1999! the debate, could bernie and labor union workers deliver president trump a re-election victory and the gop the house? michael bloomberg, critics say he is trying to put out the fire with gasoline. that campaign in full damage control over the 2015 leaked audio where the former new york city mayor defended stop-and-frisk by saying, yes, put more cops in minority neighborhoods, quote, throw minority kids up against the wall. bloomberg now trying to convince african-american voters he quote, inherited this police practice, even though it grew on his watch and bloomberg defended it until last year. we'll take you also to the communist collapse in venezuela. juan guaido returns there from attending the president's state of the union address. scenes of chaos breaking out. tonight, new disturbing details from the united nations on thousands who disappeared, tortured and murdered by the communist regime there. as media increasingly asking why is bernie sanders still silent on all of this? more tonight on house republicans boycotting a hearing run by adam schiff today. republicans say adam schiff still not taking up fbi fisa abuses to spy on the trump campaign. we fact check the sanders campaign. it is a whopper of a mistake. the bernie campaign in its new attack on jpmorgan chase's jamie dimon, you won't believe the error they made. i'm elizabeth macdonald. "the evening edit" starts right now. ♪. liz: welcome to the show. you're watching the fox business network. we've got solid turnout for both president trump and the democrats in new hampshire. the president, the best for an incumbent since george hw. bernie sanders winning the new hampshire primary. the democrat raise slight between these candidates. none got above 30% a look to nevada and south carolina and super tuesday on march 3rd. jonathan hunt in vegas with more. reporter: elizabeth the biggest winner in new hampshire last night may have been the state of nevada itself, suddenly lavished with attention by democratic presidential candidates who want to separate themselves from the pack. senator amy klobuchar had a good showing in new hampshire. she immediately announced a huge increase in ad spending here in nevada. she is battling mayor pete buttigieg what would be termed the moderate wing of the democratic party. hoping that she can get ahead of mayor pete once the vote happens here in nevada on february 22nd but both of them are trailing senator bernie sanders at the moment. he had a victory in new hampshire of course and hopes that his ties to ethnic communities and to unions will help him here in nevada. also hoping though for help from those same groups is former vice president joe biden whose campaign frankly is on life-support at this stage but he believes, and his advisors believe, that he will benefit from the contest moving towards a more diverse state like nevada. listen here. >> so not only does it matter winning in nevada just because it is the third state and it is important to carry the momentum forward. it is important for campaigns to be able to show we are, appealing to america. reporter: caucus day is february 22nd. that's a saturday but early voting happens here and that begins this saturday, february 15th through 18th and already, liz, the nevada democrat party trying to avoid the sort of problems that happened in iowa has issued a long and complicated list of guidelines for that early voting but they still at this point don't seem to know exactly what they're going to do on caucus day itself. they were going to use the same app that was used by the iowa democratic party that didn't work out so well. nevadaans want to avoid that same kind of disaster. liz: jonathan hunt. thank you. reports coming in moderate house democrats in districts the president won are deeply worried democrats could lose control of the house according to "the hill" magazine. why? if bernie sanders becomes the nominee. the democrat establishment says unite behind a moderate. "politico" is reporting what we've been warning for two years. nancy pelosi ordering democrats, stay away pro impeachment. switch away pro impeachment towards the economy. nancy pelosi attack it that it is not as strong as the president claims. former trump 2016 campaign manager. look who is here, corey lewandoski. great to see you. >> thank you for having me. >> your reaction to the president's budget going after the safety net and roger stone sentencing does this distract from the president's economic message? >> i don't think so. we're still learning information about the roger stone sentencing that the decision was made prior to the president putting out any tweet to roger stone. in full disclosure i'm not a big roger stone fan but the notion this man will spend nine years to a federal penitentiary lying to congress when we see others lying for congress don't have the same penalty i think is very unfair. liz: okay. let's move on. the media headlines continue to pour in that the democrats are really worried about beating the president. financial times, bernie sanders early strength worries democrat leaders. the prospect after nomination of the most anti-establishment presidential candidate since 1972. we have media reports in the likes of "politico." this could be the weakest slate