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lead, again. 39-38. >> mccoy in to the end zone and buffalo wins it. ♪ o'er the land of the free ♪ and the home of the brave ♪ [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ you know i'm in it for the party. steve: live from new york city, it's the world's number one cable news show. come on in. ainsley: come on in. we are two weeks away from christmas. steve: we have the coffee. we are ready. brian: by the way that is steve and ainsley's philosophy i'm here for the party. i'm here to do work. that's how we're different. ainsley: let's pretend it's friday. brian: you pretend every day is friday. ainsley: i do. i like my life. brian: that's a general statement. steve: we are working at a news channel and luckily there is a lot of news. delighted you would join us today because we have a great story to tell you all about coming n just a moment you will hear that first, our top political story, all eyes are on the state of alabama one day before their special election for the u.s. senate. ainsley: republican candidate roy moore has president trump on his side as he is denying all the sexual misconduct claims. and his opponent is launching brand new attacks. brian: yep. griff jenkins is live in washington, d.c. with what is at stake win or lose. hey, griff. >> good morning, guys. it is come down to the wire in the heart of dixie as alabama voters are waking up to this robo call from president trump making a final push for roy moore. >> get out and vote for roy moore. his vote is our republican senate and it's needed. we need roy to help us with the republican senate. we will win and we will make america great again. >> moore, who has been running as an outsider, was noticeably absent from the campaign trail this weekend and avoided reporters. called into radio show defiantly denying allegations against him and attacking the republican establishment who refuse to support him. >> the republican establishment actually wants jones in there because they think they can beat him in two years without a contest. and, of course, the democrats want jones in there for their vote. >> meanwhile, jones barn stormed the state with outside help from establishment democrats like new jersey senator corey booker and took a shot at moore accusing him of hiding. >> what kind of public servant hides and goes only into enclaves and doesn't address the media? i'm going to be as accessible after this election as i am now. >> and jones began running ads featuring alabama's other senator richard shelby who said he wasn't voting for moore writing in another republican candidate. moore maintain as slight lead in the polls. and tonight plans a massive rally featuring none other than steve bannon. it will be exciting to watch. brian: interesting, griff. exciting to watch. the president knows for all practicality purposes he needs that vote. 51 votes makes everything very tough in the last of his first two years before the mid terms. however, you wonder in the big picture if the sexual allegations will actually allow the republican party to put their backs against the wall for the midterm elections as if he would be the poster child for sexual misconduct. ainsley: we will find out. tomorrow is the big vote. steve: we will. we have pastor jeffress coming up shortly from dallas. he says there are a lot of republicans in alabama who would like another choice. but are going to vote for this particular guy, judge roy moore. they are going to hold their nose and do that because they are worried about the issues. brian: that's a great point. if this came out and he still beat luther strange, this happened in the primary purpose, that's one thing. but it came out after the primary. so the people of alabama ares who tableg to these candidates. steve: and according to what griff just said, the people of alabama by a slight, what, 3 or 4 points right now, our favoring roy moore. brian: in the last poll. steve: we will see. over the past few days, the president and the press. ainsley: is he fed up with all the fake news. this was his latest tweet. he was talking about all the fake news from all the networks. he is done with it he has had very little discussion of all the purposefully false and defamatory stories put out this week by the fake news media. out of control. correct reporting means nothing to them. major lies written and forced to be withdrawn after they are exposed. a stain on america. steve: what's he talking about? well, "the washington post" had to apologize. one of their reporters dave weigel he had put out a picture and said that that place down. ainsley: florida. steve: pensacola was not filled up. it was indeed. brian ross got suspended for a week. mollie hemingway says the real scandal is how the media are continuing to push the russia thing. >> this is the pattern for so many of these stories. this is not the first time it's happened to cnn. it's not even the first time it's happened this week that a major story blew up like this. at some point you have to start asking maybe the real scandal is how the media fell for this russia/trump collusion mentd and how they have been involved in perpetuating that. brian: i put that on my private twitter. i apologize to the president. i didn't put it to the "the washington post." why would they do it to begin with because it's inaccurate. it was way before the actual event. ainsley: hours before the president showed up and showed the arena half full. brian: i would like to see report for the president. if one of these organizations came out and said a story that was too positive for the president and had to walk back and said it should have been more negative, i apologize, then i would see fair and balanced erroneous behavior. steve: sometimes as we know, being in the press for a very long time, you have got to wait until you have a got a couple more people who have verified the story before you rush out with a smoking gun. ainsley: i do think it's more than an honest mistake. if you know the president is going to be speaking in a few hours, then you post the picture of what the arena looks like. like taking a picture weather forecast team comes out in the nfl like hours before and say no. inaccurate. in other news rod rosenstein was appoint as special counsel back in may after jeff sessions recused himself. now he going to be testifying on capitol hill. it happens this friday in a few days before the house judiciary committee. steve: he is the deputy attorney general. here's the thing going on right now, there are so many reports from the republican side of the aisle. robert mueller special counsel team riddled from the political left. andrew weissmann. one of his deputies, he went to hillary clinton's victory party. peter strzok emails he exchanged with lover. there is peter strzok right there. the guy who handed out gross negligence jeanne rhee. represented the foundation. and it goes on and on. and it looks like it's stacked with murderer's row of people on hillary's side. brian: christopher was appointed by the president to run the fbi. it doesn't mean he goes by the president's agenda. is he a guy he looked into his background and said would have to get fresh eyes on this and straighten out the higher ups in the fbi if they need to be straightened out. i was stunned by stonewalling last week. lead editorial in the "wall street journal" talks about christopher wray not answering any questions on capitol hill. most of which is the fight that application. it was done before you got there. fusion gps material to get it when it comes to all these people with their obviously pro-clinton views showing up at a party praising sally yates, why are you not curious to get to the bottom of this. instead it was stonewall after stonewall. i'm wondering if rod rosenstein who could make christopher ray come forward with the application to see if they are using opposition research to take down president trump or to get information on him or used it in the past if he is going to do anything. so that's going to be the question. will he be forth right? he is also appointed by president trump. steve: chris wray, what he said was, it's a great question. i can not answer it because there's an inspector general who is going to come out with -- he's going to have the answer to all that stuff. just hold on and you will have the answer. brian: the "wall street journal" says that is not true. the bottom line is you don't have an inspector general to stop an investigation. you have a judiciary committee who asks you a question. give them the answer. ainsley: yeah. instead of pleading the fifth. did the dossier lead to surveying the president while he was candidate trump at the time? that's the question that you want to know. meantime hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us? jillian: that's right. good monday morning to you guys and to you at home as well. the hunt intensifying for whoever is behind a string of freeway shootings. police in detroit says the same suspect or suspects are playing russian roulette on interstate 94. opening fire four separate times. one driver was hit in the leg but is expected to be okay. authorities are looking for a silver or gray car seen during the shootings. they are also beefing up police presence in that area. while you were sleeping, the most destructive wildfire raging in southern california just got bigger. scoimping 230,000 acres. that's larger than new york city. the massive inferno forcing brand new evacuation orders in santa barbara. hurricane force winds fueling the flames, making the fifth largest wildfire in state history. six out-of-control blazes still burning across california at this hour. and it could get even worse. there's no rain in the forecast at all this week. new overnight, the u.s. military making a bold show of force launching missile tracking drills as tensions with north korea run high. the two-day joint drill with japan and south korea simulate detecting and tracking down potential ballistic missiles in the waters off the korean peninsula. this comes less than weeks after the rogue nation fired its longest range missile yet. potentially capable of reaching anywhere in the u.s. the white house calling out palestinian leaders for refusing to meet with vice president pence. they cancelled the meetings after the u.s. recognized jerusalem as the capital of israel. the vice president's press secretary saying, quote: it's unfortunate that the palestinian authority is walking away again from an opportunity to discuss the future of the region. egypt's coptic church also refusing a meeting with the vice president when he leads overseeoverseas later this mont. a lot of news this morning. steve: thank you. ainsley: alabama has the most evangelize voters in the country. will they be able to reconcile their faith in god and vote for moore. robert jeffers is here in dallas. he is coming up next. brian: football neerls kneeled during the national anthem and put a fist up in the air. did it actually happen? ♪ go slow. ♪ come on mom! ♪ let's go! ♪ mom! slow down! for the ones who keep pushing. always unstoppable. ♪ steve: all eyes on the state of alabama on the eve of a special election down there. republican roy moore currently in the lead as he denies accusations of sexual misconduct that lead, according to the real clear politic average. ainsley: the question will it be enough for evangelicals in that state to put their faith in him and roy moore? joining us to weigh in is fox news contributor pastor robert jeffress. thank you for being with us. >> good to be with you this morning. ainsley: there is not anyone who is going to be for child abuse or all these allegations that all these women that have come out against him. as a female i have a big problem with the fact that he is running. however, i understand the issue that you have to put the party first because his opponent is -- most of these republicans dislike the establishment. they dislike the media. his opponent has an extreme view on abortion. how do you justify it as a christian? >> well, look, for me, as a christian leader, the issue is not about politics or party, it's about morality. and, look, christians, above all people, have a zero tolerance level for any kind of child abuse. jesus said it would be better to have a mill stone tied around your neck and cast into the sea than to harm a child. but here it is the evangelical dilemma. in alabama about this election evangelicals can choose roy moore who vehemently denies the very serious allegations of child abuse from 40 years ago, or they can choose doug jones who openly and proudly embraces the most extreme example and kind of child abuse abortion. doug jones has said in interviews that he favors no restrictions on abortion, meaning that if a woman decides she doesn't like the jerngd of her unborn child, she can get rid of it or in the 30th week of presidency she decides she doesn't really want a child, she can kill that child. that is not only horrific, it's barbaric. and i believe it is doug jones' horrific, barbaric views on abortion that will cause evangelicals in the end to vote for roy moore. steve: pastor, i saw an ad from there jones down in alabama that ran over the weekend. and he says he is not for late term abortion. but he is for abortion. and you are saying that evangelicals are going to vote for roy moore. they are going to hold their nose, essentially and vote for roy moore over abortion. that's what you are saying, right? >> i think that's what it comes down to for many evangelicals. by the way, steve, in his interview with chuck todd on meet the press, he said absolutely no restrictions on abortion. he later on said in an interview that he was only pro-life after the child was born. so, i believe he may be backpedals a little bit. but you know what his real view is steve, look, and ainsley, the reason this is important. this is not just hypothetical theoretical talk. the next senator from alabama is going to play a key role in confirming president trump's conservative judiciary. these judges will make life and death decisions about children. that's why those who are really concerned about children and the future well being of children may put that ahead of roy moore's alleged past. steve: pastor, out of curiosity, what are you doing in washington today? >> well, actually, i'm looking forward to seeing the president a little bit later in the day today. some faith leaders are going to be talking with him and, look, we are so excited about this president. and all he is accomplishing. the jerusalem decision last week, what he is doing in appointing conservative judges. he has a groundswell of continued support from evangelical christians. and we love what this president is doing for america. ainsley: okay. pastor robert jeffers is the pastor of first baptist in dallas. if you are in the area check it out. it's a great service. thank you so much, pastor. great to see you. >> thank you. ainsley: coming up flags that honorable our brave police officer. we will be talking about that. this morning one state is trying to make sure they never get them taken down. steve: a grouch conservative college students kicked out of campus college shop because they wore maga hats make america great again. >> wearing hats that completely violate. take it off or you are have to go. steve: so maga stands for nazi. one of the students in the cap joins us next. ♪ in the good old days ♪ ♪ when heartburn hits fight back fast with tums chewy bites. fast relief in every bite. crunchy outside. chewy inside. tum tum tum tum tums chewy bites. what is this? 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(snoring) introducing theravent anti-snore strips. clinically shown to reduce snoring. theravent. the answer is right under your nose. ayep, and my teeth are yellow.? to reduce snoring. time for whitestrips. crest glamorous white whitestrips are the only ada-accepted whitening strips proven to be safe and effective. and they whiten 25x better than a leading whitening toothpaste. crest. healthy, beautiful smiles for life. brian quick headlines now, police could finally get the public attention they deserve. in ohio end bans on the thin blue line flags. prevent homeowners and associations restricting displays meant to honor officers. proposed bill comes after retired sergeant was forced to take down his flag at his condo complex. and one of the teenagers seen torturing a disabled man in the video stream live on facebook. you remember. this will not spend one day behind bars. >> donald trump [bleep] brian: thanks to a plea deal britney covington was sentenced to 200 years of community service and four years of probation, avoiding a 23 year prison sentence. the judge in chicago says he doesn't think jail time would benefit the 19-year-old. three others have yet to be sentenced. i'm done speaking. steve: meanwhile, listen to this. a group of conservative college students kicked out of their campus coffee shop because they were wearing make america great again caps. >> i don't want people like you supporting this club. >> well then you should be. >> don't want people like you supporting our club. you are wearing hats that completely violate the -- take it off or you have to go. >> fascism, nazi, okay? ainsley: the student manager of that coffee shop said that the hats violated the safe space policy even though the school says there is no such of a policy. they don't have a safe space policy. brian: one of the students booted from the coffee shop joins us now. he is a correspondent there aaron spring. aaron, set the scene for us on that day. did you sense in there that there might be some confrontation? >> when we walked in we got a lot of the looks. a few gave us the middle finger. we patron nice them. president of the coffee club. all of a sudden anybody make america great again has to leave. freedom of speech and supporting our president, especially a president who at one point attended fordham university for a couple of years. ainsley: let me set the stage. you were talking during the commercial break. you pay. this coffee shop is on your campus. have you every right to be there. your campus discount have a safe space policy. the club dedicated that to be a safe space. you walked in with a american flag hat not a maga hat. represents everyone in america. they had a problem with that. they are calling you a fascist. >> they called people in the make america great again hat fascist. ainsley: what did you do. >> i stayed. i'm from new york. that's what we do. couple people said you have to go to. you were with them. this is american flag. we are not going to leave and we are not going to be treated as second class students anymore. we will standing up for our right to free speech. ainsley: fordham put out a statement you went viral. there is no safe space policy as ainsley just said nor one that excludes any members of fordham community from any public spaces on the basis of their political views. the university is still investigating the incident. and students who may have violated university code of conduct will be met with the appropriate student conduct process. so it sounds like the people who threw your people out could actually be on the hook for that what's interesting is you told me before the show that a lot of -- a majority, you said, of the students at fordham are conservative. >> yeah. to it seems everybody i talk to is conservative. i was actually at fordham university today and a lot of people come up to me and said hey, you are the guy from fox. thank you for doing what you are doing. thank you for raises awareness. i cannot thank campus reform.org for bringing attention to this issue. our i. brian: do you regret your decision to go to fordham? >> not at all. i think this is a great thing that happened. now we can really, you know, advocate for free speech and push the university to continue to fight for conservative students and get their free speech recognized just as much as liberal speech. brian: a parent out there having to choose a school cost $50,000. steve: 70. brian: $70,000 and bark up that money and from a conservative household are at least one that wants to be open-minded. do you question why they would question should they send their son or daughter there now? >> i don't personally blame the university. i think they are taking the appropriate action in at least trying to sanction this shop. but i do think college kids and parents need to take a look at the political environment of their campuses. because this is, like i said, conservatives are treated as second class students on campus. we need to raise awareness about that. steve: when you say deleted as second class students do you mean by either students or faculty as well. >> i would say by the other students. steve: faculty is fair. >> i would say so, yes. it's academia. you will have a liberal bias of course. i have never seen someone's grades impacted because they were conservative or liberal. steve: good. >> do you see liberal bias in terms you can't even say things on campus. you can't wear a make america great again hat. brian: what's your major. >> accounting. brian: if you were history or science you might see it there. >> it's definitely possible. i have taken few american history courses where the generalprofers were to the leftf lennon. ainsley: what does the american flag mean to you. >> the american flag represents freedom and basically our rights astins to exercise the bill of rights and to live in a country that is free and basically live the life that we want to live and pursue and it's up to us to continue to recognize that. steve: ever going back to that coffee shop? >> i mean, it's possible. you know, if they change their leadership and if they change their policies, i would be happy to go in and talk to some of the liberals in there and have an open dialogue. ainsley: you are tolerant of them. >> i'm extremely tolerant of them. everybody has the right to their own view and free speech. i will tolerate that as long as you are respectful. ainsley: what a nice young man. thank you. steve: steve meanwhile, coming up on monday, it's the video everybody is talking about this morning. a teenager breaking down in tears because he had been bull idea in school. >> if you are made fun of, don't let it bother you. just stay strong, i guess. it's hard. ainsley: bless his heart. the overwhelming response from athletes and a listers, all kinds of celebrities are on his side. including us. now that we are big celebrities. but we love him. brian: dana white first and foremost. who says crime doesn't pay? new york city mayor bill de blasio is handing out gift cards to suspects if they do a survey. thank you, mayor. ♪ it ain't my fault ♪ for adults with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy, including those with an abnormal alk or egfr gene who've tried an fda-approved targeted therapy, here's a question: who wouldn't want a chance for another...? 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ask your doctor about opdivo. see opdivotv.com for this and other indications. bristol-myers squibb thanks the patients, nurses, and physicians involved in opdivo clinical trials. ♪ ♪ ♪ o say does that star spanglestar-spangled banner yet wave ♪ o'er the land of the free ♪ and the home of the brave ♪ [cheers and applause] steve: how great is that? those are the choirs of the navy and west point national anthem on saturday. the great tradition. ainsley: what happened? brian: i spilled my coffee that's why on new set we have hardwood instead of carpet. ainsley: don't let that take away from the great video we just played from the army-navy game. brian: toss back to steve. steve: army ultimately won making it two years in a row. when you look at that awe-inspiring demonstration of operatism wit patriotism. not one person kneeling. ainsley: only game on earth where people playing are willing to die for the people watching. brian: right. you also have a situation where on sunday 16 different players decided to protest the national anthem in some way, shape, or form. and the snow added to the ora. it was sold out wherever you went if you were army or navy you were happy or sad. steve: let's listen to the end once again. [cheers and applause] steve: i love that. brian: i wonder if they use real ammo in the cannon. ainsley: we have to talk about this story. kimberly jones is a mother and poste posted this video of r son on facebook who is a middle school irin tennessee. he gets bullied so badly she gets calls. momma come pick me up i don't want to go to lunch because i'm too scared. brian: this is every parent's nightmare taped her son keaton as he expressed what was going on. >> just out of curiosity? why do they bully? what's the point of it? >> innocent people finding a way to be mean to? it's not okay. >> what did they say to you? >> called me -- they make funnel of my nose. they call me ugly. they say i have no friends. >> what did they do to you at lunch? >> poured milk on me and put clothes. >> is it just you? >> yep. >> or other kids too that feel that way. >> they do it to other kids, too. >> how does that make you feel? >> why do they do it to me? why do they do it to other people because it's not okay. people that are different. don't need to be criticized about it. it's not their fault. but if you are made fun of, don't let it bother you. just stay strong, i guess. it's hard. but, probably get better one day. steve: that is so raw and so real and it has touched so many people. over 20 million views there. and so many celebrities have come out in support of him. the tennessee titans invited him to a game. the university of tennessee is going to go to his school to say what a cool guy he is. brian: one of the toughest guys on the planet. dana white who is president of the ufc and took that from nowhere to everywhere saw that and said. this thank you for helping -- he wants someone to help him find his family. he wants to help them out. he tweeted this out. ainsley: he said meet keaton jones, a very smart little boy who is being bull idea at school. this video is heart breaking. i want to bring keaton to vegas and hang out at ufc headquarters. steve: done trump jr. saw that and tweeted this out. this boy is incredibly brave and the video really got to me at dana white. if he takes you up on your offer to see you at ufc headquarters in vegas. i would be honored to host him and his family at our place if they need somewhere to stay. brian: it's amazing the school system let it get to this point. i can imagine when the story is unveiled how many times the mother was called. dana got such outpouring. thank you for trying to help me find keaton. 1,000 percent greatest response post. this kid is special and we all feel it dying to meet him. hopefully they meet him today. ainsley: great lesson for every parent to learn. replay that video. find it on website and let your kids watch it and see how every mean thing they say to a kid it really affects them. if you have ever been bull idea it's the worst thing in the world. most ofs have you experienced that who are these kids pouring milk on him. and who are kids throwing bread down his shirt. they need to be pulled into the principal's office. they need to be punished. this is unacceptable: brian: i'm sure the mom picked um. if she got to the points they were taping it together. steve: he asked her to turn on the phone shoe she could record it. she put it on web page. 20 million views. somebody had started a go fund me page for his future education. right now it is up to $47,000. ainsley: i bet he feels good though today knowing is he supported and loved and has friends. steve: a left friends. 