upsetting. >> though his lawyer has entered a not guilty plea on the new murder charges, bowles seemed resigned to the likely end result, a murder conviction in at least one of the cases. he also made it clear that he had no feelings about the victim. >> you know, so many years of doing things and getting away with it, now getting caught with it. i look at it, i don't really feel it. you know. to me, honestly, i mean, you want to be dead honest, the dude's a dirt bag. to me, it felt like he had it coming. you want it as real as it gets? that's as real as it gets. >>> coming up -- ♪ my mind's not right i s
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Ãjudiciary chairman repeatedly calling hope hicks miss lewandowski. during a closed-door hearing. hicks corrected nadler telling him if he wants the american people to take his investigation seriously, he should not act immaturely. asked about today nadler said he misspoke because he was preoccupied. more than 600 years companies have signed a letter supporting president trump's american first terrace against china pruden limited president trump titled country first, companies wrote quote - no longer should america play second fiddle to china. it is important we stand behind the united states and their agenda and put the country over political differences. america's national security and economy are at stake. we offer this letter as support for your tariffs on china. join me now former reagan white house political director and fox business political analyst, ed rollins. >> nice to be with you. david: just we thought they couldn't get any lower, very nadler calling hope hicks, who by the way, works for our parent company here, calling her miss lewandowski. i mean what is going on? >> and to say he was preoccupied. david: he did it several times! it was not just once. >> better get occupied what's in front of him she's an important witness to the janitor across the country. david: now they are insulting her. >> yes, hope hicks is not a difficult thing to remember. >> it just goes to show how completely these are turning into witch trials. let's turn to something important. what's going on with iran. the media portraying this as weakness. the president pulling back. likening it to when president obama would not step over, would not do something after syria stepped over the redline. just yesterday, not too often when they contradict themselves so quick. just to show they were calling him a warmonger. and today there calling him weak. what do you make of that? >> made sense of the president is being very deliberate. it's a very important decision how he will respond. obviously they will do other things. there are bad actors in that part of the world for a long time. to attack them last night may not have been the correct thing. he did not have congressional support and what difference does it make another day or two? maybe not to do anything. the decision is not to drinking but i promise you they have been put on morning. they will do something like this again, beware.there will be a big hole in the ground. david: i may be making too much of mainstream media they probably don't deserve all the attention but the fact that if president obama had done exactly the same thing, they would have given him another nobel peace prize. right? >> sure. i don't think anybody in that part of the world is sitting there saying, were not going to worry about trump anymore. just like president xi jinping in florida. i think if they continue bad behavior they better be prepared the united states will not tolerate it. david: okay let's switch to pure politics. joe biden did not have a good week. getting called racist by democrats in a democratic fight for the nomination, it is tough. is he really out of it? can he recover from all of this? >> i don't think -- and everett that he was a good candidate. his past performances outside of delaware prove he was not a good candidate. he had one percent of the vote when he ran for president last time. you know he got picked by obama to be the vice president does not automatically make your presidential candidate i think the real issue is trying to find a new leader not an old leader. i think he is sort of reinforcing how things work in the godel days i could sit there with the democrat racist and get along. that is not what they want to hear. they want to hear new energy and i think to a certain extent, i expect him to probably not end up being the nominee. david: you think there is a good chance, better than likely chance that he will not be the nominee?>> being a trump support i would like him to be a nominee because i think you'll be a -- candidate at this point democrats are looking for a new, young dynamic candidate. there 23 or 24. david: most of whom, the young, dynamic candidates went for the green deal. which will cost what, $90 trillion.it would bankrupt the united states just by looking at a peer request will spend the next 18 months explaining how they will be able to put into effect. but i think reality is that joe biden had a very bad week. david: for all this making a lot of people look at what happens in a second term of the trump presidency. and kimberley strassel, hot in atlanta called it make america even greater. and she was start with this phase 2 of the tax cuts. focusing on individual tax cuts. >> is very important in a campaign. the one i ran for president reagan we did not have a second term agenda. it advocated we won 49 states and the key thing is we did a lot of international stuff. i would argue very strenuous the president has a record to run on, he needs to basically see what he would do in the future. david: i think it's important to quote - a little bit of the piece by kim strassel. she says america select mr. trump to trade with other presidents would not. he is a disruptive choice and his success rests and promising more positive disruption mr. trump claims to know america well which means he knows that americans are not satisfied with being great. they always want to be even greater. i think she gets it anything he gets it as well. and the american public seems to want to appear. >> i think they definitely wanted. i think he can give them what he wants for his great campaigner and he loves the crowds. they have to fix the tax plan so i think that they will have an agenda. spoon ed rollins, great to see you. have a wonderful weekend! we would like to hear your thoughts.share your comments and follow lou on twitter @lou dobbs follow him on facebook and twitter and instagram. and denying working with president trump but emails seem to prove otherwise. plus a large gas explosion rocking a major american city. we will have all of that and more after the break. it's not just easy. it's having-a-walrus-in-goal easy! roooaaaar! it's a walrus! ridiculous! yes! nice save, big guy! good job duncan! way to go! 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[ "movin on up" by primal scream ] that is big. not as big as that. sure that's big. that's bigger. big. bigger. big. bigger. big. but that's bigger. wow, big. so much bigger. this is big. but that's...well, you got this. david: welcome back everyone. i'm david asman sitting in for lou dobbs. attorney general william barr now looking into intelligence assessment finding that russia wanted trump to run the presidency. the review will reportedly look at disagreements among the intel analysts and other findings were motivated by political opposition to mr. trump. president trump today accusing "the new york times" of providing false stories about his administration to the fbi tweeting out just revealed that the failing and desperate new york times was feeding false stories about me in those associated would be to the fbi. it shows a kind of unprecedented hatred i have been putting up with for years. with this crooked newspaper, is what they have done legal? gemina, tom fitton, president of judicial watch which uncovered the shocking email. tom, surprise, surprise! anti-trump forces in the fbi were colluding with the new york times. what do you make of it? >> the emails speak for themselves here "the new york times" is trying to defend itself they say they were just doing journalism. email to the spokesman to the justice department from a new york times reporter. describing a story that colleagues are working on about jared kushner and russia. a story that we know was planted to make donald trump look bad. and suggest nefarious activities. none of which have panned out of course. the reporter was not asking for a comment. he sent the information along. and so, you know that seemed unusual. and there is a second mo "the new york times" is willing to give the fbi leadership a head's up, a preview on a story. so you know, that is journalism i think americans would be upset about it because it looks like the media is working with the fbi on -- david: and we should mention it was not the entire fbi. obviously these are the anti-trump forces the fbi using their position to get things out that they knew the press was hungry for because the press hates donald trump from the beginning. so they knew who was a receptive audience.>> yeah and, you put in a context of illegal leaks to the new york times and the "washington post", classified information. concerning russia. the anti-trump you know this material came from the cache of documents of peter strzok and lisa paige emails. so this is further documentation also, that peter strzok and lisa paige were in the center of the russia investigation by the fbi and doj and was also involved in media relations. david: and by the way we should mention once again as congressman nunez has recently, in october 2016, christopher steele, the guy behind the trump dossier met with a deputy assistant secretary of state and he came out with information that even she, although she obviously was not pro trump said was completely false information. like there was a miami division of the russian consulate which does not exist. she passed the information onto the fbi and the fbi still went ahead and full throttle with christopher steele and using his so-called documentation which she told him was bad, for the fisa warrant. >> none of that stopped the state department from other documents we have with colluding with continuing to collude with christopher steele and sent his information along also to the top leadership of the house democratic party. and again, going back to your first story, you bet william barr nice look at that hit job i see assessment on president trump. no new president trump is going to win. i don't even know if president trump knew that. the only reason that trumps wanted him to win it was absurd. the thought hillary clinton was going to win and activity look like it was designed to put hillary clinton back on her heels as she enter the presidency. it suggests to me otherwise it was politics designed to undermine the legitimacy for president trump's election. and you can look at the i see assessment yourselves, it is publicly available.you will see it is as much of a weak argument against donald trump as the mueller report. just, i see intelligence deep state garbage created by the obama gang. david: i wonder how much of what the attorney general is uncovering and will uncover will discredit portions of the mueller report or at least discredit his inability or unwillingness to look into what was going on. the anti-trump forces within the fbi. >> the perceived wisdom even about russian interference in election designed to help president trump cannot be taken at face value. he has got to look at everything that is everyone assumes is true. there was never collusion, it is not even clear the russians were trying to help donald trump. they may have well been trying to help hillary clinton. with no idea donald trump would win. david: i want to get your assessment on something. the president was interviewed it will be shown on sunday, meet the press. he talked about the whole push for impeachment and nancy pelosi willingness to go that way now. let me get your reaction. >> why do you think nancy pelosi has held off her impeachment process? >> i think she feels i will -- >> you think it is good? >> i think i win the election easier but you know i'm not sure that i like having it. look, i did nothing wrong. i was spied on, what they did to me was illegal. it was illegal on the other side i did nothing wrong. impeachment is a very unfair thing because nothing i did was wrong. david: i can understand the president. politically it might actually help him but it is a stain. no one wants to stay particularly if it is totally undeserved. >> that is exactly right. and the president obviously is concerned that they will continue with impeachment fight. even if they lose or even if he wins, it is an abuse of power by congress even talking about it. there is no collision, no obstruction. no case for impeachment. and nancy pelosi thinks that something sensible the other day based on my understanding. she said look, impeachment something that is obvious. there's something out there that obviously someone is to be impeached for. and the idea that the house is going to hunt around to make a case that is not for anyone else in the country, nancy pelosi is a sophisticated enough politician to know that it will not wash. david: tom fitton, great to see you, thank you very much. >> a massive fire erecting at the largest crude oil refinery on the eastern seaboard. flames and smoke filling the philadelphia air around 4:00 this morning pay look at that! this happened at the philadelphia energy solutions complex. the fire is now contained. officials say four workers suffered only minor injuries. the cause is still unknown. this marks the second fire at the 150-year-old refinery just this month. coming up next company develops in the jussie smollett case. and why he could face new charges. plus, bernie wants american taxpayers to foot the healthcare bill of millions of illegal immigrants. we will take that up and more when we come back. now that you e new dr. scholl's massaging gel advanced insoles with softer, bouncier gel waves, you'll move over 10% more than before. dr. scholl's. born to move. i swibecause they let metual, customize my insurance. and as a fitness junkie, i customize everything, like my bike, and my calves. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ hey! i live on my own now! i've got xfinity, because i like to live life in the fast lane. unlike my parents. you rambling about xfinity again? you're so cute when you get excited... anyways... i've got their app right here, i can troubleshoot. i can schedule a time for them to call me back, it's great! you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. david: a judge in chicago today appointing a special prosecutor to investigate the decision by the cook county prosecutors to dismiss all charges against actor jussie smollett. he was accused of course of lying to the police about a staged racist and homophobic attack in january. the judge suggested the county state attorney, kim foxx, mishandled the smallest case -- the jussie smollett case aftershave recruiters appeared by the way bernie sanders admitted his $32 trillion medical for airplane will cover the millions of illegal immigrants living in the united states. >> we all have to end the and create a medicare for all healthcare system that guarantees healthcare to every man, woman and child. david: absolutely. join ameena, alex vogel, ceo of the vocal group and former deputy counsel for the rnc. and liz harrington, rnc spokesperson and former washington free beacon writer. thank you for being here. first to the jussie smollett case. lady and gentlemen.forgive me. cook county state attorney kim foxx, liz, this woman is a real piece of work. what do you think happens to her? >> well, this is the case that we actually need a special prosecutor. unlike the russia hoax. but the cook county is one of the most notoriously corrupt counties in the country. and unsurprisingly it is run by democrats. but kim foxx basically in this case recused yourself in name only. which she still had a top aide making all the decision so she was still doing it. kind of reminds me of when loretto lynch, her non-recusal after she met with bill clinton on the tarmac. and said that she won't interfere in whatever the decision the prosecutors make after the scandal. they already have exonerated hillary, months before so i'm sure she relayed the information to bill. kind of reminds me of that situation there. david: alice, let me switch to iran which is again a far more important topic for we have someone tweeting something brilliant on the reaction to all of this. i should have given her credit but she tweeted if obama had called off airstrikes, the media would demand he get the nobel peace prize. such a double standard. i think the voters of this country see through that double standard. don't you? >> i do. and actually think that last 24 hours in the presence decision and really unique window that he gave the american public into this thinking, is going to prove to be very consequential for his presidency. people forget, we don't normally get that kind of insight into most presidents decision-making. and so bob woodward writes a book a few years later and here we have the president in near real-time telling america, what led to his decision process. and the fact that it was thoughtful and based on proportionality, again, the president is not focused on the near-term issue of a drone. he is focused on a long-term strategic goal keeping iran from having nuclear weapons. and so i think that actually reflects very well on the president and his performance. david: liz, he has a lot of advisors. some of whom are hawks and some are less hawkish than others. i have heard, i don't know if the story is true but there is a legendary story about the trump presidency saying that he was asked, do you go adventure advisors? he said i have a lot of advisors but they are advisors. i'm the one who takes their advice and makes a decision. so he does amalgamate the advice of all of his expert advisors. he has the best of the best from bolton to mike pompeo, these are really the top minds in the country. but ultimately, he is the one who makes the decision. that is what being president, commander-in-chief is all about. >> exactly. he is the commander-in-chief it's his decision. i think it shows he does not take that job lately. he makes a measured call and exactly right, very transparent about it. he left the american people know exactly why he made the decision he made. but absolutely he's got a great team around him as well. the president has been so tough on iran, we pull out of a terrible nuclear deal which put them on a pathway to nuclear weapons. and i love our chairwoman what she said about the media coverage. but i guess the media did not have to beg them to give obama the peace prize because he got it on day one. before he sent cash to iran. david: no joe biden. he's had a terrible week, alex. i'm wondering, the establishment is trying desperately, the old democratic party establishment, to get them to lay off of joe biden, not call him a racist or suggest he has said anything wrong. i don't think they are succeeding very well at it. do you? >> no, they are not. it's rick pitino we haven't even had the first debate yet. people think this is going to somehow pass quickly, it's not. they're just getting started and what i think the vice president is realizing that a lot of the same things he has done over the years politically to the president, republicans and others are now being used against him. and frankly, his responses challenging and also these issues highlight and really show the fragmentation and the divide politically within the democratic party. >> liz, if joe biden is defeated by the young, one of them, just take one. and not so young, bernie sanders who we heard wants to spend all of our money giving medical support, full medical care to illegal immigrants.i mean that is not going to even fly on the first day of the campaign. will it? >> exactly. we should not be surprised though from bernie sanders who wants terrorist have a say in our democracy from prison. it is not surprising american citizens are always the last on his list of who he wants to support. he wants to take 180 million americans offer private insurance and then make us all pay incredibly huge amounts of taxes to pay for this. and give it to illegal aliens. it is so out of step with the mainstream. sadly, it is the way the democratic party as they appear they are all on board with trevor, harasses open to the voting from prison idea too. david: is extraordinary! thank you both. coming up next, the trump administration prepares for a weekend of ramped up interior immigration enforcement. we will have more on that after the break. rtfolios. fisher investments tailors portfolios to your goals and needs. some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions whether you do well or not. fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. .. in my line of work, i come face-to-face with a lot of behinds. so i know there's a big need for new gas-x maximum strength. it relieves pressure, bloating and discomfort fast. so no one needs to know you've got gas. gas-x. ♪ so no one needs to know you've got gas. there are roadside attractions. and then there's our world-famous on-road attraction. the 2019 glc. lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benzz. the best or nothing. david: on wall street the stocks closing lower. the dow is on pace for its best june since 1938. the nasdaq lost 20 points. the dow and s & p up over 2%. the nasdaq up 3%. a reminder to listen to lou's reports coast to coast and the say emimmediate work. the i.c.e. will begin sweeps of criminal illegals. >> they are defying the law by crossing the border, and now they are denying the law ignoring a judge's order saying they are to be deported. >> they have had every chance to exhaust their appeals rights and they still defy the law. this is an operation that has to happen. david: you can catch me every week night, 5:00 p.m. trish: president trump putting iran on notice saying the united states was indeed ready to strike iran for shooting down an american drone. but at the last moment the president called off the attack because of possible civilian casualties. president trump: we are sitting with the possible death of 150 people and i didn't like the. i didn't th
