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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  May 19, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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>> it's the 9:00 a.m. hour on "fox & "fox & friends weekend." we are waiting for president biden to take the stage and deliver commencement address at moorehouse college. this comes as he's looking to improve dismal polling among black voters. some say it's not enough. >> we're doing record numbers with african-american voters, democrats are all talk, no action. i was little talk and total action. >> more than a little talk, probably, but definitely a lot of action. scary statistics, the number of nypd officers on the job hits the lowest point in more than 30 years. rachel: and two life-long best friends off to college together. how are they -- how they are out to break stereotypes surrounding down' syndrome of.
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final hour of "fox & friends weekend" starts right now. >> >> we did this recently. this is the skyline. you won et it in dramatic fashion, it's jacksonville. >> it was very well done. >> jacksonville is great down. rachel: it really is. >> it's a sleeper town. there's not as many flights there. i did a lot of research when we moved. it's a great town, not enough flights to new york. >> one of my good friends lived outside jacksonville, i don't hear what you said a lot. you don't hear jacksonville's a great. town. rachel: i have heard there. i've been there. i like it. >> you're running with the high falutin dallas crowds. >> i'm not saying it's not a great town. i'm saying it's not known as -- >> why don't you like florida? rachel: you keep digging and
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digging. we have a lot of friends. >> i am a truth teller. people know what i'm talking about. i'm setting up to sell me on jacksonville. >> jacksonville is awesome. tampa's you awesome. i'm not a big orlando guy. rachel: you're not a disney guy. that's the b problem. >> jacksonville, you pivoted. you started talking you about tampa go coastline, football team, beautiful weather. >> are you selling me on the jags? >> why not. >> i get the coastline. i love you, jacksonville. >> the truth teller caves. >> you're looking at live at moorehouse college in atlanta where the commencement ceremony is underway. rachel: president biden is expected to deliver the keynote address later this morning. >> madison scarpino has the lacest.
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>> reporter: is this is the first time biden will be on a college campus an directly addressing students since all of the anti-israel protests encampments began across the country. the commencement ceremony is just getting started. many people from students to fact you u and political analysts believe that biden giving the speech is a way to gain support among black voters. take a look at the latest fox news poll. biden is down about 7 points if from october 2020 when it comes to support among black voters and you can see former president trump is up by 9 points. here's what biden said about that yesterday. >> here's the deal. you hear about how we're behind in the polls. so far, the polls haven't been right once. now, look, we're either tied or slightly ahead or slightly behind. >> reporter: he spent the last week trying to gain support from
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black voters with multiple events. biden aarrived in atlanta here yesterday. he stopped by a black owned restaurant to meet with volunteers and supporters. he then went to a private fundraiser. moorehouse college, an hbcu, it's for all men and it's martin lmartinluther king, junior's ala mater. there's a long history of activism here. the announcement of the speech brought out mixed emotionses. most of the students we talked to here just hope that biden leaves politics out of his speech and the president here at moorehouse college said that he's prepared to shut down did commencement ceremony over any protest. so far, no signs of that yet but we're keeping an eye on it. back to you guys. >> i will shut down the ceremony. rachel: got to control the kids i guess. >> i hope they're expecting under the gowns palestinian
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flags, that's how you get them in there. >> how will they shut the organ off? >> the organ is great. you don't like organs either, don't like jacksonville or organs. >> i notice things. i noticed the organ the entire time. rachel: i think it's interesting that you're going to liberal school like moorethe house and you're worried as a democrat president that you're going to get booed off the stage or there could be protests, interruption. thinking about my own grad school graduation, bill clinton spoke at my grad school graduation. >> really? rachel: as you can imagine, i don't really like the clintons much. >> really? rachel: never thought about protesting my own graduation. this is the new environment that we're in. >> you know what mine was, oprah, my harvard one, it was oprah.
