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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  March 26, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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>> never what you think would you see that the you would see, physically see the key bridge tumble down like that. it looked like something out of an action movie.
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>> every single one of these arrows they manage to stick into donald trump helps him are politically. it really does look like donald trump is running the tables on all of these cases. >> i think you'll see people buying truth social or djt because they want to send a message to washington that they support president trump. >> he he behaves more like a politician than a traditional prosecutor. prosecutors are not supposed to run for office saying they're going to target a person. >> your job as journalists is to ask her questions, find out what she thinks, comment on what she says, but she's going to be here presenting that a point of view. ♪ ♪ now and then i miss you ♪ stuart: oh, i'm so glad that the you're playing the latest and one of the greatest beatles' songs ever, now and then. i really like it. only released about, what, six months ago a finish. >> already? stuart: one of the greatest. i qualified that. all right, sports, fans, it is
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11:00 eastern time, tuesday, march the 26th. some green if on the markets. the dow's up 100, the nasdaq's up 52 points. show me big tech, please. most of them on the upside with the exception of amazon and apple. meta, alphabet, microsoft if up. amazon, apple, down. amazon -- apple just holding on to $170 right there. let's see bitcoin. last time we checked it was 71, now it's $70,120. here's the stock of the day, djt. that is trump's media company. it went public. and look at it go. it's up nearly 40, $69 a share. that's trump stock. now this. donald trump is very good at politics. oh, sure, he expresses himself in sometimes unfortunate ways, but he has a way of framing the debate in easy to understand language. he knows how to make a point, if and he knows how to use a situation to his advantage is. case in point, his brief statements monday after he won a lower bond for his fraud trial
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and more time to pay. talking about the case he said this is all done by the democrat party, and it's all a done by biden and his crew, end quote. he's pointing out that the democrat attorney general in a a democrat state before a democrat judge with a democrat president's approval went after the republican presidential candidate in the middle of an election. can you say political prosecution? if he he went on to say that biden doesn't know what's happening. a a h, he's making the point that biden is in cognitive decline, and that's a very big issue in this election. trump squeezed it into his courtroom statement, got it in. taking advantage of what was supposed to be a difficult situation. he turned it into a sharp-edged attack on biden's teenage. the -- age. the cameras were rolling, he had the country's attention, and he turned the courtroom win into a biden defeat. there are signs it's working. a politico poll showed if trump was convicted in alvin bragg's criminal prosecution, four times as many republicans said it
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would make them more likely to support him than less likely. four times. trump has exposed biden's use of the courts as a weapon in the election. just who is helping democracy? third hour of "varney" starts now. ♪ ♪ stuart: jimmy failla joining us this tuesday morning. i think biden's lawfare is failing. what say you? >> for him, yes. for me, no. twitter's amazing right now, okay? if the meltdowns that are happening all over my feed right now finish. [laughter] why am i not a therapist? i had no idea that yesterday e was going to result in as many tantrums as it did. there is such a visceral hatred for trump, but what the people on the left don't understand is nobody holds it the way they do. what i mean by that, okay, is the average person agrees with every word of your monologue which was brilliantly written, okay? and, yeah, i'll take the 50
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later. he doesn't venn know -- venmo. we don't do cash on the set, it looks bad. [laughter] the point is donald trump was charged with the9 financial equivalent of murder, but this is no dead body, okay in they were going to take away his business, okay, they were going to penalize him and deny his sons the ability to do business in the state. yet as you've mentioned and everyone else has mentioned, there was no aggrieved class. the banks happily lent them money, they're willing to do it e again. so to rational observers, this made no sense. but the people who who live in this manufactured hysteria in the media when it comes to trump, we knew who he was. he's been around for 40 years. he was on "the view," he would go on howard stern when howard was the king of all media. now howard's the prince harry. let's be honest, he complains a lot. [laughter] we all knew who trump was, he was part of the fabric of america. this idea that came down the escalator one day as a cult leader is laughable to rational people, and that's why biden's lawfare is failing. there's a lot more rational