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[ rhythmic tapping ] hey, the rain stopped. -a bad day on the road still beats a good one off it. -tell me about that dental procedure again! -i can still taste it in my mouth! -progressive helps keep you out there. but some give their clients cookie cutter portfolios. fisher investments tailors portfolios to your goals and needs. some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions whether you do well or not. fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. >> it certainly sounds like something out of a movie. the president of the united states and top u.s. lawmakers briefed on a series of so-called ufo sightings by military pilots, but it's real life and there is growing concern tonight about what could be a potential threat to american airmen and women. cnn's brian todd is joining us with details. i understand there's actually video of some of these so-called close encounters. >> pretty dramatic video, wolf, from the cockpits of military planes. tonight we've spoken to pilots who have spotted those ufos. there have been enough of the sightings in recent years with specific descriptions from sharp-eyed pilots that the u.s. m i military is now streamlining its process for reporting those incidents. >> oh, my gosh. >> oh, hey. >> a veteran fighter pilot, surprised by an object outside his cockpit window. >> there's a whole fleet of them. my god. they're going against the wind. the wind is 120 knots west. >> reporter: this video is from a u.s. military training mission off the coast of jacksonville, florida in 2015. the object is a ufo and american military pilots have seen so many of them in recent years that the navy tonight tells cnn it's briefed members of congress this week on what it calls threats to the safety and security of our aviators. the navy won't comment on what it told members of congress. the senate intelligence committee vice chair is one member who got a classified briefing. >> one of the key takeaways i have is that the military and others are taking this issue seriously which previous generations may not have been the case. >> reporter: it's even gotten to the level of the president. >> i did have one very brief meeting on it but people are saying they're seeing ufos. do i believe it? not particularly. >> reporter: former navy pilots tell cnn they still can't explain the objects they spotted. we spoke to ryan graves who flew navy fa-18 super hornet fighter jets. he was on the same mission off jacksonville which spotted this object. >> look at that thing. >> reporter: graves told us it is similar to what he saw on training missions off the southern coast of virginia throughout 2014 and 2015. >> that was one of the most amazing things to us or at least to me was that these objects would be out there all day and the speeds they're exhibiting as well as flight characteristics, there is no platform or energy source that i'm aware of that can allow something to stay in the air as long as these objects were. >> reporter: graves told us he and his fellow pilots first thought the objects were drones then a near disaster. >> someone accidentally had one of the objects fly in between his aircraft at very close range and gained visual, realized it was very unlikely it was a u.s. drone program. >> reporter: another former navy fighter pilot told us he saw a ufo during a training mission off san diego in 2004 on a clear day. what surprised him? the object had no visible propulsion and was much more agile than a plane or a helicopter. >> this was extremely abrupt like a ping pong ball bouncing off the wall. it would hit and go the other way and change directions at will. >> reporter: skeptics say the objects could simply be military hardware being tested on classified missions, unknown to the pilots who spotted them. >> it is probably one part of the military not telling the other part of the military what they're up to. for good reason. >> reporter: still, graves is happy that the navy has a newly upgraded process for pilots to report the sightings. >> if these things are in the air space the smallest amount of damage they could do is potentially take out a couple lives and an aircraft and i think that alone is worth investigation. >> reporter: we asked u.s. navy officials about the comments from bill nye the science guy that these could simply be cases where one branch of the military does not tell another what it's doing. a navy official did not respond directly to that but did tell us they are working with the u.s. air force and other branches to better understand what pilots are seeing. another navy official told us the navy does not believe aliens have been flying around in usair space but he said they do have to investigate all of these reports of unidentified aircraft. wolf? >> they certainly do. all right. good report. thank you very much. >>> coming up, breaking news. president trump says iran made a very big mistake in shooting down a u.s. surveillance drone. , one day you'll tell your grandkids about it. and they'll say, "grandpa just tell us about humpty dumpty". and you'll say, "he broke his pelvis or whatever, now back to my creamy heinz mayonnaise". heinz mayonnaise, unforgettably creamy. it's how we bring real hope to our cancer patients- like viola. when she was diagnosed with breast cancer, her team at ctca created a personalized care plan that treated her cancer and strengthened her spirit. so viola could focus on her future. their future. this is how we inspire hope. this is how we heal. cancer treatment centers of america. appointments available now. cancer treatment centers of america. cancer is the ugliest disease mankind has ever faced. we got the idea that if we took two dimensional patient imaging and put it in holographic displays, we could dissect around the tumor so we can safely remove it. when we first started, we felt like this might just not be possible but verizon 5g ultra wideband will give us the ability to do this. ♪ [ slow dance♪music plays ] sfx: record scratch music (plays throughout): [ 'watch me walk' by spencer ludwig ] yo dj, can i put in a request? 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"i've seen a cat without a gri, but a grin without a cat." hey, mercedes, end audio. change lighting to soft blue. the completely reimagined 2020 gle. with intelligent voice control and available third row. your adventure awaits. visit your local mercedes-benz-benz. the best or nothing. hey! i live on my own now! i've got xfinity, because i like to live life in the fast lane. unlike my parents. you rambling about xfinity again? you're so cute when you get excited... anyways... i've got their app right here, i can troubleshoot. i can schedule a time for them to call me back, it's great! you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. >>> happening now, breaking news. you'll find out, president trump is leaving the world guessing about his response to iran after it shot down a u.s. drone. is he looking to de-escalate tensions or fanning fears of war? secret briefing, top congressional leaders summoned to the white house situation room for classified details on the drone attack. this as iran and the pentagon are making duelling
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>> look -- >> this is not something you can dodge. if you say abortion is a crime or abortion is murder, you have to deal with it under the law. should abortion be punished? >> well, people in certain parts of the republican party and conservative republicans would say, yes, they should be punished. >> how about you? >> i would say that it's a very serious problem and it's a problem that we have to decide on. >> do you believe in -- do you believe in punishment for abortion, yes or no as a principle? >> the answer is that there has to be some form of punishment. >> for the woman? >> yeah, there has to be some form. >> my msnbc colleague chris matthews grilling then candidate donald trump in 2016 over whether women who seek abortions should be punished. he admits that he believes yes and then spends the rest of his life trying to get out of it. but that interview was a freaking master class, and you are in luck because tonight chris matthews is unleashing his formidable superpowers on the good people of dayton, ohio. this is super interesting. it's "the deciders," right, the voters in the most crucial precincts and the swing precincts in the country who are ultimately going to be key deciders in the presidential election. dayton is in montgomery county, ohio. montgomery county, ohio voted for obama twice before voting for trump in 2016. trump -- excuse me, chris matthews is going to be there tonight. this is the second one of those "deciders" events they've done. the first one was in northeastern pennsylvania, another key place. that was fascinating. but this next one is tonight, 10:00 p.m. tonight eastern time, which means right after this show. that is your quick programming note as you are thinking of your night ahead. pace yourself. you have to watch chris matthews in dayton, ohio, right after i am done at 10:00 p.m. okay? >>> much more coming up here, including joy reid fresh off her day with a whole bunch of the 2020 democrats including her time with joe biden. much more ahead, including joy reid joining us, stay with us. my experience with usaa has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. i was told to begin my aspirin regimen, blem. and i just didn't listen. until i almost lost my life. my doctors again ordered me to take aspirin, and i do. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. listen to the doctor. take it seriously. can we talk? we used to play so beautifully together. now we can barely play anything... even cards with the girls. if you have bent fingers, and can't lay your hand flat, talk to your doctor. it may be dupuytren's contracture. your hand is talking. isn't it time you listened? there are nonsurgical options. take the first step. and learn more about dupuytren's. at factsonhand.com ♪ >>> i was inspired by the words of a rapper in atlanta about me on the campaign. he said "i don't know who andrew yang is, but he wants to give me $1,000 a month." so if you get that word out to people where they think that's a reality then we can get folks who do not think politics applies to them because they're just putting one foot in front of the other. it's most of us. putting one foot in front of the other. fighting for the next month. vote, whatever, it's not going to matter to me. yo, he actually wants to put cash money into everybody's hands, he wants to humanize the economy. they'll still think it's too good to be true until they turn on the tv and see me standing next to joe biden on june 27th they'll say, wow, the asian man's for real. >> 2020 presidential candidate andrew yang. earlier today talking about his proposal to give all americans over the age of 18 a guaranteed basic income of $1,000 a month. even though mr. yang is currently polling generously at 1%, clearly he is feeling his oats. in part like he says because he really is about to appear on a debate stage alongside former vice president joe biden. that might make anybody take themselves seriously as a presidential candidate. even if they hadn't been before. i mean, you know, it makes sense for lesser-known candidates to want to share the debate stage with a big name like joe biden, but if you are for former vice president joe biden yourself, you might not expect that feeling to be mutual. since launching his campaign in april, vice president biden hasn't appeared at a single event alongside his fellow 2020 democratic candidates. he's been doing lots of campaign events but always by himself. today was the first time he did an event with his fellow candidates. today at a presidential forum in d.c. hosted by the poor people's campaign, vice president biden was asked by the great joy reid, among other things, about his repeated hope against hope insistence that he'll be able to get republicans to come along and do some bipartisan stuff should he get elected president. >> how would you get past either a majority republican senate in which mitch mcconnell was determined to kill all of these ideas or even a mitch mcconnell in the minority who repeated the consistent filibustering that happened when you were vice president in anything that came from the obama/biden administration, mitch mcconnell considered dead on arrival? >> yjoy, i know you're one of te ones who thinks it's naive that we have to work together. the fact of the matter is if we can't get a consensus, nothing happens except the abuse of power by the executive. zero. >> the vice president later said, "you cannot shame people to do things the right way." that appears to be a big point of contention between the former vice president and lots of the other democrats who are all running behind him in the polls. >> let's be clear. if we're in the majority and mitch mcconnell wants to block us on the kinds of things our country needs and the kinds of things they elected me and other people to enact, then i'm all for getting rid of the filibuster. we cannot let him block things the way he did during the obama administration. >> the real issue here is, can you build a coalition for change in this country? and can we be as strategic as mitch mcconnell? i wouldn't want any of us to be as malevolent or cynical as mitch mcconnell, but could we please just be as strategic as he is? >> could we please just be as strategic as him? senator michael bennet does not have as much faith in a republican epiphany on bipartisanship as vice president biden does. but we're seeing that sort of face to face on the same stage for the first time now that vice president biden, the clear leader in the polls, is starting to do events alongside his fellow candidates. again, that started for the first time today. how fun is it going to be when they're actually all on the same stage at the same time simultaneously. joy reid joins us next. stay with us. ns us next stay with us to introducing products faster... to managing website inventory... and network bandwidth. giving you a nice big edge over your competition. that's the power of edge-to-edge intelligence. ♪ applebee's new loaded chicken fajitas. now only $10.99. ♪ there are roadside attractions. and then there's our world-famous on-road attraction. the 2019 glc. lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benzthe best or nothing. ...6, 7, 8 ♪ ♪ ♪ big dreams start with small steps... ...but dedication can get you there. so just start small... start saving. easily set, track and control your goals right from the chase mobile® app. ♪ ♪ chase. make more of what's yours®. as a family, we always mum and dad are always saying... i love the breakfasts... it's the lunch for me... we both like the snacks... and the comfy seats... granny always says... the crew are so lovely with... can i get you anything madam? 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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.>> in our politics lead, make no mistake the democrat debate is in florida but south carolina could be the decider for democrats. joining me now is a man who knows about winning in south carolina, republican senator tim scott. thanks for joining us. >> thank you, jake. >> so you know the voters well in south carolina and right now joe biden is leading in polls in south carolina democrats. still early, though. >> it is still -- but he has a huge lead really in many ways. he's done very well with african-american voters in a way that is inconsistent with what we thought it would be the case and we're excited to see the african-american are not focused on identity politics on who they think is the best candidate. i'm not voting in that primary but it is interesting to see the engagement from the constituents that i represent and their involvement looking for the best candidate. >> 60% of the democratic base in south carolina, 60% is african-american. are you surprised that your colleagues
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.have a very good vetting process. and you take a look at our cabinet and our secretaries -- >> a very good vetding process the vez said -- the president said after the clout of his previous acting secretary and two and a half years of massive staff and administration turnover. our friends at axios got ahold of some vetting notes from the trump transition team, documents with a red flag after red flag detailing swamp-like ties and background checks, cozy relationships with lobbyists and even domestic violence allegations, missed or ignored and a rush job to fill administration vacancies as one editor put it not only were many since scandalized problems foreseeable, they were foreseen and as cnn tom foreman reports the president regrets one hire but not for the reason you think. >> reporter: a republican document accusing a possible homeland security boss of taking donations from a group linked to white supremacy and also from the republican national committee an environmental protection
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benz of today that will help us get there. the 2019 e-class, with innovations that will change the way we drive from this day forward. visit your local mercedes-benz dealer for exceptional lease and financing offers. mercedes-benz the best or nothing. so, every day, we put our latest technology and unrivaled network to work. the united states postal service makes more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. e-commerce deliveries to homes copdso, to breathe better,the. i started with anoro. ♪ go your own way copd tries to say, "go this way." i say, "i'll go my own way" with anoro. ♪ go your own way once-daily anoro contains two medicines called bronchodilators that work together to significantly improve lung function all day and all night. anoro is not for asthma. it contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. the risk is unknown in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, high blood pressure, glaucoma, prostate, bladder or urinary problems. these may worsen with anoro. call your doctor if you have worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or to
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benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. hey! i live on my own now! i've got xfinity, because i like to live life in the fast lane. unlike my parents. you rambling about xfinity again? you're so cute when you get excited... anyways... i've got their app right here, i can troubleshoot. i can schedule a time for them to call me back, it's great! you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. i'm a sexist, egotistical, racist pig on the radio. lemonis: i knew ray had a side job, and i thought it may be a distraction. but i didn't realize that the focus of it was to demonize minorities and degrade women. what do you think a woman would think of your radio show? ray: that i'm a pig. i'm going to say what every other man wants to say that doesn't have the balls to do it. justin: i don't like sexist or racist things. absolutely not. so my hope with having you come here was to eliminate the tax burden. lemonis: but i'm just trying to understand this. ray: okay. lemonis: when you go onto the radio... ray: mm-hmm. lemonis: ...and you're doing your thing, and you said sexist, racist -- are the people that are listening also the same? ray: yeah, i think so because i put a humor spin on everything. lemonis: but what's funny about racism? ray: it's not the dick joke you tell. it's how you tell the dick joke that makes it funny. lemonis: i don't understand that. i am a big believer that you are who you do business with. and so the fact that you think i would do business with you because you do that, whether it's your personality or not, i just can't. i can get over business problems. fix the process. make it safe. put the air conditioning in. figure out how to pay the taxes. create a better work environment. sell more. diversify the product. i can fix those. i can't fix you from being a racist and a sexist. but here's the good news. i won't have to fix it 'cause i'm not gonna be here. -nice meeting you. -justin: nice to meet you, too. -lemonis: i wish you guys luck. -justin: all right. lemonis: thank you so much, okay? ♪ sometimes, you deal with people that don't have their head screwed on straight, then they have a perspective about others that isn't right. and, sometimes, you deal with others that only think about other people, like my friends at bentley's. and so, while i'm here in illinois, i want to see what they're up to. in 2015, i invested in a seven-store pet chain called bentley's corner barkery. it was started by lisa and giovanni senafe. lisa: we do all-natural food, no by-products, corn, wheat, or soy in our foods. lemonis: lisa, the president of the company, oversaw the product assortment and the merchandising while gio, the head of business development, hunted for new locations. giovanni: i have been calling stores to see if they'd be interested in selling. lemonis: giovanni was expanding the business faster than they could handle it without a clear plan. giovanni: i go get the deals and then go, "hey, we'll figure out how to pay for it afterward." lemonis: the locations lacked a cohesive look. this store looks totally different than arlington. the operation was a mess... this is how you manage your inventory? ...and the company was losing money. we can't run a business that way. giovanni: hey, bud. lemonis: the senafes had recently adopted a little boy. -giovanni: sebastian, say hi. -lemonis: hi, buddy. and they were desperate to stabilize their situation so they can give him the life that he deserved. giovanni: i'm not gonna put him through what we did. lisa: we don't want to move him all the time. -lemonis: because it's tough. -giovanni: yeah. lemonis: my initial investment was $400,000 for 40 percent of the business and to loan the company an additional $1.3 million for future growth with a caveat. -giovanni: okay. -lemonis: i wanted them to prove to me that they could follow a process and do things the right way before they expanded the brand. and they did. with my help, they organized distribution. they gave the shops a cohesive look. so i gave them the green light and the money to start growing again. i'm willing to take the leap with you. turns out, it was quite a leap. in the past 2 years, my investment went from around $1 million to almost $50 million. we've grown from 7 stores to 81 locations. we've taken on a new name -- bentley's petstuff. and lisa and gio, they've done a phenomenal job overseeing a rapid expansion without compromising their values or the culture that got them where they are today. ♪ i'm here in chicago so that i can meet with lisa and gio and really dig into their numbers and their business. but, first, we're going to their new location in schaumburg, a store that they're in the process of opening. and gio wants to show me this new prototype item that he's come up with. hi, guys. how are you? man: good. how about yourself? lisa: so, we've changed up some of the fixtures, redone the snack wagon. we kind of gave it a fresher look. so, people can come in and use this self-wash machine. they can pick shampoos, dry the dog, rinse the dog. everything is kind of self-contained. lemonis: how much did this cost to do? giovanni: i mean, the machine is $17,000. -lemonis: $17,000? -giovanni: yeah. this isn't a revenue generator as much as it's more about traffic. lemonis: $17,000 investment just for the machine. what did it cost to build out this space? giovanni: about $8,000. -lemonis: $8,000. -giovanni: yes. lemonis: it's not a revenue generator? giovanni: just brings in more frequent traffic. lemonis: give me the return on investments. -giovanni: 18 months. -lemonis: walk me through it. giovanni: the four we have are averaging about $1,000 a month in sales. lemonis: so you have $25,000 invested in this idea? giovanni: yes. lemonis: so how did you get the 18 months if it's $1,000? giovanni: i can't remember if it's $17,000 all-in with the room. it's 18 months. we did it. lemonis: gio gets so excited running around the country opening stores that he forgets to just take a minute and sit down and actually run the numbers through a machine, like, a calculator. grand opening would be at the end of next week or no? lisa: october. october 15th. lemonis: that's, like, a month from now. lisa: we were going to do it the weekend before, but, i mean, you've changed it. lemonis: what do you mean, you've changed it? giovanni: i definitely put more of my energy on opening a store in georgia that is opening in four weeks. lemonis: you said to lisa, "i got this." giovanni: yes. lemonis: if lisa has a certain way that she wants to run the business, why would you come behind her and change it? the stores aren't getting to cash flow positive quick enough. you delaying these grand openings four weeks, that's affecting the overall return on the investment because your rent is how much a month here? giovanni: $11,000. lemonis: and how much is that a day? -giovanni: $400 a day. -lemonis: great. the thing that makes me crazy is why everything that was for this store wasn't sitting in shrink-wrapped pallets... -giovanni: already stickered. -lemonis:...waiting. from the minute this store opened, it showed up, and it got unpacked. there's not proper planning happening. there should be a new-store-opening team, and it should be done on a very tight calendar. -bye, guys. thank you. -lisa: bye, guys. ♪ lemonis: part of the reason that i wanted to get everybody together is to really understand the new-store-opening process from your perspective to try to fix this system. so i think this is the one that's at it's rawest, right? -man: yes. yeah. -woman: yes. lemonis: i'm checking out another location that gio says he wants to open, but i've added a little twist by asking his team to come there because i want him to see for himself how they really feel about this process. what else is out there right now? giovanni: we have wauwatosa. that's next march. i don't think they know about wauwatosa. lemonis: did you know about wauwatosa? -nevine: no. -dan: no. -lemonis: did you? -man: no. -lemonis: did you? -woman: no. lemonis: did you sign a lease? -giovanni: yes. -lemonis: how do people in the office legitimately not know? giovanni: it's not like they need to do anything. it doesn't exist yet. it's being built. lemonis: what if somebody had an opinion prior to its signing? -how would you know? -lisa: we wouldn't. lemonis: this is the visual in my mind when i think about your business. there's you with a pen and the lease running in circles. giovanni: i so disagree. lemonis: and there's everybody chasing you. giovanni: i totally disagree. lemonis: but it may be -- you disagree how? giovanni: i can tell you -- lemonis: you signed wauwatosa, and nobody knew it. giovanni: do you think that i don't listen? lemonis: am i the only person that thinks you don't listen? giovanni: i don't know. nevine: well, when you're talking too much, you can't hear what others are saying. dan: i think he reverts to what it took to run six stores, knowing everything that's going on. and that doesn't work at 80-plus stores. giovanni: the fact that eight people are even here talking about this is laughable to me. lemonis: no, what's laughable is that you don't see the value of having more people in the tent. there's a process problem. you cannot drive this bus by yourself anymore. giovanni: you want me so far out of the business. lemonis: i do not. and nobody here wants to say it. just stop. nobody wants to say it to you, including your wife. giovanni: we don't know this space. lemonis: when you say "we," are you saying lisa or you? -giovanni: bentley's. -lemonis: but you just said that she's the only one that picks products. -giovanni: correct. i don't -- -lemonis: okay. then you say, "we don't know what we're doing," which is the same as saying, "she really doesn't know how to do this." the ♪exus es... lemonis: there's a process problem. ...every curve, every innovation, every feeling... ...a product of mastery. lease the 2019 es 350 for $379/month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. welcome to our lounge. enjoy your stay. thanks very much. ♪ ♪ find calm in over 1,000 airport lounges worldwide. it's another way we've got your back. the business platinum card from american express. don't do business without it. but i can tell you liberty mutual customized my car insurance so i only pay for what i need. oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no... only pay for what you need. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ but some give their clients cookie cutter portfolios. fisher investments tailors portfolios to your goals and needs. some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions whether you do well or not. fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. well you can always i thibring it backy it. within seven days for a full refund for any reason. like if i become allergic to yellow? sure. or my turtle hates it? okay. what if i become a professional power walker? seems like a strange reason to return a car, but you can. what if the glove box doesn't fit my gloves? well you could try that before you buy it. what if the car and i just don't get along? whatever the reason, carmax will give you a full refund. that is good to know because reggie is very opinionated. i'm sure he is. intand ux f sport,rst of its kind lexus ux also available in hybrid all-wheel drive. lease the 2019 ux 200 for $329/month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. you cannot drive this bus by yourself anymore, and nobody here wants to say it. just stop. nobody wants to say it to you, including your wife. so, going forward, what we are going to do is that you and i are going to get a group together. we just have to create that process. i want him to now accept the fact that they need to be involved in every step of the process. if he would just trust in some other people, the end product could actually end up being better. and once a month, hold a meeting in order to prevent people not feeling included. woman: increasing communication. -nevine: engagement. -woman: yep. ♪ lemonis: how many stores exist today? 81? giovanni: 81, yeah. so, this is the balance sheet through the end of june. lemonis: i wanted to sit down with lisa and gio and go over their historical financials, and, while they're doing amazing, i want them to see that there's room for improvement. so it looks like the business is on pace to do somewhere around 88 million bucks in revenue. it looks like the business will make about $4.6 million. the margins are coming in around 47 percent, which is really three points less -than it needs to be. -giovanni: yeah. lemonis: look, there's no golden rule that says what the margins need to be in a retail store, but i don't like to be in the retail business with margins that are less than 50 percent. by the way, when bentley's gets to 50, i'm gonna move it to 55. and when it gets to 55, i'm gonna move it to 56 because we always need to be thinking on how to improve the business. because you're $88 million now, going to $100, $115 million. so you start talking about three percentage points on $100 million -- it's real money. and so i think what we should do over the next week or so is to really start to dig in and see where our margins can get better. you remember i did that bid deal with murchison-hume where i bought best in show? -giovanni: yes. yeah. -lisa: yeah. right. lemonis: so i want to actually put that to work. lisa: so we're going to start out with a dog spot and odor remover and a cat spot and odor remover. lemonis: so, do you have the formulas and everything? giovanni: you vetted out a couple formulas, correct? lisa: i did. yeah. lemonis: you remember best in show from a previous business? i paid $100,000 for the trademark. it's a brand that i bought specifically to launch a line of pet products to not only sell in bentley's but in the entire industry. and now i'm gonna make some money on it. lisa, i think we need to crank up your ability to say no because your husband is very persuasive. -giovanni: sure. -lisa: mm-hmm. lemonis: do you guys remember what you told me in the basement when we first met, what you guys wanted out of life? lisa: i know that we were looking to grow the business and be able to provide for our kid. lemonis: and so what's different at home now? lisa: now we have two boys. in february, we adopted our second son, miles. lemonis: the one thing that lisa and gio have consistently done is put their employees, their customers, and their family in front of profits. i think that's the big reason that they're as successful as they are. all right. i'll see you guys tomorrow. lisa: all right. ♪ -lemonis: i'm marcus. -tracy: hi. nice to meet you. lemonis: nice to meet you. gio told me that he's contemplating making another acquisition, and i thought, rather than just approving it, i would go along for the ride. you've been a long time, haven't you? tracy: 13 years. lemonis: what inspired you to start it? tracy: i had a golden retriever. he had arthritis really bad. he couldn't walk up and down stairs. and after 2 weeks on fresh food, he was up and down the stairs. and that's how i came up with this idea. lemonis: similar to how lisa did it. giovanni: she's got a great reputation in the business. tracy: i do like educating people. -lemonis: you do? -tracy: yeah. i love it. i have consulted with other stores already. giovanni: so, what was the revenue in '16? -tracy: it was almost $900,000. -lemonis: wow. -$900,000? -giovanni: yeah. tracy: in '17, it went down. giovanni: but you're still at about $61,000, $62,000 a month? tracy: oh, yeah, easy. giovanni: so it's still about $720,000 a year? tracy: yeah. lemonis: how much inventory is in here? -tracy: about $80,000. -lemonis: oh, wow. i love that tracy shares the same values as lisa and the rest of the company, and she could be a killer asset to not only train customers, but train our employees. giovanni: in your mind, what number? tracy: for? giovanni: the purchase. tracy: $285,000. -giovanni: $80,000 in inventory? -tracy: mm-hmm. lemonis: so maybe a different way to think about this is... giovanni: yeah. lemonis: ...new store, acquisition. giovanni: sure. lemonis: compare and contrast. there's the cost to open up a new store. -giovanni: so, $218,000. -lemonis: okay. that's a starting point. now compare it to this transaction sheet. giovanni: so, $285,000 is our purchase price. lemonis: included in that $285,000 is what? giovanni: $80,000 in good inventory. -lemonis: of assets. -giovanni: correct. lemonis: how much do you have to still spend? giovanni: that's what i -- okay. lemonis: how much do you still have to spend? giovanni: adding inventory, remodeling, $138,000. lemonis: historically, it costs us about $218,000 to open a store. tracy is asking $285,000 to buy her business. subtract the $80,000 of inventory that she's including, and our price is about $205,000. we'd still need to spend an additional $138,000 to improve the store and build it out, which puts us at about $343,000 of total investment. so, at the end of the day, we'd spend about $218,000 to build a brand-new store or $343,000 to acquire tracy's, about $125,000 more. and while that's a premium, we'll be getting a business that has over $700,000 of revenue. and as a kicker, we'll get tracy with all of her experience, which is worth way more than $125,000. giovanni: so we're paying $125,000 for $50,000 in profit and tracy? lemonis: that's the question, period, end of story. giovanni: i got you. lemonis: i want you to make this argument before you do this deal to the team... -giovanni: okay. -lemonis:...because if they all agree collectively to put the money in, what happens to their pride of ownership over that location? giovanni: yeah, they own it way more. lemonis: i think the name "natural pet market" is really good. as you're working on private-label foods, i would use that name. tracy: i do own the trademark on that name. i actually wanted to keep the name. lemonis: look, this deal is not going to be as simple as i thought. the name has to be part of this acquisition, and we're going to need to figure that out. we need to think about this. ♪ susan: so, lisa, what i did was that i kind of printed out what we spoke about. lemonis: lisa told me about this company, royal animal, out of new york, that specializes in soft goods, particularly pet clothing and accessories. in order for the overall margin to grow from 47 to 50-plus, we have to incorporate things that have a 60-plus percent margin. and so i want lisa to focus on things that are going to give her that. susan: this is, like, this kind of canvas material. lisa: and our chicago store, it would do great in. giovanni: i definitely don't think that will sell. lemonis: what's something like that cost? susan: we're wholesaling it for, like, $12.99. lemonis: what's the suggested retail? susan: i would probably go for $39.99. ♪ susan: i think these were on your list. lisa: i like the puff coat. giovanni: i don't think they'll ever sell. -lemonis: oh, that's cool. -lisa: that's really cool. i love the raincoats. giovanni: i don't see somebody putting this on their dog. we've done that, and we've seen that it doesn't move the needle. we do have to get -- pick and choose. i think -- i think this will sell. i could picture a corgi in it. and i'm not the merchandiser. i'm just saying. lemonis: well, you seem like it. giovanni: yeah, i definitely don't think that will sell. this is at least cute. lemonis: gio has an opinion, but his opinion sometimes comes without any information. you never once asked lisa what she thought. lisa: it's ultimately my decision on the products. lemonis: this is a $100 million business that's making great money. we want to pick up three more points of margin. at the end of the day, we have one person that has to be in charge of the business, and that's not me, and that's not you. giovanni: we don't know this space, and we make guesses. lemonis: when you say "we," are you saying lisa, or are you -- giovanni: bentley's. i talk about bentley's. lemonis: no, but you just said that she's the only one that picks product. -giovanni: correct. -lemonis: okay. then you say, "we don't know what we're doing," which is the same as saying, "she really doesn't know how to do this." ♪ giovanni: we have been working on acquiring natural pet market. she wants $285,000 for the business. moment of truth -- yes or no? ♪ has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. ♪ change has many faces. names you'll never know. the bright-eyed, the brave, the visionaries. where challenges exist, you'll find them. at citi, we empower people who are out to change the world. because tomorrow belongs to those who welcome it with open arms. citi. welcome what's next bill's back needed a afvacation from his vacation. an amusement park... so he stepped on the dr. scholl's kiosk. it recommends our best custom fit orthotic to relieve foot, knee, or lower back pain. so you can move more. dr. scholl's. born to move. but we're also a cancer fighting, hiv controlling, joint replacing, and depression relieving company. from the day you're born we never stop taking care of you. we're oscar mayer deli fresh your very first sandwich,m... your mammoth masterpiece. and...whatever this was. because we make our meat with the good of the deli and no artificial preservatives. make every sandwich count with oscar mayer deli fresh. -giovanni: correct. -lemonis: okay. then you say, "we don't know what we're doing," which is the same as saying, "she really doesn't know how to do this." i wish that lisa felt like she had the freedom to try different things without having to hear, like, "oh, i told you that wouldn't work." lisa: we all know not every set is going to sell, but, like, i know gray has been very popular. susan: so this is our gray coat this year. and these are two of our best-selling coats, by the way. lisa: i love the raincoats. these, i think, would actually do well. lemonis: what's something like this cost? susan: $9.99. lemonis: and what do you suggest retail on this? susan: it could really go up to, like, $39.99. lemonis: okay. if you were able to get it to $8 because you did some volume, you just went to 72 points. those extra seven points start adding up. as we work on growing the margins from 47 to 50, we need to find things that have 65 and 70 percent-plus margins, so i love the things that lisa is picking because it naturally is just going to pull those margins up to where they need to be. i feel like we have good momentum. lisa: yeah. for sure. lemonis: and we're headed in the right direction. susan: i'm very excited to work with you. thank you for coming up. lemonis: thank you, susan, as always. susan: it was so nice seeing you. ♪ lemonis: we're here at american bottling, a co-packer that's going to help us launch best in show, a high-margin cleaning product for pets. ♪ lisa: the biggest factor for us is a lot of people with pets have kids, so they want something that they can clean, especially carpets. kids are running around on their carpets. they don't want a bunch of chemicals that are stuffed in the carpet. korie: it's designed to do something very effective and be all natural. it has no ammonia, no bleach. -lemonis: there's no chemicals. -korie: no chemicals. lemonis: so it fits in your whole -- lisa: it fits perfectly. yes. i love it. lemonis: let's go look at the packaging options. lisa: oh, look. very cool. korie: so, we have our dog and our cat. giovanni: i love the white. it's so simple. -don't you like this one better? -lisa: i kind of like this 'cause it stands out a little bit more. giovanni: really? this one is just so much cleaner. lisa: the white, to me, kind of cheapens the look. giovanni: you don't think the kids' part should be bigger? lisa: no. these little icons work perfectly. -it makes sense. -giovanni: but i like the white. lemonis: look, it's obvious to me that lisa is really struggling with taking control. gio continues to walk all over the situation and her. she's going to have to step up. can we have a minute, just the three of us? -korie: sure. absolutely. -lemonis: okay. ♪ lisa, i just want you to feel like this is your business, and i think gio definitely needs to hear from you. giovanni: i have stayed out of 97 percent of the meetings that you've held. lisa: you may have stayed out of the meetings, but then you had your own meetings without me. giovanni: well, not about the same topics. lisa: no, no, no, but you've changed some things that i had to find out later. ♪ lisa: after looking at the numbers, i think it's a great deal. giovanni: but we have the expectation of the name natural pet market, and i'm sorry because this didn't come up. tracy: no, it didn't. that's gonna be giovanni: i have a good one., ♪ (playing) did you know that nationwide has customized small business insurance? 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(music stops) are we there yet? ♪ (nationwide jingle) everybody has a great story to tell, and our job as producers is to help pull that story out. my name is taylor, and i am a producer for tv and podcasts. the whole production is on my surface laptop. it's very powerful, and just speeds up your whole day. i always have at least 4 or 5 programs open on my computer. i do need to be able to work everywhere. 16+ hour days are pretty common, so i need a long battery life. it feels weird to be on this side of the camera for sure. welcome to fowler, indiana. one of the windiest places in america. and home to three bp wind farms. in the off-chance the wind ever stops blowing here... the lights can keep on shining. thanks to our natural gas. a smart partner to renewable energy. it's always ready when needed. or... not. at bp, we see possibilities everywhere. to help the world keep advancing. but we're also a cancer fighting, hiv controlling, joint replacing, and depression relieving company. from the day you're born we never stop taking care of you. from the day you're born ...6, 7, 8 ♪ ♪ ♪ big dreams start with small steps... ...but dedication can get you there. so just start small... start saving. easily set, track and control your goals right from the chase mobile® app. ♪ ♪ chase. make more of what's yours®. ♪ there are roadside attractions. and then there's our world-famous on-road attraction. the 2019 glc. lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benzisa: no, no, no, but you've changed some things that i had to find out later. it does make it difficult. giovanni: i mean... lisa: i would like to focus on this and have you step back. giovanni: i don't want to help in stuff that i'm a distraction on. lisa: but sometimes you do. when i need you involved, i'll bring you in. otherwise, we got it. giovanni: okay. i got you. lemonis: this is what i really wanted out of lisa -- her ability to take control of the situation and be a leader. so, we really need to go to work, and i definitely want to see something... -lisa: okay. -lemonis: ...in the next... -lisa: week? -lemonis: yeah. lisa: yeah. that's fine. we'll get started right away. i'get started right away. giovanni: i'll be out of it. lemonis: okay. see you, buddy. -giovanni: thanks, sir. -lemonis: bye. ♪ things are moving forward at bentley's. giovanni: we have been working on acquiring natural pet market in wheaton, illinois. her best year was about $850,000. this year, she's on pace
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.est or nothing. maria: welcome back. after a week in meeting at the g 20 summit, they're asking to be lifting the ban on huawei. lawmakers on both sides of the aisle warning that huawei represents a national security risk. i spoke with the chief security officer, andy purdy, about what a list would mean for his company and why so many see that huawei is a major risk for national security. >> the united states government is never going to allow huawei or any other company to have no restrictions to operate in the telecommunication market. it is too important for security. want to talk about the us government -- in terms of the impact our projected increases in review may be hurt. it could be hurt as well as a $30 billion reduction in the projected revenue. more portly, we know the impact this will have on american companies.we want to be able to continue to buy from american companies and want to be able to support our customers who buy our products for the rural america. maria: it's a
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.. ♪ ♪ gerry: this week in cannes is all about creativity, and it's not just the modern media and digital companies seeking that creativity. all businesses are looking for new ways to reinvent themselves too. traditionally, they turn to management consultants to help them innovate their brands and products, but there are new ways of achieving that. joining me now to talk about her business and the way it's using a very new way is the founder of mesa and codera. barbara, welcome. how do you work with companies to change the way they do business? >> okay. the way we look at it, you have a problem, and you have to assemble a team that has every single piece of knowledge and everything that you need to solve that problem. most of the people people are not working like this. they get a problem, and they say i'm going to work with my team, and that's wrong. the first thing is the problem itself, and that's -- gerry: you've worked with some of the biggest companies in the world. >> yes. google
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. expedia to book the vacation rental which led to the discovery that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. expedia. everything you need to go. ♪ ♪ gerri: the media landscape is changing almost daily. digital consumption is soaring while traditional print and even television engagement continues to decline. giant tech companies dominate the advertising market, but they're facing rising scrutiny from regulators over privacy and other issues. more and more people are viewing content and subscribers from netflix to spotify and, yes, to "wall street journal," i'm glad to say. one thing that isn't changing much is the cultural can and political message of most of that content. the big media, entertainment and tech companies -- with a few notable exceptions -- still lean in one clear political direction, leftwards. there's much emphasis on on the need for greater diversity in media, gender, ethnic, cultural diversity. and it's too bad there isn't as much emphasis on political an
