florida as well as tens of thousands of electric crews from all over the country. we do not have a complete picture of fatalities or injuries across florida as of yet. one death has officially been reported so far. we expect to hear more from authorities soon. almost 3 million people are still without power. it weakened to a tropical storm ian but back to a hurricane this afternoon as it heads for south carolina. the mayor of charleston, south carolina, is asking his city to shut down tomorrow. correspondent steve harrigan kicks off our coverage, charlotte county florida with the latest. good evening. good evening, bret. help is pouring into florida from across the country but still in pockets like this one it is largely neighbor helping neighbor. after going across florida s peninsula, hurricane ian north and along it led to coast. the numbers are staggering. more than 2.6 million floridians without electricity. rainfall totals approaching 2 feet in some places. heavy wind
it s so cold and so callus and so inhumane it is unconscionable. it s just vile. i can t believe it. what s he looking looking for a headline. people like him are why so many americans don t like politics. there is no question that the governors of arizona and florida and texas are using migrants as pawns in their political campaign. jesse: and the governor s plans are working. democrats are finally paying attention to the border crisis. and so is the media. who thinks migrants going to massachusetts is just like the holocaust? this is the coming straight out of the authoritarian playbook. this is what is so disturbing about desantis is to use human beings to weaponize human beings for a political purpose. what we find in all our films is that the themes that we engage in the past are present today. and so when you look at the story that we are telling of the u.s. and the holocaust, you understanded that the time to save a democracy is before it s lost. jesse: 5
president biden looking to flip the script on republicans when it comes to crime the call to refund the police. could he be risking use of the unprecedented rate on mar-a-lago to score political points ahead of the midterms? will it work? our bream team panel. a university refusing to allow an lgbt club on campus. they say it s an issue of religious liberty. bombshell claims by the justice department in the formal objection to the trump team request for the neutral party to look to the documents taken from mar-a-lago. bill melugin. good evening. this doj filing came in moments ago. the doj filed this as their latest response tonight to former president trump s lawsuit over the fbi search of his home in their filing tonight, doj is saying that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the federal probe into the classified documents that were taken by the fbi from mar-a-lago. specifically here s what doj is writing. in particular the government developed evidence that a search l
seemingly more divided than ever, is there a new axis of evil on thrise? i m sandra smith in new york. hi, john. john: good to start the week off with you. congressman darryl issa just back from a trip to taiwan, tensions with china are the highest point in a generation. sandra: begin new at 2:00 with the crisis on our own shores, this is a fox news alert. and it is just eight weeks now from the midterm he thinks loos and a problem across the country, crime, leading candidate for mayor in the second largest city said she felt unsafe, felt safe in los angeles, shatter this weekend when a thief broke into her home and stole two of her handguns. john: the same time, this weekend in memphis, disturbing new information about the accused gunman in last week s deadly shooting spree, huge questions why he was not locked up to begin with. sandra: even as the democratic mayor of memphis complains about repeat offside offenders, some leaders are not learning the lessons of progr
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