20 minutes before the top of the hour. jillian: he is the coolest kid at school. the other kids just don't know it yet. ainsley: they do now. ains. jillian: good morning to you at home. a serial killer serving life sentences for murdering seven people says he is even more victims. in a letter to a sout south carolina newspaper. more bodies that haven't been found. blue it off. rescued a woman chansd inside storage container on his property in 2016. police believe there could be more victims in florida or outside the country. agents patrolling the border catch illegal imgrant wanted for escaping mexican prison. fugitive on the run sings last month has a criminal history of kidnapping. he has been deported back to mexico. five other illegal immigrants caught with the fugitive now being processed by immigration authorities in arizona. new york city mayor bill de blasio is making crime pay with gift cards as part of a new taxpayer funded effort to make the court system more user friendly. criminal suspects are asked to take a survey about the judges. prosecutors, even the courtroom's temperature. in exchange, they get a $15 dunkin' donuts gift cared. the entire program cost $800,000. a look at your headlines, guys. steve: america runs on dunkin' and apparently so does the court system. thank you very much. 18 minutes before the top of the hour. ainsley: janice, i thought but this weekend we got snow. janice: i always said until i'm 100 years old i'm going out on the first snow fall and perform the season's first snow angel. ainsley: i saw it online and here it is. janice: we have it right now apparently. let's take a look. is it happening? steve: look at that. janice: here is my husband. it's not bad, you can see the grass because would he say only got three or fowfer inches. i'm going to be a kid at heart until i'm 100 years old. ainsley: you should be. janice: i got my necklace from jones beach. jones beach christmas lights. ever out there a beautiful festival and get these lights. quickly, here are the current temperatures. cold enough for snow in new york. snow as far as south as north florida. we are set up for a wintry pattern across the midwest, the great lakes, and the northeast. we have this clipper system diving across. going to be bring quite a bit of snow across the great lakes over the next 12 to 24 hours. will we get snow here in new york city tomorrow? i don't think so. but north and west of new york, definitely seeing some snow. again, we are in to this trough pattern which means the potential for snow, guys, not only this week but in to christmas week as well. so we might have a white christmas here in the northeast. steve: fantastic. got a good start on it this weekend. j.d., thank you. >> you got it. steve: a bit coin bananza on wall street. the digital currency is driving the markets wild officially today. here's the thing everybody is talking about. should you buy bit coin. we are going to talk about it. ainsley: liberal comedian chelsea handler taking a disgusting swipe again at white house press secretary sarah huckabee sanders. >> this is foundation. and just like the foundation of america, it's republican, it's strong, and it's white. ainsley: congresswoman mia love says there is a double standard for conservative women. she is walking on the set right now. ♪ ♪ what doesn't kill you makes you stronger ♪ of green mountain coffee roasters sumatra reserve. let's go to sumatra. the coffee here is amazing. because the 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comedian chelsea handler facing backlash after tweet ago viral video attacking the white house press secretary sarah sanders for her appearance. watch this. >> hey, y'all, it's me. sarah huckabee sanders. my face is a big fat biscuits. our great president was kind enough to take me to a sephora and he said to the employee. see that fellow right here, make him a woman. i know what you guys are thinking she is only 35? i get it. i got my dad's old face. ainsley: how can liberal feminist claim to champion women's rights while they are attacking a woman for being a conservative and they are attacking her looks? here to react is republican utah congressman mia love. thank you so much, congresswoman for being here. what's your reaction to this? can you believe this is happening this day and age? >> this, to me, is just like adult bullying. if we see what's happening with our kids in school? that video that just came out, i mean, i am raising three children. and i have to -- you sit there and see how adults behave and you wonder why children are mimicking what adults do. she is absolutely objectifying women by doing this. i think that it's absolutely inappropriate. ainsley: she defends it this is what she is tweeting. this woman, talking about sarah huckabee sanders, deserves to be taken down. she is pure evil. what is so threatening about sarah huckabee sanders who is a spokes personal at the white house? >> well, it's kind of what i deal with all the time. they wants women involved. they want diversity, yet, if you think for yourself, if you think differently, if you are a conservative, that's not the kind of diversity. so, they feel like they need to take down conservative women. ainsley: you have been through. this what are you experiencing? >> all the time. if you think about it. even in my district, they have gone out and gotten someone who is outside of my district to run against me because of what i stand for. and that is for conservative policies. they got a white, middle aged male to go after the one diverse woman that we have in the republican party. i find it really -- it's divisive politics. when you are asking for diversity instead of helping us recruit more people of color. more women. it's just let's go after them. ainsley: i feel like i have gotten to the point in my life where i don't want any more negativity. i don't want to watch someone on twitter that is so nasty and mean. there is so much love to go around in other parts of the world. i don't have time for that what's your message for chelsea this morning? >> i would say to chelsea that behaviors have consequences. and that not only are children looking at what you are doing, but if you are going to be on tv, and you are going to be some sort of an example, a role model, you should exempt phi what we want america to look like. and how we want america to treat each other. i think we lost the fact that we have to be nice to each other that there is some sort of civility in respect. even if you disagree with someone, have you no right to go out and be as horrible as she was being in this video. i'm actually proud of sarah and what she has been able to do, being a strong woman in a strong position. that doesn't happen very often. i want her to do her thing. ainsley: i know we need to stick together. we are americans. we are women. >> that's right. we are americans. we are women. we have something to offer and we need to make sure we stick up for each other. ainsley: thank you, congressman. thank you for being with us. kellyanne conway and steve scalise both here live in the next hour. and it's about to get wild. we have got leopards and tigers in our green room. they are coming into the studio. good thing they are small. right? that's next. ♪ ♪ keyboard clacking ] [ mouse clicks, keyboard clacking ] [ mouse clicking ] [ keyboard clacking ] [ mouse clicking ] [ keyboard clacking ] ♪ good questions lead to good answers. our advisors can help you find both. talk to one today and see why we're bullish on the future. yours. talk to one today and see why we're bullish on the future. hello there friend! hi! hey there. i'm an imaginary friend of a kid just like you. you're going through a lot right now and i know you're scared. but you're stronger than you know. but look, we'll get through this together. and remember... we at the imaginary friends society always have your back! >> fast as a ferry zero to 60 in three seconds. her fine flexes like a spring. the whole time she stays laser focused on her prey. >> she is going to get it right there right now. steve: nat geo's big cat week special. some of the world's fiercest felines. ainsley: this morning we are joined by a few of them. thank goodness they are small. brian? brian: i'm sorry. joining us is from gna that natd tiger cub, right. >> bengal tiger. ainsley: what's his name boone? >> this is gideon. he will rub up against your leg. a lot of exploring. ainsley: you are boone. >> four months old right now. not very big but he is going to get really big. brian: what should we know about him. >> what we need to know and let people know about him. steve: adorable. >> like a big puppy. steve: what age is he going to want to chew your hand off. >> he won't want to, he doesn't know better. they get so big and strong fast. they don't realize their own strength. ainsley: what age is that? >> is he going to grow up 250 pounds maybe bigger. ainsley: one-year-old. you have to put him in a cage. >> steve: here goes that cat. tonight big cat's week on nat geo. do you have a favorite. >> our cat here in the united states. one of my favorites. ainsley: what a beautiful animal. steve: can you tell that learned by thleopard by the spo. >> can you hear him talking. he has a brother over here. brian: if i brought this home. what's the difference between this and maybe a boxer? >> they probably won't get along. these are brothers. we will let them cruise around and obviously everything is new to them. hear them talking to each other. brian: look how low he gets. is he ready to pounce. who teachings him that. >> a lot of these guys born it's just instinct. they naturally know. steve: shouldn't they be on leashes? just saying? >> not these little guys. ainsley: for folks home watching this is cat week. start watching tonight? >> big point we want to do with these guys so many of these species are facing problems. we need to do something now to ensure that we are not playing the extinction game and not trying to bring them back. steve: we had three and now we are down to one. ainsley: thank you, boone. we will be watching nat-geo. steve: kellyanne conway will be joining us ♪ a trip back to the dthe doctor's office, mean just for a shot. but why go back there, when you can stay home... ...with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. neulasta helps reduce infection risk by boosting your white blood cell count, which strengthens your immune system. in a key study, neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%... ...a 94% decrease. applied the day of chemo, neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the next day. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to neulasta or neupogen (filgrastim). ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries, and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. so why go back there? if you'd rather be home, ask your doctor about neulasta onpro. ainsley: he is fed up with all the fake news. this was his latest tweet. major lies written and forced to be withdrawn after they are exposed. a stain on america. steve: all eyes on the state of alabama. republican roy moore currently in the lead as he denies accusations of sexual misconduct. >> it's also part of a scheme of political parties today to degrade your opponent. >> those who are really concerned about children and the future well-being of children may put that ahead of roy moore's alleged past. >> the most destructive wildfire raging in southern california. just got bigger. it's scorching nearly 250,000 acres. that is larger than the city of new york. >> give pittsburgh the lead. again. 39-38. >> mccoy in to the end zone and buffalo wins it. ♪ for the land of the free ♪ and the home of the brave ♪ [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ steve: very pretty day down in nation's capital. brian: like chico and the man very popular sitcom. ainsley: lots of news to talk about this morning. kellyanne conway coming up. we will talk to her about the news of the day. first. steve: straight to top story. all eyes on alabama one day before the state's special election for the u.s. senate seat. ainsley: republican candidate roy moore has president trump on his side as he is denying all the sexual misconduct claims and opponent launching brand new attacks. brian: heck of a battle as the voters go to it polls. griff jenkins with a poll with what the alabamaians have to make. >> alabamaians indeed. here we go in the heart of dixie, guys. just hours to go. alabamaians are waking up to a robo call calling jones a liberal puppet of nancy pelosi and chuck schumer. moore who was noticeably absent from the campaign trail this weekend avoided reporters but called in to a radio show yesterday defying the allegations against him and attacking the republican establishment who refuse to support him. >> the republican establishment actually wants jones in there because they think they can beat him in two years without coon test. of course, the democrats want jones in there for their vote. >> meanwhile jones barn stormed the state with help from outside democrats like corey bookie an booker who accud jones of hiding. >> what kind of public servant hides and goes only in to enclaves and doesn't address the media? i will be as accessible after this election as i am now. griff: ultimately had will come down to this choice that fox news contributor pastor robert jeffress said in our last hour. take a listen. >> evangelizes can choose roy moore, who vehemently denies the very serious allegations of child abuse from 40 years ago, or they can choose doug jones who openly and proudly embraces the most extreme example in kind of child abuse, abortion. >> now, moore has a slight lead in the polls, guys. tonight he plans to close out his campaign with a major rally featuring none other than steve bannon. it will be interesting to watch. >> see what kind of jacket he wears. probably the bomber jacket. steve: griff, thank you very much. kellyanne conway is going to be with us in just a couple of moments, we hope. but, first, we have some other news with jillian. jillian: bomber jacket is so in right now. brian: only one he has. jillian: good morning to you at home. the hunt intensifying for whoever is behind a string of freeway sheeghts. police in detroit say the same suspect or suspects are playing russian roulette on interstate 94. opening fire four separate times. one driver was hit in the leg but is expected to be okay. >> authorities now looking for a silver or gray car seen during the shootings. while you were sleeping, the most destructive wildfire raging in southern california just got bigger. scorching 230,000 acres. that's larger than new york city. the massive inferno forcing brand new evacuation orders in santa barbara. hurricane force winds fueling the flames. making it the fifth largest wildfire in state history. six out-of-control blazes still burning across california at this hour. it could get even worse. there is no rain in the forecast at all this week. new overnight, the u.s. military making a bold show of force launching missile tracking drills as tensions with north korea run high. the two-day joint drill with japan and south korea simulate detecting and tracking down ballistic missiles in waters off the korean peninsula. this comes after weeks after the rogue nation fired longest range missile yet potentially capable of reaching anywhere in the u.s. it was action packed week 14 across the nfl. the philadelphia eagles wrapping up the title 43-35 win over the rams. happy with that the star qb could be done for the season. leaving the third quarter with a knee injury. he will undergo an mri today in philadelphia. it's like so bittersweet. ejected seattle seahawks player clinton jefferson tried climbing into the stands charging and opposing stands who thro threw things at him. snowy scene in buffalo. you could barely see the field. by the way why were they wearing white uniforms in the snow in the bills beat the colts 13-7. you couldn't see anything. seriously, like so many people this morning are like oh congratulations about your eagles. but -- steve: somebody people didn't see 14 players took a knee. jillian: not during the army-navy game. brian: they wouldn't even see what happened. steve: looked like old school football. jillian: it did. ainsley: that guy who went after somebody who threw something at him didn't get them. steve: are joined by kellyanne. >> philadelphia eagle fans there you go. steve: kellyanne, we did a story griff did a story about roy moore according to real clear politics average. he looks like is he 3 or 4 auto head right now. mr. is jones. why what was the calculation behind not saying he could go out and campaign for him. at the 11th how about the president made it clear in pensacola his guy. >> i don't think the president could be more clear how he feels about this race this is the president now. made it very clear he wants that vote in the united states senate. the president has said a vote for lower taxes. secure borders. certainly less regulation. isis in defeat around the globe. the president has made very clear how he feels about this race. he also said it's up to the alabama voters to decide. we respect the rights of voters in every state to decide who represents them in the united states senate. i know nobody looks like in the poll, i'm out of the polling business now. nobody has cracked 50%. one of the undercoverred stories of this race is what will be the effect on the alabama voter with respect to how much money has been spent in this race? there is a tremendous spending advantage for doug jones. and the president knows that as well. he sees that but there is probably. this president getting involved and the vice president getting involved special elections has spun victories. they are 5 for 5. i'm just surprised that the democrats haven't had more of a footprint in alabama. i think if they had polling showing doug jones ahead they would be crowing about it and feeding the media or most of the media about it. they just haven't. they had a couple people down there. but, really, they have spent money on this race. but they really haven't had super stars, power hours going into alabama. say how they did in georgia 6 for that race where he lost election. brian: there is a theory laura ingraham brought up and others that the democrats want roy moore to win to make him the poster child for bad behavior next year in the mid terms. how do you feel about that possible plot? >> so, here is what voters focus on and we all know. you don't need to be a pollster 28 years to note following. including the own media's polling that are pushing that point. media polling show it's taxes, economy, heck, immigration, national security, prosperity. accountability. transparency. every single issue that this president and vice president are working on every single day behind me. voters know this is the paycheck president. they saw those numbers on friday. noble can that i can that away from this president. that the economy is absolutely booming. the stock market is up. he has created trillions of dollars of wealth since he got here. since he was elected. we have the lowest unemployment rate in 17 years. lowest unemployment rate among hispanics ever, folks. lowest unemployment rate we have had among african-americans and teens and women. you can't argue with the facts and the figures that motivate people to go to the polls. i don't know why the democrats, i mean, i do know why. they have nothing else to say. what are they going to do next year say hey, not a sings gel one of us voted for tax decreases. not a single one of us wanted to roll back regulations that are hurting property owners and taxpayers. not a single one of us when we could, stand um for the moms and dads and moms and pops in the tax code did that. they are for porous borders. they have what they call isis determined enemies in the jv team. and so we want their help. but what in the world are they going to run on other than this next year. i think voters are smarter than that. ainsley: kellyanne, what was your response then. talking about all the statistics that president trump has done, when president obama spoke at a summit the north america climate summit in chicago last week. and he said he is taking credit for this booming economy. and sarah huckabee sanders i believe the word she used was laughable. what's your response? >> regrettable and false, obviously. if the obama economy is what americans wanted, then hillary clinton would have won his third term. they rejected obamaomics. look at the statistics. we had 2% or less growth on his watch. this country for decades until 2007 got about 3% or better growth g.d.p. on average. and when he got here, we settled for less. and people are tired of settling for less. under president trump, we have had 2 consecutive quarters of over 3% g.d.p. we're going to be close to 4%. we had hurricane spending in there, rightfully so. and yet still had a quarter. you see the anticipation and expectation of a massive tax cut for the middle class and for our job creators. that is spurring economic anticipation manufacturing confidence. small business confidence. it's all up there. steve: you are not going to hear that on the mainstream media. >> obama is not the president. why can't he talk about something else? i can't believe the democratic party has wasted a year talking about the 2016 election and occasionally the 20020 election. what in god's name? what do they have to show here? this will drive the haters crazy this morning lying in bed watching us. everybody says what are the trump accomplishments? those are lengthy and we'll be putting them out soon. here are the democratic party's accomplishments, go ahead and make it viral, haters. these are their accomplishments, they talked about 2016 and 20020 the whole year and it doesn't mean anything. they have to go home now and face their voters when i had a chance to cut your taxes. when i had a chance to make our national security more robust, i looked the other way because of petty partisan political differences. let me make very clear this president wants democratic support on major measures, that's a question for the democrats. steve: all right. very good. kellyanne conway. >> you bet. bye-bye. brian: 13 minutes now after the hour. i don't want to give it away but i think i saw stuart varney on the stairs. take a quick look. steve: that's a tease. brian: skier lindsey vonn says she will not represent the president of the united states at the winter olympics. now she may not even get to go to the games. steve: and it's a bit coin bonanza. everybody is talking about how high it is. should you buy it? that's a question. stuart varney has got some answers because it's bit coin monday. good morning. ♪ money, money, money ♪ money ♪ but when your psoriasis is bad, does it ever get in the way? embrace the chance of 100% clear skin with taltz. taltz is proven to help people with moderate to severe psoriasis 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win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. that erupts with even more flavor. which helps provide for win's family. and adi the goat's family too. because his kids eat a lot. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. packed with goodness. from our family to yours... may all your wishes come true this holiday season. when heartburn hits fight back fast with tums chewy bites. fast relief in every bite. crunchy outside. chewy inside. tum tum tum tum tums chewy bites. ainsley: bit coin coming in with a bang. future of the digital currency surging more than 20% during his debut on the chicago exchange. steve: that is today. it began the day at $15,000. ending at more than 17,000, i believe, on friday as investors predict multitrillion-dollar values. brian: so, should you invest? here to weigh in, the host of varney and company and the fox business network, he is on to noon. people like jamie diamond said you better north trade it i'm going to fire you. he knows what he is talking about. >> i think this is a speculative bubble which ends in tears. that's my opinion of this thing. ainsley: not for the winkle boss brothers. they made a lot of money. >> they are supposedly the first billionaire bit coin people. they think it's going to a multitrillion-dollar market. okay. that's their opinion. look. brian: it's a global digital currency. >> what you are buying essentially is a computer entry, and the value of that computer entry is based on supply and demand, not on the price of gold or the full faith and credit of the united states treasury. the price has gone crazy. started trading on future exchange yesterday 6:00 p.m. eastern time. yesterday afternoon starts trading. goes up 10%. trade something halted. can't handle the volatility. brian: on sunday? why on sunday? >> it's a global market. steve: completely unregulated. >> they are trading on this exchange is regulation to some degree. it is dangerous. can you establish all different prices on different exchanges. that's the problem here. steve: stuart, here's the thing. so many people looking at, you know mom and pop got some money. 10 people on our show investing 10 odollars or $100 in it. month ago $9,000 and $17,000. they want to have it when it goes to 50. >> if you have 100 or $200 or $2,000 that you are quite prepared to lose, okay. chuck it into the gambling casino, why not? but. ainsley: only buying -- >> -- let's give you perspective here. what you are buying into is essentially a new and very disruptive technology. even if it crashes, it's not going away. the bit coins of this world are here to stay they are a crypto currency, nobody understands them. new medium of exchange. brian: will restaurants ever take bit coin. >> some do. but at the moment it's not being used as a currency. it's being used as a speculative computer entry which they hope will go straight up in value. brian: bought new dollars. ainsley: i understand the whole coin is $15,000. >> current price moments ago $16,411 to be precise. ainsley: good luck, brian. go invest. brian: sounds like a seinfeld episode. steve: you would not put a nickel in it. >> i don't. i think it's a bubble. if it crashes it could hurt the overall economy. brian: he is the star of varney and company featuring him for three hours. relish in it. >> thank you very much. brian: 10 minutes before the top of the hour and 40 minutes before the top of the hour and two hours and something else until something happens. the clock is ticking for congress. can they get something done before christmas? he wool ask steve scalise ahead. that's him and his title. ♪ more people shop online for the holidays than ever before. and the united states postal service delivers more of those purchases to homes than anyone else in the country. because we know, even the smallest things are sometimes the biggest. on a perfect car, then smash it into a tree. your insurance company raises your rates. maybe you should've done more research on them. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch and you could save $782 on home and auto insurance. call for a free quote today. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ ainsley: here's some news by the numbers. first, 3,800. that's how many pounds of cocaine a self-propelled semisubmersible vessel was trying to smuggle into the u.s. the coast guard intercepted the drugs in international waters near texas. next, 2. that is how many players are now elected to the baseball hall of fame. jack morris. brian: all right. ains antsz and allen trammell helped to win in 1994. helped win with toronto and minnesota how many men lose wedding rings by insurance company in u.k. only 14% of women admit to losing their brings. brian: i don't take them off. ainsley: that one looks like it's engraved. brian: and it's lost. steve: should be easy to get it back to the owner then. parents no doubt that raising children can be challenging. steve: okay. that's a cartoon. ainsley: now in making children mind without losing yours, our next guest has the tips that every parent needs. joining us now "new york times" best-selling author and parenting expert dr. kevin leman. dr. leeman, your book is great. i love the title. how do reraise our kids without losing our minds? >> the key is to to try to be authoritative parents. most of us grew up with authoritarian presidents. brian: there is a president. >> get that look off your face or i will change it for you. steve: that's authoritarian. >> permissives walk five feet step into them. mellowed have you chosen to go to bed yet? ainsley: have you choivel to go to bed. >> my father would say 8:00, he would point. if you didn't move you want to go to your own power or ricocheted to bed? the point is you are going to bed. the midpoint is being the authoritative parent. and that's a tough place. brian: how do you do that? >> your 14-year-old has an attitude. she is mean to everybody. 10 minutes later mom, would you drive me to the mall? no. the kid will come out what do you mean you always drive me to mall. >> i don't feel like driving to you mall. you had attitude all morning. i asked you to do this. you didn't do it. that kid will apologize. they will con you. and the parent many times well, she did apologize so i guess i will run her over there, bob. no. steve: don't cave. >> don't cave. your yes be yes, your no be no. action oriented discipline that's what you want. steve. brian: that's an example. >> another one kid doesn't clean room hire sister to clean it for him but give the sister allowance. reality become the teach tore child. this isn't rocket science. i'm not that smart. this can work it works. when i talk to ypo groups. business groups. principles i share with them making children mind without losing yours in the birth order book. it works. action oriented and then learn to respond rather than react. brian: in what way? what do you mean by that? >> single mom, 9-year-old having breakfast. living in 2 bedroom parliament. -year-old says mommy, i want a pony, a pony? a pony? she got a deep voice. a pony? where did you get that idea from. i am telling you if a bird had your brain he would fly sideways. where do you come up with those things. the doctor says hey, brian, you responded to the medication, respond something good. reaction to the medication is bad. so, 9-year-old, using same situation, mommy, i wants a pony. wow, can you imagine having your own pony? can you imagine riding down to school in the morning waving at the kids at the bus stop? 9-year-old says yeah, but mom, we live in a 2 bedroom apartment we can't have a pony here. he will figure it out. don't look for trouble. kids say stupid, dumb things. look at them and go wow. brian: so do adults by the way. >> i'm telling you it works with husbands. when a husband says something really stupid my advice to women is go look at them and go wow, fascinating. you can be thinking you are an idiot. just don't say it. steve: one of the things that parents do i have seen over my 30 years of raising kids is a lot of parents constantly praise their kids thinking that's going to help them but that does not help them all the time. >> well, when people read in making children mind that lehman says praise structure with children. they think i have a screw loose. five a's come home on report card. here is your traditional authoritarian based parents five a's. i'm going to call uncle jack and aunt martha. we are so excited. honey, i'm so proud of you. here is $20. now people say hey, lehman, what's wrong with that. let me give you a better way. wow, five a's. all that hard work you put in really paid off. congratulations. high five. steve: less pressure. brian: also have you made it about them. not about you. you are calling you want to brag because you are a good parent. >> parents will pay kids for grades. really. let me ask you all a personal question this morning. would you. how many of have you gone potty this morning? steve: huh? >> potty, have you gone potty this morning, steve? steve: what does that mean. >> give you m and m for going. we fabricate all these stupid things. ainsley: how do we poet train them? steve: he is talking about us. ainsley: don't do the m and m. i have been told. >> in front of steve. ainsley: we will talk about it in the commercial break. brian: fascinating. ainsley: i could listen to you all day long. live. this. brian: right now everyone has a parenting crisis at home having breakfast. ainsley: that's true. steve: new book is called "making children mind without losing yours." >> we have seen the enemy, steve, they are small and they're unionized. [laughter] steve: thank you, sir. ainsley: thanks, dr. leeman. it is the video that everyone is talking about this morning that young boy breaking down in tears, the middle schooler about being bull idea. steve: the response internationally has been overwhelming. your emails are coming up next. >> it's not okay. people that are different don't need to be criticized about it. it's not their fault. copd makes it hard to breathe. so to breathe better, i go 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 tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain while taking anoro. ask your doctor about anoro. ♪go your own way get your first prescription free at anoro.com. that was just a'ight for me. yo, checi mean,t dawg. you got the walk. you got the stance.. but i wasn't really feeling it. you know what, i'm not buying this. you gotta come a little harder dawg. you gotta figure it out. eh, i don't know. shaky on the walk, carriage was off. randy jackson judging a dog show. i don't know dawg. surprising. what's not surprising? how much money lisa saved by switching to geico. wow! performance of the night. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. steve: now time for news by the numbers. it is more than 20 million views. what we are talking about is kimberly jones who is the mother of a young boy, you know, he would come home every day and he would say yeah, they bull idea me again. she decided she was going to turn on her phone on friday and she did. as her son, keaton, explained how the bullies at school are really getting to him. >> just you are out of curiosity why do they bully? what's the point of it? why do you enjoy making innocent people, finding a way being mean to them. it's not okay. >> what do they stay to you. >> they make fun of my nose. they call me ugly. they say i have no friends. >> what did they do to you at lunch. >> poured milk on me and put bread down my clothes. >> is it gist you? >> yep. >> or is it other kids too that feel that way? >> they say it's other kids, too. >> how does that make you feel? >> why do they do it to me isn't enough why do they do it to other people because it's not okay. people that are different don't need to be criticized about it. it's not their fault. but if you are made fun of, don't let it bother you just stay strong, i guess. it's hard. but, probably get better one day. steve: 20 million views of that video. there is a go fund me page. up to $50,000 so far. ainsley: so hard to watch as a child. if you are a parent even if you are not a parent a human being watching that. we were all middle schoolers, we were all bull idea at one point to actually pour milk on someone. who can do that? picked up bread and put it down his shirt. who are these people? we need to find out who these kids are. and get to the principal's office. they need to be told. i'm sure they feel terrible today. brian: is he going inside the mind of why would you do that because we're different? it's not our fault. he is also doing that for other kids that are being bullied. stay strong, i guess. dana white sees this. and he is in charge of the toughest strongest most lethal weapons on the planet ufc. he has reached out. he wants everyone to help him find keaton because he wants to invite the family. he said meet keaton jones very smart little boy who is being bull idea at school because he forwarded this video. this video is heart breaking. i want to bring keaton to vegas and hang out at ufc headquarters. ainsley: he is the smart one to recognize people are different. we are all god's children and it's okay to be different. you don't have to be the most popular person, the most prettiest person. we all have strengths in different ways. steve: after dana white tweet thrad out. donald trump jr. tweeted this out. this boy is incredibly brave this video got to me at dana white. if he takes you up on offer at ufc headquarters. i would be honored to host him and his family at our place if they need somewhere to stay. ainsley: brought to me to tears that school should be investigate wanted for allowing this to happen. steve: if this was my kid this my new job would be camp out daily at that school until these people and the people allowing had are punished. brian: we have got to get the back story here. this from cartha. i bless all the people who came to this little guy's side. i would love to see coverage of him staying at don jr.'s home or hotel and then hanging out with other celebrities. that would be great. steve: dale earnhardt jr. said add me to your long list of friends, keaton. snoop dogg said keaton has a friend for life. that love is the only way to beat hate. have you got justin bieber and scooter brawn. the entertainment world and a lot of athletes have all said this kid is cool. he is our friend. ainsley: i wonder if this will be something we will see more and more of to combat bullying. parents doing this so that their kids filed loved. as a parent if your kid -- would you put this on video? brian: might be desperate. sounds like they are desperate. ainsley: i agree. good idea. brought to light this issue we all need to be talking about it parents at home need to show it to their middle schoolers and say this is what happens when you mean to someone. steve: whether or not the mother has talked to the school in the past my kid is getting bull idea every day and you are not doing anything. had it up to here. we don't know. we are going to try continue to variety them on the program for an appearance in a couple of days. we will keep you posted. everybody wants to meet keaton jones. brian: other thing would be great if people were inspired to not watch the bullying. you see the bullying going on and keep walking. hopefully students will stand up for him. jillian: students are young and trying to be cool or do what their kids try to do. they're the people that need the message and wakening right now. it's sad. ainsley: kids shouldn't laugh at someone else. pour milk on them and to do that. that's a different level. steve: evil. jillian: that's a good word for it get you caught up on headlines this morning. annual at this american protests erupting overnight in indonesia as muslims react to the u.s. recognizing jerusalem as israel's capital. protesters burning american flags and images of president trump. meantime, the white house calling out palestinian leaders for canceling a meeting with vice president pence later this month. the vice president's press secretary saying quote it's unfortunate that the palestinian authority is walking away again from an opportunity to discuss the future of the region. jury selection begins today in the trial of the first u.s. police officer to ever be accused of terrorism. nicholas young, a former washington, d.c. cop, is accused of buying $250 in gift cards to send to isis and giving them to an undercover agent. he was arrested in a government sting last year after being under surveillance for years. young's lawyers claim he was entrapped by the fbi. olympic skier lindsey vonn pulling out of a world cup race after injuring her back on saturday. the gold medalist says she is focusing on getting healthy for the winter games. this happened just days after trashing the president. >> i hope to represent the people of the united states. not the president. i want to represent our country world. and i don't think there are a lot of people currently in our government that do that. jillian: vonn also says she won't visit the white house if she is invited. a look at your headlines. ainsley: that sparked a lot of outrage online. and it's still going. steve: it is, indeed. thanks, jillian. 19 minutes before the top of the hour on this monday it is warm in the studio. i think it's a little chilly out on the streets of new york city. that's where j.d. is. janice: rub it in. look at the crowd keeping me warm. you know those ugly christmas sweaters. i love crazy christmas hats. here is two weeks. what do you think? [cheers] janice: all right, let's take a look at the maps real quick because it's cold. do you guys like the cold? [cheers] janice: seasonal, all right. absolutely. 30 in cleveland. cold as far as south as florida. 45 degrees in tampa. we do have this pattern setting up where we have got the wintry weather across the great lakes and midwest and northeast. we have a chance of snow not only tomorrow, ladies and gentlemen, really near the end of the workweek and a white christmas. who wants a white christmas? put your hands up. everybody wants a white christmas? who is from north dakota here. and what are your names? >> den net from fargo. >> and john from north dakota. janice: you love "fox & friends"? >> we love "fox & friends." janice: is this the highlight of your trip. >> it is. janice: waive twave to steve and brian. we have the whole gang here. you got brian to wave, janice. steve: coming up on monday. clock is ticking for congress. can they get tax reform done. we are going to get a whip count from steve scalise. there he is. he is in our studio and he is coming up shortly. ♪ anyway you want it ♪ ♪ if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis,... ...isn't it time to let the real you shine through? maybe it's time for otezla (apremilast). otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months,... ...with reduced redness,... ...thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has... ...no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased... ...risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have... ...a history of depression... ...or suicidal thoughts,... ...or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla... ...reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper... ...respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take... ...and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your dermatologist about otezla today. otezla. show more of you. from the fire department of new york that there was some sort of a bomb in midtown manhattan near 42nd and 8th avenue where the port authority bus terminal is. we do not know if it exploded there are reports the station -- the port authority bus station has been evacuated. bomb squad is on the scene. we have a crew on the way. we will have an update as soon as we get it. so, anyway, it looks as if they found a bomb over by the port authority. ainsley: pretty scary. port authority where the buses from different parts of the suburbs come in onto our city. brian: that's probably one of the busiest times you could do it. so, that would be the maximum pay off for a would be terrorist. steve: all right. meanwhile, more on that in a moment. >> but right now let's bring in republican louisiana steve scalise it's an honor to have you in new york. >> i'm not sure what that is about. my prayers go out to anybody injured in this. new york police department, fire department. >> they are the best in the business. brian: we understand a bomb squad has been dispatched over there right away. they are the best. and they can act authoritatively. you have a lot to accomplish in 10 days. you have got to fund the government. you have got to fund the defense department. reform tax reform. compromise. first off on tax reform, where are we now? >> we are right now in a conference committee. so the house and senate passed two different versions of the same, roughly the same bill that's going to ultimately reduce taxes for families and get the economy moving and create jobs. and so the confer res both in the house and senate have been meeting through the weekend. combing through a lot of the final details where there is disagreement. hopefully in the next few days we will see the final framework. get a bill well before christmas on the president's desk. ainsley: is obamacare repeal part of that. >> individual mandate repeal is going to very likely be part of the final. brian: you embrace it because it came from the senate. >> we passed it in the house many times. the senate had trouble in the past. the senate did pass the repeal of the individual mandate in their version of the bill and we want to keep it in the final product. that's going to help a lot of families to improve this healthcare system that's just devolving under obamacare where people are seeing massive double digit increases. let's get this in the final product of the bill signed by president trump. steve: there's a story on drudge report right now, i believe it's the "wall street journal" that shows that some high income business owners could actually face marginal tax rates over 100 percent. >> that's not going to be in any final version of the bill. right now i think they were trying to take some extreme worse case scenario of something in the senate bill that is kind of a fictional -- regardless of that, every tax. steve: that's not going to be in. >> there every tax rate will be cut. in our bill, no matter what tax rate you pay, if you are paying taxes, your tax rate is going to go down. and you are going to see families on average get $1,200 more back in their pocket. brian: state and local taxes. a lot of republicans in big states like new york. high tax states like california upset. susan collins is going to be a stumbling block in the other chamber. here she is yesterday. >> i always always wait until the final version of the bill is brought before us before i make a final decision whether or not to support it there are major differences between the house and senate bills. and i don't know where the bill is going to come out. i also, obviously, care very much about amendments that i i was successfully getting in the bill helping middle income families. brian: are you worried? >> she voted for the senate bill. i think she going to like the final bill even more. this bill pushes a lot more tax relief to middle class families it works on making our country competitive again. we have the highest tax rate in the industrialized world. what that has mental is erosion of middle class. really good 60, 70, $80,000 jobs leaving our country and going to ireland and other places. we are working on bringing those jobs. steve: has the president been helpful on taxes unlike healthcare which in the senate he was told by michigan don't bother helping, i got this covered. >> president trump has been incredibly helpful every stipulate of the way. the day released the bill in the house the president had us over to the white house and fully elm breasted cutting taxes for families. he campaigned on this. i'm going to cut tax rates across the board. is he following through on yet another campaign promise. he has been great to work with. when this gets signed by president trump, this is going to be a generational achievement. we still talk about the 1986 tax cuts under reagan. you will be talking about these trump tax cuts and how it got our economy moving again. and it's going to be something that families are going to really look back on a year from now, five years from now as a great achievement. brian: great to see you back in action. >> great to be here with you. steve: meanwhile, the mainstream media reigl reeling from a series of mistakes about president trump. doesn't this proo prove the president was right about fake news? when people ask me for whiter teeth, i always tell them the thicker the enamel, the more white you're going to have. i would definitely recommend pronamel strong and bright to my patients. pronamel strong and bright toothpaste helps to actually strengthen the enamel. it's going to keep that enamel strong. it's going to keep it white. patients get what they're asking for. they want whiter teeth. they're going to get it with this. not only what dentists are looking for in a product, but what patients are looking for in a product. ♪ ♪...nausea, heartburn,♪ indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ ♪nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ here's pepto bismol! ah. ♪nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ hello there friend! hi! hey there. i'm an imaginary friend of a kid just like you. you're going through a lot right now and i know you're scared. but you're stronger than you know. but look, we'll get through this together. and remember... we at the imaginary friends society always have your back! steve: reporting errors about president trump and inaccurate. cnn had to back pedal and abc suspended brian ross their correspondent after a botched exclusive about former national security advisor michael flynn. this as the "new york times" published a guide to the president with the headline inside trump's hour-by-hour battle for self-preservation detail his twitter and diet coke habits. have the recent media mistakes and missteps proven the point the president makes about their bias? here to weigh in is senior editor for the federalist and fox news contributor mollie hemingway. molly, media had a really bad week last week, didn't they? >> it's been a really tremendously bad week in a tremendously bad year. there has been such like beat to get this russia-trump collusion story and so many of the of the stories have had to be pulled and corrected some turn out to be no big deal. you north seeing a lot of intraspeculation on media about whether the entire story is the problem and whether that belief in that story has caused some of these errors which all seem to go in one direction against the president. steve: sure. but the media is giving the president ammo, i told it you was fake news, see. and you got this, and you have got "the washington post" correspondent who tweeted out the picture where it looked like nobody showed up pensacola and the place was packed. >> right. it seems sometimes like the media and donald trump are in a distonguesal co-dependent relationship. but, yes, absolutely the media are giving ammo to donald trump. he has figured out that people are very trust straited by media mistakes, media narrative pushing and by a general bias problem that they seem to have no interest in correcting. he exploits that frustration that people have. and then they fall right into it by continuing to makerrers on very important stories. steve: you know what it is? you know a lot of members of the mainstream media want the smoking gun. they want to be the one who does it to the president. >> and they keep saying that they have a smoking gun which turns out to be a random email from an average american releasing publicly available information. so maybe instead of pushing for a smoking gun, they should push for the truth of the story. and in this case it seems like the truth of the story is not that russia and trump colluded to steal an election that was rightfully hillary clinton's. but maybe that everyone has been participating in a somewhat frustrating information campaign about a russia collusion narrative. the scandal is that the media have participated in that story and pushed that story gotten some things wrong on that story. that's a troubling situation for our media to be in. steve: molly, thank you very much. meanwhile, fox news alert, new york city has confirmed an explosion near the port authority. latest in a minute. steve: it's 8:00 in new york city, and we start with a fox news alert. that is a live look in midtown manhattan at 48th and -- 42nd and 8th avenue where the fire department of new york now confirming an explosion near that site. reports of some sort of a bomb near the port authority. this is all happening at the height of rush hour. apparently the explosion was 7:25 this morning. the police, as you can see clearing out several subway lines beneath the station. there are reports that areas surrounding the station are also on lock down and evacuated. a bomb quad is on the scene. we have a crew on the way. as you can see, we have live pictures there as well. brian: we have a situation if you're local, and you travel here, you'll know. the a, c, and e lines have been evacuated immediately. there are reports of a enormous blast. the nypd staying some reports of some kind of explosion. abc is also saying it was a pipe bomb. ainsley: so we haven't confirmed there was a bomb yet. we are hearing reports of a explosion. there are reports of maybe a type of bomb. we'll know more if this story develops. i used to live -- this is the first department on this block, and i lived there until i could find my footing here in new york. it's a very busy area. if you haven't been there, what happens is all of the buses that come out of new jersey that come into the city. a lot of people commute from the suburbs, a lot of buses come from long island, stat onisland, they come in and drop people off in the morning. also, it's christmastime. you have so many tourists here, more tourists during any other times of the year. and they were also when you go downstairs, when you enter into the bus terminal there, all the subway lines connected. this is 42nd street. this is time square. it's extremely busy. steve: but this time of morning and the explosion was apparently at 7:25 this morning as the police apparently, you know, they're trying to figure out what happened. mainly, the port authority is the input where all the people from new jersey who are coming in on the buses get off and then scatter throughout new york city. my daughter is actually in the bus lane right now waiting to -- ainsley: what is she saying. steve: well, she said apparently the phones are jammed. she said apparently people are getting a lot of phone calls from their loved ones to make sure they're okay. apparently on the bus she's on she said according to somebody on twitter, there was a bomb and shots fired. we have not heard that. she was saying people on the bus are terrified because they are in the lincoln tunnel, and then they come out of the lincoln pneumonia new york at the port authority, and they have heard these reports that apparently some sort of a bomb went off there. brian: when you go on amtrak, there is some type of security. they'll see you, they'll walk you, they'll eyeball you. you have to go through and hand in a ticket. not in this situation at the port authority. not obviously with the subways. sometimes abstractly they'll have different bag checks. sometimes you'll see cops there. maybe they got an alert or trying to throw off a would-be terror attack. but when you talk about the port authority, you talk about something that you just had a lot of the surveillance that you do, you see you don't understand or it's not transparent. ainsley: everyone's on high alert in new york this time of year and especially after 9/11, you look at all of these police officers that do such a good job. we've seen other emergencies since and hopefully this is -- this will not take the lives of anyone. hopefully no one is injured. we just don't know any of that information right now. brian: the port authority, by the way. we're talking about 42nd and 8th. we're not talking about pen station. steve: no. brian: and we do say this. when you talk about a busy station, this has for you people on average going through every day. steve: right. every weekday. so as you look at that headline there near time square, it's a couple of blocks away from time square. but nonetheless, it is one of the major hubs here in new york city for transportation. and 7:25 in the morning, maximum time of people. if these stories are true, these reports are true, there was some sort of a bomb, we do not know whether or not it it had been planted. we don't know whether or not somebody had it on them, we are just seeing incidental reports as the cameraman backs up over by the westin hotel over there by 42nd and 8th avenue. so much is not known right now. but as you can see, the police are moving the press back, obviously, to establish. ainsley: not too far where we're located right now. we're on 47th street. this is 42nd street. but you can see all of the blinking lights and the billboards because you know if you've been in time square, that's what it looks like. this is a very heavily-traveled traffic area, invariably christmastime. brian: when i went downstairs, it's much easier to hear as far as to hear the sirens on the city is very reminiscent when there have been other. the time square bomber or other things happened. ainsley: when you went downstairs, what do you mean. brian: when i went downstairs to do the interview, i was talking to steve scalise, you could hear the blaring sirens. but also in the big picture, if this is what it seems to be, some type of terror attack, this would be the second one in a month. and i'm talking back to ray kelly when he said all of his year, he said i think it was at least 8, there were 13 separate attacks that were thwarted that we never heard about. it seems if this is, in fact, what indications are, this would be the second one in a month at one of the most trafficky times in one of the busiest times for the number one city in america. steve: sure and ultimately as is always the case when it comes to these kinds of events, the obvious goal is to simply terrorize people and something like this happening on the 11th day of december just a few weeks before christmas in one of the busiest parts in new york city is terrifying. dan bongino joins us right now. he used to be with the police department of new york city. a secret service guy as well. dan, as you look at what's going on athe 42nd and 8th avenue, what's your observation? >> well, a couple of things, steve. we know it's roughly rush hour in new york. we know it's a transportation hub, given the port authority terminal there on the west side, and we know it's holiday season. those are three very suspicious factors because it's not a secret that isis and other terrorist groups have targeted transportation groups. if you think of a city as a body, they've always targeted transportation whether it's airlines, buses, or trains because those are the blood vessels of that body and, again, three highly-suspicious things that leads me to believe that it could, in fact, be a terrorist. ainsley: so, dan, the mayor has just been briefed on everything. i'm certain he's going to have a press conference this morning once he knows more information. what's happening right now? what's going on? because as an nypd detective, secret service, what's going on behind the scenes right now? >> well, one of the first things they're doing is create an evidence-free pathway. if this was a pipe bomb, there have been some reports about that, they're going to need the fragmentation, they're going to need what type of explosive was used. these are all pieces of evidence that are going to be necessary to reverse engineer this potential crime here and see actually what happened. it's tough. i mean, when you're talking about a bomb, the fragmentation on a pipe bomb could be pretty severe, depending on what type of explosive was used inside this. so that's the first thing you want to do. and secondly, you want to make sure that this is the only attack. as we've seen in the past here, you know, there's no guarantee that this is the only one. i can almost guarantee you right now the nypd is at a heightened state of alert at other trains, buses, and airports telling their officers obviously, nobody panic here but give a second look to anything that may be suspicious right now. brian: well, one gratuities event is that there's a firehouse right around the block, so they're able to get there quickly in a time that you just live in gridlock at this hour. they might be able to get there on foot, even though i do see trucks there. and it is quite loud in midtown, manhattan at this hour. and you're getting multiple -- different reports of different types of explosions. can you give me an idea of the hierarchy? the nypd control but the fbi also has a bureau here along with various different secret service. who's in charge? >> yeah. you know, in the movies, brian, you see it all the time it used to be the feds. i was a secret service agent and a nypd cop, so i've seen it from both sides. guy shows up with the federal agent badge and everybody clears the way. that's just in the movies. not in the real world. the nypd is a great police department. they work together. if it is terrorism, the fbi will always take the lead. but that doesn't mean that the nypd has a diminished role. it just means it's more cooperative, especially in a big city like new york and l.a. where you have a really professional police department. it doesn't work otherwise. steve: right and, dan, as we look from the chopper shots as they look down in the time square area, and we do understand that apparently multiple ambulances were requested. you know, my daughter goes in and out of the port authority twice a day. and over the last six months, there have been so much security inside the port authority, that is reassuring. but i'm seeing on twitter right now, including abc 7 and their network as well, they say that a possible pipe bomb was detonated in a passageway below ground level at the port authority. there are other reports that apparently one person is in custody. there were a few injuries. police have obtained video and are confident it is contained. >> yeah. the injuries part, obviously, has everybody concerned. when you see that type of emergency medical response to the scene. but, steve, at that hour -- i mean, you all know new york ainsley, steve, brian. you've been there. i've been there 1,000 times. these are such densely-populated areas. if you have an explosion of any time. i mean, if you had an m80 firecracker go off, you're going to hurt somebody, and that's these terrorists' sick thinking. so i'm not surprised to see that. i think everybody is praying right now that the injuries are minimal or hopefully that there's not a significant death count from this. but it would be very difficult not to injure someone at that location, and that leads me to believe there's some terrorist implication. ainsley: dan, we're just that he didn't nypd that a suspect is in custody, so this does appear to be not an accident. >> yeah, and if there's a suspect in custody, we also know it's not a homicide bombing as well. and i believe in cases like this, this is a good thing. i mean, you get to the motive, you get to what type of support network this person may have had. and, guys, for future attacks, this is all information that really helps. one of the problems with these homicide bombings, obviously, is, you know, he kills himself or she along with the rest of the people, and you never get to the bottom of what actually happened, you know, so you can be proactive in the future. brian: so we understand the nypd is prepared very soon. but, of course, if this suspect -- if, in fact, it is true and the initial reports sometimes are, sometimes aren't that we have him in custody and he or she is alive, this would be the second one in a month. dan, how do you explain that? we should be getting better at this. we shouldn't be getting more vulnerable at this or have we just been dodging bullets for the past ten years? >> you know, brian, the bad news, and it pains me to tell you this is that these types of attacks, these low logistics, low-planning attacks whether they're using small arms to shoot in the crowd or whether it's a pipe bomb, they are nearly impossible to prevent like fire techniques. if you're an arsonist and you don't get advance to stop it, there's no way to stop it. what are you going to do for the port authority? they don't screen people on the way in. ainsley: will that change do you think? will that change? >> i don't know if it's possible, ainsley. i really don't. i mean you set up magnetometer points, and then what's the blac black and white zone? steve: one of the police sources twitter i was looking at, apparently the person involved in the detonation of the device. the device is reported it went off prematurely. that person is in custody but injured and may have been wearing some kind of suicide vest. >> yeah. well, that's certainly a terrifying wrinkle to this. and that would explain why they have a suspect in custody. largely as we have seen with these attacks in the past historically is the murderer and the terrorist kills themselves as well. there's no interest in escaping from the scene. and when you said that they had somebody in custody, i was a little puzzled now that that explains it that it may have been, in fact, a detonation in advance of what this person wanted. and that explains a lot. and wonder if it's a real vest or a fake vest. you've seen that as well before. steve: surely. and you know what, dan. with a quarter of a million people going through the port authority in new jersey at that location every weekday. on this, the coldest day of the year, a lot of people are wearing big coats. and you know what would be easy to conceal if you had some sort of explosive device strapped to your chest because everybody's wearing a big coat today. >> yeah, that's an excellent point. you're absolutely correct. i remember being in the secret service doing events in the northeast in the fall and winter, and you have a guy that shows up in a park in a 99-degree day. everybody obviously stairs at him. but someone wearing two parkas in new york city on a day like today where it's 30, 40 degrees is not going to elicit any suspicion at all. it's a really good point. brian: hold on. we have our own rob schmidt who is at the scene and got a signal up and is able to take in what's happening and give us the latest information. rob, where are you exactly and what are you seeing? >> hey, brian, yeah, we're at 43rd. i'm standing at 43rd and 8th, so this is where the port authority is and all the buses come into the city. this is a major subway station here. so it's really an epicenter of how people get into the center, and it's monday morning and rush hour people come in. so this, tsks, would be a place where somebody who would want to inlitic a lot of damage. we're only about ten blocks from you guys there in midtown. i ran over here as soon as we heard the initial report from the bureau. right now we're going to go out what this is. there was a huge response, but there wasn't just a lot of panic. so it was interesting to see all of these police and firemen here and everybody responding to this but then getting here and just standing around wondering what had happened. i walked into a deli over here trying to get some kind of basic information of what happened. i asked the guy did you hear anything? did you feel the explosion? did you feel the rumple? because i know the subway runs right underneath the blue line. and i said did you feel or hear anything? and he said he didn't. so i'm not sure exactly what this is. obviously, this is a maze of systems underneath new york city. but it could be something very small that hopefully did not inflict a lot of damage is what we were hoping. but i'm seeing a number of stretchers over here to my left that the fdny has brought in, but they're not moving them downstairs yet. they're just standing there and waiting. so i think it's all happening me beneath me right now. ainsley: when they blocked off the streets, how did you get in? did you get in with your news credentials? or did they just let anyone come in? >> no. i slid in before it developed into what it is now. it's now 42nd and 8th, that intersection is completely blocked off and that's where the port authority physically is. where all those buses come in and all the people come through. i'm at 43rd now because they pushed me back. but, yeah, the subway lines i believe right now are suspended, and i know there's major delays on buses coming in because the whole operation runs out of the