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63 people were shot in the city of chicago. 10 of those victims at this point have died. one of them a 17-year-old boy who was just riding his bike. 34 of the 63 were shot between saturday and sunday morning alone. and 25 people were wounded within a two and a half hour period over the weekend. >> we are the ones who can stop the violence in our own neighborhood. whatever the police does, you know, what they do good. god bless them. that's their job. at the same time we cannot keep tying these police hands. will be rob chicago police say most of the shootings were targeted and related to gang violence with gunmen opening fire large crowds. most of it happening in the south side of the city. president trump predicted chicago violence would get worse more than two years ago. tweeting in july of 2016 crime is out of control and rapidly getting worse. look at what is happening in chicago and our inner cities not good. working with gangworkworking tof the ice. if we were talking about 63 people hurt. it would be wall-to-wall coverage on other networks. it's just another summer weekend there. brian: rob, thanks so much. appreciate it talk about chicago, you talk about a problem the president even spoke with on the campaign trail. at one point people have to put down their partisan hats and say if the federal government has to come, in the mayor has got to go and say mr. president, can you help me out there. could be leaders coming together there is a guy on the president's legal team who knows how to solve chronic crime problems. he straightened out new york city in a way we are still the beneficiary of that is rudy giuliani. the way he combined with law enforcement to take back the city block by block. that's what's got to be done in chicago. steve: here's the thing. apparently the feds are helping them with increased law enforcement but, you know, when it comes to additional national guard or something like that, nothing A morning show that highlights the latest headlines in news, weather, sports and entertainment, and is known for the cohosts' casual and spontaneous... controlled his campaign. or directed and control his administration that there was some conspiracy or some violation of u.s. law. the hoax is the idea that the trump campaign was the beneficiary of a concerted effort, together with the russians to affect the 2016 election. as to that i don't think there is any evidence publicly. brian: what john bolton was trying to say those people who say he contradicted his own cabinet secretaries when they came out and talked about the russian electioning, past elections. almost unprecedented afternoon press conference in front of the media and the president went out that night and said this whole russian thing is a hoax. what is he trying to say is linking us to the russian meddling in the election, that's what he is talking about. and by the way, everybody understands the difference. it is totally disingenuous for the press to say cabinet secretary are speaking tout contradict the president who doesn't seem to get it he gets it he is the one who told them all to go out and say that. rudy giuliani said they will decide by saturday if they're going to allow the president or if the president is going to sit down with robert mueller. brian: us i would just say on top of all of this, if report mueller ever wanted to appear to be balanced in this investigation, he would just as fervent in his mission to find out what went wrong on the democratic side on all the links that are out there from peter strzok on down and what was going on with the dossier. he could actually quiet down his critics on the right by legitimately pursuing that ache gel. then everyone would sit back. there is a sense that he just has no interest in what happened over here only what happened over here. steve: because there are no real leaks from the mueller's team. we don't know whether or not they are looking into that. they could be looking into that right now. brian: number one, does it interest you that carter page has not been brought in to speak to the mueller team. hillary clinton has not been brought in to speak with the mueller team. they have not reinterviewed peter strzok why did you not swear her in when you went one-on-one that saturday right after the weekend of the fourth of july? steve: all we really know what the mueller team is doing, they're prosecuting the case in alexandria, virginia right now regarding paul manafort. brian: we know the witness list. steve: everything else we don't know what they're doing with those guys. ainsley: hopefully we will find out the answer soon. brian: marco rubio ♪ one being investigated. ainsley: jillian has headlines for us. i hope had you a great weekend. jillian: i did. good mopped morning. get you caught up on this. the trump administration is ready to reimpose sanctions on iran. the penalty also go into effect just after midnight tonight and will be the first since the obama era nuclear deal was scrapped. president trump says is he willing to meet with iranian president rouhani to lay groundwork for better nuclear deal. the currency is at a record low. another fox news alert now, six people are arrested in venezuela after an alleged drone attack on president madeira. new individual has emerged behalf madeira calls an assassination attempt. jillian: drones packed with explosives look at that as he spoke during a military parade in the socialist country. he later said a group of terrorists and assassins were detained. some firefighters said the was merely a glass explosion at nearby apartment building. california in a mall parking lot. the dash cam video showing the moments the small plane heading to the john wayne airport in los angeles came down. the pilot declared an emergency just before the crash. everyone on board was killed. no one on the grownelsd was hurt. the cause is being investigated. charlotte wright, actress best known as the beloved mrs. garrett on the hit sitcom the facts of life has died. >> i got to get going. i got to make the bed, vacuum the rug, do the laundry, scrub the floors, clean the windows. everything has got to be perfect. >> two-time tony nominee and emmy nominee first played the role on different strokes in 1978. her cause of death not yet release you had. but in april of last year. she revealed she was diagnosed with bone cancer. her family says she died peacefully in her los angeles home. charlotte ray was 92. send it back to you. steve: she left us laughing. ainsley: we grew up with her. gosh, she was so sweet and loving on that show. anyway. steve: thank you very much, jillian: ian. could there be a big break out in iowa. what about that hog farmer. ted williams spoker with. he will joins us with brand new information from iowa next. wrinel brian we have exclusive information here at fox. remember when actor called for donald trump to be put in a cage. next voter fraud to get elected. genius ♪ ♪ they work togetherf doing important stuff. the hitch? like you, your cells get hungry. feed them... with centrum micronutrients. restoring your awesome, daily. centrum. feed your cells. you finished preparing overhim for college.rs, in 24 hours, you'll send him off thinking you've done everything for his well-being. but meningitis b progresses quickly and can be fatal, sometimes within 24 hours. while meningitis b is uncommon, about 1 in 10 infected will die. like millions of others, your teen may not be vaccinated against meningitis b. meningitis b strikes quickly. be quick to talk to your teen's doctor about a meningitis b vaccine. with proskin technology intimates overnight for two times faster absorption so you can have worry free nights, and wake up feeling fresh and free for a free sample visit tena.us -morning. -morning. -what do we got? -keep an eye on that branch. might get windy. have a good shift. fire pit. last use -- 0600. i'd stay close. morning. ♪ get ready to switch. protected by flo. should say, "protected by alan and jamie." -right? -should it? when you bundle home and auto... run, alan! ...you get more than just savings. you get 'round-the-clock protection. you always get the lowest price on our rooms, guaranteed? let's say it in a really low voice. carl? lowest price, guaranteed. just stick with badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com >> i don't even remember what they asked me. it was a waste of my time. i know that i have no idea what they are doing. it's a bad deal. steve: that is that iowa pig farm owner with a history of stalking arrest. questioning third time now in connection with with the disappearance of 20-year-old mollie tibbets. this as a neighbor telling fox news a suspicious black suv was slowly circling the area the night mollie vanished nearly now three weeks ago. fox news contributor and former detective ted williams spent the weekend working the scene in iowa. he was there last week as well. he spoke to that farmer. and he joins us from d.c. with the latest. ted, when you were talking to the farmer, i'm kind of curious, apparently he has declined the police's offer to take a lie detector. why is that? >> you know, that's very interesting. and when i spoke to him, i asked him with some specificity why won't you take the polygraph he said no, no. and continued to say no. don't you want to help out out there? he said yeah. but no, i'm not taking the polygraph is what he represented. steve: right it sounds like the police have talked to him two or three times now. it was on his property that they did find a red shirt that would have matched her red shirt that she might have been wearing in advance of going to work the next day? >> well, they found a red shirt that she would normally wear to work but as of this time, from what i understand, they have not been able to show a nexus between that red shirt and no, it was not found on his property but right in the vicinity of his property is my understanding that they found this red shirt. steve: okay. also, there was a story, i believe, came out on saturday, friday or saturday where the police had located the body of a 20-year-old white female in lee county. and there was some suggestion that maybe while it wasn't mollie there could be a connection. >> yeah. this is very scary. i'm hoping that the authorities will come out today and kel u tell us the manr and cause of death of the person they found dead in lee county around the age of mollie. one of the big questions out there is there a serial killer. why are young people out there dying and quite naturally the community, the nerves of that community is already up. they want to know also the manner and cause of death of the young lady they unfortunately found throughout in lee county. steve: there is now i believe the reward is north of a quarter of a million dollars. so perhaps somebody who knows something will call the sheriff's office. by the way, if anybody has any information the sheriff's office and the number to call is 641-623 641-623-5679. all right. ted, thank you very much for joining us this morning from d.c. >> my pleasure. steve: all right. thank you, sir. 6:20 now in new york city. army corporal terrell fuller was just 20 years old when he went missing in south korea in 1951. this week his body is returning home. his great niece joins us live with what this moment will mean for the entire family. that is coming up ♪ coming home is going to make it happen by funding scientific breakthroughs, advancing public policy, and providing local support to those living with the disease and their caregivers. but we won't get there without you. join the fight with the alzheimer's association. ahoy-hoy! as long as people talk too loudly on the phone, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. are you ready to take your then you need xfinity xfi.? a more powerful way to stay connected. it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. jillian: goorng and welcome back. time for quick headlines, the man arrested for threatening congressman steve scalise had a stockpile of ammunition. police say he also had materials and instructions to build bombs. the new yorker was arrested last week for leaving threatening messages for both scalise and congresswoman rogers last month. he was nearly killed at shooting at congressional baseball practice last summer. the son of usama bin laden is now married to the daughter of a 9/11 hijacker. the family of the dead terror leader telling the guardian bin laden on the left married the daughter of atta. ham hamza is al qaeda leader himself vowing to avenge his father-in-law's death. brian: thank you, ainsley. this is brian. could take years to identify. what are the families of these korean war service members have to look forward to while they wait? >> the family of army corporal taylor j. fuller can tell them, the remains of the 20-year-old who went missing in action back in 1951, and was declared dead by the military, in 1954, is finally returning home to georgia this week. and he is going to be escorted by his great, great nephew who is also an army soldier. >> here to tell us more is terrell's great niece amy hicks and it's her who will be traveling to hawaii this week for great family moment. so, amy, what's it been like four since you got word that the remains were there and now you are finally getting definitive answers? >> it has been amazing. just a lot of support from the local community. i have had so many calls from news media just, you know, trying to get the story out there and trying to see what they can do to help make it such an easy process to get him back home. ainsley: he was 20 years old when he went off to war. he didn't have a wife. he didn't have children. i know he would be so grateful to know that his family is still remembering him. what was it like growing up? does your family talk about him a lot? >> i didn't -- i never heard too much about them talking about him. my mother, you know, she was 5 years old when her father passed away. so when terrell went missing my mother wasn't born yet. there wasn't too much talk about terrell when she was growing up. she probably heard, you know, his name here and there. but, as far as much, you know, learning about him or, knowing, you know, about his life so there really wasn't much talk about that. brian: why was it important for your son to go with the remains as your uncle comes home? >> it's an honor for him to be able to go out there and get the remains and bring it back. not only with him being military, it gives him a deeper understanding as to what life in the military means. you know, most people look at the military, did you go out there, you are putting your life on the line. this is what you see behind the scenes when you know your soldier, your loved one doesn't come back home. he is actually getting to fit in to the scenario of what it would be like if something like that was to happen, you know, somewhere else. ainsley: amy, it was very important to us as a channel to cold front remains of those brought back those 55 boxes because we want to help these families get reconnected to their loved ones and those who made the ultimate sacrifice to us. your uncle was wrought back, i understand, in the 1990s reerks mains taken to hawaii back in the 90's. did your family get a call then to say your uncle's remains have been found? >> there was no calls made back in the 1990s. there was -- they were not sure of who all the boxes contained back then. they had to go in and find d.n.a. testing and get all kinds of d.n.a. strains from different families to be able to locate. this and from what i understand, when his remains were brought over, they are actually contained the remains of five different soldiers. brian: wow: they had to piece together each skeletal bone and do d.n.a. testing on each specific one in order to determine who was who. >> when did you find out that it was your uncle? >> it was april of this year. brian: lastly, what about the families wondering if their great uncle or their grandfather or their loved one is in the last shipment? what advice do you have for them? >> just hang in there. there's always hope. you can always, you know, just sit back, provide the d.n.a. testing, definitely. if no one reaches out to you, definitely go on the dpaa website. there's a link on there that you contact them to, you know, provide your d.n.a. but, always stay in touch with them. keep the d.n.a. going. and just hope for the best. brian: all right. amy, thanks so much. amy hicks, appreciate it. >> thank you. ainsley: your uncle will never be forgotten. tell your son thank you for his service. brian: everyone should take up some time that korean war people called it a conflict. people who fought in the war it was a brutal war. chinese come in. we were unprepared. we ramped up in the middle. and no one ever really gives these veterans the credit they deserve for fighting in that war. and hopefully these korean war vets will get their time in the spotlight that never came their way. ainsley: brian, almost 77 -- 7700 remains of americans are still missing to today. brian: north koreans have it hopefully they will let us retrieve it in areas where they have not gone yet. ainsley: in other news, 10 killed, 63 shot in chicago over the weekend alone. here's a message from one democrat. >> we have to make sure that president trump recognizes that not everyone believes that chicago is a trump-free zone. ainsley: that man, chicago state democratic representative will he sean ford joins us live next. brian: little bit of quiz here. where would you rather be, a metal concert or nursing home. meet the two guys who broke out to rock out ♪ i want to rock ♪ rock ♪ i want to rock ♪ rock ♪ i want to rock ♪ and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? 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>> well, first of all, thank you for having me and i'm so happy to be working with your contributor gianno caldwell from chicago. as a democrat i come here today calling on the president who said he wanted to help people from chicago. i accept that help. that's number one we have to accept the help from the president of the united states. illinois sends billions of dollars to the federal government and the taxpayers of illinois need help now. as a democrat from chicago you know, we are in a state of emergency in chicago. over 1700 people have been shot since the beginning of the year. this weekend, you guys have noted that 63. but of the 63, three of those people were shot right will steps from my church on the west side of chicago. one shot in the head. and also we had two others critically wounded. steve: right. >> right steps from my church on the west side of chicago. steve: terrible. hey, la la shawn, embarrass the mayor. the chicago police department is not trusted by the people. explain that. >> well, the chicago police department is not entrusted with the mass genocide of people in chicago. can't get the cooperation of the citizens in the community to help solve the crime, chicago right now has more unsolved crimes than they do solved crimes. and so what we have to do is make sure that there is some trust between the chicago police and the community and that's not happening. steve: how do you do that? >> you have to be fair. you have to be honest. you have to make sure that you are respecting the people that you patrol. i represent a community on the west side since the government allows drugs and gangs to dominate those communities where senior citizens and children are hostage. they are held hostage in their homes. they are held hostage in their community. and they can't enjoy their liberty that are afforded to them by everyone else. and that's unacceptable we need the president's help in chicago. we pay taxes. illinois -- brian: you guys certainly are taxed. >> i know that america, you know, we go on international community and we help some of the communities that are the most violent. and i know that we can stop the crime in chicago if we can stop crime and make peace in the countries where i know that's much more violent and there is more intelligence. we can't let the criminals outsmart our most intelligent people in america. we can stop this if we really wanted. to say. ainsley: la shawn what's the message for the mayor? >> the mayor must take away the thought that chicago is a trump-free zone because taxpayers deserve to have the president come in and bring resources to the community. we need to make sure that the billions of dollars that we send to washington comes back and the mayor should be working closely with trump. he should be working closely with the labor department. he should be working closely with the u.s. hud, the surgeon general there is so much in chicago. brian: lal space shawn. >> i'm not going to throat mayor under the bus. i'm going to let him know that i'm going to work whim. i'm going to work with the police. and work with your contributor gianno caldwell so we can bring the community together and make things work. but as long as we are divided and against the president it's not going to happen. steve: there have you the headline chicago is not a trump-free zone. they need help la shawn ford a democratic representative. thank you for joining us from your home today. >> thank you. steve: and good luck. brian: bring some representatives to the white house. find out first hand what the problem is. steve: maybe they can help. ainsley: hopefully those poor moms losing little ones. 11-year-old shot over the weekend. steve: his point senior citizens and children hostage can't leave their house. brian: it's a two-way street. he wants more respect for the cops for the people. you have to show respect to law enforcement, too. ainsley: absolutely. brian: somehow that message has got to get out. steve: people don't trust the cops in chicago. brian bine we trust jillian. jillian: i trust you. now that we all trust each other, 20 people behind bars after violent crashes erupt between two groups of protesters in berkeley. as you can see police arriving in riot gear as the far right nothing to marxism. stop the hate rally. dozens of weapons including rocks and poles were confiscated. three people suffered injuries after some type of explonges were thrown. no officers were hurt. remember when actor peter fonda tweeted about putting president trump's son barron that cage? now he is back for his second acts. now this time he wants democrats to commit voter fraud in the midterm. if you have a millennial in your family, take their early ballots, fill them out and mail them. in or take the ballot to the voting place and give it to the officials. no more worrying. many users quickly pointing out that is a felony. a back-to-school event meant to promote peace turns violent in a heart beat. beat. [gunfire] >> video hard to watch. gunfire breaking out at florida park. fortunately the shooting was stopped by a good guy with a gun. bystander licensed to carry fired back mead. the initial shooter was the only person injured. two elderly men escape a nursing home to attend the world pghtsz biggest heavy metal festival. you can't make this up. the nursing home in germany raising a red flag when they couldn't find them it wasn't until 3:00 a.m. when police found the duo at the whacken the men were disoriented and dazed. the mayor who didn't want to leave were eventually persuaded to leave home in a taxi escorted by a cop car. that's a look at your headlines. hope they had a good time. they are safe. all well that ends well. hopefully they had some fun. steve: if they're going to make a break that's where they are heading. ainsley: heavy metal concert. which brian calls metal concert. brian: i get rolling stone magazine. what's another metal magazine. ainsley: you you are the expert. brian: if you are in twisted sister please call i would like to know what magazines you get. one bookstore pier leader. one school is hiring students to fight social injustice on campus. wait until you hear how much that job pays ♪ you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, including nasal congestion, which most pills don't. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist. your hair is so soft!feel. did you use head and shoulders two in one? i did mom. wanna try it? yes. it intensely moisturizes your hair and scalp and keeps you flake free. manolo? look at my soft hair. i should be in the shot now too. try head and shoulders two in one. owners always seem so happy? because they've chosen the industry leader. subaru forester holds its value better than any other vehicle in its class according to alg. better than cr-v. better than rav4. better than rogue. an adventure that starts with a subaru forester will always leave you smiling. get 0% percent apr financing on the 2018 subaru forester. (burke) so we know how to cover almost anything.en almost everything even "vengeful vermin." not so cute when they're angry. 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 ♪ ♪ steve: time now for quick headlines. demi lovetitem demi lovato breag her silence. she is taking time to focus on her sobriety and recovery. lovato ending her message with, quote: i will keep fighting. all right. and a former insingh member is saying bye-bye bye to dreams of owning the brady bunch house. >> might sound crazy but it ain't no lie baby bye-bye bye. >> lance isn't going to bye-bye bye it, hollywood studio outbid him even though he claims he had won. the exterior of the house were used in nearly every episode of the brady bunch that ran from 1969 to 1974. that is the real interior not seen on tv. ainsley: that's a pretty room. give it to lance. he wants it. steve: somebody else bought it sorry, ainsley. brian, over to you. brian: we will knoll story throughout the show. i will continue with this one. hey, the trump administration having near unprecedented success confirming nominees to the federal bench. now one in seven federal judges are trump appointees. what impact will this have on ever evolving judiciary down the line? here to break it down former law clerk himself to justice gorsuch who went on to bigger and better things policymaker at george mason jamel. >> thank you. brian: what an impact he has made already. let's begin which this is compared to other presidents. president trump a year and a half in has 24 opportunities. he has filled them. >> unbelievable. an average of 17 a year. what that means is that by the time he finishes his first term in office he have as many as president obama in two terms. almost double. brian: this is all just about opportunity. just coincidence they happen to be open at this time. but then have you got to get them confirmed. the democrats have been delaying but they can't deny. >> that's right. mitch mcconnell has done a good job. chuck grassley kicking butt out there. kicking the ball forward. president has nominated these folks. great nominees and real rock stars and able to get through the senate and make it through the judiciary. brian: what does it mean in judiciary? one in seven of these will be trump appointees. >> this is important. bawl stability and the rule of law here. average americans will know how the law is going to be for them because they have judges who interpret the law in line with what congress and the president wrote. not with what they want the law to be. brian: that's the big worry. that's what democrats feel as though sometimes republicans accuse democrats of legis laghtd from the bench in and theory republicans don't do that. >> exactly. justice gorsuch said judges need to know they wear robes not capes. brian: good line by the way did you give it to him? >> that was his average age of he or she 49 years old. >> these folk also be there a long time. brit graham on the 11th circuit. andy alderman. fifth circuit. under the age of 506789 up there for a long time. brian: here one bullpen waiting for time for confirmation senator schumer holding out got 10. >> democrats holding them up on the floor. making the republicans run the entire 30 hour clock. huge lineup of nominees, not just judicial no, ma'am niece tons of trump nominees stacked up behind these. mitch mcconnell is doing the right thing of getting lifetime appointments on the bench. brian: whole thing which is ironic is they have to work in august. because mitch mcconnell is saying because you keep delaying, i'm going to make you work in august. last year there was a big deal to stop the bottleneck. i'm wondering if there might be a big deal now. >> one can only hope. members of congress want to get out of home districts for the elections. at the end of the day, got to get the nominees through. these are important judicial appointments all the way for life. >> get to george mason because school is going to start. >> thanks, brian. >> coming up straight ahead. president trump warning the democrats that there will be a blue wave. yeah. he believes that blue wave will be crashing. >> if the democrats get, in they are going to raise your taxes. you have have crime all over the place. would that be a blue rave? i think it could be a red wave. >> we'll see. we're breaking down the numbers that could spell trouble for democrats and might not. plus, bookstore cashier, tour guide and diversity peer leader? one school hiring students to fight social injustice on campus. seriously that story next. thingr like a beach trip, program dplf facilitate small group dialogues between students on divisive issues that really matter to campus climate issues like race relations, cross-cull trurel communications and more. what exact solid are these issues and how much are students paying to fund the program. with us now is campus reform correspondent and student arick schneider. thank you for being with us. what do you think about this program? is it necessary at ucla. >> i don't feel like it is necessary. currently many of the programs at ucla already provides many exlint programs. already cover most of the things that this program is supposed to solve. for example, there is the issue of sexual assaults. we already have many programs that receive hundreds of thousands of dollars to combat that issue. issues like racism and sexism, things that, again, this program apparently claims to cover but already address through other programs. a waste of student funds to address the leftist agenda. ainsley: you have to pay $1,128 in student services fees along with every other person on your campus. and this -- that money is being spent to hire these diversity peer leaders? >> exactly. it's our money going to programs that we just don't support. it's another example of the administration taking our money and using it for things that not a lot of people want. campus reform has reported on. your own show has covered many times where college administrators, the take mandatory student funds and advance their own personal causes. >> what would you rather do with your money. >> personally rather give it to the incorporate near department buy more equipment. give it the anthropology more cultures anding. things that improve the world as opposed to will funding echo chambers. ainsley: kudos to you for investigating. this college students generally just pate bills. they don't really know what the money is going toward. how did you find out about this program that your money was going to be used for. this actually i found out about this program because ucla was nice enough to publish it on their website and other people at campus reform actually brought it to my attention. yeah, kudos to ucla for at least being honest about it. unfortunately seen too many times where college administrators don't tell students that their funds are going to support leftist and progressive causes until it's too late too do anything about it at least this time administration was very upfront and they said this is where your money is going to. ainsley: unbelievable. all right, arik, thank you so much for being with us. appreciate it? >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. 11 sick and malnourished children rescued over the weekend from a heavily armed new mexico compound. sheriffs say that the men running it might have islamic extremist ties might not be the only compound like this. why are ideas like this becoming so explain stream? >> healthcare is a human right and not a privilege. [cheers] >> i campaigned on hard commitments of medicare for all, tuition-free public college. keeping this tookus safe and protected... you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. booking a flight doesn't have to be expensive. just go to priceline. it's the best place to book a flight a few days before my trip and still save up to 40%. just tap and go... for the best savings on flights, go to priceline. a new algorithm it only seems to effect republican conservatives. >> surprise of a lifetime for a police officer making final radio call of 32 years of service. the voice on the other end his son. >> it's my honor to acknowledge this code five to set free a man who has sacrificed so much of his time for all of us. >> come home. ♪ i like the sound of that ainsley: that proves you never grow up. everyone works fox news out there. what do they call them the tea cups? >> right now out in new jersey, they are having a state fair. and it's this time of the year toward the end of the summer some counties and states have their fairs so, we thought we would celebrate with our own version out on our plaza. if you are walking bike 48th and sixth avenue. maybe you can be in the tea cups. >> these are the guys from bill hemmer and sandra smith show. they will be a little off this morning. the tea cup thing was probably invented with the first fair and we have never really pushed it made it more so he face at this kited. steve: i think tea cups came from disney land. now of course you see them all across the country. ainsley: some things are good just never to change. brian: like a carousel hop on the horse? steve: hard to go wrong with that when you are a kid. ainsley: this is true. have you been to disney world lately? i haven't been there in a long time. has anything changed at epcot? like is it still space mountain? steve: silver golf ball. brian: i think everything has changed dramatically. one of the big things that they just got is toy story land. ainsley: okay. brian: where you sit there for hours to get in. ainsley: tell me it's a small world is there. brian: small world is gone, isn't it. ainsley: i think you are lying. steve: disney world have you got to go to. the state fair, the county fairs come to you and today we are bringing the fair tour as well. brian: i'm sorry if i are in line for small world if it is there. steve: some expert. brian: all right. president trump predicting a red wave in the mid terms ahead of tomorrow's special house election in ohio. ainsley: the president is confident that republicans can ride out his accomplishment this fall. steve: well, the president is actually on a working vacation out in new jersey and rick leventhal is standing by. he is not on vacation. is he working this morning. good morning to you, rick. >> i am, indeed. good morning to you, steve, ainsley and brian. ainsley: good morning. >> yesterday was hot and sunny. is he on vacation. we suspected he might be playing golf. sarah sanders confirmed it she said the president hit the links with senator lindsey graham. they discussed national security and trade. and the president was also very active on twitter yesterday writing about the california wildfires. tariffs, fake news and the upcoming mid terms. and he wrote on twitter, presidential approval numbers are very good. strong economy, military and just about everything else. better numbers than obama at this point by far. we are winning on just about every front and for that reason there will not be a blue wave but there might be a red wave. senator joe lieberman disagreed. >> i will say that my prediction today is that it's going to be a blue wave. a democratic wave. not a big wave in the house. democrats retake the house. if the elections are today. my guess is that the republicans hold the senate. but it's going to be close. >> on saturday, the second day of the president's working vacation, he flew aboard marine one from bedminster to morristown where he got on air force one for a short hop to columbus, ohio for his third campaign rally in five days supporting republican candidates in key races. this time it was for troy balbalderson who is locked in a tight battle with danny o'connor tomorrow for the open seat 12th congressional descringeght president won there by 10 points in 2016. the polls show balderson ahead by a single digit. >> whoever has the white house, that party tends to lose the mid terms. i don't know why, maybe it's complacency. maybe y'all fight so hard for the presidency. and, you know, you win and little complacent. have you got to get out and do it. have you got to get out and vote. they want to take away what we have given. >> no public events on the president's schedule today. will will event with supporters closed to you the press. back with you guys. steve: rick lesson that you livlevin that youleventhal outn. >> steve: small world opens at 10:00. brian: is this the last day? steve: no, it's ongoing. ainsley: i said brian, there is no way it closed. he said something closed. thousands of rides. brian: i wrote my friend at diss any and i'm sure she is going to write me back. real clear i hear in new jersey when the president goes to this club drives secret service nuts because he interacts with people. like the president is here and people are in the pool right downstairs. and they are not used to that with the president. steve: because apparently his cottage is right next to the pool people are doing the lunch thing out by the pool. apparently he just walks through. ainsley: he enjoys going up to people and shaking hands. we saw that at all those rallies he would spend time on the floor shaking hands. you don't have to do it. get out of there quickly. i had to give a speech one time and the guy said we had the president here one year and it was time for him to come on stage. we were trying to slow walk the introduction. we are like where is he? go outside and back stage talking to all the kitchen staff and introducing himself and shaking hands with them. steve: you have got the president of the united states. stayinstay saying over the weekd there might be a red wave in stumping thought ohio. if there is a red wave. clearly one of the main drivers of that would be the fact that thanks to the republican congress where they have reduced our taxes significantly for middle class in particular. the corporate tax rate has gone from 35 to 21%. the g.d.p. this last quarter was 4.1%. the economy will be a big factor if people come out and vote republican. >> brian: i will add to, this too. with the balderson appearance. i ask john kasich why did you have the president come out? i thought you were more of a kasich guy. >> no. the president called me and says i'm coming. fantastic. i don't know why john kasich thought it was necessary to out balde rson steve i think is he anti-trumper. brian: one thing the president and republicans or democrats have to not overslook healthcare because of the rising cost de void of obamacare or anything else, just by the system itself. all the money that we're saving in our paychecks because of tax reform, a lot of it is going to healthcare. we have got to somehow address that issue. steve: that is the number one issue that democrats are running on. saying, look, now that republicans are running congress' and look how high my rates are. ainsley: comes to unemployment. look at the numbers. it's pretty amazing. if you have ever been without a job it's very stressful. this is wonderful for our country. 