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people outside the media than in it. stuart: you're right about that. democrats and the media with, they're fuming over trump's reduced bond. watch this. >> this is so infuriating, i don't even know what to do. you know, now he's getting his own private system of justice. this is an absolute travesty. >> certainly, this is one healthcare of a break for, yet again, testify hon don. >> the playbook is different for former president trump. >> he's pretty much gotten everything he's wanted. for what reason? no one else in the country would have that kind of luck. >> the notion that i would walk in there and have my, what i owed knocked town to a third of -- down to a third of the judgment is ludicrous. of course that wouldn't happen. and the notion he's got 11 more days is ludicrous. stuart: throw this open, respond to that. >> the idea that she would have is her bond knocked down, no one's ever been prosecuted for this but trump. this idea that he's getting preferential treatment by being the only guy in the history of this law to be charged with it is not exactly the free pass
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they think it is. i'm telling you, these people are not well. when the guy goes what do i do now? you go home and if admit to yourself in the mere your e -- mirror that you're a loser. that's what you do. you get a life. [laughter] stuart: sharp-edged this morning. i want more of what you're offer, and i'll watch you on "fox news saturday night," 10 p.m. eastern only on fox news. jimmy, thanks a lot. >> my man. stuart: 96 minutes' worth of business so far this tuesday morning, and the market shows some green. dow up 100, nasdaq up 51. charles payne with us this morning. djt began trade on the a nasdaq this morning. my question, and it's gone straight the up. are people buying the tock because they think there's value in the company or because they just want to show support for trump? >> i'd say a combination of both, but 90% folks who have reached out to me think there's value there. you know, a lot of people left twitter. remember not long ago a lot of liberals were leaving twitter.
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snap has been somewhat of a failure. we may not have tiktok in this country anymore. people see a legitimate business opportunity, investment opportunity. so the majority of them are jumping in because of that. stuart: but i if trump wins in november -- >> yeah. stuart: -- that stock, that trump media technology group, that's going to be worth a lot of money. >> it should be. i mean, it's, you know, listen, they're losing money, but a lot of these companies are losing money particularly at this stage of the game. it's a social media bet in a social media world. stuart: yep. here's a story we have not yet covered this morning, and we need you. blackrock's larry fink is warning of a retirement crisis. he thinks people aren't saving enough. he also a calls the 65 years of age retirement age a bit crazy. >> yeah. stuart further institutes he's highlighting a problem, we're not saving enough. that's the truth. >> this is a huge problem. of i'm definitely covering this today. it's a long letter, but the part that really touched me, he starts with this brilliant personal note with his parents, and he says in their last days they were able to live with
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dignity and financial freedom and most people done have that a chance. that's a powerful first statement. then he says, but they can. and he goes on to talk about investing, capital markets. and and what i like about this letter is he says america's where it's at. he went to 15 countries last year, over 80 countries have financial markets, everyone wants to be the united states. and yet you have americans who are sitting here and not participating. if this was not in his letter, but let me tell you last year just to give you an example, so equity buyers last year, foreigners bought $179 billion net of our stocks. we sold $57. an upyear. an up year. stuart: net? >> net. stuart: americans were sellers in an up year? >> in an up year last year. we're buying this year, mostly corporations buying back their stocks, but it's really amazing when formers are saying, hey, you guys got it going on, with we want a piece of the a action, was every headline, hiccup, whatever it is that scares the hell out of americans from
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owning -- this is the greatest country in the world in part because of the foundation that built this market. people just aren't talking advantage of it. so he really lament ares that, and -- laments that, and he's pushing the point home, and and i hope people listen. stuart: i hope they do. charles, we're watching you, "making money," every day 2 p.m. eastern right here on fox business. thank you for stepping in, or we appreciate it. >> you got it. stuart: lauren's looking at the movers, ups is moving down. lauren: the biggest decliner on the s&p 500. today is their investment day, they're targeting revenue of over $100 billion in 2026 because they're cost cutting, streamlining and using autoa mission yet the stock is down 3.5%. stuart: explain that one. mccormack spice -- lauren: yep. hot sauce up 9.5%. great earning, great margins. their growth profit margin ebb e paneledded 140 bay access e points -- can expanded. this is the best day -- >> [inaudible] bl iron chi enough, it's another