station. so it's a mess. but hopefully there's not a lot of damage and not a lot of casualties in this or injuries in this, it's what we're all hoping for. and right now it does feel even though there are has been this massive response, there is kind of a very lackadaisical attitude by first responders. there's not a lot of running around or panic at the scene. just a lot of people here. steve: absolutely. so if you're just tuning in, police confirmed that pipe bombing of some sort at the port authority near the subway. suspected bomber is in custody. sounds like two people are hurt, including the suspect. now, here's the thing, rob. the port authority, which sounds like the target is how tens of thousands of people get into new york city. is the port authority closed? and does that mean people who are on the rail lines heading in are on trains that are stopped? because my daughter is in the lincoln tunnel right now trying to come to work, and her bus is not moving. so where are people going to be going? >> that's a great question. and, you know, the tunnel, the lincoln tunnel comes right in there too. spits you out at what? 40th street and 9th avenue or something like that. so she's going to be coming into the thick of this as well. i don't know if the port authority is closed. i don't think it is. i think that they're going to try to work around this thing because you've got, you know, hundreds if not thousands of buses and trains and everything comes through. a lot of it comes right into this area here. so this is really how new york operates. ainsley: i'm not sure if they will, rob, let them in. based on what we saw after 9/11, dan bongino is worried about other attacks that might have been planned, i bet that they're not going to let the buses come into authority authority for that very reason. >> what i saw from the nypd is that they were expecting delays on port authority and that the subway had been suspended. so i think that it definitely had more of an impact on the subway. brian: hold that thought for a second. we're just getting recent footage from inside the port authority. you know, there are reports that there was a wild stampede after the explosion actually happened. let's look at this video together for the first time and i'm not sure if you'll hear anything on it. but with everyone with an iphone, let's listen. steve: see, what you notice there is we were told there was a stampede inside the port authority as soon as they started to evacuate. and you can see some people in the background actually taking off. ainsley: it looks like the people would know. you see it looks like a police officer running. maybe he just got word. it looks like the other people were not in a big hurry. so maybe they didn't know at that point. brian: yeah, i know steve scalise special -- his secret service did not know anything, except for an explosion at port authority, and that was ten minutes ago. ainsley: we are being that you would, sarah huckabee sanders i can read it on twitter. she's saying potus has been briefed on this situation. can we bring back in dan bongino? because he was secret service. what's happening now at the white house when the president is notified, what happens next? do we have any of them on the phone? >> yeah. the white house you have the national security team, obviously looking at if this is some type of terror incident it looks like frighteningly so. and that's obviously the primary question right now, ainsley. the investigation is secondary to triaging your needs to making sure that this is the only attack. you don't want to preemptively declare that everything's over and then god forbid you have another explosion say down on a train station of whatever, downtown manhattan somewhere. obviously saving lives is paramount, and i bet there's some heightened state of alert right now, and this is the kind of thing that the president is briefed on, in my opinion, immediately. everybody stops, everybody rushes over. steve: surely. let's bring in sebastion. he's an expert at terrorism. he joins us right now from our nation's capitol. sebastion, as you look in, what appears to be your observations what appears to be a pipe bomb or a suicide vest near the port authority of new york city? >> well, good morning, steve. i reached out to my contacts at the fbi -- the bureau, the nypd half an hour ago, and they were already on level three alert, which is one of the highest levels of alert. but as your coverage shows, they have responded. the first responders are there. the professionalism is clear. but there isn't that heightened level of a very serious attack having already occurred. the initial reports is that it was a failed bomb attack but the individual is in custody. so now it's going to be a question of deploying the investigators to find out who this individual is, were they part of a broader conspiracy? but the facts remain the facts. new york is one of the most seductive, important targets for any jihadi organization, whether it's an international one like isis or whether it's somebody who has been recruited domestically in the united states, and they've said again and again and again. al-qaeda and isis in their magazines, in their internet publications, you want to affect as much damage. so what do you do? you look for the highest concentrations possible of unarmed civilians. and the port authority would be a classic potential target for groups like al-qaeda or isis. brian: so on top of this when the president comes out and says i'm going to be moving our embassy in jerusalem, there's a reaction in israel and throughout the middle east and lebanon. but do you think there's also an increase of security here, especially with the united nations blistering our ambassador over the last few days? and then, of course, the location of so many other important people? >> yeah. there probably is, and that's really sad, brian. i mean, think about it. we just reaffirmed the fact that jerusalem is the capital of israel, and we have to worry about violent outbreaks in the rest of the world. during my time at nypd, anything related with judaism whether it's synagogues or israel embassy was always a target that required extra nypd and federal government attention. it's really sad, but it's a valid question, and i think you're right. nouns. maybe this did have something to do with it. i'm sure isis if they do claim credit will say it did just to make sure that they get the fundraising capabilities off of it as well. steve: let's bring in rob schmidt. once again, he's just about a -- well, we just lost his signal. i was going to ask him about the port authority being open, and we have just been told that apparently it is still in operation. however, one of the entrances is closed. i'm getting a report from my daughter apparently the bus is moving, and she's getting closer to it. it will be interesting to see what happens when she comes out of the lincoln tunnel. there you can see the chopper view down at 42nd and 8th avenue. and as you can imagine, the traffic in new york city on the west side is horrific. brian: dr. gorka, i always understand we see these terms, but the attack is contained. there seems to be one person in custody. i know israel has always lived by the decree of get things back to normas quick as possible. a bomb attack, get the bus out of there, you know, you clean up the streets, get people back on the streets. do we have the same philosophy when it comes to post attack security if it is indeed post attack? >> great point, brian. israel really has got this issue down, whether it's shopping mall or whether it's anywhere. a bus station that has high concentration of civilians. there's a heightened level of security at all times. metal detectors outside their key areas. what we need to do, brian, in this incident whatever happens to be the case just reinforces the key reality. this administration is crushing the jihadis in the middle east. but we as americans must understand that the front line in this war isn't in a desert 1,000 miles away. the front line is when you leave your house in the morning. it is everywhere. it can be a discotheque in florida. it can be a christmas party in san bernardino. it could be a bicycle path in new york. so the see something say something isn't a catchy bromine, it is something that all americans should live by. we don't change our lives and give in to the terrorists. but you could stop a attack or save lives if you see something suspicious. whether it's a package, whether it's a person wearing clothing when they shouldn't. just be alert to the world around you. don't walk down the street staring at your mobile fun as so many people do. steve: dan bongino, we just got word from former commissioner bill bratton. ainsley: yes, he's saying that this was an isis-inspired attack. what do you make of that? >> wow. well, i'm not surprised. i mean, you have the three big indicators there. the transportation networks they've always targeted because of the psychological impact upon the community after the attack. guys, everybody uses a car, a bus, a train, or a plane. we're not superman. we don't fly. we have to use these devices. they've always targeted transportation. rush hour, you want the most amount of people, maximum impact. new york city, maximum press coverage, big target. those three things i mean, led us to believe earlier that there was some nexus to terrorism. brian: if this is an isis-inspired attack, and we do indeed have the bomber in custody, we have to be able to question him before he lawyers up in an international setting, not in a police setting. don't you agree? and is the administration ready to do that? >> i think the president is. brian: not with the bike path bomber. we turned him over to authorities. >> yeah. but i don't think that was the white house's call. but, look, you know better than anybody. you wrote the book on the tripoli pirates. if this turns out to be an isis-connected or inspired plot, this is somebody who is at war with us, even if they're the representative of a nonnation state. the idea that we treat them like a bank robber, and we mirandaize them, we give them all the rights of a u.s. citizen committing a crime is just absolutely insane. we are at war with global jihadism, and they should be treated as illegal combatants just as we did under the bush administration. brian: i hope we snap out of it and do that. we do have a report of the bomb. it was found on a subway platform. steve: that's where it exploded, which would suggest that they were trying to get into a train car, which could have had devastating consequences. let's go to rob schmidt who is near the location where just about a block away from the port authority. rob, we received word from one of our producers that the port authority was open but now it sounds like it's closed again. >> yeah. great request he. i'm about a block away from the port authority. another stream of cars coming through as they move through here. the scene is ever expanding at this point. they keep pushing people back and bringing in more first responders and stuff like that. but i would say this is probably -- i would argue this is one of the busiest intersections in manhattan right before everybody gets to work. you can see all of these firemen here waiting to go in or do whatever they have to do, and this has been a huge response. but if you were trying to pull off an attack, which now we learned from the former commissioner, the former police commissioner as he says it was isis inspired, this would be the place to go. grand central or pen station. but this is a huge area where people come into the city east of long island and everywhere else. so this is a major place for people to come in. ainsley: rob, we're learning now the mayor is saying that -- rob, the mayor is saying that this is an active crime scene. you can see all the police officers coming through too. i can't help that you have steve's daughter trapped in the tunnel. she's on a bus coming through new jersey coming into new york city, which is about two blocks from where you're standing. but now where there's a lot of traffic and gridlock in the city, you know what we all do here, we don't want to take taxis, we want to take the subway because it's faster, and you can avoid the traffic. now nobody is going to want to take the subway because we're worried about this. >> well, yeah, it sound like this happened on the platform of the subway, which would be the 8th avenue line, which is the way a lot of people in the west side get up and down and through the city. and that, of course, is going to be a packed platform on a monday morning, and that's when these types of things happen, and it's why people now are scared of crowds, scared to go into places where a lot of people are at because it's where they it. a year and a half ago or so we had the guy mow down i think eight people or injure even more than that. kill eight people and then the chelsea bomber that set off that bomb near a dumpster and injured a number of people there in chelsea as well. so we're seeing moving towards this new realm of just one guy, you know, builds a, some kind of bomb and uses it, and it's a scary reality now. you never know who it's going to be. brian: we do have a report now that there's just one person injured, thankfully, according to the fdny. steve: in addition to the bomber. brian: and it's not a life-threatening injury. so we learned moments ago that the bomb was actually on a subway platform and earlier we did have reports that the bomb went off prematurely. so i don't know if that plays into the story line as we try to piece it together. and as you see with these officers there, that is not unusual to be found at all the major thoroughfares here. pen station, grand central station, and now port authority. that is not atypical for a average new york day. so we're going to continue to follow all of that. >> as i come up here, i've noticed just more and more as i go through the city, you see officers armed with, you know, aks and ar15s standing outside subway stations on just regular days. so you're just seeing as this all escalates as the threat becomes more and more apparent, you're seeing the police having to escalate their game as well. and you see guys lifting arms with rifles and looking like they're going into war standing in new york city. steve: oh, i know it. and, dan bongino, we are looking at some video that has been posted to twitter, and we hope to share it with our audience in just a moment. but it does show people on the platform and the walkway and there is a lot -- it does appear there's smoke. it does appear there's people running on the platform, that is to say, and, oh, my goodness. i'm looking at it right now. you can see exactly the moment it goes off. so the one thing about the port authority, dan bongino, is there are cameras everywhere, so they'll be able to figure out where this went off. and also, where the guy got on and, you know, ultimately where he's from. >> steve, that's what makes these sick terrorists different. you know, when i was in the secret service, one of the big concerns about an attack on the president was identifying ingress and egress. in other words, how is the bad guy going to get in and how is he going to escape? well, that's not a problem for these bad guys. they don't care about the cameras at all. it's helpful post investigation after the attack, but they don't really care. and just let me say as well. thank god this thing apparently went off before it got into the subway. remember, an explosive, the damaging effects aren't just the shrapnel, it's a pressure in a contained tube like that, unbelievable the damage it could have caused. brian: bring me through how this could have taken place. you know there's cameras everywhere, and they're going through where this guy came from and backing it up. so if they get to the explosion, they get to the people, they decide whether it's going to be contained, when does the fbi come in? when does the police commissioner step back, if taut? and most importantly, how soon can we get to the bomber to find out if there's another bomber coming through? >> there's no doubt in my mind someone's talking to him right now, brian. the bureau is in this thing the first -- the minute that they get the 9-1-1 call. now, the way it would typically work is they work in conjunction with an nypd terror person. but they already know each other. there's a task force in new york. it's not, like, hey, bob, this is tony from the fbi, they already know each other. so they're already at the scene sharing the exact same bit of information, and ask you the right question. one of the first questions you ask right now is are you alone. and you're hoping you get an answer. these guys obviously aren't the most cooperative most of the time. brian: but i hear, dan, right after the attack is when they're most vulnerable when they are scared or injured, that's when they talk the most in theory. >> no. no. yeah, that's the real world. you're right. that is theory. but it's the real world as well and the reason why is a lot of these cases, this guy expected to die. he thought he was going to get his reward in his afterlife and what's he doing now? he's sitting in the back of a nypd police car getting interviewed. so, yeah, of course he's. ainsley: dan, let's recap for the people just joining us because it is 8:35, people wake up in the country at this time. there is an explosion at the port authority, 42nd and 8th, time square where all the buses come into new york and leave new york for the suburbs. there are a lot of subway lines underneath port authority. so it is very, very busy. you have rush hour, port authority, and christmastime. a recipe for disaster if you're an isis identify inspired terrorist that commissioner bill is the case here. the mayor is on the way. the president has been briefed. it is an active crime scene. the port authority is closed as authorities are there making sure there are not any other bombs that are hidden there in the subway. this did apparently explode on the subway platform. if you're jumping onto the subway right before you jump on, there's the platform that everybody waits. lots of people would be waiting this morning, and that's where the bomb allegedly went off. so, dan, if you're coming to new york, if you're watching this, and you have a vacation scheduled because it's very busy, it's christmastime or if you're here in new york or you are a new yorker, you have so much experience as an nypd officer and a secret service agent. what do you recommend? >> well, i guess the pc thing to say always is don't let this alter your plans. frankly, i wouldn't let it off your mind. but that doesn't mean we have to go around living with horse blinders on. sebastion gorka made a great point. how many times -- you and i have both done it. you walk down the street of new york tweeting in the middle of traffic. not that we shouldn't do that once in a while, but keep your head on a swivel a little bit. it doesn't hurt. i and i always say to people always have a plan. when you're in the red zone, and your body instantaneously goes into a adrenaline dump, you're going to panic for 20 to 30 seconds before you get your head together. how have you thought of every spot you'll do it, and you won't have that fog in 20 or 30 seconds. brian: gotcha, dan. now, meanwhile, the governor's on the scene. some of our reporters are getting pushed further away. so rob is penetrated in that zone and able to give us the latest information. and i do want you to factor in this. these moments are so critical but not just to get to the would be bomber. the right person questioning him in the right way that that is the way to disarm and get the most out of a terrorist. how do we do that in new york city? >> well, look, new york city after 9/11, brian, became one of the world's -- not the country's. one of the world's preeminent counterterrorism institutions. it's only under mayor de blasio that they've been potentially weakened when it comes to their program. but, yeah, it is the profession, the person with decades of experience like dan on the street working these kinds of cases who should be in the room and who should be extracting the most relevant information as soon as possible. is there a secondary attack? is there the so-called bad samaritan ploy being deployed as well? but, again, let me go back to what dan said. every american, you don't have to carry a badge or a gun, needs to have a plan. if you are involved in an incident that involves terrorism, you need to remove yourself from that incident. you need to flee. if you can't flee, you must hide. if you can't hide, you must fight. whether it's a fire extinguisher, your bare hands, everybody has to resist these people and understand that we will not be seeped. it is the sheep that are the best target for terrorists but everybody must be prepared to react. don't walk around. think about these things. think about what are you going to do if you're discovered in an active shooter incident, if you're involved in an incident of this nature, what is your plan b? steve: right. as i mentioned a moment ago, there is a twitter video that is circulating that is purported to be the moment this thing went off, and it does appear according to the associated press now apparently the device was strapped onto the person, and it does look like it was some sort of suicide device, perhaps a vest. our correspondent laura is near the scene. laura, thanks for joining us. what can you tell us from your point -- she'll be with us in just a little while. sorry about that. dan, let's go back to you for a second. with the ap saying that this was a device strapped onto the person, what does that tell you? >> well, that obviously fits the terrorist motive there to detonate while on the person, which would kill the terrorist as well, creates no need for an escape path. creates maximum carnage, and the benefit the sick, tragic benefit, steve, of having one of these explosives strapped to you is you are the explosive. you can walk it into a zone crowded and densely packed with the most amount of people. you can make sure you're on a subway car. there's no reason to have to engage in any kind of remote detonation as would happen before the suicide bombing. so that's the worst part about obviously the attack attack. ainsley: rob is down on 42nd and 9th; is that right, rob? what are you seeing now? >> 42nd and 8th, guys. yeah, we're seeing the same situation. a lot more police officers have shown up. we understand the mayor is going to come down here in a little bit to talk about exactly what happened here. and as you said, we have one reported injury and that's of a victim, and they have the suspects here in custody who reportedly had some more serious injuries to himself and otherwise. it sounds like this was a port in new york. one of the busiest parts of the city at 48th and 3rd right near time square. this is the hot spot for a lot of people. hundreds of thousands of people come through the city right here in this area every day. so this is a big target. it's monday morning. it's the morning rush. and that's what we have right now and secure the scene. brian: there's a little bit of a discrepancy, says it happened outside the car on the ground and now the ap reporting that the device was strapped. so it could have fallen off the body, was strapped. just trying to put together the language to see exactly what it was. initial report also said the initial, initial report that it was a pipe bomb. steve: ap is according to their twitter, law enforcement officials tell ap that man had explosive device strapped on when it exploded in new york city subway. brian: right so that's it, dan. so we find out that he had this strapped on, it was at the port authority. so you figure that that's the biggest bus terminal in new york city and maybe around. as that goes and in your mind if you're thinking how do i prevent that, there's really nothing. there's no metal detectors getting on a bus, nobody pats down, there's nobody even eyeballing you. >> yeah. the depressing news about this, brian if you don't break up these operations through preoperation intelligence, what we used to call in the secret service, you know, shaking the trees. getting good sources in the communities to make sure the tips come down, and you break these up in advance, you know, you're correct. there's very little that you can do. setting up magnetometers every place in new york city is not practical. it also creates unsecure zones and what do they do? they walk right outside the magnetometers where people are lining up and don't it right there. good point. ainsley: sebastion, what does it mean if this guy has the device strapped on them or a woman. we don't know if it's a man or woman. and it explodes prematurely it seems like based on reports and injures that person and injures one other person. but i'm sure when they plan an attack like this, they're planning to wipe out hundreds of people or if not dozens of people at one point. what does your experience tell you that this device was strapped on him and didn't do much damage? >> remember, let's be careful here. all initial reports have to be dealt with very cautiously. but this could be a redo of the time square bomber. a failed device. in that case, the individual drove an suv full of improvised explosive devices into time square, and it burnt rather than detonating. the person the capacity to build the device was subpar, and it didn't properly detonate. as these people pointed out, needs to be inside that vehicle to create mass carnage. we've seen this in israel, the bus stations. we've seen this in the uk during the attack. if this did detonate before they entered the vehicle when they were on the platform, this is a failed explosion. and this is a gold mine. if this person is alive, and we can interrogate them now, that is a potentially gold mine for this. brian: sebastion, you have to think about all the businesses that will be hurt because people won't frequent there and the stock market right downtown is going to respond globally and locally to this. so in a way, at least temporarily, the bombing was successful to a degree, which brings him getting the third degree. we need to find out more quickly. i haven't heard a thing about the bike path driver since he was taken into custody. he has since lawyered up. this has to be a national event and international attack, even if he turns out to be an american; correct? >> oh, absolutely. but, brian, whatever the consequences are negatively for the stock market, they will not last. why? because we have a different president, a different commander-in-chief. isis is on the run. the physical caliphate has steesed to exist whether it's in mosul, whether it's in syria, whether is in raqqa. so we have finally after january 20th taken the fight to the jihadis as opposed to the last administration which said this is a generational threat, and we just have to get used to it. so we will bounce back. new york is one of the greatest cities in our great nation. it will bounce back as well because we are going to -- as the president said, they will be eradicated. brian: all right. thanks. hold on. steve: let's go out to our correspondent rick leventhal who has new information on the scene. rick. >> good morning, guys. just got here. obviously there's a lot of confusion and investigation going on with the nypd. you see some heavy weapons teams over here as well. what i have been told by law enforcement sources as there was, in fact, some sort of explosion below the ground apparently in a pedestrians walkway at the port authority destination of that vicinity of 42nd and 8th avenue. there were reports of a suicide vest also a pipe bomb. there was an incident, some kind of explosion and the suspect, the person who detonated that device, i'm told was injured when that exploded. the person who set off this device either with a switch of some kind or a cell phone or handset it off is, in fact, injured and is, in fact, in custody. i have his name. i don't want to release it just yet. but he is a 37-year-old man from brooklyn. that's about all i want to say right now so i can talk to another law enforcement source. brian: why, rick? you just want to make sure it's the right guy? >> yeah. and i want to make sure it's okay to, you know, say his name on tv. steve: sure. >> but the police has his name, and that's the most important thing. the investigators know who this guy is, so they're going to be talking to his residence and family and friends and figure out who and he is why he might have come down here with an explosive device that according to police did, in fact, detonate. but perhaps it detonated early. ainsley: a guy from brooklyn. do we know is he from brooklyn originally? did he live there just temporarily? >> he has a foreign name. i'll go that far. steve: all right. brian: rick, you've been in. >> i can't tell you exactly where he's from, but has a foreign name. brian: you've been in nypd headquarters. you've seen those screens and what the nypd has their eyes on. from your best estimation, they could almost put this whole movie together immediately; correct? they have port authority covered. >> absolutely. and they're the watch list. what i cannot tell you is whether this individual was, in fact, on any kind of list. but they're going to know that very quickly now that they have an identity. they're looking into that, obviously, whether he was known to them, i don't know yet. but clearly, they're now trying to figure out exactly who he was and why he did what he did. the good news here, guys, is apparently he may have been the only person injured. if there are other injures. they may be minor. but what you're seeing behind me is a shut down 8th avenue in rush hour. every avenue is packed, a lot of the side streets are closed, traffic is at a virtual stand still and none of the trains are running in port authority area. so it's a nightmare for anybody trying to get to work this monday morning and certainly a tough scene for these first responders as well. steve: indeed. all right. hey, rick, the new york post is reporting that the suspected bomber had wires attached to him and was armed with a pipe bomb. i know that's something confirmed by you and a battery pack. he was taken into custody. that's -- it was what you have been told; right? >> well, it is, steve. there were early reports with a suicide vest and wires strapped to his body. so it may very well be that he had a detonation device or some sort of subdivision, and that may have been what people were seeing. and as you know, early reports can often be wrong, and that's why we're going to be careful here. brian: rick, from what you know, how quick are they over his residence in brooklyn at this very moment? >> oh, within minutes. within minutes. they've gone to his property. we saw this happen on the west side highway, you know, reports came out that it was a gun incident, and he was shooting people, and he run them down with his truck. but he did have a couple of fake guns, a pellet gun and trade gun. but they went to the home depot and traced it to a second home depot. they went to his home and talked to his family and friends. that happened within minutes. and that's no doubt happening right now here in manhattan and also in brooklyn and anywhere else. any other addresses that's connected to this gentleman. now, we have a member of the nypd telling the pedestrians to clear the streets because they need this room to work. brian: wow. they keep backing you up more and more instead of narrowing down the site, they're widening it. >> well, they often do expand scenes if there's a concern of, you know, more incidents. i don't think that's the case here. i think they're just trying to get a truck through here and clear some traffic. this seems to be pretty well locked down at this point. i think they know -- they obviously know where it happened, and they're trying to just get all the evidence and information out of that one location. brian: hey, rick, we do find out -- more information. let's see if this mirrors yours. we know the 30-year-old has been in the country at least seven years. ainsley: according to bill bratton, who is the former commissioner of new york. thank you to your reporting. i know you're anxious to get more information. let's talk to dan bongino and find out, dan, based on this latest information, what's going through your mind? this guy 37 years old. he lived in brooklyn, bill says for seven years. a new york brooklyn resident. >> yeah. well, the first question here is what was the motivation? i mean, was he vacuolized into some isis ideology online? these are the big questions. if he did come here, how did he get here? was he here legally any if he came here legally by which process? these are important questions. hey, one more quick thing. i think some of the confusion that we're hearing now about the suicide vest versus the pipe bomb. it would be a little bit unusual to put a pipe bomb on the vest. pipe bomb is something you typically leave behind. he may have had both, and that may be some of the confusion in the reporting. brian: i just wonder if the other story is going to be unusual. the reaction to the would be explosion. some stubborn reports that there was somewhat of a stampede. can you imagine that? if anyone has been through these reports, you can't run. that would be a small miracle if there are no injuries. >> yeah. brian, that's new yorkers. you know it. i mean, you guys are there all the time. i was just up there with you. i've lived there my whole life. they're an unbelievably resilient. god bless the big apple. really. they're really tough people up there, and i wish they didn't have to be so tough all the time, but this has been forced upon them, and they almost always rise to the challenge. god bless them. steve: you were listening to rick's report regarding the person they regard as a suspect apparently has been in the united states for the last seven years. what are your observations? >> i've been following the reports on the internet and social media. there is talk now that the individual is connected to bangladesh, so he has some south asian connects. i've also watched the video from inside the terminal. if that is truly the cctv footage of the incident, it does, in fact, look if this was a premature detonation because the individual was walking down a passageway with just a few other commuters when the device detonated and then injured him, and he is seen in the video on the ground after the detonation. so if these are confirmed, then we are the -- then new york is blessed today. the good lord has blessed new yorkers because this attack was not executed as intended. and maybe. steve: if this did detonate prematurely, this goes back to something we have talked about on this program and channel for a number of years and that is some of these people who have evil intentions ultimately are bad bomb makers. >> yes. absolutely. and this does look as if this is somebody who came recently from a war zone. that's one of the most serious threats the nypd, the fbi, the cia has that you have an individual who has been in an insurgency in syria or iraq really learned how to build ieds and learned how to build fully automatic weapons, comes to america and then uses those skills to affect. hopefully -- it does look like it's not one of those individuals. this is an ammeter had to learn those skills online or secondhand and was not as good building these devices. brian: a lot of a lot of times the bomb makers, the genius, the mule or the would be sacrificial lamb is the person who is dull enough to go pull it off. >> that's what happened with the shoe bomber. exactly, brian. we know that the shoe bomber, he did not build that device. that device was built for him. but he failed to detonate it successfully. so this could be a redo of the shoe bomber. brian: thank you, dr. gorka. recap where we are right now. ainsley: the suspect in port authority explosion had a device strapped on his body. so we got word probably about an hour ago, maybe a little bit more that there was possibly a suspect down in port authority where the subways are underneath the road where the a, t, and e lines meet and someone had a -- some sort of a bomb strapped around their body, and it prematurely exploded. so all of this information is just coming in now. we know the president's been briefed, the mayor, and there's going to be a press conference this morning. steve: apparently it happened at 7:19 this morning. the port authority has been opened and closed and my daughter sally who was stuck in the lincoln tunnel for about a half an hour i understand finally made it to work. apparently travelers into and out of new york city are able to make the trip. brian: we know that there's -- steve: i was just going to add one more thing, brian. bill bratton, of new york city's police department says it appears to be an isis-inspired event. brian: we know the suspect is 37 years old, according to our reporting. we know law enforcement officials are scurrying we imagine to brooklyn where he's from. we also have reports that he has been in this country at least seven years. there's a new york post is saying that it went off prematurely. the bomb malfunctioned leaving the bomber alive and in stable condition. he was also found to be on a walkway with few people around him in one of the places that port authority where few people would be around. so all indications are it could have been a lot worse. but the reaction from the explosion has not been uncovered yet because there are reports not from the ap that there was a stampeding response, which is understandable. ainsley: can you imagine? because you're underneath the ground. people trying to get on and off the subway. people trying to get into the city it's monday morning. also christmas, it's rush-hour traffic. so if this is happening, people are running for their lives probably screaming bloody murder. we're going to learn more information. but this is a very heavily-trafficked area. if you've been to time square and been to new york, this is just a few blocks down to the south of time square. steve: that's right. the president of the united states has been briefed >> bill: nypd confirms one person in custody. there is a press conference expected any moment now with the mayor and governor. we await that and also await new information, brand-new week and we start with this. good morning. >> sandra: good morning to you, bill: here is what we know so far. they responded to an explosion this morning at a tunnel linking the port authority to the 7 subway line. a

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX Friends 20180510

morning. they appear to be in good health. they are now at walter reed medical center. ainsley: secretary of state mike pompeo secured their freedom second trip to meet with the rogue dictator. finalizing the upcoming historic summit between president trump and kim jong un. brian: get them out as soon as possible. victory and apparent goodwill gesture ahead of the face-to-face meeting and beginning to get details about that meetings. steve: we are. meanwhile, leland vittert has been live at joint base andrews. >> exactly. steve, brian, and ainsley. you guys are up at 3:00 a.m. all the time and happy about it. not often that the president of the united states is up at 3:00 a.m. for a reason to smile about. normally it's bad news. anything but last night. ear-to-ear smiles by the president, the first lady, the vice president, and mrs. pence as well as they walked onto the plane to greet those three americans and then walked off with waves and smiles. one of those former prisoners in north korea saying it's like a dream. very, very happy. and after this homecoming ceremony, they headed to walter reed medical center for a physical checkup. also, to deal with sort of the emotional trauma of more than a year in captivity in north korea. one of the detainees saying that he had been forced to do a lot of labor while he was there. the president on the tarmac taking a moment to remember a north korean prisoner who came home in a very, very different situation. >> very important thing to all of us to be able to get these three great people out. i must tell you i want to pay my warmest respects to the parents of otto warmbier who is a great, young man who really suffered. >> secretary of state pompeo has been in the air and on the road now since monday night. still, he spent about 20 minutes inside the terminal at andrews air force base briefing the president and vice president on his trip. and now begins the strategy sessions to figure out exactly how the administration wants to play their meeting with kim jong un coming up early next month. guys, back to you. steve: all right. lee land vittert live at joint base andrews. thank you very much. it does sound as if that summit according to our own john roberts in singapore. the president said overnight it's going to be in the next couple of weeks. >> ainsley: it's unhistoric. it's unbelievable. a positive step towards reducing tensions on the korean peninsula according to kim jong un. that is what he said on heir their state news television unbelievable. very historic and lead to a good future. brian brian i think the president has done a remarkably good job how measured he has been about expectations for the summit. how he has kept it quiet about the three coming out. he acknowledged moved to a hotel. acknowledged that was one of his things. never made a statement these three have to get out or else there will be no summit. he keeps saying this is what we hope for we like these signs but i'm not promising anything because if it's not going to go the way he wants he's going to get up and leave. that's the perfect way to set the table for consequential negotiation. steve: a fenegotiation.steve feu probably up. the welcoming event three men held in north korea for over a year. was very trumpian. behind that airplane that traveled from anchorage to joint base andrews just outside of washington, d.c., there's a gigantic, an oversized american flag stretched between two fire trucks never seen that before. half of the press corps in washington, d.c. was awake. when was the last time the president of the united states himself actually went out to joint base andrews in the middle of the night to meet somebody who had taken a red eye? brian: how about this, with his wife. out of all the gigs, can i sleep through this one? but, no, she is ready to go at 3:00 in the morning. someone is going to need a nap later. ainsley: i know. he has a rally tonight at 7:00. they boarded the plane and went on. came out at 3:00 in the morning. can you see they walked down the stairs and they met the vice president, the second lady and secretary pompeo on the tarmac. steve: we saw in that little shaking of hands there at the bottom of the stairs, we saw one of the guys give mike pompeo a note. i want to hear what that note said. ainsley: and a hug. steve: let's watch right here. you can just tell by the looks on their faces how unbelievably happy they are. then they walked over to the press. they talked for seven minutes. the president did most of the talking and here's what they said. >> my proudest achievement will be, this is a part of it, will be when we denuclearize that entire peninsula. this is what people have been waiting for for a linger time. nobody thought we could be on this track in terms of speed. so, i'm very honored to have helped the three folks. the true honorable is going to be if we have a victory getting rid of victims. we appreciate he allowed them to go before the meeting. it was sort of understood that we would be able to get these three terrific people during the meeting and bring them home after the meeting. we are starting off on a new footing. this is a wonderful thing that he released the folks early. that was big thing. very important to me. and i really think we have a very good chance of doing something very meaningful. and if anybody would have said that five years ago, 10 years ago, even a year ago, you would have said that's not possible. so, a lot -- i will say this. a lot of very good things have happened. brian: you know what's pretty amazing too, how shocked must these three are been when they said they have virtually been shut out of the real world. what's donald trump doing here? wait a second? where is hillary clinton? ainsley: i used to watch him on tv. who is he? is he president now? brian: the most important thing the president said not to forget the warmbiers, otto warmbier did not come back in any condition he died three days later. the president is not forgetting that lower your expectations. number two, i will not forget who these people are and what they did to the warmbiers. ainsley: you wonder why did they do that to him and these three seem to be in good health. one of the three did hard labor when he was sick they treated him. i talked to the warmbier family yesterday and said we were thinking of them and otto was on our minds a when we learned during this show the three were coming home. he said we are happy for the hostages and their families. we miss otto. steve: i know why the president had went out in the middle of the night, he worked hard to get those three sprung. he wanted to be there and shake their hands. the president on the last two minutes on his official twitter account has released 32 seconds, the length of a tv ad. kind of looks like a tv ad of what went on a little bit behind the scenes on that airplane and they came down the stairs. we are just ingesting that into our system. gavin the producer is telling us we may have it now. we are going to run it for you. here it is. listen. there is sound on it. that's a little music i'm told. there is that flag. ainsley: this is the video that the white house staff edited together and put on his twitter page. steve: that's the last 10 seconds of it right there. brian: whole thing what the president has accomplished so far getting out of iran deal something he has done. seen ramifications from it positive israel taking action against the spread of iranian influence. we also talk about the president's foreign policy achievement with north korea name a his an place and time. jerusalem embassy is opening opening. doing it all at once very unusual for any administration. ainsley: yesterday morning his supporters were celebrating the fact that he pulled out of the iranian deal because that's what he ran on. then they started celebrating the release of these three. then they started celebrating the fact that he is going to sit down with kim jong un and we know the location. not the date and the time yet. steve: obviously he has a foreign policy team on board they are all on the same page. they are getting so much done. here is dr. sebastian gorka putting it all into perspective. >> the president and secretary pompeo with this one act have done more for america than obama and his whole cabinet did in eight years. no more appeasement. no more middle of the night pallets of currency being ships to our enemies. what did we pay for these three americans to come home, sean? nothing. we dealt with a dictator as you should deal with all dictators. no appeasement. walk softly and carry a very big stick or aircraft carrier battle group. that's how you get things done. it is a new day for america and this is a message for all dictatorships. brian: it's not over. you don't know how this is going to turn. remember what john bolton said. if you want to know what a north korean leader is lying, watch when their lips are moving. steve: because they're always lying. brian bine we have been down this road before. later we will have jay on who looked over the previous summits from jfk to reagan. there is little things that can happen and little challenge take place. there is no necessary script here. but my sense is japan is on board. south korea is on board and china is on board. there has been a series of meetings to set it up to mean something. it will be beginning of a series of confidence measures, measuring sticks along the way from both sides. steve: think about the fact president xi met with kim jong un just last week. some have suggested kim jong un going to china as kind of a dry run for whatever is going to happen the next couple of weeks in singapore. the president of the united states is quoted as saying all the other people who have had this desk in the oval office, they have been too predictable. i'm unpredictable. that's one of the reasons waived nobody knows what i'm going to do regarding what we're going to settle for in north korea. ainsley: we know singapore. we know june. has the president announced when he's going to tell us? steve: he said in the next couple weeks he said overnight. that will be interesting to see. apparently the white house staff has been told get ready for a trip to singapore. that's a pretty good indication. brian: looks like the dmz is out. ainsley: i thought they needed to be on a more neutral site. steve: other thing though is there are not enough hotel rooms for the thousands of journalism, press and security people. brian: need a motel six. steve: or pup tents. brian: should be able to get pup tents. steve: historic day and other images coming in. gina haspel firing back at democrats grilling her about her cia past. >> i don't believe that torture works. valuable information was obtained from senior al qaeda operatives that allowed us to defend this country and prevent another attack. steve: curiously the cia asked daniel hoffman to be at the hearing and he said something very important was missed. he will explain that on the other side of a brief time-out. brian: tease a bear at a dairy queen drive-thru. but not everyone thinks this video is so sweet. steve: really? 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ask your doctor if myrbetriq is right for you, and visit myrbetriq.com to learn more. >> i don't believe that torture works. i believe as many people, directors who have sat in this chair before me, that valuable information was obtained from senior al qaeda operatives that allowed us to defend this country and prevent another attack. brian: gina haspel fighting back against democrats who used her first confirmation hearing for cia director to smear her as advocate for enhanced interrogation. what many of them failed to mention was her more than 30 years of experience and service with the cia. former cia station chief daniel hough map was asked by the cia to be at the hearing yesterday. he joins us now with his reaction. we know it was all about enhanced interrogation and that's fine. daniel, you said they missed an opportunity, all those senators, republicans and democrats. what was that opportunity? >> this was an opportunity to address key issues of interest to the american public. there were no questions about terminating the iran nuclear deal. there were no questions about the upcoming summit between the president and kim jong un and for the democrats, in particular, who are so focused on the russia investigation, no questions about gina haspel's views of the russia threat of which she is really an expert, a substantive expert. brian: john mccain has weighed in and said she is a great patriot. i won't support her because she won't disavow the enhanced interrogation program. i also sense she does not believe it's torture. she didn't want to get into it then. what's your thoughts? >> neither i do. john mccain is a great patriot. i don't begrudge him his views. i do believe it's important to distinguish between our program and the torture to which senator mccain was subjected, the means, the motives and results of our program were entirely different. brian: every living cia director endorsed her. john brennan got through to her. we will play a montage later. he was higher up than she was. and he got okayed. here's a little of the back and forth on the interrogation program with gina haspel yesterday. >> i would never ever take cia back to an interrogation program. first of all, cia follows the law. we followed the law then. we follow the law today. i support the law. i wouldn't support a change in the law. brian: and she also knows, but she doesn't want to say i imagine like jose rodriguez says. it worked. >> right. it did. we know that it worked. that's the uncomfortable fact for those who oppose the program. i would say as well senator cotton he will quepghtly exposed what would be a double standard. if gina haspel is not confirmed as john brennan was then she would be treated unfairly. brian: unbelievable. what is the feeling inside the cia in langley about the chance of her getting this job? >> you know, i have talked to some friends, some retired colleagues and others as well. just a feeling of pride. one of our colleagues has risen from -- someone who started at the agency 33 years ago and now being considered and hopefully will be confirmed as director of cia. we know gina well. she has exceptional leadership aptitude for hard languages and the substance of our work. intellectual honesty and integrity. i just hope the congress does the right thing and confirms her. brian: we know camilla haste is out. king is out. also looks like john mccain is out and rand paul is out. joe manchin, one democrat who has stepped up and maybe senator from virginia as well. thank you very much, dan, appreciate it. >> thank you. brian: all right. straight ahead. they are here illegally, so should they get a break to go to college? california taking the nanny state to a whole new level. facing every new homeowner to get solar panels. will that move back fire? we will ask someone wh who lives there next ♪ california dreaming on such a winter's day ♪ stopped into a church ♪ before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, lucy could only imagine enjoying a slice of pizza. now it's as easy as pie. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? 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[ child offscreen ] hey! let's basement. and thanks to these xfi pods, the signal reaches down here, too. so sophie, i have an xfi password, and it's "daditude". simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. jillian: good morning, back with headlines and a fox news alert. as depositions reaching a poilg point in the middle east overnight israel firing missiles at iranian targets in syria. the move in response to an iranian rocket attack in the golan heights. many were intercepted. no one was killed. it's considered iran's first direct attack on israeli soldiers. comes less than two days president trump withdrew from the iran nuclear deal. today defense secretary james mattis will consider whether to send 700 national guard troops to the southern border. right now there are 1600 national guardsmen serving on the u.s./mexico border. that national guard support has led to over 1600 arrests. 451 voluntary returns and the seizure of 1,000 pounds of marijuana. ainsley? ainsley: okay. thank you, jillian. people who li in new houses in california will soon be forced to conservative energy and get solar panels on their homes. that means it's going to cost the homeowners an extra $10,000 during the construction process. but aren't housing costs in california already sky high? here to weigh in is the host of the mike slater show mike slater himself. hey, mike. >> good morning, ainsley, how are you? >> i'm great, thank you. this is your state. you live in california super early out there. thanks for getting up for us. >> of course. ainsley: what was your reaction to this? >> as you said california already has incredible problem with housing costs. in san diego county the average house is $540,000. it is nearly impossible to live here as it is. also impossible to watch hgtv to get mad people are buying houses in waco in $80,000 and can't even renovate a bathroom for that in california. this is only going to make it worse. you said $10,000 for no systems. with the government involved it will be 20,000 if not even more. that only hurts lower income and middle income families who just want to buy a house and it's so hard. right now, in california, 40% of the price of a new house is regulations. that's before a shovel even goes in the ground. 40% is regulations. and now we are adding more to it? come on. ainsley: you have to have a lot of money to live in your state that's why a lot of people are moving to texas where you don't have to pay state taxes. this goes into effect in 2020. what are residents out there saying? the board voted unanimously for this. all the lawmakers like it that voted on this. what about the residents? you live in a more conservative area. you are in san diego. >> it was very pro-environmentalist state which is weird because solar panels aren't very good for the environment either. i don't know where people think they come from or what they are made out of. they are made out of rare earth metals mostly from china and not exactly great stewards of the environment as they dig these things out of the ground anyway. your listens are not going to believe this. one of the problems with solar panels is we can't store the energy that's made. so it creates these big surges in the middle of the day that we can't use. so we actually call our neighboring states hey guys we have this extra electricity, will you buy it from us? they are not like, we don't really want it okay we will give you the extra electricity. no, we don't want it. we pay neighboring states to take our excess solar electricity because we can't use it so we literally pay other states to take it and here we are mandating that we make more power from solar. it makes no sense whatsoever. ainsley: everyone, of course, wants clean energy. we all want what's best for the environment. the question is do they work like you said? the solar panels are they really good for the environment? and how much money are people going to save from this? you put a lot of money upfront. do you know the answer to that? >> listen, i'm all for the free market and one of the sponsors of our radio show is a solar panel company. i'm all for it if you want to do it and that's the great thing about a free country. if you want to put solar panels on your house free to do it. some houses it's not a good idea. the angle of the roof maybe there is trees nearby or doesn't add up for everybody. so to mandate it, that's never a good idea from the government. and it's going to be another failure here, i'm sure. ainsley: you have to cut down trees to put up your solar panels, right? you have to pay more than 10,000, you say, to put up solar panels. they are mandating that sanctuary state so paying for illegal immigrants. very expensive to live in california. hohow are people doing it? >> as if everything else is solved, right, anxiously? no other issues here no. sanctuary state issues. no water issues. no crime issues. no education issues. and san diego county, 65% of eighth graders can't read or do math at grade level. here we are sacramento, spending all their time wasting time with nanny state policies like this. it's so difficult to live here in california and things like this only make it worse. ainsley: mike slater, thanks so much for getting up for us. great job. >> thanks, ainsley. ainsley: president trump calling out the "new york times" for secretary of state mike pompeo for, quote, going missing. >> ourselves has done a fantastic job. they couldn't find him because he was in north korea. ainsley: he was rescuing those hostages. does the "new york times," do you think that newspaper owes the president and mike pompeo an apology? plus, that hero pilot who landed a plane after its engine exploded is speaking out for the very first time. >> we had to use hand signals because it was loud. and there was -- it was just hard to communicate for a lot of different reasons. ainsley: why she says she was calm during that frightening landing. but, first, we want to wish a happy birthday to bono. if you have never been, it's the best concert ever. the u2 front man turns 58 years old today. happy birthday, bono. we love your music. ♪ beautiful day ♪ olay regenerist shatters the competition. hydrating skin better than prestige creams costing over $100, $200, and even $400. for skin that looks younger than it should. fact check this ad in good housekeeping. olay regenerist. ageless. touch shows how we really feel. but does psoriasis ever get in the way? embrace the chance of 100% clear skin with taltz. up to 90% of those with moderate to severe psoriasis had a significant improvement of their psoriasis plaques. most people were still clearer after one year. with taltz, 4 out of 10 even achieved completely clear skin. don't use if you're allergic to taltz. before starting, you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection, symptoms, or received a vaccine or plan to. inflammatory bowel disease can happen with taltz, including worsening of symptoms. serious allergic reactions can occur. ready for a chance at 100% clear skin? 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(burke) and we covered it. talk to farmers, we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ we know what you bring home isn't always as important as who you bring with you. we know the great outdoors. we love the great outdoors. bass pro shops and cabela's. where great gear, good people, fair prices and an experience like no other all come together. and during our go outdoors event and sale - get bass pro or cabela's flag t-shirts for only $5. an igloo 48 qt. cooler for under $20. and save 25% on camelbak hydration packs. here's the story of green mountain coffee roasters sumatra reserve. let's go to sumatra. the coffee here is amazing. because the volcanic soil is amazing. so we give farmers like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. which helps provide for win's family. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. ♪ steve: very nice. brian: that was turned around pretty quick that happened at 3 in the morning eastern time and that was quickly recapped for you in an ad that's now out union line. steve: a 30 second twitter spot from the president. three hostages walking down and stepping foot on american soil. they walked off the plane and gave the peace sign. steve: rich edson is live at the state department with details on the meeting and he joins us with the very latest. hey, rich. >> good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. secretary of state mike pompeo also returned from north korea. he says he spent about 13 hours on the ground in pyongyang including 0 minute meeting with kim jong un. of course, he secured the release of the three detained americans. but he also helped finalize some of the details for the meeting between president trump and kim jong un. and as the president welcomed home the former american prisoners, he mentioned that many of the details are now set. >> we have the location set and we will see if we can do something that people did not think was going to happen for many, many years. >> pompeo says the u.s. and north korea have agreed on a one-day summit with the option of a second day. senior administration official says this trip was designed to settle on a country, a city and a specific venue. white house team is reporting movement towards singapore in early june. now the defense secretary says he is hopeful for a positive outcome. >> north korea their capability concerns us on the military side. however, we see there is some reason for optimism. we said all along this was a diplomatically led effort backed up by military force. i think there is reason for some optimism that these talks could be fruitful. flrg. >> there are still plenty of unknowns how much north korea is actually willing to surrender of weapons program and whether it would submit to sanctions and what the allies are willing to give in turn as the u.s. has a substantial military presence in south korea. guys, back to you. steve: all right, rich edson there at foggy bottom. thank you very much for the live shot. brian: a lot of people are saying how were they treated? i thought this was a telling statement through the translator. how were we treated? we were treated many different ways. for me i had to do at love labor. when i was sick i was also treated by them. ainsley: you look at otto warmbier why was he treated the way he was? yesterday the "new york times" had a headline it said at a key moment trump's top diplomat talking about mike pompeo is, again, thousands of miles away. steve: right. keep in mind the reason they had that story is when the president announced that there would be a summit with kim jong un, rex tillerson was thousands of miles away rex tillerson is being marginalized and irrelevant. and then with the president pulled out of the iran deal, the iran nuke deal where is mike pompeo? he is awol. well, he had a good excuse. he was going to north korea. here is the president. >> i think ourselves, despite the fact that the "new york times" said he was missing he was in north korea. but i think ourselves has done a fantastic job. they couldn't find him because he was in north korea. brian: i don't even think most people reading the "new york times" or what their opinion is which is supposed to be a news column. i would bring this up, too. this president is taking on five things at one time. he is in the middle of a trade deal trying to rebalance us us with europe and china. after a lot of negotiation, a year and a half, i'm going to pull out of iran. when it comes to what's happening with north korea, preparing for a summit and getting the hostages out as well as talking about a phase 2 tax reform. he is doing nine things. that's just the way it's gonna be for the next two, maybe six years. steve: look, the "new york times" was trying to say look, at the time that the president had pulled out of the iran deal north korean leaders who needed to get ahold of him at the state department, they actually have phones on the president's plane, on the secretary of state's plane. sometimes they don't work but generally they can get the message through. it came on the same day though that the president tweeted out about the lousy coverage that he has gotten by 91% of the mainstream media. ainsley: to your point, brian, the headlines started out at a key moment trump's top diplomat is 1,000 miles away. he wasn't present for this key moment. but he was present for that key moment because there is a key moment. yesterday we saw three or four different key moments all at once. brian: rex tillerson. he is referring to the fact rex tillerson out o out out of sync. steve and i are dressed in the shade of blue. we have blue in our color spiral. it seems as though the producers have decided to put the back drop like ainsley's dress. am i wrong to be bothered by that. jillian: you can bothered by whatever you want. steve: i didn't notice. brian: matching ainsley's background. ainsley: the show for once, briajillian, is not about brian. brian thinks it needs to be red to match brian. ainsley: we're changing the name of the show it's brian kilmeade and friends. steve: perhaps this is why television used to be in black and white. jillian: would you prefer that brian? ainsley: that's where brian's career started. brian: wow. ouch. jillian: let's move on. they are still going. i will tell you about this incredible story the hero pilot who landed that southwest plane after the engine blew up is now speaking out tammie jo shults who many said is a hero relied on military background to get the packed plane safely on the ground. >> my first thoughts were actually here we go. just because it seemed like a flashback to some of the navy flying that we had done. we had to use hand signals because it was loud. and there was -- it was just hard to communicate for a lot of different reasons. ainsley: incredible woman. the entire crew honored by president trump at the white house. one woman did die on that flight after being nearly sucked out of a shattered window. illegal immigrants can now get college financial aid in new jersey. democratic governor phil murphy signing a new bill to help dreamers. to qualify students must have graduated from a high school in the state. undocumented students already get instate tuition in new jersey. critics say it's wrong for the taxpayers. just come to your tv and just watch this. it's not every day that you spot a bear out for ice cream. that's 1-year-old berkeley leaning out of the window of a pickup licking ice cream at dairy queen drive-thru. while you may think this is hilarious. wild life officials in canada are not laughing. they have charged berkeley's home the discovery wildlife park for taking the animal out. i see the background is now blue. brian, you can rest easy, my friend. it's all about brian again. brian: and steve. ainsley: where was the driver of that car? steve: good question. brian: there are a lot of questions. ainsley: there are first it helped illegal immigrants get in and now one university is training its students to protect them. an outraged student is going to join us live. brian: plus, just how independent are those quote, unquote independent prosecutors handling the probe. judge napolitano walking up the stairs. he couldn't get here in time so he has to walk in live on camera ♪ feeling like a little kid ♪ i'm still standing ♪ after all this time ♪ picking up the pieces of my life without you on my mind ♪ my digestive system used to make me feel sluggish but now, i take metamucil every day. it traps and removes the waste that weighs me down, so i feel lighter. try metamucil, and begin to feel what lighter feels like. brian: sweet mess when a tanker truck filled with chocolate overturns. [laughter] ainsley: yum. brian: 12 tons of polish highway i was going to say polish. the truck. ainsley: five second rule. you could lick it off the street. brian: clean up crews had to use hot water to melt it off the road. the search is on to find the thirsty thief struggling to stay away. catching him stealing a cart full of energy drinks. mocking him online stealing can be exhausting which is probably why this guy can't stop yawning and why he has nearly $250 worth of stolen red bull in his cart. we will following that story wherever it leads us. [laughter] ainsley: can't make it up. we have been telling you about that judge in paul manafort's case accusing prosecutors of gunning for president trump's impeachment and questioning mueller's authority. steve: judge napolitano now pointing out a troubling question how independent are these so-called independent prosecutors handling the probe? the answer is. >> good morning, guys. the answer is they do have a measure of independence as do all prosecutors. so, think about this. when judge ellis said the other day look, we all know why you are prosecuting paul manafort for financial crimes that, according to you, the indictment, began and ended before donald trump even ran for president. you want to squeeze manafort to testify against the president. that is repellant but that is the process that the federal government uses in every courthouse in nearly every prosecution almost every day. so, if judge ellis throws out the indictment, because he finds that mueller does not have the legal authority to go after something manafort did 10 years ago with his bank, what will happen? the local federal prosecutors in alexandria, virginia will get another indictment and will prosecute manafort for the same crime. so, there really will be very little change. it will mean not that manafort can't be prosecuted, but that mueller can't do the prosecuting. because, prosecutors have an ethical duty. if they see evidence of crime, and it's provable, they have to pursue it. brian: would have you said something similar? judge: if i were on the bench? brian: if that were you. judge: who cares what the judge thinks is what my attitude would be. i have argued that prosecuting somebody like they did to mike flynn, squeezing him, reducing his jail exposure so he will say what you want him to say is a form of bribery. i have been arguing that for years. i am in the distinct minority in the legal and judicial community. the courts have said this is fine. if defense counsel gave a witness so much as a lollipop, the lawyer and the witness would be indicted for bribely. ainsley: judge, is he in trouble tore something on his taxes 10 years ago. don't they say taxes 3 years, 7 years, can they go back that far? >> yes, the argument was it was a continuing series of acts. the most recent of which occurred before the statute of limitations applied. only one of the two trials against manafort. he has another one for similar behavior in washington, d.c. he was indicted by another grand jury. judge ellis is quite correct. they are putting extraordinary pressure on him because they want him to flip and become a star witness the way his partner rick gates did. steve: right. meanwhile congress has got oversight authority over, you know, because it's a coequal branch of government over, for instance, the oversight committee and intel over the fbi. >> right. steve: they have been looking into what the fbi did before the mueller probe. we understand apparently devin nunes who has suggested perhaps the attorney general could be held in contempt of congress and trey gowdy are going to go to the department of justice today to look at some secret documents that they won't show all of congress. >> the two of them. they have top secret security clearances so they can see these things. the question is will they use them for law enforcement and intelligence purposes or will they use them for political purposes? it is dangerous -- i've been saying this for a long time, for politicians, even with security clearances, to examine raw intelligence data and use it for political narrative. that keeps intel people from wanting to reveal what they have found because they don't want their names and their methods to be out there. steve: doesn't congress have investigators as well. >> yes, it does. steve: we need that piece to figure it out. >> congress' investigators are usually retired or former cia, fbi, secret service, so they know exactly what they're doing. but they have a law that requires them to protect the names of sources and protect the means that the sources use. otherwise, the source of the source contact in a foreign country gone. steve: gotcha. >> all the best, guys. you can see i got the same memo kilmeade did. i love the background particularly when it complies with ainsley. brian: there you go. >> love you, brian. [laughter] ainsley: that is so awesome. how do you do that? brian: brian you know what? it's a secret. president woodrow wilson coming up next. steve: stepping aside. coming up in color and black and white. brian: i will being black and white the rest of show. ainsley: you are so dull, brian. number one sleep doctor recommended remfresh-your nightly sleep companion. available in the natural sleep section at walmart. bp's natural gas teams use smart app technology to share data from any well instantly. so they can analyze trends and stop potential problems in their tracks. because safety is never being satisfied and always working to be better. yes or no? do you want the same tools and seamless experience across web and tablet? do you want $4.95 commissions for stocks, $0.50 options contracts? $1.50 futures contracts? what about a dedicated service team of trading specialists? did you say yes? good, then it's time for power e*trade. the platform, price and service that gives you the edge you need. looks like we have a couple seconds left. let's do some card twirling twirling cards e*trade. the original place to invest online. steve: rutgers university in new jersey helping illegal immigrants once again. first they hosted a college fair just to help illegals get into rutgers. now there is a new program to teach students how to help illegal immigrants. a number of rutgers administrators expressing their approval. one of them saying, quote: trainings like these are important to start conversations about how to begin supporting undocumented students. the training should be mandatory a correspondent with campus reform.org and student at rutgers he joins us right now. what do you think? >> honestly i'm frustrated but not surprised. this is really the latest episode in a long series of rutgers privileging illegal aliens over natural born citizens and legal immigrants like myself i came here in 1999 from israel. my whole family we got 2012. went from l 1 to h 1 b to green card. we went through the process legally and, you know, these people are going around the system and it's really not fair. steve: sure, i live in new jersey. i'm a new jersey taxpayer so obviously i'm subsidizing what they are doing out there. it was interesting for me though to look up and as it turns out if you lived in new jersey as an illegal student in high school for more than three years, you qualify for in state television. >> yeah. steve: at rutgers while other people in the country legally. >> international students won't qualify. these people aren't even in country let alone in state they are getting instate tuition and financial aid. >> what do you think the message by rutgers and one faculty member saying this should be mandatory. >> this is a worrying trend college campuses nationwide. especially the leadership institute's campus reform.org has really reported extensively on this. just like colleges privileging illegal aliens in these programs diverting public resources for them. providing scholarship money or whatever. it's a worrying trepsd that colleges are sort of enforcing this lack of respect for the rule of law. and that's really what's the case here is that they are not respecting the rule of law. yeah. that's it. steve: well, it's interesting. new jersey is the fifth most physically burdened state by illegals, costing $4.5 billion a year. >> that's right. that's a lot of money. steve: not mandatory yet but could be. stay tuned. >> they are saying they want it to be. steve: thank you for young joining us live. >> thank you for having me. steve: more on top story this morning. three american hostages back on american soil. our team coverage continues in a couple of minutes. >> this is a special night for these three really great people and congratulations on being in this country. thank you. o. let's plan for income that lasts all our years in retirement. prudential. bring your challenges. it's just my eczema again,. but it's fine. yeah, it's fine. you okay? 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let me show you. let's go. so we climb. hike. see a bear. woah. reach the top. dave says dark magic is a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters packed with goodness. brian: president trump welcoming home three american detainees held captive in north korea. >> these are great people. they have been through a lot. it's a great honor. >> iranian forces have fired about 20 rockets from syria into the golan heights area. target apparently the israeli military. >> this action further demonstration that the iranian regime cannot be trusted. >> i would advise iran not to start their nuclear program. if they do there will be very severe consequence. brian: gina haspel fighting back against democrats who used first hearing to smear her as an advocate for enhance the interrogation. >> i would never take the cia back to interrogation program. i stepped up. i was not on the sideline. i was in the front lines in the fight against al qaeda. >> congratulations on being in this country. steve: this is a fox news alert. 7:00 in washington, d.c. and this is what freedom looks like. president trump welcoming three american detainees home overnight. exactly four hours ago. >> nobody thought we could be on this track in terms of speed. so, i'm very honored to have helped the three folks. they are great people. it's a great honor. but the great -- the true honor is going to be if we have a victory in getting rid of nuclear weapons. ainsley: home, sweet home. while you were sleeping the men landing at joint base andrews. brian: bringing them back home and leland vittert is with us right now. leland was reporting through the night with the great ed henry. leland, so the sun is up. you are still up. what can you tell us about the arrival? >> steve, brian, ainsley, it is not often that the president of the united states is up at 3:00 a.m. for a happy reason. but he certainly was overnight. and you can really see these ear-to-ear smiles. not only on the president but also, of course, on the men who he greeted. this is the very first video we are getting from the president's twitter account of him going onto the air force plane that brought them back all the way across the pacific from japan to anchorage, alaska and then here to joint base andrews. he went on the plane, said hello to them. brought them down. a lot of hand shakes, a lot of smiles. few peace signs. cheers from the gathered members of the air force there. they talked to the media very briefly. one detainee said it was like a dream being home. said that while he was in north korea he was forced to do at love hard labor. to that end, the detainees were put on a bus and taken right to walter reed medical center it appeared as though physically they were doing pretty well. the big question is sort of what emotional state they are in. that's something that the psychologist at walter reed are going to start dealing with. sort of reimmersing them back american culture and begin debriefing them from their experience in north korea. president trump clearly made bringing these three men home a priority. especially after seeing what happened to another american inside north korea. >> it was a very important thing to all of us to be able to get these three great people out. and i must tell you i want to pay my warmest respects to the parents of otto warmbier who is a great young man who really suffered. >> at joint base andrews, you had the president, the vice president, the secretary of state huddling for about 20 minutes debriefing the secretary of state's meeting with kim jong un. and now, guys, gibbs the strategy sessions for how that summit will happen next month. back to you guys. brian: thanks so much. and, again, great job overnight. because you had no idea what was going to be happening next and you guys filled it great. i thought it was interesting what happened before they got on the plane. evidently it's a 12-hour visit for the secretary of state. at which time he had a 90 minute visit with kim jong un. this is his second one in a matter of weeks. this is pretty significant. they are making big gains. you never know, in the past, we have sent over former presidents and important people like bill richardson and bill clinton. didn't know if you were coming back with the hostages. could have been humiliating experience for us. ainsley: y'all were sleeping in the middle of the night. i woke up this morning and immediately went to the tv. it was a little after:00. i knew these images would be all over the tv. look at that it's amazing. after interviewing warmbier's parents and you all saw that interview on "fox & friends." to know what he went through and see these three americans. we all needed to see it for ourselves that they were in good health and hold up the peace sign. that's the american pastor. steve: other two are educators involved in universities over there. they were all held for spying on north korea or stealing state secrets and hostile acts against north korea. nonetheless, this is setting the table for the president, probably sitting down with kim jong un in singapore in the next couple of weeks. and his ultimate goal? well, we found that out last night. at about 3:10 in the morning when he walked over with those three men and talked to the media for seven minutes and 10 seconds. >> my proudest achievement will be this is a part of it, but will be when we denuclearize that entire peninsula. this is what people have been waiting for for a long time. nobody thought we could be on this track in terms of speed. so, i'm very honored to have helped the three folks. the true honor is going to be if we have a victory in getting rid of nuclear weapons. we very much appreciate that he allowed them to go before the meeting. it was sort of understood that we would be able to get these three terrific people during the meeting and bring them home after the meeting. we're starting off on a new footing. this is a wonderful thing that he released the folks early. that was a big thing. very important to me. and i really think we have a very good chance of doing something very meaningful. and if anybody would have said that five years ago, 10 years ago, even a year ago. you would have said that's not possible. so, a lot -- i will say this. a lot of very good things have happened. steve: no kidding. brian: so measured for a president that sometimes could get ahead of himself or feel freewheeling. with this he has been so buttoned up. i'm not raising anyone's expectations. i'm encouraged what i see. if it goes wrong i will pull back. if he does have to pull back, no one will say wow, look at you, you failed. no being look at me i tried. and we're going to go back. ainsley: it happened so quickly. i feel like the president just started negotiating that summit with kim jong un. so what was it that made kim jong un release these kids we were all surprised or former vice president dick cheney. steve: former vice president. that's an interesting point, ainsley in the past used detainees as bargaining chips. they released them as of 3:00 this morning back here in the united states of america mainland. so what's come forward? here's the former vice president dick cheney himself. >> well, if had you told me this is going to happen, i would have been surprised. i would not have expected it could happen. so i'm pleased that it has. i think it offers of possibility of significant progress. i think we have to be very careful and i think the president is being very careful to go operate in a way that we don't get sort of hung out to dry. if they don't meet our standards, then i would walk. steve: what's interesting is when i look back at the president's first term, you know, he brought in a lot of outsiders as his national security team and he did pretty much exactly what they said. he added troops in afghanistan. he delayed out plans to move the israeli embassy and then he hung on to the iranian nuke deal. now he has got a new foreign policy team in there with pompeo and also bolton and he is going more with his gut. because is he essentially trying to get global leaders to do what other presidents previously have been unable to do and that's where we are right now. brian: yeah. the next big thing we're going to be talking about is the whole standoff with china. they are sending somebody here now on trade. two weeks last week we were in china. trying to work something out. that's his other thing that everyone said don't start a trade war. he said i'm not. trade imbalance has got to change. steve: hinelsd the scenes president xi was sitting down with mr. kim jong un last week, you know, it's part of that maximum pressure thing where that probably had a lot to do with the release of those three men overnight. brian: other drama that took place yesterday was on capitol hill where gina haspel put her best foot forward to be the next cia director. maybe the most qualified nominee we have ever seen in our lifetime. yet, there was push back obviously over the enhanced interrogation. as was pointed out earlier in the show they didn't bring up russia and didn't bring up iran and the challenges of china and militarizing the south china sea. it was all about what happened in 2003. and many of the lawmakers then were the same lawmakers questioning now. ainsley: keep in mind back in 2013, when john brennan was sitting in that seat and he was being questioned by same senators, he was her boss at the time. brian: number 4 overall at the cia. ainsley: that's right. the questions they posed to him in 2013, totally different than the questions that they posed to her. those three senators that questioned both of them, watch the difference. >> i think it is also important, these will be questions that i will be asking as well to ensure while we look at the programs of the cia that these programs effectiveness be measured objectively and not simply by those who are charged with implementing them. >> many people and i include myself in that number, have questions about the message the senate would be sending by confirming someone for this position who served as the a supervisor in the counter terrorism center during the time of rendition, detention, and interrogation programs. >> it's incredibly important for the cia to be as open -- to be totally open with this committee. the reason is that there is no one else watching. typically in this -- in our country, we have the public is involved. the press is involved. was it a matter of coincidence that you -- that this decision was made to destroy the tapes in the same week that two major stories appeared in american newspapers to a great deal of public interest just that week in the whole interrogation question. >> mr. brennan is without a doubt qualified for this position. he served at the cia for 25 years. analytic operational and managerial capacities. you are very unique. you have 30 years of under cover experience. accordingly, we asked the agency that your records be declassified. i think i signed three letters in that regard. to make an informed decision. steve: ultimately brennan was confirmed and some of the senators who were there then and are still there, he was confirmed by senator warner, senator feinstein, heinrich, collins, king, burr, manchin, wyden and rubio. how many of them will be voting for her given the fact that they gave her boss, who is in charge of waterboarding and enhanced interrogation the thumbs up a couple years ago? brian: i thought she was great. i thought she was strong. while she was also proud of what she accomplished and keeping america safe and stopping the next attack that goes forward, bottom line is she does not consider enhanced interrogation torture. number two is it worked. you don't get bin laden without it most of these senators know it they felt they didn't stop it when they were there like senator feinstein who has been there for ages. now all of a sudden she comes out and she has questions about. ainsley: you are talking about what happened with ksm. they did do the enhanced interrogation on ksm when that was legal. that led us to the courier talking to bin laden. we followed that courier and got bin laden as a result. steve: ainsley, you made a great point right there. that was everything that she did at that point was. ainsley: she said i followed orders. steve: look, they changed the rules. congress changed their, you know, interpretation of what enhanced interrogation should be and what torture is. but, back when they did it, keep in mind, when you go back to the -- immediately after 9/11 mind set, you know, anthrax came into this building. people in the united states of america were just waiting for the other shoe to drop. and they were doing the patriots at the cia and all the operatives around the world were doing everything they could to stop another attack and that was her job. brian: how do you think danny pearl's family feels about ksm getting waterboarded? do you think they bleed for them because their son's head was cut off by that guy. ainsley: she was very calm and collected. her dad was in the military and served in the air force i think she said for 33 years. she is a military daughter. she said she learned discipline from her dad. she would be the first female cia director which would be amazing. brian: manchin is in and mccain is out. meanwhile. steve: the sanctuary revolt in california is growing. another city voting to break away from the state's laws. we will tell you about that coming up. t choicehotels.com feclaritin 24 hour relief when allergies occur. day, after day, after day. because life should have more wishes, and less worries. feel the clarity, and live claritin clear. -oh! -very nice. now i'm turning into my dad. i text in full sentences. i refer to every child as chief. this hat was free. what am i supposed to do, not wear it? next thing you know, i'm telling strangers defense wins championships. -well, it does. -right? why is the door open? are we trying to air condition the whole neighborhood? at least i bundled home and auto on an internet website, progressive.com. progressive can't save you from becoming your parents, but we can save you money when you bundle home and auto. i mean, why would i replace this? it's not broken. >> for those people in the back who don't seem to have a problem or recognize this crime, i'm asking you to pick one of your loved ones and kill them for no reason and then maybe you will have a little bit of an idea of walking in my shoes. steve: that was california resident don rosenberg. his 25-year-old son drew was killed by illegal back in 010. he was in the room this week when santa clarita became the first city in l.a. county to join a federal lawsuit breaking away from california's sanctuary law. don rosenberg joins us right now from l.a. good morning to you. >> thank you, steve. good morning. steve: you bet. over on the wall, we have got the communities that are opposing the state wants s.b. 54. something is going on in california, isn't it? >> yeah. it absolutely is. i mean, it's like california brush fire. you've got people realizing what was passed last year is a law and how ridiculous it is. not only do you have all these cities. but three weeks ago i filed an initiative. the children, family and community protection act which would overturn the sanctuary state law and would require law enforcement to cooperate with the federal government and ice. steve: sure. of course, the very core argument about sanctuary cities is those policies are needed to get illegals to cooperate with the police locally to report crime. but we have experts on this program, don, who have said that's not true. >> yeah. it's ridiculous to say that. there is no evidence to back it up, number one. and even if they report crime, california, in so many cases california law now these people are back out on the streets. steve: right. >> i don't believe they are afraid to call. if they are, it's probably the retribution they are going to get from the person that they ratted on. you know, we had a case here right when they were debating the sanctuary law. steve: right. >> where a woman called domestic violence case. they arrested the guy. ice wanted to deport him. steve: right. >> they let him out and he murdered her. steve: it's a terrible story. real briefly and quickly your exit question. what should sacramento take from what's going on in southern california right now? >> well, i think they should realize that the public is starting to learn what they did and they're not happy about it. steve: right. >> the cities are leading the way by taking these votes. and, of course, they will learn very soon about, you know, the initiative that i filed. if anybody wants to learn about it it's fight sanctuary state.com. steve: i'm sure a lot of people are going to go to it right now. don rosenberg who lost a son to an illegal. don, thank you very much for joining us live. >> thank you. steve: all right. coming up: switching gears. democrats grilling gina haspel over her past ties to the cia's interrogation program. next guest was known as one of america's deadliest snipers and he says we need her. about your reputation, is that small? when you own your own thing, it's