Transcripts For FBC Mornings With Maria Bartiromo 20170323 :

Transcripts For FBC Mornings With Maria Bartiromo 20170323



votes. >> the fact of the matter is that they aren't looking tat entire plan. if you just look at this bill which is what the congressional budget office tid and i think they made a significant error on the coverage amount. >> we have not got a deal yet. that's not something that i can say we have yet. maria: we've got all of that coming up plus implications key items on the president's agenda including tax reform package we are expecting. take a look, mixed markets right now. futures searching for some direction. dow industrials flat on the session. in europe this morning markets are hovering near the flat lines as well. the dax index is up a fraction. in asia overnight markets were a little changed as you see here, it's all in the plus column. that was the best of it. the others very close to the flat line. plus evidence bomb shell, house intelligence committee chairman devin nunes going straight to the president about new details about intercepted information involving the trump transition team. the details on the new battle on capitol hill. mylan is recalling epipens, device is being pulled off shelves. starbucks will hire veterans, additional 15,000 vets, comes after backlash over the company's hiring plan of refugees. all that coming up this morning and joining me to talk about it fox business dagen mcdowell, former fbi joint task force. a lot happening. dagen: a lot of foot-dragging in washington over the health care bill. unclear that the republicans even vote on it today in the house. maria: now, yesterday there were a number of conservatives, there were report that is the no's were going to yes. you don't this that this is actually happening? dagen: maybe. art of the deal, can donald trump do this. it falls on the president's shoulders. maria: british police arresting seven people in overnight raids and they believe to be connected in yesterday's attack in london. 40 people were injured after a man mowed down pedestrians on westminster bridge before exiting the vehicle and attacking a police officer with a knife right outside of parliament. theresa may addressed the attack. watch. [inaudible] >> i am working very hard to make sure we can reassure the public that london can go back to normal business. >> the values that our parliament represents, democracy, freedom, human rights, the rule of law, commands the add -- admiration and respect of people anywhere, any to defeat is doom today failure. maria: we are waiting on theresa may, she will give another statement in 30 minutes time. we will take you live when she makes that statement. former u.s. embassador to the united nations senior fellow at the american enterprise john bolton. thanks so much for joining us this morning. we are expecting another statement from prime minister theresa may in about 25 minutes. your reaction to what took place overnight? >> well, the attack reminded me immediately of the attack on the canadian parliament in late 2014 by a terrorist there armed with weapons. this is, i think, quite possibly an outgrowth of the difficulty isis finds itself in in syria and iraq. a lot of people have speculated that isis hold on that caliphate diminishes and that there would be increase on terror attacks, obviously a lot remains to be seen. perhaps the prime minister will address that. but there's no accident here, no coincidence of why this attack took place where it did. the parliament square there always incredibly con guested with tourists, business people, members of parliament and the fact that this terrorist was able not only to kill and got inside the gate and actually killed one policeman. really, i think quite disturbing from a security point of view. maria: it sure is. we have more on this. let's move to another subject and that is health care. fox news is reporting this morning that it is unclear if the house will even vote on the healthcare legislation today, but at 9:00 a.m. republicans are set to male -- meet to talk about this bill. watch. >> unfortunately obamacare is making it much harder for all to have doctors, nurses and healthcare professionals, men and women alike to do their job. as insurers free obamacare marketplace, it is broken, the sphu are fleeing. >> this is a program that, i think, will work extremely well, we are again focusing on the individual across the land who want to be able to select their coverage. >> i think this is an opportunity for us to finally get rid of obamacare and move towards a system that's going to drive costs down and give americans more choices and put patients and doctors in control of their health care. maria: commander in chief to meet with the house freedom caucus to garner support. that happened at 11:30 a.m. this morning. robert, investors are watching this closely because stakes are so high, if this doesn't happen and timeline on health care doesn't happen, that backs up tax reform. >> which is why i think it will happen. i think it's better a 50% chance. i cannot see they could not give the president his first policy need. i know we went from trump bump and trump rally. some people moving to trump slump, whatever it may be, people have the eye on what's going on in this. the other thing is if this doesn't get done before the april recess, you can kiss tax reform good-bye in 2017. maria: that's why the market is so low. >> that being said, you have 10% of congress really staring this whole direction, the freedom caucus which surprises me that they could not find a better way to attack this bill. dagen: we found out that the koch network, organizations associated with the conservative koch brothers, americans for proper city and freedom partners announced yesterday that they are creating a special fund, potentially millions of dollars to support house members who vote against the healthcare bill. so it's not just some elected members of congress, it's people outside the club for growth, running ads, no vote, heritage action. >> you know steven moore works with 32 advisers, what he talked about yesterday freedom workers is against it, heritage is against it. they're going to change -- the discussion being had now supposedly with the freedom caucuses really changing a lot of it where it is out of government hands and therefore when it goes to the senate you will see a lot more republicans say no to it. dagen: to that point, one of the things that the freedom caucus won't change have the mandates for coverage which are a carry-over from obamacare where insurance has to provide say maternity care. they want that change. if those coverages, mandates are removed it will help drive down costs. maria: 50 to 70-year-old need maternity care. why is everyone paying for all of the things. they are called essential but they're not essential for everyone. >> you have a whole slew of republican governors in the key states in 2018 and 2020, michigan, nevada, pennsylvania and at the end of the day, you know, they're against the changes that the trump administration is doing and i think that will hurt as well. maria: we are watching markets this morning because they are going to be reacting to any anticipation of that vote tonight. we want to get onto one other story that's important and that is also in the lead, embassador, chairman of the house intelligence committee devin nunes making news. watch this, embassador, we have to get your reaction. >> i recently confirmed that numerous occasions that the intelligence community gathered information, details of u.s. persons associated with the trump administration. >> do you feel vindicated? >> i somewhat do. i very much appreciated the fact that they found what they found, but i somewhat do. maria: embassador, your reaction? >> well, i think the fact that nunes was willing to go public with this is an indication that he feels that is information that people need to hear right now. there's a difference obviously between incidental collection and direct collection but the fact is there were press reports before the election, during the transition, after the election about investigations of associates of the trump campaign, a very broad phrase and, in fact, what nunes has said, indeed, there were and these -- the transcripts, tapes were leaked to the press and that's how it got out there. so, you know, as the saying goes, when you feel like you're being listened to, it may turn out to be true. maria: explain to us incidental recordings versus direct? >> first of all, they probably had been conducting surveillance, electronic surveillance in this case on particular targets but i could tell you with regard to our intel oversight laws, any time a u.s. citizen is mentioned that information has to be blocked. i believe a criminal act was committed here by releasing information specially names of u.s. citizens that may have been intercepted. maria: not only that, but who was recorded, that was distributed throughout all of the intelligence agency. >> if you remember, president obama before he left office actually indicated that now every agency should care every bit of information with each other, but getting back to this one fundamental fact that if u.s. citizens were intercepted, if their voices were intercepted or names intercepted, there was a criminal act taking place here. dagen: one last thing here. if you take that story and relate it back to london terror attack yesterday, what happened in london is a reminder of how important intelligence is to fight the political battle here in the united states over them. maria: we have to jump on that. john bolton joining us there. fox business is taking you live having special coverage and analysis of the house vote on the american healthcare act as it happens today. stay with us live throughout the day for this decision. it is going to have wide and deep implications. coming up, breaking news out of london this morning. seven people have been arrested after yesterday's terrorist attack that killed three people including a police officer. we've got the very latest. next, i will sit down with eric schmit and then faulty epipen, mylan is calling a recall after report that is they did not work in an emergency. everything you need to know right after this i realize that ah, that $100k is not exactly a fortune. well, a 103 how long did it take you two to save that? a long time. then it's a fortune. i told you we had a fortune. get closer to your investment goals with a conversation. maria: welcome back, a police officer and three others have been killed in a string of shootings in wisconsin, cheryl casone with the details now and headlines, cheryl. cheryl: good morning, maria, good morning, everyone. the shootings at a bank, law firm and apartment complex as police referred to a domestic incident. police responded to reports of shots fired where they found two people shot. shots reported at a law firm and 20 minutes later in an apartment complex including s.w.a.t. with standoff. federal prosecutors now investigating north korea's potential role in the theft of $81 million from a bangladesh central account at the new york fed. the wall street journal this morning the heist may be linked with north korea because the rare piece of code was the same one used in the hacking attack on sony pictures that happened back in 2014. and finally this, don't have your debit card, well, no problem if you're with wells fargo. the company rolling out cardless withdrawals, all of atm's across the country started march 27th, customers can withdraw cash by using their smartphones. hallelujah. eight-digit code and that along with your pin. code can only be used just once at a time, maria, but certainly that's good news for wells fargo customers. those are your headlines, back to you. maria: coming up next, fall-out over hate speech. a growing number of companies pulling ads from ewe teeb. we-- youtube. plans to hire refugees, stars plan to go speed up hiring of veterans, details coming up. eric schimdt alphabet google, back in a minute. is there an elk in your bed? with sleep number, there's an adjustment for that. tilt your tormentor and put those snores to sleep. does your bed do that? come into a sleep number store where mattresses start at $899. it's a no brainer. maria: well, it started 20 years ago with a goal of building a better search engine. google has groan a titan of the technology industry now under the alphabet umbrella. joining us right now executive chairman of alphabet and ceo eric schimdt along rosenburg. you updated the book and perfect time to update the book given what's happening in terms of google's influence. top story, verizon and at&t pulling most of the ads from google. eric, this is obviously a huge piece of important. >> well, it's important. we match ads and the content but because we source the ads from everywhere every once in a while they put something that doesn't match. we had to tighten our policies and actually increase our manual review time and so i think we are going to be okay. maria: when you see companies sort of tripping over the idea that we didn't know that our ad would be in this particular spot, that's why they are pulling it, can you ensure that that doesn't happen again where they are putting the ads in a place that obviously is not where these companies want them? >> we can in this case, because the ads come from everywhere, every once in a while we will have an ad that somebody was trying to sneak it in and get underneath our rules and we can't guaranty but we can get pretty close. maria: it's interesting because google has changed so much and it's been so important in terms information flow. you've got in the wake of yesterday's attack if london, jonathan, when you look at a company like goog well the reach it has, even a facebook, twitter, they are doing more to mitigate spread online, tell us how that fits in the way that google has changed? >> the big challenge that is we focused on in the new chapter are really issues around scaling google. the original version of how google works focused on how the mobile and cloud computing came and disrupted the technological landscape and shifted the power from companies to consumers. product became the most important thing. what we are focused on now is organizing around the ceo's who can have the technical insights to build products that solve these kind of problems. maria: how do you do is that that's? >> so we focus on -- google is is a holding company that consists of google first, one to have big benefits is that google gets to focus on google and then we have brilliant ceo's who are running the separate companies, fiber, access business, deep mind, so they're focusing on the things that matter for them, cross culture, innovation, decision-making, communications, the kind of things that we talked about in the -- >> in the book what we say people have the biggest impact, so in particular larry decided why don't we just organize around google and separately take the people leading the initiatives and put them in charge of their own companies. no company at our scale has ever done that and it looks like it's a huge success. for