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sign that the consumer 's running how of money. will be the last few years have been all about going to restaurants. we're finally running out of money when you have to cook at home, expect ceo said as much. stuart: that's interesting. a fine observation, charles. lauren: we've heard that from starbucks, from the olive garden parent. stuart: penn entertainment. lauren: yep. and the trio surging, all three initiated at a buy at missue low, on line sports betting has opportunities ahead. for penn national, i just want to give you the price target, it's $29. from yesterday's close that implies 70% growth. and that's because of espn bet partnership. stuart: got it. they're all up. thank you. very much is, lauren. coming up, trump's hush money trial starts next month. if he he -- he does have to stay in court every day of that trial. surely, that seriously affects his campaign schedule. we're going to dig into it. new york's mayor, eric adams, imposing new r curfews on three massive migrant shell or
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ises. we've got the full story. why is he doing that? and the white house is ripping into the fop's budget proposal -- gop's budget proposing eye causing them of trying to defund the police? congresswoman claudia tenney responds next. ♪ if they're waiting for you. hey, do you have a second? they're all expecting more. more efficiency. more benefits. more growth. when you realize you can give your people everything, and more. thank you very much. [applause] ask, "now what?" here's what. you go with prudential to protect, empower and grow. with everything you need to deliver, you guessed it... more.
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♪ ♪ stuart: texas is installing new razor wire at the border just days after hundreds of migrants stormed through the fencing. casey stegall is in eagle pass, texas. there was another breach at the border wall there the in el paso. tell me more about that. >> reporter: yeah, stuart, it was here in el paso, and it was
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also captured by the same photographer that captured those images last week, by a new york post photographer who was at gate 45 or 46 which is not far along the border wall here in el paso. this past sunday they caught video of a migrant with what a appears to be wire cutters i cutting a hole right into the cancer e tee that if wire and then helped dozens of people through that opening from mexico onto u.s. soil before they were eventually caught by national guard troops and then turned back. this comes just three days after a group of about 100 migrants got rowdy and rushed members of the national guard at a different gate, gate 36 a few miles away. national guard troops say some of the my grants had knives and shanks -- migrants -- and a handful of soldiers were treated for minor injuries as we e reported. meantime, are republican senator
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marsha blackburn is visiting eagle pass today, as we speak, getting an operational visit. >> they do not have a sense of you are general city about this border -- urgency about this border. you know, having an open border is the biden administration border policy. texans and the texas department of public safety stepping up, the national guard is stepping up, and they are doing their part to secure this border because with texans do feel that sense of urgency. >> reporter: eagle pass has become so much of the story with this particular if crisis, however, el paso here in order to try and prevent future breaches of the wall, the state has a put up more razor wire in this sector, they're also deployed additional soldiers here. texas officials say they're also reviewing that video to try and determine which migrants were involved to see if they can positively identify any of them so some could be criminally charged.
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stuart? if. stuart: casey stegall right at the border, thank you. now this, the new york city counsel wants to allow noncitizens to vote in local elections. they just a appealed this to the state's highest court after the measure was ruled unconstitutional last month. they're still trying. congresswoman claudia tenney, are republican from upstate new york, joins me now. would this be the first step towards allowing migrants to vote? is this the -- the camel's nose into the tent? >> of course. they've been trying to do this. look, or the u.s. constitution prohibits it, new york state constitution prohibits, it, article -- can section two -- article ii of new york's constitution prohibits noncitizens from voting. citizenship is a requirement of voting, of participating in our government. that's the whole mission of self-governance, is to leave it to people who are not only citizens, but responsible as citizens. stuart: but the goal is -- >> oh, yes. stuart: that's the overall goal. >> i think is to turn texas blue where. if texas turns blue, that's it
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for the electoral college. we will -- the republicans will never win again if they can win. and, obviously, new york is blue, but the more migrants you place around in swing states and turn them into blue states, we can't win on the electoral college, and ten they don't have to fight that fight. stuart: the more migrants you get in your state when the next census comes along, they're counted as people, and that affects congressional districting. >> absolutely. certainly. stuart: in this case, they'll gain. >> that's what they're trying to do because new york if had 45 seats in the '90s. we're town to 26 right now. we've lost a lot of clout because of the policies of the one-party rule in albany that have eviscerated our clout in washington. and now we have, you know, a dominant number of democrats, of course, in the state. new. stuart: now, you're upstate new york, but in new york city they've started to distribute these prepaid debit cards, $350 a week. the mayor says this will save the city money. your comment? >> giving people money to do nothing is never going to work for our economy, as we know.