of candidates since 1972. cnn commentator van jones says democrats are depressed and sad. your take on nancy pelosi meeting with house democrats, switch away from impeachment. talk about the economy. attack it and it is weak under this president. your reaction. >> terrible message for the democrats. everyone opens 401(k) at end of the month, end of the quarter to see if they're doing better under this administration. the dow is up 275 today. if nancy wants to pin hopes and dreams remaining speaker on the economy we'll do that all day long because this president created the best economy in a lifetime. >> breaking news. the iowa democrat party chair, troy price, reaction to this, cory, he just resigned amid the caucus chaos. more disarray, go ahead. >> probably rightly so i gave a speech in iowa. gave a speech at one of the caucus locations. before i left we had the votes tallied. usually about 100 people at a caucus location. when you can't get this right. there should be accountability. the right decision for him to design. liz: roll call, nancy pelosi attacking economy, rollcall that the house democrats have not drafted a budget resolution this year as nancy pelosi is saying attack the economy. does that square. >> it doesn't square obviously. look the democrats have nothing to run on. they have been a do-nothing party for the last year-and-a-half they have had the majority. nancy pelosi decided to move forward with a partisan impeachment witch-hunt. it didn't pan out well. the president's numbers are better than ever, if she wants to switch to the economy we're happy to talk about the unemployment rate at record lows for after can americans and hispanic-americans. liz: the huge las vegas culinary union, 60,000 members who work in all the casinos there, they're saying that the casino workers unite against bernie's government take over of health care. cory, they put out a flier warning that sanders would kill their health coverage. is a statement from the culinary union. this is casinos in las vegas. other labor unions oppose it. international association of firefighters, flight attendants. afl-cio afl-cio richard trumka not in full support at all for a government take over this is the rust belt. these are the swing states, cory. we have tracked it. they have higher health insurance coverage than the national average. these are the battleground states. your reaction? >> very simple, if you want to keep your health insurance you should be able to. that is what barack obama said. we know it wasn't true. the president said we'll fix that problem. bernie sanders believes that government-run health care is the solution. it is a 12 trillion-dollar problem. people in nevada know, excuse me, those workers know specifically if bernie sanders is elected they lose their health insurance and they lose their collective bargaining under it. they will not support bernie. he has a real problem. we're seeing the quote-unquote establishment of the democratic party trying to steal this election from bernie sanders because they know he can't beat donald trump. liz: watch. we'll track this. we've been on the story. we've been first on out of the box on a lot of coverage. my team has been terrific. watch for union protests against bernie sanders in nevada. i want to get to this. bernie sanders, cory, saying he is not for a over. we have his legislation cosponsored with senator warren. it would abolish private insurance, defund obamacare, abolish medicare, medicaid, s ship, erisa benefits, federal employee health benefits and on. your take bernie sanders called on the carpet by the media saying stop dodging questions, answer questions. is bernie sanders habit, his chronic habit, we've seen it, we reported on it, his habit of dodging questions, how will president trump take that on if sanders is the nominee? >> this election in 2020, if this will be the bernie sanders, donald trump election about capitalism versus socialism. bernie sanders is a self-avowed socialist. he honeymooned in the former ussr believed in and still believes it. bernie sanders is entitled to his core convictions but american people and rust belt across middle america don't support those convictions. they don't believe free health insurance and free education for people in this country illegally is the right thing. the president said we'll change the health care system, we'll do it and you have the right to choose where it is. i think we should pass health care across state lines so you purchase it regardless what state you live in to drive down the costs. truth is bernie sanders wants the government to run it. the government can't run anything very efficiently and american people don't agree with it. liz: across state lines was in obamacare. the president is pushing for that even further. corey lewandoskis. thanks for joining us, we appreciate it. >> thank you. liz: more breaking details in the latest twist of actor jussie smollett. facing a new six-count grand jury indictment for allegedly orchestrating the racist, anti-trump homophobic attack against himself for allegedly lying to police about it. jeff hall joins from us chicago with more. jeff? reporter: a little more than a year ago actor jussie smollett claimed he was attacked along this very street