2008 the unemployment rate is 3.9%. y'all, this is the lowest for a july of a midterm since 1966. look at that graph. steve: so if the economy is one of the reasons people go out to vote red, you can thank the tax cuts and things like that. however, tammy bruce, who says while out president has done a good job, congress needs to do more. >> they promised the wall just like they promised to repeal and replace obamacare. so this is why there is such a low approval rating of congress that they have lied to us for votes. they took our money based on certain lies. and people want, clearly, what the president has promised. steve: like the wall. brian: the president has the big tracking poll that came up and put him at 50%. the "wall street journal" poll had him between 45 and 50%. the economy is going strong. but, people just say that, you know, historically, the president, after he wins, after his first two years take as pounding in the mid terms. he has ha so-to-somehow buck history. the thing that can help him buck history is what the democrats are doing and what they're running on. it is this socialist platform. >> thanks bernie sanders. >> it's becoming the norm. becoming mainstream. listen to this. >> republicans are going to call us socialists no matter what we do so we might as well give them the real thing. >> healthcare is a human right and not a privilege. >> i campaigned on hard commitments of medicare for all, tuition-free public college, ensure ago green new deal for our future. brian: $31 billion is medicare for all and not many people high five -- steve: trillion. brian: trillion. i keep forgetting. steve: one of the reasons some people on the democratic party are talking about socialism right now is alexandria ocasio-cortez had that stunning win and who had energized everybody notice lasinthe last election is bernie sanders. the star of pawn stars on cable, he says the fact that we are talking about socialism right now in america is mind-boggling. >> look at some of these news channels. these people supposedly have a college education and they are touting socialism. which, to me, is just sort of mind-boggling. obviously you didn't -- you cheated a lot. socialism sounds so great though. that's why people embrace it government is going to pay for everything. it sounds great. economically it can't happen. brian: see the american dream answered talked about watches. he says the whole world invented watches. it was america with its business climate that was able to take the watch, mass fruits to the fact that we became the best watch makers ever in the 1850s. look at me. he didn't have a high school education. he didn't go to college. he applied for a business license in a week and he got it and he made it on his own. he goes you are not going to have that if you have socialism. steve: right, but if you don't have anything and somebody is offering free college, free healthcare, free everything, that is a very tantalizing prospect. brian: if you didn't learn in school how when you don't have anything the way to apply it is not to give it by having it handed to you, but by earning it. ainsley: you know what he learned in school there is no such thing as a free lunch? remember that in economics? it's true have you got to work hard for that cheeseburger. steve: 7:11 in new york city. ainsley: or meatless cheeseburger. veggie hamburger. brian: called bun. jillian: we have to talk in the break. search for mollie tibbets and possible new clue. neighbor in iowa exclusively telling fox news she saw a suspicious black suv the night mollie vanished. fox news contributor ted williams speaking to iowa hog farmer wayne cheney about why he is refusing to take a polygraph test. >> i asked him with some specificity why won't you take the polygraph? and he said no, no. i said don't you want to help out out there? he said yeah, but no, i'm not taking the polygraph. jillian: cheney's property has been searched multiple times but he claims not to know about mollie. five people dead after a plane crashes in california in mall parking lot. the moment the plane heading to the john wayne airport southeast of los angeles came spiraling down. the pilot declared an emergency just before the crash. everyone on board was killed. no one on the ground was hurt. and the cause is being investigated. that's a look at your headlines. i will send it back to you. steve: oh, man. ainsley: thanks, jillian. malnourished people rescued over the weekend from heavily armed compounds in mexico. the men running it might have islamic ties. next guest says it might not be the only compound like it. warren 2020? big hint she just dropped about ler future. some magazine says she is the frontrunner. i swear ♪ it's a small world after all ♪ it's a small world sheriffs say the men running the so-called compound may have islamic extremist ties. our next guest says it might not be the only compound like it. here to weigh in is national security analyst and fellow at the clarion project ryan. in this compound in the middle of nowhere the fbi had it under surveillance. why didn't they move in? how ultimately was it uncovered? >> this really amazing story. i had muslim sources inside of a community that knew about what was going on where a child had gone missing. the father was accused of abducting the child and the accused kidnapper is the son of a radical imam in brooklyn. we don't know that the imam was involved. that's how i learned about it and then turns out, where did he flee to? believed to be with that child that he kidnapped near son abducted near the mexico, colorado border. very remote area with lots of guns with his friend. now we know there are 11 kids there. three women. and when i talked to law enforcement sources close to the investigation, they said this was basically a 10-ache compound terrorist training camp with islamic extremist ties. they said it definitively to me and indicated that they believe this is part of some broader radical islamic movement. they wouldn't say what group or movement they think it's part of. they made it pretty clear to me. not just a couple of guys hiding out. brian: the sheriff's department told you that? >> yeah. sources, law enforcement sources involved and aware of the investigation. >> what makes you think -- what makes them think that this is a water spread situation, that this isn't the only compound? >> the reason that they went, in even though the fbi said we don't have probable cause yet and they had under surveillance and then the state and local police said all right, we have had enough. what triggered that was that there was a message intercepted going to georgia from that compound that somehow got in the hands of the police when they said the kids are starving. when they raided that compound about 10-acre plot of land, they were just shocked at the condition that the kids were in. and i have got to tell from you studying this type of radical islamic movement there are other groups. this has been going on since the 1980s, this waco type squadist movement one group talked about a lot on this program fuker. brian: just watching not moving the sheriff's department said i have had it with the watching, i'm moving. >> so brave. unbelievably brave. brian: ryan mauro thanks so much. keep following it 10 shot an63 shot overthe weekend. dan bongino his message to chicago cops coming up straight ahead. a writer says is he heart broken at seeing kids at president trump's rally. next guest brought her kids to one. what does she think of that? ♪ make of america ♪ it's a high school prom ♪ it's a springsteen it's a ride in a chevrolet ♪ they were on it. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today. dates, deals, done! tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com are you ready to take your then you need xfinity xfi.? a more powerful way to stay connected. it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. steve: all right. time now for some news by the numbers. first, 2.8 million. that's how many people have dropped off food stamps during the trump administration. the latest usda report shows just over 39 million people are still, however, on the roles. $5 million, how much taxpayer money may be blowing in the wind in the new york state. the state has yet to fix four wind mills off a highway according to the buffalo news. the problem is the manufacturer no longer makes the parts so they can't fix them up. and finally 6,000. that's how many people ran in the annual run for the fallen relay honoring our nation's heroes. runners started in april at forter win army base between colorado, nevada and ending at arlington national cemetery. that's your news by the numbers. ainsley. ainsley: good deal. thank you, steve. a new york writer says he is heart broken why? because there are more and more children attending president trump's rallies. in a new op-ed damond winter recalls the 2016 rally that he attended and wrote. this i remember being heart broken that children were exposed to this anger. we're learning from it and participating in it. i was searching for a way to connect in an environment that felt so toxic and violently polarized. a family who did attend leesburg virginia rally. virginia women for trump and her daughter perry. thank you both for being with us. >> thank you for having us. >> yes. ainsley: suzanne, i will start with you first, why did you think it was important to take your child to a rally? >> well, my husband and i thought it was important because there was so much negativity in the news at the time about the trump rallies and about how people were being violent and protest guilty. really the only thing we were being shown. we decided to let our kids decide for themselves what was going on. we didn't make them go or force them to go like they would go to school. we absolutely said let's go and see for ourselves. and then you can judge. >> perry, i know you attended that rally in 2016. he went on to become president of the united states of america. you got to witness history. why was it important for you to be there? >> i think it was because of all the people that showed up and about how calm and peacefupeaceful it was. ainsley: suzanne, what did you think of this op-ed of someone saying it's wrong for parents to take children there and heart broken when he sees kids at these rallies? >> well, overexaggerated might be a good word. i was, again, put into the position of we are being labeled and put into a box in a category such as deplorables or whatever the phrase word is of the day. and it's just another swipe at a large group of people who are just simply supporting our president. and to put news a category in a box like that. it's insulting. ainsley: you don't regret taking your children, do you? >> not at all. actually we can't wait for the next one. ainsley: perry, what did you learn from that experience? >> i think i learned about what trump was going to do as a president. ainsley: have you been able to take that into the classroom? have you talked to your friends and your teachers about it? >> yes. >> ainsley: what do you say to them? >> just about my experience and what i learned. ainsley: what do you say to this writer, peri, did it benefit you or do you feel like you were harmed by going to this rally? >> it benefited me. ainsley: okay. well, suzanne, what's your message for the president? what do you love about him? >> oh, everything. he has done so much for our economy. he has stuck by everything he promised us. i cannot wait for another four years for president trump. ainsley: what do you say to the critics who say he does call people names and, you know, this writer is saying we shouldn't expose our children to that? >> i say that you have to listen to the bigger picture and the bigger message. is he doing so much good for our country and you have to focus on the good things and not the petty things that are just there for argument sake. ainsley: suzanne, peri thank you so much. did you a great job. peri you have another check on your list. you saw the president and now on national television. good job. you have a bright future. >> thank you. ainsley: conservative candace owens did it the social media site shut her down. dan bongino is going to react to the double standard there next. after signing off for the very last time, that police officer right there got a big surprise. a surprise of a lifetime. who was on the other end of that call? stick around. we'll tell you. >> it is my honor to acknowledge this code 5, to set free a man who has sacrificed so much of his time for all of us. with advil liqui-gels, what bad shoulder? what headache? advil is relief that's fast strength that lasts you'll ask... what pain? with advil liqui-gels 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. ainsley: 34 of the 63 were shot between saturday and sunday alone. 25 people wounded within a two and a half hour period. most of the shootings were gang-related and targeted large crowds. steve: let's bring in dan bongino former new york city cop, former secret service agent, host of the dan bongino show. dan, we were talking in the last hour to a fellow lashuan ford. is he a democrat. state lawmaker out in chicago. and he said, look. chicago is not a trump-free zone. we are desperate to have the president help us because the mayor is not doing the job. >> yeah, you know, steve, i remember being in new york city police officer in one the tougher areas of new york crime wise at the time the 7 75 precinct in new york. one of the things that touched me. a young man trying to figure out the world for myself all the good folks that came outside. an area that was really high crime at the time and said please, help us, this guy on the corner is slinging drugs. i can't be seen talking to you. but will you do something? please, anything? this is our country, these are american citizens, too. they deserve better than this look at the picture. i was reading the article about crime wave in chicago. young lady jenea' parter son, look at the picture, 17 years old, look at that picture. that poor woman will never take another breath of oxygen again. her life is over at 17. all of the pleasures and wonders of life. makes you sty yourself, gosh, listen, i'm not going to make a cheap political argument. it's not the time for that maybe time for new leadership and new people. i'm not suggesting that democrats or the republicans have all the answers here. maybe it's time for new people. you deserve better. you are american citizens, too. it's your country. brian: new york city was a mess. law enforcement needed to reason vamped. had to have a different philosophy and stop and frisk was part of it they revamped things in the 1990s. i remember the l.a. i was there during the riots when they had to revamp the entire police force and got rid of manage. most people say the lapd is more respected now and more effective. does new york and los angeles leave clues? >> that's the old expression copy genius don't invented mediocrity. i was a police officer when rudy giuliani came in with bill bratton, brian. you probably remember this as well. broken windows. what is broken windows? you see a broken window you fix it you don't wait for the building to fall down. in other words you see a guy jump in a turnstile get on a train free in new york. they used to let him go. brian: the squeegee guys. >> i got news for you the guy who jumped the turnstile was the guy who committed the more serious crime. you don't let them go jumping the turnstile. run his name find out he has a warrant and doesn't rob someone on the subway. in chicago it's time to let the cops be cops. those people there deserve better. these are american citizens living in a place with zero opportunity for you could walk out of your house and be killed. that 17-year-old girl deserves a shot at life. this is a stable on our -- stair country. i encourage the president to get involved. start these task forces up again and clean it up if chicago isn't willing to do it themself. ainsley: democrats on capitol hill that are continuing that narrative that the president colluded with russia. have you congressman adam schiff on one the sunday shows yesterday and this is what he had to say. >> i think there is plenty of evidence of collusion or conspiracy in plain sight. now, that's a different statement than saying that there is proof beyond a reasonable doubt of a criminal conspiracy. book mueller will have to determine that. ainsley: dan, he says the evidence is right before our eyes. what do you think? >> yeah. listen, guys. this is one the few times i agree with adam schiff. the evidence is before our eyes collusion was very real. hillary clinton 100 percent her team collude with the russians and by the way so did adam schiff. i don't know if you listen to hannity his radio show. he plays the tape of adam schiff no one denies it's him on tape trying to collude with what he thought were russians to obtain compromising material on the russians. guys, everyone watching this, that actually happened, okay? we also know that hillary clinton paid through a law firm eventually kremlin-connected sources to gather information on donald trump. collusion is very real with hillary and the democrats and we should demand a full and accountable investigation. steve: hey, dan, did you see that paul sperry the investigative reporter has suggested that the president in the next month will de classify 20 redacted pages from the fisa renewal so people will finally see whether or not the entire investigation was based on lies and the phony dossier. >> well, did you notice, steve, how that was the liberal media talking point in the really damning information about the trump team and redactions. then when devin nunes the republican who has seen the information came in and said okay, let's put that information out there. everybody got real quiet. that information and redactions i can guarantee is you even worse than the dossier. and that's why the media has calmed down on it. ainsley: rod rosenstein signed off on that. maybe we will get some answers there candace owens is a conservative activist works with turning point u.s.a. she was appalled by some of the tweets by "new york times" editorial board member who wrote some antiwhite tweets. her hatred for white people. what candace did took those tweets and replaced the word white with the word jewish and the word black trying to prove a point about a racial double standard because the social media went crazy and then twitter suspended her account. they later said i'm sorry. and allowed her account to come back up. it was suspended for 12 hours. what's your reaction to that? >> yeah, i mean, twitter should just be honest and admit they are just a democrat propaganda form. i'm on twitter because have you to be. there is not a viable alternative. they did this to me i was banned from running ads. i'm still banned from running ads. they never told me why. the reason why candace got in trouble and i got in trouble on twitter. not because we said anything wrong. because we were wrong we were conservatives. it's a democrat platform. come out and say it i know they are trying to make some subtle attempt to reach out to conservatives. the damage has already been done. this is a propaganda platform for liberals. they have been hiding it or trying to hide it for a long time. they always say it's an error. the error is always conservatives and never liberals. it's a complete joke. brian: they put it back online. steve: do you think that congress should get involved? >> no. i mean, to be candid with you i'm a libertarian and twitter is a free company and free to make stupid decisions. unfortunately they have taken us up on that offer repeatedly. no, it's a free company and should be able to do what they want. and when a good alternative comes up we should seek it out. brian: darryl ice said maybe they need to be regulated. steve: are i don'regulated.stev. >> i don't agree. steve: thank you for joining us. jillian: following a story out of oregon. four antifa protesters are heading to court after demonstrations turned violent in portland. [shouting] jillian: they at accused of illegally using weapons, harassment and assault during a clash with counter protesters. the city's police chief is now calling for an investigation into reports of officers using excessive force. elizabeth warren just keeps on hinting at a possible 2020 run. this time branding herself as the underdog. >> in america, every family deserves a fighting chance. and we are ready to fight as hard as it takes, as long as it takes to deliver on that promise. jillian: president trump has said running against the massachusetts senator would be a dream come true. stay tuned. dramatic body camera photos shows police officers saving unconscious man inside a burning car after it crashed into a pole in atlanta. [shouting] [bleep], [bleep] >> pull hard, pull hard. ainsley: officers frantic to pull the driver out after failing to douse the flames. ' the man inside the car will be okay. one officer walked away with minor scrapes. and the surprise of a lifetime for a massachusetts police officer making his final radio call. the voice on the other end, his son. >> my sincere pleasure to announce after 32 and a half years of service my father police offer duane ladue is retiring final. to set free a man who has sacrificed so much of his time for all of us, officer ladue badge 4041 dad, you are officially code 5. >> love you. [laughter] he did come home. jillian: the officer's son flew across the country to be with his dad on his last day. isn't that incredible. steve: i'm amazed he was able to keep driving. i would have had to pull over. ainsley: he wasn't expected it. it sounded like he told his dad i'm not able to come home dad, he was able to come home. brian: 18 minutes before the top of the hour. steve: these three democratic socialists want universal healthcare. how are they going to pay for it by hiking up income taxes up to 75%. stuart varney thinks that's a big mistake and cost democrats in the midterm. stuart is next. brian: hopefully he will say more to that. it's our "fox & friends" live on the plaza. adam klotz is shooting basketballs as i understand. steve: let's see. brian: we're going to have some fun with adam at the fair in just a moment ♪ hold on to your dreams ♪ it's the ford summer sales event and now is the best time to buy. man: (on tablet) preparing classic campfire trout. say what? trout. trout. alright. you don't think i need both? why does he have that axe? make summer go right with ford, america's best-selling brand. now get 0% financing for 72 months plus $1,000 ford credit bonus cash on a great selection of suvs. during the ford summer sales event, get our best offer of the season: 0% financing for 72 months plus $1,000 ford credit bonus cash. 0% financing for 72 months we really pride ourselves on making it easy for you >> tech: at safelite autoglass, to get your windshield fixed. with safelite, you can see exactly when we'll be there. saving you time for what you love most. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ he crossed the finish line. american teacher sets new world record for rolling solo across the atlantic. bryce carlson going from northeastern canada to england in just 38 days. he completed the 2,000-mile journey despite his 20-foot boat capsizes several times. of the previous record was 53 days. incredible, steve. steve: he's brave. thank you, jillian. one of the most popular rallying cries of the democratic socialist agenda. medicare for everybody. the plan, which includes free healthcare for illegal immigrants requires massive tax hikes in an already highly taxed state like new york. income taxes could sore to as much as 70%. stuart varney host of the varney and company on the fox business network right now. if new york which is where we where taxes soar to 70% what could happen. >> everybody gets the single pair government care including illegal immigrants. the colmes of that is so astronomical to pay for it have you got to raise income tax rates through the roof. it will reach a top rate of 70%, all taxes included if you live in new york city. the result of that i would imagine would be a gross slowdown in your economy in that state and exodus of people leaving the state to get to places which have much lower tax rates. steve: sure, like texas and also florida. >> the thing -- have to make the point though, the democrats believe that this free healthcare is their best strategy for winning in november. steve: right. >> the republicans have a strong economy. the democrats will give you free healthcare. that's the choice that you you face in this election. steve: ultimately, it comes down to who is voting. if you don't have anything, you are going to go for i want the free stuff. >> i have to believe when the astronomical cost of the ever of these free services and free healthcare and college, when that is truly understood, people will walk away from it. you can't afford it. steve: stuart, the president over the weekend in ohio predicted there could be a red wave. if there is a red wave in the mid terms in large part based on the economy. and the "wall street journal" the lead story right now is how profits are soaring at big u.s. companies. s&p 500 500 companies dropped 23% in the second quarter. >> the mea thed the immediate rs take some of that money and give it to poor people and pay for free college and free healthcare. why don't we do that? the secret to these huge profits is that that fuels growth in the economy. that fuels capital spending. new computer systems, new plant, new equipment on the part of business which expands the economy, expansdz jobs, expands wages. you are now at the position where profits are so strong that you about to get amazon, google and microsoft close to being worth a trillion dollars just like apple is. that's a success. steve: they say that these companies are thriving because of the tax cuts. you put a big tax hike on them probably going to go the other way. >> that's exactly right. they would be going the other way. steve: we will be watching you on fox business an hour and 10 minutes from now. >> sounds good. thank you, sir. steve: president trump warrenning the democrats their blue wave will be crashing. numbers that could be trouble for the democrats coming up. fair season you won't have to travel far. we have our own right here on the plaza. look at that ♪ you got the keys ♪ now shut up and drive ♪ shut up and drive ♪ ♪ -i've seen lots of homes helping new customers anels ains stat ainsley: state and country fairs happening all over the country. we don't have to travel because we have on own on the plaza here to tell us more is fantasy world entertainment. thank you all for being with us. >> thank you for having us for the fourth year. ainsley: i know. we love you guys. >> we love y'all, too. ainsley: tell us about your company and how you got started. >> we started in 1992 with my garage with the attractions with my wife and my son and doug and our team and we built it to over 650 different attractions. we do about 1200 event all over the east coast. and we do a lot of events here in new york city. we deliver, set up, and operate all of our attractions. ainsley: most memorable experience with the company? >> with the company 26 events at the white house. ainsley: that's awesome. that's great. what are the most popular ride. >> aside from the two carnal sides, 35 total carnival rides. zip line, mobile zip line we can set up anywhere. 200 feet. here in the city on saturday. we have a mobile ice skating rink and escape room and inflatable. ainsley: what are we seeing right now? steve and jill january playing basketball. >> going head to head on connect four. you don't take turns shooting basket. first one to connect 4. steve: there you go. steve. ainsley: brian was on the tea cup. that's been around forever. right? >> that model has been around forever. we are very lucky. this is brand spanking new it? >> looks brand spanking new. what about this one? adam is on this. >> also is a new ride. we have had for three weeks. and the manufacturer is here with us today. he is with action rides and he, as a matter of fact, rides all over the world. ainsley: what do you want to tell parents out there. some are fearful to get on these rides. how safe are they? >> the reputation of the company. we have licensed crew chiefs that get licensed with pennsylvania every two years. they get that renewed and we're safety-conscious company. and we have you know, grand children and children and they get on the rides, also. so we are very concerned. steve: brian looks terrified on the tea cup. [laughter] ainsley: can you say that of most of the state fairs? they're starting to roll out now and families want to take their kids? >> main thing is you want to look at the ride and make sure it looks like clean and if they have it attended by an attendant. >> don't go on the ride with the lights hanging down and attendant not paying attention. ainsley: thank you for being here. steve, you are doing a great job. brian is on the tea cups now having funnel. all right. president trump warning the democrats their blue wave could be crashing. we are breaking down the numbers that could spell trouble for the left. d their blr and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? (vo) and you may lose weight. in the same one-year study, adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. oh! up to 12 pounds? (vo) a two-year study showed that ozempic® does not increase the risk of major cardiovascular events like heart attack, stroke, or death. oh! no increased risk? . . . . do not take ozempic® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to ozempic®. stop taking ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, itching, rash, or trouble breathing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. tell your doctor if you have diabetic retinopathy or vision changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase the risk for low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, and constipation. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ (vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. i'm and i'm an emt.erer when i get a migraine at work, it's debilitating. if i call out with a migraine, that's one less ambulance to serve a community. i just don't want to let these people down. excedrin migraine. relief that works as hard as you do. do as president an benefited. >> a massachusetts police officer making final radio call after 32 years. the voice on the other end is his son. >> a man who sacrificed so much of his time for all of us. >> did you just come home? ♪ ainsley: what do you think about the state fair as a kid? steve: i think about the tilt-o-whirl. because i went on it time after time. being in 4-h for 10 years. we worked all year for the county fair. if you were lucky to win blue or purple ribbon at the county fair you went to the state fair. brian: we never went to the new york state fair because it is way up state. we went to church fairs. the way they make their money. the catholic church makes money. follow up one guy about the disney story, what is closed. according to my neighbor. ainsley: explain that. steve: it is not closed. brian: we don't think. ainsley: technically it was closed at time, but opens at 9:00 a.m. >> if you go for the snow white ride, it close ad few years ago. snow white, the princess. steve: i didn't know she had a ride. brian: the mine train, great movie ride, closed. mickey and mini's runaway rail, done. ainsley: mickey and minnie, they're together right? brian: we don't know. they don't talk. steve: what do you remember about the county fair, state fair. email us at foxandfriends.com. ainsley: are you trying to change the subject and cut us off? we're having to much fun. i'm kidding. give the folks at home real news. steve: president trump talked about a the democrat blue wave. brian: he says he could ride out his accomplishments this fall. ainsley: rick leventhal in new jersey where the president is taking time off this week. good morning, rick. reporter: good morning, answer sy, brian and steve. historically the party in party loses seats in the midterm elections in the house and senate. the president is hoping to avoid that attending three rallies in five days last week, trying to tout his achievements and push republican voters to the polls this fall. saturday night the president flew to columbus, ohio, to support, republican troy ball der son, running neck-and-neck with democrat danny o'connor in tuesday's special election for the ohio 12 congressional district. the president celebrating the economic values and success and intelligence of his audience. >> you work hard, pay your taxes, do all these thing, you were forgotten, they forgot about you. you're the smartest people. you're the smartest people. when they talk about, the talk about the elite, do you ever see the elite? they're not elite. you're the elite. it is driving them crazy. [cheering] reporter: and when the president got back to new jersey he got busy on twitter, writing presidential approval numbers are very good. strong economy, military, just about everything else. better numbers than obama at this point by far. we are winning on just about every front. for that reason there will not be a blue wave, but there might be a red wave. the president said he will hold multiple rallies in the weeks leading up to the midterm elections, to make sure republicans go on to polls and they hang on to very important seats in the house and senate. brian: thanks a lot, rick. one thing about president bush, he had a couple themes he hammered them, to the point people said, enough we got you. if president trump would hammer his successes and tweet less about lebron and all this other stuff and forest fires and the reason for wildfires, it would allow people to focus on what he has done and his administration has done well. steve: one of the things he said at the rally over the weekend, republicans should hitch themselves to the america first agenda, they will win come the midterms. brian: right. so you agree? steve: i'm just saying something else he said. ainsley: you have democrats in chicago calling out for the president to help because the crime is so bad. look at these numbers over the weekend. 63 people were shot over the weekend, from friday to sunday. 10 people are dead. 14-year-old was wounded, 11-year-old was wounded. 