two reasons, one we obviously have the new things going on, self-driving cars, all that going very well but the core business got a new sort of dose of focus and that's produced extraordinary results in the last couple of years. maria: that is. you've been able to create that much more value for investors by creating -- >> frankly i should say more than i expected. in other words, the value of focus in this division that again larry page led really has delivered to our shareholders in a way that i don't think any of us quite expected. maria: i want to get back to the reach and influence of google and youtube. i mean, obviously this has become much bigger than a lot of people expected in terms of influence and as a result bigger responsibility fall at leadership of the company to really make sure that the right things are online? how do you control the extremism on youtube, for example? >> youtube, for example, went from 100 million hours watched per day to 1 billion hours of youtube watched globally every day. that's an extraordinary platform and extraordinary responsibility. my own view on most of this extremist thing as well as fake news in general is that it's a ranking problem. we are very good at detecting what's the most relevant and what's the least relevant. it should be possible for computers to detect malicious, misleading and incorrect information and essentially have you not see it. we are not arguing for censorship, we are arguing to take it off the page, put it somewhere else. make it harder to find. maria: that's the thing, people are feeling that it is harder to find. >> that will get fixed and it will get fixed -- it's a big problem in social media in my view. there's undifferentiated links, i'm going to link here and here and they discovered a woman who is a passionate activist who is a computer runed by the russians or whatever stereotype you have. maria: can you see everything quickly that's out there? when you've got the bad guys posting things, how quickly can you get around that and shut it down? >> well, we certainly can see it, our computers can see it, the algorithm for shutting it down or deranking it takes a little time. maria: yeah, at this point tell us how google develops through here, jonathan? you've obviously taken this company and you've written about it in terms of beginning search engine but you mentioned all the different brands, where do you see this in the next five years as eric is working on ai and all of the other innovation in. >> i think we are attacking some of the biggest problems imaginable. i think the machine efforts are going to allow us to solve problems like traffic, solve problems, anything in health care that's related to tracking longitude data. >> anything involving vision. what do doctors do, they look at you, we can make that more accurate. >> we have huge progress with machine learning one of the examples that someone was working in 20% time was solving the diagnosis of diabetic, a disease that affects millions of people and we look at machines and look images and diagnosis disease so we are saving enormous amount of time. huge opportunities there and machine learning is also going to do enormous things to anything relate today business that involves prediction, invent other, warranty analysis. anything related to your supply chain. maria: that's incredible. when you say that a doctor looks at you, we can make that better, how? >> everybody goes to the doctor and you go to the dermatologist, they say that's cancer, that's not cancer and so forth. they see more skin cancer, they see more eyes. we will see a million eyes, we are just more accurate. by the way, we don't replace what the doctor does, the doctor still uses the tool and make the decision with the patient as to what to do. >> radiologist on pattern matching. the radiologist isn't looking at the shot and telling you how that evolved, they are just looking at the state of the information so that's pattern matching. if you can see 150 million, you will do better than someone who sees a few hundred a day. >> these techniques can transform business worldwide specially in american business. my view is that ai machine will be the primary engine of growth and profit drivers in the next decade. maria: that's incredible. again, with technology and innovation, how do you stop, you know, the car from getting hacked, how do you stop technology working against itself in terms of creating problems? like with driverless cars. how do i know the bad guys don't take charge of it and take control? >> the biggest problem with cark and wrap it around a tree. i think the technology is now capable of being defended against. in other words, i think that the sort of traditional my car has been hacked because somebody got into it it could be much harder. incrimination -- encryption is so harder now, more than 30,000 people will die on american highways, every one of those is a horrific strategy. let's do everything we can to stop that. maria: what do you think is the most important lesson you've learned? go back to the early days. i remember when you first got the job. you had said to me they wanted an adult in the room. [laughter] maria: talk to us about the early days and what you've learned? >> if you approach with a new way, you can really change the world. most people accept things as -- these are the rules as jonathan said, the traffic is always bad in new york or what have you. but there are new technologies and particularly young people with ideas really can do it and what alphabet is simply the evolution of that model, another way to make more bets. >> i think it's about getting the culture right from the start and this is one of the things that i have seen when companies have come to talk to us about how google works and try to implement many of the techniques that we have articulated with, the hiring, decision-making, how to run meetings, some of those things they can do. this was a company that had a clear mission and allowed its employees to define the culture and many of the rules that you read about in the book, the user comes first, don't be evil actually came out of the smart creatives that were the founding employees in the company. maria: amazing. again, as you get more influence and more important in the global story and the global economy, are you fazing more backlash when you see advertisers pulling their ads today? >> i don't think it's too bad. i think we still provide such a fundamental valuable service. i always worry about governments. i've always worried about european governments, for example, for the issues of overregulation, if you will. maria: yeah. >> but fundamentally as long as you're solving a real problem, you will fine. maria: all right, we will leave it there. great to see you both. >> thank you. >> thank you very much, we will be right back retirement journey takes you, we can help you reach your goals. call us or your advisor t. rowe price. invest with confidence. ( ♪ ) i moved upstate because i was interested in building a career. i came to ibm to manage global clients and big data. but i found so much more. ( ♪ ) it's really a melting pot of activities and people. (applause, cheering) new york state is filled with bright minds like victoria's. to find the companies and talent of tomorrow, search for our page, jobsinnewyorkstate on linkedin. searching one topic. that will generate over 600 million results. and if you've been diagnosed with cancer, searching for answers like where to treat, can feel even more overwhelming. .. with a specialist at cancer treatment centers of america. start with teams of cancer treatment experts under one roof. start where specialists use advanced genomic testing to guide precision cancer treatment... ...that may lead to targeted therapies and more treatment options. start where there's a commitment to analyzing the latest research and conducting clinical trials-to help each patient get the personalized cancer care they deserve. start at one of the cancer treatment centers of america hospitals near you. maria: would want to take you to breaking news. theresa may addressing parliament. let's listen in. >> we are not afraid in our result will never waver in the face of terrorism. and we meet here in the oldest of all parliaments because we know that democracy and the values that entails will always prevail. those values, free speech, liberty, human rights and the rule of law are embodied here in this place, that they are shared a free people around the world. a terrorist came to the place where people of all nationalities and culture gathered to celebrate what it means to be free. and he took out his rage indiscriminately against innocent men, women and children. mr. speaker, this was an attack on free people everywhere. and on behalf of the british people, i would like to thank our friends and allies around the world who made it clear that they stand. what happened on the streets of westminster yesterday afternoon second assault. others are not going police investigation, the house will understand there are limits to what i can say, but having been updated by police and security officials, let me set up what this stage i can tell the house. at approximately 2:40 p.m. yesterday come a single attacker drove his vehicle at even two innocent pedestrians who were crossing westminster bridge, killing two people and injuring around 40 more. in addition to 12 britons admitted thoital we ow that the big guns include three french children come athree romanian, for south koreans, one german, one irish, when cheney is, one italian, one american and two creeks. we're in close contact to the governments of the country of all those affected. the injured also included three peace officers who were returning from an event to recognize their bravery. two of those three remained in serious condition. they are unless the vehicle and attack that officer with a large knife. the house will know 48-year-old keith kerner was killed. pc primer had devoted his life to the service of this country. he had been a member of the parliamentary diplomatic detection command for 15 years and a soldier in the royal artillery before that. he was a husband and a father killed doing a job he loved. he was every inch a hero and actions will never be forgotten. i know the whole house will join me in sending our deepest condolences to his family and to the families and friends of all those who have been killed and injured in yesterday's awful attacks. i know also that the house will wish to thank all those who acted with such speed and professionalism yesterday to secure this place and ensure we are able to today. i chaired a meeting of the government's emergency committee cobra and will have further briefing from briefings that officials later today. the threat to the u.k. has been sent as severe cut in meaning an attack highly likely for some time. this is the second highest threat level. the highest level critical means there are specific intelligence that an attack is imminent as there is no such intelligence, the joint system has decided the threat level will not change in light of yesterday's attack. mr. speaker, the whole country will want to know who is responsible for this atrocity and the measures we are taking to strengthen our security here in westminster. if a counterterrorism investigation is directly under way. hundreds of police and security officers have been working through the night to establish everything possible about this attack including its preparation, motivation and whether there were any associates involved in its planning. and while there remain limits on what i can say it this stage, i can confirm that overnight the peace search six addresses and made it a rest in birmingham and london. mr. speaker, it is still the least that this attacker acted alone and they have no reason to believe there are infinite further attacks on the public. his identity is known to the police and add my five and operational considerations allow, he will be publicly identified. what i can confirm is that the man was british-born and back some years ago he was once investigated in relation to concerns about violent extremism. he was a peripheral figure appeared the case is historic. he was not part of the current intelligence picture. there is no prior intelligence of his content or the plot. investigations continue. that being deputy commissioner last night our working assumption is the attacker was inspired by islamist ideology. mr. speaker, we know the threat is very real, but while the public should remain utterly vigilant, they should not and will not eke out a this threat. as acting deputy commissioner rowley has made clear, we are stepping up policing to protect communities across the country and to reassure the public. and as a precautionary measure, disobeyed increase the number of patrols in cities across the country with more police and more armed police on the streets. since june 2013, our police and the security and intelligence agencies have successfully disrupted 13 separate terrorist plots in britain. following the 20th -- 2015 strategic defense we've protected for counterterrorism and committed to increase cross government spending on counterterrorism by real terms over the course of the parliament and over the next eight years, we would invest an extra 2.5 early in and building a global security intelligence network, employing over 1900 additional staff at mi-5, and my six ngc hq in dublin or global network of character terrorism networks working in 30 countries across europe, middle east, africa and asia. mr. speaker, in terms of security here in westminster, we should be clear first of all that an attacker attempted to break into parliament and was shot dead within 20 yards of decay. if his intention was to gain access to this building, we should be clear that he did not succeed. the police heroically get their job. but as this routine, the police together with house authorities are reviewing security at the parliamentary estate, coordinate with the cabinet office who have responsibilities and security measures in place around the government cares so. although this is your spouse have a responsibility for the security and safety of our staff and advice is available for members who need it. mr. speaker, yesterday we saw the worst of humanity, but we will remember the past. we will remember the extraordinary efforts to save the life including those from my right honorable friend, member and we will remember the exceptional bravery of our police, security and emergency services who wants it and ran toward the danger comment even as they encouraged others to move the other way. on behalf of the whole country, i want to pay tribute to them for the work they have been doing to reassure the public treat the injured and bring security back to the streets of the capital city. but they have lost one of their own in yesterday's attack only makes their columnists and professionalism all the more remarkable. mr. speaker, i'm speaker, a lot has been said since terror struck london yesterday. much more will be spent in the coming days. but the greatest response last night in the words