in chicago. smollett is once again facing charges that he lied to police about the entire ordeal. smollett initially told officers two men attacked him, yelled, racist and homophobic slurs and place ad noose around his neck. one of the attackers he said quote he was in maga country. police determined that smollett staged the attack paying two brothers to care it out. state attorney kim fox's office abruptly dropped all charges despite police saying they had a strong case. is overwhelmingcago this is the against jussie smollett. the big thing i'm waiting to see why did the 64,000-dollar question. it is a layup against jussie smollett. kind of the real issue a lot of us in chicago still want to see, why did she drop the charges? reporter: smollett was originally facing a 16 county indictment before it was dropped and never had to claim any responsibility. he ended up forfeiting his $10,000 in bail but smollett has maintained his innocence. >> i have been truthful and consistent on every single level since day one. this is incredibly difficult time. honestly one of the worst of my entire life. reporter: smollett is due for arraignment in court on february 24th. liz: this debate, we're staying on it. it is breaking out in d.c. could bernie sanders and labor unions deliver both re-election to the president and send the house back to republican control? this is the debate still coming. we have the latest details coming up. ♪. only pay for what you need... only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture, now might not be the best time to ask yourself, 'are my bones strong?' life is full of make or break moments. that's why it's so important to help reduce your risk of fracture with prolia®. only prolia® is proven to help strengthen and protect bones from fracture with 1 shot every 6 months. do not take prolia® if you have low blood calcium, are pregnant, are allergic to it, or take xgeva. serious allergic reactions like low blood pressure, trouble breathing, throat tightness, face, lip or tongue swelling, rash, itching or hives have happened. tell your doctor about dental problems, as severe jaw bone problems may happen. or new or unusual pain in your hip, groin or thigh, as unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred. speak to your doctor before stopping, skipping or delaying prolia®, as spine and other bone fractures have occurred. prolia® can cause serious side effects, like low blood calcium, serious infections, which could need hospitalization, skin problems, and severe bone, joint, or muscle pain. are you ready? 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make the world you want. ♪. liz: in new hampshire republican voters came out in droves to support the president even though he did not have a strong primary challenger. the president got nearly, more than twice the turnout, rather of president barack obama in 2012. the president got more turnout than incumbents going back to george hw. so is a red wave coming in election? could the republicans now take back the house and hold the white house? watch this. >> nine months from now we are going to take back the house of representatives. we are going to hold the senate. and we are going to keep the white house. we have so much more enthusiasm than -- it is not even close. they're all fighting each other. while the extreme left has been wasting america's time with this vial hoax we've been killing tariffs, creating jobs, raising wages and enacting fair trade deals, securing our borders, and lifting up citizens of every race, color, religion and creed. liz: let's bring in my next guest, national taxpayers union senior fellow, mattie duppler. your reaction. wow it is a fluid story, changing by the hour. if you see what's happening. i don't i think the democrats expected it to be this dire. >> you heard the president say. he talked about enthusiasm, that is really what voters have headed into november. because the economy is doing so well. think about it, the last several presidential election cycles we had candidates telling the american people this is how i'm going to make it better for you. trump gets to tell american voters. things are pretty good. this is how i keep the momentum going. certainly the wind is at his back. the contrast is so strong here. if you look what is happening in new hampshire, in iowa, democrats talking about what they want to do that would essentially unwind a lot of economic victories that happened over the course of the trump administration whereas the president going on the campaign trail he tells you what exactly he will do when he gets elected for a second term. is talking tax cuts 2.0. regulatory relief. second phase of the china trade deal. their economic circumstances feel so strong and they feel buoyed by that as they head into november. liz: look at president's accomplishments. boost for the middle class and strong economy. when it comes to manufacturing jobs, also to labor unions, afl-cio has talked about it. it is how much the u.s. is making manufacturing and selling to china. america, called goods trade deficit. it is historic number. in other words, $74 billion, that is the good trades deficit with china. this is the biggest drop ever in what china is selling into the u.s. and u.s. selling back into china. u.s. is selling more into china than ever before. this was largely ignored, mattie, last week but it is a whopper. it is a big turn around. >> that was the stated goal of the president since day one when he talked about taking on china and the u.s.