number of migrant kids remained in custody but the biden teams are still not calling the situation, sandra, a crisis. john: griff jenkins is live near the border in el paso for us where we do expect to hear from a group of lawmakers a short time from now. the microphone is set up. i had a fat, you are on the ground they are. what have those lawmakers been seeing? hey, sandra and john, how are you? the leaders which by the way includes congressman tony gonzalez and el paso as part of his district. what you can see behind me, the press conference is waiting to begin after the tour and the visit, the briefing to lawmakers are getting. they started at the el paso central processing center resources told me they are at or near hitting their capacity levels right around us today or tomorrow, certainly this week. then come up they are going to go up to what is called monument three and get an overview briefing, a briefing and an overview of the high points. you can see here as w
if that s the case listen. it s hard to get people to speeding tickets to come court. you think you re going do catch somebody committing a crime and let them go and tell them to come back to court and they re quoi going to come back? according to statistic the, reverend, 75% of them would. what statistics? where are you getting this from? the ones that are listen. you can t put out by the justice department. okay. what you re telling me is this. trying to sneak into the country illegally. you asked what statistics. the ones put out by the department of justice. anderson, you sneak into this country illegally. and you get ignoring that? they let you loose in this country illegally and take you on your good faith word to show up to court. to do what? get deported? come on now. i m telling you the k department of justice you can say come on now, all you want. the department of justice says 75% return. 75% of the ones that they re aware of. you can t
neighborhood, people will bring their own cameras. the outside cameras will whip out their cell phone cameras, try to capture a confrontation on camera and put it on youtube for the world to see. i think we re going to see a lot more of that kind of campaigning, gorilla-style campaigning, this year than we ve seen in the past with the advent of all this new technology that allows the average citizens to engage in that. megyn: you can learn a lot about a candidate in a moment like that, perhaps even more than in an event like tonight which is very formal and structured, and sort of catch somebody off guard, sometimes you see i guess more of what they really are, so those moments are interesting, which is why we show them when they come in, steve hayes, we ll also be watching the more formal exchanges tonight. we look forward to seeing you there. thank you very much, sir. thanks megyn. megyn: folks, do not miss tonight s debate, it is cosponsored by fox news, washington examiner and io
they do catch somebody, they might just simply throw them out of the housing complex? yes. yeah. i heard that, too. that s exactly what they plan on doing. why isn t jail an option for these people? i mean, it should be the minimum. they attacked first responders and they did it for sport. sure. if they can catch somebody and say, ok, we ll kick you out because you did that, they should also kick them out and charge them as well, right? yeah, absolutely. give them a new home. take them out of the housing complex and put them in a jail cell. that s a disgusting story. radio talk show host at wls, blow torch of the midwest. thanks for joining us live today. thanks, steve. you bet. that s bad. that is bad. crazy. you don t need to live there. you don t even need to visit to get a gun permit from utah. so applications for these permits have hit a record number. that s a good thing for pro gun activists. critics call it dangerous. that is next. and ever wish you had more tha
heather: they are saying his company could make a lot of money off of relationships with china and other nations as a result of the real estate. how did they handle something like that? that is the real issue in politics today with the federal government, a $4 trillion enterprise that spends a lot of money and many trillions of dollars more with their policies, which is due the families of people in power benefit unfairly from the decisions they make and they are privy to? trump promises he will make clear when he holds his first press conference in july he will make clear how he and his family are going to separate themselves, divorce themselves from the possibility of these sort of conflicts of interest. that s a big task when you think about how entangled, how involved the businesses are. we will wait and see. heather: let s talk about the confirmation hearing this week, the democrats are bowing to delay these things, they don t have the votes to kill any of the nominees. they