of politicians, but in the everyday actions of ordinary people. beyond these walls today, it seems repeated in towns and cities across the country, millions of people are going about their days and getting on with their life. the streets are as busy as ever. the office this fall, coffee shops and cafés bustling. as i speak in the millions building trains and airplanes to travel to london in the two themselves the greatest city on earth and in the factions commit millions of acts of normality that we find the best response to terrorism, a response that denies there and domestic jury that refuses to let him win. the shows we will never give in. a response driven by that same spirit that drove a husband and father to put himself between us and our attacker and to pay the ultimate price. to respond that fast to the men and women who propagate this hate and evil, you will not defeat us. mr. speaker, let this be the message from this house in this nation today. our values will prevail. and i commend this statement to the house. >> order. colleagues, i am advised we have been joined today. maria: british prime minister theresa may addressing yesterday. steve rogers is the best of the fbi. when you think more details will come out in terms of who the individual was, what the motive is good at this time, police believe the attacker acted alone. we don't have many details. usually these attackers to a maximum. they are looking to see if there's any overseas international terrorism matrix that there probably is. the prime minister talked a lot and said nothing about you. the fact of the matter is until we recognize we are at war and until we recognize this is an ideological war. i've got to tell you, and really frustrated but i and hear from politicians because the war begins when these come from england, for example. they've got to respect our way of life, our values and learn about baby peggy lbj and stuart country when they are here. we don't do that and fight do that and fight that war from the ground up, we will see more of. dagen: she did say something of value pitch out of the victims of these terrorist attacks and she's trying to reassure the people of written that they are on it and that they are safe and in terms of law enforcement by tracking down before releasing an individual's name. i'm sure that they wouldn't want to make sure -- they would want to make sure that they are on top of whatever in tracking down terrorists and other suspects. maria: we should point out eight people were arrested. we don't have the details in terms of their motives, their names, that eight people have been arrested. >> steve, just a few questions a few questions for bad credit been on the fbi task force. one, will they look at this and correlated at all to brussels which have been exact a year earlier, the anniversary of the brussels attack. and to come hug you now find a different terrorism when people use cars. this is very much like what happened in france. we have a whole new -- they usually can find people with guns. >> low-tech method. anyone can drive a car and drive it into the crowd. the first part of your question, they were correlated to brussels and they will do everything they can to find out if this individual is connected to a terrorism organization. it is important to take them alive and unfortunately he said. the other question is how do we fight this. we haven't been fighting it the way it should be. that is what i said earlier when you have open borders, when you allow everyone to come into your country and i hear this from police officers i spoke to from great britain and police are unable to do their job. you have this type of problem. it's an ideological war from the ground up. respect our country, values, culture. learn about them. orist raids come it's not clear at all at this point whether they are. we don't know if they remotely, directly connected on westminster bridge or if it's just a general terror crackdown after this attack in london. >> a little different in the u.s. where they put the picture of the terrorists defeated boston, what happened in new york. they put it out pretty quickly to make sure they spread the word that way if there's people. maria: they want help from the public good >> you're absolutely right. i'm concerned they haven't done that. they know who this fellow is. of course they don't want to compromise an investigation, but at this point you've got to be transparent. the government may be afraid to let people, but they'll have to soon. we'll keep an eye on that. maria: so what are they doing now with eight people have been arrested? take us to the protocol of how they move forward on this investigation, finding out who individuals are. >> each one of these individuals are interrogated by intelligence agencies to see if they were connected to this. they had bad information. they had to have people on the radar so they brought them in to be investigated. they are going to a lot of electronic sleepiness computers, cell phones. there's going to be an intense investigation of these days. maria: for sure. we'll keep watching monday. we will list the theresa may. and the may. any developments, we'll have them for you. taking a sharp rate, we will be right back. this is the silverado special edition. this is one gorgeous truck. oh, did i say there's only one special edition? because, actually there's five. ooohh!! aaaahh!! uh! hooooly mackerel. wow. nice. strength and style. it's truck month. get 0% financing for 60 months plus find your tag and get $5500 on select chevy silverado pick-ups when you finance with gm financial. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. maria: welcome back. a woman arrested after she eventually attempted to gain entry into the white house. cheryl casone at the details. reporter: maria, secret service officers found the woman dangling her shoelaces from the white house and that she tried to jump. it happened tuesday night she told police she was there to speak to president term. this comes two weeks after a california man jumped a fence while carrying two cans of mace and a letter for the president. mylan pharmaceuticals issuing a recall of thousands of epipen antiallergy and check is in overseas markets. concerned that the parker cause them to not work and is frustrated and subsidiary has recalled or badges. about 80,000 of them. she reports that the inspectors did not work properly. none of the injectors affected by the recall were distributed here in the united states. finally this, starbucks pledging to hire more u.s. military veterans after some customers threatened to boycott starbucks. because they promised to hire 10,000 refugees. well, howard schulz at its annual shareholders meeting a cd a comment the last time yesterday says he's going to hire a team customer better in expenses by 2025. shares of starbucks down 6% over the past year, which is that you know starbucks will continue to pledge the higher 10,000 refugees as well. maria: that's what brought on all of the pushback from the fact they came and said we are going to hire more refugees. people said what about batteries? they had hired program in place already, but obviously they've changed course and are hiring more veterans. dagen: which i think people needed to hear it is important to remember. trade to us about yourself. >> we talked about this several months ago and so it's good. public awareness and what you do here in a program like this has really raised the bar. >> i just have to plug for company because measures for the word for best company hiring military. maria: how many military men and women have you hired? >> we have 35 employees and we are already a 30%, 40% and by here and we will be over 50%. almost all of our pilots former military. she pilots coast guard, head of director operations. >> is something to be proud of. you should be applauded. dagen: i go back to the cap blank node set. i've never regretted hiring of veteran. >> in meetings, no one wants to go after a chief pilot when he talks about the idea of what is going to do an omission. maria: not just the skill you're talking about, but also disciplined and teamwork in so many reasons to hire better in. >> you learned a military teamwork. maria: will take a short break. terry monday. we'll have the very latest when we come right back. stay with us. . . . i mean wish i had time to take care of my portfolio, but... well, what are you doing tomorrow -10am? staff meeting. 3:45? tai chi. 6:30? sam's baseball practice. you are busy. wouldn't it be great if you had investments that worked as hard as you do? yeah. introducing essential portfolios the automated investing solution. maria: welcome back, good thursday morning, i'm maria bartiromo, it is thursday march 23rd. your top stories right now, 7:00 a.m. on the east coast. healthcare reform on life support. the administration and lawmakers trying to make a deal that will pass a house vote. tonight, if 23 republicans vote no, it fails. >> this bill represents the best chance of repealing and replacing obamacare and instilling a patient centric health system that increases choice and lowers healthcare costs. >> tonight is an encouraging night and yet i don't want to be so optimistic to say that the deal is done. >> this taking 24 million people off of medicare. this is your vote. maria: we are following that following the implications for other key items on the president's agenda including tax reform. futures searching for direction as people are wondering how this vote will go tonight and, of course, impact tax reform, that's what's been the upset in the markets recently. this morning we are looking at a gain. fractional move but nonetheless a gain. in europe markets are hovering near the flat line as well also in positive territory but fractionally. in asia overnights markets were little changed. fractional moves. we have breaking news out of london once again. british police have arrested 8 people in overnight raids following yesterday's terrorist attack in london. we do not know if the arrests are directly related to this attack, four people were killed including a police officer as well as the alleged attacker. british prime minister theresa may speaking last hour honoring the victims, we will tell you what she said this morning. fallout over extremism online hitting youtube. several major companies pulling ads from the site saying they do not want content next to videos promoting hate and terrorism. eric schimdt's reaction coming up. he joined us up today. david nunes telling president trump his transition team's communications were in fact, intercepted during legal surveillance. the reports he readied not mention russia. she jumped out of a truck of a moving car, in her escape, she did escape. we will have the details on what happened next. united airline making next trip to airports, out mate security lines. big move there. the visit with the pope goes viral. take a look. he takes it in stride. laughing it about it. [laughter] maria: joining me to talk about it dagen mcdowell, former fbi task force steve rogers and fox news contributor robert wolf. great to see you. >> great being here. maria: what a news day today. >> what an interview you just did with eric schmidt. it could not be more timely. not an easy day for him. maria: he seems to think that the algorithms will help and not put those ads that these major companies are pulling from youtube in bad places. >> in 24 hours. >> it's to the point that a lot of corporations have a responsibility to help us combating terrorism and hate. it's a national security issue and they need to jump on board too. maria: this has been an issue for a long time and so far, daig even, as you pointed out, technologies companies have been lagging in terms of their response in combating terrorism. dagen: a couple of years there was an advertising conference in south of france and youtube executive owned by google obviously and talking about all of the thicks they are doing to reduce the hate videos and the terrorism-related videos and at the same time there were videos all over the place from the islamic state on youtube. >> two very different situations. you have facebook where they're trying to make sure they don't proliferate fake news and then you have google where advertisers don't want to be near youtubeers with terrorism. they both have different ways they have to figure out how to engage their clients just totally differently. maria: i don't think they have figured it out yet. dagen: they have not. >> i think they are going to come together and realize that they do have a responsibility to the american people and i'm sure they'll work it out. dagen: identify when a crime is being committed by a live video on their social media network. maria: just this week, a teenager getting raped. dagen: exactly. engineering way to shut that down but it's very difficult. maria: and then there's health care. today is a major day. we are waiting to see if the vote happens. fox news is reporting that it's unclear. if the house will even vote on the legislation today, yesterday we were speaking about this and, in fact, one of our guests said that they would expect the bill to be pulled and that was rand paul, of course, saying he would expect paul ryan bill to be pulled. house republicans are set to meet to talk about a deal. 9:00 a.m. eastern. house speaker paul ryan said republicans need to compromise to pass legislation. watch. >> we are in the fourth quarter of the house passing the bill. that's when a lot of the negotiations intensify near the end of the process. this is what this is. this is called legislating. what's important for us is we have to compromise to make sure that we draft legislation that can actually pass. maria: meanwhile the commander in chief set to meet with the house freedom caucus during closed-door meeting. joining us governor huckabee. good to see you. thank you so much for weighing in here. what do you make to have republican push and pushback on this bill right now? >> well, maria, some of the congress members are going to need health care because they're all dealing with broken arms that have been twisted so hard trying to get their vote. this is really a full-court press vote by paul ryan and a lot is on the line. let's take it away from the political issue because there's the theoretical and practical. the theoretical is think tank approach to health care, the practical is what does this bill actually do to the single mom who is a middle manager at a dollar general store. what does it do to a retired elderly person and i think that there's enough anxiety that the very people that were promised that would have absolutely no interruption to their health care are scare today death that it's going to interrupt it. this had better work if they pass it and i'm not sure they will yet, i think there's still concessions, but if they pas it it dog on sure better work and not hurt a bunch of people because if it does republicans will pay dearly for this. dagen: those individual that is you just mentioned, it's dagen mcdowell, are the reasons that the republican leadership is trying to change the affordable care act