-china trading relationship. we still have a long road until the election in november. things could certainly change. election, voter sentiment could certainly sour. what i would be looking for, the june,-july time frame. that is when voters opinions start to crystalize about the economy headed into an election. we have every indication that i believe the economy will get stronger from here on in. we got an astounding jobs number from the labor department, that the economy added 225,000 new jobs. that was unexpected, a surprise to the upside. we'll continue to see that kind of growth. those are the numbers americans pay attention to. during the recession one of the most interesting components of the recession, the beltway insidessers were trying to tell the rest of the united states while the economy had recovered while most americans in the rest of the country looking at their community, they hadn't gotten a pay raise in 10 years and most of their neighbors if they had a job couldn't leave the job for better conditions. now americans look around and think their fortunes are raised. they think they can make demands on their employers and raises are wages are rising as a result of. that will be so important for the president as we head to november. liz: in 1992 the democrats early on didn't really have a candidate against george hw. then bill clinton was pushed to the forefront. he became the candidate. same in 2018. the fight between barack obama and hillary clinton lasted well into the summer of that election. then barack obama took, won that election handily. do you think there is a likelihood a moderate could push aside bernie sanders like amy klobuchar or buttigieg later on? >> there are certainly a lot of there is a lot of momentum forhe bernie sanders. look what happened in the stock market the last couple days. this is very telling. the notion that bernie sanders will be the nominee for the democratic party didn't tank the market. it didn't create a lot of hesitancy for the stock market. instead stocks are up. that is because most wall street observers see bernie sanders nominee as the democrat, they see a trump second term and he is a shoo-in. the progress sirf part of the party will have to come to terms with what is happening and bernie sanders has the momentum. liz: mattie duppler, great to see you. come back soon. just ahead, michael bloomberg is trying to put out the fire but with gasoline. the former new york city mayor trying to downplay a 2015 audio where he says, quote, throw minority children up against the wall to stop and frisk. mike bloomberg says he quote, inherited this police practice even though it did grow on his watch and bloom per was defending until last year even though a court struck it down. the bloomberg campaign get ahead of this one? that debate next. liz: welcome back. you're watching the fox business network. we're coming into the bottom of the hour. billionaire michael bloomberg is doing a big super tuesday spending spree, a massive advertising push into 14 state voting on march 3rd. can it work? as that 2015 audio of bloomberg's full-throated defense of stop-and-frisk in new york city? his campaign is scrambling over that. more details with jackie deangelis. reporter: good evening liz. can it work? i'm not sure but i will tell you right where we are right now. bloomberg will spend $90 million in super tuesday states this is four times what steyer spent, 23 million. 13 times than the rest of candidates combined. look at breakdown, sanders, biden, mayor pete, elizabeth warren they spent the bulk of their money on new hampshire, iowa, nevada, south carolina. bloomberg and trump are spending on super tuesday. bloomberg has aired twice number of tv ads trump did than the entire 2016 campaign. since bloomberg joined the race since november he spent more than $344 million on the ads. majority on tv. also 57 million on facebook and google. to compare senator sanders spent less than 26 million in the same time period. he seems the most popular. with respect to facebook trump harnessed the platform in a groundbreaking way in the 2016 race. that is not wasted on mayor bloomberg. his facebook spend was 1.6 million a today. trump's peak was 400,000 doll a day. most of his days were closer to 200,000. for super tuesday, bloomberg is setting his sights on california. he has 800 staffers there. he spent 36 million on ads there. he wants the 415 delegates that state has to offer. texas has 228. north carolina has 110. virginia has 99. after south carolina and nevada that is where the push is going to be, liz. liz: wow, amazing story. jackie, what detail. thanks so much for your reporting. great to see you. come back soon. michael bloomberg his campaign now in full-on damage control, scrambling it is on defense. critics say he is flip-flopping on stop-and-frisk after this leak of an audio of michael bloomberg in 2015. president trump saying he would rather run against michael bloomberg. listen to this. >> frankly