Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX Friends 20170419

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>> when the pit maneuver is conducted, the vehicle spun around, came to a stop. he immediately pulled the weapon out and shot himself. >> make no mistake, we are in fact a nation under attack from people who hate us, hate our freedoms, hate our laws, hate our values. >> i don't think there is any doubt the open borders, the lawlessness that we have had is a factor. >> lift off of the atlas five rocket extending the research legacy working in space. ♪ and i think it's going to be a long, long time ♪ steve: thank you, stageman. directing rocket man. live from studio e is ed henry. ed: i don't think this is going to be a long, long time it goes fast. ainsley: thank you for being here. i like your outfit. stars, very patriotic this morning. ed: it's a former bush aide in the bush 43 white house. he makes cool ties. this one was picked, i think by president bush 43. president bush 41 and 43 design ties. i just thought of it when you said it. ainsley: are they made in america? i hope so. ainsley: you always look good too, steve. steve: thank you, ainsley. if you were watching the mainstream media yesterday you knew that special election down in georgia's sixth district pretty much was the most important election of our lifetimes because the democrats were desperate to essentially have a referendum on donald trump and they wanted a guy screen left, jon ossoff, the 30-year-old documentary filmmaker. they wanted him to win and they pumped millions and millions of dollars into it. he had to hit 50%. he fell a little short and so now a runoff is with that woman right there. ainsley: he was excited. he said it was a victory for the ages. it wasn't a victory because he hasn't won. let's listen in. >> there is no doubt that this is already a victory for the ages. that no matter what the outcome is tonight. whether we take it all or whether we fight on, we have defied the odds we have shattered expectations. [cheers and applause] ainsley: he ran not on policy but on the fact that he won -- it was referendum on president trump. he wants to run against president trump's policies. and that's what he kept saying. so all these hollywood elites heard about this and donated money. 97% of the money that he raised came from outside of that area. it is a republican district. ed: all about democracy and fighting for this district. and super interesting because he is saying it's a victory for the ages. which ages? steve: he is only 30. ainsley: he can't even vote for himself because he lives outside of the district that he is running for. steve: how crazy is that he could not vote for himself because he didn't live in the district. ed: the media has been framing this as this is a big blow to donald trump health and human services secretary carried this by 23 points. donald trump won this district by 1 point. it was much closer. ainsley: what they don't mention there were 11 candidates running for the republican party. so now in a runoff on january 20th, that what will happen is you had will have one democrat it, will be him and you will have one republican. and so they will go head to head it is a republican district. we have to see who wins. ed: follows all the predictions that donald trump was going to lose the kansas special election as well. steve: they are desperate nor that fairive to take off. the mainstream media wants you to say oh, donald trump, he won the election, of course, that hacked and stuff like that. and then one by one we're looking at these elections and they're close but none the less, they have not picked off the republican. president trump himself actually did some 11th hour tweeting in a major way. and helped with the counter attack yesterday to keep him under 50%. he tweeted shortly before midnight last night despite major outside money, about $8 million, fake media support and 11 republican candidates, big r win with runoff in georgia. glad to be of help. how funny is that? by the way, newt gingrich had that seat back in the i think late 1970s and '80s. he predicts that he thinks that handle, karen handel will win by 8 points. ed: we will have her on. the next 8 weeks are going to be intense. when you talk about outside money flowing. in $8 million to the democrat. you will see hollywood say we've got a shot here. even more money will pour in. ainsley: impressive he is 30 years old. we will interview the republican in the race. we did ask him to come on the show. we have asked him to come on the show, answered hasn't responded or has declined. if you are listening and watching, we would love to have you. steve: absolutely, why not. mine while, the big winner going forward will be the atlanta television stations because millions and millions of dollars worth of ads. ainsley: this is true. steve: what does hillary clinton's official former spokesperson think about last night's race? brian fallon tweeted this. even if he doesn't hit 50 tonight. ossoff is showing us the path to retaking the house, it runs through the panera breads of america. what does that mean? through the people who love tomato soup and a loaf of bread? ainsley: trying to do the trump thing where i'm not -- what is the phrase i'm not washington, i'm main street. i'm down home. i'm of the people. ed: exexburbs. ainsley: they do have one heck of a salad and many choices. steve: many on twitter said after he said the road to victory goes through panera. we shall fight them in the alberto barn and banana republic and fight them in the starbucks and so it goes. ed: the president was out talking about the economy while all of this was playing out and fulfilling a campaign promise about buy american, hire american. here he was in wisconsin. >> i'm proud to announce that we are about to take bold new steps to follow through on my pledge to buy american and hire american together, we're going to do everything in our power to make sure that more products are stamped with those wonderful words made in the toss. for too long we have watched as our factories have been closed and our jobs have been sent to other far away lands. but this election, the american people voted to end the theft of american prosperity. they voted to bring back their jobs and to bring back their dreams into our country. with this action, we are sending a powerful signal to the world. we're going to defend our workers, protect our jobs, and finally put america first. steve: that's great. essentially some of the things and we went over it yesterday when we were talking about it. president trump wants to change the rules distributing the visas to foreign workers because right now it is a lottery system where everybody gets equal chance to get one of these visas. he would like to see the people who are at the higher end of the earning structure get the visas because a lot of them have outsourced to people in india. they will wind up coming over and not making as much. also there will be 150 day review where federal agencies look to make sure that there aren't any loopholes that are keeping them from buying american. ed: that's the message that helped win the presidential race. is he back on that in the key state of wisconsin that helped put him over the top when all this focus was back in georgia one seat that's really not going to matter mathematically. ainsley: if the democrats win in georgia the democrats aren't going to take the house. ed: it's interesting because all the time and money spent there is because democrats are desperate for a victory. that's why you have former clinton aides weighing in. think about what we had yesterday where the dnc chair was being introduced at big party event and they were booing him saying we want bernie. this is a party desperate for a win anywhere. that's why they are focused so much on georgia. president out in wisconsin saying let's talk about the economy. steve: you mentioned the tom perez who runs the dnc. he says while president trump was in wisconsin he says he wants buy american and hire americans. then why doesn't he practice what he preaches because his neckties are made in china and other clothing articles are made around the world. so abc sent brian ross, the investigative reporter, to a trump hotel and he made a shocking discovery. watch this. >> when i checked, in right after the election, the room was full of non-american made products. >> here is a marble and gold bathroom. the soap is made in canada. the towels are made in india. this fancy bath robe, it's made in china. steve: they have soap from canada. ainsley: if you put a camera in any of our bathrooms or any of our houses you will find stuff from other countries. steve: my soap is from cosco. ainsley: president trump is saying yeah, i would love for us to buy all of our soaps and our robes, we would all love to buy american made but the prices are much cheaper if you buy from other countries. he is saying that's why it's important when it comes to tax reform to lower the corporate tanks rates so more companies can afford to make these things here in the u.s. steve: level the playing. ainsley: children's book said made in china. i said i would love for the books to be here in america. they said it will be more expensive. we have to cut costs elsewhere. it was more expensive. that's what we need to change. lower corporate tax. we did it we made it work. that's why companies are looking to china, looking to cangsd because it is cheaper. what businessman is going to go a more expensive route unless they cut corners elsewhere. ed: deals at papandreou panera as well as we mentioned. our own abby huntsman. abby: i love panera best cinnamon bagel with hazel nut cream cheese. steve: that changes everything. ainsley: have you such an important coming up with congressman mass down in florida. abby: stick around 6:25 a.m. stick around i look forward to that i do want to start with a fox news alert. u.s. air force taking quick action intercepting russian bombers off the coast of alaska. two foreign jets detected 100 miles south of it dakota island air force space. the air force jets flying beside the bombers and flew away. first intersessions of russian aircraft off the west coast in nearly two years. another letter, police say he screamed allahu akbar. this morning they are not calling it terrorism. >> this is solely based on race. it has nothing to do with terrorism, in spite of the statements he made. abby: corey alli muhammad admits to killing three white men. under investigation like this one where he praises the quote cataclysmic natural disaster striking again saying allah u akbar. >> nationwide hunt for facebook killer. employer looking for steve stephens while ordering chicken nuggets in eary, pennsylvania. stalling him until police could get there, saying his fries were not ready yet. >> just told him it was going to be a minute for his fries which it wasn't, really. we were trying to make sure she got in contact with the state police. he didn't want to wait for the fries, which was fine. he took his six piece and didn't want any money back and headed out. abby: that might have saved lives. >> police pulling out right behind steven's car just seconds later. stephens who filmed the execution of an innocent man and then taking his own life during the dramatic chase. just glad that all came to an end. what a horrific story that was. steve: quick thinking on the poor the of the mcdonald's employees who i hope will get to split that $50,000 reward. ainsley: great story. that's great. steve: we told you how the democratic candidate came up short in the sixth district of georgia. what are the wider implications in the upcoming run off race. eric erickson who lives down in the -- is next. ainsley: might have lost in the battlefield but never lost his mission to serve our country. we kick off the new series "a call to duty." >> being in this cloud of dust. hearing 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raymond james financial advisor can do for you. ed: breaking overnight a runoff called in georgia where democratic candidate jon ossoff failed to flip the sixth congressional district forcing a faceoff against republican karen handle what are some of the wider political implications. eric erickson joins us live now. good morning, eric. >> good morning. >> you are down there in georgia. what was happening on the ground when you have this democratic candidate basically declaring victory that it was a quote, unquote, victory for the ages when he did not win? >> democrats always seem to claim moral victories when they lose. he didn't get to 50% and it's going to be more difficult in june. there are some warning signs for republicans. don't get me wrong. the democrats were very enthusiastic. he outperformed hillary clinton in key areas of the district. he won several republican precincts outright. but people forget this was a special election. there were real different dynamics. you had 11 very well known republicans fighting against unknown democrat with $8 million. he was able to build up positive name i.d. the republicans engaged each other for three quarters of the race before they paid attention to him. ed: can this kind of message from the democrats really win in the long run? didn't we see this in 2016 where it was all about donald trump is a bad guy? it wasn't about here is what we are going to do for the country. they made this all about donald trump in recent days, last couple of weeks. he was tweeting back and they did not get to the 50%. >> right. the issue is here the democrats made this a case of vote for jon ossoff to make donald trump angry. well, a lot of people did but not enough to get him to 50% in a republican district. was there some things the white house should be worried about? yes, a little bit. some of the candidates, most closely identified with the president did very bad. but they ran poor