Skip to main content

tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  March 21, 2024 10:00am-11:00am EDT

10:00 am
10:01 am
"cavuto coast to coast" 20 you know it's a good day. in midtown manhattan looking down 6 avenue, it is 10:00 eastern, i'm ashley webster in today for stuart. picking up where we finished yesterday the markets are moving higher. look at the dow up 270 points, s&p up half of 1%, nasdaq up more than one hundred%. look at the 10 year treasury yield moving slightly lower at the open, turned around a little bit. up half a basis point at 4.28%. look at the price of oil moving lower, down $0.25, 8102 for a barrel of crude. take a look at bitcoin which has been bobbing up and down, it was down a little bit earlier, down $1300 at 66,543 and we've got the latest read on existing home sales. lauren: surprise increase,
10:02 am
strong number here, increase to 4. 38 million units on seasonally adjusted annual basis so over 4 million seasonally adjusted, expectation was under 4. there you have it. ashley: not bad at all. thank you very much for the home improvement stuff. let's move on to this. president biden's it's been hearing turned angry and fiery when alexandria ocasio cortez claimed rico is not a crime. watch this. >> did you witness the president commit a crime? is it your testimony today? what crime do you, have you witnessed? >> how much corruption statutes -- >> what is the crime? specifically? >> i answered the question.
10:03 am
you are not familiar with -- >> rico is not a crime. it is a category. what is -- >> the category of crime -- >> reclaiming my time. ashley: you can see how that went. ben domenech joins me now, great to see you. my first question is where is the impeachment inquiry going. are we ever going to get to a vote? >> we will get to a vote. interesting democrats have decided they are going to approach this whole proceeding by treating it as laughable when i think actually james, and his committee have done a lot of due diligence and been working in a serious manner to layout the case that the president in his capacity you did violate a number of different statutes. as you saw yesterday the whole approach the democrats have had
10:04 am
is to try to turn everything into a circus, treated and seriously, to not push back against the serious claims. let's take for example setting the rico thing aside, the claim regarding nefarious statute and clearly violations on the part of failure to register under any kind of required law has a representative of a foreign government when clearly that was what hunter biden was doing and essentially by extension you could allege the president, the former vice president was doing at the time as well and that is something that is obviously a crime, something we've seen other people have to go back and address across washington and for some reason the same party that says no one should be above the law when it comes to donald trump, have a completely tune when it comes to president biden and that is what we will see continue all the way.
10:05 am
stuart: shouldn't aoc be calling fans about i will us and say i know you are trying to prosecute on rico charges but rico is not a crime. >> exactly. fani will this is based on this but she thinks it's just a category of a crime. ashley: a young tiktok user called republican senator tom tillis and threatened him if he votes to ban the apps, listen to this and i will get your reaction? >> shame on tiktok. we just had to do our first police report today. we've let a lot of kids off the hook but i had a kid just recently say i'm going to hunt you down and shoot you and cut you into little pieces. sounds like she was about 16 years old or younger. to have tiktok tell these kids to do that doesn't help their case, it hurts their case.
10:06 am
so to young people and parents everywhere they need to understand these kids lives could be locked by statements they are making and shame on tiktok for not discouraging it. ashley: it doesn't help tiktok's case, does it? >> it does not. if you look back, considering's the warnings from republicans and out democrats share as well about the ability of the chinese communist party to influence america's youth in this tradition, tiktok is providing them a wealth of new examples of it on a daily basis, the way they can reach into the lives of america's youth and not just steal their data, their property but influence from in ways that no parent, no american should want them to do. tiktok is not going to go away.