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that's our biggest problem upstate is we keep giving out more and more money for people not to work, and in upstate new york we can't find people to do the jobs we need to get the output we need to get the growth so that we can pay some of the debt that we have. that's part of the problem. i've been in business, you know, all of my life if in upstate new york. i inherited our family business. we can't get anyone to work. it's a struggle. we were lucky we got the old dairy farmers to come and work for us, but now with so many of the large companies kind of taking over, we haven't been able to get people that are interested. they somehow are finding places to go especially after covid. stuart: do you want to give the migrants work permits? >> well, if you -- we had an option for that a -- stuart: it's got to be -- >> we have h2a programs, we have a lot of farm workers. i have the number one agricultural district in the northeast, ideal soil conditions, abundant water, we just have a short growing season. a lot of migrant workers are there legally. if we can have people to work
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legally so that we can prove hay don't have a criminal record, they're not part of a cartel, they're not human trafficked, they're not dependent on government, they're willing to come and work, that's an option. but all those things have to be met. it was something we actually did my first term in congress, the so-called goodlatte legislation. we need people to work, but it has to be done legally. and there are the lots of people who want to come into this country legally -- millions, in fact -- that are standing in line behind the illegal migrants right now. stuart: would you change the rules, make it just much easier for the migrants to get work permits? i know you couldn't necessarily get the background checks, you couldn't do the cartel checks, but is that what you really want to happen? >> i don't think you have to do that. you just have to enforce our laws as they exist. there's just an unwillingness to do it p there's a disingenuineness, this is about voter registration, this is a power grab. this isn't about actually helping our communities, helping
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upstate new york, helping all of new york state by getting people back to work and having growth. the democrats want to just give everybody money to do nothing, and that never works. it undermines, it actually undermines the -- stuart: -- do this forever? we're paying them to eat, to sleep, health care, education, you name it, we pay for it. it can't be like this forever. >> it isn't can't. and the other thing i can't emphasize enough, the people who with want to come here legally, want to be here to be produce produce, to work, to care for their families. that's how my brand parents came to this country. -- grandparents. they met at a ellis island. they came here to work. they came here to work, to be prosperous, to raise a family and be free. stuart: just like some other people at this desk. >> other people at this desk. a great citizen. [laughter] stuart: let's not get carried away. claudia tenney, appreciate it always. >> thank you. stuart: the mayor everything adams imposing more curfews at migrant shelters. why is he doing this, ashley?