rather than just repealing the entire thing and starting from scratch because they don't want people's insurance interrupted, they don't want to rip insurance markets as we know them right now. >> let me give you a specific, the whole idea of tax credits, this is a republican, you know, wonderful piece of policy, they are always pushing tax credits, you know why, that way you're not saying you're subsidizing anybody. a tax credit is a subsidy. here is a problem with it. it's a subsidy but after the fact. if you're barely putting grocery on your tables and can barely pay your rent, getting a tax credit next year with your tax return did you want mean didly squad, you need the help now and not a year from now in your tax returns and that's something that they understand. dagen: would you have kept obamacare subsidies in place then? >> no, i would have pushed more toward free market, look, let's be real clear, there are some subsidies that are going to have to be there if we are going to provide the safety net that the president promised throughout the campaign and even during the early part of this discussion. subsidies for people, for example, with preexisting conditions that you can't put in the typical normal pool because if you do, that's what makes the cost absolutely unaffordable. you skew the whole pool. you can't defend that and you can't defend the idea of unlimited benefits, those are things that you just have to look at not with a loving heart, but you have to look at it with reality and some of that is going to require subsidy. >> governor, good to see you, we missed our dinner last week, one day. you sound like a sitting governor right now because when you think about arkansas, kentucky, you know, and even some of the midwest states, michigan who all are against it, ohio, it seems like your real concern is how it's going to impact the medicaid expansion and those that really need it the most, so you're sounding like a governor again which i applied because i'm aligned with you on those concerns. how do you think we square the circle between getting it passed in the house and getting it passed in the senate? is there a way to square that circle? >> i think there could be, robert. i believe that one of the real issues is making medicaid a block grant and giving states more control of how they allocate the resources for their unique populations. there's a big difference in the 50 states, the way things look for health care in rural arkansas, very different than it looks like in urban boston and to have a template which is the flaw of obamacare, 50-state template replaced by a republican version of a 50-state template is still a huge mistake unless you allow federalism to take place, let the tenth amendment work, put the money in the hands of the people closest to the problems they have to solve and you'll get a much better solution. maria: that is exactly what the freedom caucus is pushing back about, governor. let me switch gears, i have to get your take on this because the chairman of the house intelligence committee nunes said that some of the communications of the trump transition team were in fact, monitored after the election. watch this, governor, i have to get your reaction. >> this appears to be all legally collected foreign intelligence under fisa where there was incidental collection that ended up in -- in reporting channels and it was widely disseminated. clearly i thought it was important enough to at least tell all of you, inform the speaker and then i'm going to go to the white house. maria: governor, the president said he was vindicated. i mean, obviously he was monitored. what do you make of this? >> well, i think that there was a real sense in which he's vindicated. two things that ought to concern every american. number one, that there are clearly issues of americans being surveilled who were not elected officials when they're being surveilled. who are not subject to a criminal complaint and i think it's a real issue for the fourth amendment and we need to be concerned i don't think whether you're democrat, republican, liberal, conservative. this is an issue than any philosophical direction. the second thing is i believe this is very important to point out is that when you have people inside the government who were sworn to secrecy under the violation of law if they discloses and they discloses, you are obligated to find out who they are and criminally prosecute them because the only thing worst than the government secretly surveilling is somebody inside the government trying to leak that information out to hurt people because they don't like them politically or philosophically. maria: that was the other thing. nunes said, i found much of it inappropriate and not only that, steve rogers, it was disseminated throughout the intelligence agencies. you're not -- when that information is disseminated, it's not supposed to be disseminated with the person who is actually surveilled. but they unmasked it to be donald trump and transition team. >> the governor is absolutely right. he put things in very good perspective. first of all, legally collected but possibly illegally distributed. you cannot take incidental information, collect it and simply share it with everyone when it's a united states citizen, so the governor is absolutely right. there should be investigation regarding a crime that could have been committed and those who committed this crime should be prosecuted. >> you know, i probably have a little different take, not surprising -- maria: we know that president obama changed things in the last couple of weeks of his administration by allowing that kind of dissemination. >> i have to hear this. maria: you're friend with president obama. >> i was going to say that i think that what senator mccain said yesterday makes the most sense. the house is not doing it in a bipartisan way, the wall street journal said that nunes -- what nunes did yesterday was a breach of protocol. it was clear that we have to take it out of the house and bring it to a -- let me finish. maria: you're saying it was a breach because he went to the president first. >> and the media. this is not robert wolf. maria: look at michael flynn's phone call. go ahead. >> we need to bring it to a select and independent committee and let them go through the facts of where russia was. this was -- this is not a republican or democrat thing. this is about russia here. >> it's not about russia. maria: this is not -- i know everybody wants to go to russia all of the time. this is not about russia. [inaudible] >> possible criminal act of distributing collective information that was on a u.s. citizen is illegal -- >> representative said that he has seen more than circumstantial evidence of collusion between russia and the associates of trump. you quote nunes, i quote schiff. we should go to an independent committee and let them decide like they did during 9/11. >> robert, let me interject, if this is about russia, then we have russian agents in the intel agencies because that's where this stuff originated and that's where it leaked. russia had nothing to do with it. there's no russian fingerprints on that. i tend to agree about having a special investigation, select committee if it's still a bunch of congressmen, it won't work. the problem is if you get a special prosecutor or a special investigator, who the heck can you trust right now? >> you. maria: that's right. >> we put you on it. [laughter] >> i'm sure a lot of democrats would think i will be fair and unbiased. they cannot touch it. maria: governor, thank you. great insight from you. governor mike huckabee, we will be right back estors even more v. and at $4.95, you can trade with a clear advantage. fidelity, where smarter investors will always be. maria: welcome back, breaking news out of london, eight people have been arrested overnight following yesterday's terrorist attack. it's unclear whether the arrests are connected to the terror attack. theresa may just speaking out in the last hour in parliament. listen. >> we are not afraid and our resolve will never waive in terrorism. we know that democracy and the values it entails will always prevail. maria: we know that theresa may said that the attacker is british born. he was actually known to the intelligence services, steve rogers what do you think about this? he had been investigated over extremism in the past? >> yes, he had and now they are going to try to learn, did he visit any foreign countries, was he in the middle east. they are certainly now truly look at his travels and the point is this is what we talked about earlier, british born, probably radicalized, there's no such thing as a lone wolf. they're always connected with someone. it goes back to the ideological war. trying to get people to understand our values, our culture, our way of life and that's how you counteract with there being taught with regard to radicalization. maria: you make this good point. one year after brussels. >> it seems -- it seems like a very cryptic approach where they leak things very slowly. like i said earlier, it's very different than the u.s. that will blast out the face, so if there's any collaborators, you know, people will call in, 911 or publicly to the fbi, hey, we have seen this guy with so and so. it just seems -- they say extremism, we don't know what that means. you just had an incredible brexit vote, it could be radicalization or extreme against the government. we don't know what extremism today is. >> i would mention to say they know a lot more than what they are telling us and they are careful not to compromise the investigation. maria: that's true. dagen: one thing in terms of the way britain is handling this and what this highlights is that intelligence gathering is important, interrogation, hunting out networks of terrorists and, again, given the fight that's going on here about intelligence gathering. maria: which brings in the idea of social media and what technology companies could be doing in terms of tracking the extremism online. dagen: particularly for lone wolf attackers. >> did we go to high alert at all? maria: not here in the u.s. youtube is facing the fallout of terrorism online. they are pulling ads off of the youtube site because they don't want their ads anywhere near content. earlier in the program, i spoke with eric schimdt about this issue. listen to what he said about it. >> my view of extremism and fake news in general is it's a ranking problem. we are very good at detecting what's the most relevant and what's the least relevant. it should be possible for computers to detect malicious, misleading and incorrect information and essentially have you not see it. maria: well, that's pretty extraordinary, steve rogers that computers or machines can predict. it hasn't happened so well recently. there's a lot of hate out there and they find out after the fact. >> well, they do, ci remember san bernardino. remember the big battle with fbi and apple. they we wanted to get into the phone for national security reason, maybe now they are going to be learning that that's a good way to go. maria: what do you think, dagen? dagen: there's a difference apple case and the responsibility of these companies. these companies are acting out youtube and the like because they do worry about their business. that is is a private business and it's not actually the government breathing down their necks. >> maybe they should start worrying about government and safety before profit. maria: important topic and debate. we will take a short break. when we come back flying without the hassle, automate security check outs at some of the country's most security airports. why she took the pontiff's skull cap right off of his head when we come back ( ♪ ) it just feels like anything is possible here in upstate new york. ( ♪ ) at corning, i test smart glass that goes all over the world. but there's no place like home. there's always something different to do like skiing in the winter, jet skiing in the summer. we can do everything. new york state is filled with bright minds like samantha's. to find the companies and talent of tomorrow, search for our page, jobsinnewyorkstate on linkedin. search for our page, this is one gorgeous truck. special edition. oh, did i say there's only one special edition? because, actually there's five. ooohh!! aaaahh!! uh! hooooly mackerel. wow. nice. strength and style. it's truck month. get 0% financing for 60 months plus find your tag and get $5500 on select chevy silverado pick-ups when you finance with gm financial. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. live-streat the airport.e sport binge dvr'd shows while painting your toes. on demand laughs during long bubble baths. tv everywhere is awesome. the all-new xfinity stream app. xfinity. the future of awesome. the biggest week wow, watchathon has netflix? hey, drop a beat... [ beatboxing throughout ] show me orange is the new black. wait, no bloodline. how about bojack? luke cage. oh, dj tanner. maybe show me lilyhammer. mmm, show me last chance u. on second thought, maybe pompidou. narcos, fearless, cooked, the crown. marco polo, lost & found. grace and frankie, hemlock grove. season one of... show me house of cards. xfinity watchathon week starts april 3. get unlimited access to all of netflix and more, free with xfinity on demand. maria: welcome back, more breaking news this morning. arrests have been made in kidnapping alabama nursing student who was locked in her trunk of her car. she escaped. cheryl casone with the details now. what a story, cheryl. cheryl: we are looking at the video, it was hard to look away from. the woman escaped in the trunk of her own car in kidnapping attempt. police say town threatened to kill diggs last tuesday outside of apartment if she didn't hand over money. he locked her in the trunk of her own car, drove around the city before pulling into this gas station parking lot and that's when she made the brave escape in the video as you can see it's coming up right now. the whole thing captured on surveillance camera there. diggs is diabetic. she jumped out and was able to run for safety. well, had you ever been stuck in a tsa security line behind a family of six or somebody that takes ten minutes to taking their shoes off? united airlines has become first airline to open up automated lanes, during new york area, checkpoint in united hub and terminal c, 17 lanes with larger bins and individual stations so when you fill your ben, then you walk-through, you go around that family of six, get your screening, you're done. i actually had been through this, it is fabulous. check it out if you're in newark. chicago and la are going to be next. [laughter] dagen: tsa ruined it somehow. [laughter] maria: what's the point of being prechecked by the way? dagen: take it your jacket off and yell at me. maria: take that. cheryl: i have to show you the pope, thall shall not steal from the pope. estella westrick from atlanta. of course, she's american. swiped the cull cap, of course, that's known as a zucchetto. everyone laughed about it. [laughter] cheryl: this has, of course, gone viral. 