sandra smith will stick around for us today as well. and bret baier also joining us this hour as the president insists the economy is right on track. celebrates it with james taylor at the white house. first we go to white house correspondent jacqui heinrich. hi, jacqui. even though that new gallop poll shows that voters are far more concerned with the economy than the climate, the president is fixated on climate telling reporters that he s not concerned about yesterday s hotter than expected inflation reading or the stock market sell-off before announcing that $900 million for electric vehicle chargers on highways across 35 states. great america road trip will be fully electrified, whether you re driving coast to coast on i 10 or on i-75 in michigan. charging stations will be up and easy to find as gas stations are now. we ll invest $7 billion to have the batteries and other critical materials that car companies need. the white house wants half of all new cars to be el
senate candidate don bolduc. that s more than bolduc spent on his own campaign. dems are trying to give incumbent democrat maggie hassan what they think will be an easier opponent in november. the state s republican governor says this. in some of these races they ll get what they asked for, they really are. they will get what you could call extreme candidates winning in november because people are fed up with inflation, fed up with gas prices. it is a horrible strategy. i just think this strategy will massively backfire on the democrats. harris: fox business correspondent hillary vaughn is in new hampshire with the latest. big day. big day. our fox digital team caught up with senator maggie hassan today as she was on her way to vote. she talked to reporters there. she was again asked what she thinks about democrats that are meddling in these mid-term republican primaries and whether or not she thinks it is hypocritical for them to spend donor dollars boosting a republic
times higher than when president biden took office. bill: threatening to make it worse a possible strike by tens of thousands of railroad workers. could happen as soon as friday. stoppage would cost the economy $2 billion a day. that leaves about a third of the u.s. freight in the lurch. dana: biden administration is working to broker a deal between unions and rail companies. the dispute is already impacting service with amtrak suspending some trains. kelly o grady has the latest on the possible rail strike and edward lawrence reporting on the inflation news from the white house. the inflation year-over-year 8.3% ticks down a little bit. the federal reserve would like to see the number around 2%. the federal reserve is going to be focused on the core inflation. inflation without food and energy prices. that number went up for the first time in five months and rose substantially to 6.3%. that will spook the federal reserve. the biden administration will tout the overall
4% of the dow is the worst we ve seen in two years. all hit hard because inflation remains stuck and no one can get it under control. an 8.3% annualized inflation rate. the core rate, that is without food and energy, also soaring more than 6.3%. this is the fourth 1,000 point sell-off for the dow just this year. again, this was a worse than expected inflation report. now the president is heralding this inflation reduction act that some people said is actually making the situation worse. because across the board, prices are going up. he s touting the prospect of eventually drug prices going down. even if he gets that and it s a herculean leap, it would be but a fraction of the overall costs that continue to soar. keep this in mind that with inflation running north of 8%, most food and related items are running at about double to sometimes triple that. whatever progress we ve seen on gasoline and related prices has done little to affect prices almost everywhere else. and then a
guarding the coffin for their mother as mourners pass by before returning to london. as we talked about, tomorrow evening that plane is expected to land at 8:00 p.m., 3:00 p.m. eastern time. so about 24 hours from now exactly. it has been quite a day. imagine that it has been an extraordinarily long day for king charles and the rest of his siblings. ingrid seward is joining me now. she s the editor in chief of majesty magazine and a frequent guest here and fox news contributor. good evening. good evening. martha: very good to have your with us today. what stands out to you as you watch charles and camilla as they head back to spend the evening at the royal residence in edinburgh after a long and meaningful day packed with emotion? the thing i found the most emotional is when they left holly road house with the queen s coffin loaded on to the car and they worked very slowly behind. i think it was incredibly moving. it was completely silent. i imagined there might have be