not visiting. it s not just a lack ever leadership. it s a lack of action. they are creating blacklists. fires on capitol hill as two of the journalists brought us twitter files testified before lawmakers. an american population accustomed to the right speech left industrial complex. rousseau. he gives it up. alexander, off the rim. marquette survives and advances. small town big time rocking the main street red taillights steve: ocean city, new jersey is kind of a small town kind of like what blake is singing about right there. currently it s 7:01 out there. 36 degrees. it s a little chilly along the jersey shore. going for a daytime high of 50. welcome to hour two of fox & friends for this march the 10th, 2023. and there is our crew. dave and john come on over with a steady cam. welcome ar board. ainsley: did anybody tell you all it s friday. steve: tgif thank goodness it s fox. ainsley: waking up with you on the morning and sleeping in on saturd
in place to protect dei. well, that protection doesn t start without any pressure. and so with that, reverend sharpton, thank you for always continuously applying pressure where it needs to be. hello, everyone. i m charles coleman junior in this evening for alicia menendez. we begin this hour with breaking news out of capitol hill. congress has reached a spending bill for 2024. now, the deal establishes an overall spending limit of 1.59 trillion dollars for the fiscal year. congresses currently facing its first chant deadline of january 15th joins us now from capitol hill with the latest. good evening, julia. help us break this down. this 1.59 trillion dollar deal. well, it depends who you ask when it comes to breaking down the steel. when speaker johnson put out his memo to colleagues breaking it down, he said that there would be 886 billion dollars
the dear colleague letter from speaker johnson. tell us what you know about this agreement. we ve got a lot of numbers here. yes, symone. a lot of numbers. a little bit of a discrepancy and what we re hearing from republican leader, speaker johnson and democratic leaders. you mentioned we have that dear colleague letter that gives us the first sense of these top line members. you know, one point 59 trillion for fiscal year 2024, which republicans say allots 886 billion dollars in defense and 704 billion in non-defense. now, democrats are saying that they ve secured more than 772 billion in non defense spending. so, this is getting a little in the weeds here. but the difference is a side card dam deal that is a 69 billion dollars, that was negotiated as part of that speaker mccarthy, biden deal. and so, that is actually sticking around, explaining
gaps here. but those gaps need to be filled, and we need to understand that there is a methodical and comprehensive process to determine whether or not there are employees of the department of homeland security who have connections, ties, allegiances to domestic violent extremist groups. how do you square or reconcile the first amendment right to have these views and believes as opposed to the potential threat? the senate just passed the annual defense bill that approved 886 billion dollars over the next year that covers the cost of tracking terrorism abroad, but it in its own report, but admits that had no official definition of or guidance about what constitutes a violent extremists, no workforce training to identify and report extremist activity
mission. so it s been two years which, is part of the reason why we followed up with yet another letter because we appreciate the fact that the department has recognized that there are gaps here. but those gaps need to be filled, and we need to understand that there is a methodical and comprehensive process to determine whether or not there are employees of the department of homeland security who have connections, ties, allegiances to domestic violent extremist groups. how do you square or reconcile the first amendment right to have these views and believes as opposed to the potential threat? the senate just passed the annual defense bill that approved 886 billion dollars over the next year that covers the cost of tracking terrorism abroad, but it in its own