13,000 likes on twitter, 6200 retweets by late afternoon. you go, little girl. take the pope hat. maria: that's sweet. thank you, cheryl. cheryl: you bet. maria: president trump's trump transition team communications were collected by intelligence agency, what it means for the investigation into the president's wiretap claims? what the airline will give up as part of sale to alaska airlines? back in a moment to work for you. the ultrasound that can see inside patients, can also detect early signs of corrosion at our refineries. high-tech military cameras that see through walls, can inspect our pipelines to prevent leaks. remote-controlled aircraft, can help us identify potential problems and stop them in their tracks. at bp, safety is never being satisfied. and always working to be better. i realize that ah, that $100k is notwell, a 103fortune. yeah, 103. well, let me ask you guys. how long did it take you two to save that? a long time. then it's a fortune. well, i'm sure you talk to people all the time who think $100k is just pocket change. right now we're just talking to you. i told you we had a fortune. yes, you did. do .. [vo] quickbooks introduces jeanette and her mobile wedding business. she travels far and wide to officiate i do's. and quickbooks automatically tracks those miles. she categorizes with a swipe and is ready for tax time. find more than $4000 in tax savings. visit quickbooks-dot-com. trained to good thursday morning, everybody. welcome back. i maria bartiromo. thank you richard announced a very busy news day. tuesday, march 23rd 7:30 a.m. on the east coast. i half expected to that of the gop's health care plan today, but now we are hearing it is unclear if that'll happen. republican support for the obama caret placement will still in flux and wall street watching every move here. anxiously awaiting any update on developing markets this morning looking higher. very much a fractional move and people are waiting to see what happens next at the health care bill because it impacts tax refund on the line in the president's agenda. markets covered near the five minus 12. european indices that very much a fractional move but up on the session this morning. asia overnight from a similar story higher across the board at best the firm was japan. make a average of the quarter of a percent. terror in the name. reddish police have arrested eight people followed an attack yesterday that left four people dead, another 40 others injured. prime minister theresa may standing beside him in the face of terrorism saying britain will not be afraid. >> what i can confirm is the man was british-born msn years ago he was once investigated by mi-5 in relation to concerns about concern. he was a peripheral figure. drain to the latest on the investigation coming up a vindication for president trump after house intelligence committee chairman devin nunes address assignments over president trump's wiretapping claims. listed. >> what i saw has nothing to do with russia and nothing to do with the russian investigation, has everything to do with possible surveillance activities and the president is about these reports are out there and i have a duty to tell him. >> i can't say this. the president -- chairman will need to decide whether he's an investigation into conduct which includes allegations of potential coordination between the trump campaign and the russians or he's going to act as a surrogate at the white house because he cannot do both. maria: much more coming up on the congressman findings. meanwhile, the lighter side of grilling gorsuch. the nominee scored big last yesterday during his confirmation hearing. say goodbye to virgin america appeared by the name is likely to disappear with its merger with alaska airlines. the nfl shaking things up a things up a bit picture against a proper touchdown dances and the debate changes you can expect on the field coming out of the nfl. first, top story this half an hour. and evidence bombshell. house intelligence committee devin nunes address information you learned about president trump's transition team. president trump reacted after he spoke with devin nunes. >> today briefed the president on the concerns that i had about incidental collection and how it relates to president-elect trump and his transition team. >> i somewhat do. i must tell you a somewhat do. i very much appreciated the fact that they found what they found. maria: meanwhile, intelligence committee ranking member adam schiff responded with the following statement. committee members only learned about this when the chairman discussed the matter this afternoon at the press. and express my grave concern at the chairman that a credible investigation cannot be connected this way. former deputy chief of staff to president george w. bush and fox news contributor, karl rove. good to see you. thank you for joining us. we now know where chairman nunes has shared. why do you think devin nunes went to the press and the president with the information so quickly? that is what adam schiff is complaining about. >> first of all, don't get me started on adam schiff. he started off in this investigation trying to sound reasonable. i've had personal experience with the man. when he was on the judiciary committee, a lunatic from alabama popped up alleging when i was at the white house that i had encouraged her to follow the alabama governor around in order to discover whether he was having an affair with a male staff member and that i had direct this from the white house. never met the woman. there is no evidence that any such meeting ever occurred in a maria: in front of the judiciary committee in order to ask me about whether or not i was responsible for invoking an investigation that ended in the alabama governor dean sent to jail for accepting bribes. he was a complete partisan. he started out trying to play like he was working with nuñez and this is going to be a bipartisan and the sensible investigation. underneath the surface, adam schiff is a highly partisan democrat and he was going to find a moment to criticize no matter what. i have confidence in chairman nunes. maria: it doesn't work with this story. doesn't fit into his narrative. now he says yes, president trump -- his transition team was being listened to. so now he doesn't like the storyline. >> well, we knew although there is incidental coverage of president trump and president trump's transition team. but we didn't know follows. this doesn't have apparently to do with russia. these particular reports don't have to do with incidental surveillance. incidental collection of information about trump team members with rations. if somebody else. more importantly is that names a trump transition team members have been apparently unmasked. they're a very high standards for unmasking the names of american citizens who are caught up in incidental surveillance of foreign nationals. but apparently those rules were not followed in this instance and these reports were apparently widely distributed throughout the government. this is part of what the obama administration did in its closing days, which is basically spread the information widely and unmasked names when they did not reveal the names of the americans who were caught up in the incidental conduct. dagen: to that point, the obama administration sundays before the inoculation which we talked about basically took the cuts at the nsa insight you can share unfiltered data with the intelligence agencies, but that means you put people at risk and people are getting hands on the raw data. can they reverse that? >> it has. the outgoing obama administration spread this wisely, which was not the typical procedure. immediately after they spread it widely on the we don't know whether it was somebody at the justice department, somebody inside the white house. admiral rogers at the nsa is not going to do this on its own. he's not even going to do if he's direct you to do so by the administration. somebody inside the department of justice are inside the white house made a determination that they would spread the information more widely and somebody again come a suspect to justice or at the white house made a decision they were going to unmask these names. those procedures at the cia and fbi are very detailed and very precise and required a deliberate decision or someone says you've met the standard. that doesn't appear to be the case. it's done some are by and about administration official justice or the white house. maria: we want to move on to health care. >> congressman nuñez did the right and i believe it goes down to a battle of trust. how can they share the information as committee members whose motives may not be clear. there was no way that any more information could be leaked out with probably another narrative. what was your take on that? >> again, i have been dubious since the beginning. at the beginning he looked like an adult. in the last few days, it has become clear he is who he is, which is another part of thing. i hate to be personal about it. i literally spent two days in hearings in the judiciary hearing being grilled by schiff. when i walked out of there, the staff said the witness that supposedly caused of father happened to such a lunatic. we can't get a hold anymore. the one interview he had whether she was was clearly a completely unreliable witness. i'm sitting there thinking i spent two days and god knows how much of a lawyer so you can trash my good name because you are such a hyper partisan that you've got this lunatic that you won't even try and bring out and put under oath because you know what she told you not under oath was completely wrong. i don't trust the guy. maria: will be watching a pair with a move on the two issues. number one health care and number two neil gorsuch. using the hustlers on this bill tonight? >> two days ago i would've said yes. when you have the house rules committee spent 13 hours in a meeting and not be able to arrive at the rules to bring it to the floor, and i says they don't yet have the votes. i have seen reports. nbc says 27. you know, ap says at least 24. if they have 23, they can't pass the bill. 23 no votes. on the other hand there's a meeting with the freedom caucus. there were discussions last night. this is very much up in the air. >> without the markets are going to react today. >> mr. wolf. >> i didn't even say anything in the prior comments. on health care, if it does not get passed or if it doesn't get passed before april recess, but he think the chances of us getting tax reform done it 17? >> is a piece this morning on "the wall street journal" for us. i did a pretty good job and i made the point if this goes down, lots of other things go down. [inaudible] >> thank you. i appreciate it. go buy "the wall street journal" read this excellent piece by karl rove. >> would you have started the tax reform? if you are the white house? >> biscuits on a technical question. both of these have to be done in reconciliation. did you begin with reconciliation? one for fy 18 and one for fy 17. so it really gets down to a technical question. brinkley at the close, close call. it's important what will drive the economy is primarily getting the tax code right. it is also important for republicans to live up to promises to repeal and replace obamacare. but that a lot of members of the caucus who decided they will just repeal, not replace. >> i running out of time. two days ago the market taking a 1% had. that has to change them at the idea of trying to get trump this win. >> i think it does. it causes people to say we are playing with real bullets here. they've got to get health care. otherwise the party will fall apart at this point. if they get health care they can be on track to get tax reform. it is actually easier unity and testify with the exception of the border text and help care. the markets have been supported by expectation that there's going to be a significant corporate tax rate that will make these ratios reasonable and republicans have to get it. >> i don't think they will waste this opportunity. they understand the severity of this moment in time and will not let this pass. >> that's the message donald trump has been spending. the first step to doing all the other things we wanted it. if you don't get on board, everything else fails. maria: gorsuch called for the fourth day of nomination hearing. yesterday a lot of tough questions. then there was a lighter moment. watch this. >> no one remembers who john hancock was. but they know that is a signature. because he wrote his name so bigley -- big and boldly. >> you just said bigly. [laughter] >> and i just want five bucks. [laughter] >> you embarrass me. true to so he does know donald trump well. >> poor guy. three days of being assaulted by midgets. this has been again, the unseriousness of democrats and basically asking me what you tell us you are going to decide cases based on the political constituencies on the attractiveness of the litigants. you will pay the little guy against the big guy rather than uphold the rule of law. this has been a very unserious exercise. god bless them for subjects to himself. he's done a superb job. maria: good to see you. thank you so much. we will be right back. ed legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here, and we've got your back. legalzoom. legal help is here. maria: welcome back. harrison and london. eight people overnight following an attack on the four people dead. another 40 injured. kitty "logan" has not been with the very latest. good morning to you. >> good morning. reddish prime minister theresa may has been addressing been addressing parliament and been given a few more details about the attack yesterday. we argue now that the suspect drove the vehicle and speed across the busy westminster bridge shortly after 2:30 p.m. local time yesterday. he then crashed his car into the department of defense, ran in, fatally stabbing a police officer. others responded by shooting the attacker who died of his injuries shortly afterwards. police haven't yet revealed the suspect, but the prime minister has given us a little more and her nation. >> what i can confirm is the man was british-born and some years ago he was once investigated by mi-5 in relation to concerns about violent extremism. he was a peripheral figure. >> area where the attack happened as popular and upper half of the 29 people being treated in hospital, one american was among those injured. overnight, police carried out sixth-grade play to the attack in the city of irving had ended monday. eight people had been arrested so far. police have also been conduct a forensic work at the scene as the investigation continues. surviving the attack site remains cordoned off. members of the parliament to recognize usual today. earlier in london, police held a minute of silence for the police officer who was killed in that attack. he's been named 48-year-old member of the parliamentary protection. the prime minister also said today there is no indication of another imminent attack, but the threat level in the u.k. remains the same. maria: kd, we will be watching. severe threat level. kitty logan in london. a white man from maryland travels to new york to kill black people. cheryl casone with the details on that. train it well, good morning. 