pennsylvania, casey, bob casey, wrote after the debate fetterman has a clear record of public service, knows the commonwealth, cares about pennsylvania, will be a great senator. like no comment at all about the debate itself. i thought it was just kind of interesting that the two senators had those reactions. clearly a rorschach test. clearly how they want people to view this, through a particular lens. either they know, or only two weeks away from the midterm elections, so these are the candidates. these are the options. so, i guess the reflecting that in terms of how they want people to have an understanding of what happened. and our panel will have very strong feelings. they wanted to. and they ve got very strong feelings about how john fetterman performed. i mean, obviously all eyes were on him. and it was challenging. it seemed like it at certain times. yeah. so, okay jake, thank you very much for setting the table for us. all right, guys. did you even see
complicating that effort, however, is fetterman s ongoing recovery from a stroke last may. dana: health concerns front and center as fetterman and oz clashed on everything from inflation to crime. let s also talk about the elephant in the room. i had a stroke. he has never let me forget that. this campaign to me is about fighting for everyone in pennsylvania that ever got knocked down. there was a lady in beaver county who told me with fear in her heart she wanted to provide food for her son s chicken she wanted and couldn t afford it. i can make the difficult decisions as you do in the operating room as a surgeon and cutting our budget as well to make sure we don t have to raise taxes on a population already in pain from the high inflation rate. he has 10 mansions. he must push back against corporate greed. we must make sure that we re also pushing back against price gouging. fetterman has been trying to get as many murderers out of jail as possible. he does it wit
tomorrow morning. jose diaz-balart picks up live coverage right now. good morning. it s 10:00 a.m. eastern, 7:00 a.m. pacific. i m jose diaz-balart. 13 days before the midterms. candidates across the country face-off on the debate stage, including in pennsylvania where senate candidates john fetterman and mehmet oz sparred on a host of issues. in fetterman s first debate since suffering a stroke. on capitol hill, a key member of donald trump s inner circle testifies. plus, the president of the united states warning the leader of russia as the kremlin is insisting ukraine is planning to use a dirty bomb. and we re keeping an eye on the white house as the president is set to speak later this hour about what the white house calls new actions to provide families with more breathing room. and we begin with our top story. in 13 days voters will head to the polls for the pivotal midterm elections. candidates made high-stake pitches in four intense debates last night. pennsylva
experienced. 2377384. migrant deaths 856 died at the border. person randomly shoved onto the new york city subway tracks for the 1st time this year. mayor eric adams deflecting the blame for it. not having your ipods in. not focusing on phone i encourage new yorkers to do that recommendation record 4,000 on set to retire this year. philadelphia phillies to world series. astros going wild also purvelging wild card to the world series over the yankees. brian: that s where i was at the jaguars game as they hosted the new york giants. i will tell you they are rebuilding jacksonville. a huge practice facility there and a four seasons and the team is being rebuilt but if you look at the stadium, it was two thirds a third two thirds giant fans. new yorkers thought it was so easy to get down there. they did. what a game because the jaguars got to the 2-yard line. had they scored they would have tied it. steve: you are talking about from the chamber of commerce point of
talked a lot about the frm former president, but now he s putting himself, the record of his administration, front and center as we get closer to the midterms. reporter: there s no question about it and that s because white house officials, the president included, believe they have a record to talk about, a record to hold up as they head into these final days before the midterm election, and as you noted, it is a record that has been bolstered over the course of the last nine weeks by a real flurry of legislative victories. some of the president s key economic agenda items, key climate agenda items, key healthcare agenda items all moving through congress throughout the course of this summer. you combine that with what we saw from the supreme court related to striking down roe vs. wade and there is no question about it. democrats, politically, feel like they re in a railroad diff very different place, but the president s legislative accomplishments are significantly more sub