>> ♪ ♪ >> neil: hqca nothing yet, two too heart institute from boston in the north to charleston in the south, cities are on guard scorching temperatures, 85 million americans already under heat alert and that number is expected to jump to at least 135 million on thursday with temperatures likely to peek at around 100 degrees. in the meantime major cities are launching cooling centers issuing alerts as well as about air quality and warning of potential hits to very low very rollerball power grids. school -- some of them shutting down in the course of this. welcome everybody, i'm neil cavuto. we've got leaders on the heat with our top box weathermaker religious steve bender. we -- what are we reliving -- licking out? >> we are looking in a very warm week at and at times it could be excessive, looking at this and you had mentioned peeking over 130 mirror -- from the midwest, great lakes all the way through the northeast, no one being spared from this and some of those big cities because of the pollution kind of stag -- air quality alerts for new york city, cleveland, det detroit, chicago in place through tuesday, will get that ozone effect. let's talk about why all of this is happening. you said what can we expect? temperatures to climb in the nineties, hundreds and it feels like you can get to 110, let's not hit -- whenever you see that strip of pink sent out, that is not a good sign, let's north of the century mark and this can be a record challenging heat late in to the week. this is thursday as the heat builds and builds so now will be 1 of the factors is the long direction -- duration of this event. will not be a warning for 2 this, it will continue and this will include a cup -- upcoming weekend. look at friday, for example,, all along the identified corridor, from new york down to the nation's capital, mid nineties air temperature. look at the duplex, coming from the atlantic, at the chesapeake bk -- you combine that and that is whereou start sweating you can't stop sweating and then hydration becomes a problem, dc, baltimore, philly all at 100 degrees, new york 99 and said to continue to build. when we watch this, saturday looks like the day we can finally get relief for the northeast. notice the last and we got 100 degrees in new york city, we have to go back in 2012, over a decade so there is a big concern about this, neil, is that it has been a while since we've seen these type of temperatures. it's not record-setting it at least has been a regular -- if not 2 decades since some of these major cities like new york, pittsburgh on the nation's capital even all the way back towards chicago has felt this type of heat. >> neil: you have to rub it in but thank you for that, you covered everything, we appreciate their. by the way if you want to stay on top of the stick and go to the fox weather and really screamed out and get back habit on a connected device, fox has this entirely covered, we are the best team in the business doing this we can find this at fox wea weather.tv today back in the meantime, how cities across the country are preparing for this we depend on the city but it got all personnel out. we have more on the plans -- >> summer started off with the summer but quickly cracking the heat to what could be a historic boil for more than 200 million americans including national, you'll notice here a lot of people on lower broadway despite the fact because he temperatures in the mid-nineties throughout the week today, that is just 1 of some 200 cities that will be like they are baking and some of the hottest temperatures ever. the midwest feels the burn first with high soaring to the opponent -- upper nineties including places like chicago. on this cd on father's day reached a whopping 95 de 95 degrees, already the hottest day of the year so far. and you'll notice here there were lots of people crowding around misters and of -- in fact riverfest was a scorcher is -- especially for those standing over the burning girls for a couple of hours and it can't get even -- temperatures expected to hover in the mid-eighties, even at night. so, of course, we had to ask how hard is too hot? here is what some of those braving the scorching temps in minneapolis had to say. >> anything under 90 and look a week but once again overnight units were a want to just be inside. >> right around 90 -- 98, that is my peak. >> about 100 occumed and then that's probably going to be a problem. >> as that heat wave moves in to the northeast it can get even worse. a heat advisory expected for the big apple later this week new york mayor eric adams just announced in a press conference new york city will be opening up its cooling centers tomorrow and the city's emergency plan has already been activated. meanwhile cities like philadelphia taking similar action their opening up nearly a quarter of their 100 public pools to provide some relief for people. that is on top of state resources, warnings and more all across several states in the northeast are metro if you think it's hot now just wait until thursday or fri friday. >> neil: thank you for reminding him -- of that. nicole valdes roommate -- reporting of the. another thing heading up in the political race here