huge. your partnerships, even bigger. with dell small business technology advisors you'll get the one-on-one partnership you need to grow your business. because the only one who decides how big your business can be, is you. the dell vostro 15 laptop, with 7th gen intel® core™ processors. >> we are back with a fox news alert. tensions reaching a boiling point in the middle east. firing missiles at iranian targets in syria. move in response to iranian market attack in the go alan heights. many were intercepted and no one killed. it's considered iran's first attack on israeli soldiers. it comes less than two days after president trump withdrew from the iran nuclear deal. rescuers desperately searching for a teen who may have been attacked by an alligator. the 15-year-old boy last seen flailing around in orlando pond screaming it bit me. >> eye on binoculars he sunk under the water and didn't resurface. >> i hope i didn't see what i saw. >> neighbors reported seeing a 6-foot gator in that pond. as you recall in june of 2016 a 2-year-old boy was killed at alligator by nearby disney world. president trump is making it easier for military spouses to get jobs. the commander-in-chief signing an executive order encouraging the government to hire them while their loved ones are deployed. >> military spouses have already shown the utmost devotion to our nation and we want to show you, our devotion in return. [applause] jillian: unemployment for military spouses is four times higher than the national average for females. second it back to you. steve: all right. jillian. thank you very much. she served in the cia since 1985 under six u.s. presidents from both parties. but that did not stop senate democrats yesterday from trying to smear gina haspel. >> cia selectively declassified only small pieces of information to bolster your nomination while keeping damaging information under wraps. >> why destroy videotapes doesn't that feel like a coverup. >> what i feel sitting here today is i support the higher moral standard we have decided to hold ourselves too. >> can you please answer the question? >> senator, i think i have answered the question. >> no, you've not. brian: yes, she did. sergeant nic irving was known as one of america's deadliest snipers taking out the taliban in many cases and more and says we need her in charge and joins us now to react. welcome, sergeant, thanks so much for joining us. >> thank you. brian: congratulations on your book rebirth ghost target. wrote with general at a time ta. also seemed like fiction for a while. what do you know about gina haspel and how do you think she was treated especially in that exchange. >> what i know about her, guys from my background we couldn't model a candle to that. a lot of covert drops. her background speaks of what legends are made of. it almost sounds like it's from a fiction book her background is stellar performance, a lot of guys from my background look up to that we envy that. steve: your parents were both in the intel community. >> both intel i was born overseas in germany. we have a little bit of i say so or know how how things go on the intel side. ainsley: you killed 33 individuals in three months. first african-american to deploy in the global war on terrorism as a sniper in your battalion. how did you get into this. >> started when i was in the sixth grade. i had this dream watching a lot of chuck norris shows and stuff like that with my parents. [laughter] i always wanted to ride the motorcycles with the rockets on it after that i wanted to trade triout for the naval seals. i have color issue. i'm colorblind. the army stuck up for me and help me not say cheated on my test. but the battalion nurse helped me out and got me through that. steve: did they have the motorcycles with the rockets? >> it's classified. i can't say. [laughter] brian: can you got to make a stand. in particular when she was talking about what she needed to do we know it's not politically correct to say enhanced interrogation i did what i had to do. she is prideful for what she did. i think she should embrace from what happened. she stopped a lot of future attacks is that your belief. >> 100 percent my belief. like you said earlier, 9/11, no one complained about how we got the job done back then. and, you know, watching individuals and innocent moms and dads jump from those towers it's hard to forget. what we do to get the job done is how we get it done. ainsley: have we forgotten. >> i think we have. it's become somewhat bumper sticker deep. only goes that far. so i think we need to kind of get back on track and let the guys, you know, do their job. steve: the president of the united states is taking an unconventional approach toward foreign affairs and foreign policy. but, you look at what he has done in the last week, seems to be working. >> unconventional warfare. you know, i think one of thization isayings in my commune do bad things to bad team. we have not deterred from that. brian: we had in the news yesterday captured five higher ups in isis in iraq yesterday. clean capture we now have them. >> yes. >> what do you think about that? how does that benefit? >> i think it's a really really good deal. you know, one of our missions overseas in special operations iraq and afghanistan doing six deployments there our job was to capture high value targets and get those guys turned over to giving up intel or any information they have. ainsley: have you complete confidence in our military. we are not going soft in that area, right? >> no. no. i still talk to a lot of the guys and they have not changed. brian: talk about this. reaper ghost target. what about your background play into this novel. >> a lot of my background. i kind of wanted to go into the fiction side. it's where i grew up my first book that i ever completed was based off of a goose bumps novel back in elementary school my mom still has it printed out with the serrated edges of paper. my first book i ever wrote. i think going back to that childhood dream state. i think we have kind of forgotten the older we get being able to dream and living not so much of a fantasy world but explore the mind. steve: goose bumps, chuck norris. brian: you wrote it with general tata also successful. real quick, michael strahan grew up in a military family in germany. what is different about your background that allows you to accomplish so much? >> the appreciation for the military. both of my parents, you know, serving in the military. i watched, you know, their career play out in front of me and it kind of, you know, instilled that into me. me and my siblings. appreciation for america. the united states and our military. stand behind that. steve: we were talking little bit about what you are doing now. you are actually filming something right now. >> i am. i'm filming something right now it's also classified. but hopefully soon we will get a little bit of information on that. but it's pretty cool show. ainsley: everyone needs to go out and buy his book. his book came out. steve: motorcycle. jillian: book came out in the beginning of april. it's successful. everyone needs to read this and buy it we need to support you because have you done so much for this country. you are a hero and we thank you. >> thank you, guys. ainsley: nicholas irvin it's called reaper, ghost target. brian: coming up ahead, president trump welcoming those three americans after they return home from north korea. how important is this ahead of the president's summit with kim jong un? we're going to asking ted cruz. he promises to answer. ainsley: plus, this veteran used to be homeless. we told you about him yesterday. now, he is one of the top v.a. nurses in his state. he is going to share the remarkable story of how he turned his life of drugs around. he's going to join us live ♪ an american soldier ♪ ann, american ♪ it works with the water in your body. unblocking your system naturally. miralax. now available in convenient single-serve mix-in pax. i'm about to start the hair, skin and nails challenge. so my future self will thank me. thank you. i become a model? yes. no. start the challenge today. and try new tropical citrus flavor with collagen. nature's bounty. hello. give me an hour in tanning room 3. cheers! that's confident. but it's not kayak confident. kayak searches hundreds of travel sites to help me plan the best trip. so i'm more than confident. forgot me goggles. kayak. search one and done. ainsley: back with a fox news alert. historic homecoming. three americans held prisoner in north korea. they are now safely back in the united states. steve: the three men now being evaluated at walter reed medical center in maryland. brian? brian: president trump and vice president pence welcoming them home at joint base andrews at 3:00 in the morning. >> frankly, we didn't think this was going to happen. it was a very important thing to all of us to be able to get these three people out. ainsley: diplomatic victory comes as prepares for summit with kim jong un and that happens in june next month. brian: let's bring in ted cruz looking to keep that seat for another six years. has his handsful in texas but a big student of what's hang internationally. senator, what is your take -- i'm sure you weren't up at 3:00 in the morning. what is your take at what has taken place so far? >> well, it's a big deal. the president is to be commended for bringing these three americans home. that is a major victory. it's really the results of american strength. you know, we saw for 8 years under barack obama a foreign policy that was really a policy of weakness and appeasement. remember how obama put it, leading from behind. the problem is weakness and appeasement doesn't work. especially with dictators like kim jong un. president trump has come in with a strong american foreign policy, getting back to peace through strength. i think we are seeing the results of it with three americans coming home. steve: you know what's interesting, senator, i was clicking around yesterday with the big news that they were coming back to the united states. and the majority of the news coverage on the other channels was about stormy daniels. what's the heck is up with that? >> most of the media -- they are just out of their mind. they have what i call trump derangement syndrome where all they can do is attack the president all day long on the scandal of the day. i have got to tell you i think most texans are really tired of it. when i go home nobody asks about the latest scandal of the day and whatever the talking heads are lighting their hair on fire about. people are excited about tax cuts. about regulations being lifted. about jobs growing. i will tell what you people are excited about, for example, is yesterday at the white house i was there. the president made a decision that saved thousands of jobs. he stepped in and solved the broken ren system. something the e.p.a. invented to enforce the ethanol mandate. what happened was renn skyrocketed and they were threatening the jobs thousands upon thousands of blue car union makers at refineries in texas and refineries in pennsylvania. i have been for six months working with the president and work with other senators. yesterday, the president made a terrific decision. he stepped in and said that we're going to allow rennes to be created when ethanol is exported of. what that means we are going to export a lot more ethanol. that's going to help corn farmers. we will sell more ethanol and also allow e-15 to be sold year around. it's a big win for corn farmers but critically the president saved the jobs of tens of thousands of blue collar union members, refinery workers. exactly the people who elected donald trump instead of hillary clinton. it was exactly the right decision. ainsley: senator jobs check. ethanol mandate check. primps home check. the summit now set and the iran deal. what are your thoughts about that? >> well, once again, i think the president did exactly the right thing to pull out of the iran deal for the last year and a half i have been talking with the president, urging him to take this course. i think the president hastedtly been on this path. the iran deal that president obama negotiated was catastrophic. it did enormous damage to america because it allowed billions of dollars to go directly to the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism. and even worse than that, it did so in a way that ensured iran would get nuclear weapons. you know, when the ayatollah khomeini pledges death to america and death to israel, i believe him. he is a religious radical zealot and canceling the deal is the exactly the right thing what we need to do and what we are going forward doing is reimposing crushing sanctions, urging our allies to do the same and making sure that iran never never never gets a nuclear weapon. brian: senator, you know how they feel they made it clear. the foreign minister of england and macron spent two days here and merkel spent a day all to keep us in. in fact, she released this statement. it is no longer such that the united states simply protects us. but europe must take its destiny in its own hands. that's the task of the future. your reaction? >> listen, we're going to see some posturing in european capitals. the reason is there is some big european companies want to do business with iran. they make money. that's got a lot of the european countries defending this deal. i will tell you, when the deal was being negotiated, i had european ambassadors in my office asking for my help saying the obama administration is pressuring us. we think this is a foolish deal. will you help us press back? so, look, no one should be surprised that their companies are interested in money. but you know what? we have a bigger responsibility. the ayatollah with a nuclear weapon, if he ever acquire as nuclear weapon, i think the odds are unacceptably high. he would detonate that weapon in the skies of tel aviv or new york or los angeles. we can't roll the dice. brian: if germany was worried about their own destiny. maybe they wouldn't accept a pipeline from russia that keeps them on the russian natural gas crack pipe forever when we could supply it. steve: senator cruz, let me ask you this. the white house is now sending to correct me if i acongress a 15billion-dollar ren package. it's been over a month ago you guys passed that spend popalooza $1.3 billion. i know you got a lot of funding from the military. now how are you trying to claw it back? >> yes. well, i have been, the omnibus was a serious mistake. i voted against that 1.3 billion-dollar spending package. steve: trillion. >> now you got me doing it. steve: i did it, too. >> it was a serious mistake and i think the president is right to send a rescission package. the biggest advantage of rescission is the democrats can't filibuster it. it's a procedural vehicle that only takes 50 votes. if republicans just stand together we can claw back some of that spending and one of the things i have been urging republicans in the senate, we have a narrow 51 vote majority. of the democrats are filibustering everything. we need to be using all of the procedural tools we have to pass things with 51 votes to get victory after victory after victory for the american people and reigning in wasteful spending is certainly something we ought to be doing. applaud the white house for doing that. brian: sarah jessica parker going after your opponent in the senate race. can you still win? >> she joins rosie o'donnell and al franken and chelsea handler and i got to say. if this election were in hollywood, i would have lost already. but, fortunately hollywood celebrities don't tend to vote a whole lot in texas elections. listen, i have got an opponent who is running hard left. is he running on gun control. is he running on open borders. is he running on impeaching the president. he is the first democrat senate candidate in the country to pledge he would impeach donald trump but i have got to tell you, he is raising more money than any democrat in the entire country. he raised $7 million last quarter and so what we're saying is conservatives in texas and across the country, they are going to ted cruz.org and we are standing together. we're going to win because there are more conservatives than there are liberals in texas. but it's going to take conservatives showing up in november to defend our freedom. steve: all right. senator ted cruz.org. thank you very much. [laughter] ainsley: thanks, senator. great to see you. this senator used to be homeless now he is one of the top v.a. nurses in his state. is he going to share his remarkable story of how he turned his life around. he was hooked on drugs, when he joins us live next. ♪ come fly with me, let's fly, let's fly away. ♪ ♪ come fly with me, let's fly, let's fly away. ♪ i have no idea how we're going to get through this. follow me. unitedhealthcare has the people and tools to help guide you through the confusion. well that wasn't so bad at all. that's how we like it. unitedhealthcare. the first survivor of ais out there.sease and the alzheimer's association is going to make it happen. but we won't get there without you. visit alz.org to join the fight. if yor crohn's symptoms are holding you back, and your current treatment hasn't worked well enough, it may be time for a change. ask your doctor about entyvio, the only biologic developed and approved just for uc and crohn's. entyvio works at the site of inflammation in the gi tract and is clinically proven to help many patients achieve both symptom relief and remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. pml, a rare, serious, potentially fatal brain infection caused by a virus may be possible. this condition has not been reported with entyvio. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections or have flu-like symptoms or sores. liver problems can occur with entyvio. if your uc or crohn's treatment isn't working for you, ask your gastroenterologist about entyvio. entyvio. relief and remission within reach. we're on a mission to show drip coffee drinkers, it's time to wake up to keurig. wakey! wakey! rise and shine! oh my gosh! how are you? well watch this. i pop that in there. press brew. that's it. so rich. i love it. that's why you should be a keurig man! full-bodied. are you sure you're describing the coffee and not me? ♪ ♪ ainsley: a homeless veteran turns his life around becoming a nurse at the v.a., helping his fellow vets. david now works in the same arkansas hospital where he was treated for drugs more than a decade ago. his story providing a real example of perseverance and determination. army veteran david is ranked as one of the best nurses in arkansas. he joins us with his remarkable story. good morning. thank you for being with us. >> good morning. thank you for having me. ainsley: you're welcome. i know you are a nurse and overcome your drug addiction. tell us how you got into drugs. >> just made the wrong decisions one night. and i picked it up and, you know, that's the thing about addiction, it's coming and baffling. it can make a good person go bad real quick. you could have everything in the world and next thing you know you're homeless. that's what happened to me. ainsley: it was in 1998 you tried methamphetamine. you were going through a divorce. you worked at a tire store. so what happened next? >> you know, you just get into that grove and next thing you know don't go to work and then i start selling it or making it and all this -- it's -- i could go on and on about the perils of addiction. ainsley: what did you lose as a result? >> everything. i mean, they repossessed my house. i had no car. no phone, no friends. you know, i mean, i lost everything. and that's what the disease of addiction will do to you. ainsley: david, when did you hit rock bottommen? >bottom? >> in 2003 when they repo saysed m --repo saysed rerepossessed my home. i was hopeless and godless. opportunity arose to go to the central arkansas veterans healthcare system which opened the door and gave me the opportunity to change my life and it continued this day to help me change my life. i have to give credit where credit is due. the v.a. has been there the whole time. they have supported me. and it starts at the top with dr. margie scott what a great director. all the way down to my nurse manager jackie nunn who encourages me every day to do something good my phenomenal team ohio work with no matter how bad it gets and no matter how low it gets around there, we always try to come out with a smile and warm hand to our veterans and to help them. ainsley: i know, you are doing an amazing job. what's your message. >> my main message is all of america, for every bad thing you hear that goes on at the v.a., there's a thousand great things that go on every day that you will never hear about. and sometimes that's okay with us. when i walk into the room and family member goes you have given us so much great care here, we really appreciate you, that's enough for me. and, you know, i come in every day with an open mind and just do the best i can. ainsley: we need more nurses and doctors that have your attitude. you are an amazing person. congratulations. you turned your life around. you have a daughter and granddaughter important two months ago. >> yes, ma'am. ainsley: they need you. thank you for being with us. >> thank you for this opportunity. ainsley: usual welcome. president trump gearing up for high stakes meeting with kim jong un after getting our hostages back home. the next guest says the president can learn from the past to make sure his summit is a success. plus, people say she is elizabeth warren's worst nightmare. meet the candidate running to unseat the senator in the next hour ♪ hold on tight to your dream ♪ at bass pro shops and cabela'. like bass pro or cabela's flag t-shirts for only $5. an igloo 48 qt. cooler for under $20. and save 25% on camelbak hydration packs. with the right steps, 80%of recurrent ischemicide. strokes could be prevented. a bayer aspirin regimen is one step to help prevent another stroke. so, i'm doing all i can to stay in his life. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. oh hi sweetie, i just want to show you something. xfinity mobile: find my phone. 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[ whirring sound ] you want a cookie? it's a drone! i know. find your phone easily with the xfinity voice remote. one more way comcast is working to fit into your life, not the other way around. brian: a fox news alert. in case you missed it three hostages held in north korea now free in the u.s. as president trump prepares for upcoming summit with kim jong un. this was a great show of -- i guess their point of view heading into the summit. next guest writes in op-ed summits can be risky business. will trump bungle it like fdr or jfk or triumph like ronald reagan did. we are encouraged about where we are at. we have seen these summits before. let's go back in time. personalities matter, circumstances matter. what went wrong there? >> well in yaltafdr who was sick and dying he thought he could charm joseph stalin. it turns out he couldn't charm joseph stalin. he didn't really have a plan and as a result, the pols went from going to one master the nazis to another master the soviets. in that sense it touched off the cold war. because he overrelied on his personality, because he wasn't as well-prepared as he could have been, it turned out to be a disaster. brian: calling him uncle joe and acted like he was friendly when he was a mass fever. he would be voted out of office. >> exactly. brian: next you want me to bring jfk. what went wrong there. >> jfk was young, cocky and brash. and he thought he could charm him but the old soviet came and he quickly put -- he quickly put jfk on his heels. as a result of that jfk, his uncertain performance actually led crews chef to believe he could put nuclear missiles into cuba and that led to the cuba missile crisis which is near armageddon. brian: to his credit he said he knew he blew it, he was not prepared. next reagan, gorbachev. what almost happened and what didn't because of reagan? >> that was an epic summit. it was actually supposed to be just a prep meeting in preparation for a larger meeting to take place later in washington, d.c. as it turned out. gosh che came, he had a whole set of proposals yet, reagan, to his credit. he and his team were prepared to counter. they added on an extra negotiating session and they came very close to talking about riding the world of all nuclear questions it found floundered over the question. ronald reagan decided it was a bad deal he walked away from it. gorbachev looked at reagan i don't know what more i could have done reagan very hotly said you could have said yes. brian: warning and word of caution for trump? >> well, the word of caution for trump is expect the unexpected. come prepared. and be prepared to walk away from a bad deal. brian: one thing to his credit so far he has made it clear. if i don't get it i will walk away. jay, fascinating perspective, of course, as a noted historian, i would expect nothing else. jay thank you. top story those three hostages back on american soil. our team coverage continues at the top of the hour. period. . . do ndo 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front lines in the fight against al qaeda. >> congratulations being in this country. brian: here we go, right to a fox news alert, welcome home. president trump greeting three u.s. detainees, literally overnight, 3:00 in the morning held captive in north korea. >> nobody thought we could be on this track in terms of speed. i'm very honored to have helped the three folks. they're great people. it's a great honor. but the true honor is going to be if we have a victory in getting rid of nuclear weapons. steve: that is his point t all happened at 3:00 a.m., the men stepping foot on u.s. soil at andrews air force base in maryland, outside of washington. the white house released this video early this morning on twitter. exclusive behind the scenes action what happened. it was all captured by the white house camera. ♪ steve: that is very trump gran, isn't it? -- trumpian the overstretched flag between two fire trucks. the president live at 3:00 a.m. the a 6:00 a.m., eastern time, a 30 second, essentially victory lap on twitter. >> while you were sleeping this was happening. we woke up this morning, turned our tvs on. leland vittert was there live at joint base andrews. leland. what was it like to witness that in person. reporter: in this business there are not a lot of good reasons to be up at 3:00 in the morning. often times it is for the worst of news. this was for the bet of news. there was something special for every one there, even among the hardened white house press corps when those three men walked down the stairs with president trump, there were you have a you will full lot of smiles. you could see almost to ear smile on the face of three former detainees from north korea. one saying it was like a dream as he walked down and experienced the freedom of america once again. another one said they had experienced hard labor while they were there inside of those camps. president trump said he made this a priority for his administration to bring these men home. they are at walter reed medical center getting checked out not only physically but emotionally. a psychologist working to reintegrate them back into american life, experiencing the brutality of that regime for so long. president trump talking about why it was so important to bring them home and remembering somebody that came home too late from north korea. >> it was a very important thing to all of us, to be able to get these three great people out. and i must tell you, i want to pay my warmest respects to the parents of otto warmbier who is a great young man who really suffered. reporter: so behind the scenes pictures from sarah sanders here of the president the secretary of state, the chief of staff and the vice president all huddling in a little bit of a debrief that lasted 20 minutes here at andrews air force base. now begins the planning and strategizing for that kim jong-un president trump summit scheduled for early next month. back to you guys. steve: leland vittert live at joint base andrews outside of washington, d.c. with the latest. brian: that count is 15 detainee hostages that the president gotten out. there is whole huge list to work on. ainsley: otto warmbier's dad i called him yesterday to see if he wanted to come on the show to react and he was in our authorities and prayers i thinking about otto yesterday. he said, his quote was, we're happy for the hostages and their families and we miss otto. we wonder why did he come home in that state. when we saw these three, even though the president tweeted yesterday they were in good health, we were all happy to hear that, i wanted to see with my own eyes. brian: it was great that you called them. it was great that the president mentioned, but i do believe otto's death allowed them to live because the fallout from the way he was returned to the u.s. was so devastating and so clear, even from, the north korean allies, they knew. when he said, one of these detainees said i was in hard maybe bore. when i was sick they took care of me, that to me because of what happened to otto. they clearly didn't take care of him. steve: he got typical treatment people in north korea get when they were in one of those hard labor camps. while the president has been really good springing hostages, ultimately what he wants to see is a unified north and south korea with no nukes. here he is last night, this morning, 3:00 a.m. >> my proudest achievement will be, this is a part of it, but will be when we denuclearize that entire peninsula. this is what people have been waiting for, for a long time. nobody thought we could be on this track for at such speed. i'm truly honored to help the three folks. the true honor if we have a victory getting rid of nuclear weapons. we appreciate he allowed them to go before the meeting. it was sort of understood we would be able to get these three terrific people during the meeting and bring them home after the meeting. we're starting off on new footing. this is a wonderful thing that he released the folks early. that was a big thing, very important to me. and i really think we have a very good chance of doing something very meaningful and if anybody would have said that five years ago, 10 years ago, even a year ago, you would have said that's not possible. so a lot, i will say this, a lot of very good things have happened. brian: 90 minute meeting with our secretary of state. their second meeting. the first one was impromptu. pompeo was went over there to visit his counterpart in north korea to set this one, easter meeting. this was an hour. and then he had 90 minute meeting with kim jong-un. ainsley: meeting with the south korean president and shaking hands. this is remarkable. we see what happened with iran, tearing up the deal. his supporters are excited about that. steve: unlike a number of u.s. presidents who promised to move the u.s. embassy to jerusalem, this president is actually going to do it monday. ted cruz says what we're seeing a different kind ever strength than we've seen in the past. >> it's a big deal and the president is to be commended for bringing these three americans home. that is a major victory. and it's really the results of american strength. we saw for eight years under barack obama a foreign policy that was really a policy of weakness and appeasement. remember how obama put it, leading from behind. the problem is weakness and appeasement don't work, especially with dictators like kim jong-un. president trump has come in with a strong american foreign policy and getting back with peace through strength and three americans coming home. brian: knowing it could all fall apart. i know one thing they are not testing nuclear weapons. they shuttered one of them. another