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>> well, the new curfews will be imposed at three more large shelters in queens, manhattan and brooklyn by april 22nding. now, the migrants will be limited from coming or going between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. each night with exemptions for work and emergencies. it's going to impact roughly 4600 single asylum seeker ors. now, the curfews were first rolled out, to your point, earlier this year following a series of complaints by neighbors who said migrants have been panhandling, going door to door to beg for food and clothes. randall's island had a curfew imposed this month after a fatal stabbing at the shelter there. nearly all the makeshift shelters now, 190 of 218, will
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have a nightly curfew come the end of april because of complaints from people who live nearby. stu. the. stuart: off. all right, thanks, ash. king charles' team planning for events this summer. he reportedly has, quote, amplified confidence thanks to his cancer treatment. we'll have the latest on that for you. trump got a victory in his civil fraud trial. he now has nine more days to pay his reduced bond, but is anyone going to sanction the judge in the case or the attorney general, letitia james? former acting attorney general for the whole united states, matthew whitaker, takes it on. he's next. ♪ ♪ meet ron. ron eats, sleeps and breathes hoops. and there's not a no look pass, double double,
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stuart: on the markets this morning dow's up 90, nasdaq's up 62. little bit of green. start with the movers, and let's start with canada goose. lauren: the ebbs e pensive winter jackets -- expensive winter jack jack is jackets. typically when you cut jobs, 156 positions, you see your stock price go up. but shares are down 3.3% because the bigger story is the consumer is pulling back, the consumer's a being reined in. we've seen that at lululemon and nike. stuart: krispy if cream expanding a big partnership with
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mcdonald's. lauren: ex. stuart: that a works, doesn't it? lauren: i'd say so. stuart: let's get back to trump. he scored a legal victory in new york after an a appeals court ruled he now has nine more days to pay his reduced bond. c.b. cotton live from trump tower in new york city. c.b., what's trump's next move? >> reporter: hi, stu. former president donald trump risked losing control of his bank accounts and prized real estate assets like trump tower behind me, but those dire outcomes are now on hold. the trump campaign sharing this win with supporters and a message writing, quote: trump tower remains mine, end quote. trump's attorney, alina habba, saying it's a start. >> i am so proud of the appellate division for giving us the opportunity. they didn't reverse the case, but they will when they see what
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we saw. >> reporter: trump returns to court next month in another case, his criminal hush money trial. the judge with setting an april 15th start date saying in court yesterday prosecutors were not responsible for a last minute documents dump that trump's team argued should delay or dismiss the case entirely. prosecutors say trump tried to cover up hush money payments to adult film star stormy daniels keeping voters from fully assessing trump's candidacy for prime minister trump says the case is being run by, quote, biden thugs saying this about the lead prosecutor on the case -- >> colangelo was put into the state working with lee letitia james and was put into the district attorney's office to run the trial against trump. >> reporter: he worked with new york attorney general leticia a james' office in 2018 helping her investigate the misuse of charity funds and
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allegations of fraud at the trump foundation in 2020. in 2021 he became acting associate attorney general of the doj during the biden administration, then he was hired by the manhattan d.a.'s office in the fall of 2022 to work on the hush money case. he also worked in the labor department during former president barack obama's administration. stu. stuart: c.b., thanks very much, indeed. joining me now is former acting attorney general matthew whitaker matthew, i want to know is fin going to sanction the judge or the attorney general, letitia james? >> yeah. stuart, good to be with you this morning. the short answer is it's too soon to tell, you know? this reduction by the appeals court in new york suggests that they even thought that judge engeron's decision was excessive and, obviously, beyond what was allowed under the law. and, you know, the case might fully be reversed because if you remember the details, the facts
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are pretty straightforward. the loans that were subject to these alleged frauds were paid back in full with interest, the banks said do more hones in the -- loans in the future with president trump and, or you know, they didn't believe that they were defrauded. now, you know, whether or not any bar complaints have been filed against judge engeron or letitia james, ultimately that's going to be a separate proceeding. but, you know, based on how this case turned out and especially if courts reverse the entire case, you know, that would suggest that the judge and maybe the prosecutor went beyond their bounds and and could be subject to some sort of sanctions, for sure. stuart: some time away that is, of course. now, i'm interested in the hush money case. >> sure, yep. stuart: the trial starts april 15th, i believe. i understand that trump has to be there for the entire trial. he can't leave, so he can't campaign. i'm saying that amounts to interference in the election. what say you? >> yeah. all of these criminal cases are
