575,000. waiting for the administration to release the latest numbers. he doesn t understand what s going on at the border. he s never been to the border. $1.7 trillion spending bill. on his way to the house. the senate approved the measure and raced to get it pushed through. before christmas, that s not the right way to run the government. after one neighbor thought she saw some lewd behavior. collect, please. it was this cousin eddie-inspired mannequin. santa claus is coming to town santa claus is coming to town you better watch out will: good morning. welcome to fox & friends on this third and final hour of the day before christmas eve. as carley described it. christmas eve to christmas eve. carley: yeah, christmas eve eve. if you have one of those chalkboards, you only have one more day the scratch off. you know what i m talking about? brian: and we will walk by a couple of gifts that would have worked for christmas. he thinks he can ge
international where one airline is reeling flights in. kelly o grady in los angeles where folks are saying the hell with it all and hitting the road instead. welcome. i m neil cavuto. this is your very crowded world today. doesn t casey stegall know it in dallas. casey? yeah, neil. it s been so busy all day long. we got here at 7:00 a.m. local time. steady streams of people. nothing insane. no lines out the door or anything like that. the folks at aaa says that this fourth of july is expected to be the second and busiest in terms of travel since 2000. so more than 20 years, if you can believe that. almost 48 million americans venturing out over the next couple days. for air travel, it s 3.5 million. that s the project, which is a little higher than last year according to aaa. only time will tell whether those holiday passengers will further bog down the airport and the airlines. as of this hour, i just did a quick check. more than 3,900 delays and 374 cancellations are repo
it with the midterms fast approaching. sandra, the busiest woman in television. sandra: great to be with you this afternoon, john. president meeting with fed chair jay powell yesterday as the white house kicks off a months long effort to focus, it says, on the economy. but inflation has been on the minds of many voters in this country for months now, especially when filling up their tanks. price of gasoline rising almost daily with the new national average for a gallon, 4.67 today, a jump of 1.60 a year ago, and up $0.05 since yesterday. john: 11.4 million unfilled positions. labor shortage driving up wages and keeping inflation high as businesses continue to struggle with hiring. minnesota congressman and national republican congressional committee chair tom emmer will join us. sandra: we head to the white house, peter doocy live from the north lawn to kick things off. hey, peter. peter: good afternoon, here at the white house hearing two different things about how
this type of the situation. when we don t build pipelines, when we don t invest in our infrastructure, we are more susceptible to these power outages. and it really shouldn t be happening. this is america, we should be investing in things that work, not things that are theoretical. will: it s not theoretical right now. it s happening in reality for everyone. thanks for joining us this morning and highlighting this problem. actually, over to you. ashley: we will start with this, internal emails or the railing and plays at tiktok s parent company were accessing private data through user accounts including members of the media. this track multiple journalists covering the company and properly stomach improperly gaining access to their ip addresses and user data. a spokesperson for tiktok says they condemned this incident, which was a direct violation of the company code of conduct, and all employees involved are no longer with the company. and it was jolly old saint nick