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rachel: that's so harvard. >> i remember george w. bush my junior year. rachel: pe pepperdine? >> yeah. >> my girlfriend was a year older than me. rachel: let's talk more about me. >> i came up and saw governor bush. saw him a week later in my hometown and he goes hey, that kid wearing boots in california. memory. politician. >> he did? impressive. rachel: i was talking the other day, about how great pepperdine is. i was thinking about you. >> feels like one of those universities that's saying we're not going to do this stuff, do it the right you way. let's move on. donald trump yesterday was -- late afternoon was in dallas, will's hometown, speaking at the nra annual meeting. he talked a lot about obviously the second amendment and gun
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owners' rights and talked about what's happening at the border, things he predicted would happen. here's donald trump yesterday. >> on day one we will seal the border. we will stop the invasion and we will send joe biden's illegal aliens back. we start with the criminals and there are many, many criminals. less than four years ago we had the most secure border in u.s. history, crooked joe biden has turned your state and the entire country into a dumping ground for the world and venezuela, violent crime is down at levels that they've never seen before. they are depositing them into our country. all the gang members from caracas it's going to be safer than our cities. all the criminals are sent to us. common sense, who want toes have an open border where people can come in totally unchecked. rachel: that's not just a donald trump exaggeration about
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the cr crime rate in venezuela dropping as our crime rate goes up. they're literally emptying out their prisons, people are coming over here. we were talking about moorehouse and the black vote, we've been talking about it all morning long. the border is playing into this. economics are top of mind for african-american voters as for all americans but the problems of the border because of your governor in texas and others, they're sending the illegals to blue cities who claim to be sanctuary cities and magically all of them end up in black and brown neighborhoods and their services are being either depleted or they're seeing new funding, new pots of money showing up to fund them and they're going wait a minute, you guys said there wasn't any money for a community center for our kids but be there's money for this so there's a lot of tension because of the border even in --
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that's an issue for african-americans. >> they thought they were going to import new voters. turns out they ticked off existing voters in the process. >> here's the updated number, number of known got aways from 2021 to 2023 fiscal years, you can see there in 2021 it was 1.6 million. >> on the right that's 10 years on the right. on the left it's -- >> two to three years. over a 10 year period, 1.4 million, three year period alone -- rachel: under joe biden you have more got aways than you have in the last 10 years before he was here. theses are remarkable numbers. we had art del quinnto saying these numbers could be much higher. these are the numbers that are reported. what's troubling is it's not just criminals and cartel the who don't want to be put in detention centers because they have records and will be shipped
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out. but as you talked about earlier in the year we're seeing military aged men, chinese men coming over and donald trump has said i'm worried they're going to stand up an army inside of our own borders they could be organizing it. >> or hamas or hezbollah. there's rumblings over the internet of the capability of those cells in our country. one thing we heard from donald trump in that clip that i think we'll hear more from him on, we're very conservative, all that stuff but we're really common sense. you hear him say that all the time. common sense. what's common sense? having a border that's actually secure. even on the issue of abortion, hey, roe v wade was overturned, it was sent to the states, common sense to let the states decide. it's common sense to have cops able to do their job, it's common sense you don't print money you don't have, common sense you don't start foreign wars you can't finish. they may want to make him look extreme it's not. it's the thoughts of average
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americans, looking at the craziness of men and women sports, it's common sense that men should play against men, women should play against women. it's common sense. it's not conservative. that's meeting people where they're at. rachel: or we have huge resources of energy and we're not developing them for green reasons and import it from other countries who by the way have worse processes and a more moreyco-logically speaking for getting out their oil than way . >> if they pollute in china, it hurts us. if don't see it, they get to virtue signal. >> i like how you said meet them where they are. most of the world doesn't see themselves through this lens. they try to live their lives by common sense. rachel: common sense is not very common anymore many at least in washington.
