joey, we are going to have some fun, too. >> as we get ready to spring forward, this is the last time to change our clocks is what they want. >> america into lockdown. one year ago today president trump declared a national emergency the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. >> unleash full power of the federal government today, i am officially declaring a national emergency. two very big words. stop the spread of the virus and help all americans who have been impacted by this and this will pass. this will pass through and we are going to be even stronger for it. >> we have endured months of mask wearing, social distancing and isolation at home away from our loved ones. the pandemic taking a huge toll on our economy, keeping businesses closed and our kids keeping the doors shut on america's schools. we've endured a lot and we are longer foot and now america is beginning to reopen. this month, 13 states announced a significant rollback of statewide restrictions and faxing distributions ramping up, too. 100 million doses administered and 35 million americans are fully vaccinated. the president says millions more will be vaccinated sooner than expected. >> too many national, just like we saw during world war ii. now because all the work we've done, we'll have enough vaccine supply for all adults in america by the end of may. if we do all this, if we do our part, we do this together, by july the fourth, there's a good chance you, your families and friends will be able to get together in your backyard or neighborhood and have a cookout barbecue and celebrate independence day. >> one year later, who would have thought that we would face? so many lives lost. 22 million jobs lost in just march and april alone. i remember you and i were here at the fox headquarters when this began, we are talking in the green room about prayer and how we get through this. where do you think we are, your reflections one year later? are you ever coming back to new york city? [laughter] >> hopefully not. i looked florida. obviously heartbreak for anyone who's lost a loved one over the past few months. i can't believe suffering that kind of loss, i have colleagues who have suffered loss as well but there's no reason the american people should have had pain inflicted upon them economically as well as isolation so many have had to endure for the past few months by the government we are down here in the united states of america and president biden laid out there in the primetime speech everyone listened to. when he said maybe, just maybe if you are good little girls and boys, maybe you can spend time with your family on independence day, no less when we celebrate our independence from tierney. the democrat vision for america and all the while places like florida have been free. businesses have been open and schools open and even if you look among the most vulnerable populations, seniors have 20% less deaths in california and 50% less deaths in new york. also, knowing florida has one of the highest elderly populations in the country. still has those numbers so we should reopen america, be free and people should exercise common sense and spend time with your family and loved ones and go about be an american and be free speech is there is definitely a reason why people in new york fly down to florida for the weekend. joey, 100 million americans received at least first dose of the vaccine. biden says by may 1 we will all be eligible but there is still confusion about what we will be able to actually do. from the president, then a warning, there might be restrictions on the way. let's play that. >> in the coming weeks we will issue further guidance on what you can and cannot do once fully vaccinated. to lessen the confusion, people safe and encourage more people to get vaccinated. if we don't stay vigilant, the conditions change, we may have to reinstate restrictions and get back on track. please, you don't want to do that again. we've made so much progress. aishah: joey, that sounds really deflating, doesn't it? joey: the white house much less the rest of the country. i live in georgia and we had a rough election season. are you going to come down here and lock me up in my house but it doesn't work that way. businesses have been open. you know what we have done? local communities have taken precautions we feel we need to take and live our lives. almost guilty because i haven't experienced a lockdown, my some of my funds, leaving new york over a lot of reasons, this being one in going to florida but georgia is not on the list of opening back up because we never close down. aishah: charlie, the president is getting slammed all over the place for not giving any credit to the trump administration, which really opened up the pathway for these shot to get into our arms for these incredible vaccines. his torque was happened. talk to me about that. charlie: i think it's a good point, the one thing joe biden said that i think was right that was strange and disconnected, he talked about americans are capable of doing world war ii type efforts to address a crisis. i think absolutely, we seen it across the country and we've seen the sacrifices people have made especially frontline health workers made to combat this illness. the problem, the real huge problem we are all talking about is the degree to which so many politicians in washington saw this crisis and saw opportunity to use it as a political weapon against donald trump against republicans and people. it is just a ploy and i think about how many of my neighbors and like joey, i