i would rather run against bloomberg than bernie sanders because sanders has real followers whether he like them or not, whether you agree with them or not. i happen to athink it is terrible what he says but he has followers. bloomberg is just buying his way in. liz: here is 2015 sound bite that mike bloomberg initially tried to block five years ago from public release -- liz: joining me now, "wall street journal" editorial page writer jillian melchior. your reaction. >> this is the bloomberg we all know having lived in new york city. he is a braise sieve. he is just as eager to take your guns as he is to take your bagel or soda. once again he has gotten the tone wrong here. that is really regrettable that is he not defending policy in of itself. look at his record in new york compared to mayor de blasio, somebody who is more on the bernie sanders wing, i think there is noticeable difference in this city with public safety, with crime, with those sorts of things and often it is the neighborhoods that are poorer, neighborhoods with a lot of people of color that suffer most from this crime and i think his record on protecting populations that are vulnerable was particularly good. i wish he was a bit more assertive. liz: a court ruled it was unconstitutional, violating civil rights. bloomberg is turning it around on the president, talking about the state of race relations, divisions today. here is bloomberg's statement yesterday saying he quote, inherited stop-and-frisk from mayor rudy giuliani but it grew under bloomberg's watch. he was defending up until last year despite the 2013 court ruling that stopped it unconstitutional and violating civil rights. >> this policy was fundamental to his mayorship. i just think trump is right on this he probably would rather run against bloomberg. same way with biden on apology tour. liz: president supported stop-and-frisk in chicago with out of control gun violence. latin americans and latinos say it is wrong violating civil rights. >> he will have a hard time to defend this in south carolina. we're seeing biden start to fade. he is relying on the black vote in south carolina but bernie sanders is making a play for that. we're already seeing him gain among latinos and blacks. liz: can i show what the "new york times" is reporting about how bloomberg apologized for this? "new york times" as late as 2015 when he would run as a democrat he told "the new york times" essentially this, that the policy had to deter crime without violating anyone's civil rights ignoring a court ruling to the contrary. do you think this hits the campaign hard? is it trouble for him? >> he would be stronger position if he wasn't so apologetic. liz: he tried to block its release before it came out. jillian, thank you. we'll take to you the communist collapse in venezuela after juan guaido returns after attending the president's state of the union. guaido met with scenes of chaos. new disturbing details from the united nations on thousands who have disappeared and tortured and murdered by the communist regime there. the media increasingly asks why is bernie sanders silent on all of this? the storygo next. ♪ we would only hold on to let go ♪ ♪ blow a kiss into the sun ♪ we need someone to lean on ♪ blow a kiss into the sun ♪ all we needed somebody to lean on ♪ the new xc90 plug-in hybrid electric. xc90. recharged. but allstate helps you. with drivewise. feedback that helps you drive safer. and that can lower your cost now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? 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[applause] please take this message back that all americans are united with the venezuelan people in their righteous struggle for freedom. liz: okay. here is what is happening now. venezuela's interim president juan guaido returned to venezuela yesterday to scenes of chaos after he attended the president's state of the union address, he was the president's guest there. loyalists of the communist dictator nicolas maduro chased after guaido. journalists, opposition lawmakers said they were pursued and struck by pro-communist loyalists. we have new details emerging from the united nations human rights committee on the torture and murder of venezuelan citizens. now this, the media increasingly asking why is bernie sanders still silent on these human rights violations? welcome my next guest, fox news foreign policy contributor, chiron skinner. love having you on. your reaction to this? >> there is so much going on in venezuela and the president's powerful statement at the state of the union recognizing the opposition leader so to speak in venezuela, guaido, really speaks to how difficult it will be to put the pieces in place to have a representative and free government in that country. we can recognize him nearly 60 other countries have done so the support for guaido is both bipartisan in the united states and transnational. but we're all up against 20 years of socialist rule where the country has basically been destroyed and what we saw, what we saw with guaido returning home was the sheer magnitude of what he has to fight against. liz: yeah. our reporting based on sources in venezuela show it just, took one generation to turn to your point, to turn venezuela from one of the