races as well. karen handel is one who said she would work with the president. holding her own side as well. very strong candidate. sixth district always treated karen handel very well. if you don't live in the sixth congressional district he couldn't vote for himself and neither could you. ed: you were not on board for donald trump for 2016 we all know that. then have you this democrat, all this hollywood money and endorsement pouring in and donald trump stuck his neck out and had robo calls in the last days. had more tweets. you know full well that if the democrat had reached 50% this would have been donald trump put his neck on the line and lost. instead he put his neck on the line and lives another day, doesn't he? >> yes. very much. so i can't tell you the number of people who called my radio show in the metro atlanta area saying i didn't support donald trump last year but the more these liberals lose their mind the more i love the guy and they came home to the republican party. the just incessant liberal bashing of donald trump and republicans and attacking everything republicans have done really help consolidate people behind the republicans. ed: all right, eric erickson i feel like the money is about to see in like we have never seen. >> me too. ed: congressman ryan mast may have lost his legs on the battlefield he never lost his will to serve the country. we get a look at his every day life on the hill next ♪ i dream of what i need ♪ i need a hero ♪ ...it's handled by od employees who know that delivering freight... ...means delivering promises. od. helping the world keep promises. why pause a spontaneous moment? cialis for daily use treats ed and the urinary symptoms of bph. tell your doctor about your medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, or adempas® for pulmonary hypertension, drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have a sudden decrease or loss of hearing or vision, or an allergic reaction, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis. for years, centurylink has been promising fast internet to small businesses. but for many businesses, it's out of reach. why promise something you can't deliver? comcast business is different. ♪ ♪ we deliver super-fast internet with speeds of 250 megabits per second across our entire network, to more companies, in more locations, than centurylink. we do business where you do business. ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: for some of those who have done so much so serve our amazing country, the call to duty still beckons after their military career is over. ed: that's the case for 102 members of congress who are military veterans. they're the subject of our brand new series highlighting their personal stories and what they do now in office. steve: first up, we've got congressman brian mast from florida and abby huntsman went down to washington to learn more about mr. mast. abby: what an incredible story he has. congressman mast is a freshman in the 115th congress after winning 53% of the vote in his home district. he started his career, many people do not realize in the u.s. army as eod bomb tech admission in afghanistan helping to detect and disharm ieds. brian ended up losing two of his limbs in an explosion. he made the decision to continue to serve his country in congress all while he was recovering in water reed hospital. here is his story. >> i lost two legs and a finger disposing bombs, trying to work for my country and my brothers in service. and that was completely palatable. i have zero regrets about it. abby: in that moment for people who don't know, take us back. >> we came to a spot in the battlefield there was a place we could pretty much just get across the river. i secretary of defense if i can figure that out, any enemy can figure it out. they probably mined the area. they probably put some bombs around there one of the sniper working with fell in this waterway. i went to step back and help pull our guy out of the water, whenever did i that i moved to, i found one of those devices exploded underneath my feet. i remember very vividly pummeling through the air, probably landed 5 or 10 feet from where i had been. i can remember being engulfed in cloud of dust. i can remember hearing in noah my radio device my men talking about me and calling up my eod is hit. eod was down. they were talking about me. they loaded me on to a helicopter and gave me a salute the men carrying my stretcher. they said you are going to be okay. ainsley: take us to the moment waking up up here in d.c. >> somebody i had gone to school with his name is josh. he found me and recognized me as brian mast. got in contact with my wife breanna. email a picture of her and what was our six month old son at the time. he taped it to that flat part of the hospital gurney where my feet were supposed to be sticking up and they weren't. he did it so that the first thing that i would ever see would be my wife and my son. ainsley: what's going through your mind in that moment because you look down and you realize you don't have legs. >> it's tough. you know, one of the things that was going through my mind is that i had lost my purpose in life. it's when my father came to my bedside and he looks at me and he says brian, you can't let this keep you down. have you got to find a way to pull yourself up to get out there and get back to work. that was on the other side of it saying it doesn't matter if i have lost that purpose of my life, i can still go out there. i can still get back to work and regain that purpose and maybe it will be on another battlefield. that's where i am today. >> thanks for coming today. see how the sausage is made in our office. abby: get a sense of the day in your life. >> headed to committee. i wanted to be on the committee of transportation and infrastructure. work for the water issues that are going on in my local community. >> not the federal government cleaning something out. the federal government is doing the damage. the federal government shall do no harm. >> talking to seventh graders art part of your day. >> part of my week. one fun things for me. speak to them. answer the questions. get them involved in the process of things going on here. >> i encourage everybody to go out there and read the constitution. ainsley: maverick is here today your 5-year-old son he is having a good ball. >> he is having a good time. i have a good time. children, family most difficult part about this process. one of the things that we do is i try to bring the kids up here from time to time when i can. ainsley: do you want to go on the trolley? >> give me your hand. let's go. >> you go into statuary hall or some of the other places and you think of its history. >> how are you doing, sir? are you doing all right? >> good. how are you? >> survived. back in the fight. >> downtown. >> there is never any down time. ainsley: constant. >> another to another. >> on the house floor. >> to real action. put an end to bigotry and violence. >> not a single moment of the day-to-day minutia is fun. a lot of it is very arduous. when you accomplish something great, when you go out there and do something great, you know, for people back home, for the country, for freedom, for standing up for the constitution for fiscal responsibility yeah, have you accomplished something good and it makes every sacrifice worth it. steve: what a guy. abby: his life has changed so much. look what he is doing with it this might be the beginning of his political career. ainsley: recovery but look what god is doing in his life. he is here for a big reason. is he serving our country again. and then came back and had two more children with his wife. they have three total, right? abby: kids are adorable. he has his hands full. ainsley: i saw his cell phone in his mouth walking down the hall. steve: brian mast who got the call from ed. ed: i had met him at charity event. they said they are not putting president trump's portrait up in any of these v.a. offices around the country. look, it's symbolic but it's important is he commander-in-chief. he went down to the palm beach office and he actually hung unofficial portrait and that started this whole movement around the country. abby: i asked him about that we didn't air that part. i said why did you do that. >> in when you want to get something done done you do it yourself. i went down down there and put this picture up. >> ed: somebody determined to get things done. abby: very well respected on the hill. ainsley: a fox news alert. police say the man who shot and killed three people in fresno wanted to kill as many white people as possible. former d.c. homicide detective rod wheeler is going to join us with the latest. ed: remember when congresswoman maxine watters called for president trump's impreachment? >> i will fight every day until he is impeached. impeach 45. 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real quickly, i looked at this guy's facebook post before they took it down and check it out real quickly. this is one of the post he had actually written. he said we will continue to bring destruction and wrath upon america until we establish a kingdom. those are the words right out of isis playbook. in addition to that guys, guess what else i learned from his facebook post he considered the dallas shooter back in july of last year when the five officers were killed, he referred to that guy as a hero. this guy corey mohammed is his name. the guy yesterday. he clearly was inspired by isis or one of these other islamic extremist groups. ainsley: right, why would the a.p. present a story of all the facts in this case and say he was shouting god is great? he was actually shouting allahu akbar which is god is great in arabic. why wouldn't they put the exact quote. >> because they need to be politically correct. that's the only reason. you know, i have been saying for the longest, the only time we can really defeat isis or islamic extremist is when we call it out and call it what it is. that's exactly what president trump has said and that's what he is doing. he is calling it what it is. that's why when i saw that report from the a.p. yesterday, i said you know, they still don't get it here at fox we have just been reporting exactly what the guy said. this is what the guy said. not only did he kill those three people yesterday, guys. he also killed another white guy last thursday there in fresno. steve: motel six. ed: rod, what do you think coming on top of the facebook killer, i know completely different case. you were just talking about this killer's facebook post. we're seeing this kind of garbage on social media and then it leads to murders. >> right. and that's why social media, whether it's facebook, whether it's inif a gram, they need to take accountability and responsibility for keeping this kind of crap off of facebook and off social media. look, they have the ability to do it. facebook has tons of money. they know how to put the algorithms in the system, they haven't done it yet. hopefully by pushing we will get them to do the right thing. steve: other scary thing is just the randomness of it he shot these three people dead randomly. selected them at random. just like the guy on easter sunday in cleveland. >> well, it was sort of random, steve. that's an interesting observation. it wasn't necessarily random though. because if it would have been random then he would have shot anybody. he specifically targeted white males. steve: you are right. >> for one we know this was hate crime. it wasn't random. he went after any white male and the guy in cleveland now that was random. he just selected anybody. i even think in that case he specifically selected the older guy, the old guy that could not fight him back. i think that's what the deal was in cleveland. ainsley: police say not tied to terrorism but hate crime that this man hated white people. >> that's right. exactly. steve: rod wheeler, thank you very much for coming in early on this wednesday morning. ainsley: good to see you. let's hand it over to abby who has headlines for us. abby: we start with this. an illegal immigrant once protected under the dreamer act is suing president trump for being deported. lawyers say juan martez was extended dhaka status and never should have been deported to mexico. his status expired back in 2015 and no record of a renewal. this comes as the trump administration continues to tighten security at our southern border. tomorrow home land security secretary john. remember when this maxine watters called for impeachment of president trump? >> i will work every kay until he is impeached. impeach 45. [chanting impeach 45] abby: apparently she does not remember that the democrat is now flipping her own script telling msnbc she never said that. >> i have not called for impeachment. >> you said i'm going to fight every day until he is impeached. that's what you tweeted. >> here's what i said. here's what i said. i said that we need the information. we need to connect the dots. we need the facts in order to do the impeachment. abby: wow. watters even tweeted yesterday saying the president is a liar. his actions are contemptible and i'm going to fight every day until he is impeached. united airlines says no one will be fired after a passenger was dragged off a plane last week. taking responsibility for the incident that sparked worldwide outrage. he was pulled off the flight for employees. he will need facial reconstruction surgery. new poll that's out that says more people are willing to take a flight double as long with another airline so they can avoid taking united. steve: about to get fired at united. ed: i guess maxine watters didn't know it was on tape. mainstream media loves hurting its base. why are they in such a hurry to call out the 2020 ledges. amy is here next. ed: first pepsi and united and now adidas is dealing with pr nightmare after sending runners this email saying congrats, you survived the boston marathon. the internet obviously had a lot to say about that one. when did you see the sign? when i needed to create a better visitor experience. improve our workflow. attract new customers. that's when fastsigns recommended fleet graphics. yeah! now business is rolling in. get started at fastsigns.com. there's a moment of truth. and now with victoza® a better moment of proof. victoza® lowers my a1c and blood sugar better than the leading branded pill, which didn't get me to my goal. lowers my a1c better than the leading branded injectable. the one i used to take. 