17-year-old was killed. you see images mom was embracing and shaking because their loved ones are gone. steve: some is random shooting. they targeted, when i say they, gangs. they target ad block party. they targeted people on front porch after a funeral. they targeted lalpalooza, they increased police presence after what happened last year in las vegas. they had more cops. the gangs do not fear of retribution by the cops. they fire into the groups and don't fear the consequences. brian: what happened with the l.a. rights, when the shooting spills over into nicer neighborhood, that is when the rubber hits the road, that they have no choice. ainsley: that is so sad. brian: people think it is only happening here, don't worry about it. so i do worry about it. steve: this is all over chicago. this is not localized thing. >> there are communities where they're seeing the most crime. steve: four communities were targeted over the weekend by the gangs. brian: you start hitting upper middle class and high class areas, that is when everything will happen because they have the power. lashown ford, is a democrat, but he says hey, mr. president i need your help. >> the mayor must take away the chicago is trump-free sown, because taxpayers deserve to have the president come in to bring resources to the community. we need to make sure that billions of dollars we send to washington come back. the mayor should be working closely with trump. we must do everything, put all hands on deck in chicago. cannot do that by being divided. as longs as we are divided fighting against the president, it is not going to happen. steve: his point was, we send so many tax dollars to washington, d.c., chicago should get more of the federal government effort to pull the plug on terrible violence across every community in chicagoland. brian: let cops be cops. let them go in there and do what they do best. they're in a situation where they feel they can't go in and act, so they stay out. ainsley: a lot of people in the communities stay inside of their houses because they're too afraid to go outside. steve: that's sad. ainsley: in other news, candace owens, conservative activity for turning point usa, communications director, she has been on our show a lot, she was suspended by twitter, and they suspended by because she was appalled by "the new york times" member, sarah jeong about tweets about hating white people. she took out the word white and replaced with jewish and black, trying to prove a point showing a racial double twitter. steve: she was suspended the worm who did the original tweets was not suspended. her account stayed up. candace got shut down for 12 years. twitter came back and said, sorry that was a mistake. dan bongino said, we see that was a mistake from twitter regarding conservatives way too often. >> they did this to me too. they prohibited me from running ads on still ban running ads. they never told me why. the reason why candace got into trouble and i got into trouble on twitter, not because in said anything wrong we were wrong as conservative is. you see the it as error, the error is always conservatives, not liberals. it is complete joke. steve: paul sperry had a story that all big shots at twitter are democrat donors. don't donate to any republicans. is it part of a business plan to ban conservatives? we hope not. ainsley: i was listening to a interview, why is it okay to say same thing about white people or but not jewish or black people, where was the uproar when the person from "new york times" wrote this about white people? brian: kept her job, bottom line. unbelievable. steve: candace owens, back on twitter. brian: good. ten minutes after the hour. talk about food. that is what jillian is. jillian: thank you very much, brian. ainsley: what about rob? brian: he is okay. jillian: tell him you said that. the trump administration ready to reimpose sanctions on iran. the penalties go into effect just after midnight tonight, they will be the first since the obama era nuclear deal was scrapped. president is willing to meet with the iranian president rue hassan any. a small plane heading to the john wayne airport southeast of los angeles came spiraling down. the pilot declared an emergency just before the crash. everyone on board was killed but no one on the ground was hurt. the cause is being investigated. charlotte rae, the actress known as mrs. garrett on the beloved sitcom, "facts of life." has died. >> i to dot laundry, scrub the floor, do the windows. everything has to be perfect. jillian: two-time tony nominee, and emmy nominee, first played the role on ""different strokes"" in 1978. rae last year revealed last year she was dying of bone cancer. charlotte rae was 92 years old. louisiana supermarket worker act of kindness is paying off. we told you about this last week. we have an update. jordan taylor was works he noticed jack was interested in his job. jack's family recorded interaction and set up a go hundred me to pay for jordan to go to college. so far, it has raised over $112,000. it isn't that incredible. steve: all started with the act of kindness on the part of the grocery store person. let me show you how i do this. ainsley: that is so sweet. we have nice viewers. talking about that story for the last few days. steve: meanwhile, 8:12 in new york city. venezuela president nicolas maduro surviving a apparent drone strike, what he claims was an assassination attempt. will attempts be more common with the rise of drone warfare? former green beret commander lieutenant colonel motorcycle call waltz joins us next. brian: remember when peter fonda wand the barron trumpp to be put in a cage. what about voter fraud against democrats in office. a genius. ♪ relentless too. mbc doesn't take a day off, and neither will i. and i treat my mbc with new everyday verzenio- the only one of its kind that can be taken every day. in fact, verzenio is a cdk4 & 6 inhibitor for postmenopausal women with hr+, her2- mbc, approved, with hormonal therapy, as an everyday treatment for a relentless disease. verzenio + an ai is proven to help women have significantly more time without disease progression, and more than half of women saw their tumors shrink vs an ai. diarrhea is common, may be severe, and may cause dehydration or infection. before taking verzenio, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection. verzenio may cause low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infection that can lead to death. serious liver problems can occur. symptoms may include tiredness, loss of appetite, stomach pain, and bleeding or bruising more easily than normal. blood clots that can lead to death have also occurred. talk to your doctor right away if you notice pain or swelling in your arms or legs, shortness of breath, chest pain or rapid breathing or heart rate. tell your doctor if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include nausea, infections, low red and white blood cells and platelets, decreased appetite, headache, abdominal pain, tiredness, vomiting, and hair thinning or loss. i'm relentless. and my doctor and i choose to treat my mbc with verzenio. be relentless. ask your doctor about everyday verzenio. ♪ steve stephens vinceian president nicolas maduro surviving apparent grown strike. six people have been put behind bars. maduro was not hurt. it is raising questions will attempts like this become more common with the rise of drones. former supervisor with dick cheney and michael waltz. joining us from beautiful jacksonville, florida. colonel, good morning to you. >> morning. steve: a matter of time before we saw this happen. >> that's right. isis is using types of mini drones with grenades and explosives all over the middle east, ramming them into ammunition dumps and other types of vulnerable targets. from an assassination standpoint and targeting we'll see more and more of this. they're easy to buy, easy to use. and, very difficult to defend against. one experiment recently, swarm of drones was put over a crowd using facial-recognition technology to where essentially they can hunt someone down and then, you know, dive bomb them, attack them. steve: holy cow. >> in other instances, so the typical defense is to try the jam the person flying them. in other cases they can be set to a gps coordinate, they're not reliant on the radio frequency. in another experiment they were set on a timer. you have several dozen of them. they go on a gps coordinate, you name the address. 1600 pennsylvania avenue or otherwise this is a growing problem. our security agencies are scrambling for what to do against them. steve: right. >> they're too small to really be picked up on radar. they can be used in swarms. they can be set to gps coordinates. this is really a growing issue for places like las vegas, stadiums, nascar events. it's something that private security and dhs is really trying to get their arms around. steve: well, i mean the technology right now, the conventional wisdom is as you mentioned to jam it so it can't figure out where it is but if you already programmed look for this guy's face in a crowd. >> that's right. >> if more than one, doesn't make it being backup drones do, that is terrifying. >> that is right. you can overwhelm any defenses, even if you do detect it what do you do about it? shooting in a large crowd. there are countermeasures in experimental way, with nets, drones that attack other drones. nothing really caught on. there is a jamming capability, but you don't want to do that in and urban area where you have planes and other things that are very reliant on radio frequencies. so, it is, it's a concerning issue, but something, that -- i think we're going to see every critical infrastructure, every nuclear plant, heck, every celebrity will have some type of drone defense in the coming years. steve: that is really something. new technology deserves new solutions. colonel, thank you very much for joining us from florida. >> thank you very much. steve: what do you think about that email us. fox news alert. could there be a big break in the search for 20-year-old molly tibbetts. we're live next. some may thing masculinity is toxic. but our next guest has a difficult message. >> when men embrace masculinity inde healthy way, that is productive they are n warriors d heroes. you hear that, karen? liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges... how mature of them. for drivers with accident forgiveness liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ♪ brian: fox news alert. there is a possible new clue in the search for the missing iowa student, mollie tibbetts. steve: they have questioned a hog farmer for the third time miles away from where mollie vanished. brian: mat h matt finn joins from us brooklyn, iowa, with latest. what can you tell us? reporter: we were there as the investigators returned to farmer's property for third time. exactly why they keep returning to the farm is not clear. what they are asking of this man i do not know. i spokespersonly to the farmer. he says he has nothing to do with the disappearance of mollie tibbetts. so far he allowed investigators search his home with a dog. he handed over his cell phone. he tells us he who al would you investigators to search the entire 70 area property because he says he has nothing to hide. what we asked the man what it is when the investigators are asking him, that is when he says i don't know. we are not naming the man a suspect. there are no named suspects in the case so far and no arrests. so far the reward for poll tibbetts is $300,000. the family believe mollie is being held alive captive somewhere and pay this reward off. mollie think's someone might have taken her and the family is pleading for some type of tip. yesterday there was a quick square because a body after white woman was found near here. the state police shut that down. everyone was on high alert. saying it is not the body of mollie tibbetts. we're expecting another update from police tomorrow. back to you guys. steve: matt finn, thank you. brian: ainsley. ainsley: prager university and molly stuckey have dire warning for the next generation. watch this. >> when men embrace their masculinity that is healthy and productive they are leaders, warriors and heroes, when they are denied their masculinity they run away from responsibilities. leaving destruction in their wake. >> thank you. ainsley: i know you release the weekly monday videos. why was it important for you to send a message to men? >> there seems to be growing trend particularly among leftists feminists, trays all of society as problems inequality or injustice, going back to toxic masculinity, in some cases patriarchy. maybe if men took a back seat, less aggressive, less assertive, all of our problems would be fixed, we would have better, more equal society. this idea that society would be better if men were weaker is not backed up by statistics. if you look at fatherlessness, for example, which is epitome of male passivity, kids who grew up without dads are far more likely to be incarcerated, depressed, suicidal, then kids that grow up with dads. what we see in the family we see reflected in communities and in nations throughout history. when good men step up and take responsibility we are all safer an more successful. ainsley: another video is five minutes long. for people that haven't seen the video yet, what is your message for men? how in your opinion can they be better? >> yeah, so a lot of times we hear that the solution, for example, we've been talking a lot about this terrible epidemic of sexual assault and sexual harrassment. we hear the solution to that men are quieter, they are less masculine. that is the not solution. that is actually part of the problem. the solution, not less most cue lynnty, better masculinity. starts at home and the bathroom. shirking sons not to shirk responsibility, to take responsibility to serve and love those around them, to respect women in their lives. i am not a mom yet. i was raised by a wonderful dad. i have a great husband, father-in-law, brothers, brothers in law, i can tell you the value, that they have had in my life is absolutely irreplaceable, having that example after strong man. that is the message that we really wanted to convey. ainsley: men, step up to the plate. ultimately is what you're saying? >> exactly. ainsley: alley beth stuckey. where can we watch isn't. >> watch it on facebook, prageru, watch it on their youtube channel as well. go to my facebook page, the conservative millenial. it is all over. ainsley: we thank the dads and men doing what they are supposed to do. thank you for being here. >> thank you. ainsley: fox news alert. chicago reeling from the most violent weekend ever, 10 are dead, dozens more shot. we're live on the ground. chicago native gianno caldwell, with a powerful message for rahm emanuel, the mayor there. we have a mess about tariffs, but that might end up hurting them even more. we'll explain. ♪ trout. alright. you don't think i need both? why does he have that axe? make summer go right with ford, america's best-selling brand. now get 0% financing for 72 months plus $1,000 ford credit bonus cash on a great selection of suvs. during the ford summer sales event, get our best offer of the season: 0% financing for 72 months plus $1,000 ford credit bonus cash. so let's promote our summer travel deal on choicehotels.com like this. surfs up. earn a $50 gift card when you stay just twice this summer. or, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com heartbreaking outcome of this senseless violence. young lives just wiped away. this is 17-year-old jena patterson, you're looking at. left home for 20 minutes. in that time she was killed early sunday morning at around 2:30 in the 1300 block of south millard. she was on the sidewalk, when two men walked up and started shooting. she was shot in the face. 11-year-old, 14-year-old, another 17-year-old and 21-year-old were shot in that same shooting. one hospital was so overcrowded, they stopped taking in new e.r. patients. alderman, bernard of the 27th ward says the community needs to step up. >> we are the ones who can stop the violence in our own neighborhood. whatever the police does, what they do good, god bless them do their job. at the same time we can't not keep tying the police hands. reporter: if you add it all up, friday, saturday and sunday, 63 people were shot and 10 people are dead. live from chicago police headquarters, tia ewing, fox 32 news. send it back to steve, brian, ainsley in the studio. steve: thank you very much. >> was a strong statement in the beginning. every monday morning i'm here. she is local anchor for fox, news reporter, she always ends up at the police station because the of what is going on. steve: numbers are stunning. gianno caldwell whose brother was caught up in the violence, by grace of god was not killed but his best friend died his arms, you went to the rally to try to get people in the community to bring awareness. essentially to shame rahm emanuel into doing something. you made a very powerful pitch last week with your op-ed, president trump needs to get involved. what can he do? >> absolutely. you know, in my op ed i say president trump should order attorney general sessions and fbi director to come up with a comprehensive plan to combat the violence in chicago. in addition to that, i talk about providing resources for at-risk youth to get them before they fall in this pattern of violent behavior but i got to tell you though, we're looking at these numbers, over 63 shot in the city of chicago between friday and sunday, my gosh, rahm emanuel has been mayor since 2011, since 2011 he has been nothing more than a failure. we see nothing less than a national crisis. this is literally black on black genocide in city of chicago. this is american city we're seeing this level of violence. rahm emanuel, instead of being a leader, being true mayor of chicago saying listen, put politics aside, i know i'm a democrat, rahm emanuel, president trump is republican, let me call to ask for help. he doesn't do it. why? he said chicago is trump-free zone. he said president trump will never spend a night in chicago. yet the residents of chicago can't have peaceful sleep. they don't know if they wake up with a bullet coming through their window or not. at this point with rahm emanuel getting prepared for re-election, no city in city of chicago should not consider giving him a vote. this is not a leader. brian: couple things. head of law enforcement, basically a lawyer and getting jeff sessions in there who is lawmaker, who understands the law, that might be a good start, but i want police commissioners involved, that do this for a living, no what an arrest looks like and what security looks like and knows how to train officers for a situation like this. there has to be police commissioners around that want to move into this city and make a name for themselves this. >> i think it is beyond just that, brian. as you look at the coverage from last friday with the protests, i sought out representative la shawn ford, i know you had on the air today, in 2010 he made national news calling for the national guard coming into chicago, him and another democrat, in fact said things were so that they believed the national guard was necessary. i thought he would have interesting point of view considering things are just as bad now. he did have an interesting point of view. so when i think about leaders like him, which i know actually cares about his community and people that are there, it made sense to say, listen, how can you and i, talking about me and hip, how can we work together and put together a coalition of leaders, democrats, republicans, civil leaders, people who care about what's going on in the community and who are willing to work with president trump to get some things done? how about we get all of them together. that includes law enforcement. that include prosecutors. at this point there should be no politics involved because there are bloody bodies dying on the streets of chicago on daily, weekly, weekend basis. we can't make anymore. brian: get bratton in there. get get the position, be liaison to just these regions. there needs to be comprehensive plan, people with experience that don't want political gain. >> exactly. steve: we'll see if the white house is watching. >> i hope so. president trump, i mean, please, please, we need to get involved. we need to take back the city because at this point, there is war-torn countries that seemingly are safer than the city of chicago. ainsley: state representative la shawn ford was on with us, i know he is a friend of yours. the two of you have been trying to get the president involved. hopefully something will happen. too many people, the story every monday apparently in chicago. these are lives. these are kids. thanks so much. >> we're putting together a coalition now. ainsley: i know. thank you so much for what you're doing for lives. brian: thanks, gianno. jillian you have the other news breaking. jillian: we're following breaking news out of philadelphia right now. let's get right to this fox news alert. we just learned a philadelphia police officer was shot in the face while serving a warrant this morning. he has been identified as jason potts, a 20 year veteran of the force. the s.w.a.t. team member is in critical condition although expected to survive. officers were shot as they enter ad home while serving a warrant of the shooter was also hit. he is in critical condition. investigators looking into islamic extremism after 11 children were rescued from a filthy compound in new mexico. look at the images. the kids between ages of one and 15 were removed after an armed standoff with one of men who stayed there. national security analyst, ryan mauro, who spoke with his law enforcement sources says the compound was disturbing. >> this is basically a ten-acre compound, terrorist training camp with islamic extremist ties. jillian: one suspect now behind bars was originally wanted for kidnapping his 3-year-old son from georgia. that child has not been found. another man has also been arrested. remember when actor peter fonda tweeted about putting president trump's son barron in a cage. he is back for his second act. he wants democrats to commit voter fraud to win the midterms. if you have a millenial in family, take the early ballots, fill them out, mail them in. take it to the voting place and give it to officials. no more worrying. many users pointing out that a felony. a fan tries catching a baseball with a bucket of gravy cheese fries, it doesn't end well. ♪ >> we'll give you 25-dollars it be. jillian: the fries spilling on the field, he gets whacked in the face before a contest in a mariner's game. walks away with 25-dollar gift card. i would take the fries. steve: love gravy cheese fries. not really healthy. brian: is that part of derek jeter's plan to bring back the mariners. excuse me, that is the marlins. ainsley: that never works. a small bowl. the ball is flying as fast as it can. it will never land and stay. steve: just doing something that is funny. >> if it were me, i would take the fries and run. forget the ball. steve: thank you, jillian. we have snack foods we'll attend to outside right now with adam klotz. they have corndogs at the ready, right? >> we have corndogs, we have food, every carnival game. we have every game you need. sam and jay are playing connect four. it is heating up in all kinds of ways. it is heating up in the forecast. 80 degrees in new york city. it is humid, sticky. you feel that, 92 degrees in phoenix this early in the morning. it will be a hot one today. 92 degrees in new york city. 8in chicago, 98 in kansas city, 114 in phoenix. feels like temperature will get even warmer than that guess who else is heating up. i will try something, if it works i want someone to make a meme of it. i'm a loser just as we expected. back to you guys. ainsley: you were close. steve: we'll try the corndogs. they have something called the pig lobe bows ski. brian: you mean the big leboski? >> no. pig. some want to boycott president trump's tariffs but they're only hurting themselves. brian: have you heard about pig lebowski? i just did. i can't remember where i heard about it. we're bringing food to the plaza. ♪ ♪ you shouldn't be rushed into booking a hotel. with expedia's add-on advantage, booking a flight unlocks discounts on select hotels until the day you leave for your trip. add-on advantage. only when you book with expedia. the leof up to 24 lapsline is taround the world.ent experience an unrivaled feel for any road at the lexus golden opportunity sales event. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. up an ice cream analogy. an american company, haagen-dazs? >> it is fascinating when canadians go to the grocery store around pull out of the freezer, buy haagen-dazs ice cream, produced in canada, in canadian factory and canadian labor, and canadian dairy. when they boycott a u.s. product, haagen-dazs, they're hurting fellow canadians. brian: you have usa, okay, canada, nafta, three nations we'll deal with mexico first. turns out the talks are making great progress. it is getting canada kind of worried. >> it should. one of the problems with nafta is that poultry as well as dairy is heavily subsidized by the canadian government. so that is one of the reasons why tpp wasn't even going to work because they were only going to allow the world markets to access 3% of the markets until they subsidize it and flood the market with their products. why mexico is looking forward to negotiating with the u.s. because they want free and open market because of the policies will reduce the prices of the goods so everyone can benefit. brian: justin trudeau, with the dairy we know about the farmers getting a bad deal but justin trudeau is trying to tell our president you have a surplus when it comes to us but numbers are a little bit different. >> the numbers are different. if you look what's happening across the board, when we're, like lumber, right, for example. so provinces would actually give subsidies for lump before. president trump hit back on that because the lumber would go to the mills and make two by fours and dump them in the united states that would disrupt the trade and balances the president trump fixed that back in 2017. brian: we'll see what will take place but i think if he gets the mexico deal done first, put pressure on canada, makes their own cheetos and willing to eat them if they get really bad. >> president trump was in canada, it was g7 summit, he said get rid of all trade barriers, tariffs, all protectionists policies, open up all borders with trade and all benefit. brian: that would be a good idea. let's leveling the playing field. >> exactly. brian: kevin kelly, appreciate it. coming up straight ahead, we have corndogs and tate -- taters to the and we're bragging. let's check this with bill hemmer, who spent the morning on the tea cups. >> you look good on those days. i get vertigo. you have ketchup with the tatertots. brian: heinz, not canadian ketchup. heinz. >> big morning at white house, about to announce new tough sanctions on iran. more protests in the streets. ambassador john bolton live on iran and north korea. so much more. bloody deadly weekend in chicago yet again. what are city leaders doing to stop it. big election in ohio. what does it tell us about america, what does it tell us about president trump. karl rove the headliner. join sandra and me in moments, 9:00 to noon. we're ten minutes away. see you then. you bet. corndog at the doghouse. we do it differently. we elevate all the classic comfort foods you love, with the sausages, burgers, dogs, corndogs. we do a root beer corndog batter. which sounds weird, if you think about it, root beer has great spices part of what make it a root beer. corndog batter is a little bit sweet. that gives more depth. try that. >> we've been talking about the pig lebowski, what is that? >> this pig lebowski is take on polish boy. this is polish sausage. we have fresh garlic, herbs, grilled hawaiian bread. you have to put on the french fries. then you got it. >> you got it. >> you gotta. then the slaw on top. i have always a fan of nice tangy, crunchy slaw. and a little bit of the barbecue sauce right on top. ainsley: can you put that in your mouth? >> that is a pedu. that is i suggest you start in there. who wants to try this one? steve: i do. >> this is rolled up. i have tots right here. give you the opportunity, if you want to build your own tots. you have cheese sauce. so i have sweet and spicy relish. we have some, load it up. it is, they are your tots. ainsley: those are my tots. >> these are somebody else's tots. >> thank you. >> there you go, if you want to cheese them. ainsley: i do want cheese. >> you chant cheese? ainsley: i do. >> this is our house-made cheese sauce. it has a cream fermented bean paste that gives it a background of flavor. ainsley: this is cheese? >> this is hot close. more cheese. steve: what about the shake? >> pour me that last one there. that is the assault at this malty. made with assaulted caramel ice cream. and we have nice little pearls in there. there are some of the pearls here. lorenzo is pouring me the last one. you have the caramel sauce. we take the pearls. that will give it a little crunch like that. get this at our pop-up, happening at 62 spring street? soho here in new york. we have 30 other doghouses open around the country. we're based out of southern california. go to our website, doghouse.com. you can find your doghouse. steve: don't worry about nutrition. this is supposed to be fun. >> there is a mind and body connection, when the mind is healthy the body will follow. steve: this is fair week. fair and balanced. >> fair and balanced. ♪ might get windy. have a good shift. fire pit. last use -- 0600. i'd stay close. morning. ♪ get ready to switch. protected by flo. should say, "protected by alan and jamie." -right? 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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends Sunday 20180805 10:00:00

cotton can whic candy, which wet there as well. >> do we have cheese curds. >> we do. >> how about fried o oreos. >> i once ate a deep fried scorpion on a stick at the arizona county fair. yeah, on live television. greta was doing her show. >> was it nice and crispy? >> good morning, we don't want to ruin your appetite. they also had a deep fried maggot. >> send us your favorite fried foods and what you love most about your state fairs. boy, is there a lot to talk about. i don't know if you were watching last night. we will play back a bunch of highlights from the rally in yow where the president was -- in A morning news show that includes interviews, features and banter among hosts. the court, we're out of that crazy iran deal, the em ba embas gone from jerusalem and the hostages have been returned from north korea. that's what happened under his leadership. >> we discussed the significance of bringing jim jordan up on the stage. he announced his run for speaker many he's been a powerful voice in support of the president and a full embrace, saying take the podium, that's a shot across the bow of the establishment in washington, mitch mcconnell and paul ryan, who don't want the freedom caucus to run the house of representatives. the balance of thousand is at stake. but a big statement there. >> a likely fight could be coming over the wall, remember, build, the wall, that's a big thing at these rallies. the house freedom caucus and many people in the audience believe we should engage in this fight over border security very soon, rather than later. >> the other side isn't so happy about that. eric swalwell is one of them who >>.>> the midterms are so important. he's telling people to get out there and vote. you can only do so much as president. if immigration is the top of your list, you have to get people on your side to help you get things through. if you have democrats that take over, imagine how complicated that's going to be. we've seen a tough two years of getting enough done with republicans he would say are working on his behalf. >.>> everything will stop if the democrats were to win the house of representatives. >> if the republicans hold l hold onto the majority, you could be looking at the next speaker of the house, jim jordan, really a big development. we have just one other story i wanted to get to. we're going to tease a little bit. it's what the children at rallies and how -- >> let's say the failing new york times has a different view of the children being at the rallies than maybe the rest of us do. here's the headline from it in the new york times by an op ed, damian winter. he wrote the children at trump rallies, he's a photographer and he talks about it. he says it's been a long journey covering the campaign and i remember being exhausted by the anger i experienced. i remember being heart-broken that children were exposed to this anger or learning from it and participating in it. of course, i wonder if they would say about the same thing about the kits brough kids broue women's march. >> is it a chance to learn about the democracy. >> and to see the president. you got to see the president of the united states and listen to his speech. i talked to, a father brought his daughter in tampa and we talked to some of the children at the rallies, take a listen to this. >> why are you here today. >> >.>> i wanted to see trump for y politics. a lot of times children don't agree with their parents. this is part of growing up. it's about learning about the country, learning what the role of the president is. >> it's history. e-mail us if you would take your children to a rally. >> the one thing i would say is sometimes with the insults, when the president gives insults, that's when i am concerned about kids being there. it's not a way to learn how to talk to people. i don't think we should say that this is okay for a president to say these things. i know you disagree with me on that. >> that's where parents come into play. parents can say, hey, he's the president, he's fighting different battles, that's why he talks that way. don't talk to your teacher that way. right? that's a pretty easy -- >> send us your thoughts on that. another big document dumped by the fbi revealing new bomb shells about the fbi's relationship with the controversial author of the anti-trump, the dirty dossier. tom fiten is here with details. and police officers facing off with a group of kids for an opeepic dance-off. ♪ just dance. traveling lighter. taking a shortcut. (woooo) taking a breather. rewarded! learn more at theexplorercard.com chicken! that's right, chicken?! candace-- new chicken creations from starkist. buffalo style chicken in a pouch-- bold choice, charlie! just tear, eat... mmmmm. and go! try all of my chicken creations! chicken! steele who at the same time was working for the clinton dnc funded fusion gps to dig up dirt, fake dirt on president trump or then candidate trump. it's pretty extraordinary stuff. >> we don't want to take our viewers into the weeds here, but the payments to steele has been a big part of this, the money coming from the dnc from the hillary campaign. what are we learning new about payments? >> it's one thing to hear he's been paid by the fbi or to suggest, reports suggest he was paid. here we've got the documents showing he met 13 times at least during the campaign season with the fbi, 11 of those times resulted in cash payments. he's getting money from the clinton campaign, also getting money from the fbi. the first major document talks about him being admonished early in 2016, yet he meets with the fbi afterwards and finally in november the documents show because he was leaking his relationship with the fbi, he's deemed not suitable as a confidential human source. so this source, who was deemed not suitable, then is used repeatedly to justify in the fisa warrants we later find out to spy on the trump team. it shows there's corruption at the heart of the russia investigation basically being run out of the fbi during the obama administration, really disturbing news. >> that's the whole point i want to get to with you, tom, and that is earlier this week you reported about peter strzok, that agent had repeated biases, got this unusual authority to declassify which ultimately means to share secrets and now we have this unsuitable christopher steele that was the basis for the investigation. at the end of the day, if you connect all of the tom fiten dots, do we end up at a place where when the president said that this is an unfair investigation, that this is a witch hunt, what do you say? >> the documents are supporting him, as they are dribbled out, a lot of them are heavily redacted. all the meetings he was having with the fbi, almost completely redacted. who was he meeting with at the fbi. you can probably bet a dollar it was peter strzok or people like him that he was reporting to, top levels. james comey, peter strzok, top officials at the fbi like andrew mccabe who was fired for misconduct need to be questioned very carefully about their communications with steele and their knowledge and coordination with the clinton dnc operation that was also funding his operation as well. the idea that the fbi was using this campaign funded source to target the trump team is something that ought to be troubling to most americans. >> tom, i don't want you to give away what you're working on, but obviously you have been leading on this from the beginning. can you give us a preview of what else you're hoping to get, what you're hoping to expose, really, in the coming week? >> there's always something big coming from documents. we've got information about james comey that's going to raise additional questions about his conduct at the fbi and whether the fbi again was bending the rules to allow james -- in the way james comey was following ethics at the fbi, really incredible stuff coming up. >> tom, the president tweeted this past week that it's time to end this investigation. is it your opinion now, based on all of these things we know, that this investigation is not fair? >> i've long believed the super structure, the entire basis of the mueller investigation was corrupted and it's been long past time for at least a pause in the investigation so that we have a full airing of they illicit spying, the targeting of trump, the leaking, and the misuse of the fisa court process to target him. given all that corruption, it's hard to believe the doj is allowing that operation to continue without any check. >> all right. tom fiten of judicial watch, thank you for the work you're doing and have a great sunday. >> you're welcome. thank you. she lost her father in the korean war when she was 4 years old and was there as the remains from north korea returned home. she is with us to talk about the meaning to have the remains back on u.s. soil, that's next. and tom pyro is having breakfast with friends in ohio where they're still excited about the president's rally. he's straight ahead and he's serving up breakfast. ♪ ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪ no matter who rides point, ♪ there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. ♪♪ and just like tyrone taylor, they know what it takes to help keep you protected. are you in good hands? and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. good morning. we're back with some headlines, starting with a fox news alert. venezuela's president is blaming far right groups for what he says was an a assassination attempt. the government says that explosion was an attempted drone attack. some firefighters say it was a gas explosion in a nearby apartment. seven people are hurt. they're blaming the attack on venezuelans who live in florida. also breaking overnight, three nato soldiers are dead, killed by a taliban suicide bomber in afghanistan. an american soldier and two afghan troops were also hurt while patrolling outside an air base. their conditions and identities are unknown. thousands of forces are still providing support and training afghan troops. a home coming for american heros, some 60 years in the making. >> an emotional ceremony in high hawaii where vice president mike pence attended. two family members were special guests of the vice president. one of them was 4 years old when she lost her own dad during a recon mission in north korea. >> that family member is here now with more. diane, it's great to see you full disclosure, i had a chance to speak with you, we rode on air force 2 together. it was a powerful day for shurmt it's great to talk to you. as you reflect on that day, share with our audience what it was like as someone who lost her father in the korean war. he left when you were 4 years old, never able to come home. what did it feel like to receive those remains and believe that maybe one of those could be your father? >> well, it felt like my country was following through on its commitment to bring our fallen home and my father is one of those fallen. to actually see the flag-draped cases really made it real to me that my father might be in one of those cases. it was a more hopeful feeling that i've probably ever had. >> were you told anything about your dad growing up? tell us about the man that he was. obviously you were only 4 years old. but an american hero, he was. >> yes. growing up i really did not know hardly anything about him until i was about 16, because my mother just really had a hard time dealing with it, at least that's what i think, anyway, because she didn't want to talk about it. she didn't have any pictures of him out for my brother, younger brother and i to see, and if i ever asked about him, she would get mad at me. so i kind of -- both my brother and i learned not to ask about him. so i really didn't learn hardly anything growing up, until i was a teenager, about 16, and then i -- i needed to know more at that age. so i would press it until she finally brought out a couple pictures and so i didn't remember as a young child that he was a pilot and so to see his picture was so impressive to me. it kind of reconnected my memory to him, taking him to -- i grew up as a military child, so i was used to going to air bases. >> you had a chance, diane, to be there, as those came in, speak with the vice president. if you had a message for the president today and his -- in this process in north korea, what would it be? >> first of all, thank you, mr. president, for taking that request as part of the negotiations and i'm grateful that korea followed through with that and so from here on, i really would hope that we continue to pursue recovering more remains with whatever that takes to get back into north korea, to do search and recovery efforts. >> what a powerful moment it was. diana brown, good to have you with us. thank your family for your service. >> your father, absolutely. next a new threat from isis. the target? san francisco. >. and what did voters thinkf president trump's rally last night. tom pyro is having breakfast with friends in ohio. i hear the bill's on you. >> i pay every time. that's just the kind of guy i am. most importantly, these folks were so happy the president visited their community last night. we're talking to them about the issues that are important to them this morning, when "fox & friends" on a sunday morning in america returns. ♪ to me, he's, well, dad. so when his joint pain from psoriatic arthritis got really bad, it scared me. and what could that pain mean? joint pain could mean joint damage. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, helps stop irreversible joint damage, and helps skin get clearer. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common, or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. since enbrel, dad's back to being dad. visit enbrel.com and use the joint damage simulator to see how your joint damage could be progressing. ask about enbrel. enbrel. fda approved for over 15 years. they have and i became president. >> that was president last night in ohio, rallying ahead of the special election on tuesday. we sent todd pyro to columbus ohio to talk to the folks. >> you're surrounded by marilyn monroe and good-looking pancakes. you're in good hands. >> yes, marilyn monroe and pancakes, what a combo. you've done diner segments following a rally. there's a palpable excitement in a community when president trump visits that community. and that is definitely the case today. i want to introduce you to joe. joeys a veteran. thank you, sir, for your service. also worked in finance. he says he's voting, actually already voted for troy boldeson because he wants somebody that's going to support the president's agenda, specifically you have two key issues in your life, immigration and economy. why is the president's approach to i' immigration so important o you? >> it's to help the country, to save the country from the illegals, the education factor for our children and the border control. >> reporter: you saiyou said you recently took a visit to california and you were so upset by what you saw there. explain what you mean by that. >> the total poverty that you see throughout the city, the homelessness, the trash on the freeway, the streets, just total lack of concern for our country, from the illegals, i would assume. >> reporter: as somebody who worked in finance, you say you look at the trump economy or the economy under the president and you say wow. why do you say that? >> i say that because of the job situation. the highest job employment since 25 years now he said. the black employment, the mexican employment, all the lowest ever in our history. >> reporter: all right. enough said. thank you for your service and thank you for your time. alice, alice is a veteran as well. thank you for your service. also works in finance. and as somebody who works in finance, you too look at the economy under the president and say we're doing very well. why do you say that? >> my 401-k has increased exponentially since he took office. i see an increase in what people are investing in. people are investing and that's a huge thing right now because they're preparing for their future, they're preparing for their children's future and grandchildren's future. all of these things are positive keys to looking at the economy. >> when it comes to immigration, you say you don't mind the fact that the president is threatening to shut down the government over the border wall. why do you say that? >> we need to make america great again. i think the president is trying to do that and he's trying to get our leaders on-board with him and go with him and when they're dragging their feet, not wanting to do so, it's time for him to step up and say if we're not going to do it, we're going to shut it down. >> socialism has been in the news a lot lately. you say millennials don't get it. why do you say that? >> they haven't experienced what america has gone through, from before the attack on the twin yotowers,from there going back. people from my generation, a couple generations below me, they were there when the twin towers were attacked, they were there when we had -- we had people that were here in the vietnam war, in korea, world war ii, stuff like that, so those older people, they understand what the country has been through and how important it is to make america great again. >> reporter: alice, thank you for your time. joy, thank you for yours. we've got a busy morning ahead of us, a lot more opinions to get to when we check back in with you guys in about an hour. for now, back to new york. >> the biscuits and gravy -- >> get eating for us. thank you so much. >> keep it up. >> it's always a plus when you go to a diner and the food is that good. >> there's always something good. >> i feel bad keeping people from their food. >> they're eating right now. we want to bring you other headlines, starting on a serious note with a fox news alert. we will make you fear the air that you breathe, isis posting that chilling threat online, calling for biological attacks right here in the u.s. the terror group's new video shows the san francisco skyline, you can see it there, with a man holding a gas canister. it also gives instructions on how to build undetectable homemade dirty bombs. yikes. today the fbi will question a man for a third time about missing college student molly tibbits. wayne cheney said agents are entitled to search his entire property. last week, he refused to take a polygraph test. molly disappeared more than two weeks ago after going for a run in brooklyn, iowa. it looked like something out of a james bond movie. ♪ >> police getting into a high speed chase with four jet skis in london. the riders were racing on the river but unlike in the bond movies, the bad guys got away. police were forced to give up the chase for safety reasons. and there's this, police officers face off with a group of kids for an epic dance-off. you've got to see this. ♪ >> you got it. >> don't mess with that one, the cop showing off to a boys and girls club in lake county, south carolina. the adorable moment is now going viral. i wish i could dance like that. >> was that a leg up into a split? >> i don't even know. >> that was intense. >> they're going i hope they don't throw with a do dance moves talk. >> have you seen that before? >> i give all credit to the adults. but that kid - what's going on out there. >> there's a category 4 hurricane, hector, moving close to hawaii. tuesday into wednesday, likely best chances, it will go just to the south of the big island. the big island has been in the news. they have an erupting volcano out there. they will have rain and swells out there. it's 97 this morning in phoenix. the heat is still on. everybody across the east still kind of hot and humid but not as much precipitation as we've seen over the last, say, two to three weeks. we've had a lot of spots see their wettest july ever. we'll have a pretty nice week. there will be a few scattered showers in the tennessee valley. in florida, you'll be looking at a nice day, carolinas well. we'll be watching severe weather moving across parts of minnesota. your high temperatures look like this for the day today, we're going to be very warm, especially across parts of the southwest. the hundreds that we've seen across parts of the plains, those are gone. >> big swells heading to hawaii, that's music to surfers' ear. camilla harris is taking offense. >> i have a problem with the phrase, identity politics. that phrase is used to divide and it is used to distract. >> charlie kirk is here to react live, that's next. >> he's going to have a different opinion. a giant herd of goats causing chaos in one neighborhood. the owners of those goats join us live, just ahead. ♪ still nervous about finding a new apartment? please don't, i'm saving those for later. at least you don't have to worry about renters insurance. just go to geico.com. geico helps with renters insurance? good to know. been doing it for years. that's really good to know. i'll check 'em out. get to know geico. and see how easy homeowners and renters insurance can be. to diminish and demean are the very issues that will define our identity as americans. >> here to react, turning point usa founder, charlie kirk. thanks for being here this morning. she's saying that these identities are the very issues that will define our identity as americans. what do you say. >> it's a bizarre way of looking at it. she accuses us of using the critique of identity politics to try to divide people. she's the one that's dividing people. the left are so hyper focused on race. they look at everyone in little different racial identity politics. just for everyone at home, so they understand what identity politics is, it's the idea that your identity is your skin color. we as conservatives or those who consider ourselves americans, we think your identity is in your ideas, not your skin color. the left, they always try to divide people, not unite people. i like to say that democrats want to create a country where everyone looks different but they think the same. i believe true diversity is not skin color diversity but idea intellectual diversity. >> she's a darling, though. i talked to in the democratic party a lot of people see her at a potential frontrunner for 2020. griff would agree with that. >> is it your sense that senator harris stands a chance because she's fresh but do you see a problem that she's bringing some of the same baggage that democrats have now? >> without a doubt. look, i experienced this sort of identity politics narrative on college campuses. you look at the black lives matter protests and you look at the kind of d divisive culture. it's graduated up to the high ranks of the democratic party. if you listen to the president, he talks about all americans, he doesn't talk about little different groups. the democrats lose on policy. they're trying to win on identity. we need to get back to the idea that the idea of america is you can come with nothing and create anything. that the free enterprise system is the greatest wealth creating engine ever. you're not the identity of your background but the identity of your future. that's why this president has succeeded over the last such he'l--couple years. >> it's not just race, it's sexual orientation, it's gender, immigration status, any category they can identify. >> precisely right. you look at it, they also try to identify a particular piece of identity that you can't control, by the way. you can't control your skin color. they try to create uproar around that. america is the only country where even those who hate it refuse to leave. and we have defied history where people can flea marxism and create the america they see fit. people are in different victim identity buckets and groups. we as conservatives are a champion of the identity of ideas. >> it will be interesting to see. she may be the democratic nominee for president. we'll find out. charlie kirk, thank you very much. >> good to see you. trevor noah tells republicans socialism is all in their minds. >> many republicans will say they hate socialism. really, they hate labels. it's all in your mind. >> didn't he interview a socialist? there's a giant herd of goats causing chaos in one neighborhood. the owners of the goats will join us live along with one of the newest members of the herd. >> i was hoping a goat was going to be here. this is what we do for you. ♪ stay at laquinta. where we're changing with contemporary make-overs. then, use the ultimate power handshake, the upper hander with a double palm grab. who has the upper hand now? start winning today. book now at lq.com. ♪ it's so hard to believe ♪ but it's all coming back me. ♪ baby, baby, baby. all you can eat is back, baby. applebee's. if your adventure... ...keeps turning into unexpected bathroom trips... ...you may have overactive bladder, or oab. ohhhh...enough already! we need to see a doctor. ask your doctor about myrbetriq® (mirabegron). it treats oab symptoms of urgency, frequency, and leakage. it's the first and only oab treatment in its class. myrbetriq may increase blood pressure. tell your doctor right away if you have trouble emptying your bladder or have a weak urine stream. myrbetriq may cause serious allergic reactions... ...like swelling of the face, lips, throat or tongue, or trouble breathing. if experienced, stop taking and tell your doctor right away. myrbetriq may interact with other medicines. tell your doctor if you have liver or kidney problems. common side effects include increased blood pressure, common cold or flu symptoms,... ...sinus irritation, dry mouth, urinary tract infection, bladder inflammation,... ...back or joint pain, constipation, dizziness, and headache. need some help managing your oab symptoms along the way? ask your doctor if myrbetriq is right for you, and visit myrbetriq.com to learn more. making hay of their new-found freedom for hours. the goats' owners finally rounded them up. the owners of the company, we rent goats, are here. we have an unnamed baby goat here. we need to hear suggestions for names for the goat. good to have you here this morning. what happened, why were the goats on the loose? >> they like to eat weeds. they like to eat the tall parts, the seeds at the top first. i guess they were standing on their back feet, leading against the wood fence and they knocked the boards out and they got through like a 9-inch wide hole. >> we've got this goat that we're going to name this morning, we're going to help you name this beautiful goat. how old is the goat? are you raising the goat specifically to do this or it just happened naturally? >> this is a little female goat. she is a little over a week old. she was born out of cycle. normally goats are born in april. but she's from a mom we bought this summer and she was already bred when we got her. she'll get babied this year and she'll go out on jobs in about a month when she gets old enough. >> if we were to walk off the job we would get fired. ddo you punish the goats? >> no. they got loaded up in the trailer and went to the next job. they're doing great. >> our goal in life is to work and not even know we're working. the goats probably don't know they're working, do they. >> no, they love it. wthese goats are bred for land clearing. that love it. every time we turn around to a new place, people are like oh, my gosh, they look like they're starving. you see them in someone's yard and they went to work again. >> they just like to eat. >> matt and kim, thank you so much. until we get a better name, the goat's name is abby. are you okay with that? >> i like it. keep watching the show. we'll ask viewers to send in name suggestions. hopefully by the end of the show we'll have a name for you. >> the name of the business is we rent goats, so if you need goats in boise, ohio, check them out. >> pretty good life to be a goat. coming up, we've got jason chavitz and a whole lot more. stay with us. buffalo style chicken in a pouch-- bold choice, charlie! just tear, eat... mmmmm. and go! try all of my chicken creations! chicken! when mit rocked our world.ailed we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they took care of everything a to z. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. my lineage was the vecchios and zuccolis. through ancestry, through dna i found out that i was only 16% italian. he was 34% eastern european. so i went onto ancestry, soon learned that one of our ancestors we thought was italian was eastern european. this is my ancestor who i didn't know about. he looks a little bit like me, yes. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis was intense. my mom's pain from i wondered if she could do the stuff she does for us which is kinda, a lot. and if that pain could mean something worse. joint pain could mean joint damage. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop further damage enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. since enbrel, my mom's back to being my mom. visit enbrel.com... and use the joint damage simulator to see how joint damage could progress. ask about enbrel. enbrel. fda approved for over 18 years. they talk about the elite. the lethe elite. do you ever see the elite? you're the elite. you are the elite. >> the president was out there, campaigning in ohio, getting people motivated to get out and vote. >> more americans are now employed than ever recorded before. oh, and we're going to get the wall passed, don't worry about that. >> you've got to love the fact that it's a saturday night, he could be in bedminister relaxing but he's in an 110-degree auditorium giving that kind of rousing speech. new bombshells about the fbi's relation with the author of the anti-trump, dirty dossier. >> the relationship between the comey fbi and christopher steele, really disturbing news. >> why are you here today? >> i wanted to see trump for my first time. >> what are you hoping to see? >> i want to see that he's the president of america. >> we will make america great again. ♪ there is like an entire, i don't know if it's a city fair we might have to call it, it's replicating a county or state fair out on our plaza this morning. >> does that mean we're getting old? >> we're getting old. we're feeling it. we have a fair on the plaza. we have a trump rally. we have goats that need a name. it's time to get up on sunday. >> we lost our shot. >> we have a lot going on and a lot of good food, cotton candy and popcorn. we were talking about our favorite fried foods. i forgot that one of the best thing that i've eaten that was fried, it was fried rattlesnake. it sounds kaye. >crazy but it wasactually very . >> tastes like chicken. >> it wasn't a maggot. it wasn't a scorpion. >> why can't we see good fried things, like snickers, cheese. >> you've had a fried snickers? >> it's a great thing at the minnesota state fair. >> twinkies as well. >> send us your favorite fair things to do, the rides, the food, being with family, it reminds you of summer and being with people you love. the president was loving life last night. he loves these rallies more than anything else on the job. >> it's the greatest political phenomenon of our time, are trump rallies and his ability to connect with the people that voted him in office. >> because they're not political speeches. it's a performance. it really is. there's comedy. there's critique. there's media critique. there's laughter. there's chants. it's like nothing else. you study history. i'm sure there have been similar phenomenons like this but nothing like this in my lifetime. the president was in ohio supporting troy bolder pson whos up on special election on tuesday. the president spoke for over an hour. we're going to bring you a minute and 32 minutes of it if you missed it. listen to the president. >> our economy is soaring. we're creating opportunity for everyone. more americans are now employed than ever recorded before in our nation's history. the new platform of the democrat party is to abolish i.c.e. and let's not worry about crime. we want our country to be a sanctuary for law-abiding americans, not criminal aliens. >> build that wall! billed thabuild thatwall. >> we're building the wall, don't worry. the laws are so bad, catch and release, visa lottery. let's pick somebody out. i wonder who that might be. oh, here he is. oh, he's convicted of five murders. oh, i see, we'll let him run through the country. they talk about the elite. do you ever see the elite? they're not elite. you're the elite. you are the elite. they're more elite than me? i have better everything than they have, including this. [ cheering and applause ] >> and i became president and they didn't, meaning you became president. even though it's 110 degrees in this crazy room, if you can take it, i can take it. [ cheering and applause ] >> so much for my brand-new beautiful suit. >> it was like over 100 degrees, no air conditioning in that arena. the moment where he talks about elites, though, that's one of the first times i've heard him change that topic and turn it to the audience, to say you're actually the elite. basically saying fine your voice is -- finally your voice is being heard. when we're at the diners, that's one of the biggest reasons they voted for him. they felt like someone was fighting for us, finally someone was pushing back and not letting our country be taken advantage of. in that moment last night i was thinking this is a brilliant strategy by the president. that's why he's successful at the polls. he reminds them of why he's the person fighting for them. >> not only he's the person fighting, but he's telling them in that statement that you are now in control in washington, d.c. where elites have lectured to you what you should do with your life, how you should lead your life. you're now in charge. you matter. he's reminding them at every stop that we're going to continue to do it. these midterms matter. he's there of course for that race, the race is very close, within 1 point, i believe 44-43. and this is a significant vote, perhaps a brilliant strategy at this time. we're just a few months away from the midterms. >> we'll see. he brought him on the stage last night. if you don't have the trump name on the ballot, will you get enough people motivated to get out an vote. that's the question a lot of people are wondering. >> that's what candidates, in this race, when bolderson got up there, he said if you want what president trump is doing, i'm a voice, i'm a vote for that, my opponent is a vote for nancy pelosi. this is do you support this president or do you want to impeach the president. it's a very stark choice in a lot of these places. i think this will be a bell weather too. >> if you want a bellweather of where the american people's minds are, on tuesday i was in tampa, talking to the supporters. a lot of the mainstream media criticizes them. listen to what some of the supporters said last night. here you go. >> he knows what america wants. he's here for the people. he's here for all of us, not just the richi rich y elit. >> immigration, are you in favor of the president threatening to shut down the government if he doesn't get the border wall. >> absolutely. >> this is the american dream, to be strong, to be prosperous and to improve on that each and every day and that's what president trump does. >> what you hear there is he is us, he is my voice, he speaks for me, he's got -- these folks, folks i served with, they're your neighbor, the folks you go to school with, regular folks with jobs who feel like they have been forgotten, illegals have been prioritized over citizens, the folks they send to washington forget about them. he hasn't forgotten about them. he's still coming out to rallies, still packing halls. >> oftentimes on the other side trump supporters are criticized, painted with a broad brush, that the basket of deplorables, right, if you voted for trump, you're not a smart person. they hear different critiques of them. it's a good reminder, i always say to people that ask me what i think about politics, i say do you know someone that voted for trump. sit down with them, get to know these people. they are your neighbors, they're people that are just like you. you may not agree with them politically, but it's so important for us to understand who they are and that's what he's doing. he's getting out there and speaking to these people. >> you know what we didn't hear from those supporters was a desire for medicare for all. you didn't hear them asking to abolish i.c.e. you didn't hear them using the word socialism which is what the democrats are offering on the other side. we've seep with alexandria cortez, we've seen bernie sanders. i don't know if you know who trevor noah is, late night comedian. >> he took over for that other guy. >> took over for the other guy, host of the daily show. trevor noah is basically saying that socialism, that's all in just republicans' minds. take a listen. >> many republicans will say they hate socialism but really they had labels. it's all in your minds. >> i am proud to be one of a small but growing number of candidates who identify as a democratic socialist. [ cheering and applause ] >> the establishment is terrified of that word. socialism. but if we learned one thing from the obama years, it's that republicans are going to call us socialists no matter what we do. so we might as well give them the real thing. >> it's all in your mind. these are not the droids you're looking for. nothing to see here. we almost elected a democratic socialist in 2016. bernie sanders had socialism in the label of what he stood for. now you've got the socialist from the bronx, tom terrac pereg she's the future of the party. you're going to have apologists in the media. they're saying don't use the label. >> it's all made up. i thought he interviewed ocasio-cortez. trevor noah had a one on one. he asked her about socialist policies. maybe we can pull some of that. >> here's the abcs of politics, define your opponent, define your strategy, define the opponent's strategy. what we're seeing today is we are just a few months from the midterms, we're seeing the prosperity of the administration's policies 4.1, gdp, it's the economy stupid and the whole thing, now on the left, socialism. you're seeing this resistance and trevor noah is opening up what's going to be a huge fight in the democrat house, whether we're socialists or not. >> the left used to be the party of the wor worker. the workers are seeing trump bring the manufacturer -- manufacturing jobs back. they're like why don't we go for what we were for in the beginning, socialism. >> trump won a lot of the rust belt states, the blue color jobs. today, there are many people in the country to mark a "d" when they go to vote but there's not a message that's attracting them right now. they have to figure out what direction they're going to go in. >> good point. >> we talked so much that now we're not allowed to do headlines. >> i'll bring you headlines coming up. >> more headlines with abby later. in the meantime, president trump taking aim at the democrats' so-called blue wave ahead of the midterms. >> if the democrats get in, they're going to raise your taxes. you're going to have crime all over the place. why would that be a blue wave. i think it could be a red wave. >> jason ch chaffetz joins us n. they're no longer selling fake news t-shirts, but hats are still selling like hot cakes and it's driving the media crazy. ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪ no matter who rides point, ♪ there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. ♪♪ and just like tyrone taylor, they know what it takes to help keep you protected. are you in good hands? 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>> it's an important thing. jim jordan is a long-time representative from ohio. he's wildly popular many he's popular because he has a simple message, let's as republicans do what we said we were going to do and he also wanted to hold people accountable, he wants there to be justice. it's a good, positive message. the people of ohio, he has so much support in ohio and across the country. i spoke the night before last in california. they were asking me about jim jordan. they were excited about him. >> it's a showdown over a shutdown, the president casting in with the true believers. >> look, the president is very loyal and to those that have supported the president, mark my words, the people that are wishy washy about donald trump and this next election, they are the ones that are going to lose their races. if they don't embrace the trump agenda, the republican agenda, which is a positive message that they ran on last year, if they don't run on that this year, they are going to pay the price in november, they will be the one that's lose. >> it happened in 2016. you're probably right, the same will happen in 2018. thanks for your time and congrats on the book. >> thanks, pete. he's rescued a cruise ship and even a train on the big screen. now russia is hoping steven segall rescues something else. i don't know what that is about. i look forward to learning. todd pyro is having breakfast with friends in ohio where they're still excited about the president's rally. there he is, taking orders it looks like. he's coming up next. >> do you think he's going to stay? ♪ ♪ ♪ back now with headlines starting with a fox news alert. venezuela's president is blaming far right groups for what he says was an assassination attempt. the government says that explosion was an attempted drone attack but some firefighters say it was a gas explosion. maduro blames the attack on venezuelans who live in florida. he wants president trump to step in. today, the fbi will question a man for the third time about missing college student molly tibbetts. wayne cheney says agents are welcome to search his property. he claims he doesn't know molly and he suspects, quote, some guy has her. molly disappeared more than two weeks ago in brooklyn, iowa. those are your headlines. >> never heard headlines read like that. no, abby reads them better every day. i was like i shouldn't say that. president trump rallying thousands of supporters in ohio last night. what did voters think? >> todd pyro is live at a diner in columbus with some good-looking pancakes. >> reporter: everything here is good-looking. we're going to dig into the politics of the day. the president was in this area yesterday, rallying for troy bolderson. we're going to begin with cliff. cliff, huge fan of troy bolderson. he says he's going to enact the president's agenda when he gets to congress. specifically with regard to the economy. why do you say that? >> because we need people that will vote for drum, -- trump, with him i should say. we don't control the senate or the house right now and so without votes, we've got to have it. that's why we voted for him. >> reporter: you run an rv company and a campground. what have you seen in your business while trump has been in the white house. >> our campground has been here since 1966, 53 years, more than a half a century, family owned and operated. prior to trump coming on-board, it was tough going. now rv sales have picked up. people are spending money. it's back to the good old days. >> reporter: you said you sold six rvs last week alone. is that normal? >> no, it's not normal. i'll probably do three or four this week. >> reporter: you say when it comes to immigration, you say you don't understand why anyone would want sanctuary cities or would want to abolish i.c.e. why do you say that? >> we've got crime coming across the borders, drugs coming across the borders. when you look at the sanctuary cities -- we're it's pretty decent. i don't understand why anybody would want that kind of thing. >> reporter: cliff, thank you very much for your time. let's go over to linda. linda is a business woman. she is voting for troy bolderson. for her, it's all about the economy. why? >> absolutely. i see kids in low positions, making more on minimum wage now. corporations are spreading money around for these kids. i see girls, men, young men, getting huge increases in their positions. and they aren't at top level positions. >> reporter: you say that's a great sign for us going forward. >> it's absolutely a great sign and the economy is so good, it's giving a chance for the young kids in the construction industry to get into the field. they don't go to collage. college. they aren't college material. but they now have an opportunity to get back into the trades again. >> reporter: do you think we are better off now under president trump than we were under president obama for eight years? >> [ laughter ] absolutely. >> reporter: linda, thank you very much for your time. now we're going to go to ken, ken, a marine, thank you for your service, thank you for all you've done for your country. when it comes to socialism, you get so upset when you see the rise of socialism near the u.s. why? >> we have a number of friends that come from previous socialist -- they're socialists now, have i'm greate i'm greate- imigratesd from other countries. they've said socialism does not work. it destroys individual incentive. eventually they end up like venezuela, absolute chaos? quickly, as a veteran, why was the repatriation of u.s. remains from the korean war so important? >> that hits the heart and soul of our country. yes, we need them back for closure. it's unthinkable that we have so many that have been missing for so long and thank you, president trump, for bringing them home. >> reporter: thank you all for your opinions on a beautiful sunday morning here in the columbus, ohio area. sending it back to new york city. >> todd, that's great. what a great point from that marine, thank him for his service from us. i don't have to tell you, pete and abby, the most powerful words you can hear is they're coming home. >> exactly. >> these are the stories you don't hear anyone else. >> a family owned business, he runs a campground, rvs, people are buying stuff. >> how often do you hear from a guy like that? >> nowhere else. >> that's why we do these diners. >> we'll have more of it. california's governor is usually trading insults with president trump. now he's asking for his help. we'll explain what we mean. we are having our own "fox & friends" fair out on the plaza this morning. we've got rides. we've got games. we've got classic fair food, everything is fried. that's up next. don't miss it. ♪ today's fluctuating interest rates can increase your anxiety when buying a new home. that's why quicken loans created our new, exclusive rateshield approval. first, we lock your interest rate for up to 90 days while you find your new home. then, if rates have gone up, your rate stays locked. but, if rates have gone down, your rate drops. either way, you win! it's the kind of thinking you'd expect from america's largest mortgage lender. if you're thinking about buying a home, call quicken loans or go to rocketmortgage.com today. 