and it's getting a low-cost or -- car and asked her. >> the biden campaign says is spending $50 million in ads in battleground states just to the end of this month alone. are focusing campaign on former president trump' legal problems including his multiple felony convictions in new york. that includes this ad, one that says that this election is between "a convicted criminal whose only up for himself and a president who is fighting for your family." that's a line the biden reelection campaign indicated that it plans to rely on leading up to the first debate later this month. >> the sky and blue and donald trump is a convicted criminal. i think we can expect is donald trump to do what he has been doing with his attempt to undermine the rule of law at a computer down the judicial system and the president and he's been consistently well talk about dangerous and irresponsible it is to do that. >> copy for that ad by, or biden campaign said it took in more than $30 million on the los angeles fundraiser this weekend. jimmy kimmel moderated a discussion with trenin and former president barack ob obama, that featured barbra streisand cal julia roberts, george clooney and it also doctor 25 million-dollar fundraiser in march in new york with biden, obama and former president bill clinton. republican's claim this latest lam ensure that biden is just out of touch. >> why would we start and big tech billionaires, let's would the democrat fight -- party is fighting for, environmental billionaires in california x. who they care about, people who are in bed with china, that to the democrats care about. >> training this weekend over the river to virginia that's where he will hold a number from another event with the clintons and the former governor of virginia. >> neil: richardson cover -- thank you very much, my friend. -- you know,, and you first on the strategy here it's obviously for the biden administration to jump in advertising, they had this big fundraiser, they're going to spend $50 million on ad campaigns to focus on donald trump, to focus on january 62 say he's a convicted felon, et cetera et cetera. what do you think the impetus will be a? >> i'm actually not totally following the logic of this strategy -- strategic move from the biden campaign because typically with a massive ad by like this what you look for a candidate who is to define their opponent, to sort of cement what their opponent is like in the minds of voters before their opponent had the chance to do it for himself. but in this case pretty much everyone in america already knows exactly what they think of donald trump. and don't think that this conviction changed that many minds, i don't think it surprise anyone, a meeting -- it might have shocked people but it certainly did not surprise anyone that donald trump was convicted of this so to pour that much money into an ad that is set to put content in a frame when voters already have their own frame that they've placed trump in there and seem to make a lot of sense to me. >> neil: i'm wondering too about the timing of making donald trump the story and if you are you as administered and has that the economy is picking up and it's beginning to show traction and you want to prove it and say it impounded, you're not pounding any of that. >> here's the thing, neil, what they want to do is be strong for the convention. the convention is coming up, the democratic convention where we have a lot of ellipticals are saying well joe biden should be replaced. if they can change the polling just a little bit, impacted a little bit the $50 million is worth it to them to say this is our best case moving forward, it's only been a month since we've been running these ad outlook what more we can do as a political strategy in the months to come. right now, joe biden in standing on one leg, you need barack obama to walk you up the stage, you can't really move on your own, you're in juneteenth concert looking like your struck by a train. this is in reimbursing womanizing for the democratic party and the american people that it doesn't seem as though we have a functioning president. they need to bring back the narrative and this is the only thing they have. donald trump is a convicted felon, that's the only thing they can say, they can't talk about the economy is -- because of -- inflation is taking over everything. it's taking over budget, you prefer -- fte, abigail medicine, how do you pay rent? because everything is up up up, and is a scenario the trenin administration and biting campaign find themselves in. >> neil: you know, the biden and meditation to go back and see if we're doing something empathetically why men in and month out do we get these pretty good stable economic numbers, why do we have the markets hearing all new hires seemingly every other day in the case of the nasdaq everyday now for six days, that's something, but they're not pounding that and i find that kind of curious in and of itself. >> they're not because i think there is such a mismatch between how voters perceive the economy and some of those numbers that you cited. if they were to focus on those economic numbers, the message would've essentially been cormac if you think the