10:07 am
to force the sale with in 180 days and move away from control of the ccp which is the most important part of this whole thing. ashley: do you think the tiktok bill will pass in the senate? if it does, will it hold up against lawsuits? >> ultimately it will pass but there's a question of whether it is going to pass before november or after november. in other words after the lame-duck session that you could see coming after the election. a lot of democrats are worried about taking off younger voters prior to the november vote so that could factor into when the bill passes. ashley: fascinating stuff, fantastic stuff. thanks for joining us. all right. a national security group has launched an ad campaign against tiktok. which group? how much are they spending on this? lauren: you never heard of them, state armor action, small
10:08 am
watchdog where they have deep pockets, spearheading a multimillion dollar ad campaign to warn the tiktok is the ccp. it spies on you and targets you with communist propaganda. they say the ccp targets young americans especially who are more vulnerable to brainwashing. there campaign is coming one week after the house passed a bill to force bike dance to sell tiktok in six months or lawmakers could ban it altogether. ashley: all right, interesting, thank you very much. let's get back to these markets, smiles, lots of buying good, good time to bring in gary kaltbaum. i asked adam johnson, do you think we are in a bubble? >> the biggest bubble in history is this administration on their debt and deficits. i must tell you i was watching
10:09 am
edward lawrence and janet yellen earlier and i almost wanted to heave her sitting there acting like nothing is going on with debt and deficits, $3 trillion was added to the deficit in the last 12 months, this budget guarantees, their own predictions, 20 trillion more deficits in the next 10 years but they are telling us they are cutting the deficits. it's really sickening. i wish i could do an interview, they wouldn't last five minutes and what they are doing, basically mortgaging the future, going forward all for one reason, big election come november. it's an outrageous amount of money, more goes into the, the more things look good, a lot of it is just going to be a mirage and i just pray, i mean this, that one day the bond market does not wake-up to this and all of a sudden yields, forget inflation, yields are up 7%,
10:10 am
8%, 9% on the 10 year because of what they are doing. it's quite insane i have to tell you. i use one word on my radio show, unimaginable the neighbors they are going after and getting away with. ashley: i need a cup of tea or something stronger after that. >> just facts and numbers. ashley: very sobering. let's move on to this ipo, redit, haven't had a major social media player in 5 years. what do you make of redit? >> they had to lower the market value in the last couple years from 10 billion down to 6 and it's just a company that loses money. i will tell you in the past a lot of money using hot companies have done well in the marketplace and if they ever start making money off of this it could be a good deal but from the get-go, valuations
10:11 am
high taking advantage of a strong market and good on them, they will make some good cake as some of those people are working. stuart: feel like i need to take a deep breath after that. always bringing the heat, great to see you this morning. reality bites as they say. thank you so much. let's look at some of the movers in this market that have been open for 40 minutes or thereabouts. let's begin with broad.com. lauren: they are tremendous, a i lifted earnings are lifting the chipmakers overall as you can see, these are healthy gains. for broad.com, they are raised to outperform, they take the price target to $1500, they say the benefits from ai, gaining from the now closed acquisition of the outerwear. ashley: i don't know if i am saying this. after labs?
10:12 am
lauren: this was yesterday's ipo up 18.5%, $73, they priced at 36. what do they do? they sell data center connectivity chips to cloud and ai infrastructure companies. they are riding and ai boom and sending a signal to the market at this point that hop on in, idea right now is testified. ashley: winnebago, the giant vehicles of the road. ashley: they also own chris craft, they have the seeds also. i'm scratching my head, it was up 5% at "the opening bell," reporting a loss because consumers are going back and stock is up 6%. that is volatility. arising market lifts all boats. ashley: very good. there's another new work trend. tell me about dry promotion.
10:13 am
lauren: you get a title promotion but don't get a raise, 13% of companies are giving their employees new job titles without matching compensation. how insulting. if your employer values you, they put a number on your work. they don't say we will give you a new flashy fancy title but you won't get compensated for it. i don't like it. no thank you. ashley: now this. illegal migrants could soon turn into 2 squatters. >> translator: my people. i've thought about invading a house in the united states. there is a law that says if the house is not inhabited we can expropriate it. ashley: isn't that wonderful? tiktok going viral for telling migrants how to invade american
10:14 am
homes. 200,000 deportation cases thrown out by immigration judges since biden took office. what happened? nate for will have the story from eagle pass, texas, next. it with pronamel repair. it penetrates deep into the tooth to actively repair acid weakened enamel. i recommend pronamel repair. with new pronamel repair mouthwash you can enhance that repair beyond brushing. they work great together. everywhere but the seat. the seat is leather. alan, we get it. you love your bike. we do, too. that's why we're america's number-one motorcycle insurer. but do you have to wedge it into everything? what? i don't do that. this reminds me of my bike. the wolf was about the size of my new motorcycle. have you seen it, by the way? happy birthday, grandma! really? look how the brushstrokes follow the line of the gas tank.
10:15 am
-hey! -hey! brought my plus-one. jamie? here you go. is there anyway to get a better price on this? have you checked singlecare? whenever my customers ask how to get a better price on their meds, i always tell them about singlecare. it's a free app. accepted at major pharmacies nationwide. before i pick up my prescription at the pharmacy, i always check the singlecare price. it's quick, easy, and totally free to use. singlecare can literally beat my insurance copay. you just search for your prescription, and show your coupon in the app to your pharmacist. i just show you the coupon and i get this price? that's right! go to singlecare.com and start saving today.