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election interference, there's no doubt about that. structured and timed to keep donald trump off the campaign trail. now, there will be wednesdays off. the court has already set a schedule that wednesdays will be free, and so i'm guessing the president will be on the campaign trail then, you know? there is also some talk about doing a soldout madison square garden event by president trump that would just be a must-get ticket to be in manhattan in madison square garden, in the belly of the beast, if you will, celebrating donald trump and his campaign as a republican nominee for president. so all that being said, it is going to interfere with the election are, there's no doubt. the president's going to be restricted at least four days out of every single week from being on the campaign trail and, therefore, preventing him from spreading his message if personally to, you know, voters across the country. stuart: is it a strong case against him in the hush money case? >> yeah, or it's a very weak case. and let me tell you why it's
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weak. first of all, the southern district of new york and the manhattan d.a.'s office together with the federal election commission have all previously determined that these campaign violations that elevate a these charges to felonies were with not based in the law and not consistent with how the law's been interpreted. and also remember, stuart, you know, the allegations that business records have been altered, the only visibility if these records z were altered or somehow not appropriate was donald trump himself and his company. so this is a bit of a circular argument by alvin bragg and a very, very weak criminal case. but, beginnings, this is was happening. letitia james, alvin bragg, others have committed their entire political lives to try to get trump, and they come up with these half-balked, weak charges that, ultimately, are going to lose -- half-baked. stuart: if you take the big picture and look at all the trials and all the cases, would it be fair to say, in my opinion, biden's lawfare if
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strategy is failing? certainly it's not succeeding in the way he wanted it to succeed. ing what say you? >> yeah. well, criminal cases typically are strongest e when the charges are brought and then they deteriorate over time. but in this case these charges started off very weak, and if it was, you know, if -- which many believe it is a coordinated effort by joe biden and his supporters to weaken donald trump, it has only made him much stronger. you know, president trump, i know him very well, and i see him using all of these proceedings as almost energy bars. you know, he eats this and thrives on this environment. and he is certainly, you know, the top of every news cycle and everybody's talking about donald trump. and he just made almost $1.5 billion today in the stock market as his company went public. [laughter] stuart: he's doing all right financially right now. matthew whitaker, thanks very much for being with us. always appreciate it, sir. see you again soon. >> all right. stuart: philadelphia district attorney larry krasner suing nearly 20 pharmaceutical
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companies. ashley, on what grounds is he suing them? ashley: yeah. well, he wants nearly 20 pharmaceutical companies and pharmacy benefit managers to explain if what he calls the artificially high cost of insulin. in a lawsuit he claims the companies are in violation of the pennsylvania unfair trade practices and consumer protection law. now, the suit goes after the biggies, ely bigly, novo nordisk, the maker of ozempic, and sanofi which the d.a.'s office claims manufacture manufacture all of the insulin and other diabetes medications available in the united states, almost all of them. also a targeted are cvs, caremark, express scripts and upton rx. the suit contends the pharmacy benefit managers work in concert with the manufacturers to basically dictate the availability and price of insulin drugs for most of the u.s. market and also the d.a.'s office points to a 2022 study in the annals of internal medicine
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that found more than 1.3 million americans with diabetes did not take their full daily doses of insulin because it cost too much. so that's the impetus behind the lawsuit. stu. toure stuart thanks, ash. coming up, people want to know if their flight is a boeing plane. some won't fly on one. we have the satisfactory. princeold. are hay angling to come back into the royal bold? royal watcher neil sean has the latest. ♪ ♪ trading at schwab is now powered by ameritrade, unlocking the power of thinkorswim, the award-winning trading platforms.
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stuart: the dow industrials are up 72, nasdaq's up 61, s&p up 13 points. show me, the jt, the trump media stock -- djt, $69 a share. trump's made about a billion and
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a half so far on his stock. now this. the host of "the view," say they regret indulging in conspiracy theories about kate middleton. ashley -- [laughter] tell me about this. are they apologizing on "the view"? [laughter] ashley: my gosh, i think you're right. yes. the ladies of "the view" admitted, well, they went too far with their speculation about a kate middleton and if gave a very rare mea culpa. watch this. >> i'm guilty of having gotten into the fun of where's kate and and sort of thinking it's funny and sharing the memes and playing into that, and i forgot if something fundamental that we all know which is every person whether they're a princess, somebody in a high privilegedded person or just the person next to you is dealing with personal struggleings that we don't know about. i send my love and strength to her because, sure, the palace totally mishandled the pr of this, but the public mishandled it.