economy is bad when you're just too dumb to understand." when you go to the grocery store -- >> and that was her message at one time at what was their message. >> right, they try that and it obviously has not worked. joe biden has consistently been slipping in the polls. to think, you know, they're trying this strategy in their risk of that is that this is sort of the hillary clinton paper, you just lean on demonizing the long-term and unsupported without any proactive message on your own and hope that donald trump's employee with, you know, centrist voters is enough to get you over the finish line. it wasn't in 2016, it's not clear it will be enough in 2024. >> neil: why do the things that i here worry the folks at the white house, some of their key base of support is a rolling. that might change byelection david particularly among african americans and hispanics, it's melting away and that is not part of this strategy. this initial 15 -- is talking about everything but. what do you make of her? >> and that is one of the issues that define them selves and. are not used to having to work for black voters sup support. who does that in the democratic party? they think that those borders are monolithic and that they should for work democrats otherwise they just ain't black, plain and simple grandmother has been their game plan, donald trump has usurped what is the natural politics for years and decades for democrats and now he's making him work for it. is going out to the truck, he's going out in the bronx and his rallying voters of all colors anyone can -- he can talk about the platinum plan that he ran on in 2020 which would have been great for the black community, he can run on the first -- which did actually impact black voters, the black community, more than anybody else. there's a lot he can run on and democrats do not like the fact that he is making the effort because that is their base. >> neil: we shall see. gn okay thank you very much, sarell great to see you again. in the meantime we are focusing on the long-term already planning at least practicing for potential new shot in the white house for another four or years. a meeting with the speaker of the house, at mar-a-lago. chad pergram has more on that. >> reporter: >> what does a -- more on that, next... >> ♪ ♪ higher shipping rates may be “the cost of doing business...” but at what cost? 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laskova chad pergram with more. >> neil, good afternoon. gop leaders believe the lining with former president trump is essential in order to hold the house and then -- otherwise the cube could not accomplish anything. today marked the second pilgrimage to mar-a-lago by mike johnson. [ engine roars ] months. >> he and i speak frequently about the election cycle of court and how we can complete the mission of restoring him to the white house and during the house majority and winning the republican majority in the senate. >> here are the gop's meter agenda items reupping the expiring trump tax cuts, the gop could lean on a special senate process to avoid a filibuster the past that but renewing our tax cuts may act or the deficit. there will also be a focus on border security republican see a porous border puts the u.s. at risk. >> we are talking sex predators, gang members, violent criminals, terrorists, people who have ties to terrorist networks. this is not just hundred of thousands, we're talking millions. >> but democrats cough and suggestion that former president trump and republicans are interested in governing at all. >> with november fast approaching, republicans continue to show the american people where they really are with maga extremists and not with the majority of america. that's what republic -- republican senators and house members are doing. >> now democrats plan to target republicans from swing districts or states or lend themselves to -- too close -- closely with former president trump. >> neil: you talk about the narrowness of what speaker johnson has to work with whether it's two or threes say it was a room here, that's as close as you can get. >> it is very close and probably control the house will be decided in new york and california. new york was the difference last time. >> neil: what is your sense of how the former president and speaker getting along, you know, donald trump has a number of times supported johnson, spoke at his defense, called out those who tried to take him down. how has -- is with that relationship coming? >> so far, so good, and keep in mind if mike johnson, if republicans will control of the house, he will stand for speaker next year, january 3rd. he needs the support from former president trump whether trump wins or loses when the speakership back. >> neil: got it. chad pergram following all of those developments in here. we told you about these markets not just our running at an incredible pace. records -- the s&p 500, the nasdaq sixties going out for the nasdaq technology ruling the roost of drove -- a lot of the -- but is there more to it than that? we'll ask ken fisher what he makes of this as he made some news himself, after this... >> ♪ ♪ when the sawdust settles and the engine finally roars the