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>> don't talk in political terms. talk in everyday terms. he's always done that, common senses is a great way to do that in this election. rachel: that's always the key to his success. he came in and said a lot of things we were thinking and now they're the platform for the republican party. >> turning to your headlines. high school senior sadly is dead after and his girlfriend is out of the hospital after a drunk driver slammed into their car on mother's day, splitting it in half. police say the driver crashed into them with his mustang going 122 miles an hour in a 35-mile-an-hour zone. the senior was three weeks away from graduating. his girlfriend suffered serious brain injuries. the driver faces a slew of charges including dui and reckless homicide, he's due back in court on the 24th. the nypd arresting at least 34 anti-israel protesters after the demonstrators clashed with police officers in brooklyn yesterday according to a new
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york times report. the crowd upwards of 250 people. could be heard blaring horns and seen lighting off smoke bombs. no word on what the charges the protesters will be facing. we cele celebrated brisket . >> first annual. >> we did it yesterday on fox square. now a grand champion has been crowned in the best pork at the world championship barbecue cooking contest in memphis, tennessee. the shed barbecue and blues joint from mississippi took home the prize for the whole hog division. >> whole hog. >> the third grand championship win in the 17 years they've been competing. rachel: take that, peta. [laughter] [laughter] >> we should take them to fox square with their whole hog. rachel: we should have them come. that would be a great thing to bring the winner of t the conte. >> maybe we need to have pork
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fest. >> pork fest. just a walking think tank. >> you set this up. i'm a violator and you're a preacher on this. rachel: no, no, no. this is -- >> i'm all of the map on this. rachel: most people are. that's the whole point. it's something we need to talk about. this next topic was the topic on my podcast. i brought in tim carney, the author of family unfriendly. we decided we're going to talk about travel sports and the impact on family life. because a lot of parents are talking about this. here's what tim had to say. we can come back and discuss on the other side. i think there's a lot of views on this. >> the good things about sports are, okay, well, if you put in the effort, you see that it pays off. it's practice for work, practice for anything good habits. but then somehow we replaced sort of the local little league that you ride your bike to and mom and dad can come if they want with intensive expensive
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travel sports and there are all sorts of harms. it disrupts family culture. nobody is home for dinner if you're on a travel lacrosse team and hockey but also i think it adds to the childhood anxiety, not just because of the high pressure of the sports but because you're deproving them of -- depriving them of unsupervised play. rachel: there's a lot he packed into that. it's fascinating. we talked about family culture, family life, the dinners that are missed, the studies behind the ben filth of sitting around -- benefit of sitting around a family dinner which gets disrupted by an intenser sports schedule. you can look hem they up. they're more likely to get good grades, not do drugs, not have premarital sex. the benefits of family continue for the family unit is important. the other thing we talked about which was interesting, tim's a catholic. there are a lot of christians involved in the sports activities. a lot of them interfere with
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church. i told tim, there's a 0.0001 chance that your intensive travel sport kid is going to end up in the nfl, 100% chance they're going to meet their maker and have to account for how they lived their life so i think there's also a level of priority ies and what are we prioritizing and a lot of people are weighing in on this podcast. >> we can have that conversation here. i am -- everything you say is true. i can tell you from firsthand experience. we do this. rachel: travel sports life. >> soccer and football is more through the schools so they do school football but soccer eats up multiple family dinners a week every week. sunday morning often as you point out, church. there are positives. i acknowledge all of those negatives. i definitely acknowledge them. driving to and from practice is a positive the. it can be a negative if you handle it the wrong way. i spend time with my sons
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talking. i think a lot of the dedication you're talking about, like tim brings up s unsupervised play. i think it's under threat from devices and other things they're doing. it gives them physical activity, discipline, dedication, could be anxiety. i get the negatives. i really do. i don't think it's without some positives. rachel: there's another side we talked about. there's also an eliteism about it. working cl it's hard for them -- working class, it's hard for them, these are expensive things as well. >> i grew up inside the sports culture. i was able to do things in my life because of the benefits of that so i see that but i'm also moving away from that hard and fast. just because i do -- from a christian world point of view i think it becomes an idol oftentimes for the parents and the kids, sports is everything. travel team is everything. get the gear. be the -- and it asked and sends the falsesignals to kids s
