expend this narrative to the american people. you are watching fox & friends first and i m todd piro. carley: carley shimkus, and saudi arabia to discuss the energy crisis. alexandria hoff joins us live with the washington with the details, alexandria, good morning. good morning carley and todd appear in the markets for consumer price index report is out this week to indicate the next move for the federal reserd the attempt to sue inflation. the prices of everyday goods 8.6% from the prior and economist predict the june number will have risen above that. it s going to be bad news again. i think it will be 1.1%. that is the headline head inflation of food and energy. i don t see how you take food and energy out and all of us have to spend money on. carley: you have to spend money on an the main focus of the biden administration is combating inflation but said yesterday at the public shouldn t be talking ourselves into a recession. i don t see any reason to thin
i m harris faulkner and you are in the faulkner focus . the producer price index up 11.3% over last year. now adding to fears of a recession compounding trouble for americans after yesterday s consumer prices index hit a four-decade high. notice the number on the left for wholesale prices, the goods being made for us, is cooking hotter than the inflation that we re faced with. now how long do you think it will take for them to pass that along to the consumer? will they even have a choice? former trump economic advisor explains it this way. i would like to walk through how you should think about inflation so people understand why. if you start the car at zero and accelerate 10 miles per hour per month after six months you go 60 miles per hour and after 12 months 120 miles per hour. what s my velocity right now is what you care about. we re hiding how big the increase in prices are that are affecting ordinary americans by a very large amount. inflation is startlingly high ri
the district attorney s office told fox news while a victim has a right to be notified, they also have the right not to be contacted. after consulting with victim experts we don t believe this is a trauma informed approach. david, one of the deputy district attorney s there pointed to the fact that the d.a. recognized that victim service representatives will be at the hearings. they are not attorneys. when you take away the prosecutors and the victim s right to know and give them a serve that is counselling that s like putting a band-aid on something and is not a solution. a right to know supersedes the right not to be contacted. a couple of days ago i spoke to a friend of mine on a parole board and people in the law enforcement community about this issue. the important of impact statements not only in the courtroom but from families needs to be considered. there is another problem here that goes to where gascon s excuse about staffing. it s not just police officers on the
of the right, we keep talking about these things that they haven t happened before and not exactly right, and we just need smart, digestible history about this, particularly as we head into the midterms. this is just perfectly timed. we ve all been thinking about it. i remember thinking about it when donald trump got the nomination in 2016, i kind of work my way back to sarah palin, and then it kept going and kept going. but i never did the full homework that david corn has done to take us all the way back, to where it really begins, and trace its consistency all the way through. and it s survival points that we just described. maybe that could ve been the moment, where they snuff this out. but no, it survived and stuck through this way, and then it s not by another moments in history netherlands, to come out to this full bloom in 2015 or 2016. and the conservative movement and the conservative media has been very self congratulatory, so they eventually did self believe
thinks abortion should be in any case, no matter rape or incest, then you have governor whitmer, who s been traveling around the state, we had images of her holding a roundtable saying this is a human right, abortion rights sh and she sees it as a civil right. will s a lawsuit to stop abortion to go into effect in that state. the feeling is that kansas, a red state, if they can vote to keep abortion rightings in their constitution, a battleground state like michigan, the people who are of course the others, they feel like this issue will be a one that will g get a big turnout and michigananders will vote the rights into the constitution. yamiche alcindor, thank you so much for your reporting. greatly appreciate it. willie, it is fascinating to see how this issue will shape the 2022 election. we really don t know how it s going to end up moving voters, but you look at that kansas race, all the polls beforehand showed it too close to call, but a lot of them had pro-life force