thing you care about most is a job well done. ♪ but when you get your tools from harbor freight something about the job feels a little different - your wallet. because we believe no matter what you're working on you need high quality tools at a great price. and that's what we're all about. ♪ whatever you do, do it for less, at harbor freight. ♪ with the price of just about everything inflating these days, you may wonder why mint is deflating the price of mint unlimited from $30 a month to just $15 a month. well, it's easy. we know a great price on a great product is better than one of those things. right? does big wireless really believe that these things actually work? ( ♪ ) ( ♪ ) this one will never see the light of day. all right. >> neil: supersonic travel could be back, not anytime soon, but how would you like to get from new york 200 -- to london in about three and half hours? no guys behind the second shot at that, after this... because there are places you'd like to be. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections, and low blood sugar. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection, an allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis. ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ ♪ my back got injured very bad. i was off work for about a year. i heard about relief factor from my wife... i took it every day, three times a day, for three weeks. ...look at her and i said, "the pain is gone." and she said, "i'm glad it helped." i said, "no, you don't understand. it's gone." you, too, can feel better every day with relief factor, a daily supplement that fights pain naturally. call or go online now and get 35% off your first order. >> ♪ ♪ >> neil: all right, this rally continues -- the 30 years for the s&p 500 the six in a row for the nasdaq, you know, the dow and bouncing today and now not all that for about 2% maybe a little less from that from its all-time high so what is really going on and what is driving this? ken fisher back with a list of fiction -- for sure investments ponder and chairman. a follow-up from our weekend discussion but on what is driving all of this? >> so basically after all we went through with covid and the aftermath of russia and ukraine's war, all of the fed scares, on and on and on people just became too pessimistic and in the bull market began in october 2022, we've just been slowly moving up with john templeton famously referred to as the progression of bull markets which are born in pessimism going on passed -- and we are past the skeptical part but we haven't really got in to the euphoric part at all. it's the natural progression imperfectly strong in normal election years. >> neil: know there has been a lot driving this, you know, a lot of people are interested in the markets and there are a lot of firms that come to play that they're getting interested in firms that deal in the markets like yours that i was noticing this private equity firm -- what is that about? >> so people quickly have underestimated what i'm supposed to be worse and i need to be prudent and set aside provision for death tax and so this really provides that in a way where we just take the money and manage it in equity, it's held for if something happened to me that's untold for us subject in aryan like me i'm especially good health, i'm not on any prescription drugs or anything like that >> neil: you don't know what you're missing. [laughter] but you're fine. -- and interstate when you said well my health is excellent, this transaction with an atypically long holding period for a private equity transaction will ensure fisher investments long-term private independence. what if it doesn't? >> what that means is we need to keep doing what we're doing. to remain fairly -- firmly in control because i control -- own 70% of everything is an exceptionally high valuation for unacceptably long pipe period. we are delighted to be with us were delighted to have them because they love us for what we are but when you think about okay the million r rating entities like forbes and bloomberg, did probably have to if they just do the math up there sense of my birth by a few billion here and there but as older viewers will remember senator iverson from the 1960s, "a billion here, a million th there, pretty sure you got real money." [laughter] >> neil: when you're closing in on a were supposed to $10 million, what do you do? >> it will be more than that when they figure out. >> neil: really? you have a lot of friends and family members to get a little bit closer to you now? how does that work out? >> i've got good defenses. i know i've got production cover and all of that. [laughter] >> neil: that's good. >> it's okay. >> neil: value go. i do -- some good look at this in a twisted way and say or write outside entity comes in, bumps of $10 billion in arguably one of the world's best investment houses, that would be you, is that a market top? i'm not meaning to badger it but a lot of events going on and a lot of firms that are just feeding on other firms and other departments in this investment wave, do you worry about their? not what it meant here in this particular case. >> do we are about what people thank? not