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ashley: and so did you with. another panel member called it a learning moment. ana navarro also called out middleton's request for privacy, said she would now hut her mouth, wish her well and pray for her. leave it to "the view" to take the high road after gleefully flying down the rabbit hole. [laughter] stuart: that's a rare turn of phrase, ashley and and very good. game, set and match, well done, lad. land ash thank you. stuart: prince harry and. megyn:ing markel have offered to help the royal tam my. neil sean with us today. what do you know about this, neil? are they angling to get back into the royal fold, and do you think the royal family would take the them? >> good afternoon, stuart, from london. la. [laughter] yeah, shock about "the view," i've never known that before. what's interesting about this story, let me tell you, is this: i have the understanding that prince harry is now bored rigid. i don't know if you remember late last year or maybe earlier this year at the golden globes,
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meghan on the red carpet said prince harry's loving the part of the entertainment buzzful well, so far it contests of -- can consist ises of meghan, the podcast and now a lifestyle beauty guru queen selling everything. there isn't really a role for harry. march harry's job is literally the litigation cases and sort of juggling lives -- limes somewhere in the backyard. he misses certain elements, i'm being told, of his royal life. and the idea that he and meghan return is absolutely ludicrous because she does not like the united kingdom. no two way as about it. they're not overkeen on meghan markle either. and, you know, what can he assist in? sadly, his majesty the king, king charles, along with the prince and princess of wales, they can't trust them. so they couldn't leave them the out in the public to go and meet people on their behalf for charities. they're certainly no princess anne. the popularity if you look at
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the polling, even prince andrew's polling better. stuart: but what about prince harry going back on his own and leaving meghan in california? >> you know, that are's a good point. but we know that, i think, he's surgically attached, actually. [laughter] i don't know if he can do that alone. it's an interesting thing. when he came over, obvious of course, for his e majesty, the king's, coronation, i think that would have been, on a serious note, stuart, that would have been a great time for someone to unbond him. he didn't want to do that, clearly. he decided against that. what we have right now over here is, of course, the monarchy's not in crisis. it's ridden out so many crises over the years. as his e majesty the king points out, it's a slight bump in the road. things will return. and, of course, as our wonderful monarch said, in the fullness of time, everything comes full circle, and i think it does. stuart: okay. king charles' team have started to plan his summer schedule. is this what you're been
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hearing, that the king could be back in the public eye by the summer? >> well, he is very much in the public eye actually now, stuart, because he has his weekly audience with, of course, the british prime minister, richie sunak, the big thicks are -- things are we are hopeful and looking forward that the he will be seen at this easter sunday's church service. the bigger picture -- and this is the big, hopeful news -- is that the he will be able to attend trouping the color which is, of course, his official birthday. we don't believe he will be on horseback. we think that will be, of course, offered and taken. en in place by his royal highness, the prince of wales. so i think it's really -- i mean, we all just want to see some sort of normality back. you know the weird thing about this situation right now is, you know, we don't realize how much we like to see the monarchy doing the traditional things which are barometers in our year, you know? stuart: yes. >> and when that slightly changes, or it's very disconcerting particularly for brits, let me tell you.