28-year-old james jackson told police he felt hatred towards black men. came to new york and killed a black man by stabbing him with a sword here in new york city. the victim was collecting bottles from trash cans. the veteran later turned himself in at a times square police station. another headline this morning. get ready to say so long to virgin america. three months ago alaska airlines bought virgin america. not the name virgin america is going to go away by 2019. all is not lost. keep many. whether it's the in-flight entertainment for the cabin lighting that changes color. of course we will just see -- there goes the name anyway. this headline. chipotle trying to boost its image with an animated web series for kids. >> in elite team dedicated to the preservation of the many plants and animals. reporter: series teaches a tent out how to make healthy food choices. still trying to bring back caring bring back. the customers who may have been turned up several said poisoning out rakes in 2015. available on itunes for $5. maria: looks great. thank you, cheryl. the nfl laying down the new law for his players. what a proper touchdown in looks like. that is next. kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin trusted advice for life. kevin, how's your mom? life well planned. see what a raymond james financial advisor can do for you. i just had to push one button wto join.s thing is crazy. it's like i'm in the office with you, even though i'm here. it's almost like the virtual reality of business communications. no, it's reality. introducing intuitive, one touch video calling from vonage. call now and get amazon chime at no additional cost. then you're a couple. think of all you'll share... like snoring. does your bed do that? the dual adjustability of a sleep number bed allows you each to choose the firmness and comfort you want. so every couple can get the best sleep ever. does your bed do that? only at a sleep number store, where queen mattresses start at just $899. and right now save $400 on our most popular mattresses. go to sleepnumber.com for a store near you. won't replace the full value of your totaled new car. the guy says you picked the wrong insurance plan. no, i picked the wrong insurance company. with liberty mutual new car replacement™, you won't have to worry about replacing your car because you'll get the full value back including depreciation. and if you have more than one liberty mutual policy, you qualify for a multi-policy discount, saving you money on your car and home coverage. call for a free quote today. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. maria: well, the world baseball assic in le never before. what a game. >> brick in thfourth gund for the world a fall classic. first time the championship game featured the country who call for pastime. wanting to decide the title between the u.s. and puerto rico. top of the third inning on the scoreboard until the detroit tigers blast from the centerfield wall. team u.s.a. truthfully, no more offense was needed because starting pitcher for the americans was lights out. he took a no-hitter into the seventh inning until angel put on hold to that. was born in new york, not playing for puerto rico. he was posted dodger stadium. ate nothing but final. great celebration. jimmy leyland after the game got emotional and services for the men and women who serve our country in the united states. >> i had the honor of coaching for our country. the players had the honor of playing for our country, but this is for the men and women who serve our country. thank you very much. [cheers and applause] >> we are hearing that twice that another american tradition continues after three days at the ncaa presents. kansas city midwest region 17 michigan brings a win streak against oregon and kansas come a five-point favorite to eliminate purdue. tonight games are in san jose. first up, battling west virginia and number two seed arizona. 7.5 favorite to beat arizona. according to step up, they getting price is cheaper for tonight's games in kansas city than any other three regions. 159 at madison square garden in new york city tomorrow night. and if you can't get into the rain is coming i can buy a seat courtside. courtesy of intel listing up at the ncaa, cbs, turner sports offering fans aimed at a younger demo and more virtually reelects as with march madness. what about the nfl viewing next. not rushmore sports tv is about to rollout plans for ways to tighten the tv experience. commissioner roger cabal is not trying to shorten games. what we are looking to do is take that down time now, which is not entertaining. one initiative will increase the length of commercial rakes from one minutes it be due to breaks. only four per quarter and also moves to maybe tweet the way and start replays are challenging in relation to commercials. some say nfl stands for no fun like because i felt the night celebrations. an educational video to show players the river to celebrate. the video is mobbed by fans and players, because then it that i thought the show is called free to be you and me essentially. check out his tweets on twitter. maria: thank you, jared max. a crucial vote on the bill to repeal and replace obamacare. the feature that presents health care agenda at stake. more on that next hour. "mornings with maria" right here. we'll listen. we'll talk. we'll plan. baird. at angie's list, we believe there are certain things you can count on, like what goes down doesn't always come back up. [ toilet flushes ] so when you need a plumber, you can count on us to help you find the right person for the job. discover all the ways we can help at angie's list. as after a dvt blood clot,ital i sure had a lot to think about. what about the people i care about? ...including this little girl. and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i asked my doctor. and he recommended eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. yes, eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. both made me turn around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily ...and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis the right treatment for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you. 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(applause, cheering) new york state is filled with bright minds like victoria's. to find the companies and talent of tomorrow, search for our page, jobsinnewyorkstate on linkedin. r0 r. maria: welcome back. good thursday morning. thanks so much for joining us. i'm maria bartiromo, it is thursday, march 23rd, big newsday this morning top stories 8:00 a.m. on the east coast, repealing replacing obamacare, lawmakers scrambling to reach a deal as some he conservatives are holding firm on no votes the administration is holding out hope. >> well we're trying to get to again is making certain that it is patients and families and doctors that are in a charge of health care not washington d.c. the way you do that to make it so that individuals all across the land are able to pickle the coverage that they want. >> we are encouraged tonight is based on the -- real willingness of not only the white house, but our leadership to make this bill better and by being encouraged we are not there yet but we're -- we're very optimistic. maria: meanwhile, the koch brothers vogue to banning lawmakers who vote no, they want to be supportive not of vote freedom caucus details coming up markets searching for direction amid interceptor from washington, futures indicating markets open higher by a fraction, but, again, any upset in the health care legislation and timeline will upset the entire timeline of the president's agenda including he tax reform really one of the reasons the market is up 14% since election day watching closely this morning in europe markets at flat line as well very similar story across the world actually as you see fractional movers asia overnight little changed as you he see here best japan nikkei average up a quarter of a percent breaking night out of london british police arrested 8 people in overnight rated follows yesterday is important o attack in london we do not know if yeflths are directly related to this attack four people were killed yesterday including a police officer, and the alleged attacker cities around the world honor victims eiffel tower goes dark orlando's ferris wheel lit up in red, white and blue. >> evidence bombshell to report house intelligence academy chairman nunes straight to president with new information details about intercepted information involving the trump transition team details whether the president field vindicate indicates search for carnival cruise passenger that went overbored, latest coming up wish of good luck viral ice skater yes, ma'am nuchi telling kerrigan break a leg before going on "dancing with the stars." >> all is to say this morning, joining me to talk about it fox news network dagen mcdowell former fbi joint terror traffic member steve rogers here 32 adviser ceo fox news contributor robert wolf. dagen: break a leg, exactly, two words just -- >> exactly. >> to be so twisted turned. >> listen big study obviously this health care legislation, we don't know if this vote is going to take place. dagen: we cannot report at this point this vote is definitely going to happen, that is coming from -- our reporter at fox news reporter in washington, d.c.. maria: vote will happen. dagen: unclear if mows he will vote today on health care bill we can't say definitively that -- >> call it for a reason a feeling from majority whip to trump i think the one that is going to be whipping up the votes all day and -- maria: firmly behind this bill. >> maria, i am a commissioner of department of health in ingenious where i life people came to me lost health care over obamacare willing to try anything now, i mean we saw people lose health care get into catastrophic financial mess over obama kay, i think they are willingy take this shot let's see where we go. dagen: that is the within republicans were not going to repeal the entire thing later work on replacement because they don't want people to lose health insurance. >> i look forward to all of you calling it trump care tomorrow, because we freely use obamacare oi i hope he takes onship. maria: i don't think calling it trump care i don't think it has trump as far as the architect here this is a paul ryan bill, the gop health care bill to repeal obamacare is hanging in the balance. >> going to be a win. >> going to be a winner. maria: blake burman live at white house with very latest blake what can you tell us good morning to you. reporter: good morning to you as well talking about uncertainty if vote on kwhooil scheduled today will take place today or some other point down the line that is because of this. no deal has been struck, as of this morning, the main holdout throughout numbers of house freedom caucus conservative group of republicans on hill leader mark meadows last night soundeded a a little bit the optimistic a deal could potentially be struck. >> the president and i came to an agreement in principal i think what we're trying to do now is make sure that -- our agreement is actually something that can be executed, in a way that passes this senate. reporter: that group cooling to white house he couple hours from now later today the tightrope that dealer makers are trying to walk if you make the concessions to the members of the highways freedom caucus does that come at expense of moderate conservatives, republicans at white house fully bracing the role president trump being closer to the final hours, of this deal making mode take a listen o to what good white house press secretary sean spicer told me yes. >> slowly but surely we are getting there i feel when vote comes up wheel the vote. >> let me ask you today -- congressman -- described the president members of congress coming to the white house, as the closer -- >> closer. >> -- break that label this -- >> is it a absolutely -- >> maria 9th into ball game see how this ends spicer is saying yesterday from this podium behind me that there is a plan a, a plan a. no plan b. maria: that is right sticking to it, thank you so much blake burman with latest there two major conservative groups backed by billionaires chaelz and david koch say they will spend millions to protect house republicansps who vote against the health care bill from political fallout, in 2018 reelection races joining us flight toaway in rnc chairwoman, and good to see you ronna thanks for joining us this morning. >> thanks for having me great to be here. >> what do you make of the koch brothers coming out saying yeah let's keep pushing in digging in, and don't vote yes for this health care legislation? >> i think it is a little early, let's see what happens, there is going to be meetings today the freedom caucus going to white house the president talking to members, we need to pass this, we need to repeal obamacare what every republican ran on this past election, this is a team sport, republicans need to come together, and work in favor of the american people who have been so hurt by the failure of obamacare. maria: yeah i mean you are getting push bark here what are you going to do? there is no plan b, every time pale paul has been asked sean spicer has been asked, what is plan b, they say there is not plan b, you will come to the table and vote. you still have the petitionback particularly from freedom caucus. >> there is negotiation no plan b, but ways to make the bill better improve for american public, of course, we are having a discussion we're having a dialogue people are representing their constituents, but at the end of the day republicans are going to have to come together, and deliver for the american people, because too many people have lost their insurance, they have lost their doctors, and we need to make a people centric health care system, and return choice back to the patient. >> how come it is being called obamacare light then? how come, the party did not go back rip it up start again, come up with something that is truly a repeal and replace? >> there is a recognition we don't want a lapse people off coverage we want to have a seamless transition there isn't easy republicans have come together said we got to make sure as we transition to this new health care, we don't wloov people out in the cold, and i think they have done a good job working together with the president, with the house, with the senate, and now they have to come together and deliver to 7th anniversary of obamacare voters are looking to republicans right now to make their life better. >> premiums have gone up deductibles so high right now actually afraid of health insurance, we have to improve this and notice no democrats are helping they know 24 is failing nowhere to be found. maria: they want to upset the agenda ronna you know that there has been obstructionism going on a o long time here, how much of the worry for -- is it for the party, that if this congests buffeted does not come to vote tonight does not move and has this timeline that you are