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really important. i think as a portion of your life, something you want to do, if you want to do it excellently, great. if you're going to practice every day, you want to be great, i encourage that. this is what we do, these are our saturdays and sundays, i want them -- i don't get those moments because i'm here in new york hosting a weekend show. but normally you want those moments. you have to reclaim them. way try hard to try to reclaim dinner, worship and devotion with your family. that's hard to do if your schedule is not your own. i get all sides of it. i don't impugn anybody that's involved. i think be more intentional if you have the ability to block some of those things out. rachel: at the end of the podcast, sean said -- we talked about both sides. there's obviously virtues that come from sports and a lot of character development that comes from that as well. so not to minimize that. but i think the overall thing is are you running your family or is that sports schedule running your family? >> that's exactly right. rachel: that is something that
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every parent -- >> it's a great discussion from the kitchen table podcast. rachel: check it out this week. >> scary statistics, the number of nypd officers on the job hits the lowest point in more than 30 years. >> what could go wrong. former nypd commissioner ray kelly joins us on the growing risk to public safety. my dad believed in hard work, and the farm was the perfect place to learn grit, determination and problem solving. we're taking that passion and channeling it through our farm to home bedding bath, and apparel at red land cotton. we grow cotton in the rich red earth of north alabama. and we want our products to be made here in the usa, from the seed in the ground to the final stitch. go to red land cotton dot com and receive 20% off your order with code fox 20
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the numbers of staggering. the number of nypd officers on the job the lowest in three decades with 200 cops reportedly leaving each month. former nypd commissioner and guardian group ceo ray kelly is here to react. mr. commissioner, thanks for being here. why is this happening? >> it's a good question, pete. i think a lot of this developed after the death of george floyd, cops were demonized, they were vilified, thousands started to leave and that hemorrhaging is continuing. not only in new york city, but other major cities as well. and i think we have to do more to find out precisely why they're leaving and to try to address it. i think we need to an outside consultant to come in to say to the nypd do the exit interviews of police officers who are
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leaving. am late that data and -- accumulate that data and make recommendations as to how we can take some of these problems on. some may be solveable. some aren't solveable but at least we would be able to identify directly what the problems are. >> it's a good idea. they should be doing that already, getting a sense of why people would be prematuring leaving the force. i'm guessing some of it has to do with things the nypd could not affect themselves, radical das that are letting criminals out of jail, catch a release program or sanctuary city policies that have an illegal crisis so there's only so much the nypd can do, right? >> yes. but i think it's important to clarify that and to put that out in the open. what can be affected around what can't be. there's a lot of problems in the environment that i think it's more difficult now to be a police officer, certainly in new york, than it's ever been, certainly when i was a police officer. so but i would like to see those
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problems in black and white, i would like to have an objective analysis of them so at least politicians or executives in the police department can attempt to address it. >> that's a big phrase, more difficult than it's ever been from someone who knows what it has looked like in the past, that's important. let me put up the stats real quick for you, mr. commissioner, of number of new york police officers leaving the force. i mentioned it was 200 per month right now. more or less. in this year, overall, 823 officers have left in 2024. as some people say, there is a quality to quantity in and of itself. how does policing change when you have less officers? >> well, they're much more reactive, you're not proactive, not doing things to prevent crime. they're responding to 911 calls and their response time is much longer. and of course, attendant to this
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problem is the fact that they can't hire the remacementmaceme- replacement officers who are leaving. that's a big problem and then there's a quality issue, as to exactly who are you hiring with the job becoming less desirable. so lots of issues here and i think they have to be taken head-on and i haven't seen that happening are from city hall. >> it's true. you're always going to have attrition. if you can recreate more than you're leaving them you're in good shape. if it's perceived the profession is under assault you don't have people signing up, many ways like the military. thank you for your time. >> thank you, pete. >> i hope they do that study. >> two life-long best friends off to college together. how they had the are out to break the stereotypes around down's syndrome and that's next. -cologuard®? -cologuard. cologuard! -screen for colon cancer. -at home, like you want. -you the man!