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"new york times" interviewed several people. they had buyer's remorse. then you had the a.p. saying a mid policy shift. trump voters are forgiving to pinget huffington post said is there really buyer's remorse for trump voters suggesting that voters are losing their patients? >> i think this is a lot of mainstream media wishful thinking. we saw this happening last night with the special election in georgia. all the hype that this democratic candidate was going to win and it would be a repudiation of president trump. and that just didn't happen. i think another thing, ainsley, is that we know when you put trump in headline, you get a lot of attention. you have these news editors saying go find some people that are going to stir up some controversy and that will get us. ainsley: we saw all the protesters on both sides are really angry. the people that didn't vote for donald trump, didn't vote for president trump, what does he need to do to appeal to them. because we are all americans and want to get along and work together and for the people and being one country and solidified. what does he need to do to get them on board. >> i agree we are one country and we're looking for solutions. for example, when you look at healthcare, obamacare it, a disaster. i think that's something both sides recognize and both sides recognize it needs reform and needs to work. president trump, when he is able to get republicans at least to come to consensus and reach across the aisle, he will be able to gain more support. some of these voters, the hillary clinton supporters are dead set against him including in lot of america's numerous let's face it. ainsley: just because he is republican. >> he is a republican and president trump and never give him a shake. ainsley: thank you. >> thank you, ainsley. ainsley: a huge show ahead. nigel farage and lindsey graham. starbucks frappuccino so rare that they named it, greg gutfeld, after a unicorn. the internet is obsessed with there carley shimkus has them for us, awesome, to try this morning. awesome. we love free food. ♪ dear predictable there's no other way to say this. it's over. i've found a permanent escape from monotony. together, we are perfectly balanced, our senses awake, our hearts racing as one. i know this is sudden, but they say: if you love something... set it free. see you around, giulia ♪ ed: adidas sent a marketing email after the boston marathon it's the subject line that sparngd outrage has the company apologizing this morning. ainsley: here with that and the day's other top trends is fox news headlines 24/7 reporter carley shimkus. they weren't thinking. >> poor choice of words coming from adidas. the company sent emails with this running line you survived the boston marathon. so, a lot of people, of course, were reminded of the boston marathon bombing, of course. and a reaction pouring in so swiftly on social media. let's take a look at some of those messages. wyatt on twitter says i know this has good intentions but could really be taken the wrong way. jason writing dear adidas i love you but you need to talk to whoever is doing your email marketing. jen tweet you had i think we all agree they could have worded it better. adidas issuing a swift apolog apology: poor choice of words. they apologized. they came out in front of the situation. ainsley: big corporation. you probably want to have two or three people that read the emails before you hit send. >> completely agree. you are right. sometimes things slip through the cracks like this. and then they have to pay the price. i understand the outrage. steve: it was not on purpose. it was an accident. meanwhile, talk about something at facebook. apparently this is no accident if on may day you decide to go out and protest donald trump, the president of the united states and apparently there will be a number of organized demonstrations, at facebook, it's okay. you get a free pass. >> yeah. tech companies versus president trump this week. so facebook is saying that they will let their employees participate in this immigration protest on may 1st without any penalty. they are letting their employees participate. they don't have to work that day. the company released a statement explaining their decision. they say at facebook fostering inclusive workplace where employees feel comfortable supporting. recognizing international workers day and other efforts to raise awareness for safe and equitable employment conditions. so, not only that. but company also says they might reevaluate contracts with companies like security firms that work for facebook if they don't let their employees participate in this protest either. ed: where does that end? come off with all types of protests people won't be showing up for work at all. ainsley: all.ains. >> facebook owner giving employees day off to profit trump. boycott facebook. anthony. is i wonder if my boss will give me a day off to protest facebook. >> i think your boss would probably like to you protest facebook. you will be working instead of going on the site. steve: before you go. those things have been sitting on the glass coffee table driving us crazy. >> fun stuff. this is a new drink that starbucks just launched. it's called the unicorn frappuccino, they are trying to make money off this unicorn trend going on on social media. i think greg gutfeld started this trend. it's supposed to taste like mango and change color and flavor as you drinks it. so what do you think? ainsley: i'm thinking little girls love. this they love pink and purple and turquoise. ed: feels like a shot of sugar. >> doesn't taste like mango. tastes exactly like it looks. like a unicorn. he had i had tastes like magic. ainsley: absolutely right. >> this is causing a lot of buzz online. too pretty to drink. steve: absolutely. what are people saying online? >> a lot of people are talking about. kelly tweeted i'm only interested if it comes with a real unicorn. sorry, kelly they don't exist. maybe they do somewhere. looks like the unicorn frap is coming to a starbucks near you. my condolences to starbucks employees looks like unicorn frap thapmagedon. ed: good job pronouncing that. ainsley: they are beautiful. >> thanks so much. steve: four minutes before the top of the hour and we have a fox news alert. former patriots star and convicted killer aaron hernandez found dead in his prison cell. we have got breaking details coming up next. ed: democrat running in the georgia special election says he is fighting the so-called dark money of republicans. what about the 8 million bucks he raised from outside of georgia? steve: well, that was just green. ♪ can't you see ♪ i don't have ♪ before i had the shooting, burning of diabetic nerve pain these feet... jumped into city life as a kid... ...raised two rough and tumble boys... ...and kept my town moving. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda approved to treat this pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. and i love keeping their little feet safe and sound. ask your doctor about lyrica. if you are eligible, you could pay as little as $25 dollars a month. bp engineered a fleet of 32 brand new ships with advanced technology, so we can make sure oil and gas get where they need to go safely. because safety is never being satisfied. and always working to be better. >> i'm proud to announce that we're about to take bold new steps to follow through on my pledge to buy american and hire american. [applause] steve: 39-year-old man out in california kori ali mohammed shot and killed three people in fresno. he reportedly yelled allahu akbar. >> this is one of the most he had actually written. he said we will continue to bring destruction and wrath upon america until we establish a kingdom. those are the words right out of isis playbook. >> breaking overnight, a runoff called in georgia. >> democrats made this a says of vote tore jon ossoff and make donald trump angry. a lot of people did but not fluff to get him to 50% in a republican district. >> if lawmakers don't like the laws we enforce, then they should have the courage and skill to change those laws. otherwise, they should shut up. abby: ohio father 90's 14,000 bucks on the side of the road with his family. rather than pocket the cash he turned it into a lesson. >> it was a good opportunity to teach the kids about doing the right thing. ♪ ♪ going wherever it leads ♪ running down a dream. steve: if you are driving to work today up the avenue of americas the traffic is light so far at 7:01. there is that one bus at 49th street. >> got to be careful. those things do not care. they will run you off the road because they are so big. they will just wedge themselves through traffic. steve: look who made it today. ed henry. ed: so welcome. running down a dream u we have a fox news alert. steve: it was big news last night in the sixth district of georgia. that man, screen left, democrat jon ossoff was desperately hoping he would finish above 50% so he would not have to have a runoff with the republican carol handle screen right. turns out he didn't get over 50. ed: he didn't win. ainsley: why is he saying victory of the ages? steve: he spent 8 million bucks. ed: dirty money. ainsley: he raised 95 to 97% of his money from outside of his district. ed: he doesn't even live in the district and yet he put a really wonderful spin on things last night. >> i know it has been a long evening and it looks like it may be a longer one. but, let me tell you this, there is no doubt that this is already a victory for the ages. we will be ready to fight on and win in june if it is necessary. there there is no amount of dark money, super pac, negative advertising that can overcome real grassroots energy like this. this is not a story about me. this is a story about this community at this moment in history. >> that's right. >> this is a story about women in this community. [cheers and applause] ed: it's also a story about a party, the democrats desperate nor a victory. they did the same in terms of pouring money and attention in kansas made a referendum on donald trump. they won. guess what it weighs closer than they wanted but they won. donald trump did a robo call. drew him in. he lives to fight another day. did he not win flat out. ainsley: what you mean he ran on saying i'm anti-trump. i'm anti-president trump. ed: vote for belief so i could be a check on him. ainsley: wasn't about policy i want to run against the republican party. steve: ultimately the larger goal is democrat want to say look, donald trump was elected. it was a fluke. russians, all about the russians. ed: they hacked. steve: every election going forward towards the mid terms and democrats are going to gain steam. they did not gain steam last night even though you had donald trump a furious counter attack kept that man under 50%. then about midnight last night, donald trump, the president of the united states tweeted this out. despite major outside money, 8 million and fake media support and 11 republican candidates big r win with runoff in georgia. glad to be of help. ed: now there is a runoff in june where jon ossoff, the democrat we just saw, will be facing off with karen handle the republican who got the most votes in the so-called jungle primary. multiple democrats, republicans. you will see her live. she will join us next hour. we invited both candidates to come on. she is the only one to say yes. ainsley: as donald trump was tweeting about this. he said there were 11 republican candidates. imagine running against 10 other people. of course the votes are going to be split. she got 20%. she got the most out of all the republicans like you were saying. he wasn't running against. there were seven democrats and independents running. so he got the most votes. so the two of them will -- they are going to be in a matchup. they wipe out all the other candidates like the presidential election. that happens on june 20th. one republican against one democrat. it is a republican leaning district. steve: sure, you can imagine the republican will unify around her as the democrats will around him. erick erickson was on earlier. he had this observation how the spin is if they did really well. >> democrats always seem to claim moral victories. he didn't gte to 50%. it's going to be more difficult in june. there are warning signs for republicans, don't get me wrong. democrats were very enthusiastic. he outperformed hillary clinton in deareas of the district. he won several republican precincts outright. people forget this was a special election. there were real different dynamics. had you 11 very well known republicans fighting against unknown democrat with $8 million. steve: if i was jon ossoff, what i would do today, is i would go online and find an apartment in the actual district to live in for the next two months. ainsley: that just came out yesterday, so that might hurt him. it seems people are so -- it's either republicans and democrats. it's not about policy anymore. it is hate versus -- i have never seen anything like this. steve: steps awfully polarized. ed: media is left out. tom price health secretary his former seat that he used to win by double digits, 22, 23 points. donald trump only won this district by 1 30eu7b9. ainsley: not going to change anything you were saying in the house. >> in terms of the math one seat it doesn't mine if they win that the democratic national committee democrats get the majority in the house. steve: it would be a talking point. off we go to the runoff. 