terribly much. i'm very mission oriented in the mission is the thing i started down the path of looking to try to solve this estate problem over two years ago. we talked to dozens and dozens of entities including aberrant funds, major corporations that private equity firms, family -- major family offices. we got offers from all kinds of folks from all kind of stuff that we didn't want but that's -- and, of course, vendors -- the abu dhabi investment authority which is a client of advance and likes to invest alongside rather than inside. but these are great partners will have no say in what we do that allows the key being us and doing what we do and may keep being -- me being a crazy person that i am you don't get any better than that. >> neil: but longer with what's in it for them? obviously they're doing -- dealing with the prestigious firm and prestigious name, guys were pretty good investor, but beyond that, do they want to take over? if something happens to you, you sleep on -- let one of the 90 -- banana peel, than what? >> as love of all time and you know that. the back of the matter is nonevent give them any say that give them any kind of control and that will not happen and that's not the way my estate as set up. the fisher family is strongly in control and i i should live a longer time, i'm going to be pestering people hopefully for a couple of decades more. my parents lived through the nineties. >> neil: but do you a succession plan, i only say this, you know, a warren buffet is always asked this question, -- duties issues come up at your firm? i only say that because we've seen even some of the premier investment banks that go through this and wondering who's a successor to jamie dimon going to be, j.p. morgan chase, how are they going to handle things at goldman sachs? i this comes up a lot, you become the firm. >> so in reality though since 2016, damien has been the ceo of the firm, you know, i leave the investment side and i go due a lot of communication and i battle with people. but the reality is damien is much younger than i am, is going to be leading the firm in 25 years in the firm keeps going and the management stays intact and if i should die which i don't expect i will, but this is like an insurance policy that everything will continue the same and the family will still have control and it will all be good. >> neil: all right. really quickly, your take on the market and this presidential election year phenomenon is playing on exactly as you said one, but how long? i in 2025 does that kind of thing end? >> might it? yes. i'm hoping you'll invite me back as we get in to the end of the year to look into 2025. and i have a particular expectation that it will, i'm going to go back to what i said before, and it makes. fact is this period as i've said over and over and over since 2022 is more like 1966, 67, 68 than any other time period in history and people just can't get that correctly in their head at the market has acted just like 1966 in 2022, like, nines 1967 in 2023 and now like 1968. if it acts like that in 1969, we're rolling over, then. their reality is and i cannot tell you what will happen yet, to look for it later, but their reality is often as i've said before in years where we elect a republican, the market gets exuberant about in an election year, somewhat negative on it be inaugural year, the flip side is true, when we elect democrats. i believe will probably elect donald trump president this time and begin schmuck we can talk about that in another time, but it's a bull market right now. >> neil: got it. can, imagination again, stay healthy, stay well, quite a success story there. can fisheries, on the development here in the markets that are raising to new highs. one thing that -- particularly as we that donald j. trump -- of course, joe biden did have some recollection issues with whether it was two or three. it's three but that battle back and forth and what -- senator from north carolina mix of that after this... >> ♪ ♪ tired muscles and joints were keeping me from doing the things i loved most. not anymore. blue-emu gave me my freedom back. it supports healthy muscles and joints. shop our expanded family of products at major online retailers. why would i use kayak to compare hundreds of travel sites at once? 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[music playing] ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. >> ♪ ♪ >> neil: >> president biden: the next president and is likely to have two new supreme court nominees be made two more. he's already point -- appointed two that have been married -- very negative in order -- terms of the rights of individuals grandmother 80 entities related that he will point -- up he might i really mean it. >> could this be the scariest part of all of? >> president biden: i think it is one of the scariest parts. the supreme court has never been as out of filter as it is today. >> neil: for sobolev from appointed three supreme court justices, neil gorsuch's governor and an equally burnt but his argument that because the conservative -- of course, isn't on -- tom tillis doesn't quite by that, the northrup of the among others. senator, what do you think