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friends have been inseparable. i can't stop looking at those pictures. so cute. since the first grade according to their parents. they're practically sisters. now, they he both get to follow their dreams and go to college together in the fall. jewel gjuliannaand ava will attl program at the university of south carolina designed for students with down's syndrome. they join us now with their moms patricia and tony, coming from a coffee shop which helps employ hundreds of people with disabilities nationwide. boy, we are so happy to have you, ava and jewels. the story is so heart-warming. you've been besties since first grade. what does it mean, ava to graduate and go off to college with your best friend. >> another milestone, going to
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college and getting a job. >> she is so excited to go to college with her best friend and work together. >> yeah. rachel: jules, will you be rooming together? >> yes. rachel: yes. >> yeah. >> yes, i do. rachel: how is this arrangement working m? is it just you two? will you have other roommates? what's going on. >> they'll live in a dorm apartment and it will be three of the life students and one traditional student who chooses to live with them so they are going to be just like other college students and they're going to have their own room and a kitchen and everything. rachel: oh, my goodness. are you nervous, moms? let me ask you, tony, how nervous are you? >> very nervous. rachel: i'm nervous sending any of the kids off. how do you feel? do you feel more assured because they're together? >> absolutely. >> knowing they're going to be together is probably the easiest to know because they're going to take care of each other, they're
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going to help each other, they're just -- they have such a special bond. we know they'll do great things together. rachel: ava, what are you looking forward to? >> i'm excited to -- rachel: say that again. to get them out? [laughter] okay. tony not feeling any empty nest syndrome. [laughter] >> not yet. maybe later. rachel: ava. what are you most looking forward to about college? >> going to college -- >> she said she's looking forward to going to parties. rachel: i love the honesty, i love the h honesty. ju les, what are you looking forward to the most? >> the most, going together, everyone, new friends here. >> making new friends and
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living with ava and living in an apartment on her own. >> on my own. rachel: patricia, what has the university -- what have they told you about this arrangement and how -- obviously, you guys have checked with the university and this program to make sure that it's perfect for your girls because you love them so much but what exactly are they providing in terms of that support system because that's so wonderful. >> so the life program stands for learning is for everyone and this program is really set up to make them the most en independet and employable so the whole purpose of the program is to teach them that they can live by themselves, that they can do everything by themselves and that at the end, that they had they areemployable. right now, they actually he have jobs that they did have to interview for but we want the community to embrace this and we want them to start providing opportunities for everybody and to really normalize seeing
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people with intellectual disabilities in the workplace, that they can work and can be members of society. rachel: you know, i think that's such a great point because part of it -- i mean, we know yo through eugenies that my people with disabilities don't make it out of the womb. it's important for people to see them. here they are on a university campus. tony, tell me what your hopes are at the end of this experience for your daughter. >> oh, gosh. you know, it's a two-year program and in that two years i hope that she will have learned additional job skills above and beyond what she's learned now here at biddies and bows and able to live independently and not have to move back in with us and spend the rest of her life with us because we're not always going to be here. and we need a really bright future for her and ava.