10:16 am
10:17 am
10:18 am
her uncle's unhappy. i'm sensing an underlying issue. it's t-mobile. it started when we tried to get him under a new plan. but they they unexpectedly unraveled their “price lock” guarantee. which has made him, a bit... unruly. you called yourself the “un-carrier”. you sing about “price lock” on those commercials. “the price lock, the price lock...” so, if you could change the price, change the name! it's not a lock, i know a lock. so how can we undo the damage? we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for. ashley: now to the border. an estimated 200,000 deportation cases have been thrown out by immigration judges since biden has been in office. nate foyers in eagle pass, texas, the question begs why
10:19 am
were so many cases thrown out? >> reporter: essentially it's a paperwork error where dhs did not file the required notices to appear before migrant scheduled court hearing and that resulted in since president biden took office 200,000 deportation cases being thrown out. look at this video from yesterday where we had 150 migrants across the border illegally in california. according to the nonpartisan group track, dhs is backing up the courts by scheduling immigration hearings before the agency is capable of filing the notice to appear. there are 3. 5 million pending immigration cases, dhs can restart the process after its mistake but according to this group track, that only happens roughly 25% of the time. take a look at this next video, let's pull up our live fox news
10:20 am
drone, crossings are down in texas right now as we await a ruling for the immediate future on sb 4, a law that would allow texas to arrest and deport migrants who cross the border illegally. you see this small group that just crossed the rio grande. these people under sb 4 would be eligible to be arrested and possibly deported. the immediate ruling will determine the next 2 weeks, the overlie will be considered april 3rd, that will have a long-term effect, texas argued in court yesterday it has a right to defend itself, the biden administration says the law oversteps its federal 40 over our borders, meanwhile look at this, new video from texas dps shows two human smuggling chases, this first one is from weber county, the drivers from laredo, texas, at the end of the chase, this is
10:21 am
after the dodger was driving through traffic. he got out of the vehicle, bail out of the car and jump over a fence has a trooper gives chase and eventually they arrest him. in this next video the driver is an illegal immigrant who lived in pennsylvania, 6 illegal migrants poor out of that sedan, the driver takes off once more. texas dps caught 5 of those 6 migrants that bailed out and they arrested the driver who told him he was such to be paid $2,500 for every migrant he smuggled. ashley: great report. absolute chaos. brandon judd joins us. let's get to that headline. 200,000 deportation cases dropped. this is a system that is completely broken.
10:22 am
>> reporter: this shows how dhs operates, complete dysfunction. what's funny about that is it is not like there's a lot of turnover. you can expect this when you see a lot of turnover in government but under this administration, secretary mayorkas has been there the entire time, the vast majority of people in dhs have been there the entire time so there's no excuse for what they are currently doing but this is what we expect from them every day. when you look at the crossings taking place, holes in the walls, it's because we don't have the agents to control the border and cartels control the border, they notice, they understand this and they are not taking precautions to protect the american people and on top of that they are failing in the easiest part which is the paperwork department and it shows the dysfunction that exists in dhs. ashley: the biden administration says we've got money ready to go, republicans
10:23 am
won't agree, provides for 20,000 more border agents, 25% increase of border technology. there is. ice feds rising, what do you think of that? >> this is what really upsets me. we don't need more money. we don't need more technology, don't need more infrastructure, we don't need more taxpayer dollars. when we take more taxpayer dollars we are throwing it away. you can line the border up with border patrol agents holding hands across the border. if we don't have the proper policy it doesn't matter. you can't just throw money at this issue and expected to go away. you have to have a policy and policy doesn't cost the american taxpayer a single dollar. we don't need any of that. what we need is policy. the administration knows that and understand that and are not doing that. ashley: i want to get to this.
10:24 am
an illegal migrant taken to tiktok to tell other migrants how to become squatters in the united states. roll tape, listen to this. >> translator: my people. i've thought about invading a house in the united states because i learned there is a law that says if a house is not inhabited, we can expropriate it. that would be my next business. invade abandoned houses. ashley: brandon, i am shaking my head. do you see this becoming a trend? just get into a house and squat. >> reporter: they can exploit the loopholes. they've been shown that by our immigration laws. so now they are looking at every single other loophole they can exploit in the united states. this is why border security is so important for the american people. they know what they can do and exploit loopholes in our laws.