saying you want to get something out before easter recess how much a worry that doesn't happen then a tax reform gets busted up you know markets react immediately if no vote tonight or not a vote tonight. >> i am concerned about it we have to come together, and pass a repeal and replace of obamacare, what we ran on, we need to show the american voters that republicans are going to deliver on their campaign promising. president trump is delivering working hard negotiating, he knows he has been in states like michigan he saw how badly people are hurting this is putting people of america first. >> do members of the rnc understand how high the stakes are? you keep pushing back, you don't have a yes vote tonight you don't get this across this finish line, you are going to have more problems in senate do they get that? and are they going to put all of this on the line basically say okay president entire agenda in generhe jeopardy. >> they are working through next couple weeks we have to get this done, we know it, people are suffering, this is something we ran on, we have to deliver. maria: let me ask you about your you counterpart on dnc we have chairman to many paragon recently with deputy chairman he willson hitting the road kicked off what they call democratic turnaround tour this starts in michigan, state -- party lost 2016 first time nearly 30 years dncchair tom peres talked about priorities last week here is what he had to say i want to get your reaction. >> we need to make sure we are building a strong party everywhere we define our mission from simply electing the president of the united states to working to build strong parties so that we can let people from the school board to senate when you billed strong parties everywhere helping recruit good accounts when you are leading with values actions out there talking about what democrats stand for building a strong middle class making sure that everybody has that tint to realize the american dream that is how we success exactly what we're going to do. >> do you think they are getting it at this point ronna? obviously losing michigan was a tough thing to swallow for democrats given that they had lost hadn't lost michigan 30 years. >> sounds like a page from rnc playbook we have been involved in the states for since 2012 working with the state parties, helping ticket up and down recognizing that we need to create a bench, so that we can field candidates for future office in michigan we didn't just win for president won supreme court statehouse all local roses public sector together a good ground game working with county state parties democrats the fallen behind trying to play catchup but we are keeping that momentum, we are working hard, i am a former state party chair know what to do how to help state parties we recognize that, but they are going to bring everything they can to this midterm to disrupt president's agenda we want to see the president be able to complete his agenda help american people going to work just as have a reasonable doubt. >> do you hear that kind of incent in michigan this is your home state, it was all about jobs, and the economy something the democrats completely missiled 2016 election were not prioring jobs the way donald trump was are they getting it is incent shifting do you feel that in michigan. >> o i think michigan is solidly behind president trump look what he has done ford motor sxaenz agreed 7 hundred million dollars in investment in state dow gm, pulled out of tpp president trump delivered for michigan voters, ohio voters, and those rust belt states we are going to continue to run, on the action that is taken by president trump to help bring jobs strength the economy states like michigan and across this country. maria: if this agenda president trump agenda health care repeal and replace followed by tax reform followed by infrastructure if this agenda is not successful by 2018, those mid temperatures how many seats do rnc lose. >> i have every confidence that we are going to be successful so i am not even going there, we are going to keep, building upon this successes we have put in place, deregulation, with the fabulous supreme court justice nomination of judge gorsuch, push to repeal and replace obamacare, tax reform infrastructure working together we have to it is going to help our country bring jobs help american people. maria: we leave it there ronna good to have you you on program thanks so much we will be right back lot to cover this morning stay with us. # a to fight disease. there are over 100 million pieces of dna in every sample. with the microsoft cloud, we can analyze the data faster than ever before. if we can detect new viruses before they spread, we may someday prevent outbreaks before they begin. i mwell, what are youe to take care odoing tomorrow -10am? staff meeting. noon? eating. 3:45? uh, compliance training. 6:30? sam's baseball practice. 8:30? tai chi. yeah, so sounds relaxing. alright, 9:53? i usually make their lunches then, and i have a little vegan so wow, you are 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are told in hospital 7 he seriously injured no i learning one was from the united states. that is one of the injured. but the international intrum along with british french germ italian polish south kor r correspond retourists in they are year ices claiming responsibility authorities here saying they do believe it was terrorism islamic rad callism international terrorism call it what you will we heard from theresa may more about about asay will abt. our concern was man was british born in fact some years ago, he was once investigate by mi-5. in he relation to concerns about violent extremism. he was a peripheral figure. reporter: a peripheral figure but a very deadly figure yesterday mi-5 theresa may mentions is british equivalent of the fbi, again, it is sounding lining homegrown terror one of those targets unarmed policeman 48-year-old, a chief -- a father of three standing at the gate evident parliament grounds stabbed to death before this man was shot and killed by police, again we were up on the bridge still closed down by authorities leading up to parliament we watched forensic teams skoier for evidence clues a lot of carnage on that bridge as ugh people before slamming into gate of parliament before doing dastardly deeds tonight 6 pm plan in london, a candle light vigil cities around the world are also offering their are condolences, tributes many like paris berlin obstructivelies where we have sadly been past couple years experienced this kind of terror the worst terror attack to hit london almost 12 years, people here are reeling but as they are british they are strong as well back to you. maria: yeah, it is true we are covering that as well a lot of -- a lot of talk, and heart warming comments outgoing to london and victims greg palkot thank you very much isis now claiming responsibility according to reuters steve rogers with us this morning former fbi what do you make of thissies claiming responsibility. >> said a year ago would send more fighters to the western world, they are here maria using low tech and highly effective weapons of car in this case a car and machete probably about toing to see more as we move forward losing ground in mideast bringing war to home we have to get smart be very, very effective regards to national security in this country as well as other western countries. >> what do we need to do from the practical standpoint what are you saying. >> let's go back to when we are able to surveil certain areas places, of this country that there were some probable cause to for the police to take action, and electronic surveillance very, very important. maria: i mean that is very social media situation is also, important to see, what social media and technology companies could be doing to contribute to this. >> they can do a lot more shut down a lot of social media activity that these hate individuals organizations are creating. >> more on this again, report that isis is claiming credit for the london attack stay with us 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xfinity x1. the acm awards. live on sunday, april 2nd 8/7 central on cbs. this isis isis isis braiksdz news president trump, lashing out on twitter this morning tweeting this, just watch the totally bias fake news reports evident so-called russia study on nbc, abc such dishonesty we will follow this as it develops that is from the president moments ago tweeting. because, of course, we know that so far we are waiting for any evidence of any collusion between the trump administration, and the russians, it has not been evidoe. nt. >> i wish president trump would the tweeted earlier on similar these astrophysicist the attack real estate tweeting about nuñez revelations before he said anything about london terror attacks he is very good on twitter could have been better yesterday my opinion. >> would i say not surprising you have nonees with his view on the other side schiff with his vie you bipartisan both ways very tough congressional -- >> the nuñez stuff is that he picked up information, that -- that president trump transition team was being monitored. >> i think maria the mainstream media should see where he said just facts because not reporting facts they are inventeding news that has to say stop. maria: what the president is reacting to, the coast guard searching for florida man who fell off a carnival cruise ship cheryl casone with details. cheryl: maria 23-year-old brandon pall went -- of boarded about 3:00 a.m. yesterday morning, near cuba picture the crew launched a search boat contacted he go coast guard karnville ship four-day cruise between key west, providing support to friends traveling with him. well -- tweet followed nancy kerrigan going viral kerrigan copycat on "dancing with the stars", can't wait to see you grace that ballroom floor break a leg. right? >> must have forgotten kerrigan had leg bashed in back in 1994 in fact back to skating rival kerrigan responded thank you for the advice definitely is helping. one more story an apple device tired of old emojis -- 69 emojis for june release here are some possibilities on screen, a bearded man, there is a -- behind me a woman bravest feeding other contenders a pie scart t. rex, you can expect on apple devices june 30. >> i like the yoga one that is a cute one i have emoji i love it friend made it for me. >> a short break when we come back wall street eyes the republican health care showdown a with a look could happen to markets if this bill falters in the house today right now expecting a higher opening for the broader averages it is a fragile story joke to job creation ambitious hiring plan for starbucks thoughts of jobs for veterans. back in a minute. yamaguchi. . . maria: good thursday morning. welcome back thanks for joining us. i'm maria bartiromo, it is thursday you march 23, busy news morning top stories right now, 8:30 a.m. on the east coast. a huge day in capitol the house expected to vote on gop health care plan today. but now it is unclear if that will take place. republican sport for the obamacare replacement is in flux wall street awaiting vote on vote we are expecting a higher opening for broader averages anything can change depending what comes out of washington expectancies around tax reform, if health care bill is backed up what does that mean for the president's agenda like tax reform. >> markets flat line some time there as you can see ft 100 turning negative the other majors off quarter of a percent, in asia overnight, markets little changed, the -- big performer the nikkei average in japan up a quarter of a percent, terrorism in london, isis reportedly claiming responsibility for attack outside the of parliament in london, it left four people deed another 40 people injured yesterday. prime minister theresa may standing defiant this morning in face of terrorism saying britain will not be afraid. the latest as british police arrest 8 people in raids following that attack, vindication for president trump, details after hows intelligence chairman devin nunes addressed new information regarding surveillance more on findings coming up -- convicted of fraud acquitted of murder details surrounding the allegedly contaminated medicine case. coming up. a picture-perfect day for snap busy -- buy rating rather pushing shares higher yesterday, the stock this morning, of snap up 4%, snap trading higher after one analyst said you want to apply it at these levels, how many episodes can you watch the staggering amount of account viewers are binge watching ahead all that coming up this morning first right now a battle brewing on capitol hill house intelligence academy chairman devin nunes telling president trump his the recognition team communications were intercepted during legal surveillance the evidence is a bombshell showing the president may not have been far off on wiretapping claims listen. >> i recently confirmed on newers indications intelligence community did incidentally collected information about trump transition. >> details about u.s. persons associated with incoming administration details with, little or know apparent foreign intelligence value wild disseminated in intelligence community reporting. >> would i be wrong in saying that the obama administration surveilled the trump transition team? >> i would say you are from all i know you are at least 99 1/2% accurate, probably one hundred percent. maria: chairman nunes clarified that the reports that he read did not mention russia at all. president trump taking to twitter this morning here is what he is saying about this, just watch the totally biased fake news reports of the so kraushld story on nbc, abc such dishonesty bring in a members of the intelligence committee you saw new york congressman peter king good to see you thanks so much for joining us. >> thank you. >> characterize the situation. >> first of all, what devin nunes said i support him one hundred percent on this this was legitimate surveillance carried out evolved in conversations between foreigners in course of conversations, details came up about people in the trump transition, about conversations these people had, either with donald trump himself or people close to him, people in transition, under the law whenever that information comes up, it has to be or called masked has to be blocked out. instead, what happened was, this information as far as we can tell right now unbeing being masked disseminated throughout intelligence community in intelligence value to this information all this was -- was personal details when meetings going to be held who was going where, who was talking with whom, absolutely no reason at all and illegal to be unmasked supersede throughout temptation community including white house in surveillance i was talking about is to have this type of information, disseminated is nothing but surveillance there is no purpose not he intelligence purposes, nothing criminal there this was strikely personal type information that was being used abused. >> i don't understand you have to connect dots i don't understand why as soon as the president said that, he used the word wiretapping, now we are using