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rachel: i want to say first of all congratulations to both of you girls on your graduation, congratulations on the new phase of life. i'm going to give the same advice i gave my daughters and son when they went off to college, that is don't party too much. we don't want that to happen but i want to give a great kudos to the university of south carolina. these are the kinds of programs that show who we are as a people, as a culture, that we have a space for everybody and that we honor everybody and give dignity to everybody and, boy, i couldn't be more excited for you and your families. congratulations, ava and jules, we're so proud of you. god bless you all. >> thank you so much. >> thank you, rachel. rachel: bye, everybody. >> bye. rachel: all right. what a great story. the did bates are on. but -- debates are on but only on biden's terms and that means they don't want rfk junior, the
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independent is now accusing biden and donald trump of colluding while pointing to polls calling him to the stage. maria bartiromo on the pressure for this third party presence, next. when enamel is gone, you cannot get it back. but you can repair it with pronamel repair. it penetrates deep into the tooth to actively repair acid weakened enamel. i recommend pronamel repair. with new pronamel repair mouthwash you can enhance that repair beyond brushing. they work great together. using the finest materials, like indulgent memory foam, and ultra-conforming inner-springs, for a beautiful mattress, and indescribable comfort. save up to $800 on select adjustable mattress sets at stearnsandfoster.com
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>> we're back with a look at your headlines. startling footage out of texas showing the moment a pair of armed robbers pulled a gun on a
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convenience store clerk while trying to steal a couple cases of beer. the two suspects escaping the scene before authorities could you arrive. police are asking the public for any information that leads to their arrest and it's texas so hopefully they will stay in jail. and this, emergency crews in washington springing into action to rescue a man who fell down an open shaft in a building that was under renovation yesterday. no word on how the victim who is a worker on the site fell into the shaft. he was taken to the hospital with critical injuries. officials are investigating. and a stubborn be bear evading colorado rangers while romeing through neighborhoods and -- homing through neighborhoods and hanging out in tree. they turned to some rock and roll legends to help get the bear out of the tree. >> oh, because the noise annoys
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the bear and the bear gets down. they don't like loud noises. they warned locals to keep trash inside and that bears don't like black sabbath. he got down for it. let's go to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. what's up, rick. >> i think you just called black sabbath noise. >> i never thought about t sacrilege that is their name. >> i can't believe you didn't think about that one. let's look at the weather maps to see you what's going on. we've got a severe weather threat pattern coming up again for us unfortunately. we've been dealing with this for about a month. you see the storms piling up across the central part of the country, that's what we're talking about in a second. look towards florida, not a lot of moisture left with the last
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system but the line of storms moving through, weakening, will bring a break to the temperatures. that's good news. temps dropping by 10 to 15 degrees in florida. that's going to feel great. here's where we've got the problems. today, areas of kansas, elevated threat, mostly a threat for strong winds that could be really damaging. by the time we get towards tuesday, looking at a threat for a tornado outbreak where you see that darker area so three more days central plains, going to come with a lot of rain and a potential flood threat. back to you inside. >> thank you, rick. two presidential debates locked in for now with team biden setting the term including no audience and no rfk junior and that's not sitting well with him. >> of all the legitimate polls including the polls that cnn says it's going to rely on, the polls that don't have us at 15% are asking the questions in a
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deceptive way that suppressing perceived support that we have. >> sunday morning future anchor maria bartiromo is interviewing rfk junior this morning and she joins us now. maria, with some great interviews especially on the heels of this, he's feeling boxed out. maria: he sure is. he's going to tell us why coming up in about 15 minutes. look, the truth is, is that the kennedy shanahan ticket is on the ballot in seven states according to the kennedy campaign. that's utah, michigan, california, delaware, oklahoma, hawaii and texas and they say that kennedy will be he'll sbe eligiblefor 2 270 electoral. so why is he being blocked from being on stage? he thinks both of the candidates are afraid of him and they don't want him there. these are joe biden's rules. trump has been saying anywhere, any time.