10:25 am
ashley: that's a frightening trend. we've done stories on gangs and thieves, tourism theft, in los angeles they had high end neighborhoods, steal stuff, take it back on the plane with them. this is just, we always say it's out of control but this is beyond belief. >> reporter: that is why the rule of law is so important. if we apply the laws appropriately we wouldn't have this chaos but we don't do it and it is so simple. it is easy to apply the rule of law. when you have politics get in the way, that's when you see this chaos. this administration something cares about political power, they don't care what's best for the american people. ashley: brandon, thank you very much as always. now this. new york city's comptroller
10:26 am
says migrants should get free lawyers. these lawyers aren't free, are they? they be paid for by the taxpayer. lauren: this is brad lander, progressive from brooklyn, he says using new yorkers tax money to pay the legal fees of 53,000 illegal migrants will help the economy to the tune of 8. $4 billion, this , this is his logic. if we pay for their attorneys they can work faster and pay taxes and contribute to the economy. how expensive visit to live in new york. i these going to be high-paying jobs when many of these migrants don't have highs could educations, services provided by the new york taxpayer and other resources, the logic is distorted. ashley: that's being kind. thanks very much, absolutely right. coming up, this story. a school fund in texas has pulled its 8. 5 billiard contract with black
10:27 am
rock because of its esg policy. we will speak to the chair of texas's board of education about that. we told you how voters aren't buying bidenomics of the president's campaigners turning to handouts the tune of $6 billion. we have the details on that after this. ♪ ♪
10:28 am
10:29 am
10:30 am
10:31 am
ashley: let's look at these markets, we been going for an hour on this session, the dow up 331 points. the s&p is up half of 1%, the nasdaq also up hundred points. picking up where we finished yesterday. you are looking at the movers in the submarket. chesler is slightly lower. lauren: someone like elon musk scares elizabeth warren and senator harris renewed calls on the sec to investigate whether tesla's board lacks independence because its members ardell too chumming with musk.
10:32 am
they also report that the senator sent a letter to the sec asking them to examine the board and potential conflict of interest between tesla and the other companies elon musk also runs. tesla is done a little bit but they got a seal of approval from morgan stanley, morgan stanley saying long-term, tesla is the winner for electric vehicles. lift is up big time, they signed a deal with nielsen, the ratings company to measure in apps ads. when you go on lift, you can see ads on the apps and this deal will allow the advertisers to measure their marketing campaigns. robin hood with the new gain of 3%, their wallet is available to android users around the world, while it supports crypto currency transactions, robin hood saw crypto volumes of 6. 5 billion last month, up 86% so more people have access.
10:33 am
ashley: while you are there i thought this was interesting. millions of senior citizens are behind on student loans, that means incurred by the government can collect some of their benefits like what? lauren: social security. i never realized 3.5 million americans over the age of 60 still hold student debt, 40% of them are involved. when a federal program tries to get their money back they can go after social security benefits, take the tax refund. student debt is a problem for young graduates and older ones too. ashley: now this was the president's bidenomics messaging hasn't resonated with voters in the administration resorting to more handouts. hillary, what handouts are we talking about?
10:34 am
>> reporter: student loan forgiveness for 77,000 americans, the president announcing 77,000 americans include public service workers, teachers, firefighters and nurses will get their student loans paid off by taxpayers, the total payoff, $5.8 billion. this applies anyone in public service who has been making payments on their student loans for over 10 years. the email that went out to these people reach, quote, because you pursued a career in public service you are on track to get your eligible student loans forgiven and less than a year through public service loan forgiveness. thank you for the work you are doing to strengthen your communities and keep it up. they won't be the only ones waking up with an e-mail from the president, also letting 380,000 public service workers know that today they are on track for debt forgiveness in the next two years if they continue to make on-time payments but some student loan borrowers feel these promises are too good to be true, 50,000
10:35 am
borrowers are suing the biden administration in federal court because they were promised their debt would be automatically wiped out by the end of january and it wasn't. the board of education says they are working as fast as possible to process it as quickly as they can and the january promise was essentially a goal, not a guarantee. the latest student loan forgiveness is going to get biden points with progressives and young people. those are voters he needs to turn out in november and these emails that came directly from the president himself to student loan borrowers has a link in that email for people to click on it and share the good news and how the student loan relief has helped them. ashley: give it away by votes. thank you very much. this is interesting. the texas school fund has terminated their contract with black rock to manage $8.5 billion of state money