7:07 here in new york city. abby joins us and have you three breaking news stories. abby: breaking just now this morning. we start with a fox news alert. former new england patriots star and convicted killer aaron hernandez has just been found dead in his prison cell the massachusetts department of correction says he hanged himself early this morning. hernandez was just acquitted of double murder on friday. serving a life sentence for killing oden lloyd. aaron hernandez is now dead at the age of 27. also breaking right now, the u.s. air force taking swift action intercepting russian bombers off the coast of alaska. two foreign jets detected 100 miles south of he kodak island. flying by side the bombers as they changed course and flew away. this is the first intercepts of russian aircraft off the west coast in nearly two years. and to another fox news alert. police say that he screamed al lieallahu akbar after a murderos rampage in fresno, california. this morning they're not calling it terrorism. they say kori ali mohammed's killing spree was race-related. former homicide detective rod wheeler says it is too early to make that call. >> very minimum i can tell you it was terrorist inspired. i looked at this guy's facebook post before they took it down, check this out real quickly. this is one of the post that he had actually written. he said we will continue to bring destruction and wrath upon america until we establish the kingdom. those rut words right out of ives sis playbook. abby: mohammed admits to targeting and killing two white men in his murderous rampage. police are blames drive through. employee recognizing steve stephens while ordering chicken nuggets in eary, pennsylvania. workers stalling him until police could get there telling him his fries weren't ready yet. told him it would be a minute for fries which it wasn't really. making sure she got in contact with state police. he didn't want to wait for the tryst which was fine. took his nuggets and pulled out. abby: filmed execution of innocent man and taking his own life during the dramatic chase. after aim that the chicken nuggets. horrific, horrific story. steve: one the only employees at the window spotted him. abby: we have so much news i will keep an eye on it. steve: thanks, abby. ainsley: will republicans will be able to keep healthcare and tax reform by the end of the year? we'll ask lindsey graham from south carolina that's coming up. steve: president trump making good on his pledge to make america work again. >> to buy and hire american order. i'm go to stein help protect workers and students. put america first. you better belief it. steve: the next guest has front r0e seat for signing ceo of snap on deals. come on in. ♪ making a living with these two hands ♪ still believe in the good old back way. ♪ i watched them shut the factories downf ♪ and the foreigners brought into town ♪ t congestion, clarispray covers 100 percent of your nasal allergy symptoms. clarispray. from the makers of claritin. our 18 year old wase army in an accident.'98. when i call usaa it was that voice asking me, "is your daughter ok?" that's where i felt relief. we're the rivera family, and we will be with usaa for life. ♪ ♪ i'm dr. kelsey mcneely and some day you might be calling me an energy farmer. ♪ energy lives here. there's nothing more than my vacation.me so when i need to book a hotel room, i want someone that makes it easy to find what i want. booking.com gets it. they offer free cancellation if my plans change. visit booking.com. booking.yeah. >> the buy and hir this historin declares that the policy of our government is to aggressively promote and use american made goods and to ensure that american labor is hired to do the job. america first. you better believe it. steve: see that flag behind him all wrenches. ainsley: made of tools. steve: absolutely. president trump making good yesterday on another campaign promise to hire more american workers with his latest executive order. our next guest had a front row seat for the signing. ed: joining us ceo of snap-on tools. ainsley: good morning. ed: what was it like to have the president there. >> he is the first president to visit our facility since our founding vow to be pumped for it. ed: almost 100 years. >> almost 100 years. ainsley: what was the reaction. >> they stood, cheered, stood up. the employees or phrase that they said to me was thank you for arranging it. it says a lot. steve: kind of a victory lap for him. because, you know, a lot of people said you will never win wisconsin. he won wisconsin. >> he won our county. kenosha county which is kind of unusual. it doesn't go that way. we saw it go that way we thought he was going to get wisconsin. steve: what's your headline from yesterday? >> emphasizing the essential nature of american manufactured for our way forward and bringing, i guess, a spotlight to the need of upscale americans. upscale american workers. we think at snap on this is the seminole issue of our time. because we are engaged in a global competition for jobs. it's why 30% of manufacturing jobs have gone offshore -- not offshore but lost in the last several decades it's because we are in a global competition and the only wave to win is to be more capable than the others. ed: what else do you need to happen? what do you need in terms of a business environment? is it cutting more regulations? what about this tax deal we are trying to get in washington? what do you need? >> actually, all those things are diviewd. you know, national association of manufacturers says the program, infrastructure and tax reform. u.s. council same kind of thing. actually, we think the tone is the most important. what you're going to get out of washington depends on political capital in the congress and so on. if the president says that he is going to emphasize jobs, he will make no decision, every decision will be to the benefit on trade, on takes, on foreign affairs to the benefit of american workers and american families, this is like music to the ears of manufacturers across the country dry. >> critics saying all flash. >> that releases animal spirits. national association of manufacturers, great oirgs, 14,000 manufacturers, they do a survey, 6% of manufacturers today are optimistic. 53% just several months ago. so this is a very positive thing. the thing we need though, i think, from the president, which is the most important, we believe the american strength is rooted in the ability to make things and fix things. and part of the problem today is the respect for those jobs is in eclipse. the respect for the dignity of work is in ellipse. we view them as the consolation prize of our society. if we can get our leaders to set the tone that they're not the consolation prize but always been american calling chug will deliver from us easel, this is the seminole issue of our time that will deliver us. ainsley: i love to hear story. i know you worked for the company 14 years. you worked your way up to 14 years. before that you were with carrier: saving jobs. you have been on the floor. you know what manufacturing is like. you have gotten your hands dirty. what does the american worker, the manufacturer want next from president trump? >> respect. i think one of the things i do believe -- we spent the election week on the floor of our plant, great people, salt of the earth people meeting best toolboxes in the country. i would say they have learned in some ways same maybe not so complimentary things about working men and women in new york is the last politically correct form of bigotry. the idea. steve: who is bad mouthing the american worker. >> i think people say things like, you know, they kind of dismiss them like you need a four year degree to find the american dream. people are writing books say the american dream is slipping away. because that's because they redefined the american dream, you have got done ceo or attorney 230er7 appearing core. its would always bull keeping your feesm warm and safe and drive and having pride and dignity. i assure you if you have the ability to keep your family warning and safe and dry and dignity exists on the floor of the. steve: that's the plant my mom worked at. ainsley: have you seen sales go up. >> tomorrow. therefore, i can't comment on that. snap-on has been in a reasonably decent trend. ainsley: it was smart. you had all the tools up there on the stage. >> those tools are like jewels. american steel made by american workers put in the hands. ed: wonderful american company with ties to the doocy family. steve: thank you for coming to new york for us. >> thank you. ainsley: british prime minister theresa may trying to get more support for brexit. former brexit leaderboard nigel farage going to join us to talk about what his role in brexit 2.0 will be. steve: sarah palin has a bone to pick with liberal senator elizabeth warren. why the former governor of alaska said she is copying me. ♪ all fired up ♪ all fired up ♪ all fired up. i never miss an early morning market. but with my back pain i couldn't sleep or get up in time. then i found aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. and now. i'm back! aleve pm for a better am. did you know slow internet 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britain would join the united states if there are more air strikes against mr. assad? >> >> well, i wouldn't be very keen and i don't think the british population would be very keen after all we have lived through iraq war. we have lived through the libyan war. we lived through the idea that we changed regime in these countries so that things become better and actually in many cases we have seen things get worse. so i would personally not be for the british joining them with this. >> you are more a diplomatic guy and although have you got your foreign secretary, yourselves for foreign and commonwealth affairs boris johnson, he called on russia to end its blind support of mr. assad. but, you know what? a lot of people have asked that for a while and nothing has happened. >> no. you know. russia is not going to change its policy overnight. that simply isn't going to happen. and boris johnson is continuing with what has been british foreign policy now for nearly two decades which is one of constant interventionism in this region. i'm one of those voices and i believe actually the majority of the public is saying let's just think this through. what is the strategy here? if we get rid of assad, you know, through military action, what comes next. nobody, noble has answered that question for me. steve: yesterday, theresa may, your prime minister called for a snap election in a number of weeks. educate us a little bit, nigel. what is a snap election and what is she hoping to get out of deal? >> okay. well, we normally have general elections once every five years or. so prime ministers traditionally have always had the power, the prerogative to call an election at a time of their choosing. so she has called this election for june the 8th. it's just six weeks away from now. and there is a little bit of work in the house of commons to get that approved so it will be. we are having what we call a snap general election without much warning. she is doing it because she is 20 points ahead of the labor party in the machine polls. virtually, unless she does something, catastrophically stupid, she is in a completely unassailable position. she will win the election. she will validate her position because don't forget she took over from david cameron. the public never really had a chance to say v. a say about that. and from a political perspective i completely understand why she is doing it. steve: absolutely. because ultimately she hopes to gain more seats this parliament and more power as well. what's curious, nigel, is the fact that before the election on whether or not to exit the eu, she was against it. now she is for it the ultimate politician. >> well, she has been against brexit for the whole career. i have appeared and argued with her. i have argued with her on television programs on this point. she was a staunch remainer she appears to be a convert and says she is fighting this general election because she wants to have a strong mandate to negotiate with brussels. for the moment, the public will believe that. who knows in a couple of years' time how they will feel. but, she, you know, she gives the impression of being a convert, yes. steve: okay. what about you, nigel. you know, people in this country love your commentary. what about over there? any possibility you might actually dip your toe back in though politics. >> well, i'm not sure right now. i'm thinking about it. i have got about another 48 hours to make my decision. i will could run for the u.k. parliament. but equally, i'm still the leader of a group in the european parliament. i'm only euro scepght particular to have a fronts row seat in the european parliament where ultimately there will be a veto over the brexit process. i have got a way up. how can i most influence this? do i do it in the building behind me or i do do it in the european parliament? i will make that decision probably tomorrow. steve: all right. well, let us know. knife zelpha rawj joining us from london. sir, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: all right. mean while, we we have known about wait time problems for years but no plan to approve it until now. a plan for our heroes coming up next. will republicans will able to get healthcare and tax reform through by the end of the year? we'll talk to that man if he ever comes in the studio. that's right. senator lindsey graham with ainsley. now he is about to shake hands with ed henry. ♪ every girl's crazy about a sharp dressed man ♪ a breakthrough medicine that can help make more tomorrows possible. tomorrow, i want to see teddy bait his first hook. in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto was proven to help more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine, don't take entresto. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high potassium in your blood. tomorrow, i'm gonna step out with my favorite girl. ask your doctor about entresto. and help make the gift of tomorrow possible. kevin, meet yourkeviner. kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin trusted advice for life. kevin, how's your mom? life well planned. see what a raymond james financial advisor can do for you. it's a performance machine. of engineering... with this degree of intelligence... it's a supercomputer. with this grade of protection... it's a fortress. and with this standard of luxury... it's an oasis. the 2017 e-class. it's everything you need it to be...and more. lease the e300 for $549 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. steve: a fox news alert for you. all eyes on the great state of georgia yesterday. the sixth district if the republican could make sure that the democrat didn't get to 50%, there would be a runoff. karen handle got 20%. jon ossoff got just under 50 so there will be a runoff down in the suburbs of atlanta. ainsley: there were 11 republican candidates. now it's down to her. she is going to be the republican candidate and she is going to be the democrat candidate. it's one-on-one. we will see who wins on june 20th. south carolina senator from the great state of south carolina senator linked is i quadruple is lehr we have had a great year. national championship. > ed: what does it mean? >> had you price win by 27 points. trump win by a point and a half. he got basically clinton's vote. so the question is can karen builds coalition that tom price did? it's going to be hollywood vs. georgia. i like georgia's chances. and i'm going to that -- karen, i will come and help you if you think i can. steve: outside sources donated something like $8 million to his contest. but he did not live in his own district, which he ran -- >> -- is he supporting his girlfriend which is a great american value. he probably needs to move. the bottom line is i think it will be the liberal left versus mainstream georgia. i like her chances. she is probably the best candidate we could have chosen out of 11. she is a solid conservative that handles herself really well. important race. i. live in south carolina. things are changes in south carolina. it's a conservative place. things are changing in georgia. but the country is getting right of center not the right ditch, not the left ditch. ainsley: why is that legal to represent constituents you don't live with? >> it's georgia. ainsley: that's not fair. >> that's a carolina joke. ed: let's talk about getting things back on track. president had healthcare defeat trying to put it back together. a tax reform deal is he trying to put together. all of a sudden treasury secretary saying it might take longer than expected. where are the issues. >> number one i think we dodged a bullet with healthcare. i'm not sure the house bill would have done much better fixing obamacare. probably obamacare light some people say. i would let it collapse because it will. poorly designed. i would tell the democrats you created this mess let me help you fix it i think republicans and democrats should work together to fix obamacare. that would be good. when it comes to taxes we better cut your tarkses or we will pay a price in 2018. if you can't get all republicans on board for a tax idea, then we're going to have to maybe marry it up with infrastructure. of course democrats will come to the dable on infrastructure. ainsley: you come back what day. >> we go back monday. ainsley: then you have to make sure the government doesn't shut down. >> that's right. ainsley: when do you take a recess for summer. >> this is good. we have got to fund the government. government shutdown bad. right? we have got to raise the debt ceiling. to default, bad. we going to do all that cut your taxes reform healthcare and everybody in your business gets breathless about the pace of things. only thing anybody will remember in 2018 and 2020 is did we do good or not. so i want a tax bill that will help the economy. i want to reform healthcare and n. a way that's better than obamacare. i don't have a guideline other than gettin getting it right. ainsley: american people do have a deadline with all due respect. people are wondering why you are taking so much time off. >> time off? ainsley: yeah. >> a lot of people are glad we are not in session. ainsley: we are hearing tax reform might not happen by august. now we are hearing it might not be august. >> it doesn't matter whether it's august this year or next year. ainsley: it does to the american people and taxpayers. >> what matters is do we improve the tax code at home. are your taxes lower. do you have have more wages coming into your paycheck? is there more money in your pocket are the costs going down or going up? this is the big stuff to president trump. take your time. ed: big stuff on world stage. big national security challenges. north korea, syria. now iran under the radar last night. >> yeah. ed: media narrative has been rex tillerson is this accidental bumbling secretary of state. he put together a pretty strong letter last night. >> i'm like the happiest dude in america right now. we have got a president and a national security team that i have been dreaming of for 8 years. so, in 80 days he has done more to correct the world, president trump, than obama did in 8 years. we second a letter to our good budding ayatollah. knock it off. you have iranian nuclear deal you may be complying with it but you are the largest state sponsor of terrorism. you captured our sailors against international law, humiliated them. you are firing missiles in violation. even the russians voted for. so we are putting you on notice. if you continue this behavior, we're going to reimpose sanctions for state sponsor s&p of terrorism. all the upheaval you are response sin for outside of the agreement. to me that has been music to my ears. iran is running through the middle east. they are toppling every government they can get heir hands on. north korea, if i were kim jong un, whatever his name is, i would listen to mike pence. the fact that the vice president of the united states went to the dnc, looked across the way and said we're watching you, donald trump is not going to let this nut job in north korea get a missile to hit america. and if i were north korea and china, i would start thinking anew about the president of the united states. steve: before you go, about a year ago, you and donald trump were great friends. now he is president of the united states. what's your relationship like. >> he calls. i'm really pleased what he has done to rebuild our military. to restore our cut taxes and reform healthcare. he has the best national security team i have seen since i have been in government. i am all in. keep it up, donald. i'm sure you're watching. don't let these guys talk you out of being tough because you need to be tough. ainsley: do you want to get him back right now? do you want to release his cell phone number. >> oh, no. he is in the books. white house. ed: lindsey graham is the happiest dude in america. >> i have a commanders and chief taking the fight to our enemies. nobody wants a war. but i'm telling you right now you cannot allow syri sir north korea to get a political to hit the home land. iran and russia need to be put back in a box. mr. president you are doing a good job. rebuild the military and use it wisely. steve: very good. lindsey graham, thank you. ainsley: thank you, senator. thanks for representing south carolina, too. go gamecocks. steve: representing us with the headlines now is abby huntsman. abby: senator, always good to have you with us in person. we appreciate that. start with the newest supreme court justice neil gorsuch about to get first big test. oral arguments begin high profile test on religious freedom. money to resurface playground with chopped tire places. missouri law bands government aid to schools with religious connections. for veterans getting healthcare it could be as simple as driving to local cvs. cvs's minute nic clinic pairing up to offer treatment for minor illnesses and injuries with minimum wait time. not part of the choice program 30 days by providers. 's unclear when this will be available across the country. sarah palin is blasting elizabeth warren for stealing her line. the senator from massachusetts tweeting this. fight like a girl while promoting her new book even saying it in npr interview. >> i saw this little girl and she was riding on her daddy's shoulders and she is holding this up sign and the sign said i fight like a girl. and i thought me too, sweety. abby: that is a phrase that palin says she coined back in 2011. take a look at this. >> if we should be suggesting to g.o.p. leaders they need to learn to fight like a girl. former governor of alaska not happy about warren ripping her line i don't know breitbart coming from liberals who claim victimization fight like a girl just doesn't sound the same as when legit fighters fight for equality. say it, mean it, live it and never give it up. those are your headlines this morning. back to you guys. steve: some straight talk. thank you. ainsley: thanks, abby. steve: time for heather. ainsley: hand it over adam klotz. adam: very spring like feel as we are seeing temperatures beginning to fall in several areas. spring like conditions including that pollen that's still hanging in the air. we are lo looking at moderate to high levels across the country. atlanta, georgia where maybe a little bit of rain is going to make that a little bit better for you. out in colorado very high numbers. spring in session. we have seen 4r5069 rain and causing this. quickly looking at rain showers across the country. mid-atlantic heavy rain stretching down into the southeast, the carolinas and also tracking a big system moving towards the midwest. we could see some severe thunderstorms, maybe a tornado before the day is over there guys? steve: adam, thank you very much for the pollen count. i'm feeling it. ainsley: yeah, you are. steve: absolutely. ed: another example of olbermann ear are a regulations crippling. a fran chifs who says we need drowmp figure out 21st sen trif. pizza. say cheese ♪ hey, you ♪ get off of my cloud ♪ hey, you ♪ get off of my cloud we cut the price of trades to give investors even more value. and at $4.95, you can trade with a clear advantage. fidelity, where smarter investors will always be. steve: let's talk regulations. according to dominoes pizza they have over 34 million different pizza combinations you can order. 34 million. ed: is that right? might be 34 million regulations coming from the affordable care act. dominoes and other chain restaurants will soon be required to display calorie counts for each one of those combos, those 34 million combos inside each store. ainsley: what does this mean for franchise owners? joining us is chris wright he owns 10 tom knows stores. is this possible? 34 million, who are you did youing to put the calorie counts of those up. >> that's what we are running into. franchises across the country looking at things have to have a book at the counter listing. you have to have a calculator for people to calculate. ed: if you do pineapple ham. >> or change the pizza sauce. steve: chris, you order online. have you got the app. and dial up what you want and that gives you the number, right? >> correct. that's what we are looking for. we are looking for donald trump and administration to strike this down. because this law goes in to effect may 5th. we are fast approaching that deadline. steve: one of the things is if the person behind the peperoni counter puts on 25 rear than 12, that's going to double the amount of peperoni calories, isn't it? >> correct. the way the law is currently written, if we display a calorie count for a pizza and one of our employees were to put too much cheese or too many peperoni on the pizza they could face heavy fines and up to a year in jail. ainsley: get some investigative reporter who takes it home and ah-ha they are lying to us. steve: lock them up. >> not to mention opening the door for lawsuits and everything else e. ed: that's absurd enough. what about the impact on people who just want to have a slice of pizza. too many calories. >> 90% of our consumers, via the internet. they order on smart phone. we already have calorie counts completely available for consumers. there was a page and a half of legislation in obamacare that was taken by the f.d.a. and made into 100 pages of legislation including the fines and jail time. and throughout that process, we just want common sense. we just want a common sense, 21st century solution to a 21st century problem. ainsley: there have to be exception. i understand if you are choosing between thune salad and chick pea salad and you are on a diet and want fewer. on pizza we always do it sunday night after we have eaten healthy the whole week and want comfort food. do you care about the calories? steve: the government does, ainsley. uncle sam. >> yeah, exactly. this is the type of thing where the government just keeps taking it one step farther and one step farther. we really need to back off delay this legislation. take a look at it and come up with a common sense approach. ainsley: do you know who is going to pay the price? we are. as a business owner you will pass the cost on to us. >> exactly. across the country this is going to cost franchise sees like myself 3 to 4 to $5,000 per store to become compliant. throw away all of our current marketing material. that's another thing, the definition of what a men you've is has changed. so anything that has a picture of a pizza, a method to order and a price is now considered a menu. ainsley: i can't wait any longer. ed: lexington, kentucky. ainsley: thank you very much. >> thank you very much. steve: look at that. ainsley: john, you need to give him more now. steve: how many calories in that pizza? conservative professor who ignored trigger warnings in safe spaces. now he could be fired by the schools' liberal leaders. he joins us live right after we finish this sausage and peperoni ♪ turning out the same ♪ so put me on a highway ♪ and show me a sign ♪ and take it to the limit ♪ one more time ♪ 30 minutes. and it works on my symptoms, too. now moments lost to migraines are moments gained with excedrin. [heartbeat] it's league night!? 