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the time is at hand. we're going to see the first debate next month, june 2 27th so we're going to talk with bobby kennedy, junior this morning, not just about this, why he's calling it collusion and also this policies. some see him as an independent when it comes to policies and others seem him as worse than joe biden when it comes to extreme left position, i want to get into poll ski and the debate. -- policy and the debate. he'll be joining me in the 10:00 a.m. hour. rachel: there are some things he says that i'm interested, i like his position on pharma, big food and a some of those issues resonate with me but a couple weeks ago he was asked about abortion. he is to the left of joe biden. he said on the record up until the ninth month he was fine with that. so i think that kind of kills a little bit of his, you know, i'm this guy in the middle image. maria: why don't we get him to
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clarify that this morning. rachel: that would be awesome. maria: i will ask i'm had about that, do you want abortion in the ninth month? give us your position right here. we'll do that. rachel: maria, can i ask one more thing of you. maria: yes. rachel: as long as i have a friend in maria. his family is big on special needs and bringing dignity to that population and yet we know you .eugnics, 90% of down's syne diagnosis end in abortion, i would love t to hear his positin on that as well. maria: we want to get his position on the climate change agenda. there's so many rules and regulations coming out of this administration, it's sure to slow down corporate spending, sure to make expenses that much higher for the corporate sector and in doing so slow down the economy so there's a to get to. we're talking to two people who are on the short list for
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president trump as the vp candidate, i'll talk with senator tim scott and north dakota governor doug b burgam. he was in the courtroom of the manhattan da hush money trial, we want to find out what went on there, we have caroline leevit, he'll respond to what rfk junior says. we have a panel of anna luna and byron donalds, we want to get to the bottom of the impeachment inquiry of joe biden. i spoke with james comer and he told me he sent out another subpoena to a major bank because he wants to connect dots, he wants specific bank records of the biden family. so we'll get into that investigation with those two oversight members, byron and anna paulina luna. i'll see you in 10 minutes.
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rachel: thank you. >> thanks, maria. start your engines, the nascar all-star race is today on fox on fs-1. >> fox nascar play by play announcer adam alexander is revving up for race day, next. ♪
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>> looking at the track yesterday you probably didn't think we would have a race in north wilkesboro today but we will. here to react and get us ready is fox nascar p play by play announcer is here today. >> i've got a complex. the last time i was on "fox & friends" was the weekend of the daytona 500 of. 500.we washed out until monday. you had me on this weekend and you showed a video of what things look like here yesterday so no doubt this has been a wild weekend weather-wise. i hope we can get it in. the weather looks better today. >> we're looking at the video on our screen, that is hefty water on pit road.
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we did have a report earlier, they pumped it out and they're drying off the track. >> everything looks great. the sun is out. the weather forecast for today is great so we'll finish the truck race at 11:30 and the all-star race should go off without a hitch this evening. all the activity begins at 5:00 eastern time with the open and we'll go for $1 million tonight at you 8:00 on fs1. >> you know, it's not like horse racing so i'm not going to ask you who is a mudder but it could be a little slicker. we'll see. they may get it completely dry as a bone. kyle larson is looking to repeat. the first time in forever that would be the case, right? >> kyle larson is the guy and he's the guy for so many reasons, not only did he dominate here a year ago the first time the all-star race had been at this venue but he is the story line because of what he's doing over the course of the next seven days. he's going to do the indy, coke
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600 double, so run the indy 500 next sunday, fly to charlotte, run 600 miles in the nascar race sunday night but the activity begins this weekend. he was in indianapolis qualifying yesterday for the 500. he'll continue that process today before flying here to north wilkesboro starting in the back, trying to drive through the field and win two in a row in an all-star race. if he can win tonight that will be the fourth win in nascar's all-star event matching jimmie johnson. kyle larson will be the focus tonight for the all-star race and for the next week. it's one of the great feats in motor sports. >> if he pulls it off, first repeat since '92. that's the part of a big week for kyle larson. get in on it starting tonight for kyle larson's week and watch the all-star open on fs1 at 8:00
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eastern and thank you so much for setting it up for us today. >> you got it, will, great to be with you guys. >> we'll be watching. more "fox & friends" just moments away. ♪
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