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the prime minister. usually, at these events, we see the president and the other world leader. mr. modi in his six years as prime minister has never once had a press conference. so he is not going to be there it's just going to be the president. you will see it start to finish right here on the fox news channel about 6:30. brian: i hope the president doesn't take him up on that we. steve: that would kill him. brian: president speaking at 6:30. that oftentimes overwhelms trips like this he often makes news last night he tweeted i think that supreme court justice sotomayor and quincyberg should recuse themselves revolving around our administration. so that certainly made a lot of news. steve: he said they were biased and some people i was reading online think that's a good idea and others think it's a bad idea. let's bring in stuart varney host of varney and company. brian: i think that's a good idea too: ainsley: stadium 125,000 people. looks like they are forming great relationships. we might need indiana with what is happening in china with the stock market down. >> wi trip was a win for the president and india. they will buy $3 billion worth of our military stuff. secondly, they are going to make progress on a huge deal. and that's a good balance between america, india and china. india may well balance out china. certainly on the world stage. plus, i think americans like to see their president cheered in foreign countries. i mean, 100,000 people in that stadium cheering. more people along the road. he was very well received. i think americans like to see that win for america. win for president trump. brian: this someone of those things where you lay the groundwork. if he gets another term the ground work is laid and the relationship is there. u.s. and india have this relationship india the developing nation and u.s. the super power. president trump is like you emerged can we please acknowledge dropped tariffs a little and start dealing with a level playing field? >> the president held a round table with indian business people and he was saying very strongly look reelect me we have a strong economy. our strong economy is very good four guys. ainsley: we have a clip from that. watch this. steve: where is he talking about tax cuts. >> we are going to be announcing another tax cut largely for middle income people. you know, we gave them a good tax cut but we're going to give them a fairly substantial cut. and that gives a lot of money to the consumer. we're doing better than anybody in the world by far is because our consumers rich now because of what we have done with a lot of things with jobs but also tax cuts. they have money. and other consumers don't have money. >> stuart: what he is going to do with the tax cut is propose a middle class tax cut. that is the tax rate paid by middle income people will be reduced. steve: he has tried that before? >> yes. but he will propose this before the election. and dare the democrats to say no, you can't have a middle class tax cut. then go into the election saying elect me. middle class tax cut, here we go. steve: here we go yesterday the dow jones was a rough day. i have been reading a lot. so much of it had to do with the coronavirus in china. and the expectation that the fact that the chinese now because of the supply line and stuff like that. not only cracking down over there but buying fewer of our things over here. so the u.s. economy could actually slow a bit, too. >> that was the original region we heard there would be new hot spots where the virus had broken out south korea and more particularly northern italy. now, that means the virus is in italy. it's in europe. they have got open borders in europe. that's a big problem. but the news this morning is that we have got another hot spot. and it's iran. around the religious city there are 50 deaths and the iranian authorities have tried to cover it up. they don't have a good way of stopping. this and pilgrims go in and out by the thousand all the time. so the worry is that now you have got a new hot spot, spreads throughout the middle east and that's why there is no recovery on the stock market this morning. down 1,000 points on the dow yesterday. we will open this morning maybe just a tad lower. certainly no bounce back no, rebound. ainsley: from what i'm hearing here most people are not too concerned with the coronavirus here in america. >> that's correct. ainsley: they do want a vaccine. the president has announced he is asking congress for $2.5 billion to allocate cash for vaccine development which is wonderful. this is what he said about the coronavirus in new delhi. >> we think we are in very good shape in the united states. we have essentially closed borders to areas where we had to close them. and we had very few. we took in 32 people over the last two days because they were sick and they are american. spoken to president xi and they are working very hard and if you know anything about him i think he will be in pretty good shape. i think it's a problem that's going to go away but we lost 1,000 points yesterday on the market. things like that happen and you have it in your business all the time. had nothing to do with you. it's an outside source that noble would have ever predicted. brian: asking for 2.5 billion. president obama asked for 6 billion for ebola. that was pretty much centrally located. >> not all of that money was spent. some of the leftover money from ebola is now going to fight the coronavirus. brian: got senator schumer upset. >> laying the ground work for any possible failure in the united states. saying essentially senator schumer is saying it's trump's 235u89. brian: 53 coronavirus here. 19 new patients diagnosed over the weekend. no deaths. >> no deaths. that is a relatively constrained virus outbreak in the united states. 53 cases in a country this size with all these people coming and going throughout the world, that's a relatively constrained virus here at this point. steve: right. over in italy, you know, that particular outbarack outbrk area they don't know who that person was infected by. they are referring to that person as patient zero as they try to figure that out. ainsley: their healthcare system is not as good as ours. >> difficulty con strange a virus of this kind. stop the free movement of people. it's a difficult thing to do in a democracy. brian: have you supply lines coming out of there. i was fascinated to see we have 10 times more of the global trade coming out of china from when sars hit in 2003. so we're even more hooked into them. guess what? these supply lines are leaving. south carolina says we are taking them back. vietnam sis we are going to start keeping them. japan says the same thing. when the world gets over. this china might not. >> okay. look, we have got more, i would call it, bad news out of china this morning that the authorities are trying to get workers back to the factories and having a hard time doing it. ainsley: our toys are made there toy industry really affected. >> expecting a supply chain problem for the toys apple is expecting. brian: general motors. factories in the u.s. already being affected. the united auto workers union saying there is a shortage of chinese parts we are already feeling. >> you don't know how far this thing is going to go and you don't know what it's going to stop. in the absence of a known quantity when it stops, stock markets are not likely to recover significantly. steve: meanwhile, you mentioned china a moment ago. you know what? bernie sanders was china yesterday as he continued to talk a little bit about, you know, some tape leaked out and it is very damaging to mr. sanders where he talks about the positive things regarding the country of cuba. here he is praising their education and it's going to work in china. >> when fidel castro first came to power, he initiated a major literacy program. there was a lot of folks in cuba at that point illiterate. he formed the literacy brigade you may have read that they went out and helped people to learn to read and write. do you know what? i think teaching people to read and wrigh write is a good thing. i happen to believe in democracy not authoritarian. you can't -- china is another example. china is authoritarian country becoming more and more authoritarian. can anyone deny the facts are clear they have taken more people out of extreme poverty than any country in history. >> he loves castro because if elected bernie sanders would do something pretty seizure of private homes and private businesses and private wealth. that's what he would do. brian: driving around et sells in cuba and he thinks it's the new wave. >> the only thing he has ever gone is moved his party to the left he has done nothing. ainsley: ted cruz tweeted out it's a difference when those you murder at the firing squad can read and write. >> that was rather sarcastic response but a good one. brian: he feels the same way now. the question is, if you are going against him tonight, if you don't shove that down his throat, you don't want to win. >> you are talking about bloomberg. brian: bloomberg gets a pass. if you are going to slow the bernie train down, tonight is the night. you have to turn around and say did you today, did you double and triple down on your support of cuba's educational system while ignoring the fact that they jailed and murdered thousands while people were so desperate to get out they laced together rafts while chopping down trees risked their lives to get out of that horrific country? >> you should being on the debate stage. brian: if you don't bring that up you don't want to win. ainsley: how does he go to florida with that message? >> florida is lost to bernie sanders if he is the number one in the election. he won't make it. steve: new morning poll out 33% of democrats feel that bernie sanders is the best one to beat donald trump. that has been the metric all along. which of the democrats can beat donald trump. some people put their, you know, all their eggs in the bloomberg basket but that blew up last week because he was so awful. be interesting to see which bloomberg shows up tonight? if it's the anti-bernie guy or the look. >> as chris matthews says if it's trump vs. bernie, trump wins 49 states and chris matthew said that on msnbc. i don't go for all these polls that say that bernie is ahead of trump in head to head matchups. i don't believe it. ainsley: democrats giving up or looking ahead to four more years. >> no they are not going to give up. brian: a lot of the people getting behind him. seven senators murphy stay yesterday gillibrand say it yesterday. senator dick durbin stay yesterday. they all say bernie could win. >> he is on track to win the nomination from the democrats. brian: could beat trump. >> i don't think that's true. they can believe what they like. look, there is no way on god's green earth that stuart varner will say a socialist will beat trump in an election. under a heard it right here. steve: just imagine if a democratic socialist was the leader of the democratic party. he has no coat tails ultimately people at the senate and the house and the lower raves all across the country, if people show up to vote for the democratic socialist, are they going to vote for that democrat who has been there for 25 years? >> prediction if bernie sanders goes head to head with president trump in november he will lose many many states and lose control and republican also keep control of the senate and i think they will flip the house. ainsley: because is he so far to the left more centrists are aligned with donald trump than bernie sanders. >> you could see democrats voting for trump in the event of a matchup between the two. let's not forget 20% of the people that go to these massive trump rallies are democrats. brian: he says free healthcare, free college. we're going to forgive student loan debt and free preschool 0 to 4. ainsley: free health insurance. steve: legal weed is really big for them. brian: you have to smoke a lot of that to believe he will do that it works out perfect. >> i'm with you. steve: free stuff sounds good when you dontd have anything. >> i understand the appeal of that. steve: i know, i know. >> in america, i just can't see that winning. steve: it's a head scratcher for him, folks. stuart, thank you very much. we will be watching you on your channel at 9:00. meanwhile, time for jillian. jillian: good morning to you. good morning, stuart. harvey weinstein taken to the hospital instead of jail after being found guilty of sexual assault and third degree rape on the way to rikers island. weinstein started experiencing heart palpitations and high blood pressure. weinstein is maintaining his innocence. >> >> he was shocked because he knows he didn't rape anyone. and so he was shocked and we don't believe that the evidence showed that he did. jillian: the disgraced movie mogul is scheduled to be sentenced next month and spend years behind bars. service members can no longer buy or sell firearms. the change follows the deadly shooting at an air station in pensacola if they don't agree to the new rules they will be kicked out of the country. three american sailors killed when saudi officer opened fire in december. the d.c. sniper drops his supreme court appeal for re-sentencing. the agreement coming after virginia passed a new law which could make lee i have malvo eligible for parole. recalling malvo was 17 years old in 2002 when he and an older man shot 10 people in the d.c. year. the other man was executed. malvo also faces six life sentences in maryland. and, boy, this was tough to watch yesterday. basketball legend kobe bryant and his daughter gianna honored at sold out memorial in los angeles. vanessa bryant and hall of famer mike ever michael jordan held back tears while speaking. >> god knew they couldn't be on this earth without each other. he had to bring them home to heaven together. >> he was like a little brother. everyone always wanted to talk about the comparisons between he and i. i just wanted to talk about kobe. jillian: 20,000 people packed into the staples center. millions more watched online and on tv. that line from vanessa bryant about them not being able to be here on earth without each other it was really pulled at you. brian: the fact they rolled out a lot of the videos retirement gave you a sense of finality. ainsley: jerseys lit up in the back. i don't know how she got through that speech without crying. she is so strong. steve: it was beautiful. jillian, thank you. crack down on sanctuary cities in this country resonating down south. one state lawmaker is taking action after hearing the president's state of the union. he joins us live next. ainsley: and michael bloomberg touted former president obama in a campaign ad but new audio reveals he wasn't always a fan. steve: what? >> i endorsement of obama saying i hadn't done the right thing. romney would be a better person at doing that. ainsley: wait until you hear what he said about elizabeth warren. brian: you been taping that? ♪ i can't get no satisfaction ♪ i try ♪ and i try ♪ and i try ♪ and i try ♪ i can't get no ♪ in 1950, king's hawaiian was born from an irresistibly delicious idea. in 2020, the jones family also had some delicious ideas. what if we make king's hawaiian breakfast sandwiches? yum! and king's hawaiian monkey bread! yum! 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(vo) get set up right with a live bookkeeper with intuit quickbooks. steve: all right. well former vice president joe biden and senator bernie sanders are neck and neck going into the south carolina primary. they will take the stage tonight with five other presidential hopefuls. brian: it should be electric. griff jenkins is live in south carolina as the socialist frontrunner says he is not too extreme to win. >> hey, brian, steve, good morning. you know the palmetto state is going to play a pivotal role in the nomination process. joe biden at one point led all his competitors by more than 20 points comfort pad. it appears that's not the case anymore. let me show you the latest nbc marist poll. sanders closing in with 23. steyer 15. buttigieg 9. warren 8. buttigieg 5. sanders riding that wave of momentum out in nevada. here in the south he may have trouble with his very progressive politics. he says though that's not a problem. listen. >> almost all of the polls nationally have me defeating trump. you know, i know if you look at the media, they say bernie's ideas are radical. they are extreme. they are out of mainstream. let me just tell you i don't think that that's true. >> well, we will see. we expect all the candidates to attack bernie tonight. here is the lineup on the stage, biden, sanders, warren, buttigieg, bloomberg, steyer and klobuchar. important to note, guys that bloomberg is on the stage tonight but not on the ballot on saturday. steve? steve: our frequent traveler, griff from south carolina, thank you. brian: that changes march 3rd. meanwhile, here is ainsley. ainsley: is bernie's socialist agenda resonating with voters? lets bring the moms in. hey, ladies. >> good morning. ainsley: i love. this so i'm going to start on this side. barbara, i will start with you. you say that bernie's healthcare plan is anti-america and delusional. why do you say that? >> i think it's reckless. he takes it to an extreme that really instills fear in me. i know we need reform in healthcare but his ideas are way too off the board for me to feel comfortable about it or support him. ainsley: tammaroy, you are on the front you are a democrat. your husband is very stick and you rely on medicare. what do you think of his healthcare plan. >> he has a chronic illness. so this is something that we will deal with forever. and so he is on medicare. it works really well for him but it works well for him because we have supplemental insurance when you get medicare you probably hear the commercials like part d part f. we have all of those. and so that's really excellent for him i imagine if they had a younger medicare like program it would probably be more than suffer for them and would seem -- for an aging person or for somebody with a lot of medical issues, i'm not sure that like the basic medicare program would satisfy what they need. ainsley: what do you say to the bernie voter who is in support of medicare for all but then you are telling those folks who lo their healthcare system that you are not going to be able to hold on to that you will have to go with a government program? >> i think that most of those voters are younger voters. and i think it's hard -- i think part of the beauty of those voters is how passionate they are and i love that they are so energized. i think it is as a mother, i know that my kids as much as i try to impart on them like what my life experience has shown me. ainsley: they are still a lot younger. >> they need to learn on their own the same way i need to learn on my own. i don't know that those younger able-bodied kids can understand the possible things that will come up and the okay stack kels they may need to face. ainsley: karen you are independent. are you noticing the older crowd is probably more conservative and going with maybe a trump vote and the younger crowd the millennials are trying to lean to bernie or seeing people of all walks of life going with both. >> i'm seeing people of all walks of life. i do think the older you get the more conservative you get. i know i have certain ideas of things. but i'm an independent because i'm really for common sense. and if we could bring back the common sense party i would be for that. what i see with bernie and why he is so appealing is because he is talking about things that other people aren't. a lot of people are conflating socialism with communism. those are not the same things. ainsley: amy in the back. republican, former nevada state g.o.p. chairman. you have six children; is that right? >> i have four. ainsley: four. the producer said six. well, you still have you still have a lot to send to college. when you look at democrats and look at bernie and he is saying free college for all four of your kids, how do you argue with that. >> it sounds wonderful and actually i wish that were true because that would save me a lot of money. bus those are empty promises that he cannot fulfill and even dealing with the medicare for all and other things that you know, promising, even have somebody like former senator harry reid from nevada who said it's not plausible, it's not doable. nothing is free. so, i don't believe that he is going to succeed with that message. ainsley: beth, i want to get you in and we have another one in the back, too. >> so basically what i want to say with all that is bernie sanders may be leading in the polls but socialism is not leading. and i think suburban voters they are not buying into his rhetoric. i mean, he is a socialist. and we have brave men and women who have fought for the freedoms in our country. and everything that bernie and his revolution are standing for are going against the foundation our freedoms and the liberty. it's going directly against it. and just to talk about what she had just said a minute ago, his revolution are the 30 and under voters. and when you are giving them these idealistic promises that everything is for free, if you don't stand for something, you are going to fall for anything. and it seems to me that these young voters, we have a lot of people who aren't standing for america. ainsley: i think that's a country song. you got to stand for something or you will fall for anything. [laughter] >> i say it all the time and they are not standing for anything. they are not standing for truth. ainsley: marissa, you are a democrat. you say you support healthcare for all as long as it's done the right way. what's the right way to do it? >> we have seen a lot of different things under the affordable care act. i think one of the things that has resonated with a lot of people is bringing a so-called federal program down to a state level. there are people that have, you know, income-based healthcare based on a sliding scale that they do pay in their state and that's done on a state-by-state basis. we have seen it work some places and not work others. that needs to be reformed as well. if you look at the affordable care act. if you take good elements from that and take good elements from another plan, i think one of the big concerns with suburban voters though is how are we going to pay for this? bernie is a socialist, all these things. he said in his town hall last night yes, i'm a democratic socialist. i'm not against america. i love this country. but it has to be all done the right way. so, people are fearful of the tax hikes that they think he is going to impose on. there is actually a website called bernie tax.com put out by his campaign. i was on it last night just to play around, if you want to see what your tax rate would be under his administration. i suggest you go on it. he is not proposing tax raises for anything that is above a household income of $600,000 that would go up from 37% taxable to 40% taxable. >> that is interesting. it's just important for people to educate themselves on everything that's out there. it's very easy in this day and age with all the technology that we have at our finger tips to make assumptions and not research it. we don't use it always for good. the more we educate ourselves on both candidates the better off we are all going to be. ainsley: i know you are shaking your heads it's not true it's not true. we are going to listen to the president speak in india and brings you back in the 8:00 hour. cool? >> thank you. ainsley: thank you. did you great job. the federal judge who sentenced roger stone will hear new arguments about a new trial. judge napolitano says this needs to be public and he is on deck. come on, in judge. ♪ i'll tell you once more ♪ before i get off the floor ♪ don't bring me down ♪ ♪ (howling wind) double dozen big! it's captain d's new double dozen shrimp. yeah, you heard that right. two dozen golden, crispy shrimp piled high on one plate! time to double down when the captain is callin'. captain d's. it made her feel proud. they saw us, they recognized us. ancestry® specifically showed the regions that my family was from. the state of jalisco. the city of guadalajara. the results were a reflection of our family and the results were really human. i feel proud about my identity. greater details. richer stories. and now with health insights. get your dna kit at ancestry.com. the best of pressure cooking and air frying now in one pot, and with tendercrisp technology, you can cook foods that are crispy on the outside and juicy on the inside. the ninja foodi pressure cooker, the pressure cooker that crisps. (howling wind) (howling wind) steve: a fox news alert. former egyptian hasnie mum baker has died. confirming the 91-year-old death moments ago. my baker led before being ousted famously in 2011. sentenced to life in prison in 2012 for failing to stop the deaths of protesters. years labor day the conviction was overturned and he was released. hosni mubarak dead at the age of 91. >> good to be with you. we are looking forward to the news conference. the president will be speaking here not terribly long from now. john roberts will continue our coverage there i do want to let you know that the president has been very active today. we saw him earlier today obviously doing some formal ceremonial events before having an opportunity to have a bilateral with his indian counterpart modi. he also had a chance to have a business round table which was very interesting. in that round table you probably heard the president mention is he going to be rolling out new tax cuts in the not too distant future. i thought that was interesting. and trade being the big topics and don't forget defense cooperation. those are all going to be topics i suspect the president will be asked about during his press conference. it has been a whirlwind 36-plus hours here on the ground and i can tell you for one it's been eventful. guys? steve: thank you very much. we're going to go live to independent i can't suspects windia. in the newsroom they were having a technical issues. brian: they were having problems 3:00 in the morning on the translation. ainsley: roger stone could be decided as soon as today as a federal judge is going to hear his motion for a new trial. steve: judge amy behrman jackson has scheduled today's closed door hearing after refusing his request that she withdraw from the case over potential juror bias. brian: she is not going to do that here to weigh in host of liberty file judge andrew napolitano. if i'm going to stay here you have no business even asking me to recuse myself. >> pretty much. steve: can she do that? >> the things she said about him in the sentencing, she is supposed to draw those comments from the evidence in the case. she didn't. she drew those many of those comments from the things roger stone has said and done in his life that had nothing to do with the case. brian: she said he was covering up for president trump. >> that was the reason for asking for her recused. whether you love or hate roger stone whether you like the president or don't like him, no matter what your politics are, this is very serious. the judge is ordering this hearing on juror misconduct in secret. and she is barring the lawyers as well as roger stone from talking to the press. now, you combine secrecy and silence and that is a recipe for totalitarianism. it is absolutely wrong that this hearing at which the juror will be interrogated as to whether she had formed an opinion about roger stone before the trial should be in secret. ainsley: why is she doing this. >> she won't give a reason why. she won't give a sound reasonable why stone is still being gagged and why his lawyers are being gagged. i can understand a gag rule during the trial. you don't want the defendant to hold a press conference which is a way of communicating with the jury outside the courtroom. but the jury is gone. the trial is over, the conviction is in. stone has been sentenced. there is no legitimate governmental purpose served by silencing him and silencing his lawyers and holding this hearing in secret. steve: it sounds as if for before the hearing there will be open court where they are going to discuss how they are going to close the door. >> they will make this argument that i'm making now. stone's lawyers are going to say essentially what i said. why the government would want this in secret? why does bill barr's justice indictment want this hearing department want this to be in secret? steve: why do you think. >> i don't know why it is. there is no national security interest at stake. there is nothing that someone is going to be harmed as soon as the information comes out. steve: has she been fair so far. >> i don't think she has been fair. as brian said she is not going to recuse herself. ainsley: what about a retrial? >> if she denies the motion to throw out the indictment, excuse me, to throw out the conviction, because of juror misconduct. stone could go to jail this afternoon. and this is happening in secret. brian: i thought about you yesterday. dissenting opinion by supreme court justice sotomayor was extremely personal. >> yes. brian: and angry and tell me how unique it is. here is a quick excerpt from it because of the administration's stance on immigration. the court has been all too quick to grab the government's reflective request i feel disparity in treatment erodes the fair and balanced decision-making process that this court must strive to protect. she is essentially saying that this court is doing the president's work. the conservative members of the court. how unusual is that? >> you know, i have known her for many years. she is a liberal. she is out there. those are her views. she was appointed by president obama. she is part of his legacy. but to attack your colleagues like that, i thought, was really over-the-line and shouldn't have been done. now, this of course, provoked the president in india to say i don't want her and her buddy justice ginsburg to hear my case. steve: sure, let's remind people what ginsburg said in 2016 when he was still running for president. ruth bader ginsburg said of donald trump then, he is a fakeer. he says whatever comes into his head at the moment. he really has an ego. the press seems to be very gentle with him on that. and then he then very famously accepted her apology. >> yes. when she said she was going to move to canada, who berated her for saying that? justice sotomayor. saying you are going to demean the court. if you have these negative opinions about the candidate trump, you keep them to yourself. now, justice sotomayor it's bubbled up in her. this is wrong to attack your colleagues and it's wrong to personalize it. but what she is really complaining about if you want to get into the technical side of this is the administration is making many arguments that they have an emergency, they have an emergency. they have an emergency. and emergency bypasses the normal appellate process. steve: regarding public charge? >> correct. the administration wants an answer. not an emergency. federal definition of an emergency, life, liberty or property is about to be destroyed irreparably that's hardly the case. ainsley: do they need to recuse themselves now if they are hearing a case that involves the president. >> i know the president wants it and i don't blame the president for saying the answer is no. there is no recusal in the supreme court. back to stone, if judge jackson makes a negative comment she could be forced to recuse herself. if sotomayor makes a comment they can't force her off the state. brian: keeping you biz with that late night treat. >> saying nothing of weinstein happening in the middle of the day. brian: i watched that while you were talking about roger stone. the president is going to be speaking soon in unscripted press conference which brings us all different types of exciting directions. judge napolitano, thank you so much. >> thank you. brian: thousands of fans family members and basketball legends saying a final farewell to kobe and gianna bryant. it was an amazing ceremony. carley shimkus has the emotional tributes next. >> take care of our gigi and i have nanna bibi and cocoa. i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ that life of the party look walk it off look one more mile look reply all look own your look... ...with fewer lines. there's only one botox® cosmetic. it's the only one... ...fda approved... ...to temporarily make frown lines... ...crow's feet... ...and forehead lines... ...look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic, may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow, eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. so, give that just saw a puppy look. and whatever that look is. look like you... with fewer lines. see results at botoxcosmetic.com you try to stay ahead of the mess. but scrubbing still takes time. now there's new powerwash dish spray. it's the faster way to clean as you go. just spray, wipe and rinse. it cleans grease five times faster. new dawn powerwash. spray, wipe, rinse. ♪ ainsley: basketball legend kobe bryant and his daughter gianna honored at sold-out memorial in l.a. after dying in helicopter crash along with seven others last month. steve: fans pack cold the staples center with millions watching online and of course on television. brian: here with the top moments and i don't know how you narrow this down making the most out of social media fox news reporter 24/7 reporter she is carley shimkus. >> you have to start with vanessa bryant. she had to say goodbye to her husband and daughter months after they died in front of 20,000 people and did so with such grace and elegance. i want to play a clip of why she thinks that her husband and daughter died together. listen. >> kobe was the mvp of girl dads or mvd. he always told the girls how beautiful and smart they are. he taught them how to be brave and how to keep pushing forward. god knew they couldn't be on this earth without each other. he had to bring them home to heaven together. ainsley: because of their bond? carley: that's absolutely right. this was all over social media yesterday. people rightfully so calling her the strongest person in the room she absolutely was. this was a celebration of their lives more than a funeral there were some funny moments as well. shear is shaquille o'neal talking about their memory of their time together on the lakers take a listen. >> the day kobe gained my respect was the guys were complaining shaq, kobe is not passing the ball. i said i will talk to him. [laughter] i said kobe, there is no n team and kobe said i know, but there is an me in that mother [bleep]. so we are back and said just get the rebound he's not passing. >> of course they had that rivalry so well. so many wonderful moments. ♪ ainsley: thank you so much, carley. brian: here is the president of the united states in solo press conference thanks, carley. he will be taking questions from our press and world press. >> prime minister modi is a terrific man. sea terrific leader. and we have a lot of things going in terms of product being purchased by india. we just had a meeting. a lot of the press was there. i thought it was a great meeting with some of the biggest businessmen in the world that come from india. they are agreeing to invest billions and billions of dollars. you heard it for yourself. they are going to be investing billions of dollars in our country. so that was the purpose of the trip, also. we're all set for $3 billion worth of helicopters, the apaches and fairous other types in addition to other equipment, they are buying that. and they are buying a lot. they are going to be buying a lot and they are also going to be a buying a lot of our energy all forms of our energy because they need energy and we have more than anybody. we are number one in the world now on energy. so that's going to be very exciting. i thought it was a great two days. it was a fantastic two days. i'm going to be not at all controversy because i don't want to blow the two days on two days of travel on one answer. one little answer. like john will ask me one little simple question and you will blow it out and that will be the end of the trip. they won't even talk about the trip. i will be very, very conservative with my answers if you don't mind. but, we did. we had a great time. we had a great meetings. and we're going for a state dinner and then after that we get back onto the plane and go back home. it's going to be about 19 hours. but, we look forward to getting in tomorrow. but this was a tremendous country. it's 1.4 billion, probably at least the most people and it's a tremendous market. and they really like us. and i think they like us more now than they have ever liked us frankly. we have a terrific, really great relationship between the prime minister and myself. so we're going to be doing a lot of things. i think it was really, really worth it. you may ask about the coronavirus, which is very well under control in our country. we have very do you people few h it. the people that have it i have heard nothing other than -- maybe there is something new, there is two days i haven't been seeing that news, very much news, because it's been all encompassing. we have accomplished a lot here. we had a lot of meetings as you know. but the people are getting better. they are all getting better. we brought in some americans from a ship because it was really the right thing to do and they are in quarantine. and we think they will be in very good shape very soon. we discussed a lot of different elements. we actually discussed the coronavirus. and at this moment india doesn't have much of a problem. certainly it wasn't expressed that they did, which is great. i think that whole situation will start working out. a lot of talent. a lot of brain power is being put behind it, two and a half billion dollars we're putting. in i see that chuck schumer criticized that he thought it should be more. and if i gave more, he would say it should be less. automatic. these characters they are just not good for our country. i gave more he would say it should be less. that's what they do. in the meantime that's all they can do. they are not getting anything done. we had so many things we could get done. we could so easily do prescription drugs. last year was the first year in 51 years where prescription drug prices went down. but we could drive them down really well if we had the democrat votes. we need some additional votes. we would really drive them down as you know. so, with that, i think what we will do is take some questions and go to a nice state dinner and then we go home. john, go ahead. >> mr. president, you just addressed coronavirus. so i will put that aside for the moment. you tweeted about justice sotomayor. >> yeah. >> yesterday. saying that she and justice ginsburg should recuse themselves from future cases dealing with the administration. what is the basis for your opinion on that? >> well, it's very obvious. i always thought that, frankly, that justice ginsburg should do it because she went wild during the campaign when i was running. i don't know who she was for. perhaps she was for hillary clinton, if you can believe it. but she said some things that were obviously very inappropriate. she later sort of apologized. i wouldn't say it was an apology but she sort of apologized. and then justice sotomayor said what she said yesterday you know very well what she said yesterday. it was a big story. and i just don't know how they cannot recuse themselves for anything having to do with trump or trump related. the right thing to do as a supreme court justice is a different standard. but, at the same time, i think it's a higher standard in a certain sense. so they will have to decide what to do. but, her statement was so inappropriate. when you are a justice of the supreme court, and it's almost what she is trying to do is take the people that do feel a different way and get them to vote the way that she would like them to vote. i just thought it was so inappropriate, such a terrible statement for supreme court justice. >> that was inappropriate about the statement. i'm not an attorney so i can't really look into it. >> you knew what she said. >> she seemed to criticize the white house for running to the supreme court at the drop of the hat. >> no. i don't think that was it. i think what she did say is she is trying to shame the way i'm looking at it trying to shame people perhaps with a different view into voting her way. that's so inappropriate. so, let's see what happens. we have things, whether or not they recuse themselves, both. look, justice ginsburg during my campaign, you know, i protested at the time. she apologized in a very minor form. and what justice sotomayor said yesterday was really highly inappropriate. and everybody agrees to that. virtually everybody. i have seen papers on it. people cannot believe that she said it. go ahead. >> thank you, mr. president. the intelligence community believed that russia is trying to meddle in the 2020 election. do you agree with their assessment and what is your message to vladimir putin about potentially interfering regardless of the candidate they support? >> you know, what i'm reading and, again, i'm over here for the last number of days. but they went to see bernie and they told bernie about something having to do with they want bernie to win. they did not tell me. intelligence never told me and we have a couple people here that would know very well. they never told me anything about that. and it was sort of a strange thing that they went to bernie and now i find out, if i believe what i read in some of your documents in some of your papers that it's a highly -- it was highly exaggerated and frankly, i think it's disgraceful. and i think it was leaks from the intelligence committee -- house, house version. and i think that they leaked it. i think probably schiff leaked it but some people leaked it -- schiff leaked it, in my opinion. and he shouldn't be leaking things like that. that's a terrible thing to do. but, basically, they would like to see bernie is probably winning and looks like he is winning and he has a head of steam and they maybe don't want him for obvious reasons. so they don't want him, so they put out a thing that russia is backing him. this is what they do. i have gone through it for a long time. i get it. i get the game better than anybody. and that's the way it is. terrible thing to say. and they didn't stay about me. i will say this. somebody leaked it in intelligence but nobody ever told me that. we have ambassador o'brien in the audience. he can tell you that this was never discussed with us. so i think it's terrible. they ought to stop the leaking from intelligence committee. and if they don't stop it, i can't imagine that people are not going to go after them and find out what's happening. go ahead, ma'am? >> >> mr. president, indian abc news. >> [inaudible] worked out what would be indian's role and pakistan's role in the region? >> i think india would like to see it happen. i spoke with prime minister modi today and i think they would very much like to see it happen. and we are pretty close. we will see what's going on. we have two days now under our belt without violence or, i guess, a minimum of violence. and we will see what happens. but people want to see it. it's very interesting that when -- everybody is happy about it. even people that are normally against me like 99.9% of the time, because we have been there for 19 years and everybody would like to see it happen. i was actually surprised. i thought the schumers of the world would say whatever the opposite is because that's all they can do cryin' chuck. but, people are really -- they are really happy to see that we're trying very hard. you know, we bring it down to 8600 and from there make a decision as to what the final outcome would be. but it has been tremendous praise for the fact that we're doing something. you know, other administrations have tried to do something. in particular the previous administration for a long time. they were never able to get anything done. and we're really serving not as a military force as we are police force. and we're not a police force. they have to police their own country. we are not a police force. it's like law enforcement. and that's the way it is. so, we would like to, after 19 i can tell you after 19 years, we would like to bring our young people back home. bring them -- that's where they want to be. and we will always have intelligence. they will have other things there we would like to bring them, for the most part we would like to bring them back home. we want to watch the area. the area is a hot bed of problems. and when we bring them home, we will let them know if something happens, we will hit them so hard. and we could win that easily if i wanted to kill millions of people. i don't want to kill millions of people, innocent people. we can win that very easily. we don't have to act as a police force. we could act as a military force to win. military force can take care of things in that very, very difficult part of the world. it's a very difficult part. very dangerous part of the world. so, let's see what happens. so far, so good. but i'm very impressed with the kind of kudos we are getting. yes, please. >> mr. president, [inaudible] i interviewed you during your last campaign in new jersey. asked you this question earlier at that time about a trump doctrine on fighting islamic fundamentalism that you spoke about and you discussed with prime minister modi and you spoke about modi-trump doctrine. what is your road map to fight out radical terrorism? >> well, i don't think anybody has done more than i have if you look. because i came in and if you check your maps and look at iraq and syria. it was all over painted a certain color. some people will say it's a republican color i don't want to get people confused. it happened to be red and it was basically trying to show what where isis was in that area. it was out of control. i gave the orders and we had 100 percent of the caliphate. we have tens of thousands of people in prisons now. being guarded by the kurds and others. europe should take a lot of them back. so far they haven't agreed to do it. they should do that. we did a big favor and captured them. i did that. killed all baghdadi a few months ago and soleimani was is gone. he is no longer putting roadside bombs all over the place. somebody else may be. he was the father, the king of the room. alroadside bomb. all those young people you see missing legs and arms. i have seen every combination. the legs are gone you go over to walter reed. i have to say the doctors at walter reed are incredible what they are able to do. that's what his thing was. he thought that was a beautiful weapon, roadside bombs. it's a coward's bomb. and all of these young people that have been so badly hurt. and we did a big favor. in addition to that as you know, hamza, bin laden is gone. he was looking to do damage and he is gone. and carbon monoxid al qaeda yout happened there nobody has done what i have done. at the same time, russia should do it, iran should do it. iraq should do it. -- syria should do it. we're in a different part of the world. we are doing it. everyone says you are the only ones that can do it. at some point these other countries. i mean iran should do it. iran hates isis. and they should do it. and we have done a great job. we have taken our soldiers essentially out of syria, except for little hot spots that we figured, you know, we will do that develop. but, we have taken the oil and the soldiers we have there are the ones guarding the oil. we have the oil. so, that's all we have there. and now we have and if you look, we are down to a small force in iraq. we're down to a small force very shortly. but right now even we have a small force in afghanistan and so we're moving out and moving around but the only soldiers we have in terms of syria the predominant number of soldiers are the ones guarding the oil. >> groups in pakistan, that's a big concern in this region and you know there are a lot of groups dangerous to the united states and democracies. >> i agree. you also have other countries that can do this. you know, the united states is 8,000 miles away they are all saying could you do it yeah. we have been doing it for a long time. i have been doing it much better than anyone else has done it. i mean, what we have done in the last couple of years has been incredible. we have 100 percent of the caliphate. remember we had 99% good we are leaving. and i was hit with people couldn't believe it. they said do 100. so we got 100. i did 100 with some great generals that knew exactly what they were doing. they were unbelievable. took 100% of the caliphate. we have thousands of prisoners right now locked up. these are isis fighters. and killed thousands. not that i want to do it. i don't want to do it. that's what we had to do. and when i came in, isis was all over the place. it was totally out of control. please. >> thank you. >> while you have been here in the country in the capital northeast part of delhi there have been violent clashes, police have been killed. some demonstrators. nine deaths so far we hear and 100-plus injured. what did prime minister modi say to you about this amended citizenship law and how concerned are you about this kind of religious violence? >> we did talk about religious freedom. i will say that the prime minister was incredible on what he. he want people to have religious freedom. he feels very strongly. in india they have worked very hard to have great and open religious freedom. if you look back and look at what is going on relative to other places especially they have really worked hard on religious freedom. i asked that question in front of a very large group of people today and he talked about it. we talked about it for a long time. and i really believe that's what he wants. as far as individual attack i heard about it but i didn't discuss that with him. that's up to india. yeah, go ahead. please. >> hi, sir. emily goodman with the daily mail.com. i was wondering do you think justice was served in the harvey weinstein case. >> i was never a fan of harvey weinstein as you know. in fact, he said he was going to work hard to defeat me in the election. how did that work out by the way? i'm trying to figure that out. he was a person i didn't like. i don't know too much about the case. [broken audio] traveling and being at meetings almost every hour of the day, every minute of the day. i haven't been able to see too much of it. i just was not a fan of his. i knew him a little bit, not very well. i knew him because he was in new york. not a person that i like. i will say the people that liked him were the democrats. michelle obama loved him. loved him. hillary clinton loved him. and he gave tremendous money to the democrats and i guess my question is will the democrats be asking for that money back? because he gave a lot of money for the democrats and it's too bad. that's the way it worked out. yeah, peter. >> i just want to follow up on that very quickly if i can, mr. president. and then i had a question i wanted to ask you. on the harvey weinstein situation this is being viewed as a milestone for the me too movement. what message can you as president deliver to women in america who are still afraid to come forward and share their stories of sexual harassment and assault? >> well, again, i don't know the actual results. i haven't seen too much because i have been in india as you know. but i think that from the standpoint of women, i think it was a great thing. it was a great victory. and sends a very strong message, very, very strong message, peter. yeah. please. >> can i follow up with my question i wanted to follow up on hers. on coronavirus specifically if there mr. president 2014 when the ebola situation was very concerning to americans you tweeted ebola patient will be brought to the u.s. in a few days now i know for sure that our leaders are incompetent in all caps you wrote keep them out of here. more than 20 americans have now been brought back to the united states with coronavirus by your own measure, does that mean that your government has been incompetent? are you pleased with the response? >> big difference in case you don't know between ebola and coronavirus. big, big difference. it's like day and night. and i felt that we should bring them back. they are americans. we should bring them back with ebola, it was -- it's very explosive. it's very terrible. we are making tremendous strides on ebola with the things that we are doing as you know. >> isn't it. >> answer the question. but there is a very -- vast difference in. [broken audio] >> 14 or 12 and at that time nobody had ever even heard of ebola or conceived of something where you basically people would disintegrate. and we're still working on ebola. >> to be clear all those survived though, right? >> yeah. we are doing a vaccine. we are doing a lot of things having to do with ebola. we are not forgetting about ebola. that's a horrible thing. but we have that now very much under control other than certain parts of the congo where they are having war and we can't get in. so we are still working on that. but as far as what we're doing with the new virus, i think that we're doing a great job. i felt that and the decision was made in japan let these americans come back and. [broken audio] immediately put into quarantine. as you know, we approved -- i approved $2.5 billion for just that purpose and also for work at getting a vaccine. >> for clarity, those with ebola, when they were brought here were quarantined and all of the americans also survived, right? >> the level of death with ebola, you know, at the time it was a virtual 100 percent. >> but none of the americans who came here? >> there is a very good chance you are not going to die. it's very much the opposite. you are talking about 1% or 2% whereas in the other case it was a virtual 100 percent. now they have it. they have studied it. they know very much. in fact, we are very close to a vaccine. yeah, please, go ahead. go ahead, peter. >> oh, all right. >> hi, i'm -- >> thank you. >> how do you define, differentiate and deem love of yours for indians in indian and indian's love for [inaudible] in india and indians h 1 visa in america? how do you differentiate that. >> we are talking about the h 1 bs and look, the relationship we have, this is not from me. this is from almost everybody that saw they say in the history of india, which has a long history and brilliant history in so many different ways. there has never been a reception given to somebody like was given and i would like to say for the united states of america but nobody else came here got the kind of reception we got. we gave -- it was 125,000, i think, seats they had yesterday. they were full. had you thousands and thousands of people outside. prime minister modi was telling me thousands of people outside. that's not uncommon for me to be honest with you, when i look at 125,000 seats and that was incredible scene yesterday. in addition, all of those people lined up from the airport to the event, it was an incredible thing. nobody has ever seen anything like it. the ambassador just told me that he has been in india for a long time. he has never seen -- in fact, both ambassadors, our ambassador and the ambassador from india said in 40 years he has never seen anything like it what took place yesterday and, you know, earlier than that but yesterday they have never seen anything like it. so, it was a great compliment. it was a great compliment to our country. i'm the leader of the country but it was a great compliment to our country. prime minister modi said yesterday they have never ever had any event like that. in fact they said usually when somebody comes in they have to look for people to fill up the areas. we had -- there was something very special. look, it's a massive country in terms of its population. and people just wanted to see. they wanted to pay their respect to the united states and so i appreciate it. i was a recipient in a sense but i was just really representing the country. peter, go ahead. >> [shouting] >> all right. thank you, mr. president. appreciate it. >> mr. president, your newly installed personnel director talked with agencies about finding people in the government that are not loyal to you and perhaps moving them on. how large a list do you imagine this will be? is it a big problem in your mind? how do you -- can you describe for us the scale of the problem as you see it? >> yeah. i don't think it's a big problem. i don't think it's very many people. i think we had a whistleblower who was a fake because if you look at the whistleblower as an example, it you look at his report and then you compare that to the transcripts, it bore no relationship. so, that was very sad situation and a lot of time, a lot of time wasted. although as you will admit and in fact you wrote very nicely i appreciate it the poll numbers have gone up very much. that's not appropriate to benefit by something like that. then there was supposed to be a second whistleblower. as soon as i released the transcripts the second whistleblower was gone. what happened to the second whistleblower. i will ask you where is he? remember -- he or she. the second whistleblower was going to happen. it was just a matter of moments. and then i released the real call, the transcripts, which are now 100 percent accurate even according to lieutenant colonel vindman. so, we want to have people that are good for the country. are loyal to the country. because that was a disgraceful situation. please. go ahead. >> mr. president, i am a [inaudible] parliamentary channel. >> good. >> you know india's concern is the neighborhood and you and prime minister modi tell you are very good friends. what is your strategy about terrorism that is coming out from pakistan to india. because we have been suffering from this type of terrorism for the last 30 years or. so what is your strategy? what are you going to do. >> we talked a lot about pakistan. i have a very good relationship with the prime minister khan, very good. we talked about it today at length, actually. and prime minister modi. and it's no question it's a problem. but it's a problem they have -- they are working on it. india is -- you know, it's a brave nation, too. there is no pull back from india. and we just hope and i said i will help. i will do whatever i have to do if i can do that because my relationship with both gentlemen is so good. but, there has been difficulty in pakistan and we are seeing what we can do about it. anything can i do to mediate, anything i can do to help, i would do. they are working on kashmir, kashmir has been a thorn in a lot of people's sides for a long time. and there are two sides to every story. but they have been working on that very hard. we discussed it at great length, terrorism. and i think we have some very good ideas. he is very, very strongly against terrorism. i will tell you prime minister modi is a very, he is a very religious man as you know. he is a very calm man. but he is actually a very, very strong person. very tough, actually. i have seen him in action. and he has got that foremost in his mind, terrorism. he will take care of it. >> please. >> go ahead, you, right here. right there. >> mr. president, thank you. have been waiting for far too long. business line and we would like to take you to your today's meetings. before coming to india, you said trade deal will be later but, of course, some time soon. in the morning you spoke about security and you are already the supplier to our country. you said other sources also. we would like to elaborate on that. talking security and -- what are we looking at and if nuclear happening? >> we talked about many things. many, many things. we talked about iran. we talked about iraq. we talked about -- you know, we were together for two days. i'm going to be with prime minister modi tonight for a state dinner at 7:00. it starts at 7:00, i believe. we talked about exactly all of the things that you are talking about. we also talked about tariffs because, as you know, india is probably the highest tariff nation in the world, meaning charging tariffs to outsiders. and i said we have to stop that. we have to stop it. at least as it pertains to the united states. and i think we are understanding each other. with china, we worked a deal and we worked it because of the tariffs. and i was able to leave the tariffs on that. will take care of phase 2. we still have 25% and $250 billion. but, in the meantime, we are working with china very much on the virus. we feel that's something. i have to tell, i spoke to president xi the other day. he is so committed to solving that problem. he is working very hard. he is very capable. the country is very capable. and it snuck up on them but i think he is going to do well. now you see going to south south korea and italy and other places. i spoke to all of them. they are all working very, very hard on it. the united states -- the because of an early decision i made. i made a decision i believe it was the first time it's ever been done. we closed the country to certain areas as you know. and i was criticized for that decision. now they are saying it was a good decision. i think it was a good decision because we have very few people and can you add to it a few people that we took in because they are americans. what are we going to do? almost in between countries where people weren't going to take them and they are americans. but, they are fully quarantined. they call it fully quarantined. we did the right thing. if you were out there, if you were an american and you refused to any help from your country, these were wonderful people. it wasn't their fault. so, but we're down to -- we're really down to probably 10. most of the people are outside of danger right now. but we have had a very strict -- we have had a very strict line on the people that were taken the areas from which we take. and i did it very early. it's never done before. and i did it early. so i think it was a good decision as it turned out. yeah. please. >> i just wanted to follow up on my colleague's question about russian interference. can you pledge to the american people that you will not accept any foreign assistance in the upcoming election and on this idea of a purge in your administration, there was recently the departure of your acting dni joseph maguire to replace him with your ambassador to germany ric grenell. some of your critics have pointed out that ambassador grenell has no intelligence experience. how can you justify to the american people having an acting dni with no intelligence experience. >> okay. first of all i want no help from any country. and i haven't been given help from any country. and if you see what cnn, your wonderful network said, i guess they apologized in a way for -- didn't they apologize for the fact that they said certain things that weren't true? tell me what was their apology yesterday? what did they say? >> mr. president i think our record on delivering the truth is a lot better than yours sometimes if you don't mind me saying. >> let me tell you about your record. your record is so bad you ought to be ashamed of yourself. >> i'm not ashamed of everything. >> you probably have the worst history in the record of broadcasting. as far as maguire is concerned, is he a terrific guy. but, you know, on march 11th his time ended anyway. his tame came up. we would have had to by statute we would have had to change him anyway. >> will your new dni have experience in the intelligence field. >> in fact we are talking to five different people right now. i think all people that you know. all people that you respect. and i will make a decision probably over the next week to two weeks. we have some very good people. but, joe maguire is a very excellent guy. he is a very good man. and his time was march 11th, i believe it was march 11th where he would have had to leave. >> was he forced out because he wasn't sufficiently loyal to you. >> no. not at all. not at all. he was pushed out because frankly -- he wasn't pushed out he would have who have get out. march 11th he would have had to leave. we'll be making a decision on dni very shortly. go ahead. please. >> that's not nice. let her do it. i know, you ripped the mic out of her hand. you can't do that boy, that wasn't very nice. >> president trump, i hope you are having a good visit here in india. we have heard from prime minister modi as well as you on a long impending trade deal. it's still not happened. even today we heard both you and him talking about how in future there is going to be one. have you been able to figure out the kind of differences that were there especially on data localization? >> sure, sure. we know the problems. i know the problems. previous administrations had no clue. they didn't know the problems. i know the problems. we are being charged large amounts of tariffs. and can't do that you can't do that. they understand that's where i am. if they want to deal with us and they will, they are going to, just like china, everybody said you will never make a deal with china. i made a deal with china. it's a great deal. they are going to buy $250 billion worth of product. and that's only a piece of the deal. it's a large piece. it's probably 40 to 50%. but it's an incredible deal. in addition to that, we are taking in billions and billions of dollars worth of tariffs that we can now use for phase 2. because they want to get rid of the 25%. so we have the 25%. they want to get rid of it. well, with india, india is, i think, the highest, again, i said it before but the highest tariff when you deal with india, harley davidson has to pay tremendous tariffs when they send motorcycles in here. when india sends motorcycles into the u.s. virtually no tariff. for the most part there is absolutely no tariff. so i just said that's unfair and we are working it out. we are working it out. >> go ahead. >> good evening, mr. president. >> i think we will win that one easily. >> we are working on that. >> good evening. >> situation. one company is paying 100 percent in the case of numerous companies. not just harley. but where they are paying tremendous. and actually tariffs were raised not too long ago. and we also did something. there was a form of rent control. there was if you put it in a different sense. it was given to india and we terminated that you know that we terminated it. no, we are talking. we have great discussions. look, i can't lose. this i can't lose it. i will never lose it. it's too easy. because i want reciprocal. it has to be reciprocal. and the money you are talking about is major but the united states haas to be treated failure. and india understands that the relationship is outstanding. india understands that we have had a tremendous deficit for many many years with india. with everybody. with frankly so many different countries. we have had a massive, massive deficit a large deficit $30 billion with india. now down to $24 billion because of what we have been doing. still, that's too high. we shouldn't have a $24 billion deficit. other countries we have more than that japan we are doing 40 billion is come in. a lot of very good deals are being made. and they will be kicking in toward the end of the year. i would say if the deal happens with india, it will be toward the end of the deal. if it doesn't happen we will do something else. it will be very satisfactory. god. >> you said at the time of the article 370 abrogation that you would like kashmir india rejected it. >> i didn't say wait, wait, wait. i didn't say that i didn't see anything about that. i said kashmir, obviously there is a big problem between pakistan and india. and i think they are going to work out their problem. but i will say they have been doing it for a long time. >> okay my problem what is your position at the moment on india [inaudible] citizen act at the moment. >> i don't want to discuss that i want to leave that to india and hopefully they will make the right decision for the people. that's really up to india. >> please, please. >> thank you, mr. president. my name is -- indian journalist. i have a very simple question. >> go ahead. >> now back home when you reflect upon your tour of india, how would you describe it? cultural diplomacy, or do you have any other words for that? >> well, first of all i would describe it as incredible. when i looked at the various things like today, when we went, you probably saw where we were, and when you look at all of the things that we have seen today, when we look at yesterday, the taj mahal and other things in addition to working in between and even during, we worked very long and hard with representatives from india. most particularly with the prime minister. i just think it's an incredible country. it's got unbelievable energy. you see that when you come in from the plane. when you see from i think i can say virtually from the plane to whatever venue we were going to it was wall-to-wall people. they have never seen anything like it. somebody said it was the greatest greeting ever given to any head of state from any country. now, india has more people than any other country. a little bit more than china. >> how would you describe diplomacy? >> i think the diplomacy is a diplomacy of great friendship and respect. >> okay. >> i think it's all going to work out very well. i really do. i admire your country tremendously. i respect your prime minister tremendously. and i think it's really a diplomacy of friendship. and i think it's going to work out very well. okay? >> go ahead, please. please, go ahead. right next to steve. >> thank you, mr. president. as you know, the chinese government recently rejected several "wall street journal" reporters. what is your administration considering to do in retaliation to that move? are you considering banning or restricting the access of chinese journalist, for example united states. >> so i haven't really been given a full briefing on that. we're going to look at it. we will look at it. it's something that i don't like to see. i don't think it's fair because we give very good access. maybe some people would say we give too good. i don't believe in that. i think we give very good access. i don't think it's fair. we will have a decision made on that relatively soon. okay? thank you. good question. please, go ahead. >> [inaudible] companies continue to buy venezuelan oil from third parties, especially. >> you will be seeing something on that in the not too distant future. >> there could be more sanctions on venezuela? >> there could be very serious sanctions. >> against the indian companies? >> what is happening in venezuela is so sad. people are starving. here is a case where a country was wealthy 15 years ago and very wealthy 20 years ago. very, very wealthy. the wealthiest in all of latin, south america. the wealthiest. and by far not even a contest. and when you look today they don't have water, they don't have basic food. they have no medicine. it's incredible what's happened in venezuela. we're watching venezuela very closely. we don't like it. we don't like it. not at all. okay? >> [inaudible] >> you are going to see in a little while. you are asking a question right in the middle of us doing something. go ahead. please. >> [inaudible] bbc. there were some back home that were hoping you would raise concerns about some of these policies that prime minister modi has introduced that discriminate against muslims and also rise in hate crimes here in india. >> we did discuss that and we discussed that and specifically muslims. and we also discussed christians and we had -- i had a very powerful answer from the prime minister. we talked about religious liberty for a long period of time in front of a lot of people. and i had a very, very powerful answer. and as far as muslims are concerned, as he told me, i guess they have 200 million muslims in india. and a fairly short while ago they had 14 million. and he said that they are very -- working very closely with the muslim community. >> you yourself have been criticized for policies that have discriminated against muslims like the travel ban. there has also been a rise in hate rhymes in the last number of year in a position to talk to him about those subjects? >> i won the travel ban as you probably know. a lot of people say i lost it. i won the travel ban. we use the travel ban where we think not based on religion but where we think there is going to be trouble where we are looking at certain countries. as you know we added a few countries on to it. we won the travel ban and we won it in the supreme court. so the travel ban is not a thing against muslims. it's a thing against areas where we don't want people coming into our country that are going to cause problems, cause harm, cause death, hurt our people. and i feel very strongly about that. okay. please, go ahead. >> thank you very much, mr. president. >> thank you. thank you very much. >> >> [inaudible] media group. some people say that india could be to the u.s. an asia during the 21st century what the u.k. was in europe during the 20th century. how do you view it? >> well, i think that india is going to be a tremendous player over the next, you know, it's now, right? but over the next period of 50 years and 100 years. look, you are talking about the largest population in the world. you are talking about tremendous country in terms of its heritage. its potential wealth, frankly. right now they have incredible potential, economically they have great potential. their schooling system is getting better all the time. they are doing a fantastic job with in certain sectors with respect to education. we see it in the united states we see it. we have a lot of indian students coming to our schools. great students and done fantastically well at our schools. but we have, you know, thousands and thousands of people coming from india coming to our colleges in particular schools but our colleges in particular. india has a phenomenal future. i mean, you can rarely think of a place that has a better future than india. and highly respected, especially with leadership like prime minister. right? modi. go ahead. pick one. go ahead. >> cnbctv india. american companies have been investing in india for a long, long time. are you satisfied with the indian investment especially on issues like multibrand and ecommerce on which companies from u.s. have a lot of interest in? >> so, i'm very satisfied because they are investing tremendous amounts of money. i met mr. patel a little while ago. he is the largest steel person in the world by far. i don't think there is even a contest. and he is going to be building a billion-dollar plant in alabama. we had the press left him in there. always a risky thing to do. but if you -- if you see the -- let's say we answered 15 questions. they were talking about how much better it is to work in the united states now in terms of their investment. they have done a fantastic job. these are some of the biggest entrepreneurs in the world. i'm not even sure if the media really understood who they were. i knew many of them. certainly heard of all of them. the job they have done is incredible. but mr. patel, who is the biggest steel -- i think the biggest steel company but certainly the biggest steel individual but biggest steel company. he is investing billions of dollars in the united states. he is only doing it because of what i have done to bring back the steel industry. the steel industry was dead. absolutely dead in the united states. it's a vibrant industry and it's incredible. again, we need it for defense. it's just not like certain industries that you don't need. we need it for defense. but he was glowing and one of the reasons is he spending a billion dollars in alabama and more money in other places in the united states is because we brought it back. so, we are very proud of that so i think what we will do is we are going to see some of you on the plane on the way back. it's been an honor to be here. it's an incredible place with incredible leadership. and unbelievable future and i just want to thank you all and i will see you back in the states and i think some of you on the plane and we can talk a little bit on the plane, too. thank you very much, everybody. thank you very much. ♪ brian: the president cool and calculated throughout the entire press conference including. so obviously provocative questions. he would not bite. he took a lot of questions from the world press as well as the american press and answered just about everything thrown at him from harvey weinstein to afghanistan to venezuela. ainsley: he said originally he wasn't going to say anything controversial because he said the media will take something small and blow it up. he did end up 25ug with cnn jim across attachment they had a back and forth when jim said you can trust us our record on deliver i have truth better than your record. and the president answered his questions and moved on. steve: the question was provocative he said would you reject any sort of assistance from a foreign entity in running for president and the president said he doesn't want any help. regardinregarding mr. maguire leaving the dni job the president made it very clear that he was going to have to leave on march 11th by statute anyway so it was time to make a change. we did hear the president also say when asked by one of the indian reporters to describe the visit he said i would describe it as incredible. you looked at the events of the day plus the taj mahal, wall-to-wall people, anywhere he went. and he said he has been told it was the greatest greeting of a foreign leader in history. brian: right. steve: according to the president. brian: he could have stopped that after 15 minutes and people would have been fine with it. he went on for 45 minutes. he was taking anything at any point at any time with absolutely no help. ainsley: he said india had a phenomenal future. i liked the fact that he said we are close to a vehicle seen on the coronavirus. he mentioned putting in billions of dollars to fight it here in america. he will now go and leave the hotel. he will go to the presidential palace and then they have their state dinner tonight and he will leave around 11:00 a.m. our time. steve: that starts about one hour from now. we will step aside. more "fox & friends" live from india and new york coming up. for a nasty cold, take dayquil severe with vicks vapocool. whoa! and vaporize it with an intense rush of vicks vapors. ahhhhhhhhhh! dayquil severe with vicks vapocool. the daytime, coughing, stuffy head, vaporize your cold, medicine. there's a company that's talked than me: jd power.people 448,134 to be exact. they answered 410 questions in 8 categories about vehicle quality. and when they were done, chevy earned more j.d. power quality awards across cars, trucks and suvs than any other brand over the last four years. so on behalf of chevrolet, i want to say "thank you, real people." you're welcome. we're gonna need a bigger room. the best of pressure cooking and air frying now in one pot, and with tendercrisp technology, you can cook foods that are crispy on the outside and juicy on the inside. the ninja foodi pressure cooker, the pressure cooker that crisps. brian: perfect person standing by to talk about what the president discussed from everything from venezuela to afghanistan to what's happening with the coronavirus. he has been leading the charge and sounding the alarm. senator tom cotton of arkansas. senator, the president brought it up. he is concerned about the markets but he says we are in a good place right now and close to a vaccine. what can you tell us? >> good morning, guys. great to be on with you. >> i want to defend the defendant's decisive from shutting down china 20 passengers a day coming from mainland china that bought us several weeks to try to get our hands around the coronavirus problem. i'm optimistic about a vaccine as the president is in a much faster time frame than have you heard from some experts 12 to 18 months. i think we can do it much faster than that what we need to focus on right now though, what can be a difference in artery math days or weeks is testing kits and testing criteria. i think we need to expand that testing criteria. and the fda needs to move faster to get testing kits approved out on the front lines. right now unfortunately we have had more than 500 people administered this test in america. the simplest way to stop this outbreak from happening is test aggressively so we can identify any possible cases that's where i think our immediate focus needs to be. ainsley: the president said out of all the americans that have come back that were fully quarantined only down to about 10. most of americans are out of danger. he said that he is earmarking $2.5 billion to work on a vaccine and i know that you all returned this morning, the senators returned this morning. you are getting the classified briefing on in this morning. can you tell us all about it and why it is classified? >> yeah. just in a matter of moments we will be stepping in to a briefing with administration officials to discuss some of these very topics. so, i think the president is right that all the known cases in the united states are quarantined and they are being monitored by health officials, what worries me is possible unknown case. i take, for instance, in new york city you 51500 people fly directly into new york from wuhan itself in the month of january before we shut down air travel from china. that's why it's so important we have aggressive posture toward testing criteria and approving testing kits. that's one thing i will be discussing in this classified setting. we will also want to discuss what is happening inside of china because the chinese communist party is still lying about what's happening in china. they are more concerned about censoring criticism than they are responding to criticism. steve: real quick, senator. one of the other topics was the president was asked about his criticism that sotomayor and ruth bader ginsburg on the supreme court shoul should recuse themselves because of past things rb gmplets said during the campaign and yesterday sotomayor's scathing dissent about the administration regarding public charges. what do you think about that? >> yeah, those questions just like justice sotomayor's dissent is an example of liberal democrats projecting their own behavior onto the president. justice sotomayor is complaining that the municipal court has now enjoined multiple left wing judges at the trial court level for blocking the president's entire regulatory reform agenda what's unprecedentside not what the supreme court is doing what judges are doing around the country when the president is passing regulation and they are trying to stop them nationwide from going into effect. that's a practice that has to stop. i'm glad the supreme court has been stopping it on an ad hoc basis. they need to stop it permanently. brian: senator, you are going to get a classified briefing. we just got the word so you can go and take a time-out. thanks so much. ainsley: thanks, senator. >> thank you all. ting in my way. joint pain, swelling, tenderness... ...much better. my psoriasis, clearer... cosentyx works on all of this. four years and counting. so watch out. i got this! watch me. real people with active psoriatic arthritis are feeling real relief with cosentyx. cosentyx is a different kind of targeted biologic. it treats the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis to help you look and feel better. it even helps stop further joint damage. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability... ...to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen... ...or if you've had a vaccine, or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. i just look and feel better. i got real relief with cosentyx. watch me! feel real relief. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. ♪ how you watch it does too. tv just keeps getting better. this is xfinity x1. featuring the emmy award-winning voice remote. streaming services without changing passwords and input. live sports - with real-time stats and scores. access to the most 4k content. and your movies and shows to go. the best tv experience is the best tv value. xfinity x1. simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. brian: so we want to get a recap on the press conference and maybe the trip as it comes to a close. going out to chief white house correspondent john roberts who claims to be in new delhi where president trump's news conference just wrapped up. john, you asked the first question, right? >> yeah, brian, ainsley and steve, good morning to you. i don't know if they call it new delhi anymore because it's been around for a long time most people say delhi these days. he enjoined his visit. i was at this there at that stayed kwru78 with more than 100,000 people in attendance. that was an extraordinary event. the president also went to agra to visit the taj mahal. he visited the ashram, he called home for 13 years between 1917 and 1930. went to the memorial for gandy. and he clearl gandhi: one thing that the president was hoping to come away with from this trip was an agreement to lower tariffs on harley-davidson motorcycles managed to interject a question. it seems the president didn't get that deal but indicated something will be happening in the future there is a promise for potentially rewriting the u.s.-india trade relationship. we are not sure if that will ultimately bear fruit. the president does seem to be pretty optimistic about that. one question i did get to the president though was about his criticisms of justice sotomayor for the dissent that she wrote in the recent case regarding green cards for immigrants to the united states and whether they should be taken away if they cannot look after themselves. here's what the president said about sotomayor. listen here. >> steve: john, we are out of time. how do your teeth get a dentist-clean feeling? start with a round brush head. add power. and you've got oral-b. oral-b's round brush head surrounds each tooth to remove more plaque. for a superior clean, round cleans better. oral-b. they get that no two people are alike and customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. what do you think? i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ainsley: moments ago president trump wrapped up news conference on day 2 of historic trip to india. peter: we are about an hour away from state banquet, right? >> yeah, a lot of people really looking forward to the banquet, i want to know what's on the menu and what the president may enjoy, today we were able to hear about the trip and about the future, this trip is not just about a possible trade deal down the line, as you know, this is cultivating the ground, if you will, and forging ahead with this relationship between these two great democracies, most notably in his conversation as you saw with reporters live on fox news channel the president talked about the coronavirus and talked about trade and tariffs even supreme court justice sotomayor, but i'd like to first share comments about the coronavirus, that's something that's affecting the markets all over the globe, listen to what the president had to say about that. >> the coronavirus which is very well under control in our country, the people are getting better, they are all getting better. we brought in some of americans from a ship because it was really the right thing to do and they are quarantined and we think they'll be in very good shape very soon. >> hopefully they'll be in very good shape and hopefully very soon, we also have heard the president remark that there's vaccine moving forward and that could come to market quickly that would make an enormous difference not just domestically but globally, you heart tom cotton mention that as well. the president has also talked about the fact that with respect to trade india frankly hasn't treated the u.s. fairly, the tariffs are incredible by high, he's also remarked on the fact that he hasn't been always treated fairly not by india, per se, some in the media and the press. the president talking about a number of topics, let's take you back to press conference and share thoughts on this. >> has to be reciprocal, the money that you talked about is major but the united states has to be treated fairly and india understands that, the relationship is outstanding but india understands that, we've had a tremendous deficit from many years with india, with everybody, you know, with frankly so many different countries, we've had a massive, massive deficit but a large deficit, $30 billion with india, it's now down to $24 billion. >> the president mentioning the fact that, yes, the trade deficit is still enormous that in order to shrink the gap he's looking to reciprocity from the indian government. obviously the prime minister here want to protect his industries and they will have a meeting of the minds and come to common ground. also mentioned the fact that there was tremendous progress made during this very brief but important trip, that is certainly god news for both side. we look forward for the banquets. ainsley: thank you, kevin. steve: donald trump loves cheeseburgers and steaks, there's no beef on the menu because cows are sacred, local reports that says tonight's dinner which start in one hour, spice salmon and grilled -- brian: what about an impossible burger? ainsley: never seen meat vegetables, business -- trump braises for food. i'm sure he will be okay eating vegetables. steve: great to have you, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: what do you make of the president's comments, the back and forth, last night he tweeted out that ruth bader ginsburg and justice sotomayor should recuse themselves because they are clearly antitrump, this goes back to when in 2016 when rbg said the -- many other bad things and he accented her apology. what do you make of now they should recuse himself in the street court? >> well, look, i think he's put up with a lot from the judges who should be above the fray making comments that are personal and negative towards the president and, you know, he's quite within rights to strike back and put them in their box. >> yeah, here is what the president just said to that provocative question. seems like yesterday, but it's today. >> frankly the justice ginsburg should do it because she went wild in the campaign when i was there and justice sotomayor said what she said yesterday. i don't know how they cannot recuse themselves for anything that is having to do with trump and trump related. the right thing to do, i think at the same time it's a higher standard in a sense, they'll have to decide what to do. trying to shame, he's trying to shame people with perhaps a different view into voting her way and that's so inappropriate. steve: higher standard. he's right, you don't want to hear from a supreme court justice them taking a side in politics. >> absolutely not. seems that they are suffering from trump derangement syndrome which is completely inappropriate for someone in that position, so, you know, pull their heads in, i think he's fired a shot across. ainsley: socialist bernie sanders had a town hall yesterday and tripling down on comments that he praised authoritarian regimes, he was praising castro, fidel castro and complementing china, listen to this. >> when fidel castro first came to power he initiated a major literacy program, with a lot of folks in cuba at that point who were illiterate, he formed the literacy brigade, he went out and helped people read and write, you know what, i think teaching people to read and write is a good thing. i happened to be in democracy and not authoritarianism. china is another example, china become more and more authoritarian. can anyone deny, the facts are clear that they have taken more people out of extreme poverty than any country in history? >> it makes no sense, you can't be a little bit pregnant and can't be totalitarian dictatorship. it's interesting that he's not hiding it. brian: fascinating up until 2003 estimated that the school system is so great, 77,000 people decide to lace up and sadly lost at sea and 73,000 were killed in cuba, they say on rough estimate for political reasons but the schools are great, i guess, the chocolate is fantastic. the transportation said they made an average of $20 a month in cuba. this is the society likes? >> so many americans who have fled from the communist and totalitarian societies and cuba. bernie sanders has theoretical notion from the woods about communism and socialism and he's so off beat that it's incredible. ainsley: i feel like he's saying this is democratic socialism, that's not communism but all of his policies mirror what happened in cuba, mirrored what happened in venezuela and if you give them an inch, what's it going to look like in 4 more years, what's it going to look like in 8 more years? >> same odd etiology, theoretical, they changed the language, that's one of the things they do. democratic socialism is putting the stick on a pig. steve: you were in bernie sanders rally up in new hampshire and inside the hall, i mean, there were hundreds of people who think that what he's selling is a really good idea. >> yes, i mean, look that is true, the energy that he generates, there's something, he doesn't seem to have a lot of charisma, what he has for young people consistency that they are craving and probably haven't had from their own family. steve: why are so many young people going to him, you say aoc? >> i think she's his secret weapon particularly in nevada, you saw when he was tied up in washington in impeachment duties, poll numbers kept on going up, that was because he had aoc out there drawing huge crowds at rallies, she certainly does have charisma and the youth and the woman thing going on otherwise he's a grumpy old guy, grumpy-old socialist. brian: if anybody decides they want to nomination, they will say nothing you are describing has ever been done before or even possible nor is there money to do it from forgiving student loan debt for paying for free colleges or free preschool, to everything else that -- medicare for all. it's -- >> when he's asked about it on cnn, he has no answers. brian: it was actually 60 minutes. >> 60 minutes, yes. t just money for jab, he doesn't care, the billions, trillions, whatever they are doesn't matter, it'll -- it's free money because actually he's a guy who hasn't really have worked from leaving apart being professional politician. he was a couch surfer, dead-beat guy, a guy who doesn't understand the value of money. steve: he's the guy who is leading, he's on the verge of coming the nominee, tonight it's incumbent upon the other six on the stage, he will have to be a piñata if they are going to stop him. >> do you think it will and also do you think it will have any impact? he's a populist on the left. he seems to be rocket propelled to the nomination. brian: well, i mean, if you can't tell him that you are a fanship of the soviet union, fidel castro, of daniel ortega, those who lost their lives, it's going to be a repellant for anybody that has a sense that they want to be free and degree of liberty in their life, if you can't make that argument, you don't deserve to be on the stage, the one that will probably escape tonight is mike bloomberg because there's a desperation to stop bernie while bloomberg will probably sit back and attack but will not be as attacked as much, i would imagine. >> it's interesting to see mayor pete who has come out and been the one that has been forceful in attacking bernie sanders to see if they step up, this could be make or break for him. ainsley: i think bernie will be get attacked tonight, bloomberg not as much because he's not as much of a threat. who is attacked and the most? >> trump. >> i think they will concentrate on those two. it's interesting to watch pete buttigieg and amy klobuchar go at each other. they are obviously -- they are fighting for the third, fourth position. elizabeth warren is sort of irrelevant, isn't she? steve: miranda, what does it tell you about the democratic party that they could be on the verge of nominating somebody who is not really the democrat to be the standard bearer? >> it shows you how far they have lost their way, this is is nothing when donald trump was nominee for the republicans because his policies economically, are not that much different from the republican party whereas with bernie sanders he is way off to the left, he's dragging, he's hijacking that party and you can see, i mean, on saturday night after his great showing in nevada, you saw those people on msnbc, you saw them -- steve: they were freaking out. >> melting down. they just don't know what to do. brian: rahm emmanuel, rahm emmanuel knows how to win with president obama and they don't see a way forward with bernie. >> no, i don't know if the youth turnout which bernie sanders thinks he can turn onto -- to win him against donald trump, you know, he's also into giving them free weed, so they'll probably be so relacked sitting on the couch. [laughter] steve: victory party. miranda, check out her op-ed with aoc and bernie in the new york post. ainsley: e see your picture, congratulations. >> thank you. ainsley: jillian has headlines for us. jillian: former egyptian president has died, the 91-year-old mubarak led and he was sentence today life in prison in 2012 for failing to stop the deaths of protestors, years later the conviction was overturned and he was released. service members can no longer buy or carry personal firearms while they train with the u.s. navy or marine corps, the change follows deadly shooting at naval air station in pensacola, if troops don't agree with new rules they'll be kicked out of the country. 3 american sailors were killed when saudi officer opened fire in december. dc sniper drops appeal for resentencing, the agreement coming after virginia passed a new law, it ends life sentences for minors making them eligible for release after 20 years. 17 year's old in 2002 when he and an old e man killed 10 people in dc area, the other man was executed. also faces 6 life sentences in maryland. that's your headlines, i will send it back to you. >> brien: hard to believe that he will never get out but that's what's going to happen. ainsley: 8:14 on the east coast, martha macallum will join us live. >> wow, you sound surprised. democrats who warn the party this would happen more than a year ago, now he says it's too late to stop it. daddy? 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free medicare, medicare for all, free housing, jobs guarantied, so that's their way in. secondly they said the way that we look forward is not running socialist but running as democrats, right? the second piece, brian that struck me about their strategy document is that youth, youth that followed bernie sanders will not have a choice in deciding what they do moving forward. let me read you the quote, however we organize labor and careers and life opportunities, it would not be decided by people, it'll be decided by committee, so do the youth of america who are supporting this man know that they don't have a choice in how their careers or lives have been shaped, i don't think they real that. >> brien: if you were shoulder to shoulder on the stage tonight with bernie sanders that would bring him to his knees, that -- because ultimately what he wants and tends to answer honestly, medicare for all is what he promises, the green new deal which is barely an eighth grade paper, free college, he will forgive student debt, if you paid off college and 35 year's old, what a sucker, create special taxes on the wealthy, we know the wealthy are bad and illegal to be a billionaire and free child health care and medicare for all. this is out there but among people who aren't happy are democrat juan vargas, he put it this way. we will get absolutely wiped out and he's worried about his future, josh, democrat from new jersey, i hope i'm wrong, seems that bernie has declared war on the democratic party. these are own party members looking to keep their seats wondering what happened. >> what's more astonishing that in the past couple of years, hey, it's a big party, big tent, let's in bernie and aoc and the squad, they help us with identity, we hate orange man so bad, we open up the tent for everybody, we stand for nothing, we have no values, what are we anymore if we let everybody and anybody? we have ideology bringing down the party and more importantly potentially the country. i want to leave you with something, very important, they wrote in 2012. they said there's more political freedom in social mobility under capitalism than all previous societies, so you tell me, what's the sale here, why would we abandon capitalism? abandon what we have for socialism? it's ridiculous, absurd. brian: if you're a legitimate candidate on the stage this is where the rubber hits the road, there is no tomorrow to quote mick and rocky 3 because tuesday, saturday is south carolina and tuesday is super tuesday which would be super for bernie until he's identified and unmasked, brian dean wright, thank you so much. >> pleasure. brian: all right, coming up straight ahead, can democrats win over mothers in america with socialist agenda? our panel of moms is back to discuss in the same outfit. makes the correct diagnoses and prescribes the medications we need." david: "my name is david and i choose an np." molly: "my name is molly and we choose nps." np: "consider an np. visit we choose nps.org to learn more." and mine super soft? 