collapsed on its own. rockets are not going over the direction of guam and japan. that is clear. steve: north korea gave up a lot and now the hostages. the president is clear the sanctions that are crippling the nation are not coming off until they denuke. ainsley: don't show you we don't know all the negotiations behind the scenes. steve: i'm fine with that. ainsley: absolutely. we didn't know that the secretary of state was over there until he peaceally was coming home. then we got word he might bring those three individuals. "new york times" is writing where is he, he is mia with the iran deal. meanwhile he is over there bringing hostages home. brian: something that had a lot of drama yesterday. acting cia director, gina haspel wants the job full time. she was nominated for it. she took a 32-year career put it on the line and stood with pride. the controversial part was enhanced interrogation, challenges with leaving the iranian deal, north korean summit, all everybody wanted to talk about what happened after 9/11. like for example, we picked up all the first generation of al qaeda and we managed to get people like bin laden because of it. steve: keep in mind, it was just a couple years ago many of the same senators in that room gave a pass to john brennan, who had been the number four person at the cia. he was her boss. so all these questions regarding enhanced interrogation and waterboarding, where were they were him? they weren't there. ainsley: they were interrogating her, yesterday. kamala harris, if you didn't see it. listen to this. >> do you believe the previous interrogation techniques were immoral? >> senator, i believe that cia to whom you referred -- >> it is a yes or no answer. >> senator i believe that cia -- >> it is yes or no answer. >> did extraordinary work to prevent another attack on this country give the legal tools we were answered. >> please answer yes or no do you believe in hindsight those techniques were immoral? >> senator what i believe sitting here today i support the higher, moral standard we have decided to hold ourselves to. >> please answer the question. >> senator i think i have answered the question. >> no you've not. brian: that was dismissive in a world, when you're five or seven years old, that is the way the world is, yes or no. black and white. there is nuance -- ainsley: she plain explained why the she made the decisions she did. senator senator -- steve: that was gotcha questioning. when it happened, it was all 100% legal. we were on the couch an hour ago, one. deadliest snipers against the taliban. gentleman by the name of first quarter irving. he is a retire army ranger. his parents were both in the intel community. he said that she, gina haspel is what legends are made of. >> we couldn't hold a candle to that. she has done a lot of covert things we look up to, a lot of covert drops. her background speaks, things legends are made of. almost sounds likes from a fiction book. background of stellar performance. a lot of guys in my background, special operations look up to that. brian: pretty amazing, lost mccain, lost kamala harris, voting no. this gang pretend to be independent, goes way to the left, will not do it for his conscience. senator joe manchin is in after meeting with her. susan collins is in. looks like rand paul is out. steve: there was a lot of grandstanding yesterday. ultimately she will be approved. you watch. brian: you do need democrats besides joe manchin. steve: she will be approved. ainsley: senator elizabeth warren isn't afraid to get voters fired up. >> we nasty women are going to march our nasty feet to cast our nasty votes. ainsley: all right, our next guest hopes to face her in the november primary. some are calling her warren's worst nightmare. steve: dana loesch will join us live on this very busy thursday. you're watching "fox & friends." spray relieves 6 symptoms... claritin-d relieves 8, including sinus congestion and pressure. claritin-d relieves more. we're on a mission to show drip coffee drinkers, it's time to wake up to keurig. wakey! wakey! rise and shine! oh my gosh! how are you? well watch this. i pop that in there. press brew. that's it. so rich. i love it. that's why you should be a keurig man! full-bodied. are you sure you're describing the coffee and not me? >> being native-american has been part of my story i guess, since the day i was born. we nasty women are going to march our nasty feet to cast our nasty votes, to get you out of our lives forever! ainsley: while speculation brews whether massachusetts senator elizabeth warren is running for president in 2020, she is up for re-election for her senate seat this year. people in her state say our next guest could be her worst nightmare. that is in a recent op-ed, that headline. joining us republican candidate for u.s. senate beth lindstrom. thanks for being here. >> my pleasure. ainsley: what a career you have had. first female executive director of the massachusetts state republican party. first female director of the state lottery. you served on mitt romney's cabinet. you managed senator scott brown's victorious seat. he was not supposed to win that election, it was a special election when ted kennedy passed away. correct? >> correct. ainsley: you have had a career in politics, well-known in massachusetts. why are you running right now. >> i was watching tv in the morning and i would have a argument in my head with her. i have a fundamental disagreement about role of government. people of massachusetts feel they -- ainsley: why people saying you are her worst nightmare. >> i'm a contrast to her left-wing liberal politics. i believe in free markets and money better spent in the hands of people that earn it. that is a very different take where she is. she demonizes anybody who disagrees with her. it is about tone and temperment. she has said she wanted to teach books, throw rocks. you can pass legislation you can not be a rock thrower. i have built bridges with people in my career. there is big difference there. ainsley: what do people say in massachusetts about her? what is the reputation of elizabeth warren? >> when i'm out across the state women say they just hug me, thank you for running. we have got to get rid of her. she does not have the same values. men three times a week it is like nails on a chalk board, truly. ainsley: the primary is sent 4th. running against a guy named jeff diehl. if massachusetts voters are watching why should they vote for you over jeff diehl? >> i am the best chance to win in november. end of story. ainsley: what are some of the issues most important to you? >> economy. we agree a lot on those republican conservative issues but it is truly in massachusetts, when she won in 2012, obama won by 23% of the vote. she won by sieve. she is a flawed candidate. but she did win the women's vote by 20%. don't vote for me because i'm a woman. vote for me because i'm qualified. because of my background, where i stand on issues. ainsley: if you win sent 4th, you're going up against her in november. will she run or run for president? >> i think she is running for president. she is continuing to say in present tense terms that she's not. we'll be up against her in november. if we give voters in massachusetts a real choice, we might give her a real surprise. >> we'll be watching. thanks so much. >> you're welcome. >> president trump bringing americans home from north korea the same week he ripped up the iran deal. what message does this send to our enemies? congressman brian mast lost both legs fighting in afghanistan. he will join us next to react. . ♪ (woman) and my brother ray and i started startsearching for answers.ords. 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(vo) call 844-4-brightstar for your free home care planning guide. jillian: good morning we're back with fox news alert. tensions at the boiling point in the middle east. israel's overnight airstrikes killed three people and damaged iranian facilities in syria. the move in response to a iranian rocket attacks in goal lan heights. it is considered their first direct attack on israeli soldiers. it comes two days after president trump with drew from the iran nuclear deal. well have more live on the ground from the golan heights in a few minutes. defense secretary james mattis will decide whether to send additional 700 national guard troops at the border. there are 1600 guardsmen serving on the border. national guard support has led to over 1600 arrests, 451 voluntary returns and seizure of 1000-pound of marijuana. look at the headlines. brian said read them quick, so you could have more type. was that to your licking? brian: that was perfect. appreciate. brian: jillian. president trump overnight welcoming three americans taken prisoner for no reason by the way at the height of his sum wit with kim jong-un. around also ripping up iranian deal. what do the messages send to our enemies? we have others. u.s. representative brian mast lost both legs to an ied deployed in afghanistan, while meeting our enemies. what do you think the diplomatic message is to iran and north korea, congressman? >> this is something we have seen played out through history. this is something many have known a long time. this is difference between foreign policy conducted through strength and foreign policy conducted through recession. you can not purchase a dollar or $150, anymore you can buy a real friend for a dollar. brian: we'll see what happens. yesterday iran directly hit israel, israel hit back. do you think that is related at all to the iranian deal being torn up? do you expect more of this? >> this is not related to the iran deal being torn up. this is something that is related to the iran deal and its concessions, the fact that the previous administration was allowing for the expansion of iran throughout the middle east, through lebanon, into syria, and in the other direction into iraq. allowed them to get on to israel's borders unchecked. not just through the auspice of hezbollah. we're talking about the iranian revolutionary guard being on their borders. these are iranian forces under the flag of iran, being there fighting our closest ally. brian: they start up their program, saudi arabia will start up the next day. see if they start spinning the centrifuges again. i want to bring you to this quote from angela merkel. despite her urging the president did not adhere to the deal and is out. it is no longer such he said, that the united states simply protects us but europe must take its destiny in its own hands. that is the task of the future. what is your read? they want to take more of their security. i'm fine with that. >> what they're missing is this, we don't make peace with current enemies. we make peace with former enemies. if they're failing to recognize that iran is still a current enemy they're going to fail in this endeavor. brian: we'll see what happens. again that haspel on capitol hill, in front of the senate, not the house. so you were able to watch. i was stunned by some of the dismissive, condescending questions that went her direction. now you know why she was tempted not to put herself up for this. did she afford herself well. >> i will not judge miss haspel for her role in enhanced interrogation. the reality of the situation we weren't pillow fighting fightine al qaeda and weren't pillow fighting with iran. they were beheading people and this is very dangerous and deadly work. takes a very special person to do it. she is that special person in the politically motivated senators need to get out of the way. brian: by the way, congressman, it worked, no doubt about it. it worked. i have to bring you something that matters a lot to you. the house approved extensive va reform package. without a va director by the way. is this what is best for veterans? do you think we're heading in the right direction? >> acting director will key is a good guy. i know him personally. the funding of va choice program and beyond that expansion of the care program that exists for post-9/11 veterans where you can go out there have a caretaker, perhaps the spouse or somebody else helping to take care of you in the home, that is being expanded for veterans from world war ii, korea, vietnam eras, this is one of the biggest things that can be done. brian: if jeff miller is nominated would you support him? >> i think jeff miller would be great. brian: you used to head the committee. good to get your perspective. >> brian: president trump calling out "new york times" for a change for slamming secretary of state mike pompeo going missing? >> our secretary of state is doing a fantastic job. they couldn't find him because he was in north korea. brian: 12 1/2 hour flight, 9minute meeting with kim jong-un. thought that was important. does the "times" owe the president an apology? dana loesch weighs in. california taking the nanny state to a whole new level. guess what they're doing now? every homeowner has got to get solar panels. that will blow my budget. why do they hate poor people? ♪ come a model? yes. no. start the challenge today. and try new tropical citrus flavor with collagen. nature's bounty. steve: fox news alert. three americans held hostage in north korea for over a year freed overnight. the president greeting them live 3:00 this morning, joint base andrews. the three of them currently are being evaluated at walter reed in maryland. set to reunite with their families later on today. they are home. brian: huge news, you know what? they didn't delay a minute in order to put it on prime time. hold it on the tarmac. 3:00 in the morning. that is the role the president and vice president and wives were all there. dana loesch is with us now to talk about that. huge news overnight. >> yeah, brian, huge news. good morning to all of you. yeah, this is fantastic. this is type of winning people have been wanting to see in foreign policy for quite some time. the new york sometimes wasted no time in attacking the president. i was talking about this president. it feels as though the president could cure cancer and legacy media could find something over which to attack him. this is great. these are all the lines previously drawn in the last administration, all those being enforced. we were all supposed to die from a nuclear attack because of trump's tweets. now look what is happening. >> you mentioned "the new york times" headline. it was, at a key moment trump's top diplomat is again thousands of miles away. they were talking about the secretary of state. who actually wasn't in washington when the iran deal was ripped up. instead he was in north korea bringing home these three prisoners. pretty amazing. so they started that headline at a key moment. there were several key moments that happened yesterday and happened this morning and the day before. >> yeah. this was, kind of silly for "the new york times" to do. and i mean, for obviously i think it also underscored just how separate both of these negotiations are right now. but mike pompeo bringing back three americans, who have been held prisoner in north korea, that's pretty significant. and it seems that the "new york times" at least needs to modify their article to note this, instead of using this separation as some sort of cudgel to undermine the administration. mike pompeo was acting on behalf of the president. shows no separation for him and the president's agenda. it was a goofy headline for them to do. this was the same type of attack when the from the media when the president rightfully was trashing the iran deal. why he knew at least a year all the evidence that mossad gathered from a civilian warehouse. i feel like a lot of stories need to be modified or retracted. steve: dana, look what the president and his new foreign policy team have been able to do the last week. he ripped of iran deal which is not surprising because he said he was going to do it. the american hostages were released from north korea in a good faith issue, gesture on the part of kim jong-un. then on monday the u.s. embassy is going to open in jerusalem. a number of presidents have promised israel. yep, when i'm president i'm going to do it. they never did. he did it. that is all one week. >> all in one week. every previous president always kicked the can down the road where it concerned moving the embassy and the president has accomplishing that on monday. this is a huge, great week for foreign policy and i think it shows america's foreign policy, we have an administration that has some strength. we have an administration that follows through on its promise, and that is exactly what we're seeing here. we also have an administration that understands the process getting things done in our constitutional republic. if you want a fifth bump acknowledged, take it to the senate and get it a ratified. who can be mad at this? brian: by the way, just watch, there will be redemption, no matter what this deal looks like, when it goes to congress, no democrats will vote for it. it might even be in trouble with that, if things move forward at this pace. >> yeah. brian: real quick, when it comes to politics the democrats definitely have history on their side. the generic poll usually in their corner, however the gap narrowed considerably. in may the democrats have just a three-point lead. in february it was 54-38. so how do you explain it? i think a lot to do with the fact that nancy pelosi says i will be your speaker. they say their agenda, we'll impeach the president. >> yeah. they also say when they reclaim the house they want to increase taxes. all the americans around the country are looking at their bigger paychecks, we don't want any of that. democrats have enthusiasm problem, they have a lack of leadership problem. i don't know how they can talk about a blue wave, they can't even drum up enthaws a in their own pry maryies -- in texas, we saw the past three previous primaries same thing, west virginia, ohio, indiana, saw democrats lagged enthusiasm to match the talk of turnout that they promised this is a real struggle for them. they're struggling with donations. they're struggling with messaging. they're all over the place. they're in the middle of the civil war with clintons and that faction trying to stay into power. it is bernie's power. turning into socialist principles, quasi-socialist party, that is what they're looking at. i think they have serious problems. ainsley: i think numbers might be closer now after the news we saw this morning. when you see three individuals coming off of a plane and coming home. democrats, republicans every one loves that. steve: a good picture. >> absolutely. steve: thank you very much. brian: i know what you're saying to yourself. i just saw jillian do the news. we have to have her do it again. jillian: i apologize i'm taking away from your time, brian. brian: absolutely. jillian: we need to get caught up on some other stories we're following. starring with this, a suspect is under arrest accused brutally murdering a teenage girl with her mom listening on the phone. police say sean french violently attacked 15-year-old bailey bradshaw. she was on the phone with her mother who listened in horror. french had previous relationship with the girl. he has a felony warrant with unlawful activity with a minor. according to "the new york times" terror bosses were captured in a joint sting with u.s. and iraqi forces. a three-month long operation tracked the group hiding in syria and turkey. one. terrorists is a top aide to isis leader al-baghdadi. illegal immigrants can now get college financial aid in new jersey. democratic governor phil murphy signing a new bill to help dreamers go to a state school. to qualify students must meet certain requirements have a diploma from a high school in the state. undocumented immigrants get tuition in new jersey. critics call it fundamentally wrong for taxpayers. here is look at the headlines. back to you. steve: new jersey homeowner around taxpayer i am subsidizing that program. there you go. as you know yesterday was janice dean's birthday. today she is out the streets with the folks. >> how are you guys? do you want to be on television by the way? >> absolutely. >> where are you from? >> from florida. >> and what's your name? >> kathleen. ken. >> mike and mary from fondue lack, wisconsin. >> and from california. >> over here? >> from texas. >> nice. >> lauren from texas. >> what is the high height been so far? >> you. >> fantastic. a beautiful day in new york city. let's look at the maps, i will show you how beautiful it is. it is 58 in new york city. nothing but sunny skies. we do have a front that will move through could bring potential for maybe some hail, maybe damaging wind, not only the northeast and mid-atlantic but upper midwest and the great lakes. it is that time of year we could see potential for strong and severe storms. not a severe weather outbreak. we could see potential for strong rain. anybody want to say high to anybody at home? >> hi, kaley. >> hi to our grandchildren. >> all right. >> hi to my kids and grandkids. >> i want you to waive to steve, ainsley and brian. nicely done. we didn't even practice. >> love "fox & friends." steve: they're adults. i think they have been waving for a while. i don't know you need to practice. we hear from the producer time to go. world leaders are freaking out about president trump's move to tear up the iran nuke deal. how should they react in order to get a better deal? steve hilton weighs in coming up. ainsley: california taking the nanny state to a whole another level, forcing every new home owner to get solar panels. will that move backfire on them? "the property man," bob massi coming back. brian: producers didn't give me anything to read. ainsley: you need practice. ♪ feel the clarity of non-drowsy claritin and relief from symptoms caused by over 200 allergens. like those from buddy. because stuffed animals are clearly no substitute for real ones. feel the clarity. and live claritin clear. the dual adjustability of the sleep number bed allows each of you to adjust to your ideal level of firmness, comfort and support your sleep number setting... for your best... sleep... ever. in the morning, you'll discover the amazing effects the bed is having on your sleep quality... your sleepiq score. and snoring? does your bed do that? right now during sleep number's semi-annual sale its' the lowest price ever on the queen c4 mattress, only $1099 - save $500. ends soon. visit sleepnumber.com for a store near you. brian: we are back with a fox news alert. you have got tensions reaching a boiling point in the middle east. ainsley: israel attacking iranian military targets in syria overnight. brian: both attacking each other, unbelievable. in response to iranian rocket attack on the golan heights where we find david lee miller. iran located in syria, attacks the golan heights which used to be in syria, attacks israel directly. this is big, david. reporter: that's right, you have it right, brian. israel saying for the very first time, iran, not a proxy group launched an attack targeting israeli territory. it was around midnight last night that israel says iran's elite al kud force fired rockets from across the border in syria. none of the rockets caused any damage. israel retaliated, biggest attack in syria since the end of the 73 war. they detroit launchers used by iran in the attack. destroyed iranian logistic headquarters. iran intel systems. syria saying one of the radar bases was destroyed, ammo depot, air defense system was hit. iran so far saying nothing about this attack. war monitoring group says there are some 23 dead. the 18 of them we are told, foreigners, that meaning non-syrians. fox news, this is significant, fox news learned that european sources have been told major general soleimani, commander of the "al-quds" elite force in syria, using syrian resources in the latest attack against israel and syrian regime of bashar al-assads had no knowledge or consent regarding what was taking place. israel maintained repeatedly it will not allow the iranians to have any military presence across the border in syria. at this hour there is an uneasy peace here in the golan heights. things are tense but quiet. brian? brian: david lee miller, thanks so much. we'll be back. meanwhile, steve, you have a different point of view. steve: i do. take a look at this, brian. california taking the nanny state to a whole new level, forcing every new homeowner to conserve energy by mandating that they install solar panels, adding at least $10,000 to the state's already sky-high construction costs for every house. here to react "the property man" host, bob massi who i was talking to in the commercial break and bob massi reveals he hates solar panels. >> i'm not a solar panel guy, not because of the fact i don't believe in conserving energy, now with california mandating it, it takes away the choice of the homeowner, prospective homeowner what they want. some homeowners like myself would not prefer to have solar panels. now the government again taking people's right of choice for solar panels. steve: tell you what, bob, get robocalls at least once a week where somebody is selling solar panels. you told me something else in the commercial i didn't realize. some of the panels they are selling, they sell to you, but actually they're leasing it to you. so what happens if you contract with one of these solar panel companies and you're leasing them on your house, and then you decide, you know what, i'm going to move and i'm going to sell my house? >> let's assume you leased the solar panels pause you don't have the money to pay cash to buy the solar panels and you lease them, and i want to buy your house. steve, i don't want solar panels. you are stuck with paying that lease, literally the solar panels would have to come off the house and move on, so you're paying for something you may not be able to use again, you go to another house, i suspect you talk to the solar panel company to put them on that house. bottom line, people don't recognize like leasing a car. you don't own them. you possess them. you pay for them, but the bottom line if you sell your house you are still responsible if that new homeowner doesn't want them, doesn't want to pay the lease, you're stuck. steve: bob, come on, the government is smarter than you are, they say you will save power. so just put the darn things on your roof. >> particularly california, right? i mean here's the other thing. the price of homes in california are through the roof. we're adding 10, 15, 20,000. a lot of contractors over there i was reading but support it but what i don't like is the intervention of government, saying to a homeowner, you have to have these solar panels on it. that overstep as line. we shouldn't be surprised because it is california. steve: he is all about freedom. he is talking about bob massi, talking about solar panels on all new homes out in california. bob joining us from las vegas. tune in for "the property man" fridays 8:30 p.m. eastern oaf on fox business. meanwhile some world leaders firing back after president trump's decision to exit the iran deal. steve hilton says, bring it on. he's next. speaking of bringing it on, sandra smith will be hosting a show in about nine 1/2 minutes. >> that show is "america's newsroom." good morning, steve. president trump overnights welcomes home three american hostages released by north korea. what happens next? also the president signing an executive order to push federal agencies to hire more mill terri spouses as the unemployment rate for votes is 3% below the average. what a university is advising their students. join me and bill in "america's newsroom" in moments. s running on a microgrid. a stadium powered with solar. a hospital that doesn't lose power. amazing. i like it. never gonna happen. 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[ growls ] somebody get this guy a muzzle. k9 advantix ii from bayer. wise choice. why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good? it's a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. ♪ steve: iranian protesters are not the only ones outraged by the president's move to rip up the nuke deal with iran. european allies claiming they can no longer rely on the united states. ainsley: german chancellor angela merkel saying it is no longer such that the united states simply protects us but europe must take its destiny in its own hands. that is the task of the future. brian: you got to wonder if the french and british feel the same way. steve hilton host of "the next revolution" here on fox. see you on sundays. he served as strategy director for former uk prime minister david cameron. he is here to react. what is your reaction the when it comes to the iranian deal? >> it shows we have real leadership here in america. the thing is, forget about the nuclear element of this, iran is a dangerous, warmongering regime trying to control the whole of the middle east and the allies should be joining president trump in putting maximum economic pressure on iran but instead, they're doing the opposite. they're desperate to get back in there. the french are desperate to sell their cars. the germans are desperate to build railways. the british are desperate to do financial transactions with their banking civil. there is a whole world out there. are there other countries that the french, germans and brits can do big with? steve: plus, steve, it's a bad deal. the president is right, we probably should do something about it but they're stuck with a stink bomb deal! >> exactly. this is the thing i just don't understand, even within the deal, as we all know now, iran would have gotten a nuclear weapon. it's a terrible deal, and the reason you have to come back to, that the allies still want to get in there and still want to keep the deal alive even though president trump has effectively killed it is purely financial. they just want the business deals. and to me that is really disgusting when you look not just at the nuclear aspect but at the way that iran is funding terrorism and destabilizing the whole region and the world. brian: let alone their alliance with north korea. a lot of their nuclear program came from that. ainsley: steve hilton's show sunday night what time? 9:00? >> 9:00 eastern. ainsley: we are going to the uk together. he will give me a tour of favorite pub and favorite park. we'll cover the wedding. brian: you're supposed to be cover the wedding. >> forget the wedding. ainsley: we'll be drinking beer next week, right, steve? >> exactly. steve: we'll be right back. badd. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com whoamike and jen doyle?than i thought. yeah. time for medicare, huh. i have no idea how we're going to get through this. follow me. choosing a plan can be super-complicated. but it doesn't have to be. unitedhealthcare can guide you through the confusion, with helpful people, tools and plans. including the only plans with the aarp name. well that wasn't so bad at all. that's how we like it. aarp medicare plans, from unitedhealthcare. >> come see me in south carolina 7:00 tomorrow night at barnes and nobel. >> go see ainsy. >> if you have something to do in 10 seconds watch or listen to the brian kilmeade radio show. >> you can see it facebook live. >> bill: good morning, everybody. breaking news from overnight. major provocations between israel and iran on the rise at this hour two days after the president pulled the u.s. from that nuclear deal. israel launching a massive missile strike on dozen of iranian targets inside syria. brand-new reaction from the white house moments ago defending israel and warning tehran to stand down. more on this coming up inside of "america's newsroom." however, we begin now with an overnight story about a hero's welcome for three american prisoners freed by north korea. president trump greeting them at the tarmac joint base andrews 3:00 in the morning as we learn that a planned summit

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