leave and seven virginia for the lockdowns haven't been as severe and people are doing a lot of normal things and being cautious and considerate of people who are more at risk but my goodness, they're willing to take on any sacrifice to do anything but the idea you have politicians who want to politicize something to score political points or get power or whatever, it is disheartening and i think that in a lot of ways, is even more troubling than aspects of the lockdowns themselves. aishah: lisa, joey, i know you are living in a completely different world than me. [laughter] what does the new normal look like? do we go back to the normal we know or is there a new normal? you think we are still wearing masks a year from now? lisa: sorry, joey -- you can go ahead. joey: some people wear masks, the difference, are we a culture who starts shaming people over this? we have heard immunity and people have vaccines, are we going to treat people differently because i don't have a mask on? where i come from, we look at you funny if you're 10 feet away and have a mask on and that's the normal we have to figure out. >> this is america, we have to go back to normal, our way of life. even with children suffering mental health crisis here in the u.s., not having human contact or being able to be with loved ones, that's no way to live life. there's no reason we cannot exercise common sense in the united states. if you have loved ones in the vulnerable population if not vaccinated, be careful when you visit them, get tested, quarantine people are visiting. we can all be smart but we have to go back to living our lives and being free and embracing everything that makes this country so great and differentiate from places like china and north korea. aishah: my nephews are happy to be back in school. okay, still ahead, surge of migrants heading to the u.s. but the biden administration still will not call it a crisis. next, a look at how the president plans for dealing with influx of immigrants coming to our country. ♪♪ ♪♪ [ sigh ] not gonna happen. that's it. i'm calling kohler about their walk-in bath. my name is ken. how may i help you? hi, i'm calling about kohler's walk-in bath. excellent! happy to help. huh? hold one moment please... [ finger snaps ] hmm. ♪ ♪ the kohler walk-in bath features an extra-wide opening and a low step-in at three inches, which is 25 to 60% lower than some leading competitors. the bath fills and drains quickly, while the heated seat soothes your back, neck and shoulders. kohler is an expert in bathing, so you can count on a deep soaking experience. are you seeing this? the kohler walk-in bath comes with fully adjustable hydrotherapy jets and our exclusive bubblemassage. everything is installed in as little as a day by a kohler-certified installer. and it's made by kohler- america's leading plumbing brand. we need this bath. yes. yes you do. a kohler walk-in bath provides independence with peace of mind. call... to receive one-thousand dollars off your kohler walk-in bath. and right now we're offering no payments for eighteen months. welcome back. big saturday show. biden administration facing an overwhelming number of migrants of the southern border while scrambling to construct new facilities to house children cross into the u.s. meantime, agents the rio grande valley center in texas are encountering 1500 migrants a day. fox news obtained exclusive photos of a temporary outdoor processing site in mission, texas. still, white house officials refused to call the major influx of migrants a crisis. >> do believe there's a crisis of the border? >> i'm not going to put labels on it from the podium but it's a priority of the administration. >> you believe right now is a crisis of the border? >> the answer is no. i think there's a challenge of the border that we are managing. [inaudible] >> is it a crisis of the border? >> we don't need to sit here and put labels on what we have already conveyed is challenging. >> come on. let's go. >> lisa, when you see footage like that, i'm reminded of the beginning of the pandemic, democrats spent so much time talking about what do we call the virus instead of trying to do something about the virus. what you think of washington's response to this crisis right now? lisa: only in washington d.c. can politicians create an entirely predictable crisis and not go to it and admit the crisis and be like i'm not really sure why this is going on. i will tell you why, mr. president. you got rid of the policy which was incredibly successful. you issued a 100 day moratorium on deportation and you outlined an amnesty bill without border security so that's why this is happening, it's the same reason why the obama administration had a crisis in 2014, unaccompanied migrant children because you had policies being put forward like daca and migrant children were telling customs and border patrol agents they were coming because of the new laws happening in the united states so that's why this is happening. we can stop it but the biden administration clearly doesn't want to. >> you would think that might be obvious to them and it does raise questions about the degree to which maybe they are trying to politicize the problem instead of trying to fix it, but that's washington for you. talking about all of the efforts the american people have made over the past year, sacrifices to deal with covid, one of the most alarming part of this crisis the situation where you have federal government isn't even testing migrants across the border, you have sheriff's doing testing but a lot of the testing