attorneys. i hope the president who seems to be coming back to a leadership in 2022 has the ability to influence these local politicians. martha: chief bratton, thank you. great to have you here. let s bring in judge jeanine pirro, former district attorney here in westchester county and co-host of the five and a stunning look at hunter biden. it s available now. i want to start by reminding everybody of a sound bite that came from jen psaki over the weekend directed at you where she was mocking a lower third that talked about soft on crime policies. watch this. biden has supported $300 billion more in funding and at the same time he also thinks we need police reform. on fox is jeanine pirro talking about soft on crime consequences. what does that mean? so was this trip today to new york aimed at changing that
afford their own security. this is a problem and in november we re going to see people will call for a change. martha: i would love for her to sit in the middle of that funeral service for an hour and defy her not to feel what is going on with these families. i also would like to point out to her the 21 children under this age of 18, black and brown children every one of them incidentally, all killed in new york city in 2021. and they in fact, these police officers that we just remembered in these funerals, they were on their way to help someone in that community. so was in need of help and they showed up and lost their lives. she should go to the inner city and talk to black and brown individuals martha: absolutely, janine. thank you. great to have you with us. lawrence jones as our live coverage to president biden s visit to new york this hour.
dick durbin, and talked to andy mccarthy earlier, about the fact listen, the problem is nobody seems to be really laying down the gauntlet. we have not heard any kind of any kind of rhetoric that shows the republicans are going to fight this tooth and nail. sandra: this is a pool spray, just happened at the white house, throw to this and see what they had to say. two friends down here, a lot of supreme court justices together, senator grassley and i, as well as senator durbin and worked with a lot of nominations overall, and supreme court nominations, and one of the president s most serious responsibilities and as i always said, and went back and looked at opening statements i made, apparently dick kind of means we must be beyond 60, chuck, i m
sears. great to have you with us, lieutenant governor. thanks for being here. thank you for having me, martha. sandra: what do you make of that poll that shows that people don t line up with the island of checking identity boxes before looking at the whole pool and deciding who the best justice would be? well, you know, it s really not without precedence. many people may not realize that the court was very highly partisan for at least the first 100 years. most people remember that f.d.r. wanted to pack the court. he was not successful in toing that. this president, president biden, wanted to pack it again. so he was rebuffed in that. you know, president johnson nominated thurgood marshall. we all applauded that. we thought that was excellent. it helped bring the country together. people started clamoring for a
the determine of prosecutors across the nation to free perpetrators have helped lead our cities look at the numbers across the country to the highest murder rates we ve seen. carjackings, shopliftings, shootings in some cities hitting their highest levels. it doesn t go unnoticed by voter who say 81% of them believe that crime is their biggest concern surpassed only by inflation. so can the president, president biden, begin the process of turning this ship around? mending relationships with the men and women in blue. judge jeanine pirro standing by. first, bill bratton has been the chief of los angeles police department and the new york city police commissioner twice. the only person to do so and now the executive chairman person at tenao risk. what did you think about what