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>> lou: i a want to start with ira. the president did something very interesting, talking about an avenue to a different result than simply a retaliation for this strike by the iranians. your reaction to it. >> i think it's always good to basically give them an option -- you always need to give someone an option not to go to war. they continue this kind of behavior and obviously the tap people made a decision to shoot down one of our drones, then i think it's more significant. but once we start there it's going to be a significant battle. lou: last count two pipeline understanincidents, six tankersd and one of our drones shot down. >> i basically think when we start firing i'm not for putting men on the ground but i'm certainly for using our sophisticated equipment. we've gone beyond the pail. they're going to have a lot of fire in their oil wells. lou: it's really stunning that they're being this stupid. i agree with the president. i can't imagine how stupid the iranians are to have done this. >> i totally agree. and i think that reality is, you know, we'll see in the next 24 hours what he's going to do. but i think he gave a tough message and i think he's gave the message in the right place and he said if you didn't do it, wasn't at the top level, which i assume it was, step forward and tell us. lou: hey's going to do what ? >> step forward and tell us. i think everything in that country is in the hierarchy. i think the revolutionary guard runs the place and the ie to ya iayatollahis making the decisio. lou: we're 40 years in. it's pretty clear who they are. >> no question. we were not -- i mean our drone is a sophisticated piece of equipment. it did not have to go over their space and we didn't do that and i have great confidence of that. lou: let's turn to the politics of it all. the president getting off to a -- this has been a remarkable week with the kickoff in or land do with the mexican senate ratifying the u.s. mca. this is a president who is, frankly, continuing his absolutely adroit leadership and governance of the country. >> a very clear message the other day. people saying it's a repeat of what he's been saying and what he's been saying is what she's been doing. you know if you vote for president trump r trump you're going to get xjz and more of the same. if you want to vote for the democrats, you're going back to the dark days of obama. lou: i thought you were going to say back to the talker ages. >the dark ages.>> certainly badc policies. when pascal and everybody talks about revving up the base, the base is not just republicans. a plurality of voters today are independent voters. you've got to get a third of those voter to win a presidency. lou: let's be very clear. >> trump has done that. lou: this president has outperformed with hispanics, with african-americans, with women. and when he does, as you point out directly and i think correc, his base is not an arch defying group of republicans. >> right. lou: it is really important to understand, i believe this to be the case, that he will expand his appeal to each one of those minority groups i any across all demographics. we're going to broaden his outcome. >> four years ago he beat a candidate who had nothing and he didn't have a great campaign. he now has a strong strong record to run on. and that's what he needs to do. every single thing that he' done. lou: stronger record a than any modern president tharchlts' what he needs to run on. lou: great to see you. the trial of navy s.e.a.l. edward gallagher taking an extraordinary turn. he's accused of stabbing and killing an isis prisoner of war. today special operator first class corey scott testified that he, he was in fact the man who killed the isis prisoner by asphyxiation after gag ge gallad been charged with stabbing the man. when asked why he killed the terrorist, scott replied, quote, i knew he was going to die anyway. i wanted to save him from what was going to happen next to him. end quote. amazing developments. >>> up next, a new report says the dirty garag fraudulent steee dossier wasn't the only dirty document used by the fbi against the trump campaign. we'll have that and much more right after this quick break. right after this quick break. stay with us. carl, i appreciate the invite here. as my broker, what am i paying you to manage my money? 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corruption, solomon, who has been leading the coverage of spygate with his reporting focusing on the black cash ledger used to target paul manafort. the fbi and robert mueller's special counsel team receiving reportedly several early warnings from ukrainian officials that that block cash ledger was likely a fake. so instead of citing the ledger itself, mueller and the fbi used media reports about the ledger, some of which they helped facilitate by the way to justify going after the former trump campaign chairman. our next guest, one of the most influential investigative journalists in the country and leading, as i said, the coverage of deap state corruption in spay-gate. joining us tonight, the hills' john solomon. good to have you here. >> good to be here. thank you. lou: let's tar start with this manafort thing. sit astonishing. >> it. lou: the low-life standards of the fbi and the special counsel in pursuing manafort through the black cash ledger. >> yeah. lou: how can -- how would you characterize their conduct? >> well this is the fbi operations manual that every agent is given makes it clear. when you apply for a search warrant and submit an affidavit, you may only use evidence that you know to be factually true. and in this case they used evidence, they cited the black ledger in four search warrants in the probable cause section citing the black ledger after they had been told that it was likely false, likely fake, a fraud. ukrainian prosecutors told them that and their own research told them that. they had witnesses who told them those transactions do not match. here's the biggest reason they knew it was wrong. the ledger purported to show that paul manafort was taking money in cash under the table and in fact they had all of his bank records. he was getting everything above the table in wire transfers. they knew that document was wrong and yet they put it in the search warrant afte affidavit. lou: what is the impact of this? where does this leave manafort? because it would see that this is, at the very least, a basis to throw out charges against him. >> we'll have to see what his lawyers do. i think his lawyer is giving a speech tomorrow in california. we should keep a close eye on that. immediately there's breaking news tonight, congressman mark meadows, senior republican on the house government and oversight committee, he's preparing a referral tonight to ask the inspector general of the u.s. justice department to investigate the handling of these search warrants. and one of the articles that they soas cited was that the fbi agents working on the case assisted. they met with the ap the day before, gave hem a nod that the hftion was accurate, they published the story and then the fbi agents turn around, take the story and put it into their search warrant affidavit as an independent corroboration of their evidence. it's a pretty remarkable thing to see that complicity going on with the fbi and the justice department are using a leak that they created as efs i evidence n their own filings. lou: it's astonishing to me, even after all of this time, watching the 11 months of an fbi investigation, two and a half years almost of the special counsel investigation. the only corrupt figures that are reveal here are the investigators themselves, the prosecutors and the team of the special counsel. this is institutional just pure ignorance and political corruption. it's stunning where we are today. >> i grew up in a family of cops and it's hard for me ever to say the word dirty cop or bad cop. i have seen cops do amazing things, my father included. but in this case a small number of fbi supervisors appeared to have hijacked the process and cheated the process. that's not good for the country and question v we have to get to the bottom of it so it didn't happen again. lou: we have got to bring these people to justice. >> accountability. lou: and we still have seen -- if this is moving at all in that direction, it is moving at best a glacial speed. your thoughts. >> yeah, listen, the justice department has a hard time punishing itself own. i did a report last week, fbi agents were found shoplifting and defrauding, not a single one of them got prosecuted, got to keep their job and their retirement and pension. it's a problem for the department of justice. in the last two weeks with the special prosecute out of connecticut and the ig, there is movement going on and i have hope that they're going to get some answers and immediat mead e accountability. lou: thanks for all you're doing in assisting in that process beginning with informing the american public. we appreciate it. >>> an update new york county clerk michael kerns promised not to issue licenses to illegal immigrants. the radical dimm governor of new york cuomo signed in the right of illegal immigrants to have those licenses. here's kerns refusing to issue the licenses and his reasoning. >> this is not only about the law, this is about security and this is about voter fraud. in new york people can register to vote and when there was discussion on the assembly and senate floor the sponsors of the bill said there are already people in new york who are voting illegally. lou: well we'd like to hear your thoughts about that and anything that we talk about here tonight. excuse me. share your comments, follow me on twitter @loudobbs, follow me on disbram. instagram. >>> up next, more evidence robert mueller helped the radical dimms steal the 2018 midterms. that's right, steal them. victoria toensing and jo digenova join us after the break i can't tell you who i ame break or what i witnessed, but i can tell you liberty mutual customized my car insurance so i only pay for what i need. oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no... only pay for what you need. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ too many people a restless night's sleep. there's a better choice. aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid and the 12-hour pain-relieving strength of aleve. that dares to last into the morning. so you feel refreshed. aleve pm. there's a better choice. a cockroach can survive heresubmerged ttle guy. underwater for 30 minutes. wow. yeah. not getting in today. terminix. defenders of home. but some give their clients cookie cutter portfolios. fisher investments tailors portfolios to your goals and needs. some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions whether you do well or not. fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. lou: the washington examiner's byron york revealing a previous unknown undisclosed at least third memo from rod voazen stein. the memo outlining a third scope of robert mueller's investigation. it's dated october 20th, 2017. several months after the former special counsel's appointment. as of now its contents are secret but york says its existence proves a major, major point. >> we know in the end mueller could not establish conspiracy or coordination had taken place between trump and russia. what we know is by october of 2017 that's when he was learning that he could not establish this. lou: joining us tonight victoria toensing, former deputy assistant attorney general for the criminal division of the justice department, joe digeno digenova. great to have both of you back with us. let's start with first the byron york's reporting on a third scope memo. your reaction, victoria. >> the first memo was ill pleel because it didn't name a crime. all it named was a counter intelligence investigation. i don't know what they were going to do expect go downhill from there. it appears, according to byron, that it hads something to do with -- not carter page but roger stone. those were all process crimes. it's like they couldn't get the real crime so they're going to go out and question people and find any little difference in what they said and indict them for that so they can say they had indictments ltd you indictm. lou: your thoughts, joe. >> this points back to the beginning of this investigation with the illegitimate setting up by rod rosenstein. when history of this scandal is written, one person will be blamed and should be blamed for the entire wasting of two years of president trump's presidency, rod rosenstein was a coward. he didn't know how to tell mccabe and those people to stop fooling around and messing around with trump. he came in, found out about the hillary clinton investigation, sow how anti-trump they were and he, rosenstein caved and gave up the power of the attorney general and the deposi deputy ay general to a bunch of corrupt fbi officials. and the third scope memo is proof that he was scared to death of mccabe. lou: and following the reporting now peter swiezer who honed in on biden, his son, ukraine and the corruption, the empire of corruption that the chinese have helped to create. your thoughts about -- actually we saw a couple l of left-wing national media outlets, victoria, actually report on this. i was stunned. how about you? >> i wasn't that stunned, lou, because what happens in this town is a media like abc will take care of a politico that they're friendly with. they put out -- there's a really bad story so they're going to put out two or three bad facts and bury the really bad facts. let me tell you the background of this biden situation. lou: very quickly, please. >> hunter bide inwaen was kicket of the na navy for cocaine use d joe biden was in charge of ukraine for president trump when he didn't know squat about energy or ukraine and he was also not only a cocaine addict but a prostitute addict. and the worst thing about this is that biden threatened the president of ukraine, if you don't fire the prosecutor general who is now investigating his son, you won't get a 1 billion-dollar loan guarantee. and the u.s. ambassador helped bury the case after the prosecutor was fired. lou: and this level of corruption, you're dismissive of this couple of outlets in the left-wing media. but this is becoming a real problem, is it not, joe, for joe biden? >> i think joe biden is dead. i think his campaign is going to go on, but it's going to be a mess. not only because of joe biden's physical incapacity and his inability to function at a high level, but because he simply can't get away from the obviousness of it. and here's what's fascinating, lou. you have an obvious pay to play with the vice president and his son. whenever hunter biden is on the plane with the vice president he gets a business deal when they leave the country. that is call corruption. where were andrew mccabe and james comey and loretta lynch and sally yates and andrew wiseman. the fact that i with are is thes allowed to break the law but when you're a republican you got the grand jury thrown at you. it still hasn't changed and bill barr is going to clean it up. it has to be done because the fbi and doj remain today politically corrupt organizations. lou: and the obama era intelligence community, the fbi, the cia relying on, it turns out, three redacted reports marked as draft from crowd strike which was their investigative arm in this instance to see who had hacked the dnc. i mean this stuff gets worse by the day. >> let's really look at that, lou. remember obama's talking points, 17 intelligence agencies have confirmed that this is a russian hacking job. no. only two had. the mapping organization doesn't quite do that kind of work. only two. and guess what two they were. the ci airks ay and cia and the. mike rogers from the nsa didn't go along with it. think of this as a former prosecutor and investigator, the fbi relies on technical information from a third party that draft, redacted, and the third party is an ally of a political opponent of trump. i mean for goodness sake. lou: it gets worse and worse without question. victoria toensing, thanks so much. joe d da digenova. >> it's like old times. lou: it is like old times. this time i will get to buy dinner. appreciate it guys. welcome back. >>> up next, the supreme court's landmark decision on whether or not a cross-shaped war memorial could stay on publicland. there it is. we'll have that and much more. pastor jeffers on this amazing day in court when we come back. day in court when we come back. my experience with usaa has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for 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[ text notification now that you have] new dr. scholl's massaging gel advanced insoles with softer, bouncier gel waves, you'll move over 10% more than before. dr. scholl's. born to move. intand ux f sport,rst of its kind lexus ux also available in hybrid all-wheel drive. lease the 2019 ux 200 for $329/month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. ruled that a world war i memorial in the shape of a cross can remain on public land. that's the decision. it with us a 7-2 decision, which may surprise some of you. this court 5-4 court came out 7-2 ruling that the 40-foot cross in maryland doesn't violate the first amendment. justices ginsberg and sotomayor decented. justice alito writing even though the cross is a christian symbol, destroying or defacing the cross that has stood un disturbed for nearly a century. and he could not be more right. joining us, fox business contributor and the host of the new fox nation show "pathway to victory" launches this coming monday and we're delighted to have you with us. good to see you in the studio. >> thank you for having me. lou: on any day other than friday. we usually wrap up our week, you're always welcome here every day of the week. >> thank you. lou: let's start with this decision. were you at all surprised or were you in any way concerned that this is not the way the court would rule? >> you know, the newer more conservative court over the last couple of months has made several decisions like this which is a hopeful new direction for the courtesying nalling that perhaps they're ready, lou, to put an end to these insane assaults on faith that the left has been launching against faith issues for the last 60 years. and look, i'm grateful for the decision, lou, but i have to say it's pathetic that we get excited because we're allowed to keep a acros cross on a war mem. this is insane up. the supreme court allowed and encouraged bible reading in school, prayers in school, ten commandment displays, crosses on war memorials. then in 1962 suddenly the supreme court says these things are no longer constitutional. lou: and it did begin with the supreme court. >> it did. lou: that changed everything. >> and what is it that changed? the constitution changed and nobody told us about it? no. what happened is we've allowed the atheists, the humanists to seize control of the country and pervert the first amendment into something that the founders never intended. and thank god we have a president who is going to appointed, he has already, he's going to appoint more justices who are originalists and who will interpret the law by what the constitution actually says instead of what liberals wish it said. lou: justice ginsberg saying in so ruling that the court was elevating religion above all other concerns. my question is what's wrong with that? it may be uncomfortable to some who believe this is not a you christian country, it's heritage from its founding on. but to argue this is just, to me, a bizarre and -- and what is it really all about? is it about practicing religion freely or about removing the christian faith from our society? >> look. it is an historical fact, lou, that america was created as a christian nation. the you day yo christian faith hads been the bedroom. 1892 the supreme court of the united states said quote, america is a christian nation. john jay was the first chief justice of the supreme court. he said god has given us the privilege in this christian nation of choosing our leaders. and again we welcome people of all faiths and no faith in this country but you cannot separate america from its christian heritage. lou: we have seen that separation effort, as you point out, for 50 years. it's been raging. and without either a resolution or reconciliation and that's a shame. so who is going to win this fight? >> well ultimately god is going to win it. i can't tell you when he's going to win it but he ultimately is. but i thought we ought to be grateful for the turn we're seeing in our country right now. lou: as always, pass tore robert jeffers, thanks for being here. and good luck monday with your new show on fox nation, if the pathway to victory ." there it is right there. available monday, june 24th. congratulations. great to see you. >> thank you. lou: stay with us. we're coming right back. hey, who are you? oh, hey jeff, i'm a car thief... what?! i'm here to steal your car because, well, that's my job. what? what?? what?! 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benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. back then, we checked our zero times a day. times change. eyes haven't. that's why there's ocuvite. screen light... sunlight... longer hours... eyes today are stressed! but ocuvite has vital nutrients to help protect them. ocuvite. eye nutrition for today. lou: mark morgan has taken leadership of customs and border protection after serving as the acting director of immigration and customs enforcement. he will be succeeded by matthewal bans, the deputy director of the deportations operations, he's worked for law enforcement 25 years and a major ally of former acting i.c.e. director tom homan and, of course, mark morgan. >>> twitter trying to silence president trump and other conservative leaders with a new warning. twitter warning the president of the united states. the social media giant today announced that well known government officials who violate twitter's so-called standards on abusive behavior will be flagged with a warning before anyone can view the tweet. that warning will say the tweet violates their rules but that it is in the public interest to keep it up. if that doesn't drive a few people crazy, i don't know what will. joining me now, dr. sebastian gorka, best selling author, former strategist to president trump and, seb, great to have you with us. what do you make of it? jack dorsey now in charge of the president's first amendment rights. >> it's an outrage. every american should be incensed. on monday what do we find out, lou, thanks to project very fast? that google is using artificial intelligence to try to make sure that the, quote-unquote, trump situation of 2016 isn't repeated in 2020? what happens after the video goes up? youtube pulls it. they censor the evidence. now we find out that -- [inaudible conversations] lou: we should point out. >> youtube owned by google. then we find out today that there will be a filter, there will be a block in front of anything that twitter deems to be offensive, which means when your scrolling through -- you're scrolling through your feed, you just won't see the tweet. lou: so why -- i'm just about tired of the republicans being so anemic. there's not one of them who is expressing with the same energy you are here this evening outrage at twitter, jack dorsey, their ceo. this is, this is outrageous by any definition, and the republicans don't have the guts to go after twitter, go after google. it is shameful to witness what this party, so-called, has become. it's just -- >> lou, it's a disgrace. it is an utter disgrace. we need half a dozen lou dobbs on capitol hill who would actually fight for the founding principles of this republic. this isn't the 1800s. you can't go home and print off some pamphlets and distribute them at the town hall in the same evening -- lou: your tweets, by the way, remind me of that. they look like something that's been run off a mimeograph machine at best, and i won't mention the names, but two or three republicans, this should not be controversial today. this should, you know, this is -- talking about the citizenship question -- >> yes. lou: this is, it is just awful. the republicans have become little paul ryans. without courage, without principle, without vision, without values. >> let's just talk about these two issues together. so there's about four platforms in the world that control social media and information. they have demonstrated, four of them, that they wish to interfere politically in the elections in america. that is unconscionable, and they have to be stopped. today the supreme court, thanks to this, the chief justice who is a traitor to constitution, has said they're not satisfied with the reason the federal government gave? so you could ask if somebody's a citizen in america? who cares what the reason is, lou? the point of the census is to ask who you are and under what status you are in the united states. has nothing to do with the reason. it's the federal government's prerogative. and when are the republicans going to stand up and show some backbone? lou: i don't think we should hold our breath, i really don't. without this president, the republican party would be just a sorry, sorry place if it is not already that. and to hear the justice, roberts, talk about incongruent reasoning. you talk about precious, that's precious. >> pathetic. lou: this is a guy who twisted an obamacare fine into a tax in order to support obamacare. talk about incongruent reasoning. as i said today on twitter, you'd have to throw out half the rulings of the roberts court on that basis. >> there's too many cowards in this city, lou, far too many cowards and far too few patriots. it's that simple. lou: well, let's start a new import-export program -- [laughter] for the swamp. sebastian gorka -- >> i'm with you. lou: you've got a deal. i appreciate you being here. good to see you always. >> thanks, lou. lou: salem radio. we'd like to hear your thoughts. follow me on twitter alt @loudobbs follow me on instagram a alt lou fox tonight. >>> up next, president trump suggests delaying next year's census after today's supreme court ruling. victoria toensing, joe digenova, they join us right after these quick messages. stay with us. to your goals and needs. some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions whether you do well or not. fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. calyou're gonna love this.rs. new coppertone sport clear. not thick, not hot, not messy, just clear, cool, protected. coppertone sport clear. proven to protect. so ...how are you feeling - on a scale of one to five? 