is completely useless because even if migrants are tested, they test positive, they are just released into the country, they get on the bus or go wherever. how does washington square that with all the sacrifices american citizens are making to combat the crisis? aishah: i think everyone can agree can turn into a dangerous situation for everyone involved including the migrants and families of children coming in. i am an immigrant, i came to this country when i was six years old and i remember it like it was yesterday. of course i'd want all hopes and dreams and successes i've enjoyed for anyone else who wants to come to this country, to. our entire process was a long one, nine years long start to finish and couldn't even apply for citizenship until we lived here five years but i want to say when it comes to asylum, we can't wait nine years, it's a completely different story. i want to bring up, i thought this was an interesting point, the national border patrol council president, he said look when it comes to asylum, let's open up court and hire judges, hire the staff and get the system up and running so the d.o.j. can finally figure out who who need help, immediate help and who can wait in a different country, mexico or different country and who can wait for the process because not everyone can do we need to figure out who can. >> absolutely. joey, i think of all of the police officers in our country, the troops who go out and risk their lives every day to enforce our laws and sovereignty and then look at the crisis of the border and marvel at it and i admire the fact that they do continue to get up everyday and risk their lives for this but is this what they are fighting for? joey: what bothers me, it bothers me personally and politically, 78% hispanic and georgia, we wouldn't have carpet in the country or world if it weren't for those meals mills. when we talk about safety and security for everyone involved, two people in my family have been severe auto accident for an illegal immigrant hit them and ran away, they weren't part of our system, they didn't have license or takes on education or training. people can't live in the shadows and become part of the riches and prosperity of the country. if you are in charge and send smoke signals to bring people into this country and teleporters are open before you do the hard work of putting resources where they need to be such as opening up asylum ports and having resources for border patrol to vaccinate or at least test people before they get here, that's irresponsible and you're not doing it to make their lives better, you're doing it to win a narrative or maybe because armed man's bad, i don't know. [laughter] charlie: let's not forget, so many want to come here because we believe in equal justice under law and that begins at the border so it's an important issue, it's not going away. next, new york governor andrew cuomo wrapped in a blanket and growing scandals as more than 160 lawmakers are calling for the democrat to resign. will he call it quits? next. ♪♪ i did not do what has been alleged. people know the difference between playing politics, vowing to cancel culture and the truth. would you proceed, i'm not going to resign. >> welcome back to the big saturday show. andrew cuomo refusing to step down even after seven women have come forward accusing them of sexual harassment. now his own party turned on him with senators chuck schumer and kiersten gillibrand writing those calls for his resignation along with aoc. he's maintaining innocent but by the look of this photo, it might beginning, quite the photo. charlie, i'm going to start with you. the pressure seems insurmountable right now for governor cuomo but you live in a state governor ralph either was caught either dressing and black base or clansmen and lieutenant governor faced sexual harassment allegations, neither have stepped down. >> it is incredible. one of the first things you learn covering politics in washington, shamelessness is like a superhero cloak for them. get out of just about anything but it's amazing to look at the situation where you look at everything new yorkers have been through by this guy over the past year. look at the decisions he's made, governor cuomo made about the nursing homes, demonstrably led to the deaths of thousands of seniors in new york. i'm a big believer that voters forgive politicians for making honest mistakes but when you do things like this and write a book about leadership and refuse to admit your mistakes and deploy allies to combat truth and concealed the truth, voters have a high time hard time with all about. it's amazing to look at all that cuomo has done over the past year end sounds like he is a real creep and he should be thrown out or get thrown out of office by voters but it's the think that this his the threshold, killing thousands of seniors is not. aishah: joey, about that, it blows my mind in the backdrop where you have women who allegedly have had these things happen to them, you have 15000 deaths at least, elderly new yorkers at the hands of failed policies and trying to cover it up. meanwhile, he writes a book in the middle of the pandemic touting his leadership. it doesn't get more sociopathic than that. joey: we need to take a break and listen to black people are saying. even the people saying we need to get to the investigation and due process, always start by saying you know he's a bully and the reason why he's never jail, he threatens people and pushes back and puts them in quarters. i'm old enough to remember when it hit line, operated