of that slack? >> you know, i think that biden is trying to red from the same playbook as schumer in terms of politicizing the court. i think -- i believe this court has been very evenhanded, that used -- you saw a judgement just last week they didn't have to deal with the substance of the matter, i'm talking about the above stocks rag. but, you know, you've got conservatives saying these folks are liberal and that there actually interpreting the law -- i've been here for four coastal report nominations and i'm very proud of my support for goure such, cavanaugh and baratz because there interpreting the law and call them balls and strikes anything that biden is trying to politicize the court and trying to win some boats over it. i think it will backfire on him. >> neil: they try to zero and on justice alito can't apply thing, of course, clarence thomas and gifts and other arrests and saying okay -- this is what you get when you put conservatives on the bench and the treatment that it's only conservatives who draw this type of contr controversy, i am simply not the case. but what do you make of that? >> you know, everybody needs to realize that this whole politicize station of the courts, really started with schumer back in the early 2000 when he devised a strategy for denying w. bush nominations. before that keep in mind clarence thomas did not have the filibuster used against him but chuck schumer decided that they needed to politicize things which ultimately led to the nuclear option for the judicial -- is called the executive calendar but largely for judicial nominations. he's just trying to politicize things again but we are where we are today because chuck schumer chose this and now a few years ago he gets on the supreme court steps and says you have released a whirlwind and he named justices by name. is separate and equal branch grandmother is pretty clear role politics and that is all we are hearing from biden. >> neil: i'm wondering as well, we're still waiting to hear from the supreme court up a largely separate -- that's going away in -- and whether it applies to donald trump of the decision could come soon or it can come later but even if it comes later, it could play to the former president's benefit that it would put off any -- push-up any wackier education until after the election if even then. what do you make of that? >> you know, where the -- i think that one of the things that i've tried to focus on, neil, i want to ask you -- and zero question but i think the democrats want to shift attention away from what i consider to be the triple play of failure on the border, of failure with this economy and our failure with natural -- national security. and democrats are going to try to do everything they can to tempt undisciplined republicans into talking about things other than that. everything that they do is focus on the court is a political stunt. if you want to go back and compare notes about maybe an action by conservative judge, i can go back and find you numerous examples of democrats weather its ethics question, all these things that have been used to attack conservative judges, i can find an analog on the democratic side. if we were going to be intellectually honest with ourselves. but at the end of the day we are trying to do anything they can to shift attention away from the failure of this administration on the things that are going to motivate people to vote for president trump in november. >> neil: having said that on this community thing that the court is weighing, you get the sense that they're not going to come down on donald trump's side here, that it would set a dangerous precedent if they did, that all actions are shielded because simply because you are president at the time. if that were to happen, and it could happen at a time when it's delayed so much the issue at hand, the case at hand would be delayed as we well, but that they won't take that step. what do you think? >> i think that your rating it right and i've told all three of them and i met with them in my office among judiciary committees, i had the -- i said i am absolutely convinced that you are going to rule in a way that i'm going to be frustrated. one case or another over the case of your tenure but i'm going to believe it's because you are reading the law and you're reading the constitution and you're doing it the way it should be done. not allowing political pressures to have your -- you bow to either end of the political spectrum. so i would honor that, you know, i can say that -- >> neil: you think donald trump would, senator? would say -- these other guys i picked and i'm not happy with that decision. >> know about their there for a reason and i'm saying -- and president trump would have every reason to be frustrated and disappointed. but i'm trying to get back to a demonstration -- i'm willing to back conservatives drunk -- i think there was a bad decision about putting a blackout and exposing yourself but that is minor. when you look at justice alito's body of work you will go down in history as one of the great supreme court justices in the modern era. and i just really want to make sure that everybody realizes biden' has built an economy