10:36 am
because of black rock's esg policies. the chair of texas's board of education joins us now. you administer this fund. tell me about this move. why was it taken? >> think for having me today. in 2021 the legislature passed a law requiring federal funds to divest from companies that boycott energy investments of the comptroller put together a list over the course of the past few years and updated that several times to come into compliance with the law. ashley: in reaction to this i noticed blackrock called your move arbitrary, said it ignores private equity firms $120 billion investment in texas, public energy companies. how would you respond to that? >> this is just absurd that they would make this, arbitrary
10:37 am
and unilateral is what they claim. this is come from the legislature elected by the people, signed into law by the government and the comptroller set up a process to evaluate these financial companies, black rock is among several others on the list so they met the qualifications through the process and when it comes to the funds to execute the law, executing the law would be what i would say. ashley: they also say the decision jeopardizes texas schools because they benefit from black rock's consistent long-term outperformance. >> that is untrue also. investments we diverse did this week are index funds so these are all beta, there is no out 5 there. ashley: are there any other funds you maple your money out
10:38 am
of? >> we will continue to monitor what the comptroller's office is doing as they uplift -- update their list and for us this is the biggest want to bring us into compliance with that law and the big move we needed to make. i'm sure other funds have taken a look at this and come into compliance with state law. ashley: you've certainly got their attention. appreciate your time. still ahead. elon musk's neural link revealed how the brain computer implant works on its first human patient, we will show you what the paralyzed patient was able to do. apple, the justice department set to introduce an anti---
10:39 am
lawsuit. we will talk about that next. we got the house! you did! pods handles the driving. pack at your pace. store your things until you're ready. then we deliver to your new home - across town or across the country. pods, your personal moving and storage team. investment opportunities are everywhere you turn.
10:40 am
do you charge forward? freeze in your tracks? or, let curiosity light the way. at t. rowe price, we ask smart questions about opportunities like advances in healthcare and how these innovations will create a healthier world tomorrow. better questions. better outcomes. your shipping manager left to “find themself.” leaving you lost. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire
10:41 am
♪ me and my friends ♪ ♪ life is better with the credit gods are on your side. rewards once available to the few are now accessible to the many. credit one bank. get cash back rewards, and live large. - [speaker] at first, just leaving the house was hard. - [speaker] but wounded warrior project helps you realize it's possible to get out there - [speaker] to feel sense of camaraderie again. - [speaker] to find the tools to live life better. - [narrator] through generous community support, we've connected warriors and their families with no cost physical and mental health services, legislative advocacy,
10:42 am
career assistance, and life skill training for 20 years, and we are just getting started.
10:43 am
ashley: thanks to some dovish comments on the fed the markets gain ground, the dow off 358 points up nearly one%, the s&p up half of 1%, nasdaq up half of 1%. let's look at some of the big tech names. everything is fine. amazon, meta, microsoft all moving higher but alphabet has turned negative down half of 1%, apple down more than 2.5% at 1007385. now this. neural link has introduced its first patient to receive a brain implant.
10:44 am
lauren: a 29-year-old quadriplegic is the first patient implanted by neural link with a brain chip and can now move the computer mouse with his thoughts. you see him playing chess but he also changed the computer, the volume on the computer. it's a 9 minute video. elon musk put it out and it shows the brain implant functioning to help a quadriplegic move again by using his thoughts. ashley: it is absolutely remarkable, really incredible stuff. thank you very much. now this. the justice department is going to announce an antitrust lawsuit against apple today. grady, this isn't the first time the doj has sued apple over antitrust so the question is what is it about this time? >> reporter: the doj has sued apple three time since 2010 and in this case the justice
10:45 am
department alleges that apple blocks competitors from using all the features available on apple's hardware and software. here are a few examples the justice department lays out in this lawsuit. it claims apple blocks super apps that would make it easier for users to switch between competing smart phone platforms, suppresses cloud streaming so users wouldn't need to pay for apple's expensive hardware, excludes cross-platform messaging apps, makes imessaging compatible with android phones and diminishes the functionality of not apple smart watches, the lawsuit says these examples are, quote, hardly exhaustive, rather they exemplify the innovation it has cycled and apple's strategy of using its power over apps distribution and apps creation to selectively block threatening innovations. as you know, number of companies have criticized apple over what they call anti-competitive practices.