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. it is your your shot of the morning, we're off to the races, the lawnmower races, that is. >> lawnmower races. >> that's right. >> crowds clearing at the small track at the andover down home days in maine. they are competing for the chance to take home bragging rights. those are slightly modified, though. i feel like they've added power to those. >> it's awesome. >> it's the kind of thing you might see at a state fair. state and county fairs are happening all across the country. we don't have to travel. our own "fox & friends" fair is right here on the plaza this morning. >> here to tell us more, brooks grady and doug wahl. thanks for bringing the fair to us. >> our pleasure. it's our fourth year with you guys. we operate all over the east coast, from maine to florida. we work for corporations, colleges, schools, churches. we did 26 events at the white house. we deliver, set up and operate for colleges, schools, churches and military. >> you said you do this -- you did this at mar-a-lago. what is the president's favorite? >> the tea cups are brand-new here today, the first time. >> we are debuting it. >> you're debuting it. we have large inflatables, obstacle courses, we were in the ballroom at mar-a-lago. it was a fundraiser for children's diabetes that they put on. >> was there a favorite event? >> there were a lot of favorites. >> what do people love about these fairs? why do people want to set these up? >> for family events, for get-togethers with friends. >> can i get on a ride? >> yeah, sure. >.pick your ride. >> we actually delivered to your venue, so we're not a fair or traveling carnival. we're actually contracted to come out to you and deliver, set up and operate with our staff. >> tell us what we have here. we've got the tea cup ride. we have pete over here in this car. >> a little inflatable obstacle course, a fun park for children. >> good for all ages? >> yes, good for all ages. >> good for adults, teenagers, good for kids. >> 3 years old like mine who i hope are watching right now, got up early, and all the way up to college kids, adults. >> look at rick over there. he's going to be so dizzy after this. why the tea cups? >> it's a brand-new piece. we were putting it together literally two days ago and the manufacturer is here with us too. i don't see him right now. is he on the tea cup? >> we're waiting for the car to move. pete said his favorite ride is the pirate ship road, the one that goes back and -- pirate ship ride, the one that goes back and forth. >> how does that popcorn feel? >> it feels great. i didn't know it spun. i'm really regretting this now. >> the spinning part is a surprise. >> i thought it was going to go like this. >> we keep you on 24/7 in my office. >> thank you. >> if you're not out on rides or -- >> right. i don't do them like i used to. i let the young guys do it. we have about 120 employees. >> business is good right now? >> oh, yeah, we're having a great year. >> we'll have you here all morning long. thank you for bringing it to the plaza. turning now to some of the headlines that we're following this morning, on a very serious note, seven people are now dead in the raging california wildfires. the latest victim was a power company lineman killed by the carr fire north of sacramento. governor jerry brown is asking the president for a disaster declaration, it would give california money and resource as 17 large fires burn throughout the state. now to some more extreme weather, tornadoes touched down in new england as powerful storms move up the east coast. in mass you chew sets -- massachusetts, one woman is hurt and dozens of buildings are damaged from a twister with 110-mile-an-hour winds. another tornado toppled trees in connecticut. in pennsylvania, roads are washed out by heavy rain. several people had to be rescued. luckily, no one was hurt. and there's this, you do not expect to see this fake news t-shirt at the museum gift shot. it was pulled from store shelves following intense crits civi inm online. the museum is apologizing, saying they made a mistake. they will continue to carry some trump related merchandise, including the make america great again hats. russia turns to an american action star in hopes of strej strengthening humanitarian ties. russia wanting steven seagal as a special envoy to the u.s. they said it will help promote cultural, public and youth relations. seagal is a friend of vladimir putin and was granted russian citizenship in 2016. those are some of your headlines. back out here to the fair and, rick, it's beautiful this morning. i don't know how it is in the rest of the country. >> it is beautiful. get ready for a heat wave across parts of the east. we had all of the wet weather. now we have a heat wave that is about to come on in. take a look at the weather maps. we'll show you what's going to go on, starting off across areas of the northeast today, put the map in motion. you can see for the most part it's a lot drier than we were yesterday. a few scattered showers will move through parts of the ohio ovally -- ohio valley. there will be pop-up storms, nothing to wash your day out. northern plains, we had showers this morning moving across parts of minnesota. we'll have a new line of storms that builds later on this afternoon, cutting across parts of south dakota, no bras nebras, minnesota later on in the evening. in the west it's hot, dry and windy. big fire threat today north of l.a., as well as up across northern utah. send it over somewhere. i don't know where we're going from here. over to the tea cups. >> we're just tea-cupping it. coming up on the show, we have mike huckabee, anthony scaramucci and maria bartiromo. maybe we'll get one of them to ride the tea cups with us. we'll see. ♪ you're turning onto the street when you barely clip a passing car. minor accident - no big deal, right? 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- anncr: prevagen. healthier brain. better life. we've got a couple quick baseball headlines. mets fans struggling to cope with the team's dreadful season, an online company is offering free therapy sessions. fill out a form, describing your toughest moments as a mets fan. the nationals beat the mets in the worst loss in team history. a baseball player gets hit in the ribs. you wouldn't know it right away. watch. >> carlos gomez is hit by that pitch. >> ta carlos gomez took a couple steps before falling to the dirt. i bet he's okay, thankfully. >> he's like faking it. >> no way. >> i don't know, that is a fast pitch. president trump hitting democrats for opposing i.c.e. at his rally last night in ohio. take a listen. >> the new platform of the democrat party is to abolish i.c.e. and let's not worry about crime. every day the heros of i.c.e. are tracking down the violent criminals, drug dealers, child predators. >> and the democrats are continuing their attack on the agency, a gofundme page set up to pay for the legal fees of people protesting i.c.e. there's the page right there. >> this, a new stage production of the diary of ann frank compares the holocaust story to an illegal immigrant's study to elude i.c.e. agents in los angeles. >> is the anti-i.c.e. movement going too far. >> this is couch is just as great as it looks on tv. >> you didn't even join us outside for the rides. >> i got dizzy watching you guys go it's amazing to watch how far they've gone so quickly on immigration. to compare to i.c.e. agents to that. >> is -- >> -- nazis -- >> historically ignorant to say the least. the nazis killed 17 million people. what was their crime? being jewish and disabled. that was their crime. i.c.e. is deporting people for committing a crime, being here illegally and they're going after people that have committed more serious crimes and simply deporting them. the day that i.c.e. starts wantoning murdering random people, maybe i'll -- >> is this a winning message for democrats? some in the party feel like this is what they're going to take to the midterms and to 2020, this is what will drive team to come out to the l polls, abolishing i.c.e., we need less security at the border, is that a better message? >> i cannot recommend a better message for the democrats, it's a horrendous message. trump will talk about how the democrats want more crime. i don't understand why people can't see it from the perspective of hispanics in more hispanic communities. i.c.e., there's -- they're the good guys. you're a hispanic living in a hispanic community, ms-13 moves in, i.c.e. is here to protect you. they break up child sex tasking rings. this is what i.c.e. does. >> you're in the ground zero of the resistance, the resistance against trump administration but you are pushing back on joining the administration with the fight against sanctuary city laws. is it your sense that as goes california will go the rest of the country? >> we have strong leadership in southern california against what's going on because we're on the border. the rest of california, led by jerry brown and gavin newsome, they're out of control with sanctuary city stuff. hopefully we continue to push back and the american people are speaking loud and clear. this is a winning message from the president. this is the number one issue for voters, number one. we still have people in california talking about global warming which doesn't poll at all. >> in california, are you allowed to use a straw? >> we're not allowed. last time i was here, i brought a crazy straw. you have to bring your own. >> you have it in your pocket? >> everywhere i go. >> it's good to have you on the couch. >> awesome to be here. >> when you see this production in los angeles with the nazis being portrayed by i.c.e. agents, is that shock value or is this really how the people in california think? >> there's a great quote from t.s. elliott, talking about how liberals value cleverness over wisdom. there's no wisdom in this play. there's not even clevers in to it. it's a lazy -- cleverness to it. it's a lazy analogy to begin with. >> first time t.s. elliott has been quoted on our show. >> it's the power of the curvey couch. >> you can stay the rest of the show if you want. a new york times writer says he's heart-broken because he says there are kids at president trump's rallies. mike huckabee is here to react to that, next hour. eric swellwell threatening republicans over trump. >> we're going to have more years of this wrecking ball. it's time for us to push that big red button that will make it stop. >> anthony scaramucci here to react to that and much more, next hour. it looks like emily cooking dinner for ten. ♪ the beat goes on. it looks like jonathan on a date with his wife. ♪ la-di-la-di. entresto is a heart failure medicine that helps your heart... so you can keep on doing what you love. in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. it helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto for heart failure. yeah! entrust your heart to entresto. ♪ the beat goes on. testimontemplatefrom the craft . it uses post-its that are color coded. in my book, the mom makes a similar calendar. it's very important for small kids that can't understand the passage of time yet. this makes it fun and colorful. you can put it in the kitchen. >> where's the best place? we got a physical calendar and it's so true, there's something that's so different to have it in the kitchen. >> perfect place for it. >> that's a great idea. >> what do we have next? >> flex, we have a mow -- next, we have a mobile homework station. there's a caddie with plastic cups to hold the school supplies your child needs to do homework. they can carry it around and work wherever they need to in the home. >> versus running around and saying where's the glue sticks. >> exactly. if your house is like mine, your kids may be working together at the same tabl. table. you can make them a privacy screen, justin justing just -- d screen. your child with decorate it. it gives them a personal space to work and keep them focused. >> all right, backpacks. >> yes, backpacks. it's when the bus is waiting that your kid can't find the backpack. you can use a regular storage bin and turn it into a backpack bin. put a little name tag on the front that your child can decorate. >> it's like what they have in the classroom. >> this is a hack from the teachers, bring it home. you can put this by the front door. the backpack goes in the bin, there it is. >> what you put in the backpack is often school forms. >> school forms and books and things that go back in the backpack that you can put in there as well. >> the class pet. >> show and tell, permission slips. fundraisers. use the clear plastic folders, you can color code them, label them with your child's name and leave them on the kitchen counter. because they're clear, it keeps all of these action items top of mind so you can stay organized, go through it once or twice a week. >> finally, what do we have here? >> finally here, this is a clothing organizer. here we're going to hang this out to the side. and so on this we have painted the themes of the days of the week, just with simple craft paint. sunday night you put all the clothes for the week on the shelves. >> i love that. we'll have a whole back-to-school series this week. laurie, you started us off brilliantly. thank you for being with us. still ahead, police officers jumping into action to save a baby choking on a chicken nugget. those hero officers are going to reunite with that girl and her mom right here on our show, live, that is next hour. don't miss it. plus, mike huckabee, anthony scaramucci, maria bartiromo, the list goes on and on, coming up on a sunday morning. two big hours to go. ♪ le revving ♪ ♪ motorcycle revving ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪ no matter who rides point, ♪ there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. ♪♪ and just like tyrone taylor, they know what it takes to help keep you protected. are you in good hands? 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[cheers and applause] >> the president was out there campaigning in ohio getting people motivated to get out and vote. >> donald trump stands for optimism, excitement, success, and the democrats are for a scorched earth. i don't think middle america's buying it. >> new bombshells about the fbi's relationship with the controversial author of the anti-trump, the dirty dossier. >> they document the shady cash-based relationship between the comey fbi and christopher steele. it's really disturbing news. >> trevor noah is now, basically, saying socialism? well, that's all in just republicans' minds. >> many republicans will say they hate socialism, but really they hate labels. it's all in your mind. >> why are you here today? >> i wanted to see trump for my first time. >> what are you hoping to see? >> i want to see that he is the president of america. >> we will make america great again. ♪ ♪ abby: oh, yeah. that you will only see on "fox & friends." we brought our own carnival to "fox & friends" plaza, the first time we've ever done the teacup ride. pete: yeah. abby: how was it? pete: as you all know, you get older, and spinning, no bueno. griff: no. [laughter] those teacups are for real! it's fun for like a minute. abby: do you know how hard it was to read headlines with all that going on in the background? i don't recommend it. that's true, that is a perfect example of what this show does. we cover it all at the same time, and we have fun while we do it. pete: there is a reason why we do it. it's august which means there's state fairs and county fairs, and we asked you what do you eat at the fair. what are yours? abby: bratwurst and cream puffs. great one. griff: angie e-mails, turkey leg. pete: and this picture from katie of her favorite fair snack be, fried cookie dough. abby: ooh. pete: at the strawberry festival in plant city. abby: that is -- we were talking earlier about our favorite fried food. cookie dough, i haven't heard of that. we should get that on the show. keep sending us your thoughts, friends@foxnews.com. the first real fair i ever went to was with governor mike huckabee. we want to bring him in now -- pete: i think he remembers this. abby: i don't know if you remember this, but you were in charge of the governors' association, and it was the first time i met you and your family. i believe it was in arkansas, and you hosted a mini state fair, do you remember this? >> yes, i do, abby. [laughter] and i remember that your dad and i in iowa played with r exo speedwagon, because your dad is an amazing keyboard mare, and i'm a mediocre bass player. i remember, the best state food fair is pork chop on a stick at the iowa state fair. normally you go to these things and you just take a bite for the cameras and you kind of pass it on, and that's it, one bite. i took one bite of that, it was so good, and they started to take it away there me. i say touch me and i kill you. [laughter] it was that good. griff: it is really good. i can attest to that. the governor is telling the truth. and people line up just to get that iowa state fair pork chop. it is a serious thing. abby: and people also line up, governor, for these big rallies that we are seeing the president do. he is really getting the gear, getting us all in gear for the midterms. he was in tampa earlier, in pennsylvania, last night in ohio, and he really a takes the time, governor, to remind his base why they voted for him, why he is the person that is fighting for the things that they care most about, and that is this country. he also talked about predicting a red wave. he said we hear so much about a blue wave coming, and this is why i think we're going to see a red wave. here's a bit of what he said last night. oh, i guess we don't have that. but you were watching, we were all watching it, governor. what were the highlights for you? >> you know, i think what donald trump is doing -- and he's doing it so effectively -- is reminding people that if you want to give up your crumbs, your bonuses, your pay increases, if you want to go back to an economy that no longer is chugging along with 4.1% gdp growth and go back to an anemic, just struggling economy, vote for the democrats. if you want a government that moves us more towards socialism, more toward the idea of you working hard and giving it to somebody who didn't work as hard as you do, vote for the democrats. because that's what we're looking at. if you want a nation and a world that's not as safe, that hates cops, that wants to surrender and bow down to foreign leaders, vote for the democrats. and i don't know of anything that the president could do more effectively than what he's doiing and that's going out there. and it drives the media people nuts, it drives the elitists living in the bubbles of new york, hollywood and d.c. nuts. but it's rallying the people and reminding them why he won overwhelmingly in november of 2016. griff: and, governor, the president's out there rally aring for, also, troy balderson, do you feel like he's going to have an impact there? >> i i think he has an impact everywhere he puppets his endorsement -- he puts his endorsement because it calls attention. it doesn't mean it automatically causes people to vote for somebody, but maybe a person that just wasn't on the radar of a lot of voters, suddenly they say if donald trump is for this person, maybe i should be too. and we've seen the influence in key races. martha roby in alabama comes to mind, there are some other races where i think he's played a significant role in boosting the candidate and giving them the push over the finish line. pete: absolutely. well, one of the things the president spoke about last night was the fake news media, and part of the reason he talks about it is they fail to tell the whole story, or they tell one side of the story and pretend it's unbiased. one example of that is "the new york times," which the president calls the failing new york times. there was an op-ed that caught our eye, it talked about the children at trump rallies. it said what is it like to see young people exposed to so much anger? heartbreaking, says a times photographer. so these positing that these kids at the rally that go with their parents, they're being -- they're in a bad spot. you've had kids go to plenty of rallies. what does it do -- how does it affect kids? >> donald trump rallies are incredibly patriotic, they're uplift aring. have you ever been to an arkansas/lsu game? you want to see some tension, something you might want to keep your kids away from, that ought to do it. why don't we take our kids to something more calm like a maxine waters speech. that ought to be something that puts you in a soothing mood. i mean, good hens. "the new york times" -- good heavens, the new york time the is embarrassing itself. they just hired a cop-hating person to be on their editorial board, and they even have the audacity to defend it. for them to come out and try to say anything negative about the tone of donald trump is absolutely laughable. they are making a joke of themselves, and i didn't think they could do a better job of doing that than they already have done. abby: governor, the battle between the president and media, it seems to only get hotter and hotter. he slams them every time. he points back because he knows they're standing right there, and they can't respond, obviously, but he continues to call them the enemy of the people, disgusting, calls them out by name. do you think this is helpful in the long run, or is he making them the story? >> well, they should never be the story. i mean, personally, i would prefer that he spends more time ignoring them because i don't think they matter that much to the average american voter. and i think he's got to distinguish the fact that not all the press are the enemy of the people. a free, responsible press is the best thing we have in a democracy. of it's critical to our survival. but the other side of that coin, the press needs to act with some level of responsibility. and when you have showboaters like the guy on cnn who enjoys becoming the story, let me tell you something, whenever a journalist becomes part of the story, it's no longer a news story. now it is an editorial story. because the best journalists are the ones who simply dui you the -- give you the facts, and they really are not part of the story at all, their views, their opinions, their biases are subjugated to the facts themselves and let the reader or the viewer make the decision. that's not happening very much anywhere in journalism today. and that kind of journalism is the enemy of real freedom and liberty and for people to think for themselves. pete: yeah. and that's what he's pointing out. it's been a double standard for a long time, and i'm able to expose it to you. another hallmark of the left has been the use of identity politics and the use of race and gender and sexual orientation as the way of classifying someone. well, kamala harris, we all know is on the 2020 list, senator from california. she took that head on, and we want you to react. listen. >> that phrase, identity politics. that phrase is used to divide, and it is used to distract. it is used to try and shut us up. these issues that they're trying to diminish and demean are the very issues that will define our identity as americans. pete: so those issues are what define our identity as americans. >> in kamala harris' world, in the world of most of the leftist democrats, we have the clearest example of the difference between a conservative and a liberal, and here it is: conservatives believe that our basic form as a nation is built around individual liberty, that i'm personally free and i'm personally responsible for my freedom. liberals believe that my freedom is tied to whatever group i'm in, whether it's my gender, whether it's my race, whether it's my socioeconomic standard, and that i've got to stay in my group. if my whole group doesn't advance, i can't advance because it's about the group, not the individual. if you want to know the difference between the left and the right, there it is. do you believe in individual liberty, individual responsibility, or do you believe that we're part of group think. and if you think that it's all about the groups and you stay in your corral and don't leave until the whole herd of sheep go out, well, first of all, you're a liberal. secondly, i hope you like where your herd is, because you're not getting out. i'm grateful to live in a country that let me get out of some of the corrals that i was put in as a child, you know, in term the of poverty, in terms of never thinking i'd go 50 miles from my home. i grew up believing that in america you can do anything, be anything if you are willing to work hard, get an education and not go around calling yourself a victim. thank god i live in america, and i'll be grateful every day for the extraordinary privilege of being individually free. abby: that is very well said, governor. griff: thank you, governor, because now i'm hungry for that pork chop on a stick. abby: governor, i'm having flashbacks to the fair we went to with reo speedwagon. i was a back-up singer singing go, johnny go. do you remember that? i wish we had video to prove it. >> tom vilsack playing the spoons, governor of iowa and a great friend of ours. he was the host governor, so they got him up on the stage, and he didn't play an instrument, but he played the spoons. i felt bad for him because the des moines paper excoriated him for saying he had huckabee on bass, huntsman on keyboard and our governor playing the spoon spoons. abby: governor, great to have you on this morning. have a great sunday. >> great to be with you guys. abby: all right. a lot going on this morning. other headlines we're following starting with a fox news alert. president nicolas maduro is now blaming far-right groups for what he says was an assassination attempt. [speaking spanish] abby: the government saying that explosion was an a attempted drone attack the, but some firefighters say it was a gas explosion at a nearby apartment. seven people are now hurt. maduro blames the attack on venezuelans who live in florida. he wants president trump now to step in. and there's this, two children are among the dead after a small plane crashes into an open field. the oklahoma highway patrol says that the aircraft had a pilot and four passengers onboard when it went down shortly after takeoff. no one survived. local media reporting that the victims include three adults and two children. the cause of that crash, it is still under investigation. pete: that's sad. all right. well, the war against confederate monuments once again ramping up. this time a statue of robert e. lee. griff: and president trump praising the booming economy but warning it could be in trouble if democratic socialists have their way. stuart varney is a refugee of socialism. he's here to explain why capitalism will always win. [laughter] abby: come on in, institute. come on in, stuart. [burke] at farmers, we've seen almost everything ♪ ♪ >> our economy is soaring, and we're creating opportunity for everyone. if the democrats get in, they're going to raise your taxes, they will destroy so many things that we've given. pete: that was president trump last night in ohio touting the state of the economy but warning it could be in jeopardy if democrats have their way, especially with democratic socialist bernie sanders and the socialist from the bronx pushing their style of socialism on the left. our next guest is a refugee from socialism and is here to the explain why capitalism will always win. stuart varney is the host of "varney & company" on the fox business network. doesn't surprise me you would go all in for capitalism winning. >> well, look, it's winning now. pete: yeah. >> it's very hard to argue against 4% growth, 3.9% unemployment, 155 million people have a job. now, that's a remarkable performance in such a short time of this presidency. i think we're in at a crossroads. here we're on the left -- the on one side you've got trump's version of capitalism and the economy, which is growth. are we going to stay on the growth path, or are we going to the other side of the fence which is, essentially, socialism? social isism now dominates the democrat party. there are calls across the board within the democrats for free college, free community college -- pete: yep. >> -- government-run health care as in medicare for all, and which is really intriguing is guaranteed minimum income for everybody. you know, there's a technical word for -- pete: universal basic income. >> thanks very much, indeed. $1,000 a month or whatever it is to everybody, just here you go. that's the choice. it's a very stark choice. pete: it sounds so good, stuart. socialism sounds great especially if you don't understand the effects. why doesn't it work? >> i walked away from it. i left england in the 1970s. in the 1970s england had a socialist economy. would you believe that the government ran the coal industry, the steel industry, the railroads, car manufacturing, all the airlines, power supply. they just ran industry. government owned it and ran it and ran it into the ground. when i left, there were strikes, power outages, inflation, chaos economically. it was the result of socialism. so to me, be we're at a crossroads now which with trump's growth agenda and socialism, it's an absolute no-brainer. pete: so this is a pretty important time to educate, because our colleges and universities haven't done that well. they're not teaching free market economics the way they should, so young people, even average voters, they need to be reminded the power of capitalism. >> yes. but they're also being, their votes, i think, are being bought. if you're a youngster, it would sound very promising, wouldn't it, to be given a monthly income, to be given -- forget your student debt, we'll forget about that. pete: it's gone, yeah. >> to be given health care, to be supposedly given community college for free. that's buying votes. and it is attractive to some people. but the other side of the coin is the vigor and dynamism of american capitalism. scope, opportunity, dynamism, prosperity. pete: great jobs, the ability to earn more, do more, and the sky is actually the limit. >> there's nowhere else i could have gone to do what i've managed to do in america because we believe in individual liberty and freedom and capitalism. pete: and you do it well. stuart varney, thank you. hundreds of homeowners sent into foreclosure, but it may have been a mistake. we'll explain. plus, police officers jumping into action to save a baby choking on a chicken nugget. those hero officers reuniting with that girl -- there they are -- and her mom. right here on fox live. ♪ ♪ i'm a migraine sufferer and i'm an emt. when i get a migraine at work, it's debilitating. if i call out with a migraine, that's one less ambulance to serve a community. i just don't want to let these people down. excedrin migraine. relief that works as hard as you do. oscar mayer deli fresh ham has no added nitrates, nitrites or artificial preservatives. now deli fresh flavor is for everyone. like those who like... sweet. those who prefer heat. and those who just love meat. oscar mayer deli fresh. a fresh way to deli. ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. are you ready to take your then you need xfinity xfi.? a more powerful way to stay connected. it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. mix ♪ ♪ pete: welcome back. a couple of quick headlines. wells fargo forecloses 400 homes accidentally. the bank blames a software glitch that miscalculated customers' ability to modify mortgages. wells fargo promising to set aside $8 million to compensate affected customers. and toys for tots is left out in the cold by amtrak. the company will no longer provide trains to deliver gifts to children at christmas time. amtrak says the charity, run by u.s. marines, does not adhere to their new charter train guidelines. toys for tots says they'll find a way somehow to make the deliveries. griff: thanks, pete. well, it was a parent's worst nightmare at a florida mall. anna graham out to lunch with her daughter and kids when her 14-month-old baby started choking on a chicken nugget. abby: can you imagine? police officers jumping into action to help. the officers who anna now calls her angels performed the heimlich maneuver, saving that baby's life. griff: and they all join us now, anna graham with baby lucia, crying. glad to be up early. [laughter] she's doing fine, and palm beach gardens officers robert ayala and rafael guadalupe pay. thank you for being here. this is truly a mother's worst nightmare. anna, tell us what happened. >> so we were at the mall at a a kids' event, and we just went to have lunch, my kids' favorite is chick-fil-a. they had the grilled chicken. and i was cutting it up, and on the second bite i just noticed that her eyes got wide open, and she opened her mouth, but she wasn't coughing, and i just knew that something wasn't right. and so i unbuckled her, i take a look at her again, and she's still not coughing, so i took her out. all i could remember was my pediatrician teaching me what i was supposed to do. so i flipped her upside down and hit her as hard as i could on her back and, obviously, i panicked and i started calling for help. thankfully, the officers just came right away and took control of everything and saved her really. that's what they did. abby: first of all, lucia is absolutely adorableing but the three of you look like best friends now. to think you didn't know each other. maybe for the rest of her life she'll always have them in her life in some way. officer ayala, tell us your side of it. you weren't even supposed to be in the food court at this time, right? it was just -- it all happened. >> officer guadalupe came for lunch, i was there all day. you were tired a little bit, so i went and started talking to him while he was eating, making sure he didn't choke. [laughter] so, you know, it was just being at the right time at the right place, you know? i saw her, i saw anna get up, and when she turned around, i saw lucia in her arms. i knew she was choking, so i got up, told officer guadalupe, hey, i think she's choking. all the training kicked in. i didn't say nothing to anna, i just went and grabbed her and looked at her quick. one thing i knew, whatever was in her mouth was coming out. griff: wow. officer guadalupe, i think you have a new best friend there. tell us what that day was like for you. >> well, i just went to the mall to try to relax and have a little bit of lunch and sitting there with the officer eye ayal. he says to me, i think that a girl -- is that that girl choking? and as i'm turning around to look, he's already walking that way. i immediately follow him. i got on my news and looked down, and as soon as i saw lucia's face, i knew she was in some kind of distress. so my first thing was to get rescue already enroute to the mall just in case it got out of hand or it got worse. i just wanted more professional, more advanced medical help on the way. so immediately i got on the radio, and i asked for rescue at the food court at the mall. abby: anna, you call these men that you're sitting next to, you say that they are your angels. they saved your daughter's life. i mean, this is every mom's nightmare. i've got a daughter just will a little younger than her, and she's just starting to eat solids, and it gets through my mind every time she eats. i can't imagine the emotion you go through. tell us and these men what they mean to you. >> you know, i, i've always said that you meet people in this journey of parenthood, and you said it in the beginning, they're like family, like we're best friends. i really feel like they're going to be in our lives forever. they saved our daughter, and they're our angels truly. i mean, there's not enough words to say. thank you for what they did for us and our family. griff: well, anna, thank you for coming on. and officers ayala, guadalupe, thank you for your service, doing exactly what law enforcement should and do in this country. it's a remarkable story. i applaud you to the highest degree. >> thank you. >> thank you, sir. a. ann: lucia's got some great uncles, i feel, the rest of her life that will be protecting her and watching her. it's an incredible story, we're just so grateful she's doing well. thank you guys for being with us. >> thank you. >> thank you. griff: all right. abby: it's a great story. moving on to this one though, a giant herd of goats causing chaos in one neighborhood. the owners asked for help to name the newest member of that herd, and your e-mails are pouring in on this. we'll read them coming up. griff: i've already named it abby, but we'll see what we go. plus, when did voters think of president trump's rally last night? having breakfast with friends in ohio. hey, todd. >> reporter: hey, griff, hey, abby. no goats here, but we're going to have some amazing opinions coming up at the end of this race, including on the media from the one person at this table who used to be in the media. you don't want to miss what she used to do when "fox & friends" returns. ♪ keep it comin' love. if you keep on eating, we'll keep it comin'. all you can eat riblets and tenders at applebee's. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. >> reporter: i am here. hi there, pete. what's so interesting about columbus, ohio, right now is there are two main issues that even's talking about. one, obviously, the urban meyer situation there at the ohio state university. but, two, this special election between troy balderson and danny o'connor. it's the reason the president came here, so we're asking the voters about it. we're going to begin with emmett. thank you, sir, for your service. actually played in a military band which is really cool. you're voting for troy balderson because you say he supports the president's agenda specifically on immigration. you say we need a wall. why? >> well, because we have too many illegal immigrants. i'm not against people coming to this country. my ancestors, about three generations back, came from ireland. but we came, we tried to be a benefit to the country and fit in rather than make the country into what we left. so i think that we need to, you know, be in control of who comes into our country. of. >> reporter: you say the president's getting stabbed in the back by the media. why do you say that? >> because i can read and i watch tv news, and that's just the way it is. everything that he tries to do, it seems to me, they're twisting around and making it look like something that it's not. >> reporter: emmett, thank you for your time. really do the appreciate it. barbara, good to see you. barbara is voting for troy balderson, and she was a background actor including on "the west with wing." knows a little something about the presidency. you were in the media, but you say the media treats the president terribly. why do you say that? >> oh, they're so unfair. they don't give the poor man a chance. if this was obama, they would be all over him. but i am so glad at this point that our president is calling the media out. it's about time. >> reporter: okay. barbara, thank you very much. >> you're welcome. >> reporter: now we're going to go to steve, steve runs an hvac company, as the president said multiple times last night, it was really hot in that rally. you're voting for troy balderson because you say you need somebody that supports the president's economic agenda which you love. why do you love it? >> i love it because he's getting rid of a lot of goofy regulations that we don't need. >> reporter: okay. and you said the tax cuts have really helped you and the people that are involved with your business. what do you mean by that? >> the people that are involved with my business, my son working for me and the people that i buy equipment from and the customers that i deal with. the tax breaks have helped us all. >> reporter: would you say your bottom line is better now under the trump administration than it was during the obama administration? >> absolutely. there's no doubt. i've got the books to show it. >> reporter: all right. steve, thank you very much. going to send it on back to new york. next time you're watching "west wing" reruns, look for barbara. [laughter] pete: you have found some good ones. abby: one of my favorite shows of all time. thank you, todd. pete: we're going to check with him again later on next hour. abby: there's a lot going on, some of those headlines starting with a fox news alert and brand new video coming in showing the aftermath of a taliban attack on nato soldiers. a suicide bomber killed three service members from the czech republic, an american soldier and two afghan troops were also hurt. their conditions and identities are still unknown. the terrorist attacking the soldiers as they patrolled outside an american air base in afghanistan. and there's this, wild protests shut down the streets of portland. police in riot gear forced to fire tear gas and flash grenades into the crowd. [background sounds] abby: the chaos unfolding after antithat protesters interrupted a peaceful rally held by patriot prayer. >> and never -- [inaudible] >> go home, nazis! abby: that is the right-wing group, to be clear there. demonstrators seen throwing rocks and bottles at officers. at least four people were arrested. well, police are on the lookout for vandals who spray painted a confederate monument. the robert e. lee statue left covered in red paint. richmond is currently debating what to do with confederate monuments in that city. and dozens of goats, they break loose at a suburban iowa neighborhood, 118 of them eating everything in sight after walking off the job. they were eventually rounded up by their owners who rent the animals to help clear weeds. earlier on the show they explained how the goats got free. >> they were standing up on their back feet leaning up against a wood fence, and they knocked some boards off. you saw the hours of video, the goats having a heyday, a buffet in someone's yard. abby: and the owners also introduce canned us to just a week-old goat. pete: so we asked you for name suggestions. many of you suggested this one, foxy. of course. i like that. griff: l are es tweeted us: miss chief. pete: and marie writes: sugar, she is so sweet. abby: and john writes goaty mcgoat face. i'm not sure which one i like the best. take a poll. griff: there are goat names. friends as fox news -- friends@fox news. abby: what do you think, rick? rick: pedro. it is a girl goat. oh, it's a a girl goat. i missed that part. pete: i forgot that detail as well. all right, rick. rick: hey, there's a hurricane that is going to be going very close to hawaii this week. take a look at the maps, let me show you what's going on. it's hector, it's a category three hurricane. likely going to move just south of the big island but maybe tuesday into wednesday we'll watch for big swells there and some rain. i don't think we're looking at a direct hit, fortunately, from that. temps as you're waking up this morning, it is hot and humid across the eastern seaboard, and get ready, it's drying out a lott which is great news thiess for a few days -- at least for a few days. we'll have some scattered showers because of the heat and humidity, the rain rumoring across the tennessee valley by tuesday or so. overall, starting out clear, and we'll continue to see rain showers form across parts of the far northern plains, some of them severe later on into today. all right. hey, what's going on? what are you doing? she's just wandering in. [laughter] i'm sorry, you want to play this game. you're going to get in here. you need to play this game. [laughter] all right, guys. abby: reduction, you are just -- rick, you are just a natural with children. of. pete: she clearly loves you. griff: thanks, rick. abby: that poor girl's frightened for life. griff: congressman eric swalwell calling president trump a wrecking ball. >> we're going to have two more years of this wrecking ball, and it's time for all of us to put our hands together and push that big red button that will make it stop. pete: plus, you've seen him on "man v. food." casey webb is here to show us how to recreate your favorite fair food, just ahead. abby: doughnut burgers. pete: oh, my goodness. >> this is gonna be hot. ♪ ♪ ♪ motorcycle revving ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪ no matter who rides point, ♪ there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. ♪♪ and just like tyrone taylor, they know what it takes to help keep you protected. are you in good hands? ♪ ♪ pete: welcome back. well, a democratic congressman has a dire warning to republicans ahead of the november midterms. >> what is the president doing to the rule of law and to our democracy, and who is willing to stand up to him as he is a wrecking ball? and i think the republicans are going to pay a price this november. i hope many january when it's a democratic majority, they realize it's time to do the right thing, because we're going to have two more years of this wrecking ball, and it's time for all of us to put our hands together and just push that big red button that will make it stop. abby: here to react, anthony scaramucci. always good to see you, anthony. >> hey, good morning, guys. i actually think he is a wrecking ball, but i just think he's wrecking something that he doesn't fully understand, okay? he's knocking himself into the democratic party, and he's taking them out like they're little bowling pins. and and so the weird thing about what he's saying is he's not following the president's strategy. and if you just look at what he was doing last night as an example, the president is embracing working class people. and what the president would probably call non-elites, although he would say they're more elitish in terms of being special than the, quote-unquote, elites. i find this stuff interesting because it's a really bad strategy in terms of going after president trump and his long-term agenda. so i do agree with him, he's a wrecking ball, and he's wrecking the democratic party. and he's actually pushing the democratic party so far to the left, guys, that they're probably going to extinguish their chance to win what could be some winnable districts in 2018. it'll be very interesting to see what happens. pete: part of the premise of his statement which you hear democrats say all the time in the media, look, he's tearing down our democracy and the rule of law. what is he tearing down that's got them so spun out? >> well, i think it's his rhetoric. i think they don't like his aggressive rhetoric. i think they don't like his combative style when they're criticizing him, they don't like the fact that he's criticizing them back. it's his decorum. i think, you know, when you're with the president, what you recognize about him is that he looks at things that are not right whether they're overregulation or bad legislation are, and he has that builders' anxiety of, okay, i've got to get this back on track, back on schedule, i've got to get it under budget. and so, you know, he's a riled-up guy. but look at his life. look at all the things that he's been able to do in his life from being a television star, building developer, business executive, brand exemplar. and in 17 short months from his declaration of the presidency, he's now in the presidency. and he's working. he's 72 years old. he's on the campaign trail last night in 110-degree weather. and i don't know, i don't know that congressman that well, but i don't think he could hold that crowd for an hour in the spellbinding way that the president did. it'll be interesting to see what happens over the next four months. griff: exactly. last night the president said he predicts a red wave. what do you see? >> well, listen, it's definitely not a blue wave, you know? i want to try to be balanced. i've looked through the different districts. i think the republicans can actually still keep the house. but the president is correct, he's going to have to get out there. i think he's talking about campaigning five to seven times a week. that's an aggressive schedule for him given all the other things that he needs to do. but it's definitely not a blue wave, guys. could we keep the house? i'm a republican, i do believe that that's possible. if we keep the house, boy, that will be a monumental thing against history if you look at trends over 120 years of first-term presidents. and so he's defied the odds before. you can't really see a blue wave. now, what you have to always worry about and just trying to be balanced is voter participation on the republican side. the president said it last night, sometimes people get very complacent because they've won the presidency, and they don't turn out at the mid temples. and so -- midterms. so the republicans need to do a good job of energizing people beyond just the president's base. abby: well, those democrats will have that big red button ready for whatever happens. always good to have you with us. pete: thanks, anthony. >> great to be here, guys. happy sunday. pete: nba star lebron james making headlines for criticizing the president. >> what i've noticed over the last few months, that he's kind of used sport to kind of divide us. and that's something that i can't relate to because -- pete: and president trump is firing back. does the president have a point? we will debate it next hour. abby: plus, we've all seen him on "man v. food," now casey webb is here to show us how to recreate your favorite food from the fair. he would give you a run for your money. pete: he would demolish me. buffalo style chicken in a pouch-- bold choice, charlie! just tear, eat... mmmmm. and go! try all of my chicken creations! chicken! classics myself. so what we have in front of us, we have our grilled doughnut burger. this is with a tea glaze. we also have, this is our candied bacon-wrapped hot dog -- abby: hey, that's you on a stick. griff: that's so good. >> you're enjoying it, right? and this is my take on boardwalk fries with a twisted tea cheese. and lastly we have a caramel tea-infused popcorn. abby: so this is, like, the new trend, this glazed doughnut burger. >> totally. abby: how do you make it? >> quickly, you cook your burger to perfection, the way you want it, right? add your little tomato, lettuce, onion. put your doughnut on top, and then you add your glaze. griff: and, casey, we're watching your show, you would have to eat, like, all six of these in, like, 45 seconds. >> typically, that would be my job. this is for you. pete: oh, my goodness. abby: get a close-up. griff: i always just want to take a picture of this process. i'll put down my phone. >> well, this, this is twisted tea. this is a candy-glazed hot dog, by far my favorite. not so crazy hot dog. abby: oh, my gosh! griff: look at that. so, casey webb, thank you so much for being here. man v. food on the travel channel. he's crazy! stay with us. abby: the burgers are coming. griff: we've is still got david bossie, maria bartiromo, plus, neighbors calling cops on this girl for selling cookies. her story coming up. abby: who wants a hot dog? ♪ ♪ >> tech: at safelite autoglass, we really pride ourselves on making it easy for you to get your windshield fixed. with safelite, you can see exactly when we'll be there. saving you time for what you love most. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to it or neupogen (filgrastim). an incomplete dose could increase infection risk. 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. if you'd rather be home, ask your doctor about neulasta onpro. pay no more than $25 per dose with copay card. >> the talk about the elite, delete. did you ever see the elite? they are not. you are the elite. >> the president was out there campaigning in ohio. getting people motivated to get out and vote. >> donald trump stands for optimism, excitement, success. >> there was an op ed they talked about the children at trump rallies. this is what is it like to see young people exposed to so much anger? when we take our kids to something more, like a maxine waters speech? >> good heavens "the new york times" is embarrassing itself. >> more americans are now employed in ever recorded before. >> it is very hard to argue against four percent growth, 3.9 percent unemployment. it is a remarkable performance. >> residence in boise idaho waking up to a shocking scene, hundred and 18 goats swarming their suburban yards. >> they escape to a nine inch wide hole.♪ ♪ [music] ♪ >> there it is! ♪ it is the "fox & friends" ♪ county fair. ♪ >> it is not the swamp. ♪ >> it is midtown manhattan ♪ county fair. ♪ >> it is like a piece of ♪ middle america. ♪ because if you go to a fair, ♪ that is where you have the ♪ rides, you have family, it's ♪ good reminder of what ♪ everything is about. >> doughnut burgers, peacocks, what else could you want? it is a gorgeous sunday morning. >> i wish everyone could be here to enjoy this with us and eat the food, go on the rides. the connection bring this to your hometown or your yard. we will have more on that. >> fantasy world entertainment. we will talk about it where you are. or just set up your county fair. it's a lot of fun! we asked you earlier what was your favorite food i said cheese kurds. wisconsin does them better i don't know about that. >> fried scorpions. >> one person says their favorite thing is deep-fried pecan pie. >> anything deep-fried! >> and my favorite fair fruit is the corndog. >> have you seen the fry on the corndog it's like this thick! >> it is really good. and dance is my favorite fair food is deep-fried reese's peanut butter cups. >> is like a fried snickers. >> that is some good stuff!>> you can fry a milky way -- auto, skittles? >> you can fry up anything. people wait in line to go to these carnal goals and fairs because it's worth it but you also in line for these trump rallies. he has his third one earlier in tampa than he was in ohio getting support for the midterms. there is a special election in ohio. then on tuesday it will be an important election but he also uses the time as we know to talk about the issues he is passionate about. fighting for the people.he says i'm the one speaking for you. i'm fighting for the country, fighting for the economy. he is a bit of a recap of last night. >> our economy is soaring. and we are creating opportunities for everyone. more americans are now employed than ever recorded before in our nations history. the new platform of the democrat party is to abolish i.c.e. and let's not worry about crime. we want our country to be for law-abiding americans not criminal aliens. we are building the wall. we are building the wall, don't worry. they are so pathetic, catch and release. visa lottery. lottery. let's kick someone out let's see who that might be. oh, here he is! he is convicted of five murders. let's let him run to the country. what we are doing is crazy. they talk about the elite, the elite. do you ever see the elite? they are not the elite. you are the elite! you are the elite. they are more elite than me, i have better everything than they have. including this. [applause] and i became president and they didn't. meaning -- even though it is 110 degrees in this crazy room -- if you can take it, i can take it! so much my brand-new beautiful suit. >> we are feeling a little bit like that this morning to it is warm out here. >> we can't complain it was so much hotter in that arena everyone looks miserable. >> we don't have to speak for an hour or more with just off the top of your cuff. the point there though in that montage, i pointed out before, the line of the night. i would argue, is -- you are the elite.he did that in 2016. he put this swath of americans in the driver seat. he told them what they should do, how they should live their lives and he reminds them, you are the elite.just ahead of the midterm elections. >> he also says i became president, they didn't. which means you became president. i think that is the premise of all of the resistance he got. it was supposed to be hillary clinton, it was supposed to be a member of the club. even on the republican side. the 17 running it was supposed to one of those groomed in politics. the businessman crushes on the screen and people relate to him. and they have frustration. and he says that any tweets and he fights. they love that he fights and the energy will be needed in this midterm. >> 2020. he is already thinking well ahead. >> he is but if they lose the house there is an impeachment hearing the next two years at the very least. and he knows that. so we have to put his name on the ballot, you will see more of these rallies. >> you also see a lot of kids, the parents bring the young kids. they teach them about politics. i grew up in politics per the new york times has their own take on kids going to trump rallies for the headlines read the children at trump rallies. they say it has been a long journey covering the campaign and i remember being exhausted by the anger i experienced in the final weeks. i remember being heartbroken that children were exposed to this anger. they were learning for me and participating in it. that was from a photographer, i believe.a court that a photographer had been to a number of the trump rallies and what he saw from his perspective. >> i like what governor huckabee said. go to a major sporting event and see if you hear adults being a little bit to adult. in this case, you're taking the kids to go see the president. you get to be in the middle of history. you can stay home and say hey, in our house we might talk a little differently and do things different, that's fine is called parenting. but when you go to a rally in these elites that the president -- i can't understand that. >> we spoke to some of the kids at the rally last night. take a listen to this. >> why are you here today? >> i wanted to see trump for the first time. >> what are you hoping to see? >> i want to see that he is the best president of america. >> i have been supporting him since the 2016 election and i came to support and came out here. >> building the wall the stop illegal immigrants.he let us keep our guns and defend ourselves. even better. >> i've never seen a president before. >> cool! >> and i want to. >> that is another person -- >> i would adopt him. >> look, i think it is all about getting kids and experience. there are moments where insults are thrown and personal attacks. i think some people concerned about with kids hearing, there is a certain level you shouldn't go but you see it on every side. he seat on the republican side but you go to maxine waters rally and it can get pretty nasty and pretty ugly and dangerous. we had mike huckabee on earlier and he compared it to that. listen. >> donald trump rallies are patriotic and uplifting. let me ask you this. when we take our kiss is something more, like a maxine waters speech. that ought to really be something that puts you in a soothing mood. i mean good heavens, the new york times is embarrassing itself. for them to come out and try to say anything negative about the tone of donald trump is absolutely laughable. >> absolutely, great point, double standard always. >> i have a 12-year-old daughter i've gone a couple times to participate and they still want to know where the malaysian airline -- me what a better experience to go to because kids are talking about this they know who donald trump is. at some point you just want to feed your children one narrative or you want them to see -- >> respective children and giving experiences. it reminds me because we're transitioning to another story. it's like a bake sale, girl scout cookies. in this case there was a young girl, savannah waters just 10 years old. she was selling cookies in her neighborhood and as we all would, you would want to buy some cookies for a good cause and everyone wants a cookie. a neighbor called the cops on this 10-year-old girl because apparently, it was causing a bunch of traffic. this is how she responded. >> i just wish that we could have no first because we didn't know anything and it was just hard to believe that did not come talk to my mom first. >> didn't talk to her mom first. i don't know griff, we would talk about this earlier. >> these are homemade cookies, these are good cookies, right? >> right. pete, what do you think? >> is the kind of cookies i was stopped by. homemade, it is not store-bought. this morning were talk about where a 10-year-old girl -- >> apparently lost audio. this is what happens not only on live television but when you're outside. you lose the sound. we will get back to that. >> beat on the street is coming back. >> wasn't that far away. someone called the cops on us. [laughter] clearly! >> welcome back. >> i don't know if you can see this on t.v. i said as a neighbor would you call the cops? and they said no. maybe there is extenuating circumstances. but this thing about lemonade stands and cookie stands. people say is it clean, is a contaminated, could it be poison in it? we are your neighbors, we are selling cookies. >> we should have them on. >> something has to be going on. >> maybe theparents don't like each other or the traffic . i don't know. >> there is a lot going on.on a serious note the venezuelan president nicholas maduro is now blaming the far right groups for what he says was an assassination attempt. listen. >> the government said the explosion was an attempted drone attack here but some firefighters say was a gas explosion at a nearby apartment. seven people know her. nicholas maduro is blaming the attack onvenezuelans that live in florida he says . he wants president trump not to step in. stay tuned for that one. today the fbi will question one third time about missing college student molly tibbets. a story we are watching so closely. a hog farmer says agents are welcome to search his entire property. he says he does not know molly and suspects quote - some guy has her. last week he refused a polygraph test. molly disappeared more than two weeks ago after going for a run in brooklyn, iowa. and this morning president trump approving a major disaster declaration. wildfires tear through the state of california. the move will give the state money and resources to fight 17 large fires burning throughout the state. seven people have now been killed in the carr fire north of sentimental. the latest victim was a power company line man. we now know the fire was sparked by a car with a flat tire. three little girls are providing sweet relief to a firefighter injured in the line of duty. the girls are raising money with a lemonade stand near st. louis, missouri. captain burlingame was hurt last month. fumes from the truck exploded severely burning his face and hands. he is going to be okay. luckily the girls raised about $500 to help him. such a great story! >> love it. >> speaking of young kids helping people. >> dino country time lemonade has started a legal defense fund for lemonade stands? next, we have david bossie live with his reaction to the presence rally last night. >> and officers jump to save a choking baby. the emotional reunion is just ahead. you do not want to miss this.♪ ♪ [music] which most pills don't. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist. >> this is where president trump is at his best. out there on the road, talking directly to the american people, bypassing the fake news divisions across the country. and speaking directly to the american voter. this is part of the strategy. these rallies. they are part of this tragedy that got him victory in november 2016 and he knows it. his team is putting together a september and october, it will look a lot like 2016. >> the president's talk about a red wave coming instead of a blue wave. the president is successful in alabama, georgia and republican primaries but he hasn't really been tested in a republican versus democrat. you think it will be a red wave? >> i'm excited about the november election because this president is going to be able to run over the next 95 or so days on his accomplishments. on this tremendous list of promises made, promises kept. 4.1 percent gdp. something obama said was never going to be seen again. 3.9 percent unemployment. the lowest in 18 years. when economic indicator after the other than our economy is on fire. this president has a record to run on. the american people are better off today than they were in november 2016 and that is where we are going to be educating the american people. because the opposite will be true. increased taxes, open borders. the abolishment of i.c.e., if you can believe it. it is going to be an incredible agenda going the opposite direction if the democrats are able to take over the house. the american people need to know that this is not a joke. on election day, the difference between continuing with this forward agenda of america first or going back to the old ways that were of yesterday. >> all right we will be watching the special election on tuesday. troy balderson in ohio against o'connor. how much should be read into this? as a statement of the poles i think are within a point of each other. this is a district that has been red for decades now. if a republican loses, should the alarm bells be blaring across the country that republicans should be concerned about what could happen in the midterms? >> this is a very important race. we need to win. the present only won this congressional district by a two or three points in november of 2016. it is about this candidate. really, troy balderson. he needs to perform on election day. this is not just on the president's shoulders. it is on the people who chose balderson and the voters choosing balderston in the primary now need to get him across the finish line. >> we will see what happens. david bossie, thank you. >> he has been on the big screen now they're hoping that stephen stegall rescues something else. >> and lebron james making headlines for criticizing the president. >> what i noticed over the last few months, he is kind of used sports to kind of divide and that is something that i cannot relate to. >> donald trump firing back. does the president have a ♪ ♪ point? ♪ we will tell you coming up ♪ next. ♪ [music] ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪ no matter who rides point, ♪ there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. ♪♪ and just like tyrone taylor, they know what it takes to help keep you protected. are you in good hands? >> we're back with quick allegedly trying to help the turkish government his no one house arrest for last week the u.s. sanction to turkish officials. >> thank you. now lebron james making news this week for criticizing the president. take a listen. >> what i've noticed over the last few months, he has used sports to kind of divide us. and that is something i can't relate to because i know that sports, the first time i was ever around someone white. >> president trump firing back on twitter readiness. lebron james is just interviewed by the dumbest man on television. dom lemmon.he may lebron james look smart which is an easy to do. i like mike! referring to michael jordan. we have a fox news contributor, jessica, good morning good to have you with us. it heats up with the president and lebron james. listen to what the president says he says it is the players are dividing. and lebron james is the present peer. >> you know it is the players. colin kaepernick began before president trump was president. a lot of people had a problem with it. and i would make the argument that the nfl in the nba in particular, have become more like hollywood. a help for left in politics for quite some time. i remember tim tebow being relentlessly attacked by sportswriters for his views. some say it was cultish for follow him. in the nfl in particular only one viewpoint is welcome. >> look at the message and coming from the white house. just within 24 hours a tweet i just read from the president. but the melania trump, give out a statement supporting lebron james and the work he is doing in building schools. in areas in ohio. what is your reaction to this? >> i think it's a good step in the right direction. no one can deny the good work that lebron james is doing in ohio. he has done certainly more for underserved children the country than the president has. if you take the i promise school versus trump university i know where all of us on this panel would rather attend. melania trump, is too little too late. her husband, she went along with him and if you look at the contact of lebron james criticism he was polite and thoughtful. the president then calling him and don lemon dom it is part of a dangerous precedent of racist remarks the president has made beginning in the 1980s when he had housing project that had discriminatory policies against black americans.to the point about the athletes, i think the president is divisive when it calls them kneeling -- >> the best way to move forward is we all know here, to sit down and actually have a productive conversation.>> i think lebron james would be the one, i know he doesn't want to go sit in the white house. and i don't blame them for that. >> he was asked about that by don lemon if he would sit down with the president or it was brought up. here was his reaction. >> what would you say to the president if he was sitting right here? >> i would never sit across from him. >> he wouldn't talk to him? >> no. >> how does that move us forward and bring the country together if you say not even willing to sit down and have a conversation? >> it doesn't move us forward at all. what moves us forward is doing things like what jones did we set a course in the president and jared kushner, worked with the demonstration to push forward prison reform. talking in dialogue, move us forward. i want to quickly address because jessica talked about racism. this president is nothing of the sort. in fact mar-a-lago was the first club ever to open to african-americans. the president was praised by african-american pastors when they said this is the best present for black men and women in the country and he's right. there is historic low for black individuals, the president is being rewarded. lester hit a 15 percent approval rating in the african-american community. it has doubled 29 percent. the president is creating opportunities and should be praised for it. an opportunity for underserved communities across the nation. >> we will see how the black committee ends up voting. as i said before, a long history of racial discrimination. he still thinks central park -- nfl players, very fine people on both sides. >> would you go to the white house and spit across the table from president trump? >> i have not gotten an invitation. >> would you go if you invited? >> if he wanted to have a bipartisan conversation about what he is doing to divide as i would go to that. i also met a black athlete in this country like lebron james who has done so much to move us forward to advance underrepresented children and minorities. >> we will leave it right there. ladies. >> have a feeling the debate will continue. good to see you both! >> thank you. coming up, trevor noah telling this socialism is all in your mind. there are a lot of democrats who say they are socialist. maria bartiromo is here to react to that live next. looks like something out of a james bond movie. but it is actually very real. the wild chase that you cannot miss. that is just ahead on "sunday morning fox and friends. and do these moves look familiar? then you might have a condition called dry mouth. biotène is clinically proven to soothe and moisturize a dry mouth. plus, it freshens breath. biotène. immediate and long lasting dry mouth symptom relief. ♪ identifying as socialists? >> republicans are going to call us socialists no matter what we do. so we might as well give them the real thing! >> healthcare is a human right and not a privilege. >> my campaign on hard commitments of medicare for all, tuition free public college and ensuring a new deal for our future. >> interactive sentiment in-- here to react, "sunday morning futures" host, maria bartiromo. >> we are trying to relive last night. >> you got a shout out. >> yes i did! thank you. i think the rally is really poor for the president. he gets empowered by all of the crowds. he really gets energized. but if he does not communicate his record no one will. i mean we talk about obviously all the time on fox. but when you look at some of the compliment, weight is up 2.8 percent year over year. unemployment rate 3.9 percent, economic growth 4.1 percent. that is just economic things. let's not just forget the judge's he put on the federal bench as well as now, the supreme court as well as north korea coming to the table. there are 70 compliments he can actually tout. but it is getting muddy because of the constant drumbeat of michael cohen this and russia that and all of these things that mean nothing to the american people. >> you heard we played a minute ago that trevor noah, late-night comedian saint socialist is on the republicans minds, they're making it up. and yet it is coming from somewhere. it is coming from a number of folks are now being called leaders of the democratic party, the ideas they are putting forward. i don't know he described other than being socialist. >> no doubt right now we are debating that. you have to be honest it's what we are doing. and we're doing it all the time as a medicare for all, precollege, free this, free that. now is actually asking the question, how are we going to pay for all of this? we were to have a debt of $20 trillion. how do you pay for medicare for all and education for everybody and make a government bigger and bigger, giving individuals fewer and fewer rights? young people have to understand the difference between socialism and capitalism. it's a very important moment in our time. >> not to mention welfare in a country is not brought by socialism. it is a reminder to every generation, it is a free market. opportunity for all. if there is dignity in a job which is different than receiving a paycheck from the government. >> is absolutely right. the private sector is created some opportunities. i think it's important for similes academics saying, you know what? let's teach socialism and let's keep going on socialism. maybe they should try working for free. because no one has the money to pay for it. how about using that for socialism as well? >> okay. >> free work! >> who do you have coming up? >> a big show. why is it so many former intelligence directors still have security clearance? most americans do not understand we have a policy of keeping them with their security clearance and they are using it to enrich themselves by becoming regular commentators on cnn, etc. and trashing the present. i talkedand talking with manny this and i have a big show coming up. >> will be an interesting show. >> thank you so much. >> i want to bring you some other headlines. starting here, it looks like something right out of a james bond movie. watch this. [video] police getting to high-speed chase with four jet skis in london. the writers were racing among the river but unlike in the james bond movie the bad guys got away. police gave up the chase for safety reasons. and an american action star, the hopes of strengthening humanitarian ties. >> i have something in my pocket right now. >> steven seagal, the russian foreign minister says he will help promote cultural public and youth relations. he is a friend of vladimir putin and was granted russian citizenship back in 2016. that is interesting. i did not know that. wells fargo admits they foreclosed 400 homes accidentally. they blame a software glitch that miscalculated customers eligibility to modify mortgages. in total, around 625 people either got their loan denied or were not offered one even if they were qualified. wells fargo promises to satisfy $8 million to compensate customers. police officers jumping into action to save a baby choking on a chicken nugget. surveillance video shows in performing the heimlich maneuver at a florida mall. the baby, her mother and the heroic officers joined us on the show for an epic reunion. watch this. >> is like were best friends. i really like there will be in our lives forever. they saved our daughter and they are our angels. truly amazing. there's not enough words to say, thank you for what they did for us. >> an amazing story. as you see the baby is doing just fine and she was crawling all over the officers. they are already best friends and i'm sure they will be in her life forever. >> super cool! thank you for what all of our police officers do for us. rick, what are you up to over there? scolding kids again? >> is it hot and humid out here for you? take a look at this guy.this is cooper. cooper, you need a haircut! he is going slow right now. because this summer is not being good to you, cooper. not at all. beautiful though. let's take a look here. we are all going to need some ac. every city on the map here, everyone in the 90s. it is hot and humid, the moisture is gone but precipitation is gone but we will just deal with humidity. the same across the south because of the humidity and heat will see a pop-up thunderstorm or two. nothing to wash your day out across the southeast. not the case in the northern plains. big storms moved across minnesota this morning. we will see that we fire this afternoon. big storms move across nebraska, south dakota iowa. out across the west monsoon moisture is dying down a little bit. heat building back in and heat returns, in california for much of this upcoming week unfortunately. back to you. >> thank you. >> no matter what time of year when i see the map the san diego area is always between 75 and 85. all year round! >> there is a reason people go there. >> good winter. >> coming up! what do they think of presidents rally last night? we are having breakfast with friends in ohio and we will check in next. plus, we have been very very own "fox & friends" county fair on the plaza. just ahead, we will be facing off in the shoot and score game. you do not want to miss it!