and threatened, a state legislature over the nursing homes, pressing for that so absolutely these are appalling things. due process is important, i don't disagree at all but you are just not leading anymore, your fighting for your self-preservation. do the right thing, which i don't know if that happens anymore, he would have a fighting chance of getting through this. >> was he ever leading? we seen public calls from the senators of schumer and gillibrand calling on him to resign. is that just lip service or they are behind the scenes trying to put pressure on him to resign? what you know about that? aishah: it's interesting, lisa, the latest development that happened that's surprising supporters of it, the senate democrats, state democrats launched this impeachment investigation of their own. as you know, there's already an investigation underway by the attorney general who's capable of doing this but now we have this parallel investigation and wondering why that's happening. a lot of people believe it's happening because the speaker here and democrats, some don't know what to do, don't want him impeached and perhaps are trying to buy time or look like they are doing something select one thing going on. reporters, while we are trying to catch our breath because there's something new, feels like every day, we are also trying to get into the governor's psyche here. we have an ambitious man and i think the question is, is correct. what happened to him, he's obviously trying to hang on. it's practically over tries to hang on by a thread, my question is, what allies does he have left? now you have people like schumer and gillibrand who have pretty much put into black and white ink they no longer support him so what does he really have left if he doesn't step down? that the question, i don't think he's just going to go summer and sit on a rock with the rest of his life. it's incredibly ambitious and i'd love to get into his head, what is he planning next? lisa: you are going to need a large cocktail after that. andrew cuomo, before you got to go, charlie, where does this go? you think governor cuomo steps down or do you think he ends up impeached or neither? charlie: i mean, given the display of shamelessness so far, i kind of doubt it but this is a problem with politicians. when politicians think they are indispensable of the world cannot continue to revolve without them, usually you have a huge problem on your hands. lisa: all right, moving along. because for most money for police departments in the pacific northwest, portland sees rampant nonviolence and spike in homicides. seattle's officers take longer to respond to priority calls to defunding police backfiring? stay with us. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ welcome back to the big saturday show. joey jones and charlie hurt, aisha hussey and lisa booth. back fire into pacific northwest cities. what was mayor looking to refund police with $2 million, homicide spike. this is the city was robbed by violent thursday when they smashed windows and set fires near the federal courthouse. in the meantime, seattle's police chief warned city lawmakers of a staffing crisis as they consider slashing nearly five and half million dollars from the department budget this year. >> the best way to drive hiring is stop the budget. my concern is if we don't change course, the staffing losses will continue and have a staffing crisis beyond mitigation. the work has not changed in 200 officers deployed to the work. >> i remember when we are told storm troopers coming in was the wrong optic and we shouldn't have, we shouldn't review these people. are these people protesting or terrorists imposing their will on cities around the country? aishah: the weather is about to get warmer and we are probably likely to see these protests come back like we saw them last year but seattle is a police staffing problem wasn't just last year end have a problem with staffing for some time. i remember in 2018 seattle pd was actively recruiting other cities like indianapolis, they put billboards up in indianapolis and indiana i remember that. police department was facing a staffing shortage. the truth always comes out in the numbers, reporters look to the truth is always there. twenty homicides so far already in portland compared to one for the same time last year. 600 thousand people living in the city. whether it's going to happen during election year or now but at some point, city leaders and the mayor will have to have a come to jesus moment what the to do with their police department in all of this moving forward. 600,000 people live here, too, they have families to raise and lives to live. they are going to speak up in one way or another. >> charlie, i'm all about conservatism but if you are going to flash a budget, five and a half million dollars into a city that may be on fire, don't you think there are maybe other places we can get money from and keep police moving forward? charlie: like maybe, that would be the last thing he would cut. i can think of all sorts of things i cut before that but joey, you and i both live in a part of the world where we are our own 911, our neighbors are our own 911. when you stop and think about who's paying the heaviest price for these politics and measures, it's the same people, democrats claim to be representing the claim to care about. those people are the ones paying the steepest prices. i was struck yesterday by the announcement of george floyd's family, a settlement of $20 million and my first question about that, how much