10:46 am
when example the device tracker tile claims apple made it more difficult to use its product on an iphone around the same time apple rolled out its own air tags. gaming company fortnight sued apple for not letting it create its own apps story and taken sizable cut of in apps purchases and paypal has complained if you want to make a payment with your iphone you got to use apple pay. here's apple's response to the lawsuit. it says in part if successful the lawsuit would hinder our ability to create the kind of technology people expect from apple where hardware, software and services intersect. goes on to say it would set a dangerous precedent empowering government to take out a hand in designing people's technology. apple says the lawsuit is wrong on the facts and intends to fight it but even the previous department of justice launched probes into apple and other big
10:47 am
tech companies. william bar wrote an op-ed in the wall street journal where he says the biden admits ration does take a heavy hand on antitrust issues but in this case regarding apple he seems to believe the justice department is right to go after them. ashley: fascinating stuff. thank you very much. ai scams going on people's tax refunds. not sure how that works. neil: fraudsters take a picture along with personal data they can retrieve and pretend they are you and file tax return for you. that means they steal your refund even before you file your return. how do you prevent this? file as early as possible, set up direct deposit and invest.
10:48 am
in the age of ai schemers can do all sorts of things which how big a problem this is is concerning. last year, 1 million returns were flagged fraud, 300,000 complaints coming in about identity fraud specific lantus by getting money from the inflation reduction act, irs technology is outdated and not to criticize the irs but can anybody keep up with artificial intelligence? no. ashley: hopefully they steal someone's identity who owes money to the irs not that they will pay but that will serve them right. thank you very much. don't forget to send in your friday feedback. want your questions as always, you can email us varneyviewers@fox.com. tell us what you think, we can take it. the biden administration released more rules against gas powered vehicles forcing and into evs.
10:49 am
economist diana ross deals with that next. ♪ off the comcast business van. into the vending area. oh, not the fries! where's the ball? -anybody see it? oh wait, there it is! -back into play and... aw no, it's in the water. wait a minute... are you kidding me? you got to be kidding me. rolling towards the cup, and it's in the hole! what an impossible shot brought to you by comcast business. meet ron. ron eats, sleeps and breathes hoops. and there's not a no look pass, double double, or buzzer beater he won't wax poetic on. ad nauseam. but oh how he can nail a software solution like the best high screen pick and roll you've ever seen.
10:50 am
you need ron. ron needs a retirement plan. work with principal so we can help you help ron with a retirement and benefits plan that's right for him. let our expertise round out yours.
10:51 am
10:52 am
10:53 am
ashley: the trump campaign wasting no time going after president biden's new ev rule saying president biden's extreme electric vehicle mandate will force americans to purchase ultra expensive cars they don't want and can't afford while destroying the us auto industry in the process. economist diana roth joins me now. we are being forced into evs, we are going in that direction, but why can't we let the market decide? >> we should let the market decide. this rule is going to be disastrous for small businesses, farmers who need these gasoline powered pickups for their jobs.
10:54 am
it is going to raise inflation because goods and services are going to be more expensive. it will cause blackouts because we don't have enough electricity to be able to power all of these electric cars. ashley: do we have the infrastructure where it needs to be? >> we do not have the infrastructure anywhere it needs to be and the transmission lines, the power plants, all those would be needed and at the same time, epa has a power plant rule that would result in many power plants closing in 2040. if they can't sequester 90% of their emissions they will be forced to close. interesting that epa did not mention this rule when it brought up the electric vehicle mandate. ashley: interesting too because
10:55 am
these vehicles are expensive. even if you discount federal and state tax credits and other incentives, they are smaller than gas powered vehicles of the same size and sort, standard. bottom line is they are too expensive. people cannot afford them. >> they are too expensive and some people need to gasoline pickups for their businesses because you can't stop in the middle of the day and take an hour to recharge if you have a landscaping business or delivering food. ashley: we could do this all day because we are on the same page. thanks for coming by and talking with us. who wants to sit around waiting for the car to charge. still ahead, sean duffy shows donald trump leading biden in georgia and north carolina.
10:56 am
clay travis talking about the view cohost getting excited about the prospect of seeing donald trump tower, the tower itself in chains. in early midlife crisis because of social media. the 11:00 hour of "varney and company" is next. ♪ ♪ (♪) (♪)
10:57 am
(♪) (♪)
10:58 am
10:59 am
a test or approve a medication. we didn't have to worry about any of those things thanks to the donations. and our family is forever grateful because it's completely changed our lives.
11:00 am
>> when you're in a bubble, you don't see $6 trillion of cash sitting on the sideline, you have all the money in. and the money's not in yet. >> one of the basic, fundamental questions that still hasn't been asked and answered is, why is it that joe biden's grandkids got $100,000, you know? where did that come from and why? i mean, that's a basic question, right? >> we have to shame this administration into their their job. ifed biden's unwilling to do his job, i'll step up and do

14 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on