♪ ♪ [music] ♪ baby, baby, baby. all you can eat is back, baby. applebee's. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. canton ohio last night. including jerry kramer, who waited more than five decades to get the call. wide receiver terrell owens, he says he is upset about the hall of fame selection process. and want to know the key to living a long, healthy and happy life? >> miller 64 is my favorite beer. i like the taste of it. >> she is celebrating the 100th birthday. she says one of her lifelong secrets is having a beer every day at tpm. outstanding! miller sent her a supply of beer and miller themed gift. some took a great idea. 2:00. >> i love that advice! >> i wonder about -- in ohio. are you there? >> no beer yet. we're going to wait about 10 minutes before we do that. take a look behind me. this diner is packed! if you think it is packed and i should have seen it last night at the trump rally. about 10 or 15 minutes down the road from where we were. we got to speak with the voters about what is important to you. take a listen. >> was it like to have the president come here today? >> exciting! i could hardly sleep last night. i'm here to make america great again with trump. >> look at his record, lowest unemployment. >> why are you today? >> i wanted to see trump for the first time. >> i have been supporting since 2016 election. >> he knows what america wants easier for the people, he is here for all of us. >> this is the american dream, be strong, be prosperous and just improve on it. each and every day. that is what president trump does. >> watching him in and take off at the airport.>> we are going to talk to chris, he was not the rally but wanted to let his opinions be known. he is a small business owner and is ready for troy balderson on the special election on tuesday. he supports the presidents agenda. there are three things that get my friend chris here fired up. you say the president is really mistreated in the media.why do you say that? >> they never have anything positive to say about him. i mean, the last numbers i saw was about 95 percent of the mainstream media has something negative to say about him. they don't say anything about his accomplishments and what he's doing for this country. >> the other thing you're fired up about? immigration. you say, like the president, illegal immigration in this country is out of control. why do you say that? >> illegals are coming in, taking jobs that should go to people in this country. and they are bringing a lot of negative people with them. like the chain migration he talks about. bringing their whole families in. they are causing problems. crime is rampant because of them. we need to build the wall. >> okay. and finally, you see the younger generation really doesn't understand the evils of socialism. and you call out your own daughters, why? >> my youngest was a college, had good conservative values and she got fed lines from professors and teachers of the college and turned her mind around. it is stunning after four years as she comes out and has all of this convoluted thinking that it is just stunning. they don't understand. they have not been around long enough to know what's going on in this country. and how bad socialism really is. >> finally, economy. how are you doing economically under president trump? >> i am doing fine. i'm doing very well in a seed everywhere i go. i travel around columbus, i see it blooming. it is coming back. places opening up, small businesses like mine. all over the country, actually. there is a company on california supporting forgotten men and women in this country, cowgirls for trump. >> chris, thank you for your time. big thanks to all of the folks here. just outside of glamis ohio. we had a great morning. talking about a great morning in new york city. >> well done! great people there in ohio. >> very well said. >> still ahead, we are having our own "fox & friends" fair on the plaza. next we will face off in a game. is it griff and pete?♪ ♪ >> a thing is everybody.>> ♪ you won't want to miss it ♪ coming up. he brake with the gas, or if your lamp post jumped out of nowhere, or if you forgot your bike was on the roof rack, you only pay one deductible -instead of two- for a claim involving both your auto and home. and when you save that much, it's almost like it... never even happened. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. an allstate company. click or call. 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(wienermobile horn) [music] ♪ he is all types of rides. he manufactures teacups. >> how do people find out if they want to get you and do 650 games brought to their house, how do they do that? >> it looks pretty good, right? one of the things i want to point out is we have a mobile escape room. you know they are so popular everywhere. you can bring it right to your house. >> and there is competition at the fair. that's what the show is all about. >> right. >> the unique thing, most of our inspectors are licensed they go through training every year. we carry -- >> go ahead. >> this is what we do, we do competitions on our show. tell us how this game works. >> sure! the first one to connect four. don't take turns it is just to get it. >> i see. pete! >> i connected four! >> he didn't even know it was connect four. >> rigged! >> where can people go to get this? >> our website or they can call. just have an idea what you want and a budget in mind. >> look out! 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Transcripts For MSNBC The Last Word With Lawrence ODonnell 20240612

delay tactic. if hope at best they might get an evidencey hearing. how the boxes were organized this way. whether or not there is something of allegations of bias and improper storage. on on the merits, it doesn't absolve trump of the idea that he willfully retained the documents. he knew he had them in 2022. when he turned stuff over to the archives. he is talking with his lawyers they are telling him to turn it over. we keep finding stuff. it will not ultimately change anything. but it will quite possibly the way judge cannon handles things but it will drag things out a little more. >> we are at the first anniversary of the mar-a-lago case. anyone's guess whether we get to the second anniversary. bradley moss, thank you for your time tonight. >> have a good night. that is our show. now it is time for the last word with jonathan who is in for lawrence o'donnell. >> good evening. i would love to know if we are going to have a classified documents case but who knows. >> prepare a sheet cake with the number not on the cake and eat it or not. >> let's just eat it anyway. >> have a good show. today, a jury convicted hunter biden, the only surviving son of president joe biden, oh three federal gun felonies. after a little less than three hours of deliberations, 12 jurors many president biden's home state of delaware agreed with prosecutors that hunter biden lied on a mandatory gun purchase form by saying he was not illegally using or addicted to drugs at a time when he was. president joe biden responded with this statement. as i said last week, i'm the president. i am also a dad. jill and i love our son. and we are so proud of the man he is today. i will accept the outcome of this case and continue to respect 2 judicial process as hunter considers an appeal. joe and i will also be there for hunter and the rest of our family with our love and support. nothing will ever change that. he didn't attack the verdict. he didn't say it was rigged. no. all the wild and irresponsible reaction to the verdict today came from republicans. some of whom have embraced the conspiracy myth that the justice department charged and convicted hunter biden of these felony to misdirect from other crimes. bigly crimes. unnamed. unspecified. imagined biden crimes that are much bigger and badder than all the actual crimes donald trump is charged with. steven miller posted the hunter biden verdict was proof that doj is joe's election protection racket. the trump campaign called it a distraction from the real crimes. one right wing commenter thinks it was cover for the trump prosecution? >> you go after donald trump and hunter biden. >> okay. in republican's defense, you might go a little crazy, too, if you had to defend backing a known fraudster, sexual abuser and now 34-time convicted felon for president. in a new op ed, merrick garland denounced the republican attacks on the justice department. quote, they are baseless, personal, and dangerous. today the doj sent a let tore jim jordan to confirm there were no emails between any justice department officials and the office of manhattan district attorney alvin bragg. quote, the department has no control over the district attorney. the committee knows this. despite that, district attorney bragg has agreed to testify before the house on july 12th the day after donald trump's sentencing. a spokesperson for the manhattan da's office said it undermines the rule of law to spread dangerous misinformation following the full count felony conviction in people v trump. nonetheless, we respect our government institutions and plan to appear voluntarily before the subcommittee after sentencing. joining us now, neil, argued more than 50 cases before the supreme court. he is a professor at georgetown law, an msnbc legal analyst and host of the podcast court side. thank you so much for being here. so now, some republicans are pushing the hunter biden jury verdict as proof of a doj conspiracy. this is some kerry matheson red yarn over a cork board stuff. did you have that on your bingo card? >> it is almost impossible. the verdict today makes these conservative claims look ridiculous. for years these conservatives have been crowing about a politicized justice department. what happened today, the justice department convicted the president's own son. his only living son. imagine what that would take. the president gave you that job. you have the power as every attorney general does to end the prosecution. with the stroke of a pen. and you didn't do it. that's what the rule of law is all about. and, similarly, the constitution gives the president the power to pull the plug on any prosecution. that is part of article two. so biden, president biden could have absolutely ended this prosecution once and for all. he didn't do it. that's the test about someone who has convictions in the system. and when it is over, you didn't hear joe biden wining about a trump judge though the judge here is literally a trump judge appointed by trump. rather you heard the president saying he would accept the outcome of the case. i know no other word for that but presidential. >> he even went so far as to say he wouldn't pardon his son. we saw this with judge merchan and it is merrick garland's way too, trying to lower the temperature in the wake of these overthe top trump republican attacks. do you think he is responding proportionally to the trumpian all-out war on our justice system? >> i was really glad to see the attorney general's op ed today in the washington post saying look, what the department does is justify the rule of law and we do so fairly and impartially. that's the justice department that i saw jonathan when i worked there in two different administrations. and it is like why people respect this country so much. this morning i had the privilege of speaking at a naturalization ceremony for 150 new citizens from 54 countries and what do they respect about america? they respect exactly a verdict like this. even the president's own son could be convicted by the president's justice department and the president's prosecution arm because this president respects the constitution and respects the rule of law. unlike some of these republicans who spit on this every chance they can. >> what do you expect to see when mat hat tan da alvin bragg testifies? >> i expect to see a big nothing. all sorts of innuendo related to how joe biden helped orchestrate the felony conviction of his own son though it was overseen by a trump appointed special council. and adjudicated by a trump judge. i'm sure we will hear cray-cray like that. the justice department said today there was no communication between the prosecutor who is the centerpiece of these crazy conspiracy theories and the justice department. zero. none. so have the hearing by all means. that is part of congress' responsibilities. but it would be nice to have some facts in these hearings. >> be nice to have some. but i'm not expecting any. thank you for coming to the last word. >> thank you. so, here is how you know trump knows it could get much worse for him. he is a dumb son of a [bleep] >> convicted felon trump indicted for his unsuccessful attempt to overturn the 2020 election praised the january 6th rioters who attacked the capitol calling them warriors. >> those j6 warriors were warriors but they were victims of what happened. all they were doing is protesting a rigged election. that's what they were doing. >> while trump was ranting in las vegas sunday, president biden was returning from france after commemorating the 80th anniversary of d-day. the biden campaign has released this ad slamming former president trump for being a draft dodger. a good commander-in-chief is somebody who gives a [bleep]. i served in the united states marine corp. >> i'm ed mccabe. i served from the 1990s until 2014. >> i'm matthew mclaughlin. >> it is the first time i'm shaking the hands of a president of the united states. it was pretty impactful to me to see an individual that supports troops not just on the battlefield but when we return home. >> i see a man in joe biden who accepts accountability and responsibility and when i see his predecessor donald trump, i see a man who is only in this for himself. >> who criticizes veterans. who doesn't see it important for him to go to the funerals. >> donald trump has zero accountability in his life. >> he is a draft dodger. simple as that. >> yesterday, draft dodger donald trump sat for his first probation hearing as a convicted felon. a mandatory requirement before his sentencing july 11th. meanwhile, president biden held a white house event commemorating juneteenth. a federal holiday he established in 2021 to recognize the emancipation of enslaved african americans after the civil war. in his remarks, president biden reminded the audience why black history is still so important. >> let's be clear. they are all ghosts trying to take us back. taking away your freedoms, making it harder for black people to vote. closing doors of opportunity. attacking the values of diversity. equity and inclusion. banning books about black experiences. trying to erase and rewrite history. it is not just about the past. it's about our present and our future. it is whether that future is a future all of us, not just for some of us. folks, black history is american history. >> black history is american history. joining us now, former assistant democratic leader in the house of representatives, congressman james cleiburn. a cochair of the biden harris 2024 campaign. congressman, always great to see you. welcome back to the show. i was at the juneteenth event last night and president biden has touted the inflation reduction act. lowering drug prices. but listen to how roy wood jr. talked about that achievement. >> we have legislation for cheaper prescription drugs. insulin is down to $35 if you are a senior. i don't know if anybody here has paid for insulin before. but that is like the bottle service of prescription drugs so we appreciate that $35 right there. >> i love the relatable roy wood jr. used to break it down. it is funny, but telling a policy success story. does the campaign need to do more of that? >> well thank you very much for having me. absolutely. we have to get this out there. this administration has a record that is unequal even cannot be imagined. by a lot of people who thought about these things as we went into the last election. this administration with this rescue plan has brought young children out of poverty. with this infrastructure bill is put in $65 billion for internet when we had no money for infrastructure in the previous administration. the chipping science act. it is inflation reduction act. all of these things people said could not be done. joe biden did them. and i get a little irritated when i hear people telling me well, he isn't talking loud enough. he didn't show the kind of energy we want. we are about substance. substance. not style. that is what will move this country forward. that is what will leave for our children and grandchildren a country to be proud of. real substance. you can talk loud. you can misrepresent. you can prance around. but, the question is, what are you doing? i used to listen to my dad's sermons and one of the things i learned early, it is their deeds that get them. not their words. if you get caught up on the words, they will pay any attention to the deeds, you might believe in donald trump. but if you are all about deeds, you will be supporting this president. this administration. biden and harris. >> let's talk about, some more deeds. because today, the biden administration announced that medical debt can no longer be considered in credit scores. president biden has made debt elimination one of his pitches on the campaign. but new polling shows americans are split on student loan forgiveness. three in ten adults approve while four in ten disapprove. how concerned are you about those polling numbers we see on the screen right there? >> i think it is because people have misrepresented this whole thing about student loan debt elimination. joe biden, if you look at the program, he made it very clear. we are talking about eliminating this compounded interest. and all these things that have accumulated beyond what the original debt was. i have a constituent. not a black constituent. a constituent in north charleston who wrote a letter to the president with a copy to me. his original loan was $60,000. over the years he has paid back nearly $200,000 because of compounded interest. and paying for it for more than 20 years. and still owed money. so when he eliminated that debt, it was on the compounded interest. not the original loan. and people need to look at that. when i hear senator romney says that this was a bad deal, how can it be a bad deal? the principle is paid back a long, long, long time ago. these people are paying compounded interest that has been put out there by people who are making money when the original principle was paid back a long time ago. so that is what is going on here. so nobody is paying anybody's debt. they paid off the debt. the compound interest people are collecting and putting people in the poor house as we say down south. >> let me get you on one more thing. let's talk comments that entertainment 50-cent made on capitol hill last week. listen to this. >> i said i'm identifying with trump. >> why do you say that? >> because they got rico charges. >> congressman, your reaction, black men are moving to trump because they have rico charges? >> look. he should have been with me last saturday night at this south carolina naacp freedom fund dinner. 100% support for joe biden. not one single person in there, male or female, for donald trump. should have been with me at greater target memorial ame church on sunday morning. 100% for joe biden. not a single person there. for donald trump. i don't know where 50-cent is hanging out. but i hang out with the naacp. i hang out with the black community. back faith community, and i don't see any support for donald trump. these people are not worried about rico, they are worried about their children's student loan debt. they are worried about the cost of insulin when it comes to their health care. they are worried about affordable housing. they are worried about broad band deployment. that's what they are getting from this president and they are not thinking about whatever it is 50-cent is talking about in rico. it is down in georgia. that is what donald trump violated. and so, we are upset because he is being called to account for violateing the rico statute? come on 50-cent. that is worth a dollar to know better. >> congressman, always great to see you. thank you for comeing to the last word. >> thank you very much for having me. all right, 50 cents. coming up, we are 11 days into pride month and there is one person i know who isn't celebrating. justice samuel alito's wife has been caught on tape sharing her exasperation at seeing pride flags from her house. and that's not the only reason we should be worried about what's on those secret recordings. that's next. those secret recordings. that's next. i have moderate to severe crohn's disease. now, there's skyrizi. ♪ things are looking up, i've got symptom relief. ♪ ♪ control of my crohn's means everything to me. ♪ ♪ control is everything to me. ♪ feel significant symptom relief at 4 weeks with skyrizi, including less abdominal pain and fewer bowel movements. skyrizi is the first il-23 inhibitor that can deliver remission and visibly improve damage of the intestinal lining. and the majority of people experienced long-lasting remission at one year. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to. liver problems may occur in crohn's disease. ♪ now's the time to ask your gastroenterologist how you can take control of your crohn's with skyrizi. ♪ ♪ control is everything to me. ♪ ♪ learn how abbvie could help you save. i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein! those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. -ugh. -here, i'll take that. woo hoo! ensure max protein, 30 grams protein, 1 gram sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals. and a new fiber blend with a prebiotic. (♪♪) it's never a good time for migraine, especially when i'm on camera. that's why my go-to is nurtec odt. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. it's the only migraine medication that helps treat & prevent, all in one. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. people depend on me. without a migraine, i can be there for them. talk to your doctor about nurtec odt today. my wife is fond of flying flags. that is what supreme court justice samuel alito said when he blamed his wife for flying two different flags at their home associated with the stop the steal movement and carried by rioters at the january 6th insurrection. new secret recordings of his wife martha anne alito are revealing more about what motivates her to fly flags. >> you know what i want? i want is a sacred heart of jesus flag because i have to look across the lagoon at the pride flag for the next month. and he is like oh, please don't put up a flag. i won't do it because i'm deferring to you, but when you are free of this nonsense, i'm putting it up and i'm going to send them a message every day. maybe every week. i made a flag in my head. this is how i satisfy myself. i made a flag, it is white. and it is yellow and orange flames around it and in the middle is the world vergogna. vergogna in italian means shame. >> that is the wife of a supreme court justice being openly hostile to a complete stranger about the pride flag. a symbol of freedom and equality for the lgbtq plus community during pride month. people. like me, being proud of who they are makes her mad. it makes her want to send them a message. it makes her want to fly a flag that says shame. this is not a woman who is unclear about the message of the flags that she is flying. and for what it's worth, i don't think anyone would care if they looked across the potomac and saw a jesus flag flying. there are lots of martha annes in america who also harbor this kind of grievance. but this is martha anne alito. she is not just any random person. she is married to a supreme court justice for life. one of the most powerful people in the country who is actively rolling back americans' constitutional rights. justice alito authored the majority opinion revoking nearly 50 years of rights for women when the court overturned roe v. wade. and that laid the foundation for another right wing justice with a right wing wife. clarence thomas, to target the lgbtq plus community by saying the supreme court should reconsider two cases that affirm the rights of same sex couples including same sex marriage. martha anne alito longs for the day when 74-year-old justice alito is quote free of all this nonsense. she is thinking about who will replace him on the court. are you? joining me now, kelly robinson, president of the human rights campaign. your reaction to what we heard. >> shocking but not shocking in the same sense. what she is saying about flags, it is not about flags. it's a dog whistle to maga bullies across the board. what she wants to do is use the flag as a symbol to talk about how they want to push us back into the closet. when i talk about what it represents, tomorrow represents eight years since the pulse mass shooting where 49 members of our community's lives were stolen forever. this kind of violent action and political rhetoric leads to real world outcomes so anyone that is listening to her, anyone that is watching what she says, should be very, very concerned. not only about her words but what it means in terms of the actions of people that are listening to her. >> uh-huh. this audio, new audio from justice alito tonight. listen. justice alito tonight. listen. >> kelly, does this sound ominous given the two abortion cases and january 6th cases to be decided? >> to me it sounds hypocrital. i remember when barack obama wore a tan suit and people acted like it was the end of democracy. and now, we are talking about a whole supreme court justice whose wife is saying things like this who is espousing these belief that's are concerning for someone on the highest court of the land. so i do think that anyone that is listening to the words that are coming out of justice alito's mouth, you should be concerned. but i also know if you are a person of color, if you are an lgbtq plus person, a woman, someone who is nonbinary, we don't have the luxury of putting our fear into a state of analysis. it is more critical than ever that we get out and we vote this november. our lives are quite literally at stake. >> uh-huh. trump is out there giving comfort to anti-abortion groups promising to defend life. these also sound like rights this ideological supreme court has no interest in protecting. >> they don't. they have said the quiet part out loud already. we have to remember that when roe v. wade was overturned and justice thomas' concurrence, he said out loud, the next the court should revisit lawrence. they should revisit griswold. they asserted our basic rights as lgbtq plus people in this country and our right to contraception so any time they say that these things are not on the table, look at what they are doing. we should be very concerned about what we are seeing and take it as a call to action. at the end of the day, we still live in a democracy. our votes still count. and there is something that we can do right now about how this court has gotten so far disconnected from its actual mission in our democracy. >> as i mentioned before, i was at the juneteenth event where i met your beautiful wife last night. but that's not the point why i'm bringing that up. i want to play something that vice president harris said last night. watch. >> across our nation, we witnessed a full-on attack on hard fought hard won freedoms and rights. including the freedom of a woman to make decisions about her own body, the freedom to be who you are and love who you love openly and with pride. the freedom from fear of bigotry and hate. the freedom to learn and acknowledge our nation's true and full history. and the freedom that unlocks all others, the freedom the vote. >> how important is it to stress to voters that the supreme court is on the ballot in november. what is at stake is more samuel alitos or more ketanji brown jackson. >> exactly. what i saw from kamala harris, that is leadership. at the end of the day when we think about this election coming up, it is not just about two candidates, it is two fundamentally different visions for our country. when you talk to people, a lot of our fears are the same. worried your kids will have a better life than you do. concerns about inflation. making sure schools are good and welcoming and safe. but i want to make sure that whoever we elect that their solutions are about moving us forward and not pulling us back. what the supreme court has shown that they are willing to do from the overturn of roe v. wade to all they have said and done in the last year, they are willing to roll back the rights not only of the last ten years or last 40 years but the last 100. we have got to do something about it for the sake of all of our communities and especially for the sake of our kids. >> kelly robinson, thank you very much for comeing to the last word. >> thank you. coming up, it's election night in nevada. a must win state for joe biden and kamala harris and a muster win seat for democrat ifs they hope to hold onto the senate. nevada senator jack see rosen joins us next. rosen joins us next. clogged gutters can cause big problems fast. until now. call 833-leaffilter today for your free gutter inspection. i've had terrible flooding problems on my porch. now i understand why. right now leaffilter is offering a free inspection, on your schedule. leaffilter is a permanent gutter solution, so you never have to worry about costly damage from clogged gutters again. call us today and schedule your free inspection. to schedule your free inspection, call 833.leaf.filter today or visit leaffilter.com. -cologuard®? 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>> i can tell you latino voters in nevada, they are the decisive vote. and my team in nevada, so many of them born and raised in nevada, i myself lived here the last 50 years just about. we are in the community all the time. we are listening and we are responding. i sit on the small business and entrepreneurship committee. we talk about all the latino small businesses. so many entrepreneurs. we want to be sure they have all the tools that they need to keep and start their small business and thrive. it is really important. and we talk about education. and our environment. we are connecting with our latino voters. the same issues that matter to everybody else. >> senator rosen, the late long time nevada senator harry reid built a famous statewide democratic organization in nevada. is the reid machine still in effect in nevada? >> what that means around nevada state. we work together to make sure we do our field program. we are talking about the issues. we coordinate. being sure we are communicating. working together. nevada families, they really matter. listening to them and delivering for them really matters. we will have the new va hospital. they are searching for their 50- acre site now. it will be a game changer fir the veterans in northern nevada. whether it is seniors, veterans, students, or a tourism economy. we are listening and delivering. >> senator jackie rosen of nevada. thank you very much for coming to the last word. >> thank you for having me. coming up, biden is beating trump in a new election forecast and one of the big reasons is biden's strength in the key swing state of wisconsin and particularly, with a group of voters who make up the bulk of the trump base. that's next. the trump base. that's next. yself i was ok with my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis symptoms. with my psoriatic arthritis symptoms. but just ok isn't ok. and i was done settling. if you still have symptoms after a tnf blocker like humira or enbrel, rinvoq is different and may help. rinvoq is a once-daily pill that can rapidly relieve joint pain, stiffness, and swelling in ra and psa. relieve fatigue... and stop further joint damage. and in psa, can leave skin clear or almost clear. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin; heart attack, stroke, and gi tears occurred. people 50 and older with a heart disease risk factor have an increased risk of death. serious allergic reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. done settling? 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>> the issues they care about our kitchen table issues that a lot of us talk about. affordable healthcare. women's reproductive rights, voting rights, saving our democracy, good education and childcare. basically kitchen table issues. >> what do you say back to them? >> we talked about some of the issues that president biden and harris put forward. the jobs that have been created. money that has come into green county for various rings such as our ymca and county seats in the city of monroe. basic issues like that. we try to point out to people what is being done. >> on the flipside on the ground, what do you hear from voters about trump if anything? >> that they really do not want him back in office. >> it is as simple as that. been, how voters get their information has changed, much more now on social media then with traditional advertising. how has that changed voter outreach? >> the first thing we have to assume is there is no silver bullet. you may get something on the local news that reaches some voters. some are reading the weekly newspaper that comes in. maybe they pick it up at the grocery store. we have to be everywhere. social media platforms, foreign science, door to door organizing, phone calls and text messages. show up at parades and county fairs, we build a surroundsound environment. we assume just because you said something somewhere does not mean anybody heard it. you have to say it everywhere and over and over. that is what it takes. trump is trying to confuse people. we need to bring people's focus back to what affects them directly. their freedom to make decisions about their own body and living in a democracy. who is fighting for them. trump promising wealthy donors whatever they want. that contrast does resonate for people but you have to go to where the voters are. >> sandy you have been nodding in agreement. my last question is, if biden were to come to green county and ask your advice on what he should say to voters, what would you tell him? >> that is a good question. i would guess to just be honest with them on what he plans to do for the voters, listening to them and what their issues are is the most important. being able to address those. if biden could come to green county, they would be ecstatic. >> we have 90 seconds left, same question been, what would you say team biden needs to work on or watch out for? >> we love biden coming to the state because he does listen to people. when they hear from him they moved toward him and when they hear from trump they move away. we have 97-99 assembly district covered. anybody that wants to help us organize you can volunteer at the website. biden really digs into what he is delivering. he announced a $3 billion investment by microsoft in a community where trump showed up and promised the sun, moon and stars and never did anything. that contrast really lance. for people that wonder what jobs they will have in 10 years, when biden shows up and does something it clicks. we want him to keep coming and we think we can draw a contrast with trump who talks big and delivers nothing and uses power to exact revenge instead of serving the people. >> i think it is guaranteed that biden and harris will be back in wisconsin multiple times before election day. thank you both very much for coming to the last word. we will be right back. ht back. that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer. ♪♪ ♪♪ citi's industry leading global payments solutions help their clients move money around the world seamlessly in over 180 countries... and help a partner like the world food programme as they provide more than food to people in need. together, citi and the world food programme empower families across the globe. ♪♪ ♪ i wanna hold you forever ♪ hey little bear bear. ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm gonna love you forever ♪ ♪ ♪ c'mon, bear. ♪ ♪ ♪ you don't...you don't have to worry... ♪ ♪ be by your side... i'll be there... ♪ ♪ with my arms wrapped around... ♪ craig here pays too much for verizon wireless. so he sublet half his real estate office... [ bird squawks loudly ] to a pet shop. meg's moving company uses t-mobile. so she scaled down her fleet to save money. and don's paying so much for at&t, he's been waiting to update his equipment! there's a smarter way to save. comcast business mobile. you could save up to 70% on your wireless bill. so you don't have to compromise. powering smarter savings. powering possibilities. that is tonight's last ward, the 11th hour starts now. tonight, hunter biden is guilty in the federal gun case. what is next for the president's son as he awaits sentencing?

