bills. bringing down household costs and fighting the climate crisis. what they are doing right now trying to win a couple votes at the margin not going to help anyone. bouncing ball to third. picked by brickman. the astros have a world series no-hitter. iit. [cheers and applause] steve: as you look live at our studio audience another broken egg cafe in gilbert, arizona, happy to be on america s number one cable morning news show fox & friends for this very special thursday before the tuesday when they start counting the votes. finally. welcome aboard, folks. ainsley: on the thursday before the tuesday. a few more days is everyone ledy for this election to be over? brian: i will tell you what, the subplot to all of this is the democrats bet so-called unelectable candidates for republicans in the primary easier time in the general, kari lake, don bolduc, tudor dixon and guess what they all have in common. they all have written risen to the top ahead or within st
dana: heartbroken family is blaming new york s democrat governor kathy hochul for the execution-still murder of a mother with three children thanks to her soft on crime policies. she is passing the buck and pointing fingers at everyone but herself. welcome to a new hour of america s newsroom. i m dana perino. bill: i love the blue. i m bill hemmer. governor hochul playing the blame game refusing responsibility for a cold-blooded murder that some say was preventable. a woman was shot and killed by her husband less than 24 hours after le lease with no bail from domestic abuse charges. the governor is claiming her death on the system which just happens to be the system that she is in charge of. the system failed her. the system has to work. orders of protection have to be granted. transition homes have to be available and we have to make sure that judges and prosecutors charge appropriately. dana: fox team coverage. griff jenkins covering the election battle for new yo
we must vote knowing what at stake and not just the policy of the moment. but institutions that have held us together as we saw a more perfect union are at stake. we must vote knowing who we have been, what we re risk of becoming. president biden laid ous the threats to democracy. ahead of an election that he says will be a defining moment for our country. we ll have much more on his speech straight ahead. meanwhile, there are new details in the plot by donald trump s attorneys to overturn the 2020 election. his lawyers had a specific judge in mind. we ll tell who you that is. and also ahead, the latest from a major meeting in germany. the united states and allies are outlining the next steps in support of ukraine. good morning. welcome to way too early. thank you for starting your day us with. we ll begin with president joe biden s speech on the midterm elections and the future of our nation s democracy. the president delivered the remarks last night from washington s
governor, as your senator, as your secretary of state, as your attorney general, then democracy as we know it may not survive in arizona. that s not an exaggeration, that is a fact. that was former president obama hitting the campaign trail hard for democrats talking on election deniers in battleground states. that guy is pretty good. he s good at what he does. he s got a future in politics if he decides to go that way. president biden makes the fate of our democracy a key issue just days before voters decide who will control congress and the future path of our country. also ahead, new polling in several crucial races, including pennsylvania where voters are weighing in on the only debate between senate candidate john fetterman and dr. oz. plus, there are new details in the plot by trump s attorneys to overturn the 2020 election. his lawyers had a specific justice in mind, and we ll tell you who that is. and one of former president donald trump s top advisers has
long-range missiles toward the ukrainian capital of kyiv. we ll have the very latest on the ongoing fight and where global leaders stand on the issue. e global leaders stand on the issue. good morning. and welcome to way too early. on this monday, june 27th. i m jonathan lemire, coming to you live from the beautiful bavarian house. we will get back to the g-7 in a moment but we start with the supreme court landmark decision to overturn roe v. wade ending the constitutional right to an abortion after nearly 50 years. the decision came after the court s conservative majority ruled 6-3 to uphold a mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks. the justices then 5-4 voted on overturning roe with chief justice john roberts making it clear that his vote was only to side with the mississippi law. the majority opinion on striking down roe was written by justice samuel alito, he writes this. the constitution makes no reference to abortion, and no such right is implicitly prot