is lucky to with alive. i m charles payne in nor neil cavuto. this is your world. we have live coverage in fort myers florida. brandy? good afternoon, charles. we re here at a food pantry where a lot of people have been coming to to get some of those necessities that they needed after the flood waters came through this area. just to quickly paint the picture in the fort myers area, if you came here, you d see a lot of lights out. if you re driving down the road, you have to stop at the red light. there s no signals working right now. a lot of downed trees and those that are still up look like they have the bark just stripped from them. a lighter brown shade right now. it s also very active here. a lot of people driving around, starting to get things recovered out here. i want to bring in mary. she s here with the organization, gladiola s food pantry. you re closing up shop for the day but what have you been providing for people? since the pantry was flooded during the s
events on his schedule. the president is trying to change the debate to climate change. jared bernstein alluded to the fact that there could be climate change executive orders coming. listen to this. the president will aggressively fight to attack climate change because he knows it s one of the reasons that he s here and it is absolutely core to transitioning from where we are to where we need to be. saying it could not come up with a plan, which is why the reason might take the step. when arriving back at the white house from his trip to the middle east, the president alluded to the fact that we might have to wait a few more weeks to see if inflation comes back down. he does not plan to change his policy at all. a new fox news poll shows 38% of voter as prove of the president s energy performance. 25% of people say that they approve of the president s performance on inflation. 3/4 disapprove the president s top energy adviser told me in israel the current policies are wo
one drives. 1 gets his permit tomorrow. there s concerns there. voters sounding off as the mid-term intensity is taking off. i m charles payne in for neil cavuto, this is your world. it s a political world that keeps turning with inflation still on fire in a supreme court decision firing up democrats and republicans. what issues are going to win the day? democrats hoping the supreme court ruling on roe v. wade gives them a supreme edge. but are voters putting pocketbook issues at the forefront instead? let s ask franchesca chambers and crystal knight. franchesca, let me go to you first here. before this ruling, it was overwhelmingly about inflation, food prices, gas prices. do you think the needle is moving much since? well, it may be a little bit too early to say. if you look at the protests taking place just over the weekend and how much of a focus this issue has been even as president joe biden has had a huge economic summit, the g-7, it s abortion rights. that supre
the wall street community fears that another .75 hike next month and more after that. the inflationary environment gets disturbance turning here after four straight weeks of advances that were stopped last week. not a great start to this week. more on that in just a minute. now there s this. say it ant so, joe? bill clinton s treasury secretary warned president biden against extending the moratorium on student loan payments. larry summers says inflation will get worse for everybody else because of it. hillary vaughn on why the administration seems to be hinting in this case. no, he s not. why our professor tells us, oh, yes he is. welcome. i m neil cavuto. i want to go to hillary vaughn on what could be coming in days. hillary, what are you hearing? president biden is keeping everyone in suspense, especially those that owe student loans. he says he will make his decision known before september 1 when payments restart. students are on edge waiting to see if they need to star
building. threats against the high court began to rise last month after a draft majority opinion overturning roe v. wade was leaked to the press. while that memo does cite possible violence from a pro right supporter, it is also going on to express concerns that some racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists embrace a pro-life narrative may be linked to the perception of wanting to save white children and fight white genocide. all this in one memo. the white house press secretary wouldn t get specific when asked about which groups the president was worried about? we also believe that violence, threats and intimidation have no place in political discourse anywhere. true in front of a courthouse or a healthcare clinic. that s the thing. it seems like to us it is very one-sided on what we call out as intimidation or as violence. we want to make sure we are calling out on both sides of what is happening and what we re seeing. harris: meanwhile attorney general garla