copies failed on the border copies and failed a national security, and we need to make sure that we don't shift our attention away from anything else. president trump at everybody else, will have to deal with her personal circumstances, their decision on a campaign. we are senate republicans need to focus on the trifecta and it's not each factor in a good way. biden has failed, we've got to be disciplined and focused on that. >> neil: really quickly, i really disappointed in justice alito that i was disappointed in justice clarence thomas, with some of these revelations? >> no. i would like -- i think that this report should take a look at ethics and transparency modernization they should do that as an independent branch but i'm no more disappointed than i am in other democratic members that i can go on point to fundraisers, ruth peter ginsberg has been involved in, information that i have on current sitting justices. look, they're all human use, they made a few judgement errors but i don't think having a spouse just to the plate -- display on the flagpole is disqualifying for somebody who has an extraordinary track record on the bench and extraordinary legal career before that. >> neil: got it. senator thom tillis, we catching up with you, thank you b1 u. too. >> neil: senator thom tillis will allow that. in the meantime the -- remember the concorde, supersonic travel, it's been a couple of decades. it could be coming back soon. >> ♪ ♪ so i hired body doubles to help me out. splurgy tina loves a hotel near rodeo drive. oh tina! wild tina booked a farm stay to ride this horse. glenn close?! with millions of possibilities you can book whoever you want to be. that's my line! booking.com booking.yeah >> ♪ ♪ >> neil: maybe some of you a certain age remember the concorde, supersonic travel. that's been then, it's been chilled for decades now, that could be changing. reed turnbull has more from north carolina. what's going on here? >> neil, north carolina is famously first in flight and it could be first in supersonic flights in the u.s. at least in the not-too-distant future. boom supersonic open this factory today and it says planes will be rolling out of here in the next three years or so. the company says those planes will be twice as fast as commercial jets are today, that, of course, means drastically cutting down flight times on overseas routes. right now boom supersonic is still testing is thought -- more prototype plain but here's what is commercial supersonic planes that will be made at this factory will look like. boom' ceo says newer materials, engine and technology will allow -- all of the company to bring the cost apply way down compared to the last supersonic jet liner at the concorde outdoor on the price of a business class ticket on a regular commercial flight right now. >> i deeply believe the next generation of airliners will be supersonic and we need to bring those here in the u.s. and we will do it right here in greensboro to ensure continuous and -- continued american leadership in manufacturing. >> and north carolina is hoping this factory will be a boom -- boon to the economy as well. the company says it will bring in around 2400 jobs, written and economic impact of more than $32 billion and potentially allowing boom to take on commercial aviation giants like boeing. >> when ceos are talking to me about where they want to come, it's workforce, workforce, workforce, we have the best community college system in the country, where one of the greatest arrays of public and private universities in the country, and i believe that these companies know that and want to leverage off of it. >> you could fly in one of these planes may be sooner than you think, neil. by 2029 that, of course, is if everything goes according to plan. neil? >> neil: we'll watch it closely. thank you, grady trimble on a lot of that. meanwhile the mess at the border and then we have the so-called lockdown at the border. not quite working out and can you say, overwhelms. bill melugin has more. >> neil, were getting our hands on some front -- brand-new internal isaiah which is revealing just how overwhelms ice is as an agency, as a hole. coming up after the break, we're going to tell you how many millions of immediate -- illegal immigrants release in to the country the agency is trying to keep track of right now. we'll be right back. >> ♪ ♪ who knows what to expect! turn shipping to your advantage. keep it simple...with clear, upfront pricing. with usps ground advantage®. ♪ . . ♪ ♪ have you always had trouble losing weight and keeping it off? same. discover the power of wegovy®. ♪ ♪ with wegovy®, i lost 35 pounds. and some lost over 46 pounds. ♪ ♪ and i'm keeping the weight off. wegovy® helps you lose weight and keep it off. i'm reducing my risk. wegovy® is the only fda-approved weight-management medicine that's proven to reduce risk of major cardiovascular events in adults with known heart disease and with either obesity or overweight. wegovy® shouldn't be used with semaglutide or glp-1 medicines. don't take wegovy® if you or your family had medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop wegovy® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis and gallbladder problems. wegovy® may cause low blood sugar in people with diabetes, especially if you take medicines to treat diabetes. tell your provider about vision problems or changes, or if you feel your heart racing while at rest. depression or thoughts of suicide may occur. call your provider right away if you have any mental changes. common side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. with wegovy®, i'm losing weight, i'm keeping it off. and i'm lowering my cv risk. that's the power of we. ♪ ♪ check your cost and coverage before talking to your health care professional about wegovy®. 