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there is the moment. beyond technology... there is human ingenuity. ♪ ♪ every day, comcast business is helping businesses go beyond the expected, to do the extraordinary. take your business beyond. who used expedia to book the vacation rental that led to the ride ♪ which took them to the place where they discovered that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. ♪ flights, hotels, cars, activities, vacation rentals. expedia. everything you need to go. lou: i'm pleased to say joining us tonight victoria toensing with the criminal division of the justice department and joedigenova, founding partners of the digenova and toensing law firm and celebrating today their 38th anniversary, and i can't tell you how much we all appreciate you sharing the day with us and the evening. thanks so much and congratulations. >> thank you, lou. lou: let's start with -- [laughter] well, with the supreme court. it didn't look so supreme today, did it, victoria? in a 5-4 decision, a ruling that how the census bureau can construct questions? what's next, weights and measures for this court? >> and this is what's so great about this president, lou. what other president of either party would have said, this is against me, let's see, how can we put off this census so we can fix it? that's where his brain immediately goes. what do we do that we can get it right? and the irony is, and i won't get in the legal weeds, but there was a case about getting deference, giving deference to agencies, and roberts went along with that. and now you're not giving deference for a census question for gosh sakes? talk about inconsistency, that's john roberts. lou: it is the john roberts. and, joe, in the obamacare he tortures the word "fine" somehow into a tax and sustains obamacare. there is -- the man is inventive and activist, and i can't figure out how he was ever considered a conservative. >> well, what you saw today was pure sophistry. he says that the motive of the secretary of commerce was very important. but in obamacare he said the motive of the president wasn't important. the fact that the president said it wasn't a tax didn't matter. when the chief justice says, well, you know what? i think it's a tax. so what you have is inconsistency. but more importantly, soft first try -- soft first try. the chief justice just wanted to stick his finger in the president's eye. it's demeaning to the court, and it's embarrassing, and he says there's no difference between democratic and republican judges? baloney. >> yeah, the kavanaugh hearing showed that. lou: yeah, unfortunately and dramatically. let's turn to robert mueller who said that the report of the special counsel would be his testimony -- [laughter] and as has happened too often over the course of the last two and a half years, mueller reversed himself and is bogged down, it seems, in partisan politics. your thoughts about what we can expect on july 17th and why a special counsel is behaving like this, vick tore cra? -- victoria? >> well, because he doesn't know what he's doing. i think he's really lost it, and andrew wiseman is running the show. but it's going to have to be bob mueller that's sitting there in front of the tv cameras. he's going to have to get his wits about him, which he sure didn't have when he did that bizarre press conference for, what, 16 minutes or whatever it was. boy, i have a lot of questions for him. one is couldn't you find one republican lawyer to put on that team? lou: and, joe, what do you think? will this witch hunt ever end? will robert mueller ever go away, or will he be a perennial guest on late night television, newscasts and, of course, house committee hearings? >> well, jerry nadler, the mum bler, is going to be questioning bob mueller, the cadaver. if you've watched mueller, he barely functions. his testimony is going to be basically worthless. he may want to answer some of the questions and he may even try to go beyond the four corners. the real damage is going to be done the next day when they have testimony from weissman and his aide which will be done in executive session with unlimited questioning. that's when the damage to president is going to be done. bob mueller is nothing more than a figurehead. this has always been the weissman investigation, and it'll be the weissman testimony. >> but the damage to president isn't because these guys know something that's damning, it's because andrew weissman makes stuff up. >> they're going to lie. >> he just creates crimes out of whole cloth. >> they're just going to lie. lou: both he and mueller have an established record of doing precisely the same thing -- >> exactly. lou: and weissman, you know, participating in the destruction of 85,000 jobs at arthur anderson without either conscience or, by the way, law as a basis for his action. it's stunning stuff. victoria, it's always great to see you. we thank you very much. joe, thank you, sir. >> you bet. lou: and happy anniversary, guys -- [laughter] >> now for the champagne, lou. lou: oh, i like that part. [laughter] have a great evening, thanks so much. that's two of the greatest americans, victoria and joe. and, obviously, two of our favorite people. >>> a 6-10 robot named q3, there it is, well, what would it do? it's shooting free throws. just set a world record for the most consecutive basketball free throws by a humanoid robot. toyota made the bot. it nailed 2,020 shots in a row to honor the 2020 olympics that will be held in tokyo. and while this is just a basketball-shooting robot, it does show you just how much we can expect to be automated with consistency and excellence. recent estimates, by the way, show 36 million jobs in the united states are at risk to exposure to automation by the end of 2030. think of it, 36 million jobs. all of this as groups like the chamber of commerce, the business round table on wall street, of course, and the koch brothers keep pushing their propaganda about the country needing more cheap labor think we can only find through illegal immigration across wide open borders. they're lying, they're lying and they're lying. >>> up next, the left-wing national media, speaking of lying, deeming a surprising winner of last night's democratic debate. this time could they be right? we'll take that up and much more right after this quick break. stay with us. not again. limu that's your reflection. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ the cloud i need? it has to keep up with sales, supply chain, inventory - ♪ ♪ it needs to track it all, from cincinnati to singapore. ooo! ♪ ♪ and protect it all. customer records, our financials, they better be secured. but i also need easy access, to manage data across my clouds - no matter where it lives. ♪ ♪ so if an auditor shows up, i can be a step ahead. that's the cloud i want. is that to much to ask? expect more from your cloud. ibm cloud. carl, i appreciate the invite here. as my broker, what am i paying you to manage my money? it's racquetball time. 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"the washington post" running with, quote, democratic presidential candidates engage in arms race to left in the first debate. and "the new york times" with this headline: democrats split on how far left to nudge the nation. nudge, you mean drive relentlessly? well, joining us tonight trump 2020 campaign national press secretary caylee mcaneighborny, great to have you with us. this is a fair question, and i'm going to guess some people would suggest it's a bit of a softball question, but i want you to know -- >> i like that. lou: -- i'm as rigorous and just as tough-minded as they can be. what'd you think of the debate last night? >> i like that question. what i thought was what we knew already, this was a bunch of leftists, lou. these are radicals x. the moment that just popped off the screen to me was when amy klobuchar, she's supposed to be a moderate and a centrist and logical, says, hey, i may agree with julian castro that we should decriminalize border crossings which is effectively an open border. so there is no seven trust, there is no moderate -- centrist, there's a whole bunch of socialists and radicals, and that was very clear. lou: i think you could argue there was a star in that debate, and that was the set that nbc put forward. it had all kinds of technical problems, but that set, you know, that was an experience in blue. the other part of this is the who do you think lost, who was the biggest loser if there was a loser, one or two losers in the night's festivities? >> yeah, i i think liz warren. you know, this was her opportunity to be the really only top tier candidate on that stage and to really be this shiny object that, for the left. and she didn't really live up to that. when, you know, the president tweets boring in all caps, he's right, because the most exciting moment was that mic flub that we saw from nbc. liz warren didn't shine. we're not hearing her name mentioned a ton today. she really seemed to lose her footing there a little. there really wasn't a shining moment, it was a really bad night for democrats and a great advertisement for the donald j. trump campaign. lou: yeah, i think there are more than a few people saying the winner of the debate certainly was donald trump. this economy, the president is sitting here with a 3.6% unemployment rate, the highest employment in the country's history. minorities fully participating in the trump prosperity. and i can't imagine how they're going to sell socialism against a backdrop of prosperity, rising wages and a growing middle class, the american dream being fulfilled as it hasn't been for decades. >> yeah, lou, you're right. you know, they live in a fact-free reality, and they are trying to sell the american people a reality that doesn't exist. liz warren saying, hey, you know, the middle class and low income americans are not benefiting from this, false, we know that not to be true. paychecks are growing twice as fast for low and middle income americans. cory booker saying small businesses are hurting, another lie. not true. small business confidence at its highest point since the recorded. they're selling this version of reality that doesn't exist, and the good news is the american people, 71% tell cnn the economy's in good shape. so their reality doesn't match the reality on the democrats' debate stage. lou: as you say, fact-free, and that's a lesser moment to everyone who is supporting this president. the president, i love the tweet in which he said talking about all that was going on in washington as he's soaring towards osaka that he is going to be a little busy saving the free world. i'm not so sure that's an overstatement. what do you think the prospects are for improving his polling as a result of what he can achieve in osaka? >> yeah, i think it's a big deal. anytime the president's overseas, we saw his d-day speech which received praise from even the likes of the liberal media, the g20 is another really presidential moment, and you couldn't have this greater contrast of the president, finally a strong president on the world stage, not a weakling like president obama, and the democrats squabbling over taking us the way of cuba and venezuela? give me a break. the president is going to have a tailwind behind him. the contrasting images cannot get any better than that. lou: and it's going to be several days in osaka at the g20, much riding on the outcome of those discussions. kaylee, great to have you with us. all the best. >> thank you, lou. lou: up next, we'll have more on the trump administration's high pressure campaign against iran. stay with us, we're coming right back with the latest. ♪ take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. we're the tenney's and we're usaa members for life. call usaa to start saving on insurance today. .. 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benz dealer for exceptional lease and financing offers. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. >>> new tonight, the democratic candidates for president are coming to the defense of senator kamala harris after a racist attack by the president's son, don junior. earlier he rewheated and deleted a racist tweet suggesting that kamala harris is not a black american and thus should not be an authority on issues of race. here was the reaction. from joe biden. the same forces of hatred rooted in the birtherism that questioned barack obama racial identity are used against kamala harris. it's disgusting and we have to it out we with he see it racism has no place in america. this from bernie sanders. donald trump junior a racist too. shocker washington governor and 2020 candidate jay inslee joins us us. governor you say this is the trump family again peddling birtherism. >> well, unfortunately it appears that the rotten apple doesn't fall far from the rotten tree. and what comes to mind is the question to the whole trump family at last have you no decency sirs, the fact that donald trump senior's political existence is built upon a foundation of racist attacks on barack obama, to now not learn from that experience to perpetuate it is unacceptable in america. and i think everyone ought to make a really fundamental decision right now. any got -- we got to get a new president. this indecency is corrupting. >> you've said, quote, we need to heal the country racially after the division of donald trump. instead of seeing candidates go after president trump on race though we saw senator kamala harris press joe biden on his anti-busing stance from 45 years ago. president trump was asked about busing earlier today. listen. >> the biggest threat to the security of the united states is donald trump. and there is no question. >> okay, sorry we had the wrong sound bite. i think we have theright one loaded. let's play the right one. >> oh, where do you stand on that issue of federally mandated with us sng. >> i will -- i will tell new about four weeks because we're coming out with certain policy that's going to be very interesting and very surprising i think to a lot of people. >> i just wanted to follow up quickly on the question about busing. do you see it as a available way of integrating schools? does that relate to the policy that you're. >> well it has been something that they've done for a long period of time. i mean there aren't that many ways you're getting people to schools. but it's certainly a primary of getting people to schools. >> the president doesn't really seem to understand what busing was. in front of a record setting audience, however, why are democrats going after each other's records instead of president trump's? >> well, listen i -- i know where my sights were on. were about the number one treat to the united states. i was asked and you played the clip what i believe the number one threat to the united states national security was. and i accurately answered donald trump. i'll tell you why i did that. the day we landed in miami was the hottest day of that date in miami history. tens of thousands of acres of wetlands in the everglades, like a swamp was on fire. when you have a wetlands that are burning, you know you got a problem with climate change. i talked to a community that's being dispossessed because of the sea level rise. and the same week this was going on donald trump was essentially rescinding the package of measures that could help us defeat climate change. so i know what i think is the number one priority that our party needs to do, which is to remove this person who is a threat -- literally to our -- to the continuation of civilization as we know it. this ke is not going to look like recognizable if we don't make defeating climate crisis the number one priority. i'm offering that to the country. >> i want to ask you more about climate change. but do you believe the president is a bigger national security threat than vladimir putin, kim jong un or iran. >> yes, because he embodies all of these threats and is an err sfobl chaotic person, more interested in press conferences and sound bites than solutions. let's just take climate crisis for one thing. this is an existential threat to the united states. people are dying today. i met people in paradise, california, a town of 25,000 people, an entire town burned to the foundations. people are drowning in the midwest. they're dying -- predicted to die of heat stroke. this is an issue of fatality and a change in the fundamentals that allow this country to exist. and he is surrendering to this. he is run up a white flag of vender to the fossil fuel industries. we need someone to fight against the fossil fuel industries, break the shackleless they have, take back that $20 billion of tax breaks and build a clean energy economy. he is standing in the way of all of those things. so you bet he is a threat to the nation. >> as you have made, the climate crisis the central issue of your campaign, make the case to the working class that democrats were accused of at times of overlooking in 2016. some of niece are people working in the manufacture industry pl the coal mining industry. make your case to them why addressing the climate crisis is important to them. >> well i'm about -- all about jobs. i've been governor of the state of washington for six years now. we have created the number one competent in the united states, the number one gdp growth and fastest wage growth because we intensely focused on jobs. and now here is what we know. and that is that the clean energy sector offers probably the largest spectrum of job creation in the united states. and we're seeing that today. today in the clean energy economy jobs are growing twice as fast as the rest of the economy as a whole. we're making electric cars in michigan. we're making wind turbines in iowa. donald trump said turbines cause cans are. we know they create jobs. we making electric batteries in in any event and bottled fuels in iowa state. we know it's a job creator. we know we need to accelerate the rate of that transition that is already occurring. and we know druch is doing what he does every single day, which is to lie to the coal miners. because those jobs are not coming back. we're seeing a transition to new systems of fuel. and we need to be honest and help these dedicated, hard-working people with transition like we're doing in the state of washington with our coal miners with a very successful transition program. this is about economic growth. i'm all about that. >> governor jay inslee good to have you with us thank you very much. >> thank you very much. >> hope you'll come back and share more of your positions and vision for america. cities around the world hold events to mark pride weekend. coming up how one night 50 years ago helped spark a revolution and bring the fight for gay rights to the forefront. you're live in the cnn newsroom. 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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.est or nothing. li the debate analysis continues to pour in. critics saying political malpractice by the democrats trying to slam the economy with the longest expansion ever. democrats accused of jumping the shark, showing they are not fifth to govern saying zero about massive miss use of our -- misuse of our money. you will have higher taxes to pay for coverage for early legals by democrats were against when they voted for obamacare. obamacare does not allow for that. let's bring in the "wall street journal" board member, bill mcgurn. >> i thought from democrats the greatest menace was vladimir putin and russia. it turns out to be the u.s. economy. not a single positive word for the private economy. it treats every company as thousand asthough it's predatord squeezing its workers. people are feeling it. liz: kamala harris flip-flopping. watch her say this. >> once and for all, do you believe private insurance should be eliminated in this country. >> i don't. the question was would you
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>> well, first of all, you need very thorough investigation before you move forward with impeachment, but for me personally, impeachment isn't enough. it isn't about one person, it's about the ring around the president. many of them looters. many of them, in my opinion, treasonous to this country. paul manafort being one of them. and already over six individuals have been convicted. some are trying to work out deals but we really need to remove the corruption and we need to remove those who are supporting the enemies of liberty. i really think that's what's at stake in this election that's coming up. >> you say -- you say in the election. are you drawing a distinction there saying the way to get the president out of office, the way to address these issues is through an election and not through impeachment? >> well, i don't know whether the committees have jurisdiction will have completed their work. you know the administration's been withholding information and it's been hard to get the evidence that the is necessary to move forward with the proper findings. so words are el chacheap, but wu move forward with an impeachment effort inside the house where it will start, you have to make sure that all of your information is locked down, and, frankly, it's not secret that this administration has held back information repeatedly. all the individuals, whether it's michael flynn, whether it's michael cohen, whether it's paul manafort, i don't care which one you pick, they lied and they withheld evidence, they did not tell the truth, and so you're not working with an administration or the ring around the president who have been forthcoming. it makes it very, very difficult. and justice meets out slowly. but i believe that it needs to meet out methodically. >> do you -- >> and this ring goes well beyond the president. >> okay. but on the question of the president, you've read the mueller report, i assume. do you believe based on your reading of the mueller report that the president committed obstruction of justice? >> i cannot tell from the mueller report because there are so many redacted pages. it appears to me that the president, he doesn't look like he's innocent. he looks like he's trying to feed the publicity around his own situation. what would it matter to him? he has most everything in the world that he wants, almost. and for his own reputation to give us the information that we want. so he's withholding evidence. >> okay. but you say you can't tell -- you're saying -- you're citing redactions here. does the mueller report leave open in your possibility -- leave open in your mind, excuse me, the possibility that the president committed obstruction of justice? >> oh, absolutely. >> okay. so why not have -- i guess the question i'm trying to put together what you're saying here. if you've read the report, you think the report doesn't answer all the questions and the question exists in your mind of obstruction of justice possibly being committed by the president. is that not grounds to go forward with an impeachment investigation? >> well, i think investigations are occurring. we have some excellent committees, actually six of them. i'm not on those committees, but they are i believe going over to the white house this week trying to obtain information that we need. the law isn't like a very quick insta breakfast. the law takes time and we have to pin down facts and we have to get the information in order to do that. so politically it's easy to say, oh, we're going to do this. and -- but to actually have the evidence in hand so that you can do proper hearings and so forth, that's what the committees are seeking. they're working very hard to do that. >> the argument, and i guess my question to you then is do you disagree with this? the argument has been made that by convening a formal impeachment inquiry, having a formal process under way that the power to seek the kind of information you're talking about getting is increased beyond what democrats and members of congress enjoy right now. >> they haven't convinced me of that. >> all right. congresswoman marcie kaptur, not signing off on impeachment right now. appreciate you taking a few minutes. >> thank you very much. >>> all right. and coming up, we're going to go live to dayton, ohio. that's where chris matthews is holding a special "deciders" town hall. dayton located in a county that went for obama then it went for trump. how are those voters feeling a couple of years into this presidency? 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would they vote for trump again in 2020? well, chris matthews joins us now from dayton, ohio. chris, really looking forward to this event. let me ask you, that's the bottom line question, has anybody's mind either way where you are changed in the last couple of years? >> well, steve, we'll find out that tonight, and i think that as you all know, all the polling you've looked at, about 80% to 90% of republicans have held true to trump. the democrats don't have unanimity like that behind anybody, so they're going to eventually have to make a choice between whoever the democrats cook up and trump again. and we don't know that until we see it, until they see it. but what i'm trying to do tonight is get the attitude about trump. does it bother them that he's vulgar, that he doesn't tell the truth, that he has a character problem, he makes fun of people's physical appearance, he makes nicknames up. does it bother them that his foreign policy seems to make no sense or is it just about us against them? they don't like the democratic or republican establishments. they still don't like them. and the same reasons they voted against them last time they'll do it again. i think that's the open question. i hope it's going to be wild tonight. i think it will. there is a lot of anger out there on both sides. >> you did one of these in pennsylvania a few weeks ago. it was gripping television. i don't care what side of the aisle you're on. you really did have a look there in this room. you're probably going to have the same thing tonight, from what i understand, of the conversation that america is really having in -- maybe we don't always see on tells. television. >> yeah because we live in our own bubbles. if you live in washington, d.c., you're probably surrounded by a lot of liberals, intellectuals well-educated people wealth a point of view. they have no problem with big government. they like big government. they like all the liberal programs. they're pro-choice. they like trade. they don't have any problem with immigration. you get outside that bubble, you get into another bubble where people are very angry about immigration, very angry about the trade situation with china and they want to see something done and they want it to be a little rougher, their politics. so i think we're going to bring those two bubbles together and see them pop. >> you know, it's interesting, you mentioned trade out there. we keep seeing these polls that joe biden supposedly the best positioned democrat to take out trump, especially in a place like ohio. this the -- put it on the screen there. this is the trump internal data. they got biden apparently up by a point there in ohio. but on trade biden, isn't he ultimately as vulnerable as clinton was on that? when you talk about nafta, when you talk about these big trade deals? >> well, certainly because, i mean, tpp was probably for that. he was definitely for nafta. all the democrats were pretty much pro-trade, at least at the top back in the '90s. to clintons, all of them were pro-nafta. hillary i don't think was pro-nafta. she turned against tpp eventually. sherrod brown is probably better fixed to represent this state as a senator. he's a very tough guy on trade, as we know. bobby casey in pennsylvania. the rust belt states, if you will, they're represented by democrats, debbie stabenow, who are very tough on the trade issue. they're more attuned than maybe biden. i bet biden switches on this. if he wants to stick with the -- rather, get the working class voter, the working person out here, the woman and the man, depend on trade to change to start picking up some of this industrial market, he's going to have to shift as well. >> you know, you guys on the ground there were talking to some voters in dayton. let me just play a clip of this. some of the voters there about the president's behavior, his conduct in office versus his performance on the economy. take a listen. >> people don't like exactly how he goes about doing it, but he -- that's trump. whether you like it or not. but the bottom line, he's getting things done. >> economically, for me, it seems to be, like, 100% better. >> you know, if i would want a preacher up in the white house, i would have voted a preacher guy in. >> i thought that comment from the second gentleman there saying economically things feel 100% different. what's your sense on the ground? how widespread is the feeling on the ground in their everyday lives that there is a measurable difference now to three years ago? >> well, we're going to hear that tonight. we're going to hear -- as soon as we do the show tonight. what i'm seeing in the numbers is that this county, for example, is about, you know -- the state's about $1 more an hour. so it's not a lot. it's $1 more an hour since trump took over in terms of wages. the unemployment rate, however, has been dramatically cut down to about a point statewide. about two points in this county. so people -- there are jobs out there. they're not good-paying jobs in many cases. so the progress of the wage per hour hasn't been able to keep up with the stock market or with -- or with the general unemployment rate situation. so we're going to hear a lot of anecdotal information. i might ask the question could anyone raise 400 bucks if they needed it in an emergency. ask people if they're all just living paycheck-to-paycheck and really hanging on by their fingertips economically. i expect we're going to hear different cases. not everybody is doing the same. >> chris matthews out there in dayton, ohio. 10:00 eastern tonight. "the deciders." you're not going to want to miss this one. trust me. thank you, chris. >>> coming up, we'll turn to the democrats. new polls show shifting fortunes for the democratic contenders ahead of that all-important first primary debate right here on msnbc. keir going to go inside the numbers next. you're watching "hardball." here are even more reasons to join t-mobile. 1. do you like netflix? sure you do. that's why it's on us. 2. unlimited data. use as much as you want, when you want. 3. no surprises on your bill. taxes and fees included. still think you have a better deal? bring in your discount, and we'll match it. that's right. t-mobile will match your discount. when crabe stronger...strong, with new nicorette coated ice mint. layered with flavor... it's the first and only coated nicotine lozenge. for an amazing taste... ...that outlasts your craving. new nicorette ice mint. the good news? our comfort lasts all day. the bad news? so does his energy. new depend® fit-flex underwear offers your best comfort and protection guaranteed. because, perfect or not, life's better when you're in it. be there with depend®. tthe bad news? ouyour patience might not.ay. new depend® fit-flex underwear offers your best comfort and protection guaranteed. because, perfect or not, life's better when you're in it. be there with depend®. >>> all right. welcome back to "hardball." well, next week middle of next week they are all going to be on staging to. well, not quite actually. it's two stages. two nights. ten candidates a night. 20 candidates for president. the democratic race. how does the democratic race stand heading into that debate next week? well, some brand-new polling we can take you through here. first of all, here is a national poll. national democratic race. this was the fox news poll out this weekend. and, again, it shows you this is kind of the holding pattern, i think, heading into the first debate. joe biden over 30%. clearly in the lead. clearly the front-runner. not overwhelming in a way we've seen with some in the past, but certainly he has created separation since getting into the race. the question, of course, then becomes, how is he going to perform? the spotlight of that debate and the spotlight that's going to come after that. biden has only been campaigning kind of intermittently. think that's going to pick up after the debate. this is sort of where he starts. let's see what happens once he takes the stage. bernie sanders, the runner-up in 2016, a distant second in this poll and a jumble of other candidates who have moved up giving chase to sanders. they're all trying to stand out, obviously, in this debate. one of the interesting divides we've seen, continues to be the case, i'll show you on the democratic side. the divide around age. this is the overall number. folks under 45 years old. biden leads but barely. 21% for biden. look at that. sanders right behind him, 18%. this is folks under 45 years old. completely different campaign. completely different election when you flip it around to over 45. look at biden's support. it explodes. it doubles. he goes from 21% to 42% people over 45 years old. sanders, his is practically cut in half. he goes from 18% and right on biden's heels all the way back to 10%, losing to him more than 4 to 1. a lot of democratic voters over 45 years old. there are a lot of voters who are over 45 years old. we don't always talk about them, but that's been one of the sources of strength joe biden's had and one of the reasons he's the front-runner now. it's the strength particularly from older voters. we also got the readout from key early caucus states. iowa, biden continuing to lead now. there is sanders, remember, 2016, sanders came close in iowa. almost knocked off hillary clinton. all of a sudden you see elizabeth warren getting some traction now in iowa. double digits for her. buttigieg at 11% in iowa. how about new hampshire? similar number for biden there. interesting number to keep an eye on as the new hampshire race unfolds. sanders and warren both neighbors. vermont next door to new hampshire, massachusetts as well. interesting thing to keep an eye on. we see south carolina. able is one of biden's sources of strength early on. look at the lead he's got in the poll. we've seen other polls in south carolina that have him significantly ahead and the big reason is that joe biden in south carolina and nationally so far has been doing substantially better with black voters than with white voters. it's been a big source of strength for him. south carolina, the democratic primary electorate is more than 50%, more than 60% in 2016 african-american. biden right now continues to run very well with the african-american voters. it's why he's ahead so much in this south carolina poll and it's another reason why he has that lead going into the debate nationally. so that's where things stand right now, but obviously when they get on that stage everything subject to change. we will see. several of the democratic contenders took part in a major event today focused on poverty and inequality. we've got a live report from the poor people's campaign presidential forum coming up. you're watching "hardball." there are roadside attractions. and then there's our world-famous on-road attraction. the 2019 glc. lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benzrcedes-benz. the best or nothing. when crabe stronger...strong, with new nicorette coated ice mint. layered with flavor... it's the first and only coated nicotine lozenge. for an amazing taste... ...that outlasts your craving. new nicorette ice mint. pnc bank has technology to help a pnc business line of credit, because sometimes inner peace requires a little external soundproofing. or pnc total auto. a place online to easily find and finance the right car for you. and your passengers. or pnc home insight, to search for a new house within your budget. hopefully with a grass yard. pnc - make today the day. at panera, our salads with peak-season berries... creamy avocado... and a dressing fit for a goddess. come taste what a salad should be. and order online for delivery right to you. panera. food as it should be. when you start with a better that's no way to treat a dog... ...you can do no wrong. where did you learn that? 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maybe you should think again. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy and the power of 1 2 3. ♪trelegy 1-2-3 save at trelegy.com >>> on the eve of his supposed fictional campaign launch, the president in strikingly authoritarian language threatened a mass roundup of immigrants in this country. quote, next week i.c.e. will begin the process of removing the millions of illegal aliens who have illicitly found their way into the u.s. they will be removed as fast as they come in. while it's a largely inflated threat, i.c.e. does not have the capacity to expel millions of people, at least in the short-term, trump has absolutely made good on his promise to make life truly miserable for hundreds of thousands, if not millions of immigrants, like the 4-month-old romanian boy the trump administration snatched from his father's arms, sending the family into a nosedive, inflicting untold suffering or the men held outdoors for more than 30 days without a shower or change of clothes in nearly 100-degree weather, or the hundreds of desperate migrants being exposed to diseases in the growing camp detention system the president sex panneding at every turn. the president understands this is what he promised and this is what his base wants to see. joining me now, journalist andrea pitzer. she is author of one long night, a history of global concentration camps. also with me the staff writer of the atlantic who wrote last year when it comes to it, cruelty is the point. we've got the president with this boastful threat that he is going to round up thousands of people. the president in florida take a bath in the adulation of his base. what is going on with the camp system right now? >> well, what we're seeing is this ramp-up. and the rhetoric is now starting to match things on the ground. it's clear we should have taken them literally and seriously, because they're sort of jamming an already faltering system. it already had a lot of problems, prior administrations own a piece of this, but trump and miller i would say are really sticking a fork everywhere they can. so the system is breaking down. even people on the ground who may be want to do a good job are unable to carry it out in any effective way. with this announcement he is going to be deporting millions, even if he can't do that, even if it's impossible, it's going to tax an already overloaded system. you're going to see more mental health crises, more health crises. we see riots, all kinds of things that just aren't planned for, and there is no good solution to them. >> there is also the fact that it doesn't strike me as an accident that this is the day before. he is sort of boasting of this the day before he is doing his sort of pretend relaunch. the crowd a few minutes ago reportedly chanting "lock her up." the desire to see other people behind bars in prison, detained is kind been a core part of the message from the beginning. >> well, look, the fact that the emotional stress that this causes the population being targeted is actually more important the trump than actually carrying it out. because by announcing it, he has actually undermined i.c.e.'s ability to carry out the task at hand, but he has scared the crap out of a lot of people who in many cases, their only crime is being here without authorization. and so it is actually very clear that hurting those people emotionally or scaring them or frightening them is of more importance to the president than actually carrying out the task that he set for himself, which is getting them all out of the country. >> you know, there is this sort of controversy erupted today. alexandria ocasio-cortez referred to them concentration camps. republicans were saying they were outraged by the term. your book is a history of concentration camps. you're qualified to weigh in on this. what do you say? >> i would say that for 40 years before auschwitz, we had concentration camps, things that were called concentration camps. what we're doing now fits very cleanly inside that tradition. at the same time, the death camps, which were on top of the existing concentration camp system, including auschwitz and a series of other camps in which you had gas chambers, mass killings, that is a singular moment in history. and for the people who want to respect that, i think that's fine and that's important. if we want to call it irregular detention, if we want to call it extrajudicial detention, i don't think we have to get stuck on that term. i wrote a history of the term. i had to use that term. and what i would really like people to know is the same thing is happening here now. >> what is the motivating logic, and adam, i'll come back to you about the sort of political underbelly. the motivating logic here, talk about those examples before the nazis. detention of some subgroup in some camp setting where things start to go awry. what is the motivating political logic that we've seen there? >> it's escape goat group is often the genesis of that. it explains a problem in the country or in the region, and you push it on to a group of vulnerable people that you can label as somehow infecting society, a national security threat to a society. maybe it's in wartime. maybe it's not. we've sort of done inject aguiar setting to the border. this is not a national security crisis. >> right. >> this is a humanitarian crisis. but we're using the language of war to detain civilians. so this is really mixing things up in a very dangerous way. >> we should also say, adam, today the president came to orlando. yesterday he threatened to round up millions of people. and today some of his supporters are marching through the streets. i want to show this video. these are folks that belong to a group, sort of white nationalist group. they call themselves western shoe chauvinists. >> they're just white nationalists. it's a ridiculous term. >> i agree. these are a flashing white nationalist symbols in their trump hats going to the rally the day after the president says he is going to round people up while expanding a system of detention for tens of thousands of immigrants. what do you think of that? >> well, look, i think that there -- these segments of society that have committed themselves to the ideals of white nationalism clearly believe that trump is on their side. in some cases he doesn't go as far as they would like, but the other thing is that, you know, as far as his own constituency is concerned, it is very much to them a matter of him keeping his promises to display ostentatiously that he is hurting particular populations the way that he said he would is to them keeping his promise. because that's what they wanted to see. and so i think, you know, even though it's undermining his own policy, what he wants is the approval from his base that comes from showing them that he is hurting the people he is supposed to be hurting. >> yeah, i saw a profile on a right wing talk yad row host today who has turnwed away from trump because he has not punished them enough. thank you. >>> how to cut through the noise ahead. and tonight's thing 1, thing 2 is next. when crabe stronger...strong, with new nicorette coated ice mint. layered with flavor... it's the first and only coated nicotine lozenge. for an amazing taste... ...that outlasts your craving. new nicorette ice mint. here are even more reasons to join t-mobile. 1. do you like netflix? sure you do. that's why it's on us. 2. unlimited data. use as much as you want, when you want. 3. no surprises on your bill. taxes and fees included. still think you have a better deal? bring in your discount, and we'll match it. that's right. t-mobile will match your discount. what's going on? it's the 3pm slump. should have had a p3. oh yeah. should have had a p3. need energy? get p3. with a mix of meat, cheese and nuts. ♪work so hard give it everything you got♪ ♪strength of a lioness tough as a knot♪ ♪rocking the stage and we're never gonna stop♪ ♪all strength, no sweat... just in case you forgot♪ ♪all strength, no sweat... ♪no no no sweat... has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. >>> thing 1 tonight is donald trump kicks off his campaign for a second term, you have to wonder will he drain the swamp this time? it's funny, because obviously he's done the complete opposite. do you remember kelly kraft? she is the wife of a kentucky coal baron who was a huge donor to the trump campaign, and now she is ambassador to canada. >> you probably as part of your job work and talk a lot with justin trudeau, the very handsome canadian prime minister who everybody swoons over in america. what's he like? is he as charming in real life as he seems on television? >> he is. he is very charming. he is very smart. he is all about the canadians. he reminds me a lot of the president as he really looks after the working class people here. >> as tempting as it must be to spend time with the dreamy prime minister, it turns out kelly kraft has often been absent on her post. she made 158 flights back and forth on her private jet according to records obtained by politico, trips that sometimes begin sided with events she attended like the derby. what do you do with an employee that doesn't show up for work? with the trump administration, you promote them. and that's thing 2 in 60 seconds. seconds. lease the 2019 nx 300 for $359/month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. has four levels of defenseremium gasoagainst gunk, wear, corrosion and friction. that helps keep your engine running like new. it's fuel for thought. at panera, our salads with peak-season berries... creamy avocado... and a dressing fit for a goddess. come taste what a salad should be. and order online for delivery right to you. panera. food as it should be. the ♪exus es... ...every curve, every innovation, every feeling... ...a product of mastery. lease the 2019 es 350 for $379/month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. >>> so we haven't had a permanent ambassador to the u.n. for nearly six months, though it's hard to keep track of the things we haven't had since nikki haley left at the end of last year. heath heather naur withdrew after having zero qualifications. apparently the next best person on the lift was kelly craft, major trump donor and current part-time ambassador to canada. she was formally nominated to the post in may. is finally set to face the senate for her confirmation hearing tomorrow where she is expected to get some tough questions about her tenure in ottawa and her husband's business. now, if you're hoping for a new u.n. ambassador who might work with the global community on something like, i don't know, the future of the planet, well, i'm sorry to report that you're out of luck. >> do you yourself believe in climate change? >> i believe there are signs on both sides that are accurate. >> you believe that there are scientist -- science that proves that man is not causing climate change? >> i think that both sides, they have their own results from their studies, and i appreciate and i respect both sides of the science. >> okay. you make time... when you can. but sometimes life gets in the way, and that stubborn fat just won't go away. coolsculpting takes you further. a non-surgical treatment that targets, freezes, and eliminates treated fat cells, for good. discuss coolsculpting with your doctor. some common side-effects include temporary numbness, discomfort, and swelling. don't imagine results, see them. coolsculpting, take yourself further. has four levels of defenseremium gasoagainst gunk, wear, corrosion and friction. that helps keep your engine running like new. it's fuel for thought. when crabe stronger...strong, with new nicorette coated ice mint. layered with flavor... it's the first and only coated nicotine lozenge. for an amazing taste... ...that outlasts your craving. new nicorette ice mint. before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, marie could only imagine enjoying freshly squeezed orange juice. now no fruit is forbidden. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? >>> number of congressional democrats who openly support impeachment grows more or less every day, but there is significant internal dissent in the party about pursuing it. perhaps that's not surprising. it is, after all, one of the most consequential actions the house can take, a process that's only been started three times in the entire history of the country. it's resulted in impeachment twice, but never in the removal of a president. now, we talk a lot about the two most recent presidents. there is bill clinton in 1998 and richard nixon in 1974. but i think there is a good argument that some of the closest parallels are actually with the first president to face impeachment, andrew johnson. johnson was a racist scoundrel, ho wholly unfit pour the office he held. but his political opponents of the time wrestled with whether that was enough for impeachment. in other words, can you impeach a president for being completely awful? for betraying his fundamental oath to the country and its constitution, or do you need to catch him in the act of violating specific statute? in this week's "why is it happening?" i talked with brenda wineapple who wrote a great new account of johnson's impeachment and what light it can shed on today. you can get it wherever you get your podcasts. podcasts. there are roadside attractions. and then there's our world-famous on-road attraction. the 2019 glc. lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz or nothing. here's how to enjoy our huge aussie steakhouse dinner. first, get your choice of soup or salad. then choose an entrée like our center-cut sirloin. add not one, but two amazing sides. and top it off with dessert. this aussie abundance starts at just $14.99. hurry in now! doctor bob, what should i take for back pain? before you take anything, i recommend applying topical relievers first. salonpas lidocaine patch blocks pain receptors for effective, non-addictive relief. salonpas lidocaine. patch, roll-on or cream. hisamitsu. your daily dashboard from fidelity. a visual snapshot of your investments. key portfolio events. all in one place. because when it's decision time... you need decision tech. only from fidelity. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. ♪ ♪ ♪ >>> on the day the president is in orlando to formally r
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[ applause ] >> playing like a vocal barbie person. and then i got "glow", and we started wrestling training, so i had been like an apologizing mouse indoor person all my life. and all of a sudden i was leading the life of an alpha barbie who believes in herself, who's busy, and the craziest thing happen. i would get up at 3:30 in the morning, do wrestling training and go to the set of "masters of sex", do more wrestling training and i was planning my wedding also and i was terrified of getting injured so i was going to this physical therapist who was like if tony soprano and kourtney kardashian had a baby. >> jimmy: she was not good? >> she had her thing. but so i was basically working 18 hour days every day, and this seemed fake, and it really happened. i was on her table the week before "glow" was slated to start shooting, lying on this woman's table, "kortney soprano", and my shoulder started to do this chipmunk on a trampoline thing, i was not meaning to do that, it's fine, it's fine. i got on the highway and it turned into like dad at a rage. like a muscle spasm, drunk aunt on a cruise ship. >> jimmy: really? >> it was the craziest thing. and i wasn't controlling it. i'm in traffic and people are like, and then i went home to like the place i was staying. i live in new york. i was shooting in l.a., okay, my dream's supposed to come true next week, but i think this will certainly go away. and i went to the hospital, and they were out of, like the first doctor that i saw, his face turned totally white. he was like, will you wait one moment? and he came back with ten medical students who are all like oh, my god! >> jimmy: they were videotaping? >> i'm happy to be part of the research. so my dream's coming true. and i just like need this to stop. and they were out of beds at the er, so they put me in the hallway, and there was this muscle spasm that happened where i was lying back and my arm went up like that and people kept coming around the hallway and going oh. and i was like, no, no, i think it's a psychological thing. i'm learning to believe in myself because my dream is coming true, my childhood stuff. it will be gone next week. my dream's coming true. >> jimmy: how long did it stay with you? >> six days. >> jimmy: six days! >> it's crazy. >> jimmy: and it just stopped? >> it seems so fake i feel like there are some actresses who are like, yeah, when i eat almonds i get a rash, you're like, that's not real. it seems, it seems not real. and i kept being to all my friends, i would send videos, look, this is real, you have to believe me. why would you make that up? and i shot a day on "masters of sex" like with this happening and i would have to be like, would you have to cut? it's happening they're like, what's happening? this, this. it was so insane. and i don't, to fix it, i went on yelp, and i found, you know, a witch. >> jimmy: what do you mean a witch? >> a witch. >> jimmy: you searched "witch"? >> no, well, i'd been to many doctors, like physical, actual doctors, and they're like, i don't know, that will be $500. and i was like, cool, health care system. so i, she didn't bill herself as a witch. she was like a massage therapist, but the second i met her, i was like, "you witch." >> jimmy: did the witch help? >> she did. i mean i walked in. the apartment was like hoarders to the max. i was like, whatever, fine. just help me. she was like, hey, so you know, i have a cat. he never comes out. the second i lay down this cat was like boom, on my chest, stared into my eyes with what i can only describe as morgan freeman realness. i was like. okay, here we go. and the witch was like, i think your inner child is trying to tell you something. so i was like, you're crazy, all right, let's talk to her. like i've already mo'd you. >> jimmy: you talked to your inner child? >> we talked to my inner child and let her know she was safe. and the muscle spasm stopped. i don't know if it was snake oil, but we tell yourselves things, we do weird ways of protecting ourselves. >> jimmy: especially you. >> yeah, yeah. and then three days later i started "glow." >> jimmy: miraculous. and now you've got this new movie called "stuber". >> yeah. yeah. >> jimmy: and a wrestler whose secrets you are presentiotectin. i'm glad you've stopped shaking. >> jimmy: betty gilpin! "stuber" opens in theatres july 12th and we'll return with music from santana. ♪ >> dicky: the "jimmy kimmel live" concert series is presented by mercedes-benzting on hold. what we don't like is relying on fancy technology for help. snail mail! we were invited to a y2k party... uh, didn't that happen, like, 20 years ago? oh, look, karolyn, we've got a mathematician on our hands! check it out! now you can schedule a callback or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'd rather not. >> dicky: the "jimmy kimmel live" concert series is presented by mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. >> jimmy: thanks for watching. a new episode of "jimmy kimmel live" with joel mchale, betty gilpin, and more sound "nightline" is next, but first, this is their album "africa speaks." here with the song "breaking down the door," with help from santana! ♪ ♪ tina was no deceiver few were inclined to believe her ♪ ♪ aba tina ohh who you have there breaking down the door ♪ ♪ she was lucky to marry a rich rich man handsome like harry ♪ ♪ aba tina ohh who you have there breaking down the door ♪ ♪ harry was a
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.or nothing. when it comes to reducing the evsugar in your family's diet,m. coke, dr pepper and pepsi hear you. we're working together to do just that. bringing you more great tasting beverages with less sugar or no sugar at all. smaller portion sizes, clear calorie labels and reminders to think balance. because we know mom wants what's best. more beverage choices, smaller portions, less sugar. balanceus.org [inaudible conversations] >> president trump who is facing criticism for lighthearted warning that he gave to president vladimir putin at the g20s summit in japan but jimmy carter not taking interference lightly. here is what he had to say earlier. >> i think the interference quantifies, it would show trumped didn't win the election in 2016, he lost the election and he was put in office because of russians interference. on his behalf. >> to believe president trump is an illegitimate president? [laughter] based on what i just said, i cannot recite. >> while. >> there is a greater tha
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.iciary committee up in arms at the former presidential advisor, hope hicks, today refused to answer the questions related to her time in the white house. >> you have the white house serving absolute immunity which is not a thing it doesn't exist and you have to ask the questions, what are they trying to -- >> an ongoing effort to prevent the american people from knowing the full truth. lou: [laughter] your really concern for them aren't you? the president has just tweeted this. quote so so the democrats are pretty wonderful hope hicks through hell for three years now after total exoneration by robert mueller and the mueller report, they were unhappy with the result. so they want a do over. very unfair and costly for her, will it ever end? radical house speaker pelosi today shrugged off suggestions from her own party. congress should censure president trump. >> i think sensor is a way out. if you're going to go you have to go. if the goods are there you must impeach. and sensor is nice
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.n rental that led to the ride ♪ which took them to the place where they discovered that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. ♪ flights, hotels, cars, activities, vacation rentals. expedia. everything you need to go. expedia. the latest inisn't just a store.ty it's a save more with a new kind of wireless network store. it's a look what your wifi can do now store. a get your questions answered by awesome experts store. it's a now there's one store that connects your life like never before store. the xfinity store is here. and it's simple, easy, awesome. ashley: it is that time of year, he guess what, heat building across the plains and expanding towards the east. cheryl: oh, boy. here we go. senior meteorologist janice dean live in the fox weather center with the forecast. good morning, janice. janice: feeling like summertime. take a look at the temperatures. 10 to 1 15 degrees above avera. a lot of 90s on the map, with the humidity it will feel warmer than that. take all
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.own from the bachelor now detailing her battle with a mysterious illness after traveling to the dominican republic. she is on the mend, but she says she felt ill with a fever and major stomach pains after a family vacation to the caribbean hot spot. trace gallagher is live from our newsroom with the story. >> anyone who follows melissa knows she prides herself on her health and fitness, a former dallas cowboys cheerleader and as you said she won season 13 on the bachelor come a few years ago she went down to the dominican republic and state ate resort, on our second day, she had an upset stomach but it quickly passed and she went on to say how much fun she had even posting on social media that she made memories of a lifetime, but when she got home she said she had severe cramping and was miserable for days, last friday she went to the doctor and posted this, "after a rough week i have been put on a liquid diet and given medication for my severe cramping. fingers crossed this goes away
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.witter is implementing a new policy to flag tweets from political figures that they say violate the code of contact, this comes after president trump told us this week that the social media site is biased against conservatives. >> totally biased for democrats, if i announce tomorrow that i'll become a nice liberal democrat i would pick up five times more followers. i was picking up 100,000 followers every few days. and all of a sudden, i am much harder now -- >> he says it's all democrats. is the president right? will this be a policy that unfairly targets him and other republicans when it comes to the court upon duct and violating the platform rules on trolling and bullying? >> no it will not unfairly target him and republicans, that is utter nonsense, by the way, twitter loves donald trump, donald trump has been very, very good to twitter. will it target him, yes. when he breaks the rules, if the shoe fits and he's a bully in a troll which he frequently is then he'll be punished. but
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz., i appreciate the invite here. as my broker, what am i paying you to manage my money? it's racquetball time. (thumps) ugh! carl, does your firm offer a satisfaction guarantee? like schwab does. guarantee? (splash) carl, can you remind me what you've invested my money in? it's complicated. are you asking enough questions about the way your wealth is being managed? if not, talk to schwab. a modern approach to wealth management. lou: it seems like every night we learn more and more about the deep state efforts to overthrow president trump. it has been cover the atlantic council digital forensic research lab has connections to the firm ground strike, the very same firm that found evidence of russians hacking the d&c so it is alleged, and an allegation that the fbi without its own inspection of the servers, accepted. and who sits by the randy atlantic council international advisory board. there would be former director, national intelligence, james klapper. what a neat little tight bunch t
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.raving it... doordash has the restaurants you want. delivered to your door. wherever your door happens to be. download doordash. the most restaurants across america. first order, $0 delivery fee. i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. hey, who are you? oh, hey jeff, i'm a car thief... what?! i'm here to steal your car because, well, that's my job. what? what?? what?! (laughing) what?? what?! what?! [crash] what?! haha, it happens. and if you've got cut-rate car insurance, paying for this could feel like getting robbed twice. so get allstate... and be better protected from mayhem... >> stephen: their new album, "turn off the news; build a garden," came out on friday. here performing "bad case," please welcome lukas nelson and promise of the real! ( cheers and applause ) ( cheers and applause ) ♪ you have the want ♪ ♪ ♪ you have the want but not the need ♪ you want the f
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benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. >>> you'll find out. you'll find out. wil you'll find out. obviously you know we're not going to be talking too much about it. you'll find out. they made a very big mistake. neil: that was first alerted on wire services so when we got that comment before we went to the so-called press conference the president was having with the president of canada, in response to questions about whether there could be a trigger-happy general involved, not a directive from iran, that someone just took action on their own, it eased concerns that something powerful or imminent or even disastrous was in the offing and the market has since recouped on those losses. we are up about 141 points on the dow. but there are a lot of options on the table right now. we are getting word the administration is looking at a briefing for reporters at 3:00 p.m. to address this and other issues, all about iran. hillary vaughn with the latest on capitol hill. reporter: we have be taen talki to republican and democratic senators all morning who are all very concerned about this drone strike that occurred over the strait of hormuz earlier. bottom line is that both sides want to avoid all-out war with iran. the president making comments on this moments ago about the drone strike calling it a big mistake. >> i find it hard to believe it was intentional, if you want to know the truth. i think that it could have been somebody who was stupid that did it. we will be able to report back and you'll understand exactly what happened but it was a very foolish move. that i can tell you. reporter: iran says the drone was intruding on their territory. that's why they shot it down. the foreign minister of iran tweeting this, also moments ago, quote, the u.s. wages economic terrorism on iran, has conducted covert action against us and now encroaches on our territory. we don't seek war but we will zealously defend our skies, land and waters. we will take this new aggression to u.n., show that the u.s. is lying about international waters but a spokesperson for the u.s. central command says iran claiming the drone was in their territory are completely false and that this was a quote, unprovoked attack on a u.s. surveillance asset in international air space. republican senator lindsey graham saying on his way out of a classified briefing moments ago that we are one day closer to war than we were yesterday. >> i think it's a dangerous situation. high tension wires are up in the region. we have to be strong and strategic about how we protect our interests. we also cannot be reckless in what we do. >> you need to tell the iranians that if they increase their enrichment program for uranium, that would be a provocative act toward the united states and israel, and all bets are off, and put in place the military capability to go after their naval forces and their refineries. reporter: there will be a meeting in the situation room at the white house between both house and senate leadership at 3:00 p.m. this afternoon. neil? neil: hillary, thank you very much. let's get the read on all this. kansas republican congressman with us. congressman, the president did seem to offer a potential out for the iranians by saying it could have been a trigger-happy general, that someone did something stupid. what do you think of that? >> well, listen, obviously kinetic action in the region is troublesome but what we really need to see is their enriched uranium program. if they continue to enrich uranium, that will be a direct threat to our allies, to israel and netanyahu is not going to let that go unnoticed. also another worrisome action would be if they would continue to bomb tankers in the region, particularly allies of ours. but one thing that's good, the market did respond to this, but we are insulated in part by the fact that we are a net energy exporter, one of the world's leading producers of oil and gas. we have doubled it since 2008 and we anticipate 50% increase in the next ten years. so we are well positioned in terms of energy. they are trying to destabilize the region in that regard, but we are looking good and also we are well positioned militarily. we have the "uss abraham lincoln" and amphibious troops in the area, we have b-52 bombers, f-35s and a host of other things we can't talk about. neil: you know, congressman, today in a case of curious timing, the senate rejected this arms deal the president wants out of saudi arabia. four republicans at a minimum joining the 47 democrats against it. that's a big repudiation to the president. what did you make of it? >> well, it's a complex relationship between us and saudi arabia. obviously, they are no friend of iran's and neither are we, but you know, the situation in the area, it's tough. they are bad, iran is worse. we are talking about iran being the leading state sponsor of terrorism, they spend over $1 billion on terrorism each year, they have been taking swipes at us for many decades and those have been largely unresponded to. i stand by the president. neil: all right. thank you very, very much. congressman watkins, beautiful state of kansas. >>> meanwhile, stocks were originally dipping after the first comments from the president concerning iran. it eased back as we got more nuance to that. the president, for example, blaming this drone attack maybe on a general that was trigger-happy or some loose nervous hands. not getting the okay from tehran. there's no way of knowing but it did offer the iranians possibly a way out of this. that's my quick interpretation and likely very, very wrong. i want to go to steve moore, meanwhile. he has been following economic and other developments, not so much obsessed with these market turns. if you don't mind going outside your normal purview, if you want to dismiss this you are more than entitled. you know the president very well. you know he's a pretty good negotiator, that he might be trying to offer iran an out of this crisis to sort of de-agitate it. what do you think of that? >> i think that's exactly right. this guy, i always tell people if you want to understand donald trump, you have to read his book "the art of the deal." he uses leverage, knows he has leverage over iran and i think that's exactly what he's doing, trying to provide iran with some sort of out short of military action. neil: it is interesting that just the threat of things escalating with iran has taken a lot of steam out of the market today that was buoyed by the prospect of lower interest rates, maybe a trade deal with the chinese. so it's a reminder that something like this, like iran, could upset all of that, right? >> it sure is. any time you have a foreign policy crisis or some kind of military action, the stock market reacts almost instantaneously. you're right, we sweat over these things like whether that is going to, you know, raise or lower interest rates by a quarter percentage point or this jobs report or that report but sometimes a major, you know, international incident, i'm not saying this is necessarily a major one, you know, can have, you know, a much bigger impact than a lot of these things we sort about every single day. neil: you're also a good student of market history and economic history but you know what's kind of interesting, any other time you had heard talk that iranians shot down a u.s. drone, manned or unmanned, it would have buffeted world markets. now, barely a blink. what do you make of that? >> i make of it that there's just a fundamental strength in