world's top economies into a communist collapse and crackdown. nearly 10,000 murdered by the communist regime since 2018. thousands arbitrarily arrested, tortureed. venezuelans tell us their socialist collapse began with politicians promising to do things like fix income inequality, do government-run health care, mandate higher wages, free college, the same as what bernie sanders wants and our show, "the evening edit" was out there first showing images of people in venezuela under this communist collapse literally eating out of the back of garbage trucks, eating out of garbage bags. your reaction to that? >> you're right to say that senator sanders has a similar platform to the political reality of venezuela and we're watching in real time what that failure looks like. what concerns me about the senator, is that he has not been able to really condemn the regime in any forceful way, and he doesn't seem to understand that guaido is involved in an epic struggle between totalitarianism and freedom and we need all hands on deck. this is a bipartisan effort and the senator hasn't really taken a firm stand in defense of freedom. liz: look the media, to your point, kiron, the media is asking why is bernie sanders silent on this? why does he refuse to call for the communist dictator to step down? why isn't he recognizing guaido who stands for freedom. watch this. >> do you consider juan guaido the legitimate president of venezuela. >> no. i think what has to happen right now i think there are serious questions about the recent election. there are many people who feel it was fraudulent election. >> why have you stopped of calling maduro the venezuela a dictator? >> well, he, i think it's, it's fair to say that the last election was undemocrattic. but there are still democratic operations taking place in that country. liz: okay. here is the united nations saying that venezuelans spend average of 10 hours a day lining up for food. we had now nearly 10,000 people, according to the u.n., murdered by the venezuelan government security forces since 2018. nearly 33,000 protests. three million have fled. nearly 13,000 arrested arbitrarily. to the food lines, let's listen to bernie sanders saying at one point that food lines are a good thing. watch this. >> it is funny, sometimes american journalists talk about how bad a country is, people lining up for food. that is a good thing. in other countries people don't line up for food. the rich get the food and the poor starve to death. liz: your reaction. >> that is a bit shameful. i really have to say i believe the senator doesn't understand when he says that there are democratic forces operating in the country, that maduro, nicolas maduro is in charge of the armed forces, the police, the courts. and that congress is more on the side of the opposition. this is a deeply divided country with a legislature has declared its 2018 election to be illegitimate. it is not a country that is operating on democratic cylinders at all. liz: does it hurt bernie sanders if he is the nominee? >> i think it makes us think more carefully about bernie sanders what his foreign policy would be. we have not pressed him on that. that is what you're doing tonight, beginning a conversation about what would a sanders foreign policy platform look like if he, is able to win the nomination. we're really concerned because every american president has focused on the epic struggle we're facing right now in venezuela. liz: love your insights and perspective. come back soon. thank you for your service to the country. >> thank you. liz: we fact checked this, sanders campaign out with a whopper of a mistake in a new line of attack on jpmorgan chase's jamie dimon. you won't believe this coming up. (whistling) (whistling) ♪[ siren ] & doug give me your hand! i can save you... lots of money with liberty mutual! we customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ [ fast-paced drumming ] ♪. liz: lou dobbs joins us now with a look what's coming up on his show. lou? >> lou has got a lot coming up for you tonight. joining us citizens united president david bossie. by the way left goes nuts every time david bossie speaks as president of citizens united. steve scalise, the minority whip, gop leader and gop strategist ed rollins. radical dems have a new target. they're taking on attorney general william barr. i will tell you right now, liz, it is not a fair fight. barr will win in a knockout. gordon chang on the latest on the coronavirus and huawei. the president of liberty university, jerry falwell joins us. we hope you will as well at the top of the hour. liz, back to you. liz: you jam-packed the show. great stuff. good to see you. we'll be watching. nice to see him. in a rare outburst on twitter former goldman sachs and chair and ceo, lloyd blankfein said russia should back bernie sanders to best screws up the u.s. he went on to say this. sanders will ruin the economy, doesn't care about the military. if i go with sanders this time around if i'm russian. >> i was kind of upset that he said that. if we, if bernie, senator sanders becomes the president he is a socialist. he wants to take over the health care system, ban all private coverage. he wants the green energy deal. he wants free college tuition. all these