surveillance, how come so many intelligence people came out said. >> evidence of it we just don't have evidence of it not at all, if this is obviously chairman nunes has the goods on this, how come nobody else knew how he come so adamant about this is not true? >> what happened was president did overshoot mark on this should not have said that president obama ordered him to be wiretapped he was not wiretapped he was abusive he -- there was information legally obtained then abused, that to me is very significant, doesn't mean presidento ordered him to be wiretapped but does mean people in the administration of the intelligence community allowed this information to be made known to others in the white house, and intelligence community this is illegal and wrong, devin nunes just funny out recently if you recall after hearing on monday said if anyone has information come forward my understanding is that when is nunes found out. >> i feel that is dishonesty steve rodgers there was pushback to president's tweet about wiretapping not wiretapping surveillance but the fact that so many in intelligence he community came out and pooh-poohed it that is dishonest. >> brings us to this point goom congressman should not part of this include who gave the who had actually allowed this information to go out without about masking. >> you know and i know that names of u.s. citizens, corporations, et cetera, have to be protected so what about that what about focusing in on who gave the order. >> exactly what chairman newspaperes says has to be investigated who gaveed to why, pressure brought exactly to whom was this disseminated that is a real issue this is supposed to be so highly secretive you are right if american citizens' name appears anywhere on one wiretap the wiretap is he legal if blacked out no one supposed to know about it unless it involved -- something important to foreign intelligence from what we can see nothing do with foreign intelligence monitoring day-to-day activities of people in the trump team, and the president-elect helms. >> congressman two questions, one, with respect tos to president's tweet probably in reference to what the representative schiff said he has seen more than circumstantial evidence of includings between russia and associates of trump, so one how would you respond to that, and then secondly how would you into n to senator mccain saying he thinks there is a need for an independent select committee, should be taken out of the house? >> i would rely on what general clapper director of the national intelligence under president obama on two weeks ago said so far actually no evidence of any collusion whatever mike borel under president obama saying no fire not even a spark of a fire, as far as where this investigation is going so listen, if the fbi finds something fine but right now fbi has been investigating this more than 8 months, let them continue investigation. >> disrespect you mentioned those two but two days ago comey nastya director say there was i don't pirtap surveillance of tower then just now you talk about possibly surveillance because of what anyonees said even though we haven't seen anything you take one side not other how do you square that circle. >> o i am not taking one side not the other i am saying that as far as russia being investigated by fbi as far as president trump specifically what comey said was accurate, maybe he was not aware of this i don't know this was we have to find out exactly how this was done, and i am not saying it was surveillance ordered of president of president-elect trump how he effective it was all this information was being released was surveillance who ordered it where did it come from no evidence president obama -- >> the left has to be careful on this i ins democrats want this true that there is some collusion there is no evidence of it not true so -- >> the former, director of intelligence stated there is no russian connection, pushing a narrative that -- >> desperate to push this narrative. >> i was asking the same question that is all. >> health care robert your take on this certainly congressman the republicansr still not united behind obamacare you replacement bill fox news reporting that unclear if the house is going to take this vote up tonight on health care legislation, are they? >> -- the votes come out, as of now i don't believe votes are there there are negotiations going on with the president, and certain members of congress what the president has to be concerned about is that if he goes too far one direction going to lose votes on the other side so this is down to the wire. >> congressman that is about what we are chatting about earlier today if they push too far right with respect to making the freedom caucus he aligned with their votes how does it you know pit someone such as yourself a little more i would say a moderate, with respect to voting on something like this? >> it would certainly make it -- raise questions -- right now, undecided i understand what president -- wants the speaker wants, but the if it goes to freedom caucus -- likely -- >> are you saying you are undecided right now congressman? >> i am. i want. >> why are you undecided? >> i am still -- what i am trying to look a at is the exact -- in new york -- 800,000 people under stomachached expansion not something i support reality is they are on it i want to see transition, how many people are going to be affected by it i think it can work if we go direction freedom caucus will make it more difficult. >> do you need to so i change before you vote yes waiting on change to take place today. >> i am waiting to see how this all plays out so are moving parts the only -- listen every other issue i have been involved in -- dagen. dagen: congressman the freedom caucus seems focused on getting rid of coverage mandates 10 items insurance must cover how would that impact medicaid funding if at all. >> no, i am sayinged medicaid -- you have this thing another issue in there how that is going to impact i with a don't see what they mean by that i want to see exactly what impact is going to have this reason a large opioid issue in my district, and we have a large rebate of breast cancer go through issues i want to see what twh actually means that is all, medicaid issue now, i am working through it but on this this is -- added issue being brought in. >> if you do not get this done congressman are you going to take responsibility for being part of the problem for busting up the entire agenda, when markets sell off? >> i -- that is why we're -- in situation we are in right now i want to find a way to make it work what i am saying if you go too far, you are going to end up, losing i think significant number of votes people want to vote yes have a hard time doing it more changes made. >> paul ryan's legacy if you don't get this over finish line is paul ryan out? >> absolutely not paul great speaker remains speaker nobody can do the job that paul ryan is doing -- 35, 40 people in freedom caucus trying to pull this he does have he overwhelming majority of republican sporting him to doubt about it. maria: go ahead. >> i think one of your one of the representatives maybe from staten island has decided he is a no vote do you he know where he stands now? >> -- a no, can speak for himself one of the main reasons language put in the bill, which would perhaps help 57 counties in new york but would have a damaging effect on new york city he is only republican in the new york city, specifically this definitely hurts -- people in district a whole -- it is how medicaid funding is made, in new york right now, local governments pay 13%, that would be removed everywhere but new york city so new york city would be hurt by that. >> if that language is changed congressman do you get to a yes vote. that doesn't affect me that effects -- >> congressman good to see you thanks for weighing in this is so important, we will be watching the developments, thank you, sir. congressman peter king suozzi, 45 manipulates away from the opening bell for thursday, markets are looking higher right now but a fragile situation out of washington will move markets a couple names watching starbucks company says it plans to create 240,000 new jobs across the world, new jobs come as starbucks plan to open 12,000 cafés by 2021 as part of the plan chain planning to hire 25,000 veterans military spouses, shares starbucks up a third of a percent premarket, snap gets a vote of confidence today, from analyst apparent company of snapchat getting second analyst buy rating sent stock up 9% yesterday analyst telling clients snap is a fun place to spend time it can be moneytized shares up 3% right now. in premarket, isis claimed responsibility for yesterday's terrorist attack in london this after a british police he arrested 8 people in raids oivent joining me stuart varney good morning to you. >> good morning, maria as everybody knows i was born, raised in england went to college london this has meaning for me strikes me as i step back one man, with a knife two knives, and set of car keys can wreak havoc in central london basically, shut down central london and shut down houses of parliament and insureds through the country i don't know what to do how do you k combat a terrorist can simply have a couple of knives ant and car, wreak horrific in the center he have premier city i don't know what you can do about this i tell you one thing we've got nigel farage on our show about an hour and a half raising the whole issue of why on earth didn't we do something way back when about muslim immigration this is a very, very touchy issue obviously, because it implies a religious test for immigration i think about time we was dr.p that daenltd with it far ajt will do that today. >> that is going to be interesting the way he sees things we know isis is claiming responsibility for this. >> yes, they are they are indeed, yes. >> see you 10 minutes i know you have a lot with a with live coverage "varney & company" top of the hour thank you 9:00 am he eastern after "mornings with maria" a short break when we come back one more ep cede study highlights how binge watching boom is changing the way we watch television certainly is in my house and dagen's house i think as well, back in a minute. this is the silverado special edition. this is one gorgeous truck. oh, did i say there's only one special edition? because, actually there's five. ooohh!! aaaahh!! uh! hooooly mackerel. wow. nice. strength and style. it's truck month. get 0% financing for 60 months plus find your tag and get $5500 on select chevy silverado pick-ups when you finance with gm financial. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. at angie's list, we believe there are 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details now. cheryl: maria racketeering -- not second-degree murder ran new england compounding centers pharmacy in massachusetts charmed in deadly meningitis outbreak killed dozens in 2012 prosecutors say he skirted regulations on sterile equipment cleanliness to push production and make more money the amounts injection manufactured by his company, young americans watching video nearly 3/4 u.s. consumers, 90% millennials binge watched video content, the study found that millennials binge watch average 6 hours or five hours of content in one single sitting, they spend halftime watching on devices not television, gen x over 60% baby boomers watched programming on television, finally something for all you lovers groupon a nail polish that states of smells like prosecco, in honor of mother's day edible but you can eat it you can't buy it online, you have to enter sweepstakes bliebing buy, instructions you have to live in uk to get this. >> sorry i. >> you can eat the nail polish. >> i don't know if you need food smelling or drink smelling stuff on nails. >> drink the alcohol -- >>. dagen: how about putting hands if your mouth living in new york city? >> thank you -- all-star panel breaking news when we come right back, stay with us. just like the people who own them, every business is different. but every one of those businesses will need legal help as they age and grow. whether it be help starting your business, vendor contracts or employment agreements. legalzoom's network of attorneys can help you every step of the way so you can focus on what you do. we'll handle the legal stuff that comes up along the way. legalzoom. legal help is here. i was thinking around 70. to an when you retire? you mean after that? no, i'm talking before that. do you have things you want to do before you retire? i'd really like to run with the bulls. wow. hope you're fast. i am. get a portfolio that works for you now and as your needs change with investment management services. ... >> ♪ papa's got a brand new bag ♪ >> with all the breaking news and the serious stories we're working on today. we don't want the show to go by without mentioning, happy national puppy day today! yes, national puppy day and with that we bring you love from ella bella my baby girl, who is not a puppy, but still looks like one and dagen's babies, charlie and ramon. >> where is the love? there's ella bella. dagen: she goes to the beauty parlor. maria: she just go thet there. and charlie and ramon. dagen: and there's a senior and there's charlie and ramon and they act like puppies. >> how old is ella bella. maria: i stopped telling, they don't wan their ages out there. dagen: she's a lady. maria: happy puppy day, dagen. >> robert. >> big vote on trump's agenda. if this does not pass, you can kiss the taxes goodbye. >> you're to be commended and the network commended by giving the american public an education every morning with civil discord. maria: thank you, we enjoy the show because it's all real. dagen and i come in every day and go, can you believe this in the stories that we're covering? and we really appreciate that sentiment. >> comes from the heart, believe me. dagen: because we care about the news and we care about the audience. maria: and the you didn't write this stuff. dagen: and one another. i think that's to robert's point, this is how donald trump our president is going to sell this to the republican. you have to get this done and look at the bigger picture. you can't look at the small details. this is what to do without tearing apart the affordable care act. they don't want to hurt the american people. maria: they don't want to hurt the overall agenda. we'll leave it there. an important show and we continue our live coverage with stuart right now. stuart, over to you. stuart: good morning, everyone. here is the state of play. no deal yet on obamacare. there's supposed to be vote today, but it will only begin when the republicans know they have the yes votes they need. there are meetings on capitol hill. there will be meetings at the white house. there's plenty of arm twisting and a lot of pleading. you'll be hearing progress or no progress all day long. high stakes indeed, the president and republican party face their first legislative test. investors are waiting on every word. the dow is pretty much flat. you can expect the stocks to move on any news

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