'saved money on motorcycle insurance with geico! goin' up the country. bowl without me. frank.' i'm going to get nachos. snack bar's closed. gah! ah, ah ah. ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. ♪ ainsley: popular conservative professor at ucla is on the verge of being forced out of his job. it's because he hasn't been pandering to his liberal university's idea of what free speech is. professor keith fink says that he is under scrutiny for telling it like it is. >> they used the law. they abused the law. they twist the law. they will sent out emails which either kill speech that they don't like or they actually punish students that run afoul of these types of policies.form to their liberal ideology. ainsley: joining me now to share his side of the story is attorney and ucla professor keith fink. good morning, professor, thanks for joining us. >> good morning. thanks for having me on. ainsley: you are welcome. we just saw a clip with you on with tuckner february. i watched the entire interview. at first he thought you were tenure. you said no i'm lecturer. that says you are even more brave to come out because if you are tenured you can't lose your job. are you worried about losing your job at ucla? >> no. i'm not worried about it i have a very vibrant and exciting law practice. i'm not worried about it from a financial standpoint. i'm an alumnus. i have a deep connection to the school itself. and unfortunately i have no kids of my own. the most important thing in my life is my students. i have a very strong bond with my students. i believe i'm a very important and beneficial factor in their lives. and so it would hurt me not to be able to help these young people. ainsley: so you definitely have a strong bond with your students. i know students can't even get in to your class until they are seniors because they have first dibsz. your class fills up quickly. one student said she tried and tried for four years still couldn't get. in finally goes to your class for the first day to get a pte. she hands that to you. you say yes you can join my class. she had to get special permission and she was fill denied. what does ucla have against you? >> it's two fold. it's, one, i teach my classes in a manner which informs the students about their rights and empowers the students how to advocate for their rights, including taking legal measures against the school when their rights have been violated. that's one. secondly, the way i teach my class is i teach students both sides of an issue. so, for example, if they are hearing about title 9 and the fact of the claim that one in five women are raped on college campuses. i will go through the studies and the methodology for those studies and question whether or not that's statistic is valid. ainsley: professor, what if you were talking about -- what if you were a liberal and had you voted for hillary clinton and you were talking about that in your class, how do you think the university would have responded. >> well, i'm actually going to talk about hillary clinton tonight because tonight i'm teaching about sexual harassment. and part of it is i will go over the thomas anita hill discussion, which was a shameful event, i think, in our history and compare that with bill clinton in the number of women. but i think what is interesting on this ucla and political correctness run amuck is just within the last six weeks, on our campus, a number of speakers have either been disinvited, and heather mcdonald. ainsley: that's all the time we have now, professor. i'm sorry to cut you off. that's all the time we have. i wish you the best. please keep us posted and we'll continue to tell our voters. stay with us. karen handle joining us next. what's the best way to get two servings of veggies? v8 or a fancy juice store? ready, go! hi, juice universe? one large rutabaga, with eggplant... done! that's not fair. glad i had a v8. the original way to fuel your day. ...it shouldn't be whateverfleas and ticks. home... no, no no no no... seresto® kills and repels fleas and ticks for 8 continuous months - for effective protection in an easy-to-use, non-greasy collar. 8-month seresto®. from bayer. ♪ your insurance company won't replace the full value of your totaled new car. ♪ call for a free quote today. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. >> breaking overnight, a runoff in georgia. >> it's going to be hollywood versus georgia. i like georgia's chance. trump: we're going to defend our workers, protect our jobs, and finally put america first. >> the president says that he's going to emphasize jobs. this is like music to the ears of manufacturers across the country. >> aaron hernandez has just been found dead in his prison cell, the massachusetts department of correction says that he handing himself early this morning. >> 39-year-old man out of california. cory ali muhammad shot and killed three people in perez no. he reportedly yelled. >> he was inspired by isis or one of these other islamic extremist groups. >> we are under attack by people who hate us, hate our freedoms, hate our laws, hate our values. >> called the unicorn frappuccino. what do you think? it tastes like a drink a little girl would love. >> it tastes like magic. >> yes. that's right. it tastes like magic. ♪ ♪ steve: it did kind of taste magical. ainsley: a cup of magic and sparkles. steve: so if you've been watching the last two hours and two manipulates, we already had the unicorn frappuccino. brian: and dominoes. steve: and dominoes. meanwhile, if you were watching tv yesterday, particularly a news story, you know the number one story in the political universe was the sixth district of georgia. would the rapport democrat win more than 50%? nobody really thought the republican would, but they thought the democrat, the man you see left appropriately john who pumped $8 million, mainly of out of state money into the race. he fell short of an outright victory, which means now we're heading for a runoff. >> that's funny because the media was building him up as the trump slayer. he's going to bring down the president. even if he won last night, it was not really going to matter mathematically in the balance of power and the house it's going to be one little seat. important but not going to be a trump slayer and turns out he did not reach 50%. ainsley: we asked both of them to come on the show and the one who accepted the invitation was republican. congratulations. you're now going to the runoff. how did you feel last night when these results were coming in? >> great. it was very exciting. very enthusiastic. the republicans were all going to come together so we can make sure this seat stays in the hand of a republican. steve: okay. we know that yesterday donald trump hit with a furious counterattack. he did a robocall for you. he put out a couple of tweets, and this morning if you will allow me, you actually tweeted back to the president. you said thank you, donald trump, for the call this morning. #ga6. georgia 6. how important was it to have donald trump help you yesterday? >> you know, it was really important as we come into the final hours yesterday of voting forth start to be some coalescing around the candidate, and that happened, and i was very grateful for that push. it got a lot of republicans to the polls so that people really understood what was at stake. >> well, and, karen, it's interesting because last night your opponent made it sound like he already won. listen to this. >> i know it has been a long evening, and it looks like it may be a longer one. but let me tell you this. there is no doubt that this is already a victory for the ages. we will be ready to fight on and win in june if it is necessary. and there is no amount. this is not a story about me. this is a story about this community at this moment in history. this is a story about women in this community. ainsley: what does he know about women in that community? you are a woman who lives in that community, he doesn't even live in the district. steve: i was going to say. what does he even know about the community and the district because he doesn't even vote here. steve: so, karen, as you look towards the runoff, how do you unite the republicans? because there were 11 different republicans running in this primary yesterday. 18 candidates in all. he wound up with close to 50%. he was almost there. you wound up with 20. but how do you unite the republicans so you can win? >> you know, that's already started. i talked to most of the republicans last night or this morning, so we all know what's at stake, and we understand that this district has a long legacy of republican leadership from secretary tom price to senator johnny isaacson, former speaker newt gingrich, so we know what's at stake here is bigger than any one person that we will unite, and this seat will be held in the hand of a republican come june 20th. >> karen, what about the fact that the democrat candidate had $8 million powder in with a large majority of it outside from the district, a lot from hollywood and endorsements and money. but he's accusing you on accepting, quote, unquote, dirty money. steve: dark money. >> that was ironic in his comments there. look, 95% of john's funds came from outside of the state of georgia. the vast majority of it from california, new york, massachusetts. he is not an individual from this district. aligned with this district, and i am absolutely confident that as we go to the voters and show that that's contrast between this young, inexperienced individual compared to the track record and the public service and the results that i've given to this sixth district, i will prevail. ainsley: you have to hand it to the democrats for putting all their money behind one candidate whereas you had to divide or the votes were divided among the republican party among 11 of you guys. but now it is down to two people. one republican and one democrat, which is a fair race. what's the difference between you if your constituents are watching, you and your running -- or the democrat john? >> we have very different values, very different life experiences, and very, very different experience. i have a track record, a proven track record of getting things done for the people of the sixth district as a former county commission chairman, as a former secretary of state. i have life experiences where i've had to overcome real adversity, and that helps you grow as a person and makes you stronger and resilient, and i am ready to take on this challenge and show the contrast between the two of us, and i am absolutely confident that the people of the sixth district want a strong, independent-minded conservative as their next congressman. steve: well, i'm sure you were watching television yesterday and mainstream media pretty much made it seem like this was the single most important election of our lifetime that of the democrat should get over 50% because they felt like it was -- would be a referendum on donald trump, who won in novas president of the united states and now a couple of months later people are having buyers remorse. what do you make of that narrative that your election was a referendum on the current president? >> you know, i think that the press and the democrats, the mainstream media really wanted it to be about that. but for the people of the sixth district, it has always been about who will be best served and who has the value to align with the sixth district to serve them most effectively in congress as their next congressmen. >> well, karen, the media. a lot of democrats have got the election wrong last november. they seem to maybe call this race wrong. what did the president say to you this morning. steve mentioned your tweet. you thanked announcement phone call. what did he say and do you want the president to come visit the district? >> the president was beyond gracious and encouraging, and i appreciated it so much. and he specifically talked about strength under pressure, and i was grateful for that as well. as we come into june 20th over the next two months, we need every single republican quick we can be get, including the president, to be coalesced and united as we come into fighting with what's going to be -- it will be a tough race because the democrats are going to pour so much money. now, it's not going to be from georgia. it's going to be, again, from all around the country but at least this time, republicans, we're united, and we're going to keep this seat. ainsley: real quick, for those who aren't familiar with georgia, what cities are in the sixth district? >> sandy springs, my hometown, milton, tucker, and brookhaven. and east cob. steve: next up, the runoff. karen, the republican winner from last night, she'll square off against john in june. karen, thank you very much. >> thank you so much. appreciate it. steve: we do have that. >> a lot of news breaking this morning starting with this one. former new england patriots star and convicted killer erin hernandez is dead. the massachusetts corrections say he handing himself in his prison cell early this morning. no note was found and there were no signs that he was suicidal. he was just acquitted of