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(thinking: eddie, no frasier, frank... frank?) fred! how are you?! fred... fuel up to 7 brain health indicators, including your memory. join the neuriva brain health challenge. >> neil: the mess at the border has gotten more messy. no matter what you have heard, bill melugin has more from california. bill. >> good afternoon to you. i.c.e. has something called a nondetained docket that they maintain. what that docket is is primarily migrants who cross the border illegally and have been released to the country pending their immigration cases. we got some new leaked i.c.e. data that shows how well overwhelmed that docket is. multiple sources telling fox news that i.c.e.'s nondetained docket has exploded to 7.4 million cases so far and 2024. we are told it is on track to hit 8 million cases by the end of this year. they cases have more than doubled since donald trump was president. we are told over 1 million cases have been added just since october 1st largely due to mass catch and release policies at the southern border. as you can imagine, this is burying i.c.e. take a look at the second graphic. i.c.e. sources saying each i.c.e. officer is having to manage an average up 7,000 cases each. you are hearing that right. 7,000 each. that is an impossible task given current staffing levels. v7 has 6,000 deportation officers nationwide and are not all working on this nondetained docket. all those numbers i rattled off don't even include the nearly 1.9 million known got aways who have crossed our border. they were never caught by border patrol or encountered by dhs. they have got no court date or court hearing or immigration proceeding. i.c.e. has to find and track those people down as well. i.c.e. sources telling us it is physically impossible given the men shortage that they have. >> neil: that is pretty daunting. bill melugin following that in california. the former u.s. border patrol chief and of u.s. customs and border protection. those are some scary numbers. >> it is very frustrating, sir. it is another symptom of what happens when we lose all control at the border. dhs a few months back said that 85% of all the encounters we were sitting at the border are being released in the united states. doubling of dependency in this presidency. these men and women that sign up to serve and swear an oath to all of us, their people love action. they want to protect the country. that is why dhs exist to protect us from the threats that we are now seeing and very public view. to have this many people on the nondetained docket, it is impossible for the deportation officers, the number of them that are assigned to this function. it is impossible for them to work there that many cases. we have to remember, this is the worst supporters search we have ever seen. at some point, we will have to pay this bill. 9 million or 10 million people that are in the united states without us asking them to be here. without a visa or without the government giving permission to be in the united states. the workload is trim and less. >> neil: the executive action we are told that those seeking amnesty or haven here would not be automatically granted asylum. how would that figure into this? that was supposed to be curtailed in those cases would be rejected. they would be sent back. >> having people access the is silent system. that is why people are coming. they know they will be released pending an asylum claim. they shut down asylum claim avenues for people that have come here illegally. there has been no discernible change in border flow right now, we are still seeing 4-5000 people coming across the border every single 24 hours. despite the president saying he didn't have the authority to do anything -- which is not true. they both his executive order in place and as i made any difference whatsoever. >> neil: with the new change in mexican presidents and alter any of that since she has run the same government in the same party unlikely? >> it remains to be seen. they are cut from the same cloth. it is an opportunity for our government to engage in them. we are dependent in mexico for a number of things, culture, travel, and trade where they can help us with this migration problem. they held us during the last administration. they did things they had never done before to abate this urge. it remains to be seen but the government will take advantage of the new opportunity. >> neil: thank you very much. good seeing you again. so we wait and wait. here are "the five" ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanineo,