Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX And Friends 20200909 : comparem

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX And Friends 20200909



intensity. >> firefighters hurt in record firefighters on the west coast. california seeing its biggest fire season in modern history. todd: breaking just moments ago president trump nominated for a nobel peace prize for his efforts in the middle east. brian: wow, that's our top story president trump nominated for the nobel peace prize for his efforts that just came down. came down two weeks ago and could be the beginning of a cascade of events for other middle east countries recognizing and declaring this thing called peace with israel, steve. steve: well, it could. this just comes weeks after the president's help broker a peace deal between the countries of israel and the united arab emirates. uae. ainsley: todd piro with the breaking developments. this just in, right? todd: that's right. the president's nomination was submitted by a member of the norwegian parliament. chris getty says the president has tried to do more tright to create peace in the nation than other nominees. in his letter he paraded the trump administration playing a role in the establishment of relations between israel and the uae adding quote this agreement could be a game changer that will turn the middle east into a region of cooperation and prosperity. gjedd also nominated after interview with kim jong un. with our own jon decker he insists the nomination is not about getting the president's attention. admitting he is not a big trump supporter. >> you don't ask for the personality of the people. you ask the performance of the people and donald j. trump has performed very well internationally. what he does in turn domestically is not a peace prize matter. it's actually what you achieve in international diplomats and donald trump has proven he is term worth worthy the nobel peae prize. the winner will not be announced until next october. back to you. brian: what's interesting, too. he sights the fact first time in 39 years a president decrease presence in the middle east. he also brought up the people have received peace prize in recent years have done much less than trump. for example barack obama did nothing. will he just got it. steve: so he is a member of the parliament in norway. is he part of the populist party. he said i'm not a big trump supporter. the committee should look at the facts and judge him on the facts not on the way he behaves sometimes. the people that have received the peace prize in recent years, brian, having in some cases done nothing. and barack obama, who won it, ainsley nine months into his administration and he hadn't done anything other than showed up and won a big election. but, nonetheless, they have got to be scratching their heads. do we give it to on american president? did it work out well that last time? let's see. ainsley: this norwegian officials did nominate in the past. we will see if he wins. have to wait until next october to find out. turning to the 2020 elections, president trump rallying a massive crowd yesterday in north carolina. brian: many wearing mavericks. the president doubling down on his law and order message and warning what joe biden's america would look like. steve: griff jenkins is live in washington to recap yesterday and preview today. griff? griff: good morning, steve, ainsley, and brian. the president is feeling some momentum which was on full display where he rallied that winston, salem crowd. warning in form of the biden-harris administration. >> if sleepy joe biden takes power, the economy will collapse. he won't even know the difference. if biden wins, the rioters, arsonists and anarchists wins. biden has now formed an unholy alliance with the most extreme and dangerous elements of the radical left. you know that with crazy bernie and everyone. by the way do you know who is further left than crazy bernie? kamala. griff: this as he gains ground in the sunshine state. the new nbc marist poll shows the dead heat. trump's latino voter support 50 to 46 over biden a stark contrast 2016 he lost 62% to 35% exit pollings. hoping to gain ground. sending moratorium atlantic and gulf waters and explaining that to georgia and south korea. and -- south carolina. biden responded to the statement saying he, president trumps has eliminated rules to keep our air and water clean and dangerously he has opened up additional public lands, both on land and offshore, to the possibility of new oil and gas drilling. now, biden returns to the campaign trail in person. he heads to michigan, a state trump nearly won in 2016 where is he going town vale this biden-harris made in america plan that will be something to watch for. meanwhile vice president mike pence travels to pittsburgh for a bus tour. brian, ainsley, steve? ainsley: let's bring in lawrence jones. >> good morning, family, how are you doing? ainsley: we are doing well. yesterday when the president was in north carolina he was talking about how all these rioters taking over the democratic party. that's why biden is not being so tough. he talked about the polls dropping. there is a dead lock in florida and in north carolina between these two. and he talked also about the restaurant rioters. he said they are going to be in charge if joe biden wins this election. listen to some more of what he said. >> he is starting to talk a little bit tougher now. did you notice that? he sees what's going on. his polls are dropping like a rock and he sees what is going on. now he is starting to say no, we need law and order. no, he didn't say that did he? he will never get to say that he can't say that because then he would lose the whole left. the left is running that party. you take a look. you don't want to be dealing with the left. these people are stone cold crazy. ainsley: here is the deal, lawrence. say we don't like a lot of things about the president. we like his policy. especially if you compare it to the democratic party now. when you look at kamala harris, record. the president said and many in the senate have said she votes. if you look at her voting record she votes far left than even bernie sanders. she wants to ban fracking. she wants to raise your tax. she praised l.a.'s mayor for slashing lapd's budget. a lot of conservatives are worried about those policies. what do you say? >> yeah. i think that's going to be the case for michigan today, too. when i'm there on the ground is what matters most to them. i think when it comes to joe biden. he was once known as the greatest retail politician. he has turned into more of a political committee i don't know changing his view on things based on who is in the room. i think that's going to be problematic for michigan voters. look, i'm interested what they were going to say. they were definitely hit strongly when it comes to covid. even though the governor's approval rating is at 57%. i often don't put my stock into those polls. i actually want to see what's happening on the ground. and they have been affected severely when it comes to their economy. the question is, the president won michigan in 2016. will he win it this time. and will they support this governor while at the same time she has hurt their businesses and when you really look at the policies where her and her have quite frankly played by different rules than what the public is playing by. that's going to be a problem. of course, back to your initial point when it comes to law and order, balancing your view on how you feel about injustices in our country. and the people that to burn down certain businesses. how she is going to be able to balance that message as well. i think all of that is going to play when i talk to michigan voters today. brian: lawrence, i'm very curious by the president's team is not spending more money in michigan. maybe they are giving up on it to a degree and putting more money in minnesota. something you will be interested in. the president had a new message yesterday. it's called patriotic education. i think it resonates. number one it's authentic to him. number two is when you have the capital vote to take down or amend 153 different -- 153 different items in washington, d.c., like this little thing called the jefferson memorial. and then when you see what california is doing with their curriculum. saying patriotic education is not just a catchphrase. it's a concern for a lot of american parents. >> yeah, i definitely think we have got to review our education system. i like the phrase patriotic education. at the same point if i had one thing to suggest. let's make sure we are teaching all of history. there is a lot of blame going around. there is a lot of great praise to go around as well. again, when i look at history today, we got people that just learned -- i mean, you are historian, brian. people just learned about juneteenth, black wall street this year. brian: i hear you. >> that's the failure of our education system. let's make sure we include it all. brian: i do. i'm older than you. i remember roots came out and i was in grammar school. i remember that expanded the textbook and i remember i think that's important. can we do it without vilifying our founding fathers? that's the key. you don't have to make a villain of james madison because of that time he made the decision to have slaves which was wrong and they knew it then. we got it. let's discuss it. but let's not put them in historical jail. >> the key with all of this, brian, is understanding that we had imperfect men with a perfect document that was for -- that we didn't live up to our ideals. brian: absolutely. >> this is what i tell people all the time. our constitution is our greatest defense weapon today. even though they weren't living up to it, i use it every single day to protect the liberties of all people. and so i think if we can get our textbooks to reflect that i think we will be in a healthy place. >> do you know who agrees with you in frederick douglass, a republican. steve: without a doubt and we have heard from the campaign cancel culture and this is all part of cancel culture is going to be front and center. still, lawrence, it looks as if since the convention. the virtual convention, it looks as if the law and order thing halls really resonated because people saw things start in minnesota and then it morphed across the country. sudden suddenly, people out in the suburbs, the swing voters who are going to determine this are worried about is it going to come here? yesterday the president down in florida said it's going to come to the suburbs. at the same time, you have got these police chiefs who would like to enforce the law, but for whatever reason, they are backing up. you look at the list, and it's getting longer all the time. of police chiefs who have recently steps down. have you got the dallas police chief, you have got the rochester police chief. seattle police chief. carmen best had been there for decades. she says i want to do my job they won't let them. richmond, atlanta, portland, oregon as well. if you -- you look at that roster right there, lawrence. you are wondering why are the police leaving? >> well, let me say this as someone that has been on the ground covering it from the angle of the police and the community. i have think that they are putting a lot of these police chiefs in impossible jobs. merging the gap on national issues. okay? you got to keep your rank and file making sure you realize that you stand with the majority of ones going out there and doing their job honorably. and then you have got to have them distance themselves and fire the bad cops and then have you got the protesters that you know, sound peaceful. then you got the ones come in at night and set things on fire. what dew points them to do? do you want them to let america burn? and i think that's been the problematic case. again, i keep saying. this why this has become a top election issue is not that the country hadn't moved. after george floyd, if you look at the -- if you even look at the polling when it comes to the nba and justice issues. americans saying i want justice. they don't want the cities burnt down as well. that has become the main issue. i will continue to say this until election time. all the other issues matter. when you talk about education. when you talk about poverty. when you talk about reforming the police system, but, at the end of the day, when yo give pee option of their safety. they will put their safety over all of these issues every single time. that's why you see changing in thmessaging in the democratic party. it's because people are picking their. brian: al sharpton said the same thing yesterday. he said who are these people saying defund the cops. a lot at a liberals. and al sharpton saying that. steve: i know. brian coming up in our next segment we will have a sheriff from indiana who was a democrat but he has switched the parties because he is so frustrated with what's going on. all right. ainsley: all right, lawrence. good luck in michigan today. thank you so much for joining us. >> all right, guys. see you soon. ainsley: carley is over there. she has headlines for us. good morning, carley. carley: the worst spot in california history becoming more dire. one firefighter hurt critically as they fight the dollan fire near big sur. burning .2.3 million acres. in oregon the governor issuing a wildfire emergency calling this a once in a generation event. now, further north in washington state, flames destroy nearly 80% of this small farming town, thankfully no one there was injured. but just devastating image on the west coast. two of the three suspects charged in the murder of a cleveland detective are due in court today. 18-year-old david mcdaniel and two teens are accused of shooting detective james -- last week during attempted robbery. he and informant were working under cover on a drug investigation. both men were shot in their car. he was a 25 year veteran of the department. his funeral is on friday. the doj is doubling down on its request to defend president trump in a defamation lawsuit from a woman accusing him of rape. e. jane carroll claims trump sexually assaulted her in a new york department store in the 1990s. the president has denied the allegations doj spokesperson says he has the legal right to represent him. >> president acting as a federal employee and officers was responding to allegations from the press regarding this woman. and he was doing so at the white house. so, in other words, he was doing his job. so, we, at the department of justice, had a duty to defend a federal officer doing his or her job. that's what we are doing here. carley: takeover would mean the government may have to pay possible damages. the hearing on the case is scheduled for later this month. today the towers of light tribute will be turned on outside the pentagon to honor the victims of the september 11th attacks. the tunnel to towers foundation is putting on the display. similar to the one at the world trade center. 125 people were killed in the pentagon on 9/11. the lights will stay on through september 12th. those are your headlines, guys. ainsley: not the original one we are going to do our own. thanks so much, carley. we have representative michael waltz, newt gingrich, sarah sanders and three-time super bowl champ mark and ben watson. ♪ ♪ ♪ bare good da barracuda. 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(burke) get a whole lot of something with farmers policy perks. they should really turn this ride off. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ on king's hawaiian bread! yum! king's hawaiian. the first and only full prescription strength non-steroidal anti-inflammatory gel available over-the-counter. new voltaren is powerful arthritis pain relief in a gel. voltaren. the joy of movement. >> portland and seattle night after night they are out rioting. they are not privating. they are rioting. they are putting police officers' lives in danger. steve: that's the sheriff of southern indiana's largest county jumping from the democratic party to the republican party accusing democrats of not supporting law enforcement. that sheriff you just saw in the video joins us live right now dave wedding from vanderburg county, indiana. >> good morning. how are you? steve: i'm doing okay. we saw this story. we had to talk to you. you are a lifelong democrat and have you made the decision in the last few days i have had enough, i'm going to join the republican party. why, sheriff? >> well, i want to make one statement. we are fortunate to have solid leadership across the aisle. i have worked with local democrats and republicans for many, many years. we have great community leaders businesses faith based and we work closely with law enforcement to keep our law enforcement community safe. what i have witnessed across the united states is shocking as a law enforcement leader i can't imagine 100 days of rioting and condoned by the democratic leadership. it's unbelievable unbelievable they can do that to law enforcement officials. as a sheriff, i cannot imagine putting deputies on the front line of these riots night after night with no relief in sight. and if you are a parent of a law enforcement officer going out there to check thes i think they would be appalled as well. steve: we had a list of all those police chiefs who have one or two or three will you told one of our producers a joe biden, kamala harris ticket scares you. why? >> it really does. harris, i believe, helped raise funds to release rioters from jails after they have committed serious crimes, including one who shot at will swat members. former vice president of raise money to release criminals from jails that's shocking in itself. you know, the democrat prosecutors, they have this catch and release programs and police are out there battling these rioters each and every night. they arrest them only to find them released right away by a prosecutor. steve: because when the people who are watching right now, they look in and violence and for instance here in new york state. it's almost impossible to wind up in jail and stay in jail because of the no bail policies that they instituted in new york state within the last year or two. sheriff, before you go, the alternative, you don't like joe biden and kamala harris. what about donald trump? >> well, i have been on the national conference calls with president trump and he pledged his support for law enforcement. i seen it in action because he has offered these cities that are under siege federal aid and they are not smart enough to take that aid to end siege on their city. >> why won't they take the money, sheriff? >> i can't explain that i would be rushing that federal aid to help us end the violence. in chicago last weekend, i believe 42 people were shot. and you don't even hear it discussed by the democrats. i mean, that's shocking in itself. steve: it is, indeed. all right, sheriff of vanderburgh county, indiana dave wedding. thank you very much for dropping by and telling us your story. >> thank you for having me this morning. steve: all right. and good luck to you. meanwhile, straight ahead, some high school football players in connecticut are fighting to save their season. student athletes planning a protest today after full contact games were deemed impossible and canceled. some of the players speaking out going to join us live coming up. you are watching "fox & friends" live from new york city ♪ ♪ get it rocking ♪ our boots are knocking ♪ we're going to say it proud ♪ we love our country ♪ and we like it loud ♪ brian: high school football players in connecticut fighting to save their system. protesting the decision to cancel full contact games this fall and set to hold another protest today in front of the state capital. we are joined by some of those players. kevin, cammeron, josh, and brian. kevin, you decide to put this pen to paper and put the petition together. why? >> good morning, brian. the decision to make the petition. it was actually joint decision between me and one of my good friends daniela rosa and right when the decision was made to cancel our season, you know, there is just a lot of emotions going through our head and we had to make a petition that was really -- that was our only option. brian: cammeron, when you heard the news, with connecticut's numbers as low as any in the country, you must have thought you were playing. when you heard the news no football this fall, what are your thoughts? >> well, initially, i was extremely heart broken. there was a lot of emotion. like the day of, i went to practice with my teammates. and we were all extremely emotional including our coaches. i mean, we believed that the decision was made out of an abundance of caution, which is unnecessary. brian: now worried about your health in the most physical game in the country doing it out of caution. wait a second, josh, have you been playing all summer? >> yes, we have. we have been playing and doing conditioning as a team. we have been taking all the precautions they have asked. also playing basketball. no covid cases related to football and basketball. i don't see why should be canceled. brian: your playing, you are conditioned. your coaches want to play. who is stopping you? >> right now it's a mix of bph and tac we are hoping to go to the governor and get our message well-heard. only one who could reverse the ruling. brian: i hope he understands this is a small window. we can't delay. two of you are seniors. you are never going to have this year back. you are not going to stick around next year to get your eligibility back. here is what the connecticut interscholastic committee says without the support of the health department ciac cannot move forward without a full contact seasonal as it would place superintendents and boards of education in the impossible position of acting against the recommendation of a state agency. we need that state agency to also, starting. with you, kevin, are your parents on board with this? >> of course our parents are on board with this. they are all very proud of us. this is a mayor initiative. in football your parents you know they are your number one fan. i think that's really important, especially with this. brian: cammeron, what about other team unless your towns, your rivals, do they want to play as bad as you do? >> literally every single team our enemies want to play. it's a statewide movement. everybody just wants to play. brian: brian, when you think about what the season brings, there are some cases where kids get this and don't recover. their lungs are damaged. are you willing to take that risk? >> i believe when you sign up for football, you know the risks that are coming. so i think any football player is willing to take the risk. brian brian what is your schedule today, josh? what are you guys doing in terms of the protest and demonstration? >> the speakers, the organizers we are all going to be there early. podium set up at the capital. we have forme guests former plas and coaches and parents will be there as well to help speak on our opinions. we will speak facts. and we hope to get our voices heard that way. brian: when you look at a seasonal that might not happen, kevin, what do you think you will miss most? >> i mean, just welcome the team, you know. being with the team is such an important part of football. it teaches you life lessons that go much -- way farther beyond high school. and for me, you know, my junior season, this is an important year. say i want to play in college. having your junior year is the most important year in high school. for these guys i don't want them to miss out on senior season. you only have one senior night your entire life. brian: does the they made a statement regarding this too as of a couple days ago the dch unlikely to change stance on high risk sports like football. don't give up. keep pushing. if 35 other states can do it and you have been practicing all summer you have the right thing on your side. please, stay together. >> yes, sir. >> thank you. brian: thanks, guys. >> thank you. >> kevin, cammeron, josh and brian. we reached out to governor ned lamont's office for a statement. we have not heard back. meanwhile, we have this situation happening all across the country. i hope people understand these kids are only juniors and seniors and high school players one time. meanwhile, president trump expected to announce today that more troops will be withdrawing from iraq. former green beret commander congressman michael waltz says this is a huge achievement. i guess he is on board and he is next. this isn't just a bandage it's a badge of armor of care of respect. because it means you fight for the safety of those you love. when you come into walgreens you get a flu shot that's right for you... and them you become a flu fighter. do your part and defend your crew against the flu. ♪ walgreens tonight, try pure zzzs all night. unlike other sleep aids, our extended release melatonin helps you sleep longer. and longer. zzzquil pure zzzs all night. fall asleep. stay asleep. that selling carsarvana, 100% online wouldn't work. but we went to work. building an experience that lets you shop over 17,000 cars from home. creating a coast to coast network to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer. because our customers love it. see for yourself, at carvana.com. steve: got a fox news alert for you if you are just waking up weeks after helping broker peace between israel and the union united arab emirates president trump has been nominated for the nobel prize for peace. ainsley: green beret joins us from that area and he joins us to react. good morning to you. >> good morning. ainsley: he was nominated by this norwegian official and he said president trump has done more to try to create peace than any other person nominated for the nobel peace prize do you agree with that and tell us about your thoughts on that region. >> well, i do agree what we have seen is wholesale shift. i think you will see more movement from bahrain, from oman, and from other countries that realize that israel is are a liberal democracy that is here to stay. the greatest ally of the united states and it's this alignment that you are seeing is vis-a-vis iran the last thing those countries want is a repeat of the obama-biden years with the complete sell-out of their security interest and the united states to the mullahs in iran i think that's what's driving this alignment and my hat's off to the president. jared curb near and robert o'brien for bringing that deal together and more to follow and then on top of that you also have kosovo and certainia, all of the violence that we saw there in the 1990s and 2,000 also coming together if he coult a fair vote. president obama got to for existing and blinking. if you look at the accomplishments of this presidency you look at what he has got done compared towel at rhetoric out there it's possible. brian: benjamin netanyahu -- you knew that well you fight over there. the president also doing something that gets me extremely nervous. he is cutting back troops in iraq and as much as we are pressuring iran. the signal to the iranians moving out. and signal to the iraqi government is you might not have a choice. but to continue that alliance with iran. and we had a prime minister there that was standing up to the iran i can't believe militias. do you worry about that message? >> i'm not as concerned about the actual troop numbers. i think a lot of those troops we do need to see a shift in focus on what i believe is the greatest threat to the united states. and that's the chinese communist party. but we need to have the capability and we need to have the platforms to begin and to continue to fight forward the reasonable isis was completely eliminated and we haven't seen attacks in the united states is because we have our foot on their neck forward. the reason we were able to take out baghdadi and absolutely and continue to stay on the will assets in the region. 4,000, 8,000 all at the pentagon decide the actual numbers. and then our finally our base in afghanistan not just about terrorism. it's on the western flank of china, the southern flank of russia and the eastern flank of iran. i think we need to keep that too there, too. brian: absolutely. again i'm not focused on the exact numbers of troops. steve: the president ran on this. this should be no surprise. he has been trying to draw down the numbers. a lot of family members would love to see their men and women come home. >> i have never ever heard him utter anything like what the mainstream media is alleging in that ridiculous article in the atlantic. he has from gold star legislation to wounded warriors, things that i have worked with him on and helped him pass, he has been 200 percent for the troops and to your point one of the reasons he wants to draw down as much as possible, he gets so emotional and moved when he goes out to dover air force base and walter reed and others. i just want to be loud and clear that my experience with him has been fantastic when it comes to our soldiers. steve: well, you had an experience with him yesterday, he was in the shadow of the jupiterer inlet lighthouse which was, you know, it dates back to before the civil war. he gave you a shoutout. one of the headlines was he signed an executive order moratorium on oil drilling off of florida, georgia, and south carolina, which is different because a couple of years ago he was proposing drilling in the continental waters. but now he is saying nope, not going to do it. at the same time, you look at the very latest florida presidential poll and among likely voters, it is a dead heat 48-48. the campaign also had a call yesterday to tell the reporters on the call that according to their internals, president trump was in -- was ahead in arizona and leading in nevada, which he lost last time. what is going on because, you know, it was a couple weeks ago, a month or two ago, we heard the mainstream media say joe biden is so far ahead and now it looks like things have turned. >> one of the things i think was really significant was the rnc convention that cut through all of the noise to talk about what he is actually getting done. i was with him yesterday in jiewrpghts anjupiter. just on the environment hundreds of millions of dollars for the everglade, clean water infrastructure. the offshore moratorium and ban on drilling that he has now extendedment things like the save our seas act which he scienced to clean up our oceans. the president knows that clean water and our environment, particularly in florida, it's not a partisan issue. it's about our economy. it's our jobs. it's boating, fishing. our beaches it is 100 percent something we have to have for our way of life there the president, as a floridian, knows that. but once again we're talking about now and floridians are cutting through the noise on what he is actually getting done to impact their lives. and i think that's a big reasonable you are seeing the shift. ainsley: congressman, a lot of people moving down to florida. new report out that 950 people from up here in the high tax states up north are moving down to your state. steve: move over. here we come. ainsley: you like it? a lot of them are democrats though. >> i think we already have steve and brian, ainsley, come on down. ainsley: and have you got the president now. >> talk to gavin about doing the show from florida. we have got the president and we are ready look, i think the salt tax, those provisions really started it. but now you have covid. we have great sheriffs in terms of law and order. and the big thing is our schools are open. so, we're seeing families come down. brian: you are playing sports, too? >> our schools -- superintendents are giving parents a choice. either you can have a hybrid option in person option, a virtual option and that's what florida is about is creating an environment whether you are a business or a family where you can live your life have a choice, government enables your life, not gets in the way of it. and with our great governor, senators, and our delegation. steve: how can you leave out the weather? it's the weather, baby. nascar, beaches, we have everything. brian: tom brady. steve: tom brady? >> we look forward to see you down there. steve: appearing on behalf of the florida chamber of commerce, congressman, thank you very much. >> a thousand sanctioned a day. it's really incredible. brian: got to see if they come in and voting for joe biden, it could change everything. we will see. ainsley: see that in texas, too. thank you. >> i have a couple of neighbors from california and new york. i was like guys don't bring your nonsense down here. we like it the way we like it in florida. ainsley: all right, congressman. thank you so much. >> okay. ainsley: bye, good to see you. as violence escalates nationwide journalists are making snarky comments about what they are not seeing. those reporters are gaslighting. she is going to join us to explain. the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past... they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. let's help protect them together. because missing menb vaccination could mean missing out on a whole lot more. ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. makes it beautiful. state-of-the-art technology makes it brilliant. the visionary lexus nx. lease the 2020 nx 300 for $339 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. carley: back with headlines, to women facing hate crimes after attacking trump supporters and stealing a 7-year-old's make america great again hat. watch this. >> get it. >> take the hat. >> that is somebody else's hat mom, call 911. >> you want me to call 911. >> oh, you are going to punch him? >> confronting the boy and his mother outside the dnc in delaware last month. the two women have also been indicted on robbery and assault charges both are out on bail. georgia's secretary of state says 1,000 people voted twice in the state's june primary. secretary raffensperger the people received absentee ballots and voted in person: he said none of the results were affected by the double vote. yikes. ainsley? carley: thank you, carley. as violence rocked america's major cities some journalists are painting a different picture on social media. paul krugman of the "new york times" tweeting i went for a belated nyc run this morning and and am sorry that i report that i saw very few black clad anarchists. and cnn josh cambel tweeted good morning to wonderful portland where the city is not under siege and buildings are not burning to the ground. karol markowicz blasted the remarks as gaslighting in a new op-ed and she joins us now. good morning to you, carol. >> hi. good morning. ainsley: when you read those tweets what was your problem with them? why do you call it gas lighting? >> look i also live in a safe neighborhood. i also don't hear gunshots in the night. we can't ignore that the fact that new york city and many of these other cities are really in trouble. and if you love new york. if you love portland. if you love washington, d.c. then you can't ignore the fact that some of your fellow citizens are suffering. in new york, those numbers are really as astro no, ma'am mic call. we have had 96% increase in shooting since last year. and we still have four months to go. we have had 36% in increase in murder. so the paul krugmans of the world running around rich neighborhood saying that everything is fine, are really gas lighting the rest of new yorkers who are living in spaces where it's not fine. and they need the rest of us to face it. ainsley: yeah. i'm reading the news this morning. yesterday three men shot in brooklyn and clinton hill. a man shot a woman in the face in brooklyn. 62-year-old dog walker murdered in bay ridge. labor day new york city gun arrests at 20 year high. 25 shootings on labor day. when you look at shooting surges in major cities look at chicago up 52%. philadelphia up 52%. new york city up 87%. so what is your message for the paul krugmans of the world or these journalists that you say live in these social -- the social class that doesn't have anything to worry about? >> look, i love new york, too. i want new york to come back. i'm very worried about new york though. i think if we keep ignoring the fact that crime is going up, our schools are closed. restaurants still aren't open. a lot of the businesses around us are shutting down. we will come back to a city that we don't recognize. that's the other thing, so many people are the jerry seinfeld writing pieces about new york will never die. i hope new york willner die, too. he is in the hamptons and i'm in brooklyn. there is a difference. ainsley: what are you seeing? because i hear both sides living in new york, too. and having friends coming back to the city. some say we're not coming back at all because we are scared. what do you say to the critics that might say jerry seinfeld's message was something that our city needed so that we had, you know, a positive outlook and a positive attitude as we do come back and enroll our kids in school? >> again, i'm very much on the jerry seinfeld side of never betting against new york city. i'm a lifelong new yorker. i lover this city. we can't pretend that everything is okay. that's really the main message here. you can't. ainsley: can a roll sorry to interrupt you what happens? we have one more year with de blasio. >> we need new yorkers to face the problems we are having and not go on pretending spree where everything is okay outside my window so everything is okay everywhere. ainsley: we are still a community. no matter what neighborhood you are in love people and worry about people in other communities as well. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. apes ages you are welcome. coming up newt gingrich and ben watson ♪ ♪ 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 -always have been. -and always will be. never letting anything get in my way. not the doubts, distractions, or voice in my head. and certainly not arthritis. new voltaren provides powerful arthritis pain relief to help me keep moving. and it can help you too. feel the joy of movement with voltaren. you recall. [chanting four more years] >> next year will be the single greatest economic year in the history of our country. but if sleepy joe biden takes power, the economy will collapse. he won't even know the difference. >> when it comes to joe biden. turned into more of a political committeian changing his view on things based on who is in the room. >> sheriff, southern indiana's largest county jump from the democratic party to the republican party. >> but what i have witnessed across the united states is shocking. and is condoned by the democrat leadership. >> tell me about joe. what's the thing about the ice cream? he loves ice cream. >> ice screa ice cream is big pasta with red sauce. >> that conversation seemed really forced and they still didn't talk about solutions. >> time for indoor dining. governor cuomo, open us up right now. enough is enough. >> it would be negligence and reckless to open -- breaking just moments ago, president trump nominated for a nobel peace prize. ♪ hanging around singing everything on the radio steve: live from the big room at the fox news world headquarters studio f, it is "fox & friends" for this wednesday. we're already up to wednesday. how great is this on the shortened workweek. the date if you are going to write a check remember when you used to do that today would be 9/9/2020. and two months from today will be the day after the election. will we know who is president? hope so. brian: yeah. you know? no one is giving us much hope that we're going to get a verdict on election day especially when states like ohio we just need a postmark before election day. we will accept them after. a state like ohio. ainsley: we haven't even had a debate and can you vote in north carolina right now. you can get an early vote -- early ballot. brian: wow. steve: going out all across the country the secretaries of state are suggesting ask for your mail-in ballot early and try to get it in early as well. brian: so far the more are more democrats than asking than republicans. and maybe that has something to do with the president worried about people getting unsolicited requests when they just show up in your mailbox. confuses people. ainsley: this just out this morning in georgia they got the nuns back from the primaries people voted two times in that state. 1,000 people voted two times. 58% of them are democrats. brian: that makes us feel a lot better, doesn't it? steve: you got to wonder, brian, more democrats are requested mail-in ballots that would suggest that more republicans, perhaps, are going to show up at the actual polls to see their votes count on election day rather than wait for somebody in the back room to count them all. brian: which makes you worry about that so-called red mirage where one person wins on election day and gradually lose. steve: have you been watching too much cable news. brian: straight to a fox news alert. president trump nominated for the nobel peace prize for his efforts in the middle east. steve: this comes after the president helped broker a historic peace deal between israel and the united arab emirates. ainsley: gillian turner with the breaking developments. this just came down right before our show, gillian. >> a bit of breaking news for you this morning, ainsley. so a single source has told fox news radio that for the second time in three years they have nominated president trump for a nobel peace prize. this time it is for 2021. this is a preliminary step in the nominating process. it does not mean that president trump is going to ultimately win that peace prize. now, the individual is a norwegian member of parliament. his name is christian he tells fox news he has submitted a formal letter to the committee for. he has given fox news a copy of the letter. this time he says it's based on president trump's brokering of a deal between israel and the uae. gjeddi believes this president has done more to create peace than any other peace prize nominees. >> you don't ask for the personality of the people. you ask for the performance of the people. donald j. trump has performed very well internationally. what he does in terms domestically it's not a peace prize matter. it's exactly what you achieve and international diplomats. donald j. trump has proven he is worthy of the nobel peace prize. >> the peace prizes a nomination that president trump has talked about in the past yesterday he touted his own efforts at peace a couple of times. take a listen. >> achieve the first break through in the middle east peace for many, many decades. even the "new york times" said that was an amazing a achievement. do you believe that? i said let me see that one. no we did something that nobody felt was possible now the white house and the norwegian institute have yet to confirm this norms. we are working to get it. if we do brian, ainsley, steve, we will, of course, get that to you right away. back to you guys. brian: jon decker congratulations, talking to the president later on for fox news radio. that's united states t great to. i love the fact that the person who nominated president trump tybriggjedde. i'm not sure if the g or j is silent. it's it g or j that's silent? steve: i think it's gjedde. ainsley: same guy that supported him a few years ago. brian: people receive this peace prize have done much less than donald trump. for example, barack obama did nothing. bit of a shocker for someone to understand the political system here. steve: well, anyway, nonetheless, the president was nominated for another one. let's see what happens. brian: it's great news for the country. steve: we will see whether or not the committee winds up bestowing it upon the president or if just like last time, they do not give it to him. ainsley: just like it was great when president obama got it for our country. that is good for our country. steve: although this president actually has an accomplishment unlike barack obama who got it after nine months as we heard from colonel waltz who was on our program about a half an hour ago he got it for simply breathing. all right. meanwhile, let's talk about the state of the race as we mentioned a moment ago two. months from today will be the day after the election. so much of the election right now is about the coronavirus. the economy, and the chaos in the streets. there is so much of it, if you look at it right now, we have been telling you about the situation in portland and seattle and minneapolis and the police chiefs in those areas, those localities are frustrated because they would like to enforce the law. if somebody tries to burn down a building you arrest them and make sure that they face the justice. unfortunately, they have gotten marching orders in some cases not to do just that. and release the people who have been stopped. you look at the police chiefs who have recently stepped down, dallas looking for a new police chief. rochester, new york, a new police chief. carmen best in seattle out after decades. richmond virginia, atlanta as well. portland, oregon police chief. so, there are so many localities which are now looking for somebody to run the department but what about the direction going forward? because, you know. is it chaos in the streets? will it continue to be like that? or will it be, if you do something wrongs, you are going to get in trouble. ainsley: yeah, this police chief in rochester, the entire command staff either stepped down and retired early or they returned to the ranks lower rank. the police chief his name is laron singletary, is he 40 years old. he was appointed in april of 2019, which was about a year before mr. prude's death. he served 22 years. and he said, you know, the community knows my reputation what i stand for this. is a mischaracterization. politicization of the actions that i took. it's not based on facts and not what i stand for. but the mayor there has said the chief did dedicate 20 years, could have handled it differently. brian? brian: all right. so if you look at -- i could add louisville, kentucky police chiefs resigning too. shootings up 87% in new york. chicago 52%. los angeles 50%. atlanta 25%. ainsley: brian, sorry to interrupt you, are they stepping down because they feel the backlash of the community or because they are saying the truth is i have devoted my life to this? brian: couple people in atlanta they were asked to step down i think in the dallas situation. she says i give myself a c-plus on handling this uproar and the violence are a george floyd's death. my hope is they get their pensions and can retire after 20 years. lawrence jones weighed in because he has seen a lot of the unrest up close. >> i think that they are putting a lot of these pleas police chin impossible jobs. merging the gap on national issues. okay? you have got to keep your rank and file making sure you that you realize that you stand with the majority of ones going out there, you know, and doing their job honorably. and then have you got to have them distance themselves and fire the bad cops. and then you have got the protesters that you know, some people. got the ones come in at night that want to set things on fire. what do you want them to do? do you want them to let america burn? brian: that's the big question. you don't want to back the cops. you will want to emasculate the cops and want them to know you are on the side of the protesters. get hit in the face with spray vilify them. 100 days while turning down federal aid to help them. in chicago, believe it or not, they accepted some federal aid and some federal agents and they are seeing some progress in chicago. steve: right. exactly, brian, with gun crimes. in indiana we just had about an hour ago the sheriff for vanderburgh county out there. he is so frustrated with the polsd of the democrats. he has switched from being a lifelong democrat to being a republican and i think we might actually have a sound bite from dave wedding. and here he is just about 45 minutes ago. >> what i have witnessed across the united states is shocking as a law enforcement leader. i can't imagine 101 days of rioting. and it's condoned by the democrat leadership. it's unbelievable that they can do that to our law enforcement profession. as a sheriff, i could not imagine putting my deputies on the front lines of these riots night after night with no relief in sight. and if you are a parent of a law enforcement officer that's going out there these rights. they should be appalled as well. steve: then there are people who live in those towns and they are thinking, you know, if i get in trouble and somebody is, like, burning down my store, and i pick up the phone, are the police going to actually respond? and then if they catch somebody, will they put them in jail or catch and release. the president yesterday at his north carolina rally said the rioters, the anarchists and the looter also take over if joe biden wins there. ainsley: all right. let's talk about what's happening. that's one factor and one portion of the story this morning. also restaurants, business owners. you have all these restaurants in new york city and the governor is saying you cannot reopen the inside of your restaurant. you have to put tables on the outside. keep in mind. most of these restaurants don't have a lot of space out on the sidewalks because our property is so expensive here. these small restaurant owners can barely afford their rent what they have now. exactly. so the governor, some people are suing the governor over. this but this is what the governor said about not reopening new york city restaurants for indoor dining. >> if you now increase indoor dining. you are going to have to have a compliance and enforcement function. if you go to indoor dining, you are roughly doubling the number of places that you're going to have to monitor. i would need additional enforcement capacity if we have the enforcement mechanism in place, then we can talk about opening restaurants. ainsley: so, brian, not only are these restaurants, they are suffering, people are sitting outside. it's about to get really cold in new york. and they are saying we're not going to open restaurants for the rest of the year. that's december, that's christmas time. what are they going to do put heaters outside? they're probably not allowed to put a tent out there. steve: would you sit in the snow under a heater? >> there is that aspect. and now you are seeing all these people coming up to folks eating on the sidewalk and they are picking up their drinks, slamming them on the ground. they are harassing them. there are so many factors here. brian: in mayor de blasio's new york city that's the bedroom for a lot of new yorkers, the sidewalk. another thing to bring upping 25,000 eateries in this area not just new york city and surrounding areas. in there there are cooks and hostesses managers not middle and upper class work twice as hard as the average person working halderer income not guaranteed. for governor cuomo to say there is no monitoring is to think so short-sighted shows he has never run a business. if you go up to the restaurant associations and say hey, guys, how do i do this? they would police each other. they would find a way to multiply situations also i know in long island, which is right next to this area, they have child protective services pitching in with monitors walking into restaurants to make sure there are only 25 to 50%. this is inexcusable. is this is why the economy is on its back. not because of policy in washington. because these in many cases democrats are sitting there saying we are not opening because i think there might be too much of a risk or i want to wait until november 3rd. the last thing i want to do is turn around the economy for the president which is sin full. steve: keep in mind for the last six months we have heard we just have to flatten the curve. brian: they lied. steve: then the governor and the mayor both said we are going to follow the science. the science unfortunately for both of them shows that over the last one month the infection rate has been less than 1%. that means the number of people that go in for a test, less than 1% actually have it. that is really good news and so that flies in the face of what they have said in the past and that is why so many people have left this town and may never come back. brian: they are shuttering their doors. they are handing in their keys. they are saying why am i struggling to pay one more month when i know i have no hope until the end of the calendar year or maybe june of this year or maybe can't sell a single dish in november because it might get cold in new york. plus, five tables on the street do not make up for 50 on the inside or 200. ainsley: this is the town of finance. most financial buildings are huge. so all the workers are zooming from home because they don't want to fill up the with people. that's why they are able to go to florida for years. let's hand it over to carley for headlines. carley: the worst fire season in california history becoming more dire. at least three firefighters hurt. one critically as they fight the dollan fire near big sur. 25 major wildfires burning through 2.3 million acres. in oregon the governor issuing a wildfire emergency calling this a once in a generation event. further north in washington state, flames destroy nearly 80% of the small farming town. luckily, no injuries were reported. astrazeneca is pausing trials of vaccine after a volunteer got sick. the company says the participant in the u.k. had a serious adverse reaction. they are not sure if the illness was caused by the vaccine. astrazeneca called the pause routine doesn't know how long it will last. first report of any serious issue from vaccine trials meantime two candidates backed by president trump winning g.o.p. primaries in new hampshire. bryant corky messner winning the state's he will face incumbent democratic senator jean that mean. meanwhile matt mowers won the new hampshire's first district. he will take on incumbent congressman chris in november. those are your headlines. guys? >> thanks so much, carley. the fisa court revealing that the fbi regularly does not follow rules mental to protect privacy. how can the agency regain the trust of the american people? byron york says it will not be easy. he is on deck again. from prom dresses... ...to soccer practices... ...and new adventures. you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past... they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. let's help protect them together. because missing menb vaccination could mean missing out on a whole lot more. ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. ask your doctor if your teen i feel like we're forglet me check.ing. xfinity home gives you peace of mind from anywhere with professionally monitored home security built around you. no, i think we're good. -good. so when you're away, you don't have to worry. the tent. we forgot... the tent. except about that. xfinity home. simple, easy, awesome. hey look, i found the tent! and, see, it's safe. call, click, or visit a store today. ♪ ♪ steve: this is just some bad news. disheartening at best. the fisa court finding that the fbi regularly does not follow rules meant to protect the privacy of americans. so, how can the agency regain the trust of the american people? here to discuss fox news contributedder and author of a fantastic brand new book, came out yesterday, called obsession, inside the washington establishment's never ending war on trump byron york. byron, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: so the stuff about the fisa court, it should not surprise us that the fbi cut corners because, first of all, in secret courts, we never hear about this stuff and had hillary clinton actually won, this would have ended pretty much four years ago two months from now. >> we never would have heard about it. no, listen, this new report shows that the fbi and the justice department have not fixed their fisa problems. remember all the problems they had with carter page, where they were using bogus information from the steele dossier to get a warrant to wiretap carter page. there was that now, this new report, which was actually done in december but just released. shows that 87 incidents of fbi agencies kind of rifling through information from wiretaps, information that they should only from a legal ability to go through and they are not -- they had no legal right to go through it. steve: of course, it is ironic that it seems like whenever corners are cut it does appear it is to one other party's benefit than to the party in power in this case the republicans. your book is great. and it's full of news that people have not heard. remember it wasn't that long ago where the president of the united states gets on the phone. he congratulates the incoming president of the ukraine. next thing you know, there is this whistleblower who says, listen, the president made a bunch of promises that are completely illegal. you have a charge that the whistleblower per se is not the one who was pushing this. it was actually lieutenant colonel vindman who was behind it. >> well, that's what republicans on the hill concluded. and it's really kind of the only conclusion they could reach. remember that early on in the impeachment drama. the democrats said they wanted to hear from the whistleblower. they wanted the whole world to hear from the whistleblower. wanted him to testify. even though they were going to do it in anonymously and this secret. but, later they changed their tune and didn't want to identify the whistleblower. vindman testifies both in secret and in public. and he is the one who listened to the phone call, the trump. steve: he was the only one at the nfc because the whistleblower himself, whoever that person is, wasn't actually on the call but vindman was. >> vindman was the only one who was on the call. only one who thought there was something wrong with the call. in congress they asked him did you tell anybody outside the nfc about this call he? said well, i told two people. one of them was george kent who was an official at state department who also testified who is the other one? can't say. democrats would not allow him to say hot person was although he did say it was in the intelligence community. now, why did democrats not allow him to reveal that person? because it would identify the whistleblower, so, you put two and two together there. steve: sure. one other thing. while james comey, hillary clinton feels that he cost her the election four years ago. james comey president trump's advisor said, you know what? you have got to get rid of that guy early on during the transmission fire comey immediately. rudy giuliani said every time we talked about comey i said the guy is going to turn on you. there is something wrong with him. chris christie advised getting rid of him he said comey is a loose cannon. and the problem is, if you keep him after you become president is he going to be your loose cannon. that certainly turned out to be true. steve: no kidding. if you are looking for something great to read and closes the loop on a lot of stories we have heard of over the last year or so. check out obsession inside the washington's establishment never ending war on trump by the great byron york. byron, thank you very much for joining us. >> thank you, steve. steve: 7:26 in new york city. the nfl season kicks off tomorrow ahead of big matchups on fox this weekend. what changes can viewers expect with perhaps no fans in the stands. we have mark schert here to break it down and mark is coming up next. cosentyx treats the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis to help you look and feel better. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for 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be proud of yourself. brian: all right. get something unhealthy ready to eat like wings and nachos football is back tomorrow. kick off thursday night football. and on sunday six games on fox beginning at 1:00 p.m. what changes can viewers expect to see amid the pandemic, everything. here with more fox news sports analyst super bowl champion mark schlereth who has used the pandemic to learn more about the game you love. mark, you actually think that you are going to be better this year than ever because of all the down time you have used studying? >> yeah. you know, brian, it's funny, brian, for 20 years i have been on the road pretty much every week talking about the game i love. the thing i wanted to see from the time i was 12 as a football player. i parlayed that into a broadcaster. i have been so blessed to live out my childhood agreement. i got stuck sequestered at home since march. i just dug in. i talked to coaches. i spent probably two hours a day studying film. studying playbooks. studying formations. just trying to learn the game at a deeper level. expand my aperture if you will and not just see it from the lens of being a player but more seeing it through the lends of being a coach. i will tell you what, it's been a great -- as bad as it's been for the last five months it's been a great five months from that standpoint to have that kind of time and to be able to kind of devil into th devil inte so much. brian: season ending ankle injury he also has a future of a broadcaster, i think. seattle as a coach in pete carroll has been very much talking about social change. >> yeah. certainly does. and everybody in the nfl and across sports have been talking about social change. and about justice. and that's a great thing. i money, it is a great thing. you know, i have always said that a lot of problems in this country could be solved if we had a locker room mentality. i think about it from my perspective. as an exoffensive lineman five guys in from different parts of the country. i played on two great offensive lines in the course of my career. denver a guy from oregon and a guy from washington and a guy from mass mass and a guy from georgia and myself from alaska. and you have got to have five guys come together, forget about differences, social, you know, social economic differences and all those things and come together and become one unit and really learn t learn how it lovh other and care for each other and really look at our differences as great strentsd that bond us together. and, you know, i think that's something the nfl is really strong and really focused on this year. so i think that's an awesome part of what's going on right now in our country. brian: we know what the blow back is, mark, with kneeling and now the commissioner comes out and says you know what? i was wrong to be critical of collin kaepernick. 30 minutes before i understand going to play what people are calling the black national anthem before the game. do you know are we going to seat national anthem? >> it's interesting i don't know that we will see it. i probably would imagine that we won't see it. but i don't know from that part. awful i know is i get to go to a stadium and talk about the lifeblood that coarses through my vein is football. we are going to talk about that. we are going to play football games. for me, that is a healing, that's a healing aspect of not only for us as football people but for our country in general as far as i'm concerned. so i couldn't be happier about this season kicking off. brian: the fans won't be there but fox has worked it out where it's going to feel and sound like a game. a couple things that stand out. cam newton seems to love new england even without a lot of weapons. he has been named captain emerging, i think he is going to have a big year from. what you saw the last time you saw him and hear, do you think so? >> i really do. cam newton, it's always interesting with age comes maturity. with experiences through life comma tutor come growth. and if you go back to 2018, so i always thought that cam newton's issue was when things break down, his default mechanism from was from the neck down meaning i'm going to just rely on athleticism. and he really matured in 2018. he became a very accurate quarterback under the tutelage of turner. thin it went south because he got injured and 2019 he was injured. if you have a healthy cam newton that can still have that physical presence that he has had in the past. brian: right. >> but that mature cam newton that can operate his default mechanism can be from the 234ebg up, you know, using his head as a default mechanism, boy, you have a dangerous, dangerous player in that vein and i think is he going to have. if he can stay healthy. i think he have a tremendous season for the patriots. brian: replacing tom brady and with his going to the bucks they become the most interesting name. >> they added gronkowski and a lot of talents. whoever thought the bucs would be the most interesting team in football. mark schlereth, you do an interesting job. you are calling the game and is he still in the game. thanks, mark. appreciate it. >> you are the best, brian. thanks,boro brother. brian: president trump no, ma'am nativitied for the nobel peace prize after brokering historic deal between israel and the uae with more to come perhaps. newt gingrich with the global perspective. new advil dual action with acetaminophen fights pain in two ways. advil targets pain at the source... ...while acetaminophen blocks pain signals. the future of pain relief is here. new advil dual action. >> tech: when you've got ...safelite can come to you. >> tech: and you'll get a text when we're on our way. >> tech: just leave your keys on the dash and we'll replace your windshield with safe, no-contact service. >> tech: schedule at safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ steve: 7:40 in new york and back with a fox news alert. president trump has been nominated for the nobel peace prize overnight. receiving praise for brokering that peace deal between israel and the united arab emirates. ainsley: mr. newt gingrich says that the president's progress in the middle east is just the beginning, and he joins us now to explain. good morning to you, mr. speaker. >> good morning. well, let me say first of all, i'm delighted that a norwegian parliamentarian would nominate president trump. you know, president obama basically got the mow bell peace prize for waking up and they gave it to him at the very beginning of his administration. and he then frankly failed in syria, failed with the palestinians, failed in the middle east. but president trump, who has followed a very different approach, has actually created a real relationship. not just to the united arab emirates but mrs. places like saudi arabia and kuwait and bahrain and sudan. i would not be at all surprised to see two or three more countries create a relationship with israel. in the next few months. so this is a remarkable achievement by a president who many of the so-called sophisticates think doesn't know what he is doing but he just pulled off the first break through in 25 years. ainsley: don't forget this norwegian official also nominated him in 2018. clearly the president didn't get it. what do you think his chances are next october? >> i think, actually, they are not bad. because i think that the scale of the achievement is so great and it's so dramatically changes the temperature and the rhythm of the middle east. particularly if one or two more countries follow on. i think at that point it's very hard tore deny president trump the fact that he really will have earned the nobel peace prize. but, following a very strong diplomacy, despite many of the so-called experts who deeply opposed him. brian: by the way, the first time in 39 years an american president has decreased a presence in the middle east which pleases norway. let's talk about maybe the rest of the world, too. let's talk about something else you know very well and that's georgia. people's fear is not against mail in voting or in person voting we want it to be accurate. when you flood the zone with people that didn't ask for ballots it confuses people because it's oftentimes the first time it's happened. i don't know what's going on in georgia. but they have already shown according to the secretary of state. that at least 1,000 people voted twice. and they say it's a felony and we're going to prosecuted it. this is exactly our fear, isn't it, newt? >> sure. and i think you have to recognize when you start having these massive mail-jutes. i just had a friend from hawaii one of her neighbors just got a ballot for california. which they had not requested. in nevada, the democrats are talking about sending out 200,000 ballots to people hot post office don't live in nevada. and of course what that would leave is mounds of mail in apartment houses, nursing homes which i'm sure the culinary union the strongest democratic organization in nevada, would love to go around and pick up and maybe help vote. so people who say there is no theft in voting and this is all just, you know, some cry by republicans, look at what just happened in new jersey. look at the ballots for south carolina that never got there. that were found frankly in new jersey, also, i think we have to recognize there are some very real dangers that the democrats in particular will try to steal the election this fall because they are so desperate to defeat president trump. brian: if you don't mind i want to follow up real quick. kevin mccarthy is concerned giving the wrong message scaring seniors away from mail-in ballots because they are misinterpreting what the president means. do you understand what the president is trying to say? >> sure. what the president should say is it is terrific if you want to vote absentee in an orderly way so we know who you really are. but it is wrong to have massive ballots sent out when nobody asks for them. it's a clear distinction of those two. and he ought tone courage absentee voting with when appropriate but be totally opposed to these kind of anonymous massive mail-outs that are going to lead to people, i think, routinely cheating with these ballots. steve: let me ask you what's going on in washington in lee university of virginia class on how to overthrow the state. the description is how will you retain power? how will you communicate with the masses? how do you plan on improving the lives of people? how do you deal with fallon to sheikh gansdy and et cetera. revolutionary thought and action across the global south. and then the president, will dudley said he deof defended it. he says we are expressionly committed to encouraging all to speak their minds freely and to consider carefully alternative points of view. it's incumbent upon us to treat each other with respect and not perpetrate or tolerate personal attacks. so what do you think about this class? is it a good idea? >> well, let me express my mind freely as he requests. one, he ought to be fired. two, the idea of just think about the language. how do you communicate with the masses? that is communist language designed to create a dictatorship. we don't have masses. we have citizens. the great genius of the founding fathers wasn't launching the revolution. it was turning the revolution into a constitution establishing the rule of law. when you put up somebody like rivera to young people as though he is a role model. a murderer. he was in charge of killing people in cuba. and he sadly has become this wonderful literary hero. frankly, personally as a professional historian, totally sick of the way in which the academic world now lives in a fantasy and wants to brainwash young people into believing things that are false. brian: someone has got to do something about it. >> fascinating theory tuition. he didn't create any operational working republics or any sense of the rule of law. ainsley: all right. mr. speaker. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. 7:47 on the east coast. michigan's governor now being sued over her emergency powers during the pandemic. one physician's assistant says the lockdown put his patients at risk. and he joins us next. ...and new adventures. you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past... they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. let's help protect them together. because missing menb vaccination could mean missing out on a whole lot more. ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. ask your doctor if your teen so, why not make the most of it?e open. expand your family's freedom with the off-road's best... like the only built-in gps that doesn't require a cell connection... and group tracking that lets you spread out on the trail but stay together for the journey. upgrade your ride for as little as five dollars a day. polaris. think outside. ainsley: just a few hours the michigan supreme court set to hear argue. s in a legal challenge to governor whitmer's use of emergency powers during the pandemic. multiple healthcare providers and a patient claim that her executive order that postponed nonessential procedures was unconstitutional and put patients at risk. joining me now is one of those plaintiffs we have jordan, a physician's assistant and the owner of wellston medical center and we have patrick wright the founder of macken notify center legal foundation representing jordan. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you, guys, for having us. >> thank you for having us. >> jordan, why are you deciding to sue? >> well, i decided to sue governor whitmer because i have seen firsthand the tremendous damage to patient health brought by governor whitmer's emergency ordered. these damages were entirely preventible. as a medical provider, as any medical provider, we provide routine medical care, which is absolutely essential and vital and crucial to maintain patient health and prevent medical emergencies. under governor whitmer's orders, we were unable to provide this crucial routine care. it was actually deemed illegal, punishable by jail a misdemeanor and fine license. unable to provide this routine care, the state of michigan saw thousands of medical emergencies and deaths and, again, none of this had to happen. completely preventable. one example i would like to give that i saw personally in my clinic a patient who came in as urgent care, wasn't my regular patient. but he was unable to see his regular primary care provider for over 8 weeks. he had diabetes. he had critically high blood sugars and he came in complaining of an odor on his left foot. upon examine he had gangrene on his left foot. we sent him immediately to the hospital. they ended up amputating his foot and he died shortly after due to complications of untreated diabetes and gangrene. ainsley: what would the governor done differently that would have saved his life, do you think? >> so instead of issuing broad, undefined, unspecified emergency orders, which eliminate all routine care, she simply could have listened to her constituents and members of the house of representatives and the senate represent 10 million residents of michigan. she could have listened to them and got input and provided better defined orders which would have prevented this man's death. ainsley: are you saying that he wasn't able to go get care because it wasn't considered essential? >> correct. yeah. he was get routine testing and care for his diabetes nonemergency. ainsley: my mom has type 1 diabetes. we have dealt with some sores on her feet over the years. i understand how crucial that is and scary that is for a family. patrick, why did you decide to take this case? >> we decided to take this case because we think it's separations of powers is so important. as you just heard jordan say we had a single person making a decision. she didn't have input from the 10 million people in michigan. there is 540 school districts. so many counties, cities and so forth. we have the system that has served us well in this country and in this state for a long time so that we gets lots of voices and we end up with the best public policy. ainsley: all right. so, jordan, where do we go from here? what happens next? >> well, our hope with our supreme court case later today we will restore the order of checks and balances. amongst our elected officials and moving forward, any governor will not be able to unilaterally make decisions which effects 10 million people. they will require input from representatives who represent us 10 million residents in michigan. to put forth orders that are representful and productive and first do not harm to our population. and that is our hope moving forward with this court case. ainsley: patrick, do you think so you have a strong case here? do you think in your experience can you win. >> i do. just about like we learn about in civics class when we are young and we do believe that the court will recognize that we can't have a governors running around for years at a time claiming that anything that is marginally related to covid. we recognize covid is an extremely important matter. 175,000 people have died in this country. 6500 of them have died in michigan. we are not saying that you shouldn't fight covid. we are saying it should be fought properly and in a constitutional manner. ainsley: i know she was one of the ones that joe biden was looking at for vice president and apparently they are very close. i know she has a lot of people it that do like her in that state and then have you people like yourself upset with. so decisions she made. jordan and patrick, thank you so much for being with us. wish you all the best. we reached out to governor whitmer's office for a statement. they are not commenting on the litigation. we'll be right back. sarah sanders and ben watson. vee tooth's surface to help reharden and strengthen your enamel. ... i wanted my hepatitis c gone. i put off treating mine. epclusa treats all main types of chronic hep c. whatever your type, epclusa could be your kind of cure. i just found out about mine. i knew for years. epclusa has a 98% overall cure rate. i had no symptoms of hepatitis c mine caused liver damage. epclusa is only one pill, once a day, taken with or without food for 12 weeks. before starting epclusa, your doctor will test if you have had hepatitis b, which may flare up, and could cause serious liver problems during and after treatment. tell your doctor if you have had hepatitis b, other liver or kidney problems, hiv, or other medical conditions... ...and all medicines you take, including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with epclusa may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects include headache and tiredness. ask your doctor today, if epclusa is your kind of cure. steve: president trump has just been nominated for the nobel prize for peace. >> this is a remarkable achievement by a president. brian: president trump expected to announced to that more troops will be withdrawing from iraq. >> you need to see a shift and focus on what i believe is the greatest threat to the united states and that's the chinese communist party. ainsley: this just out this morning in georgia they got the numbers back from the primary. 1,000 people voted two times in that state 58% are democrats. >> the hardest thing i've ever been through in my life. record wildfires on the west coast, california seeing its biggest fire season in modern history. president trump: joe biden has spent 47 years shipping north carolina jobs to china and i've spent the last four years bringing jobs back to our country. >> [chanting usa, usa] ainsley: straight to a fox news alert, president trump nominated for the nobel peace prize for his efforts in the middle east. brian: it comes after just weeks after the president helped broker a peace deal between israel and uae. steve: meanwhile jillian turner is live not far from the white house with the breaking morning developments. good morning, jillian. jillian: good morning, brian, ainsley, steve that is the breaking news here at the white house this morning a single source told fox news that now for the second time in three years he's nominated president trump for the nobel peace prize it's a very preliminary step and doesn't mean the president wilt receive the prize there are still multiple steps to go. now that source is a norwegian member of parliament he tells fox news he's submitted a formal letter to the prize committee for consideration and he has shared a copy of that letter with fox news. nomination is based on president trump's brokering of a deal between israel and the uae he also says he believes president trump has done more to try to create peace than most other peace prize nominees. take a listen. >> i'm going to ask for the personality of the people, just the performance of the people and donald j. trump has performed very well internationally. what he does in terms of domestically is not that the peace prize matters, it's exactly what you achieve and national diplomatics and donald j. trump has proven he's worthy of the nobel peace prize. jillian: the nobel peace prize is an award that president trump has talked about in the past and yesterday he touted his own efforts at peace, a couple of times take a listen. president trump: we achieved the first breakthrough in the middle east peace for many many decades. even the new york times said that was an amazing achievement do you believe that? i said let me see that one. >> [applause] president trump: no, we did something that nobody thought was possible. jillian: so we reached out to the white house, obviously and to the norwegian nobel committee no confirmation from either, yet but we hope to hear from president trump on this later today. brian, ainsley, steve? ainsley: good deal thanks so much jillian. let's bring in sarah sanders fox news contributor former white house press secretary, author of a new book, it's called " speaking for myself, faith, freedom, and the fight of our lives" inside the trump white house, there's a picture of it we're going to talk to you about that coming up but first we wanted to get your reaction to this. this just broke this morning right before our show what do you think? >> i think it certainly is well deserved look president obama got a nobel peace prize and that was after he unleashed destruction and chaos through disastrous policies. president trump has actually defeated the isis caliphate liberating millions and also worked with israel and its neighbors to create historical peace deals. i think it's well-deserved and it's a great thing that they have decided to nominate him or this individual has nominated him. brian: very interesting, there's a couple of things going on in the political thing, another one you're working on getting president trump four more years. one thing that has happened, the emergence of education as an issue, that just emerged over the last couple of weeks and now the president we're dealing with is the country all the rioting, the protesting has turned to rioting across the country. now joe biden is coming out kind of tough, tougher than he was, at least acknowledging that all the protests aren't peaceful, especially the 100-plus in portland. listen to the president last night. president trump: he's starting to talk a little bit tougher now did you notice that? he sees what's going on and his polls are dropping like a rocket now he's starting to say no, we need, um, law and order. >> [laughter] president trump: no he didn't say that did he? he'll never get to say that. he can't say that because then it would lose the whole left and let me tell you the left is running that party you take a look. you don't want to be dealing with the left. these people are stone cold crazy. brian: the problem is he's got about 13 staffers that not only weren't against the riots they were paid to bail out the rioter s from jail. kamala harris posted something very similar and also joe biden. a lot of trouble mentioning antifa. >> i don't think they have a lot of credibility to all of a sudden decide oh, yes, we do support law and order where have they been the last couple of months. oh, i remember, joe biden's runningmate was literally fundraising to bail out rioters from jail. i think it's a very hard shift. i think he's going to have a hard time convincing people; however, i think it's a good thing he's finally maybe emerging from his basement and we'll hear more about what he would plan to do if he were president because we haven't heard a lot from joe biden and his campaign on that front. i think it's very clear if we want law and order in this country versus the liberal mob, donald trump is the one to deliver that, not joe biden. the only reason he has come out the president is exactly right is because the polls have tightened. that's a matter of convenience, not a matter of conviction, and that is not who you want in charge of our country, in a moment like this. steve: well sarah yesterday the campaign had a conference call with reporters and they gave the reporters, you know, a little preview of what's going on with the internals, they said essentially that president trump is ahead in arizona which he won last time and nevada which he did not win. i think that they laid out seven different ways the president could win the electoral college bias few as two votes in the electoral college or it could be absolutely a landslide. the other thing bill stepian did yesterday was he essentially started to raise the expectation s for joe biden at the debate. he said things like you know, he's really good. he's a politician, he gave speeches he's good at it, joe biden is not formidable anywhere else but he is on the debate stage he just hope he shows up. why would the campaign raise the expectations for joe biden? >> well certainly we know the media will give joe biden a free pass just as they have for the last several months, every time he takes a couple of questions, a few times he's done it they're softball questions and so we know that the media will give him a pass, but you can't ignore the fact that joe biden did make it through a pretty large field of fairly qualified democrat candidates and a lot of that was because he was able to get through those debates. now, i don't know that it was because he was exactly tough, but he survived them and i think that the debates are going to be a critical moment but i have full confidence in president trump. i think he'll do very well just as he did in 2016 and again, joe biden has been doing this for 50 years there's got to be something to be said for some muscle memory that hopefully will come back for him but who knows. ainsley: you're on the view yesterday and even joy bayhar said she's concerned trump might pull this off again, let's talk about your book, speaking for myself, faith, freedom and the fight of our lives inside the trump white house. why did you title it that? the fight of our lives? >> well because we were up against just a significant amount of negativity day in and day out in the trump white house we were no longer fighting ideas but we were fighting institutions the entire liberal media elites were coming after the president and his team every single day. members of his staff, myself included, kicked out of restaurants, nothing was off limits. whether it was our personal appearance, our fitness to be a parent, everything was on the table when it came to the attacks that the liberals were willing to throw at us, but thankfully the president stayed strong, fought back and he also empowered the rest of us, and defended the rest of us that supported him, and i think it's a fun read. i hope people will laugh a little, cry a little and maybe even be inspired as they read it and enjoy it as much as i did writing it. brian: i got through a lot of it and if anyone thinks that women don't have a voice in that administration they haven't read your book, they have a huge voice, it was tough you said you felt you let your dad down, he did not get the nomination and the second best thing you got to work for president trump when he recommended you, but real quick. there's a story out yesterday that's not been denied by the president, that you guys basically had a $2 million cash advantage squandered. what happened to all of the money? >> you know, i haven't actually worked on the campaign during this cycle so i don't know the ins and outs, but i think the president is in a phenomenon al position to do well in november. they've raised historic funds i think they will continue to raise money because i think most americans see the difference in the two candidates. again it's a contrast of law and order or the liberal mob, who do we want to be in charge, and there's only one choice when it comes to law and order and that's president trump certainly if we want to continue on that path of prosperity, he's the guy to do that. i think again, he's still in a great position, they've raised historic funds they will continue to do so. steve: sarah sanders joining us from little rock today. her brand new book is called speaking for myself, sarah thank you very much for speaking for yourself. >> thank you very much for having me on. steve: have a good day. all right, carlie shimkis is joining us wednesday with the headlines. reporter: we're going to begin your headlines with hundreds of protesters gathering in rochester, new york for the seventh straight night over the death of daniel prude. police arresting one man at the protest charging him with assault on an officer. now authorities say kyle davis pointed a laser at police for several minutes, hurting an officer's eye. the demonstrations coming just hours after rochester's police chief and entire command staff announced their retirement amid the unrest. >> two of the three suspects charged in the murder of a veteran cleveland detective are due in court today. 18-year-old david mcdaniel and two teens are accused of shooting detective james skurnev its last week during an attempted robbery and he and an informant were working undercover on a drug investigation, both men were shot in their car. the detective's funeral is on friday. >> today, president trump is expected to announce the withdrawal of u.s. troops from iraq. there are about 5,200 troops in the country right now. that number is expected to drop to about 3,000. florida congressman and former green beret commander michael waltz joined us earlier and says we need to keep some boots on the ground. >> because we have our foot on their neck forward, the reason we were able to take out soulema ni and continue to stay on the offense is we have assets in the region whether it's 4,000, 6,000, 8,000, i'll let the pentagon decide, you know, the actual number. reporter: well the top commander in the middle east says the troops will leave iraq starting this month. >> new this morning, the navy is doing an about-face by bringing back catholic masses to southern california bases. a navy official confirming the reversal to fox news saying in part, "our top priority is to meet the religious needs of our active duty sailors and their families. " the navy nixed the masses and suspended most contracts for priests to cut costs. the services are expected to continue for at least for the next year, so, some news i'm sure catholics will be celebrating today. steve: i'm sure they will take plenty of precautions. ainsley: thanks so much. a pandemic power play. new jersey's governor phil murphy expanding his political grip on the garden state, amid covid-19. new jersey's over congressman jeff andrew is going to sound off coming up, next. >> ♪ ♪ (announcer) now more than ever, it's important to lose weight, improve your health, and strengthen your immunity. starvation dieting, processed foods, shakes, and diet gimmicks have made us heavier and sicker. the solution for losing weight the right way is golo. we help transform your body and change your lifestyle, so you can lose weight and get healthier. over 20,000 people of all ages, and entire families, switch to golo every week, because golo works. golo is a unique approach to weight loss that targets insulin resistance and body fat. insulin resistance makes it easy to gain weight and harder to lose it. golo is a patented system that uses natural plants and minerals, and sound nutrition to help your body convert fat to energy faster. so you'll lose weight while improving your health and immunity. join over 1 million people who found golo, a smarter way to lose weight. let golo help you lose weight and reach your health goals quickly. head to golo.com. that's golo.com. [narrator] this is steve. he used to have gum problems. now, he uses therabreath healthy gums oral rinse with clinically-proven ingredients and his gum problems have vanished. (crowd applauding) therabreath, it's a better mouthwash. at walmart, target and other fine stores. lookentertainmentour iexperience: xfinity x1. it's the easiest way to watch live tv and all your favorite streaming apps. plus, x1 also includes peacock premium at no extra cost. this baby is the total package. it streams exclusive originals, the full peacock movie library, complete collections of iconic tv shows, and more. yup, the best really did get better. magnificent. xfinity x1 just got even better, with peacock premium included at no additional cost. no strings attached. ainsley: democratic new jersey governor phil murphy fight tightening his political grip on the garden state during the pandemic. murphy went from struggling to get as far left agenda across the finish line, and the state legislature, to one of the most powerful politicians in the nation. here to react is the new jersey congressman, who let the democratic party for the gop congressman jeff andrew, good morning to you, congressman. >> good morning it's great to be with you. ainsley: well good to see you, you used to be a democrat and now you're a republican, he used to be super progressive and now people like him and his approval rating a year ago, last september, 40%. guess what it was in april? 72%, why is that? >> i think that the normal response to, you know, the covid issue and just you want to support and feel comfortable with obviously whose ever in leadership and i don't have a problem with that. what i do have a problem with is some of the things that he's done to try to really gain that power and by the way, that really isn't true in south jersey. you know, there is a divide northern and southern jersey and south jersey feels a lot different and we have a lot of small businesses so let me say it really comes down to voting are the things that i would really kind of want to focus in on. how we open the state up. we arbitrarily determine that certain businesses could open, certain businesses could not, and i didn't see the science behind it and an awful lot of people didn't see the science behind it as well, and so what happened is big box stores could open up, and i understand why, people needed to buy things, but small shops, you know, individual small business owners own them, they couldn't open up even though they were sanitizing in between and willing to do anything in between customers, they didn't have that opportunity and that made life difficult for a lot of small businesses that are breaking their back down here in south jersey and throughout the state. how about the gyms and how about -- ainsley: atilis gym, we had them on a million times. >> exactly and they were willing to everything from uv light to ventilation to whatever was absolutely necessary, having somebody spray down in between each customer, the reality was i think sometimes the governor gets mad at these people when they disagree but it's their right. it's a free state and a free country, and we have the right to disagree, so, those were just a couple of the areas where we really could have opened up and should have opened up our churches. again, it was okay, you know, for to have mass protests which people were arm-in-arm without masks very often, yet our churches couldn't open even if they were trying to be open on the outside, literally, in the open air, where they were having every other seat or every third seat finally now they can open up but freedom of worship, freedom of speech is one of your most basic rights, so he really was kind of, i thought, arbitrary and one more thing really important. new jersey the only state that i know and i believe the only state where we didn't open up in a segmented way by that i mean in phases, so, down where i am in the southern part of the state, the southern half, our numbers always have been low we didn't have the nursing home issue that was so terrible in northern new jersey, why so many people passed, so our numbers were very low. i'll give you an example, in the county where i live the numbers of deaths, one death is always too many by the way but about a month ago, we're 83 and i think it's 87 now something like that, so he didn't allow areas that were safer, didn't have problems, could have opened up, had small businesses, would have survived, the bottom line is people will lose their businesses and their livelihood and their home because of this. that's serious stuff. the second thing, yes? ainsley: go ahead. the second thing i know i'm doing a lot of talking here but i just have a lot i want to get out because i think it's important is the voting. voting by mail, so, we have always had voting by mail in new jersey, vbm which means that i request the vote by mail, there's nothing wrong with that, they check it off, i get my ballot, i fill it out, i send it back, they check it off again, to make sure that two people didn't vote. that's fine. there's nothing wrong with that but now we're having mass voting by mail, definitely our records have not been clean, there are people that have passed away on the voting records, there are people who don't live in the same place, people who moved , multiple ballots for the same person are going to be issued. it is going to be a mess that's going to be chaos there's no need for it. there's no need for it, if we're really worried about spacing and voting in the traditional machine, we could have had voting for example, for people that the alphabet is from a-k, those folks would vote on monday and the people from k-z would vote on tuesday if we're really worried that it be too crowded and more than enough room. ainsley: people would just do it right way and be honest. but unfortunately people are voting twice in some of these states, thank you so much, congressman, for being on with us. >> it's great to be with you. ainsley: great to have you on too. it's 8:23 here on the east coast joe biden heads to michigan today, promising relief for american workers, but president trump says the economy will collapse under a biden presidency, so who is right? former obama advisor robert wolf and trump advisor steven war, they are here to debate, as they always do, and do such a great job. look forward to having them on next. >> ♪ ♪ ...and new adventures. you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past... they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. let's help protect them together. because missing menb vaccination could mean missing out on a whole lot more. ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. on king's hawaiian bread! yum! king's hawaiian. >> techand your car., we're committed to taking care of you >> tech: we'll fix it right with no-contact service you can trust. >> tech: so if you have auto glass damage, stay safe with safelite. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ brian: people in chicago are trading the city life for the suburbs as the windy city reals from violent rioting and looting grady trimble from our sister network fox business here with more as renters leave the city in droves, grady. reporter: yeah, brian we've been hearing stories about people leaving and now, we're seeing proof of it in the numbers. the downtown apartment occupancy rate or the number of people renting those apartments is down more than 5% compared to last year. that's the lowest rate since 2002 according to integra realty resources. in the suburbs though that number is only down slightly and rent prices in the suburbs are actually up, but downtown, rent prices are falling. while people work from home during the pandemic they don't see the value in paying high rent to be close to the office and restaurants in buildings with amenities that they don't want to use right now, because of that, experts say people are getting out. >> the cost of living downtown is, you know, 50-100% greater than what it is in a lot of suburban locations. there's just not a compelling reason to pay the higher rent because the amenities that supported that higher rent just aren't really available for use right now. reporter: and the experts say the recent violence and looting isn't the main reason people are leaving, but for those who might have already been considering it , it's an extra factor that has pushed them over the edge. brian? brian: all right grady join the club it's happening here too meanwhile, i'm going to toss it over to steve. steve: you are indeed let's talk about money, both 2020 candidate s turning their attention to the economy in battleground states. today joe biden is set to unveil his "make it in america" plan to workers in warren, michigan after president trump made this warning to voters in north carolina yesterday. president trump: we have the greatest economy, we closed it up and now we're opening it up. next year is going to be one of the greatest years in the history of our country, economically. [applause] president trump: but if sleepy joe biden takes power, the economy will collapse, he won't even know the difference. steve: well, with reaction our old buddies fox news contributor and former obama economic advisor, robert wolf, screen left, and member of the trump white house economic recovery task force, steve moore, appropriately on the right side of the screen and i'm right here in the middle. good morning to both of you. >> good morning, steve. steve: steve, let's start with you first time this time, and that is joe biden's new, his new plan essentially is buy american and make it in america. that sounds familiar, doesn't it >> it sure does, and by the way , i got to make a prediction to you on this show, steve, that whichever presidential candidate wins the great state of michigan is going to win this election so i think there's a lot of action in that great state over the next couple of months, but you're right. that theme of make it in america is obviously something that we came up with back in 2016 and we did a pretty good job of it with huge job growth we saw and really low unemployment rate before the pandemic hit. i think joe biden has a problem in terms of saying well i want to make all these things in america, but he wants to decapitate our oil & gas and coal industry. he wants major tax increases on american not just american corporations but small businesses which are the heartbeat of america. i just don't understand in a global economy, where we're competing against japan and china and mexico and korea how raising taxes on american businesses going to create jobs here. i don't see how the math adds up steve: okay so robert, is joe biden stealing the page from donald trump's playbook from four years ago? >> not at all. on manufacturing, biden will end the trump offshoring loophole that failed to stop companies from actually moving jobs over overseas by avoiding taxes well below the 21% u.s. rate. he's going to replace it with a biden offshore penalty so companies don't move jobs overseas and will go even further by creating a "make it america" tax credit that rewards companies that expands manufacturing here at home. u.s. manufacturing under trump continues to lose jobs, and our trade deficit and goods with china and mexico continue to hit new highs, and when steve talks about the obama-biden administration, we gained 8.1 million jobs in the last 36 months. trump gained 6.6 million jobs in his first 36 months and that's 1.5 million more jobs by obama- biden, and i'm not even including the pandemic jobs that are now negative 11.6 million, so facts matter. steve: okay, and steven, obviously, the pandemic changed everything. every walk of american life and around the world, everything changed with that and so it's reflected in the number of people who work, the number of people who, you know, no longer get a paycheck, how many people have lost their homes, it's a cascading effect, so, ultimately what the president has got to do and what joe biden has been saying is the president and his team has screwed up the pandemic response, and so the president's got to convince people that he did not, and he's making it better. >> well steve you're exactly right and look at the numbers just in the last four months. we've created according to the numbers that just came out on friday, 10.5 million jobs. now, steve, i'm the ultimate optimist, and i didn't in employ my wildest dreams, the greatest stretch of job creation by far in history of america, and the latest forecast of what the gdp will be for the third quarter are you ready for this , steve? the latest forecast is a 30% rise in gdp, so, the direction of the economy right now is incredibly strong and i think that ultimately is going to what's going to pull trump over the goal line. steve: robert you get the final word. >> well i want strong numbers, a strong gdp is good but steve also said gdp was going to be 5% or 6% after the trump tax reform and it only came in at 2.5%, so unfortunately, his forecasting hasn't really done too well but i would love to see a 30% gdp, because we had 30 % negative gdp in the second quarter. steve: well you know what? since steven had a prediction that whoever wins michigan wins the election, robert wolf, how about a prediction from you? >> i love that. right now, joe biden is up about 10% in michigan so i'll stick with steve's forecast on that one. steve: all right >> i'm going to bet you $1 that we win michigan. [laughter] so -- >> a whole dollar? steve: well let's see just about two months from now somebody is going to be $1 richer, in this panel right here. you guys, thank you very much. >> thanks, steve. steve: good enough. 25 minutes before the top of the hour. new study linking more than a quarter of a million covid cases to the motorcycle rally at sturg is, in south dakota but the governor there says that's not science, it's fiction. and she's going to tell you live , next. i'm a performer. -always have been. -and always will be. never letting anything get in my way. not the doubts, distractions, or voice in my head. and certainly not arthritis. new voltaren provides powerful arthritis pain relief to help me keep moving. and it can help you too. feel the joy of movement with voltaren. steve: the media going all-in on a new study linking last month's motorcycle rally in sturgis, south dakota to more than a quarter of a million covid cases that is something. ainsley: well the report calling rally a super-spreading event but the state's governor says the research is "fiction." brian: she joins us now let's welcome in governor christie nome. governor, we saw the numbers they said to use cell phone data to track, to find out who went and what they're experiencing, they say your cases jumped 35%, what's the truth? >> well, that's actually not factual whatsoever. what they did is they took a snapshot in time and they did a lot of speculation and did some back of the napkin math and made up some numbers and published them. this study wasn't even done by a healthcare study it was done by the institute of labor economics and it's completely untrue. that's what's so frustrating is i know the media does not like what south dakota has done. they have deemed me as the governor that made all the wrong decisions by letting my people have freedom, by using personal responsibility, but listen. our people are happy. we've had big events. we have in south dakota 124 cases that were tied to the sturgis motorcycle bike rally out of half a million people that came, so what they have done here is completely false and it's unfair and it's not doing the public service. steve: have any other organizations looked at the sturgis event to figure out whether or not it did spread the disease or are you just saying this is the only study out there right now and they're using pseudo science to make you look bad? you know, other states are track ing cases, i think we have 11 other cases that have tracked , you know, people that have traveled to the sturgis motorcycle bike rally but it's less than 300 cases, and i think that is really what's wrong with this study that we see that was released that the media jumped all over is the kind of speculation that they put out there, the inaccuracies are just unfair, and not truthful whatsoever, you know, this is what modeling has done throughout the pandemic. on a typical day in the pandemic the models and experts all told me i'd have 10,000 people in the hospital on any given day, and i've had less than 100. the vast majority of the days i have less than 100 people in the hospital today, so we're taking the virus seriously, but we're also recognizing that there's consequences to what we've seen happen in other states that shutting down businesses, stopping people's way of life has some devastating impacts on them and their ability to put food on the table for their families, so we've taken a very balanced approach in south dakota. i know the media hates it. i know they are going to continue to come after me and my decision making. they are going to continue to try to destroy south dakota for what we have donald the path we've taken but i still believe that in our state it has worked out for our people and that they appreciate it. they appreciate the fact that i trusted them and we have the strongest economy in the nation today. our people are working, they're taking care of their families, and they recognize that we've weathered this situation much better than the rest of the country. ainsley: do you know what i think your voters appreciate about you is you don't change. you stick to your guns, and you don't care what anyone thinks because those are the people that put you in office, and they want you to continue with your issues. one of your issues is the monuments, and a lot of people around the country are saying that something is offensive we need to take it down. you're saying just the opposite when it comes to many of our founding fathers and our initial presidents tell us about your project. it's called the capitol freedom project. >> yeah, we have watched what's happened across the country with other states tearing down their monuments and their statues, to important historical figures, people that were flawed, certainly, but did incredible things during challenging times for this country. we also saw mount rushmore be threatened through that movement that was happening, so what i have done is brought forward a project that will facilitate the putting up or statues on our capitol dome. when our capitol was built there was four alcoves that were placed there that were intended to hold statues that never happened, so we are privately raising money at freedom.sd.gov to put four statues in those alcoves on the outside of our capitol dome of the four men that are on mount rushmore, recognizing that while the rest of the country is tearing down our history, south dakota is going to continue to honor those men and women who led our country to greatness that we enjoy today. brian: all right, governor kris ti noem, thanks so much. >> thank you, appreciate it. brian: hope that gets done meanwhile let's go out to janice dean, poised to give us the weather. >> janice: yes, and it's cold in south dakota. we've got cold temperatures as far south as the southern rockies, you saw the snow on all of the newscasts yesterday, freeze advisories and warnings for the rockies towards the northern plains and the upper midwest, bask through the great basin as well, and there's that snow still falling in parts of colorado, moving into areas of kansas and even western oklahoma, and temperatures are going to start to moderate over the next couple of days but certainly below freezing, in denver, colorado over the last couple of days we'll be at 83 on sunday. so, quite a see saw. there's your forecast along that cold front we'll see the potential for showers and thunderstorms maybe heavy rain as well, and then across the west, we are still watching wildfire danger, red flag warnings up from the northwest area of the west down towards california and the southwest, we'll continue to monitor all of the above, back to you, steve, ainsley, and brian. steve: you have all the weather behind you, all right, j. d., thank you very much. meanwhile a quarter before the top of the hour on this wednesday, and carlie shimk is has the headlines reporter: we'll start with a fox news alert, the worst in california history becoming more dire. at least three firefighters hurt , one critically as they fight the dolan fire near big s ur. 25 major wildfires burning through 2.3 million-acres, in oregon the governor issuing a wildfire emergency, calling this a once in a generation event. further north in washington state, flames destroyed nearly 80% of the small farming town, no injuries there are reported. >> a wounded veteran speaking out after he says he was used as a prop in an anti-trump ad. >> it's just so irritating that they put my image up there because now it looks like the president is calling me a loser and they're using that to sell something that they believe in for their agenda, and i just don't believe that's right to use us that way. reporter: the ad shows army veteran bobby hemline in his military uniform and reads in part "trump says he's a loser referring to claims made in the atlantic" in an exclusive fox news interview, he says he does not believe the president made the remarks and has gotten the ad taken down on several social media accounts. >> listen to this there will be no trick or treating on halloween this year, los angeles county banning the tradition because of pandemic restrictions the county says going door-to-door makes it difficult to maintain social distancing, party, haunted houses and festivals also won't be allowed. car parades and horror movies at a drive-in theatre are okay, but still, a big bummer and last i checked, you do wear a mask on halloween, so -- steve: yeah and i heard they couldn't do, they are going to call it trunk-or -treat where people use their cars and you put the candy in the back you won't even be able to do that. brian: i'm against halloween so i don't care. i never liked it. little kids. steve: yeah, but -- brian: adults should not be celebrating halloween it is for kids and their children. ainsley: it is a weird holiday, a lot of evil but it can be fun. brian: a little bit evil. ainsley: all right, the nfl kicking off its new season this week, what can we expect? former new england patriots tightened ben watson weighs in, coming up, next. honey honey? new nyquil severe honey is maximum strength cold and flu medicine with soothing honey-licious taste. nyquil honey. the nighttime, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, aching, stuffy head, fever best sleep with a cold medicine. your cells. trillions of them. that's why centrum contains 24 key nutrients to support your energy. so you can take care of what matters most. and try new centrum minis today. i feel like we're forglet me check.ing. xfinity home gives you peace of mind from anywhere with professionally monitored home security built around you. no, i think we're good. -good. so when you're away, you don't have to worry. the tent. we forgot... the tent. except about that. xfinity home. simple, easy, awesome. hey look, i found the tent! and, see, it's safe. call, click, or visit a store today. i feel like we're forglet me check.ing. xfinity home gives you peace of mind from anywhere with professionally monitored home security built around you. no, i think we're good. -good. so when you're away, you don't have to worry. the tent. we forgot... the tent. except about that. xfinity home. simple, easy, awesome. hey look, i found the tent! and, see, it's safe. call, click, or visit a store today. >> good wednesday morning the latest on the unrest in rochester as the police chief and the entire command center leave the force what the president is saying about that this morning, plus, 55 days to go to election day, and the wall street journal editorial board this morning asks, will the courts pick the next president? kayleigh mcenany will join us live from the white house at election night expectations, and joe biden unveiling his make it in america plan, charles payne here to react, bill mcgurn, mercedes schlapp from the trump campaign, bret baier joining us live from america's news room top of the hour. brian: the nfl is back and it's kicking off the highly- anticipated season tomorrow night. players returning to the field, and the coronavirus concerns are there, social justice protests will happen. here with more on what to expect is former new england patriots good friend of the show, ben watson. ben you got a movie coming out we'll hold off on that for a second first things first. you play with tom brady for seven years and brady is with tampa, the bucks at 43 years old, cam newton is with your old team, whose going to have a better year, patriots or bucks? >> well it's going to be interesting, but you could never bet against tom, obviously this is a guy who hasn't had a losing season in his entire career as a starter i don't expect him to start doing that right now, plus he's got a big chip on his shoulder plus he's enjoying the beach and the sun so i'm excited to see what he does in tampa for sure. brian: can cam newton adjust to bill bellechick and his system? >> so far it seems he can. this is a guy whose been an mvp , a great player, he's been hurt the last few year, i'm really excited to see them this season, and see what cam does in a new system and a new place, a bunch of new surround ings but all the clips that i've seen, everything that i've heard coming out of that locker room he immediately gains respect when he comes in because of what he's donald also the leader he is. brian: certainly sounds like he's happy how bad was the friction between bellechick and brady? >> i think a lot of that was behind closed doors. i think we're going to hear about it 20-30 years from now when they break the tapes open but what they've done, what the they did clearly for the nfl over the course of the last several decades is unprecedented , and nobody can take that away from them, no matter what happens, i know now the stories going to be whose going to win the super bowl first and that sort of thing which obviously we've got to talk about. it makes it fun but what they did together, they were the perfect two people together at the right time to create the dynasty that they had. brian: maybe they will both realize that. ben you have the release of a brand new movie it's a pro-life movie called "divided hearts of america" give us an idea of what we'll see. >> watson's movie, i think you're going to cry, you're going to be encouraged, you're going to be empowered and convicted. abortion is an issue that strike s at the heart of america. it strikes at the heart of the tenants of our nation, and it's a very divisive issue. you can't talk about it without having some sort of emotion and so in light of what has happened with conservative laws liberal law, my wife and i being co- producers set out to really interview and hear from the heart of america. we interviewed about 30-40 different people, different voices on different sides of this debate, and really in an effort to understood how we got here, when it comes to abortion laws in america and reproductive rights laws in america. what's going to happen if we continue and where we're going if we don't change some sort of course so the biggest thing that i want people to hear, you're going to be educated, you're going to learn but also this is about human dignity, it's about sanctity of life, it's about empathy and understanding that even though we may disagree on something that is so important and so vital as human life we need to see the humanity in the other person. we need to look at this debate in a different way, that maybe we ever have before, so, the official trailer is coming out today i'm excited to announce we're going to be releasing the movie on digital salem now september 17 so that's next thursday you can learn more about the movie, and get updates and get involved at divided hearts of america film .com, so we're really excited about this , we think it's going to challenge and also educate america when it comes to the issue of abortion. brian: wow so ben watson being retired nine seconds already has a movie out, congratulations, ben so go to dividedheartsof america.com for the trailer. >> dividedheartsofamericafilm.com. brian: got it it was on the screen i just chose not to look at it my fault. thanks ben appreciate it. >> i hear you i appreciate you guys. take care. brian: talk to you soon, meanwhile more fox & friends in just a moment don't move. >> ♪ ♪ who is usaa made for? it's made for this guy a veteran who honorably served and it's made for her she's serving now we made it for all branches and all ranks whether they served one tour or made a career of it. we also made usaa for military spouses and their kids usaa is easy to work with and can save you money on auto, home and renters insurance. become a member today. get an insurance quote at usaa.com/quote usaa. what you're made of we're made for inflammation in your eye might be to blame.ck, looks like a great day for achy, burning eyes over-the-counter eye drops typically work by 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keen on the nobel peace prize the president is up for and pulling troops out of iraq. listen live. >> we will. >> ♪ >> 100 gathering for the seventh night of protests in new york painting a black lives matter mural on the street where daniel prude was killed and. police chief stepped down along with other senior officials. we will speak to the white house press secretary kayleigh mcenany and the unrest in major cities across the country. >> ♪ >> 55

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