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stuart: yes. oh, i remember it well. neil, you're all right. i know we'll be seeing a lot of you. i just have that feeling. thanks very much, neil sean. [laughter] >> bye-bye. stuart: this is the chance when we looked at the dow 30 and pick out your own stocks and see how they're doing. a sense of the market is that there's some buying today, and the dow is up 80 points. a law firm is suing the faa over alleged racial bias in hiring. they say the focus on diversity is causing fundamental problems. we'll break it all down next. ♪ ♪ fly by night away from here -- ♪ change my life again ♪
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but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? have we piqued your interest? you can get two unlimited lines for just $30 each a month. there are no term contracts. and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network-nationwide. wireless that works for you. it's not just possible. it's happening. i suffer with psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. i was on a journey for a really long time to find some relief. cosentyx works for me. cosentyx helps real people get real relief from the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis. serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema, and an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. i move so much better because of cosentyx. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. i suffer with psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. i was on a journey for a really long time
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to find some relief. cosentyx works for me. cosentyx helps real people get real relief from the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis. serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema, and an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. i move so much better because of cosentyx. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. stuart: i think we'll start with boeing. check that out. it's down a bit today. 188, the stock price. my question, lauren -- lauren: yes. stuart: -- are people comfortable flying on boeing planes? lauren: i would go with mostly yes. i know that you are. you don't care what kind of plane you fly on, right? stuart: definitely. lauren: but a lot of people, especially nervous fliers, are starting to question the -- flyers are questioning the jet. some sites let you put in your
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search the type of plane that you want, they don't want another potential door blowout, a tire flying off a plane. they want to ply on airbus. with we never thought we'd get to this position. i mean, flying is the safe e mode of transportation. boeing is a major plane if maker, and a lot of people are starting to say they prefer airbus. the issue is you can do all that planning, but so often there's a mechanical issue, a plane swap at the last minute, you can't guarantee that you're not going to get on a boeing plane. stuart: i'd like to know how many people do actually change their booking. they look, it's a boeing mane, nope, don't want it -- lauren: a few. but it's growing. stuart: 10? 15? 100? lauren: we don't have a way to measure it -- stuart: no, we don't can. lauren: -- but there's been anecdotal a instances of travelers saying we're not getting on a boeing flight. stuart if you're a nervous flyer, i understand it. my e next guest is the general down of a person suing the
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federal aviation administration. william, how does chase race come into your lawsuit against -- race come into your lawsuit against the faa? >> we represent are over 900 folks who studied and took the test to becoming air traffic troll thers, concern controllers, and they passed the tests with flying colors. and way back in the obama administration, they flushedded that test, and they adopted a new pre-employment if test that was specifically designed to gerrymander who would pass and to change the racial makeup of those air traffic controller pools. and so we represent hem today, and this goes all the a way back to obama. but piped. ing's administration is no better -- president biden's administration has adopted a whole of government equity approach, and they're obsessed with race. stuart: do you think this dei, this whole concept, is that affecting safety of the airlines? >> i think so because anytime you walk onto an airplane, you want to believe that the people who are flying the plane, the people who built the plane, the
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people who are the mechanics on the plane are the best people for the job. but if boeing or the faa or anyone if along the line is thinking about race or gender first and foremost and not quality and not merit, then that's inevitably going to lead to safety issues, to creating a product that isn't the best. and so we're concerned both because of the safety reasons and the legal reasons. these are violations of federal law. you can't discriminate based on race in employment. stuart: what are you going for, just end d can ei programs at the f a aa? that's it? that's what you want? >> well, i would dare to dream that that would be the case, yes. [laughter] certainly, those programs are throughout the whole government, and we would love to see an end to them. we aren't under the illusion that the government's going to never care about diversity, but here you can't make decisions about who gets job, who doesn't get jobs just based on race. stuart: william, i'm sorry, we're out of time, but thanks very much for outlining your suit. very interesting. thank you, william.
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>> thanks so much, stuart. stuart: we're going to go from a serious subject to something quite ludicrous. the tuesday trivia question, how many jelly beans do americans consume on easter? time to guess, folks. you can't really look this up, can you? lauren: how do they even know? if. ♪ ♪ .. 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. ♪ you were always so dedicated...
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stuart: robert f kennedy junior will announce his running mate at 2:00 pm eastern today. we have a report he will choose nicole shanahan who was previously married to sergei. how many jellybeans do we consume on easter. >> >> lahren? and going with a low number, 12 million. 60 one. 3, enough to circle the globe three times. how many pounds of candy for purchase each year. that's it for "varney and company" today. coast-to-coast starts right now. >> more details on the bridge

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