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what did you think about that, living situation and college dorms because of the housing crisis it's expensive to live in cities like new york people are living with strangers? >> i think it could right option for the right person, for someone that's single could be great opportunity for them to connect with other people, live in the city in which they work, i think for the right person it's the right match but has to be carefully vetted out and opt out. ainsley: as moms would you be worried if kid did that? >> absolutely. to me sound like living to a fraternity or having roommates, as moms i would want my kid to have an option. ainsley: i went to travel europe i suggested -- well, i can't afford my parents absolutely not, if something happens to you in another country, we won't be able to find you. contested convention, do you they that will happen, amy, i will start with you because you're former chairman. >> super tuesday will be interesting, if you will like at states in california and i don't know really how well sanders will play in the areas, we were talking earlier about rust belts, i don't know if they'll be leaning to someone that is a socialist and i would like to keep their jobs and super tuesday will be telling. ainsley: melissa, you're a democrat, looks like bernie will go all the way. >> we will have have to see how super tuesday plays out, if we do go to a contested convention and sanders has the most amounts of delegates and does not end up with nomination, i think that will tear the party apart and i do think that's going to pay the way for 4 more years of trump, the democrats need to get behind the candidate and get it together and they need to be united front. >> you're an independent, what do you like? >> well, i'm weighing my options, i'm listening to everybody, what i do know that the democrats do need to get it together, divide and conquer. terribly, terribly, it's unsettling. ainsley: tammy, you're a democrat, do you think some democrats will vote for president trump because they are centrist? >> i would be more concerned that people would stay home than not vote than vote for somebody that they didn't want, but -- so that's my bigger concern. and part of what we were talking about -- so for the next thing we were talking about the celebrity -- >> exactly, separate and apart from whether i care to hear political opinions, the idea that more people would vote and the importance of everybody casting their vote is critical. the idea that if it is contested, the people would become interested in gauging that's really a concern. ainsley: you had something funny about last topic? >> kung fu panda wants to offer his opinion. [laughter] >> and mickey mouse. [laughter] ainsley: great to have you on the panel again this morning, all right, president trump and the first lady about to attend a state banquet in india as they wrap up 2-day visit, what does this trip mean for the president on the world stage, martha m macallum to discuss in new book. and visiting places like this... thank you guys when i needed to create a better visitor experience. improve our workflow. attract new customers. that's when fastsigns recommended fleet graphics yeah, and now business is rolling in. get started at fastsigns.com ♪ oh, oh, (announcer)®! ♪ once-weekly ozempic® is yeah, and now business is rolling in. helping many people with type 2 diabetes like james lower their blood sugar. a majority of adults who took ozempic® reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. here's your a1c. oh! my a1c is under 7! (announcer) and you may lose weight. adults who took ozempic® lost on average up to 12 pounds. i lost almost 12 pounds! oh! 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>> well, apparently supreme court justices cannot recuse themselves which the president knows and he pointed out as well but i do think it raises a really interesting issue, i think that most people who listen on what's going on with, this you can't reveal any bias as supreme court justice and you can't sort of attack either side of the political aisle and what they are thinking might be as they approach decisions, it's in bad taste and, you know, unethical, i would say. brian: the i will say this, is highly unusual for a supreme court justice it seems to call out an administration's philosophy as oppose to focusing on the case before them. >> yeah. brian: especially when she was a member of barack obama's cabinet? >> i know. i think about sam elito when he was sort of expressing his opinion with a nod that got ton of attention. exactly, they should be held to a higher standard in terms of not revealing opinions in a way that's transparent to people, i think it's bad for them. ainsley: we were in iowa and then new hampshire, joe biden bunt doing well, he went to my home state south carolina, if i'm going to win, if i have a shot, i have a chance, he was in south carolina, keep in mind he's running for president, listen to what he said. we don't have it. brian: joe biden and i'm running for senate. >> yeah, that's a problem. ainsley: actually we have it. >> and i have a simple proposition here, i'm here to ask you for your help, where i come from you don't get unless you ask, i'm joe biden and i'm a democratic candidate for the united states senate, look me over, likely to see, give me a look, okay, that's all i've really got to say. steve: maybe announcement he's running for senate. >> a flashback because he did have to do -- run for senate at one point. he was in one state, thought he was in another, when i was in new england. these things keep happening for joe biden and, you know, i mean, i don't think it's age related. i just think either you are, you know, you have the energy and you have the focus to do this or you don't. you know what, the voters of south carolina will have decision on saturday, if he doesn't finish first on saturday he will have to reassess. ainsley: i've heard the argument, okay, we all make mistakes and gaffes but when you're running for president there are certain things you can't get wrong? >> i do think -- everybody gets a few give-mes, you're waking up in a new state every day, the fact that this continues to happen will give people some pause, you know what, it's up to them to decide whether or not he's ready and fit for the job and they will have the choice in south carolina. >> you have spent a lifetime learning about hiroshima because in your family your mother's teenage cousin harry gray, harry who you named your son after, tell us where he was. >> he was 18 year's old, just finished high school, mom wanted him to stay in high school and graduate, no one wanted him to enlist because the war was almost over, he was with granada father on the beach in new england, but he lost his own father when he was 12 year's old. my grandfather became sort of like a dad to him and encouraged him to just wait because the war was almost over and stay home and help his mom but he wanted to go like so many young men, lined up around the block on recruiting lines to enlist to join in the effort to fight in the pacific theater at that point was going to be the main focus and he went out there, waving a flag in boy scout uniform, i was always very taken and very emotional when i read his letters because they are beautifully written, people use today know how to write letters. absolutely and i found all of these letters and i found a scrapbook that my grandfather had put together with articles on hiroshima and led me down to this journey and through the process of writing a book, something that i never imagine would happen and two men that were in the fox hole and were with him when he was a japanese attack, the other man who i met who lives in pennsylvania, remarkable man, he's 101, he -- he got hit that he still carries in his body. ainsley: what did he say about him? >> at first he didn't think he remembered him and a researcher that i was working, he said send me a picture, he showed it to charlie, oh, that's gray, and that was his last name. that's what they called him. he used to call me pop because i was 24 and he would say pop, you sleep i will watch. ainsley: because he was so old. >> he was so old at 24. brian: what was it like get to go hiroshima? >> it's back in japanese hands now so you have to get permission to go, there's one trip that goes, united airlines from guam to hiroshima where the plane full of historians, journalists, family members and veterans who go and they allow you to be on the island for 6 hours one day a year during the anniversary of the battle which is when we went last year for anniversary and it was incredible. i felt like i couldn't have written the book unless i had been there and hiked up, you see them, it's like the moon, i mean, it's an 8-mile square island, very small, the terraces are hard to climb up even when you don't have a pack on your back or rifle and no one is shooting at you it's still hard up to climb up, it gave me a real sense of what it was like for young men on the island. ainsley: what did your son say? what did harry say? >> you know, i think it's a special connection for him and for all of them and i'm glad that the book is written and they can pass it down to their children and grandchildren so that they can learn more about the story. i learned more about the family in writing the book. steve: so much more in hiroshima than just the statute. >> absolutely. steve: comes out today, unknown valor. hey, if you are interested in becoming a subscriber to fox nation, free copy of the book if you buy the yearly plan now through february the 27th. >> thank you so much, you guys, thank you for having me. brian: great job on the special. the miracle on ice team force today play defense just for appearing with president trump in rally as they chanted usa. jerry jones to react. steve: fist let's with ed henry. >> we will go back live to india when president trump and first lady play courtesy call on indian president. sanders nomination would help republicans take back the house, we will talk to the gop congressman trying to make that happen, plus the former democratic mayor of chicago rahm emmanuel who is skeptical that sanders can beat president trump, we will have a live cast with fox business coming up top of the hour we have like 40 years of data! that's incredibly valuable! ...i...i don't know... when did we introduce siracha? 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(announcer) people who know, know bdo. instead of using aloe, or baby wipes, or powders, try the cooling, soothing relief or preparation h, because your derriere deserves expert care. preparation h. get comfortable with it. hi with the world'se first invisible trailer. invisible trailer? and it's not the trailer right next to us? this guy? you don't believe me? hop in. good lookin' pickup, i will say that. oh wow. silverado offers an optional technology package with up to 15 different views - including one enhanced view that makes your trailer appear invisible. wow. - that's pretty sweet. - that's cool. oooohh! that's awesome. where'd the trailer go? i love it. it's magic. jillian: good morning to you, back with headlines, new court documents reveal colt mom loriele valor's niece know where kids are, lorie is being held in jail in hawaii charged with desertion of her children. a woman drove into a canal. watch this. >> get a hammer out the truck. jillian: incredible video shows a man climbing through the window to undo the driver's seat belt and dove into the water as soon as he saw the suv drive into the canal, this is in boca raton florida, thankfully, she will be okay. accused serial bank robber freed under new york bail reform law on federal charges, a lawyer says his family cannot afford to pay his bail, berry has been arrested for 6 separate robberies in new york city this year, since they were state charges he was let out of jail but now facing federal charges which do require cash bail, back in court next month. back to you. steve: all right, thank you very much, jillian, let's bring in joey jones, retired marine and guest cohost of outnumbered today at noon, good morning to you. >> good morning. brian: you'll be the man in the middle shortly. 40 years since they won famous gold medal as amateurs beat the soviet union who was unbeatable and they decide today get recognized. the president brings them up to get recognized, what were the ramifications? >> there shouldn't be any, proud of your country and the men that did the impossible, unfortunately that's not how the world works especially in social media, you have pundits and political figures and celebrities tweeting that the accomplishment of those men in 1980's means less or something different, how can you compare the two? these are men who have earned the right to have a political opinion and they do it gracefully and because they put on a red hat they are now the enemy, where are we coming with this? ainsley: disappointed about 1980 miracle team, i loved watching the game as a team with my dad, i loved watching the movie and maga hats crushing i have to say. your reaction. >> well, this is what's wrong with america. this type of division makes no sense at all. listen, he was the nicest most genuine person as far as celebrity goes in happening like that, my thoughts and feelings for jack black did not change because he's going to support someone i think that's a liar and he's a good guy, he's been misinformed in politics. brian: right. >> if you can't apply that then o'brian hasn't made -- a figure that is, you know, influencing people. ainsley: go ahead. steve: bernie sanders is trying to influence people to vote for him not only in south carolina this weekend but also all the super tuesday states, you want bernie sanders to be the nominee on the democratic side. >> i do. i absolutely do. too easy for buttigieg or biden to swing around, moderates to bring in voters in the general election, i watched president obama delivery two state of the unions and freshmen republicans almost clapped because he made it so much sound like what they wanted and bernie sanders is not going to do that, this is going to be a stark of a contrast, too populist, two different ideas and two people committed to him. , he's consistent, the policies he does are good for the country and we see it time in and time out, bernie sanders is going to be consistent, he will not flip-flop or sway. he was defending castro yesterday. brian: the guy hasn't changed and the hair is the same. >> i want president trump to go up against that because i believe in the country and the people in it and i believe the voters will choose the right path. brian: i believe that you'll be in outnumbered, the man in the middle. >> i will, happily. steve: step aside and more "fox & friends" in about 2 minutes. ♪ ♪ bum-bum-bum ♪ when i get my teeth cleaned, my hsomething like this. she cleans with something like this. it's got a round head. and it's got power. go pro with oral-b. power one on for oral-b's best clean ever. inspired by dentists. ...oral-b's round brush head surrounds each tooth... ...to remove more plaque along the gum line... for cleaner teeth and healthier gums. i'll only use the one that's round. oral-b. brush like a pro. >> man: what's my my truck...is my livelihood. so when my windshield cracked... the experts at safelite autoglass came right to me. >> tech: hi, i'm adrian. >> man: thanks for coming. ...with service i could trust. right, girl? >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ >> live book signing today. never done it before at 1:00 eastern time. go to brian kilmeade.com, sign up for events and sign up for premier collectibles.com. >> ask questions, he will talk back to you. >> it's a lot of fun. >> also celebrating national pancake day any way you can. we're zooming out. >> sandra: president trump wrapping a whirlwind two-day visit to india setting the stage for a comprehensive trade deal. hailing the country as a miracle of democracy. good morning, everyone. i'm sandra smith. >> ed: i'm ed henry. a presidential journey filled with colorful ceremonies and intense negotiations. state banquet about to get underway. we'll go live after the president and first lady meet with india's president at his official residence. president trump is talking about addressing a wide range of questions in a long news conference and trade deal. >> president trump: we had a great time. we had great meetings. we discussed at great lengths terrorism and i think we have some very good ideas.

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