enormous turn and that brought us to 24,265. these trade tariffs are widening a lot. it started with steel and aluminum. it s affecting a variety of products, everything from televisions and cigarettes to plastics. you name it. pork-related, beef products. soy beans, an area that they didn t want to get into that they re into. all of this was a big step-back moment to say it s bad, it s coming but maybe it s not coming at all. this was crazy. you re right. boy, just as the opening bell rang this morning at 9:30, it was looking like we were going to have one of the worst days you could see on wall street. we were down 500 points like this. a couple of things happened after that. the aforementioned larry kudlow did an interview and he shade we
wouldn t see a trade war. the markets started to come back after that. there were technical factors at play. people in support levels, held up meaning that at a certain level in a market, whether it s the dow jones industrial average, maybe th
physical evidence. it came down to who the jury believed. they believed andrea s story and bill cosby, the comic legend found guilty on all three counts. he faces up to 30 years in prison. he was let free on bail. million dollar bond. a home on house arrest. we await the sentencing hearing. his defense attorney said the fight is not over. that s tom mesereau, famous for defending michael jackson. so we expect this to go to appeals. right now a big victory for andrea constand and the dozens of women that accused bill cosby of sexual assault over the years today. neil? neil: bryan llenas, thanks very much. just to put this in perspective here, constand is the focus of this attention in this case and these allegations. more than 60 woman have come forward making similar accusations and a pattern of
behavior. putting it in perspective, constand testified that in her case in 2004 meeting with bill cosby, he gave her three blue pills and she drank wine at his request. she passed out, wo
there was no collusion ed: working together through history right now. our colleague, shannon bream, is live in washington. bret baier will be back at 8 p.m. eastern. shannon bream in washington with more fox news special coverage. dana: thanks. it was just announced, there was no collusion with russia. the most ridiculous thing i ve ever heard. there was no collusion with russia. there was no obstruction, none whatsoever. and it was a complete and total exoneration. shannon: president trump just minutes ago reacting to the news from attorney general bill barr that, quote, the special counsel s investigation did not find that the trump campaign or anyone associated with it conspired or coordinated with russia in its efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election. i m shannon bream in washington. we ve got fox team coverage across d.c. with mike emmanuel
on capitol hill, molly henneberg at the justice department, and let s begin with molly first. good afternoon. report
Go into it as would a mike pompeo or a glenn youngkin possibly. look, it s too early in the game to know, martha. that s the reality where we are right now. it s a wait and see game. i think president trump will move quickly to announce his run and i think that then the other candidates will see what happens following the january 6th committee. the president continues to have very strong support nationally. martha: fascinating to see who runs on both sides. jehmu, mercedes, joe, thank to you. happy fourth of july. so a message from bill bennett about what it means to be a proud american as the nation transforms before our eyes over the past couple weeks. a number of significant ways when we come back. even on our worst day, we are blessed to live in america. [lazer beam and sizzling sounds]
For this bipartisan infrastructure package. roads, bridges. if you can t get behind it martha: we ll leave it there. maybe we ll kick it forward and smash it in 2022. martha: interesting to talk to you both, a big mid-term year. thank you, corbin and jehmu. thanks nor being here. coming up, mollie hemmingway and joe concha respond to president biden s support levels and the potential for someone running against him in his own party. that is next.
Driven, fueled by american exceptionalism as so many americans are starting businesses under the biden administration. yes, we ve got work to do in 2022 to keep the house, to keep the senate. yes, there will probably be fringe candidates that jump in to the race as that s going to be for name recognition, for an attempt for relevancy. but there s not going to be a serious contender. vice president harris is not going to be martha: we have looked at some tough job numbers and polling numbers are real. you can say you don t care about polling. the real clear polling is an aggregate of a lot of polls. what is your response to jehmu? she says you re all hat no, cattle. people guaranteed that donald trump wouldn t be the nominee for the republican party. we can t predict the future. hopefully you re right, jehmu.
We re in a great economic position but we re unable to sell that to the american people. that s not the sense that people get for whatever reason. specifically on the economy, which i think we re doing a great job as a party, we re getting beat. 56, 57% of people polled think that biden is doing a poor job. so that s record stock market, record jobs numbers and trailing in people s minds. that s my concern. what the american people are seeing and feeling. martha: i m curious we have to tell martha: one second, jehmu. so ted kennedy ran against jimmy carter. there s parallels here. i don t see a ted kennedy in the list of people that are floated at this point. we can put that up. alexandria ocasio-cortez, stacy abrams, cory booker a bunch of names there. corey, can you envision a
That would have stopped us from eradicated polio, eradicating small pox. there s longstanding vaccine mandates when all three of us were in school if we went to public schools. we had to get vaccinated to attend classes with our peers and contribute to our community to make sure the diseases were not deadly. and the analysis around these questions that need to be asked by a political narrative, yes, and that political narrative is to divide. we need to be focused on public health measures and get away from it. i hope that we can put the love of america first, community first and stop trying to undermine public health measures. this country need to eradicate the disease. ? jehmu, tomi, thank you both. in europe, some citizens are
Rove and jehmu greene. thanks, arthel. eric: jeffrey epstein, apparent suicide while in federal custody may have stopped another investigation, that one of his finances, some this weekend suggesting he may have run a large scale blackmail operation in with the nation s biggest names, that and shock over his dead prompting attorney general william barr is anauld epstein, the most prominent defendant possibly in federal correction institutions could have killed himself under watchful eyes of jailers, inspector general has opened an investigation and the attorney general saying saying s yesterday, i was appalled that jeffrey epstein was found dead from apparent suicide in federal custody, raises serious questions that must be answered, for some of those questions let s go with jacqui heinrich
For these horrific crimes that are happening, i think that we have to look at this differently than we have under president trump in the past few years but also under president obama, president bush, president clinton, and that s that s what s different, i think, with the spirit right now in the country and that s why i do think these red flag laws are going to have more success out of the 17 states, but here arthel, excuse me, this issue is not something that we can look at from a partisan lens anymore. arthel: seems like i have to go, so i m going to wrap this up. i am say to go you, jehmu and karl, seems like you are on the same page and that s a good thing and i m happy to have both of you because i know that you both have strong points for both of your teams and you did just that and i thank you both karl