the american economy and that means businesses are doing well, they are profitable, you know, that's still the mother's milk of the stock market. it's profits. and businesses are doing well right now. now, of course, you know, when you have, as you said, if you have an international incident which can disrupt business, then that reduces profits but i think it's just a testimony to how solid this economy is. neil: the president has been making a lot of jerome powell lately, might be pleased with the fact he seems to indicate the next move will be a cut in rates, but -- >> can i just interrupt you there? i saw the president yesterday, because as you know, i was privileged to be over there with art laffer when you won the presidential medal of honor in the oval office. i chatted with the president for just a minute or two. he's not pleased with jerome powell. he wanted a rate cut. i want a rate cut as well. neil: that's interesting. this was after the fed made its decision which was no decision for the time being, but hinting of one to come. so he's still not pleased with him? >> well, i would say he's agitated. he thinks and i think there's a lot of truth to this, that he's created this booming economy and it needs the dollar liquidity to keep it going and that jerome powell isn't with the program on that. so yeah, there is a sense of -- that he doesn't get, you know, what he's trying to do, that he's increased the supply of goods and services, that he's frustrated that, you know, every time we get wage increases, or every time we get, you know, an increase in employment, somehow the fed feels like it has to pull it back. i'm with him on that. why? why do you have to do that? you should be looking at the inflation rate, i have said this many times on your show, show me, show me the inflation in the economy because i just don't see it right now. now, where i differ a little bit from the president, he would like to see a pretty big rate cut. i would like to see a quarter point. i wish they had cut by a quarter point yesterday. neil: we will see what happens in july. we have the ten-year now under 2%. those are three-year lows. >> yeah, but that's actually an indication that, you know, if investors were worried about inflation, you would think -- neil: you're right about that, but it's also a reflection that maybe they are worried about more than just that. maybe they have moved on, forget inflation, we are worried about this economy, you know, going south. right? >> i don't think -- i don't see it. i mean, i think, i mean, i just don't see any kind of slowdown. i'm a little worried about the china trade situation, but you know, you get that thing resolved, i think there's a decent chance that happens, it's going to be very liberating. neil: he will need to cut interest rates in that environment. >> no, no, see, that's the point. okay. neil: hoping to catch you. >> no. growth does not cause inflation. that's my message. neil: you were fast on your feet. thank you very much. good seeing you again. >> thank you, neil. neil: steve moore. meantime, you hard a lot about slack making its public debut, this corporate messaging service. i'm oversimplifying it. but it is the holy roar today. gerri willis with the latest from the big board. gerri: hey, neil. that's right. slack coming public down here. take a look at this. they are up some 58%. that's what they call volatile but in a good way. the stock doing very well indeed. they are the second successful direct listing down here on the floor of the new york stock exchange. so what is a direct listing? well, there's no pesky investment banker interference. there's no road show, road show the line of buyers. there's no offering price and you don't make money, you don't like bring in a lot of capital with your ipo. so the big question here, why would a company go public that way if you're not getting money? well, we spoke to stacy cunningham, president of the new york stock exchange, about this. here's what she had to say. >> there are a number of reasons why companies go public. first, it's access to capital. two, it's branding and visibility so they can attract new investors. and new customers, frankly. three, it's that liquidity that provides their investors and their employees the ability to trade the shares they already own. then four, it's a currency so they can engage in m & a. gerri: so lots of reasons you would go public as a private company and clearly the people at the stock exchange would like to do more of these, now that they have two under their belt. let me take you back to spotify, the first direct listing that was successful here on the board of the new york stock exchange. the reference price on that, $132. the first day it was $149. its first trade, $165. so think about that delta in that stock. a major move. that's the take-away here. these direct listings are very volatile. they can really move around. so far, the movement is in a positive direction. but we will cover it for the rest of the day and make sure that stays the same. back to you. neil: gerri, thank you very much. gerri willis following that. the volatility can happen no matter how you debut, you know. so many offerings that came to the market whipsawed all over the map. best way to look at direct listings, i like to call it a financial democratizing of these type of events. sort of like if you want to sell your house without a broker. you are confident enough that your house can sell, you save obviously on the commission, and in this case commissions run as high as 7%, 8%, 9%, if you deal with underwriters and bankers and you know that crowd. they have all got their hands in your pockets. no one has anyone's hands in anyone's pockets here. it is pure, it is simple, and for these guys, it's a reminder that they can save a lot of money, like you selling a house and keeping every penny you got for it. more after this. hmm. exactly. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. nice. but, uh... what's up with your... partner? not again. limu that's your reflection. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ can we talk? we used to play so beautifully together. now we can barely play anything... even cards with the girls. if you have bent fingers, and can't lay your hand flat, talk to your doctor. it may be dupuytren's contracture. your hand is talking. isn't it time you listened? there are nonsurgical options. take the first step. and learn more about dupuytren's. at factsonhand.com ♪ hey! i live on my own now! i've got xfinity, because i like to live life in the fast lane. unlike my parents. you rambling about xfinity again? you're so cute when you get excited... anyways... i've got their app right here, i can troubleshoot. i can schedule a time for them to call me back, it's great! you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. neil: the pentagon releasing video a little while ago that shows the iranians shooting down this unmanned u.s. drone. the president has tried to provide maybe a little bit of potential wiggle room for the north koreans to say that it was an errant idea, this did not come directly from iran, this might have been someone there on site, little trigger-happy, a general, you name it, but that this was not the original intent of the country of iran. no word back from iran on this. we do know more meetings or summits are planned throughout the day to talk about what the u.s.'s next options are. we will keep you posted. we do know the oil markets are a little jittery on this, even if stocks are not. decidedly contained, so that can tell you something. >>> meanwhile, president xi jinping in north korea today, meeting with his counterpart, kim jong-un, and all of this about a week before he sits down with the president of the united states. "after the bell's" connell mcshane in beijing with the latest. connell: you know, we spent a lot of time this week speaking to company officials, government officials. today, we went out and spoke to some of the people here in china to get their sense of whether or not they're looking forward to that big meeting you mentioned between president trump and president xi to take place at the g20 in japan, and the sense that we got from the people here is that they are really looking for a trade deal to be signed sooner rather than later, and you know, most people relatively optimistic or hopeful about the g20 summit. hoorps here's a sampling. are you optimistic, are you worried? do you think there will be an agreement between the countries? >> actually, i'm thinking [ inaudible ]. connell: you think it's important to have an agreement with the united states? >> of course, yes, because united states is number one largest for the economy and china is number two, and if they are fighting each other, there will be damage to global trading. connell: that last man you heard from is actually in the import/export business, he was telling me. he does see some impact from the trade war in his business. for the most part, we found that the average person we were speaking to on the street was telling us that they don't see a day-to-day impact from the trade tensions with the united states, but many of them are worried about what the future might hold. just one quick example for you, speaking to a college student earlier in the week, you know, about this and got into the huawei back-and-forth and the u.s. crackdown on that company, and he said the reason he was worried about that is that huawei's such a big employer here, especially for people majoring in engineering and whathave you, he was worried that maybe if huawei is in trouble, they wouldn't come to the college campuses and recruit as heavily for young people like him. so when people have a personal interest in it, they see the impact or the potential impact but on a day-to-day basis, very few people see themselves feeling any pain just yet. but they are looking forward to this summit. everybody knew what was going on and they are looking forward to seeing what happens in japan next week. neil: you can literally see they are engaged. thank you very much. connell mcshane. >>> all right. he follows trade very closely, talking about lee speakerman. he says it's very important to keep in mind whatever deal we get is enforceable and we can prove the chinese are making good on what they say they are going to do. he joins us right now. lee, good to have you. >> great to be with you, as always. neil: now, it looks like something is cooking, we don't know how far along, we have been disappointed before. you are in the camp a bad deal is not better than no deal. no deal, if it even hints of that. what do you want to see? >> let me put it this way. if we had an adversary that wanted to weaken the united states and their plan was to do that, what better way than to destroy millions of our manufacturing jobs, implode our middle class incomes and ravage our inner cities? that's exactly what's happened since china entered the world trade organization in 2001. it has destroyed american jobs and incomes. they now have and have had for years a $400 billion goods trade surplus with the united states. we have a $400 billion goods trade deficit with them. $460 billion trade deficit with china overall. neil, that is twice, more than twice china's entire defense budget. so they are swimming in an ocean of money from the united states that they are using to fund their military adventurism, to fund the research they are doing to overtake the united states as the world's technology leader, to fund their new colonialism which is the massive lending they're doing to developing countries around the world to exact control and have leverage over them and undermine the united states and our allies. we cannot allow this to continue and when president trump meets with president xi in japan, i hope he keeps in mind that this is an adversary and that the trade strategy, the nefarious trade strategy china has been employing and continues to employ has got to be stopped and frankly, i think tariffs, not agreements, are the key to doing that. neil: the flipside for americans is they will pay a lot more for stuff. might not be the 25% more that a lot of businesses will eat a lot of that, but they can't eat the whole thing. i don't think americans are ready for that. maybe they should be given a heads-up. >> well, they're not ready for more than 10% of our middle class to have evaporated over the past 30 years during this importing and offshoring orgy that we've had driven by -- neil: you think middle class -- it's in their interest to make sure -- >> you bet. you bet. you bet it's affected them. because what's happened, we have hollowed out our manufacturing base, deindustrialized our inner cities and wonder why -- neil: if you agree on that premise, say you are right on that, we can bicker on that, but do you think the president should be giving the american people a heads-up, you might agree with him tariffs are beautiful things and all that, but people pay them and i think a lot of people to this day have no idea for whatever reason this goes into effect, they are going to pay for them. maybe justifiably to make a statement and to deal with it, but they don't know what's coming. should someone give them a heads-up? >> neil, if we americanize american manufacturing, if we re-d re-domesticate our supply chain, it will create an upsurge in american jobs and incomes. we are right now almost in a disinflation in this country and throughout the developed world. they are worried that the prices are not rising fast enough in this country. we don't have to worry about inflation. what we have to worry about is middle income americans have stagnant or declining real incomes over the past 20 years. the overwhelming reason for that is the deindustrialization of america caused by horrific trade deals that have been made which has also decimated the africa nc african-american middle class. that was the ladder to the middle class to african-americans who fled the jim crow south after world war ii. because of deindustrialization, we decimated our inner cities and decimated so many other millions of jobs around the country and imploded american incomes. when you have this leakage of incomes, when people can source goods in china for $5 an hour, workers making $5 an hour or less, that has a tremendously deleterious effect on american workers. how can american workers bargain for fair wages and get their recompense when they are competing with that? it's atrocious. it has to be stopped. neil: you are assuming a trade deal with china is going to do that. but we'll see. all right. we'll see. >> a deal won't do it. i think it won't do it. i agree with you. china cheats. china cheats. unfortunately. the only way we are going to deal with that is with a permanent tariff at least 15% on all imported goods from china. that would raise billions of dollars for our country -- neil: we shall see, lee. always good chatting with you. always good seeing you. agree or disagree, never disagreeable. >>> in the meantime, now the fbi is getting involved in the deaths of the americans in the dominican republic and testing things out. after this. what do you look for when you trade? i want free access to research. yep, td ameritrade's got that. free access to every platform. yeah, that too. i don't want any trade minimums. yeah, i totally agree, they don't have any of those. i want to know what i'm paying upfront. yes, absolutely. do you just say yes to everything? hm. well i say no to kale. mm. yeah, they say if you blanch it it's better, but that seems like a lot of work. no hidden fees. no platform fees. no trade minimums. and yes, it's all at one low price. td ameritrade. ♪ who used expedia to book the vacation rental that led to the ride ♪ which took them to the place where they discovered that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. ♪ flights, hotels, cars, activities, vacation rentals. expedia. everything you need to go. i come face-to-face with a lot of behinds. so i know there's a big need for new gas-x maximum strength. it relieves pressure, bloating and discomfort fast. so no one needs to know you've got gas. gas-x. so no one needs to this is something bigger.. [ "movin on up" by primal scream ] that is big. not as big as that. sure that's big. that's bigger. big. bigger. big. bigger. big. but that's bigger. wow, big. so much bigger. this is big. but that's...well, you got this. neil: all right. now you've got congress, you've got the fbi and who knows who else investigating these dominican republic deaths. fox business's deirdre bolton on more. deirdre: nine americans are dead, numerous others have fallen very ill, but the state department has not issued an elevated travel advisory for the dominican republic. congressman frank pallone thinks the u.s.'s position should be re-evaluated. yesterday he wrote a letter to secretary of state mike pompeo, fbi director christopher wray. he also tweeted this out. you will see it on your screen. i'm extremely saddened by the deaths of nine americans in the dominican republic. he goes on to talk about one of the victims who is, in fact, from his particular district in new jersey. the fbi as we know is working with local authorities to investigate any similarities between the deaths, the state department says it could take up to a month to receive results from any toxicology analysis. officials in the d.r. are downplaying the deaths. one ministry of public health spokesperson told fox news that linking the deaths and illnesses amounted to fake news. the country's minister says the cases were isolated and that the autopsy reports for the nine deceased tourists showed that they died of natural causes. he said there is hysteria against the dominican republic to hurt their tourism. he says the testing of food, alcohol, air is all normal and with the tourists that they get every year, he said they must comply with international standards for everything and they do. the government officials there have been using a hash tag be fair with d.r. on social media. this is so important to their country. tourism is 17% of its economy. back to you. neil: thank you very, very much. deirdre bolton. meanwhile, slack going public today. didn't go the traditional ipo route. that's why it's getting even more scrutiny than normal. to the "wall street journal" capital markets reporter maureen farrell. so much attention on this direct listing gambit of theirs, but it appears to be paying off. what do you think? >> it seems like it. it was a really solid open. we see the number tick higher and keep on going up from there. so far, so good. neil: if you are an investment banker or an underwriter, you've got to be quaking in your boots a little bit, right? >> definitely. looks like relatively, looks like 2 for 2. we saw spotify went very well, slack went really well. this does cut a lot of banks out of the process. and lowers fees a lot. neil: i'm wondering, too, given some of the bumpier ipos that were not of this type, that maybe that was an impetus for this, and that others are going to think more about going public like this. what do you think? >> it definitely seems like a lot of companies are looking at it, especially, there are a lot of companies that look like slack. not exactly, but software companies, but they are a similar business model, a lot more than look like spotify. i think a lot of smaller ones are watching this, companies that don't need money. that's the real distinction between direct listing and ipo. you're not raising money. but there are companies that want to be public and don't need the money right now. i think they are watching and as you said, we have seen some very bumpy rides with uber and lyft and even in the opposite direction, when a stock goes up 90% and a company sells at that lower price, they have lost out. neil: i do wonder, though, obviously a company like slack which had a track record of over ten million users and corporations around the world, you can make the point that they could risk this, but a lot of companies not so well known, this is not a good idea, right? how does that play out? >> i think it's a really fair point you make. people know them, their financials were really good. they're known enough. some of the companies that i think people say in retrospect could have done it, maybe zoom, they didn't really need the money, crowdstrike, we have seen that go up so high. but the question is, they're not quite as big and well-known. so it will be interesting who is willing to take the gamble next, because there are risks. there's a lot of unknowns here. you don't know whether there are buyers or sellers. those are all big questions. neil: yeah. very much so. maureen, a pleasure talking with you, getting educated on this. maureen farrell. >>> we told you about billionaire investor jeffrey gundlach. he can envision president trump bowing out of the presidential race. how likely is that? after this. has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. ♪ ♪ there are roadside attractions. and then there's our world-famous on-road attraction. the 2019 glc. lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benzou're smart,eat you already knew that. but it's also great for finding the perfect used car. you'll see what a fair price is and you can connect with a truecar certified dealer. now you're even smarter. this is truecar. is where people first gathered to form the stock exchangeee, which brought people together to invest in all the things that move us forward. every day, invesco combines ideas with technology, data with inspiration, investors with solutions. because the possibilities of life and investing are greater when we come together. ♪ >>> do you think the president will get re-elected? >> it depends on the economy. i'm not even sure he's going to really run. if the economy goes into recession and he can't pull it out by removing the tariffs, there's very little for him to run on. neil: let's say he's running. it started yesterday. you think in that case he might pull out? >> well, lyndon johnson ran for awhile, too, then pulled out because of the war problem. neil: all right. bill
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.ir clients cookie cutter portfolios. fisher investments tailors portfolios to your goals and needs. some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions whether you do well or not. fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. connell: protecting intellectual property has been a big issue in united states in dealing whether china, what are they saying here about it. what about intellectual property property is that a red line issue. >> it's not. the chinese government established invasion through strategy, strengthening ip pro checprotect lawn and law enforct has been our policies, we revising the copyright law, they are in the right direction of our reform. connell: you say those laws have always been your policy, u.s. would argue otherwise, s
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lease the glc 300 suv for just $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz.u might or joints.hing for your heart... but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally discovered in jellyfish, prevagen has been shown in clinical trials to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. lou: sort of a boring day on wall street. the stocks closed mixed. volume on the big board 2.2 billion shares. crude oil closing flat. gold and silver flat. a reminder to listen to my reports three times a day coast to coast on the salem network. president trump meeting with g20 leaders. a topic of discussion, iranian threats in the strait of hormuz. >> iran is in a much more desperate situation they have ever been in. this is the first president in 39 years who has conducted an economic campaign that is clearly working. lou: the president will meet with the leaders of brazil, russia, japan, and india. pastor robert jeffress is among our guests tomorrow. thanks for being with us. good night from new york. trish: the 2020 democrats going fu
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