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Transcripts For MSNBC The Last Word With Lawrence ODonnell 20240612

destruction of evidence, and it doesn't absolve trump of the idea that he willfully retained the documents. he knew he had them in 2022, when he turned stuff over to the archives. they told him, hey, there's classified documents in this stuff. they knew he had them over the course of the next year, talking to his lawyers telling him, turn them over. and the fbi kept funding stuff in what you are turning over. it will ultimately not change anything, but quite possibly with the way judge cannon handles things, it could drag it out just a little bit more. >> just a little bit more. we are now at the first anniversary of the mar-a-lago case, the grand jury and bob dikeman came down on june 8th, 2023. anyone's guess if we get to the second anniversary. bradley moss, thank you, sir, for your time tonight. >> have a good night. >> that is our show for this evening. now, it is time for "the last word", with jonathan k part. lawrence o'donnell come in for jonathan. >> i would love to see if we get the classified documents case, but who knows? >> she take, with the number not on the cake, and eat it depending or not, if it happens. >> if it is sheet cake, let's just eat it, anyway. >> have a good show. >> thank you. today, a jury convicted hunter biden, the only surviving son of president joe biden, of three federal gun felonies. after a little less than three hours of deliberations, 12 jurors in president biden's home state of delaware agreed with prosecutors that hunter biden lied on a mandatory gun purchase form by saying he was not illegally using or addicted to drugs at a time when he was. president joe biden responded with this statement. "as i said last week, i am the president, but i am also a dad. jill and i love our son, and we are so proud of the man he is today. i will accept the outcome of this case and will continue to respect the judicial process as hunter considers an appeal. jill and i will always be there for hunter, and the rest of our family with our love and support. nothing will ever change that." she didn't attack the verdict. he didn't say it was rigged. he didn't attack the judge, the prosecutors, or the jury. no, all the while, an irresponsible reaction to the hunter biden verdict today came from republicans. some of whom have embraced the conspiracy myth that the justice department charged and convicted hunter biden of these felonies to misdirect from other crimes, big-league crimes, unnamed, unspecified, imagined, biden crimes that are much bigger and better than all of the actual crimes donald trump is charged with. x trump adviser, steve miller, posted, "the hunter biden verdict is proof that doj is the democrat protection racket." he called the verdict a distraction from the "real crimes." one right-wing commentator things hunter biden was prosecuted as cover for the trump prosecution? >> i don't know if this is fair, you go after donald trump and you go after hunter biden. >> okay, in republicans' defense, you might go a little crazy, too, if you had to defend backing a known fraudster, sexual abuser, and now 34 times convicted felon for president. in a new op-ed, attorney general merrick garland denounced the attacks on the the justice department. "they are baseless, personal, and dangerous." today, the doj sent a letter to jim jordan to confirm that there were no emails between any justice department officials and the office of manhattan district attorney, alvin bragg." the department has no control over the district attorney, just as the district attorney has no control over the department." the committee knows this. despite that, district attorney bragg has agreed to testify before the house on july 12th, the day after donald trump's sentencing. a spokesperson for the manhattan d.a.s office said, "it undermines the rule of law to spread dangerous misinformation, baseless claims, and conspiracy theories following the jury's return of a full count felony conviction in people be trump. nonetheless, we respect our government institutions and plan to appear voluntarily before the subcommittee after sentencing." joining us now, former acting solicitor general of the united states, who has argued more than 50 cases before the supreme court. he is a professor at georgetown law and msnbc legal analyst and host of the podcast "courtside with neil cocktail." neil, thank you much as always for being here. so, now, some republicans are pushing the hunter biden jury verdict as proof of a doj conspiracy. this is some carrie matheson red yarn over a corkboard stuff. eight you have that on your bingo card? >> it is almost impossible. i mean, jonathan, the verdict today makes these conservative claims look ridiculous. i'm -- i mean, for years, these conservatives have been pulling about a politicized justice department and so on. what happened today, this justice department convicted the president's own son, his only living son. i mean, imagine what that would take. imagine you are the attorney general and the president gave you that job, jonathan, one of the most important jobs in the country, in the world, and you have the power -- as every attorney general does, as merrick garland does, to end the prosecution with the stroke of a pen -- and you didn't do it. garland didn't do it. that is what the rule of law is all about, and similarly, the constitution gives the power to the president to pull the plug on any in the constitution, that is article two. so, president biden could have absolutely ended this prosecution once and for all. he didn't do it. that is the test about someone who has convictions in the system. and when it is over, you didn't hear joe biden whining about a trump judge even though the judge here is literally a trump judge appointed by trump, rather you heard the president say, he would accept the outcome of the case. i know no other word for that, but "presidential." >> even went so far as to say he wouldn't pardon his son, that is how much respect he has for the system. so, neal, we saw this with judge merchan, and it seems to be merrick garland's way, too, trying to lower the temperature in the wake of these over the top trump republican attacks. do you think he is responding proportionately to the trump be an all out war on our justice system? >> i was really glad to see the attorney general's op-ed today in the washington post basically saying, look, what the department does is just apply the rule of law, we do so fairly and impartially. that is the justice department that i saw, jonathan, when i worked there in two different administrations. it is why people respect this country so much. this morning, i had the privilege of speaking at a naturalization ceremony for 150 new citizens from 54 countries, and what did they respect about america? they respect exactly a verdict like this, that even the president's own son can be convicted by the president's justice department and the president's prosecution arm, because this president, as almost every president in our history does, respects the constitution and respects the rule of law, unlike some of these republicans, like stephen miller, who spit on this every chance they can. >> what do you expect to see when manhattan d.a. alvin bragg testifies before jim jordan subcommittee? do you think you made the right decision? >> i expect to see a big nothing. i expect to see all sorts of innuendo, akin to the kind of innuendo we are hearing today about how joe biden helped orchestrate the felony conviction of his own son even though it was overseen by trump appointed national council and adjudicated by trump judge -- i am sure we will hear craig cray like that, but there will be no fax, because as the justice department even said today, literally, there was no communication between the prosecutor, matthew, angelo, the centerpiece of these crazy conspiracy theories, and the justice department, zero, none. so, have the hearing. by all means, of course, that is part of congress' responsibilities and oversight. , it would be nice to have some facts in those hearings. >> yeah, it would be nice to have some. i am not expecting any, though. neal, neal katyal, thank you very much for coming to "the last word". >> thank you. so, here's how you know can pick the -- convicted felon, trump, knows it can get much, much, much worse for him. >> you have a deranged individual named jack smith, he is a deranged, john -- dumb guy, he is a dumb son of a -- >> convicted felon, trump, indicted by special prosecutor jack smith on multiple criminal charges for his unsuccessful attempt to overturn the 2020 election, also praised that january 6th writers that attacked the capital calling them "warriors." >> those january 6th warriors, they were warriors, but more than anything else, they were victims of what happened. all they were doing was protesting a rigged election, that is all they were doing. >> while trump was landing in las vegas sunday, president biden was returning from france after commemorating the 80th anniversary of d-day. the biden campaign has released this ad, featuring three american veterans slamming former president trump for being a draft dodger. >> a good commander in chief is somebody who gives a [ bleep ]. i registered, i served in the united states marine corps point >> my name is ed mccabe. i served from the 1990s until 2014. >> my name is matthew mclaughlin. i was a navy pilot for eight years. >> it is the first time i'm shaking the hands of a president of the united states. it was pretty impactful to me to see an individual that supports troops not just on the battlefield, but when we return home. >> i see a man in joe biden who accepts accountability and responsibility, and when i see his predecessor, donald trump, i see a man who is only in this for himself. >> who criticizes veterans, who doesn't see it important to go to the funerals. >> donald trump has zero accountability in his life. >> is a draft dodger, simple as that. >> yesterday, draft dodger donald trump sat for his first probation hearing as a convicted felon, a mandatory requirement before his sentencing on july 11th. meanwhile, president biden held a white house event commemorating juneteenth, a federal holiday he established in 2021 to recognize the emancipation of enslaved african americans after the civil war. in his remarks, president biden reminded the audience why black history is still so important. >> but, let's be clear, they are all ghosts, and they are trying to take this back. they are taking away your freedoms, making it harder for black people to vote. well, i will have your vote counted. closing doors of opportunity, attacking diversity, equity, and inclusion. if you can believe it, banning books about black experiences, trying to erase and rewrite history. or, this is not just about the past, this is about our present and our future. it is whether or not that future is the future for all of us, not just some of us. folks, black history is american history. >> "black history is american history." joining us now, former democratic leader of the house of representatives, james clyburn of north carolina, he is a co-chair of the biden- harris campaign, congressman clyburn, always good to see you, welcome back to the show. i was at the juneteenth event last night and president biden has touted the inflation reduction act, and lowering drug prices, but listen to how the events host, comedian roy wood junior, talked about that achievement. >> we have legislation now for cheaper prescription drugs because of this administration. insulin is down to $35, if you are a senior. and i don't know if anybody here has paid for insulin before, but that is like the bottle service of prescription drugs. so, we appreciate that $35 right there. >> [ laughter ] congressman clyburn, i love the relate ability roy wood jr. used to break it down. it is funny, but it is telling a policy success story. does the campaign need to do more of that? >> well, thank you very much for having me, jonathan. absolutely. we have got to get this out there. this administration has a record that is unequaled, even cannot be imagined by a lot of people who have thought about these kinds of things as we went into the last election. this administration, with this rescue plan, has brought young children out of poverty with this infrastructure bill. it has put in $65 billion for internet when we had no money for infrastructure in the previous administration. it is chips and signs act, it is packed act, it is inflation reduction act. all of these things people said could not be done, joe biden did them. and i get a little irritated when i hear people telling me, "well, he isn't talking loud enough." "he isn't showing the kind of energy we want." we are about substance. substance, not style. that is what will move this country forward. that is what we will leave for our children and grandchildren, to be proud of. real substance. you can talk loud, you can misrepresent, you can prance around. but, the question is, what are you doing? i grew up in the prostitute and i used to listen to my dad's sermons. one of the things i learned early, it is their deeds that make them, not their words. and if you get caught up on the words, and don't pay any attention to the deeds, you might believe in donald trump. but, if you are all about deeds, you will be supporting this president, this administration, biden and harris. >> well, let's talk about -- so, more deeds, congressman clyburn. today, the biden administration announced that medical get -- that can no longer be considered in credit scores and president biden has made debt elimination one of his major pitches on the campaign, but new polling shows that voters are split on student loan forgiveness. three out of 10 approve and four out of 10 disapprove. how concerned are you about the polling numbers we see on the screen there? >> i think it is because people have misrepresented this whole thing about student loan debt elimination. joe biden, if you look at the program, he made it very clear, we are talking about eliminating this compound it is -- interest and all of the things that have accumulated beyond what the original debt was. i have got a constituent -- not a black constituent, but still a constituent -- in north charleston who wrote to the president and copied to me. his original loan was $60,000. over the years, she has paid back nearly $200,000 because of compounded interest, and paying for it for more than 20 years and still owed money. so, when he eliminated that debt, it was on the compounded interest, not the original loan. and people need to look at that. when i hear senator romney saying that this is a bad deal, how can this be a bad deal? the principal is paid back a long, long, long time ago. these people are paying compounded interest that has been put out there about people who are making money when the original principal was paid back a long time ago. so, that is what is going on here. so, nobody is paying anybody's debt. they paid off the debt. it is a compounded interest that people are electing and that is putting people in the poorhouse, as we say down south. >> congressman, let me get you on one more thing before we have to go in a couple of minutes. let's talk about comments that entertainer, $.50, meanwhile on capitol hill last week. listen to this. >> what do you think appears as significant to african-american men this election? >> i see them identify with trump. >> why do you say that? >> because they got rico charges. >> congressman clyburn, your reaction, black men are moving to trump because they've got rico charges? >> [ laughter ] look, he should've been with me last saturday night at the south carolina naacp freedom fund dinner. 100% support for joe biden. not one single person in their, male or female, for donald trump. he should have been with me at greater target memorial miami church on sunday morning, 100% for joe biden. not a single person there for donald trump. i don't know where $.50 is hanging out, but i hang out with naacp. i hang out with the black community, black faith community, and i don't see any support for donald trump. these people aren't worried about rico statutes, they are worried about their children's student loan debt. they are worried about the cost of insulin, when it comes to their healthcare. they are worried about affordable housing. they are worried about broadband deployment. that is what they are getting from this president and they are thinking whatever it is, what they will talk about in rico statutes. the rico statutes down in georgia, that is what donald trump violated. and so, we are upset because he is being called to account for violating the rico statutes? come on, 50 cent. that is worth a dollar to know better. >> [ laughter ] congressman james clyburn, always great to see you. thanks for coming to "the last word". >> thank you very much for having me. >> [ laughter ] all right. "$.50." we are 11 days into pride month and there is one person i know who is in celebrating -- justice samuel alito's wife has been caught on tape sharing her exasperation in seeing pride flags from her house. and that is not the only reason we should be worried about what is on those secret recordings. that is next. at is next. that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer. summer. it's the hungriest time of year for kids across america. kids whose hardworking families are struggling to make ends meet. whether it's working the crazy hours so you can have enough money for food or, you know, just giving up things for your personal self, and it's just yeah, gotta feed your kids. far too many kids are missing the meals they need this summer. that's why i'm here now asking you to join me in helping end child hunger in america for just $0.63 a day. that's only $19 a month. you can help provide healthy meals to power kids through their days. they're growing at this age, and they need the best diet they can have. so please, call now or go online to helpnokidhungry.org right now give $19 a month, only $0.63 a day. and when you use your credit card, you'll get this special team t-shirt to show that you're helping kids build a brighter future for themselves and for the world. we want to ensure that all of our kids have healthy meals every day, and many of our parents and many of our communities are still suffering. it's very difficult to, you know, have a good family setting when we are worrying about having enough food for your family. you can help kids get healthy meals this summer and all year long. please join me in supporting no kid hungry today. for just $0.63 a day, only $19 a month. you can help provide healthy meals to kids across america and in your local community. thank you for giving. thank you for giving. thank you! families are struggling to make ends meet. these are hard times. so please call now or go online to give. "my wife is fond of flying flags." that is what supreme court justice samuel alito said when he blamed his wife for flying two different flags at their homes that are associated with the stop the steel movement and carried by writers at the january 6th insurrection. new secret recordings of his wife, martha and alito are revealing more about flying flags. >> you know what i want? i want a sacred heart of jesus flag because i have to look across the lagoon at the pride flags next month and he is like, please don't put up a flag. and i said, i want to do it because i am referring to you. but, when you are free of this nonsense, i'm putting it up and i'm going to send them a message every day, maybe every week i will be changing the flags. they will be all kind, this is how i satisfy myself. i made a flag. it's white and it is yellow and orange flames around it and in the middle is the word vergona, which means shame in italian. >> that is the wife of a supreme court justice being openly hostile to a complete stranger about the pride flag. a symbol of freedom and equality for the lgbtq+ community during pride month. people, like me, being proud of who they are makes her mad. it makes her want to send them a message. it makes her want to fly a flag that says "shame." this is not a woman who is unclear about the message of the flags she is fine. and for what it is worth, i don't think anyone would care if they looked across the potomac and saw a jesus flag flying. there are lots of martha-ann's in america who also harbor this kind of grievance. but, this is martha-ann alito. she is not just any random person, she is married to a supreme court justice, for life. one of the most powerful people in the country, who is actively rolling back americans' constitutional rights. justice alito authored the majority opinion revoking nearly 50 years of rights for women when the court overturned roe v wade. that laid the foundation for another right-wing justice with a right-wing wife, clarence thomas, to target the lgbtq+ community by saying "the supreme court should reconsider " two cases that reaffirmed the rights of same-sex, including same-sex marriage. so, martha-ann alito longs for the day when samuel alito is "free of all this nonsense." she is thinking about who will replace him on the court. are you? joining me now, kelly robinson, president of the human rights campaign. kelly, thank you for coming back to "the last word". your reaction to what we heard from mrs. alito? >> shocking, and also not shocking in the same sense. what she is saying about flags, it is not about flags, it is a dog whistle to maga bullies across the board. what she wants to do is use the flag as a simple to talk about how they want to erase us from public life, to push us back into the closet. and when i think about what today represents, not only is it pride month, but tomorrow represents eight years since the pulse mass shooting, were 49 members of our communities lives were stolen forever. this type of violent action and political rhetoric leads to real-world outcomes. so, anyone that is listening to her, anyone who is watching what she says should be very, very concerned. not only about her words, but what it means in terms of the actions of the people that are listening to her. >> this new audio from justice alito tonight, listen. >> i just wanted to ask you, why do you think the supreme court is so -- is being so attacked and being so targeted by the media these days? >> well, i think it's a simple reason. they don't like our decisions and they don't like how they anticipate we may decide some cases that are coming up. that's -- that's the beginning and the end of it." kelly, does the sound often is, given the two abortion cases and two january 6th cases yet to be decided this term? >> to me, it sounds hypocritical. i mean, i remember when barack obama wore a tan suit and people acted like it was the end of democracy. >> those lines! >> right! now, we are talking about a whole supreme court justice whose wife is saying things like this, who is espousing these beliefs that are concerning for someone who is on the highest court of the land. so, i do think anyone who is listening to the words that are coming out of justice alito's mouth, you should be concerned. but, i also know if you are a person of color, if you are an lgbtq+ person, a woman, or someone who is non-binary, we don't have the luxury of letting our concern and fear put us into a state of paralysis. we have to understand that this is why it is more critical than ever that we get out and vote this november. our lives are quite literally at stake. >> you know, trump is out there giving comfort to antiabortion groups, promising to "defend life," while republicans are not voting to protect conception. today, a federal judge struck down a florida ban on transgender care for minors. these all sound like rights this ideological supreme court has no interest in protecting. >> they don't. they have said the quiet part out loud already. i mean, we have to remember that when roe v wade was overturned, justice clarence thomas' concurrence, he said out loud, the next court should revisit lawrence, they should revisit griswold, these are cases that fundamentally asserted our basic rights as lgbtq+ people in this country, and our right to contraception. so, anytime they say that these things aren't on the table, that these rights aren't at risk, look at what they are doing. we should all, again, be very concerned with what we are seeing, but also take it as a call to action, because at the end of the day, we still live in a democracy. our votes still count, and there is something we can do right now about how this course has gotten so far disconnected from this actual mission and our democracy. >> you know, as i mentioned before, i was at the juneteenth event where i met your beautiful wife last night, but that is not the point why i'm bringing that up. i want to play something that vice president harris said last night. watch. >> across our nation, we witnessed a full on attack on hard-fought, hard won freedoms and rights, including the freedom of a woman to make decisions about her own body, the freedom to be who you are and love who you love openly and with pride, the freedom from fear of bigotry and hate, the freedom to learn and acknowledge our nation's true and full history, and the freedom that unlocks all others the freedom to vote. >> how important is it to stress to voters that the supreme court is on the ballot in november? what is at stake is more samuel alito, or marco tonya brown jackson? >> exactly. what i saw from kamala harris right now, that is leadership. and at the end of the day when we think about this election that is coming up, it is not just about two candidates, it is about two fundamentally different visions for our country, two fundamentally different visions for our future, and our children. when you talk to people regardless of where they are on the political spectrum, a lot of our fears are the same, worry that your kids will have a better life than you do today, worries about inflation, making sure schools are good, and welcoming, and safe. but, i want to make sure that whoever we elect, the solutions are about moving us forward and not pulling us back. what the supreme court has shown that they are willing to do from the overturn of roe v wade, to all that they have said and done in the last year, they are willing to roll back the rights, not even the last 10 years or last 40 years, but the last 100. we have got to do something about it, for the sake of all of our communities, and especially for the sake of our kids. >> kelly robinson, president of the human rights campaign, thank you very much for coming to "the last word". >> thank you. coming up, it is election night in nevada. it is a must win state for joe biden and kamala harris, and a must win seat for democrats if they hope to hold onto the senate. nevada senator jacky rosen joins us next. ins us next. and long-lasting gain scent beads. part of the irresistible scent collection from gain. ♪♪ rising costs. selective coverage. for countless americans, the complex specialty care they need has always felt... just out of reach. ♪♪ at evernorth, we give members unrivaled access to the most complex therapies at the best prices. while providing enhanced support like in—home nursing at no additional cost. that's wonder made possible. evernorth health services. hi guys! bill, you look great! now that i have inspire, i'm free from struggling with the mask and the hose. inspire? 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>> well, i can tell you latino voters in nevada, they are the decisive vote. i can also tell you that my team in nevada, so many of them born and raised in nevada, i, myself, lived there for the last 50 years, just about. so, we are in the community all the time, we are listening, we are responding. i can tell you, i sit on the small business and entrepreneurship committee, and when i talk to our latin chamber of congress, we talked to all of our latino small businesses, so many entrepreneurs, we want to be sure that they have all the tools they need to keep their small business and thrive. we talk about affordable healthcare, it is really, really important that we talk about education, our environment, we are connecting with our latino voters every day on the issues that matter to them. kitchen table issues, the same issues that matter to everybody else. >> senator rosen, the late longtime nevada senator, harry reid, built a famous statewide democratic organization in nevada. is the reid machine still in effect in nevada? >> well, what senator reid did is really build a coordinated campaign. so, what that means for the nevada state democratic party, all of the candidates, the incumbents and candidates who are running, we work together to be sure we knock on doors, we do our field program, we are talking about the issues, we coordinate. that is really what is the magic. being sure that we are communicating, working together, bringing people together, because nevada families really matter. listening to them and delivering for them really matters, like delivering for our seniors. i can tell you for our veterans, we passed the pact act in northern nevada in reno, we will have that va hospital, they are searching for that 50 acre site now. it will be a game changer for the veterans in northern nevada. whether it is our seniors, our veterans, our students, our tours economy, we are listening, and we are delivering. >> senator jacky rosen of nevada, thank you very much for coming to "the last word". >> thank you for having me. coming up, biden is beating trump in a new election forecast, and one of the big reasons is biden's strength in the key swing state of wisconsin, and particularly with a group of voters who make up the bulk of the trump base. that is next. that is next. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. 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the fundamentals favored biden, and according to 538, biden currently has a better chance of winning pennsylvania and all of the blue wall states of michigan, minnesota, and wisconsin. my newest favorite, the washington post has a new report about president biden's success so far in wisconsin, where republicans will officially renominate a convicted felon donald trump after a national convention next month. particularly, with white, noncollege voters who make up the trump base. the post reports wisconsin democrats attribute part of biden's relative strength with white voters without degrees to a real progressive tradition that has faded but not disappeared -- and part of it to tenacious organizing, including in rural areas where many of those voters live. biden's campaign is investing in an unprecedented field operation in wisconsin with 47 coordinated campaign offices across the state, more offices than biden has in any other battleground state, and far more than republicans have in wisconsin, staffed by more than 100 full-time campaign workers. even ousted republican governor scott walker admitted to the post, "the organization is on the side of the left," so joining us now, ben worker, wisconsin democratic republican chair, and sandy wendy, the greene county democratic party chair. thank you for coming to "the last word". you worked tirelessly to defeat the scott walker gop machine in wisconsin, but it must still feel good to have walker praise the democratic organization. >> it does feel good. it is the result of a huge amount of work by thousands of people in the most rural parts of our state. in suburbs, big towns, small towns, and cities. our motto is we work statewide and year-round. we don't take anyone for granted and we don't write anyone off. that is what it takes to win in a state like wisconsin. you can see the result in the numbers and it is an exciting moment. if we win wisconsin we win the white house. >> sandy, tell us about the green county voters you are reaching out to. is this 2020 biden voters who might be going software a true undecided voter? what issues do they care about? >> i think the issues they care about are the real, kitchen table issues that a lot of us have been talking about. affordable care, healthcare. women's reproductive rights. voting rights. saving our democracy. good education and childcare. basically kitchen table issues, that is what we are hearing about. >> what do you say back to them when you hear about kitchen table economic issues? >> we talked to them about some of the issues president biden and kamala harris have already put forward. unemployment, the jobs that have been created. money that has come into greene county for various things such as our ymca in our county seat, in the city of munro. we have received funding for that. basic issues like that. we try to point out to people what is being done. >> on the flipside on the ground, what do you hear from voters about donald trump, if anything? >> that they really don't want to have him back in office. >> simple as that. >> simple as that. >> so, ben, how do voters -- how voters get their information has changed, much more in social media or add then newspaper editorials, which breaks my heart as an opinion writer. how has that changed voter outreach? >> the first thing we have to assume is that there is no silver bullet. you might get something on the evening news that reaches some voters. some voters are reading the weekly newspaper that comes in. maybe they pick it up in the grocery store. we have to really be everywhere. social media platforms. on any screen. billboards, yard signs, door to door organizing, phone calls, text messages. show up at parades. show up at county fairs. we try to build a surroundsound environment so people here from trusted messengers and we assume that just because you say something similar doesn't mean everyone has heard it. on you have to say it over and over and that is what it will take. we have to cut through the noise. trump is trying to confuse people. he's trying to throw people off. we need to bring people's focus back to what affects them directly. their freedom. to make their own decisions about their own body. living in a democracy and who is fighting for them, fighting special interests and bringing down costs. trump promising wealthy voters whatever they want. that contrast does resonate with people, but you have to go where the voters are and not expect them to come to you. >> you have been nodding in agreement. my last question to you is if president biden were to come to greene county and ask your advice on what he should say to voters, what would you tell him? >> that is a good question. i guess just to be honest with him and what he plans to do with the voters. listening to them, the most important thing, listening to the voters and what their issues are and being able to address those. i know if president biden were to come to greene county, they would be ecstatic. >> i can't tell time, so we actually have about 90 seconds l left. same weston to you. what would you say to team biden? what would you say they need to work on or watch out for? >> we love president biden w coming to our state because he does listen to people and they move toward him. we also have local candidates. 97 out of 99 assembly districts covered with local candidates. we are organizing everywhere. our website, if anyone wants to help us organize, volunteer, chip in. i love what president biden does which is really dig into what he is doing and wants to do. he announced a $3.3 billion investment by microsoft in a community where trump showed up and promised the sun, moon, and stars with a golden shovel and never did anything. that contrast early lands for people wondering what job they will be working over the next 10 years. when president biden does something it clicks. we love the president's visit, we hope they keep coming and we think we can draw a real contrast with trump who talks big, delivers nothing and tries to ward it all for himself instead of serving the people. >> i think it is guaranteed president biden and vice president harris will be back in wisconsin multiple times before election day. thank you both very time -- very much for coming to the e last word. we will be right back. when i was diagnosed with h-i-v, i didn't know who i would be. but here i am... being me. keep being you... and ask your healthcare provider about the number one prescribed h-i-v treatment, biktarvy. biktarvy is a complete, one-pill, once-a-day treatment used for h-i-v in many people whether you're 18 or 80. with one small pill, biktarvy fights h-i-v to help you get to undetectable—and stay there whether you're just starting or replacing your current treatment. research shows that taking h-i-v treatment as prescribed and getting to and staying undetectable prevents transmitting h-i-v through sex. serious side effects can occur, including kidney problems and kidney failure. rare, life-threatening side effects include a buildup of lactic acid and liver problems. do not take biktarvy if you take dofetilide or rifampin. tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines and supplements you take, if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, or if you have kidney or liver problems, including hepatitis. if you have hepatitis b do not stop taking biktarvy without talking to your healthcare provider. common side effects were diarrhea, nausea, and headache. no matter where life takes you, biktarvy can go with you. talk to your healthcare provider today. ♪♪ ♪♪ citi's industry leading global payments solutions help their clients move money around the world seamlessly in over 180 countries... and help a partner like the world food programme as they provide more than food to people in need. together, citi and the world food programme empower families across the globe. ♪♪ nothing dims my light like a migraine. with nurtec odt, i found relief. the only migraine medication that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer. that is tonight's last word. the 11th hour with stephanie ruhle starts now. tonight, hunter bide

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