double murder on friday, but i was serving a life sentence without payroll for killing semi football player back in 2013. he's dead at age 27. and to a fox news alert, police say he screamed allah akbar but this morning they're not calling it terrorism. >> this is solely based on race. and it has nothing to do with terrorism, in spite of the statements he made. >> admits the targeting and killing three white men in a two-minute shooting spree. his social media post now under investigation like this one where he praises the natural disaster striking america again saying alluahu akbar. and the hunt for the facebook killer, an employee recognizing steve stevens while organized chicken nuggets in pennsylvania. workers stalling him until police could get there saying that his fridays were not ready yet. >> very minimum, i can tell you it was terrorist-inspired. you know, i looked at this guy's facebook post before they took it down and check it out, this is one of the posts that he had actually written. he said they will continue to bring destruction and wrath upon america. those are the words right out of isis playbook. >> well, police pulling out right behind steven's car just seconds later. stevens, who filmed the execution of an innocent man and then taking his own life during that dramatic chase. also this morning, former president george w. bush is back in the hospital with a mild case of pneumonia, the 92-year-old was admitted on friday for a bad cough. he's being treated in the same houston hospital where a serious case of pneumonia landed him, he is in good spirits, manuel hospitalized until he regains his strength. and his wife right by his side. >> wishing him well. congresswoman maxine waters has made a name for herself by making outlandish statements like this. >> i will fight every day until he is in peace. impeach 45. >> wait. i think she said impeach 45. but now she says -- you heard her wrong. she never, ever called for impeachment. steve: never. and of course what does donald trump's buy american, hire american mean for you? stuart varney who is an american joins us live next from studio e. ainsley: president trump making good on a another campaign promise with hiring more workers with the executive order, which he snapped on in wisconsin and the ceo joined us earlier to what this means for them. >> emphasizing the essential nature of american manufacturing for our way for there and bringing i guess a spotlight to the need to upscale americans. upscale american workers. we think at snap on, this is the seminal issue of our time because we're engaged in a global competition for jobs. steve: so what impact does the president's action have american workers? >> let's ask the one and only "varney & company" on fox business network. stuart varney. stuart: okay. well, you asked a question what does this mean for american workers? let's not give a dollars and cents answer. i think what the president is trying to do is restore the dignity of people who work with their hands. they've been denigrated for a couple of generations. i mean, your snap-on tools gentleman who was on this show earlier today about an hour ago. he said, look, would have been taught that you have to have a four-year college degree to acquire and get into the american dream. that is nonsense. that's denigrating people who work with their hands. wants to reverse that. he's going to go for more vocational schools, and he's saying they're good jobs. we need more welders and electricians, and it's good work. not to be denigrated. ainsley: americans love to hear that, don't they? our show today, we had dominoes pizza guy on talking about calories on the menu and how people just want to eat their pizza. this guy, the ceo saying people love to build stuff. they want to see what their hands have done. stuart: yes, it reminds me of europe. i'm a refugee of europe and the class system. in europe, they look down on people who work with their hands. the working class. that is a pejorative term, and it has crept into american society, and i don't like it. >> let's talk taxes because we're hearing various signals from the treasury secretary, from the president. where are we? >> well, i think there's an interesting new development. i see republicans and advisers to happen coalescing around a much similar tax reform. instead of rewriting the entire tax code, it seems like they want to go for something that is doable, and that would be an immediate and rerapid cut in the corporate tax rate. that they think is doable. you can get this through congress, there's support amongst democrat for this. it would bring in a lot of the money that's parked overseas and some of the republicans wanted to use this to fund infrastructure programs. that's how you get the democrat vote. steve: so with the corporate tax, it would go from what? 35% to -- stuart: 15 or 20%. a sizable cut. >> if you get that done, maybe you build momentum for the rest of the package. stuart: yes, and you can do it, you see. if you want to go for a huge are he write of the tax code, very, very difficult in this environment. but if you go for a narrowly focused cut in corporate tax rate, get things moving, get business moving, that's doable, that's more like. ainsley: you know what that means? we're going to see more made in america if that happens. stuart: one can hope. >> more of this. stuart: oh, yeah. lots of it. steve: meanwhile, could there be terrorists in your backyard? the disturbing answer is coming up. ainsley: plus, he lost his legs on the battlefield. >> i remember, you know, hearing in my radio device, my men talking about me and calling my call sign. eod is hit. eod is down. ainsley: but he wasn't done serving our country. congressman's incredible story is next kevin, meet your father. kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin trusted advice for life. kevin, how's your mom? 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steven stevens while organized chicken nuggets in eerie, pennsylvania. workers then stalling him until police could get there saying his fries, they weren't ready yet. >> just told him it was going to be a minute for his fries, which it wasn't, really. we were just trying to make sure she got in contact with the state police, and he didn't want to wait for the fries, which was fine. he took his six piece and didn't want any money back and headed out. steve: but they had called the police and police pulled up right behind his car. seconds later, stevens who filmed that execution of an innocent man on easter then taking his own life during the dramatic chase. ainsley: even criminals got to eat; right. for some of those who served our country, the call to duty still beckons after the service is over. >> and that is the case for 102 members of congress. steve: up first, florida congressman florida mast, cohost abby huntsman with more. abby: yeah, what a wonderful story. you have to hear his story. congressman mast, 115th congress after winning 57% of the vote in his home district. but many people don't know he started his career as a bomb technician in afghanistan where he lost both of his legs and still made the decision to continue serving h country in congress. take a look at this. >> i lost two legs and a finger disposing bombs trying to work for my country and my brothers in service. and that was completely palatable. i have zero regrets about it. >> in that moment for people who don't know, take us back. >> we came to a spot in the battlefield that was the only place we could get across the river. and i said if i can figure that out, any enemy can figure that out, they probably butt some bombs around there. so one of the snipers fell in this waterway, i went to step back and help pull our guy out of the water. and when i did that, wherever it is i turned and moved to, i found one of those devices exploded under my feet. i remember it very vividly tumbling me through the air, probably landed five or ten people from where i had been. i can remember being engulfed in this cloud of gust, and i could hear my radio device people talking about me. eod is hit, eod is down. they were talking about me. they loaded me onto a helicopter, and they gave me a salute, the men carrying my stretcher, and they said you're going to be okay. abby: from that moment, take us to the moment waking up here in dc. >> there had somebody i went to school with josh. i didn't know he was in the military. he found me and got me in contact with my wife, had an e-mail and picture of her and what was a six-month-old son at the time, and he taped it to the hospital gurney where my feet were supposed to be sticking up, and they weren't, and he did it so that the first thing that i would ever see would be my wife and my son. abby: what's going through your mind in that moment because you look down, and you realize you don't have legs. >> it's tough. you know, one of the things that was going through my mind was that i lost my purpose in my life, and it's when my father came to my bedside, and he looked at me and said, brian, you can't let this keep you down. you have to pull yourself up and get back to work. and that's what drove me to the other side of it saying it doesn't matter if i did lost that purpose of my life, i can still go out there, i can still regain that purpose and maybe it will be on another battlefield, and that's where i am today. >> thanks for coming today. see how the sausage is made in our office. >> yeah. get a sense of the day in your life. >> let's do it. i'm head of the committee. i wanted to be on the committee of transportation and infrastructure. work for the issues that are going on in my local community. not the federal government cleaning something up, the federal government is doing the damage, and we're working on a bill that essentially says the federal government shall do no harm. abby: even talk to 7th graders as part of your day. >> i do. signing with classes is a regular part of my week, usually one of the more fun things the week, try to get them involved and involved in the process. >> i encourage everyone to go out there and read the constitution" your 5 field son, he is having a ball. >> he is having a good time, and i am having a good time. children, family, most difficult part about this process. so what i try to do is bring the kids up here from time to time when i can. abby: do you want to go on the trolley? >> give me your hand. let's go. you know, you go into satch rather hall or some of the other places, you think of the history. how are you doing, sir? you doing all right? >> and you don't get two minutes of downtime. >> there's never any downtime. >> today you walk on the house floor. >> to take real action to end big tree. >> not a single moment from day to day minutia. but when you go out there and do something great for the people back home, for the country, for freedom, for standing up for the constitution, it makes every sacrifice worth it. steve: what a guy. >> you really get the sense that he cares. whether it's serving the military or now in congress, he wants to make a difference, and that was really nice to see. we don't see that often. steve: i love the fact that he is signing with kids in his congressional district. abby: and it's cute. the kids dressed up in suits and ties for the signing. he had his son maverick there, he has his hands full. but what an amazing family they are. and kudos to him. ainsley: walking down the hall with the cell phone in his mouth. abby: you should have seen the whole day, though. that was just a glimpse. ainsley: and after he came back, he talked about his wife and son meeting him at the hospital bed. he had two more children. abby: he had two more children. and i said what do you tell your children? and he said they know nothing else. i try to instill in them the story my dad instilled in me. steve: thank you, abby. ainsley: gunning down three people, so why are police calling it a hate crime? and. >> and maxine waters has made a name for herself. >> i will fight every day until he is impeached. impeach 45. impeach 45. >> wait. it now she says she never said impeach 45, although she just did. oops. safety isn't a list of boxes to check. it's taking the best technologies out there and adapting them to work for you. the ultrasound that can see inside patients, can also detect early signs of corrosion at our refineries. high-tech military cameras that see through walls, can inspect our pipelines to prevent leaks. remote-controlled aircraft, can help us identify potential problems and stop them in their tracks. at bp, safety is never being satisfied. and always working to be better. there's nothing more than my vacation.me so when i need to book a hotel room, i want someone that makes it easy to find what i want. booking.com gets it. they offer free cancellation if my plans change. visit booking.com. 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in this case, they're not calling it yet. >> right. this is the textbook definition of what i call fake news, steve. because if the news isn't going to robert what this guy said, what they're going to report is what they interpret the guy meant. then that's not real news. that's fake news. the guy hollered out himself, i'm talking muhammad here. he hollered out allahu akbar. the news needs to report exactly what he said. but what you know, steve? they need to be politically correct, and that's why they didn't report exactly what the guy said himself. steve: that's right. >> well, and, rod, it seems almost we were lucky that there were not more killed because this killer is out there saying i want to kill as many white people as possible. three is bad enough in the separate facebook killer story. he goes on facebook live, kills this one innocent man, and then starts driving to pennsylvania. he could have killed a whole lot more people, we're very, very lucky that those workers at the mcdonald's in eerie, pennsylvania put a stop to all of this. >> exactly. well, you know what? the cleveland shooter had plenty of ammunition, he had a weapon, he killed one innocent guy. now, with the fresno guy, by the way, he actually killed another person last week. so before, he killed the three. is on the defendant was a total of four. here's the bottom line, guys, with the guy -- the news not reporting this exactly what it was, if it walks like a duck, it talks like a duck, it acts like a duck, it's terrorism. and that's what we have here in fresno. ainsley: in your experience as a detective, are we seeing more and more shootings like this? >> no. we're seeing a lot more, and the reason we're seeing a lot more, ainsley, is because of the internet and media such as facebook giving these people a platform to get their message out. and that's why we're seeing an increase, i believe, in a lot of activity such as this on these social media platforms. steve: rod, i understand the fresno killer's father told the l.a. times that his son felt we were in the midst of a race war in this country. >> right. and that's what this guy believes. you know, they took his facebook page down, but i had an opportunity to look at his page. he had so many ravings on there about race and racism. you know, hate crimes go in both directions, guys. this is for one, a hate crime. he specifically targeted white males. white people can be subjected to hate crimes. hello. but at the same time, he also talked aboutal aakbar, and he also praised the killer in dallas, texas of those police officers. he called that person a hero. so i think it's pretty clear what we're dealing with here. thankfully with this new administration, the days of not calling it terrorism ended in 2017. steve: rod, thank you very much. >> thank you, guys. ainsley: abby has some headlines for us. >> good morning. i want to bring other headlines, vice president pence warning north korea not to test the united states, assuring our allies have a quote overwhelming and effective response to any use of weapons by the rogue nation. joining us earlier, congressman lindsey graham says the trump administration should be taken seriously. >> the fact that the vice president of the united states went to the dnc, looked across the way and said we're watching you. donald trump is not going to let this nut job in north korea get a missile hit in america. and if i were north korea or china, i would start thinking anew about the president of the united states. steve: sure. >> satellite images show volleyball being played at a nuclear test site. how strange is that? they're either on standby or trying to deceive us. and an illegal immigrant once protected under the dreamer act is suing president trump for being deported. lawyers for one say he was granted extended dhaka status until 2018. but homeland security says his status expired in 2016 and there's no record of a renewal. this comes as continues to tighten security at the border. attorney general jeff sessions will head down south to get a closer look at what's being done to protect americans. and congresswoman maxine waters apparently has a selected memory when it comes to president trump. take a listen. >> i have not called for impeachment. >> you said i'm going to fight every day until he's impeached. that's what you tweeted. >> yeah. but here's what i said. i said that we need the information. we need to connect the dots. we need the facts in order to do the impeachment. >> well, apparently, she forgot that she said this just days earlier at a tax rally in washington. >> i will fight every day until he is impeached. impeach 45. impeach 45. [chanting impeach 45] >> well, now she's saying that she never said that. we will leave it there. >> oh, boy. steve: there you go. >> like magic. your words just disappear. nightmare scenario meanwhile in the fight against terror. isis teaming up with al-qaeda. a man who has fought them up close and personal, the man who killed osama bin laden, rob o'neal next to weigh in. ainsley: and have you seen this? a wounded warrior completes the boston marathon on the prosthetic leg with a woman on his back. that woman is going to join us live coming up. pretty emotional if you haven't seen it yet. there it is. earning your cash back shouldn't be this complicated. yet some cards limit where you earn bonus cash back to a few places. and then, change those places every few months. enough with that! (echo) with quicksilver from capital one you've always earned unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, everywhere. welcome to unlimited. what's in your wallet? thithis is the new new york.e? think again. we are building new airports all across the state. new roads and bridges. new mass transit. new business friendly environment. new lower taxes. and new university partnerships to grow the businesses of tomorrow today. learn more at esd.ny.gov steve: this sounds like a nightmare scenario in the fight against terror. isis apparently gearing up to launch a new campaign teaming up with al-qaeda. so what would that mean for the u.s. if they did, in fact, join forces? let's talk to former navy steel rob o'neal, the man who took down osama bin laden. rob, good morning. >> good morning, steve, thank you for having me willing. steve: it wasn't that long ago that we heard isis and al-qaeda are competing. now they want to join forces? >> they came from the same background. they're both from islam. isis originated from al-qaeda in iraq, which is led by a man who pledge allegiance to osama bin laden for al-qaeda. they split up in 2014 just because of, you know, a kind of younger generation that wanted to establish -- isis was the first to establish the caliphate, which everyone has been trying to do. steve: right but in the last couple of days, united states has helped them shrink the caliphate. now they've got nowhere to go. >> now that isis -- they're being hit on both sides by shi'a-backed -- iraqi government, a lot of the curds, even some of the turks. they're getting hit on all sides, losing a lot of ground, so now it wouldn't hurt them to almost reunite with al-qaeda just because they -- they need something because they're getting squeezed right now. steve: it doesn't surprise you, does it? >> not at all. like i said, they come from the same background, the same ideology, and even a lot of -- even as far as pakistan what they're saying they need jihad and they can't have jihad without unity. you're seeing under president trump a coalition with jordanians, some of the saudis, hopefully some of the other stuff. and the united states, so it's in their best interest as well. steve: do you think they would split up duties? you, you're in charge of the online propaganda, you, you're in charge of the -- >> it almost seems that would be a no-brainer because there's a lot of social media constitute and al-qaeda is sort of better at the organization stuff as far as the troops. the weird will be do they side with the leader of al-qaeda, or do they agree to be equals as one pledge allegiance to the other? that's where it's going to be weird. the interesting thing, though, when you get down into africa, you have boa those that pledge allegiance to isis first. it will be a little bit more chaotic in the middle east, and they'll be able to do the sleeper cell-type hits but i don't think they'll advance where they are right now in iraq and syria. steve: and you think going forward, we're going to see more truck and knife attacks. >> no. doubt in my mind. it's going to happen here, that's do you know where i why i wish people could be more vigilant. you can shout out all the names you want this person in this country, people need to realize there are bad guys that don't like you because you don't believe what they think you should believe. they will get out of a truck and stab you. steve: president trump understands it. and a lot of this cabinet understands is and what they're going to do is be more hard-core because there's this willing blindness to not admit what the problem is. we're admitting what the problem is and we need to find out a lot of the places being are being radicalized. where are the mosques that are preaching hate? where are the prisons that preaching hate? a lot of people get radicalized in prison. we saw this guy yesterday in fresno. he killed three people. it was a hate crime, he yelled god is greater just because of something you can do. he was radicalized muslim. was he an isis soldier? they're going to say he was. but that's the dangerous kind of stuff that's happening right now. where are these people learning and why? it can be the truck or the knife. it's the bad ideology. where do they learn and ho& how do we stop it? steve: and now maybe they're joining forces. >> thank you for having me, steve. steve: now. have you seen this? a wounded warrior completes the boston marathon with a woman, his aid on his back. that veteran tells a story why she wound up on his back coming up. but first, let's check in with shannon. the woman who was in charge of the channel in 12 minutes. >> well, yes, along with bill. we're going to share. it's a power sharing agreement. all right. steve, well, it is on as you know in georgia as the up star democrat takes the stage republicans have held for decades. so what do the results say about president trump's first 100 days? we'll talk to the chair of the rnc when she joins us live. plus, dire new warnings of homegrown terrorism. congressman pete king will be here to talk about the latest threats. pence says the sword stands ready. so who's a primary target of that message? and a major religious freedom case takes center stage the supreme court with a brand that you justice. we'll see you at the top of the hour when you have allergies, it can seem like triggers pop up everywhere. luckily there's powerful, 24-hour, non-drowsy claritin. it provides relief of symptoms that can be triggered by over 200 different allergens. live claritin clear. tech: when your windshield trust safelite autoglass.. our exclusive trueseal technology means a strong, reliable bond. at safelite, we stand behind our work... because the ones you love, sit behind it. (parents whisper jingle) safelite repair, safelite replace. we have large quantities of excitement. goodbye. ♪ thrivent mutual funds. managed by humans, not robots. before investing, carefully read and consider fund objectives, risks, charges and expenses in the prospectus at thriventfunds.com. ainsley: that video right there viewed more than 8.4 million times on facebook capturing the very moment that one of our wounded veterans not only completes the boston marathon on a prosthetic leg, as you can see, but he's also carrying his running guide. here to share the story is retired army staff sergeant. thank you so much, first of all, serving our country. you lost your left leg serving for us, sack fifing so much. and then we saw that video. can you believe it has gotten more than 8 million views? >> unbelievable video. i had no idea it would go that viral. i had run down all of that energy, the boston marathon, i was, like, let me pick you up and carried right over the finish line. i didn't know it would turn like this. steve: we didn't know the story. if she was injured or anything. we understand that you kept cramping up during the race. but stopping was not an option for you, was it? >> no. i mean, my two -- around mile ten, i kept cramping over and over. i would go to a med tent and the last med tent, i realized there would be no help in this. so i just kept walking. >> we can see your spirit and courage, tell us a little bit about about your service and how you lost your leg. >> nine year national guard veteran, and i did tours in bottom bottoms knee aand iraq. i lost two of my buddies, sergeant derrick colin and scott, and i could say i just got lucky, and i'm grateful. and it's guys like those who i do these athletic events for just to show the world we can battle these events together. ainsley: was that your first marathon? >> that was my first time running the marathon. i've biked boston on the path three years. but what made me want to run this marathon this year is -- lastiary when i biked it, i was waiting at the finish line with my buddy, an both double leg amputees, and i watched them cross the finish line and stefan said to me, you're going to run this with me; right? and i did now. steve: you do have ruck races where you carried. had you run it out ahead of time where you were going to pick her up in the last 100 yards or so, or was it one of the spur of the moment things where you're so excited and so thrilled to be actually finishing the race, you just picked her up? >> kind of a spur of the moment thing. we talked about it a little bit but in the moment running down, i thought we would come in together, and i said nope. we're going to end this with a little flare. ainsley: why do you know how long picture means so much to all of us americans? >> four years ago our nation came under attack from a terrorist threat or terrorist attack, and i tell you what. seeing the resiliency in the city of boston, that historic moment four years ago, that tragedy, i just want to if anything with the american flag flying in the wind just like it was when we were crossing that finish line, i want to show this nation that we can learn to pick ourselves up, go through any tragedy, and the divide that we are doing against each other. this is a great nation, and we will overcome anything together. whether it's a terrorist attack that has divided this nation, you know? if i can take anything out of this moment, that's what i want to show this country. steve: well, you did. it is so inspirational. made history in boston a couple of days ago. earl thank you sop. >> thank you. >> wow. steve: what a way for end the show. >> yeah. more fox and friends straight ahead. 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