things would have to be paid for by taxpayers. the russians may like the fact if bernie became president we would face these kind of things and it would bring down our economy. america is doing so well right now. the stock market is at an all-time high. unemployment is low. so wish something like for the russians to like having senator sanders, he is a socialist. liz: russian on leader tweeting his support of bernie sanders after bernie's victory in new hampshire nice to wake up and find out bernie won. i cheer for him. move on to this, sally. bernie campaign attacking jpmorgan chase claiming the bank took in $460 billion of bailout money during the financial collapse. watch this. >> his bank was able to get 416 billion-dollar bailout from the federal reserve and the treasury department. liz: here's the danger for the election coming up, sally. the bernie campaign is again wildly off base and wrong. that $416 billion includes tarp bailout money that went to hundreds of banks, two carmakers, the insurer aig and the entire housing industry. but it didn't include federal reserve borrowings, that jpmorgan and other banks paid back. you deal with facts. can you trust what you hear out of the sanders campaign? >> no, actually i can't. if you look at something like health care he wants to take over it, would mean huge tax increases, long waits, rationed care like in canada where i am from. he doesn't tell the truth. he tells the american people that health care in canada is free and the average american pays $11,000. what he doesn't tell the american people that the canadian health care system costs 13,311 per year in hidden taxes. you get rationed care, long waits, doctor shortages all of the above. so i don't believe -- liz: 13,000 per taxpayer in canada, is that it. >> compared to 11,000 here. liz: to your point, wish we had more time, jamie dimon put out an annual letter this year, say you can't do capitalism, you can't do socialism here, it leads to corruption, authoritarian government, interference in everybody's lives. it would be a disaster. we shouldn't forget that true freedom is connected to capitalism. sally your final word, and then we got to go. >> as margaret thatcher said the problem with socialism eventually you run out of other people's money. that is what bernie sanders would do for us. >> sally pipes. great to see you. come back soon. more house republicans boycotting a hearing run by adam schiff today, saying adam schiff will not hold a hearing on fbi abuses spying on the trump campaign. the fight next. obligated to put clients first. so, what do you provide? cookie cutter portfolios? nope. we tailor portfolios to our client's needs. but you do sell investments that earn you high commissions, right? we don't have those. so, what's in it for you? our fees are structured so we do better when our clients do better. at fisher investments we're clearly different. .. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ wherever we want to go, we just have to start. autosave your way there with chase. chase. make more of what's yours. liz: adam schiff is under fire. republicans led by devin nunes and chris stuart boycotted a hearing saying he failed to hold a hearing over the justice department's inspector general's report finding the fbi committed abuses during the trump campaign. >> he spent years trying to destroy the united states, so did comey. that's why the fisa abuses occurred. in fact it's important that his committee does oversight hearings. and i would want to know were i there, what are you going to do to make sure it doesn't happen in the future. congress is considering letting thaition that -- considering legislation that would make it difficult to get fisa approved. liz: fisa courts meant for terrorists and foreign agents are being used to spy on opposition campaigns. at least two of the four or five fisa applications, maybe those cases are in jeopardy, too. the doj watchdog found they relied on the discredited steele dossier which we found was largely hidden from the fisa court. so adam schiff is okay with that? >> apparently, because he's not doing anything about it. there are things we don't know because of curl curlr -- becausf durham's investigation. we can finds out from christopher wray to find out what they are going to do to make sure these things don't happen in the future. we need to know what's going to happen so we have confidence. liz: hiv got devin nunes' phone records during the impeachment trial. the deal dossier was found to have sufficient factual basis. that's adam schiff. >> we necessity that's not -- we know that's not true. he's apologizing for misconduct. he shouldn't do that. liz: thank you for your service to our country. former top fbi official. thank you for having us in your homes. we'll have a jam packed show again tomorrow. lou dobbs next on the fox business network. [♪] lou: good evening, everybody, the radical dimms moving tone a new phase of their hateful address against president trump. their new target, attorney general william barr, the house judiciary committee led by failed impeachment managerriery nadler says barr will answer ask questions on the 1st. the dimms want to know about three things. with the drawl of u.s. attorney jessie through's