of that other going to give it to the business owners who lost their businesses? how much of that are they going to spend and invest in those neighborhoods that got absolutely destroyed by this? they are now very wealthy people. i hope they look around their neighborhoods and see lots of opportunities to invest in their neighborhoods and bring some of that back because they are not the only ones who suffer a grievous injustice here. lost lives and innocent people also suffered. >> i got to visit seattle 2019 in vancouver and go to a cruise to alaska and it was a beautiful city. it was a trip of a lifetime and i was so happy to be part of it. new york city, lisa, down to florida, do we have to worry about them disappearing as we know them? can we recover? are we just leaving them out to dry? businesses burning with the ground and we are just supposed to pity them? i don't understand what we are supposed to do. lisa: the cities have been hit from different angles. you have the coronavirus and government response to shutting down so many businesses and making the people suffer as a result and you also have increased crime and so many places so for dual purposes, a lot of folks are fleeing places like new york city. it blows my mind how much policy is common sense yet so many politicians can't seem to do it. you look at seattle, portland, oregon and hand over cities to criminals. you look at seattle, they are seated blocks of seattle to black lives matter and antifa and seemed shocked there are murders and bad things happening when police weren't around. look at portland, oregon, every night is essentially a war zone with antifa and there have been multiple times were you have antifa locking people are trying to burn down federal courthouse with people actually in it but it's something we don't talk about as much of the country, you don't hear the same calls from democrats on capitol hill expressing concerns that people are trying to break in the federal courthouse and set it on fire with federal agents in it. >> i know there are probably more hippies in the pacific northwest but i think americans want to live in peace. i just feel for these people in portland and seattle. they want their culture and they don't deserve this. nobody in this country deserves for their businesses to be set on fire every night but will move on. it's an issue that can unite republicans and democrats and i guarantee you will be thinking about tomorrow morning. we'll tell you what is right after the break. ♪♪ ♪♪ welcome back to the big saturday show. most americans will spring forward this weekend and adjust clocks for daylight saving time, bipartisan group of senators want to make it the last clock change ever. senator marco rubio has been leading the charge for a while. here's what he said last year. >> we are going to lose an hour of sleep and everybody's going to be upset, it done. there's no reason to keep doing it. >> joey jones agrees. he tweeted in january's president, first nonserious executive order would be to end daylight savings time. is this the issue to finally unite a divided nation? joey, i think it's a great platform to run for president on. [laughter] could i be your campaign manager? give us an elevator pitch for why you should be president on this platform. joey: listen, i live in hawaii, i've deployed most of the time there but when i was there, i never knew what time i was on in relation to anyone else anyway so we have all these time zones around the world especially around the country, why confuse people more? his the producers more honest, i've missed segment on the network because i was in mountain time and thought i was in central time so why should we do this to people? we have to acknowledge we can read our clocks and leave the clock alone and enjoy our lives. charlie: it's definitely a government conspiracy to confuse us all. when you look back at the past year, nothing i think is more important for people then fresh air. fresh air is more abundant if you scrap daylight saving time. what do you think? aishah: i'd like to know, somebody eliminate me. i want to know why this started in the first place. i think it has to do -- farmers? maybe even kids at the bus stop waiting for the bus, to darken the money? i think we need to re- analyze why we need it in the first place. in short their health benefits but i'm all about change if people are frustrated, let's change it. if we can, maybe with this new normal we are getting ready to reenter into society, but talk about a three day weekend maybe. add that to the discussion. [laughter] charlie: i'd sign up for that. i voice believed in daylight saving, it's like your tax refund day, a government conspiracy designed to make people like april 15. they get the check back and think it's great, i love taxes when no, you're not getting money, exactly, they just let you have your money back after taking it from you and made money off it. what you think. lisa: i don't have as strong of feelings of some of my friends here on this panel but i am glad our phones change automatically because i don't know about you all but i changed my, i forget to change my microwave and oven clocks, i'd be in so much trouble if our phones didn't change automatically. i did find an interesting nugget. apparently a guy who originated this idea in 1895 george hudson, from new zealand and the reason why he came up with this, he wanted more sunshine for after work to go bug hunting. [laughter] i thought that was interesting. also, what is bug hunting? not fun, i don't think. [laughter] charlie: you are the problem, lisa. it's always the search because it's because the phones switch automatically you are like who cares? i'll go along with government conspiracy because my iphone does it for me, that is the problem. that's the camel's nose under the tank. lisa: tracking all my movements and spying on me. [laughter] charlie: by the way, i do think included in fresh air is currently bug hunting, i am probe bug hunting, all children should the kind, whatever it is, ants, frogs, lightning bugs, whatever. >> i think we should go out and do that right now. another platform to run on. >> more time to go hunting, i don't know about bug hunting but more time to go hunting, i'm down for that. charlie: don't get me wrong, i am in favor of bigger game, too. anyway, the president bidens to german shepherds sent to the doghouse after one of them apparently someone at the white house. next, a look at some of the livestock and even reptiles that cost 1600 pennsylvania avenue. ♪♪ who let the dogs out? ♪ who let the dogs out? ♪ ng what's right, not what's easy. so when a hailstorm hit, usaa reached out before he could even inspect the damage. that's how you do it right. usaa insurance is made just the way martin's family needs it with hassle-free claims, he got paid before his neighbor even got started. because doing right by our members, that's what's right. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. ♪ usaa ♪ i'm jayson tatum. check out my subway sub with delicious turkey and crispy bacon. i'm draymond green. with my subway sub with tender steak and melty cheese. my sub will help you put points on the board, unlike some other subs. why would you say that, jayson? 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today is a good day for the cat i don't have an update on the cat the cat will break the internet but i don't have any update on its status. >> i'm definitely a cats person. sore dog lovers i love dogs too but only had a cat in my life so easy to take care of you can kind of they go to bathroom by themselves they leave you alone. joey what do you make of this i guess faux pas job the dogs are sent back to delaware what do you think happened? >> puns apundit. >> dogs are good judge of character and why was hillary clinton at the white house that's what i want to know. >> i want to bring up all -- i want to bring up previous first pets and this is a very interesting lip if we can bring up so, obviously, barack obama had beau werm him and ms. beezley and baron knee clintons had boots there's beau -- and then it gets kind of weird. the further back you get it is like people didn't know how to have pets or didn't have pets but jfk had a horse. macaroni, nixon had a dog and then ping there was a alligator and eagle, and a parrot somewhere in there where is weirdest pets that you have had? >> although eagle would be kind of cool so that's -- that's pretty -- but the kind of stay so daily beast did a pet psychic and talked to major and champ. i'm serious she talked to major and champ so i'm wondering how she missed this. >> seriously. i think we need to call up the -- white house psych psychic. >> in the article the interview of this lady. >> i have an inside scoop on this story. >> go ahead. go ahead -- i have to tell them. truly, the puns keep coming. that's really good. no, you know, i'm in favor of all animals i've gone up with strangest pets we were an earthy family growing up i remember sneaking baby squirrels into church with us and back of the church so having to bottle feed them in our suit jacket. we've always had very strange animal proanimal i think all animals should be in the white house my problem is, though -- because politicians destroy everything. it is when they trot the animals out to get them out of trouble. or to present them as a shiny object to distract from whatever crisis they have created. i think that that is truly inhumane where is sbca that's why the white house is talking about the cat. because they don't want to talk about all of the crises that's what they do that's what politician dos. they ruin even pets. >> all right your point really quickly. >> listen, i visited the white house back in i believe it was 2011 and talk about beau is like a poodle looking dog and nighs my wheelchair and i didn't have legs yet so i ran over beau's tail and i found a big chunk of his hair in my wheelchair spoke -- so of course i kept it. >> where is it? >> i'll have to look for it. at least in a folder, i think, and yeah. but that's a family heirloom right there. >> secret service -- is coming out. j you know what's hilarious media covered joe biden adopt these dogs as somehow like they, you know, sainthood right and donald trump was actually sold a middle east -- and barely got any attention. >> all right. all right we have to go. that's it for us here at the big saturday show. make sure you tune in tomorrow 5:00 again eastern time "fox report" with jon scott starts right now. border officials say the surge of migrant children is worse than previously reported. and with resources already stretched thin, pressure is growing on president biden to get a handle on the humanitarian and political crisis. good evening i'm jon scott and this is the "fox report." ♪ ♪ jon: according to cuss ton and border protection of the 100,000 migrants who tried to enter the u.s. illegally last month 30,000 were unaccompany children. with government shelters already overwhelmed with the biden administration has opened overflow facilities and relaxed covid-19 rules to try to free up space. republican