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I'm Jimmy Fala.
I'm Madison Hallworth.
I'm Bill Hemmer, and this is The Fox News Run Down.
Friday, March 13th, 2026.
I'm Jessica Brosnthal.
The president is tapping our oil reserves
during conflict with Iran as gas prices continue to climb.
While officials also warn of an increased security threat here at home.
I do hope that we have a bead on anybody who's in this country
who would be connected to IRGC or any kind of Iranian terror cell.
I'm Chris Foster.
We find out who the Oscars go to on Sunday.
I don't think this was a good year for movies.
When I do a top 10 list at the end of the year, on a good year,
I'm like, all right, I got to eliminate this.
I got to eliminate that instant, you know?
I couldn't stretch at the five.
Speaking of the film critic, Neil Rosen.
And I'm Joe Conchin.
I've got the final word on The Fox News Run Down.
This week, President Trump was asked by Fox's Peter Ducey
if he's been briefed on the presence of Iranian sleeper cells inside the country.
We know where most of them are.
We've got to hire all of them, I think.
If it doesn't, they came in through the open border policies of sleepy Joe Biden.
Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz told Fox's Sean Hannity.
The threat of terrorist attack is higher now than it has been in decades.
He referenced the Austin, Texas bar shooting in which two people were killed
and the effort by two ISIS-inspired men from Pennsylvania
to throw IEDs at a protest outside Gracie Mansion in New York.
And while law enforcement deals with the threat level,
administration officials are trying to shift gas prices which have shot up
due to the closure of the straight-of-form moves,
through which 20% of the world's oil supply flows.
The president told Arali in Hibern, Kentucky this week.
Earlier today, the International Energy Agency agreed to coordinate
the release of a record 400 million barrels of oil
from various national petroleum reserves around the world,
which will substantially reduce the oil prices.
That includes 172 million barrels from our reserves.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright explained on Fox News that Asian refineries
were talking about turning down throughput in their refineries
in places like India, Korea, and Japan.
And we really want to keep the refineries running
so they can deliver jet fuel and diesel and all the products
that keep the Asian economy running.
And so if they felt that they were worried about their near-term supplies of oil,
we said we've got a solution for that.
The president's talked about naval escorts through the straight-of-form moves
helping with shipping insurance,
but he also wrote a post threatening Iran with death, fire, and fury
if they attacked or laid minds in the straight-of-form moves,
saying his threats to Iran were a gift to China.
And that hopefully it's a gesture that will be greatly appreciated.
Everything is so interconnected.
This is just a reminder of that of all of those global threads
that run through each other.
Fox News Center, anchor Shannon Brehm is also the host of the Live
and the Brain podcast and author of the new book Nothing is Impossible with God.
And China does what by 80% of the output from Iran,
when it comes to these petroleum and oil crude products.
So yeah, I think the president said in that social media post,
something like, you're welcome or China should thank me.
This has got to be front and center if they hold to that date for the meeting
that they're going to have.
President Trump and Xi, we believe end of March 1st of April,
they're going to have a lot to talk about.
And the fact is that the world's economy is tied to the straight-of-form moves
in many ways, but China has a direct involvement there.
So we're now going to see how much their interests are about their own economy
and protecting themselves or being sort of this aid or ally to Iran,
which it has been in many ways.
13 of the 15 member countries of the UN Security Council
took a vote this week condemning Iran for its retaliatory strikes
rather than vote against it and support Iran, China, and Russia abstained.
This, I guess, resolution was sponsored by 135 countries total.
So this elicited some rare praise from the Trump administration,
Ambassador Walts, that this is what the UN should be about.
This does seem significant for a body that is usually
more supportive maybe of Iran.
Well, and I think it feels like a change in tone and shift
and whether it's just on this one issue or more broadly,
but when it comes to Israel, I mean, the UN is not a big supporter of Israel.
In fact, there are a lot of things that are said and done there
that feel rather anti-Israel on a regular basis.
So this is interesting, but China, Russia, Iran,
we know that they are in shared interests and shared alliances on many, many things.
I mean, to the point that we're being told there are reports
that Russia's actually giving intel to Iran to help it target U.S.
targets in their bases and their allies.
So, you know, I mean, it just begs the question about President Trump
has given Putin a lot of leeway, his critics would argue.
And the fact that they're also suspending some of the sanctions
on Russian oil right now, which lets them make money, too.
I mean, how willing are we going to be to turn the screws on Russia
when they take a vote like that, when they do things like allegedly
assist Iran in coming after us?
Senator Ted Cruz told Sean Hannity this week,
the threat of a terrorist attack on American soil is higher than it's been in decades.
And we know the FBI told West Coast police agencies to be aware of a possibility
of an Iranian drone attack.
After that, the president said, we know where the Iranian sleeper cells are.
This week, a Canadian MP said they know there are hundreds of actual IRGC agents
living on Canadian soil.
What do you imagine is being done about all this?
That's terrifying.
We have to remember that our men and women with our intel agencies and law enforcement,
I mean, this is a 24-7 thing for them.
And I do hope that we have a bead on anybody who's in this country who would be connected
to IRGC or any kind of Iranian terror cell.
But as the president also points out, I mean, there are millions of people in this country.
We don't know who they are.
There are, you know, people who may have been processed and released.
But then there are potentially hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of Godaways that
we don't know who they are.
They didn't come through any official channels.
We don't have a fingerprint.
We don't have an ID.
We don't know.
And that has been the warning signal.
You think about Christopher Rae, the former FBI director who said, there are all kinds
of blinking red lights, testifying before Congress, saying that there are all kinds of
threats that we can't even fully catalog because we don't know who's here.
That is terrifying.
Let's go to, let's speaking of Congress, we are seeing a lot of talk about the Save
America Act, Senate Majority Leader, Thune is taking a lot of heat.
But he's saying, Shannon, the votes are just not there for this bill that would require
proof of citizenship to register to vote, that there aren't enough votes among Republicans
to nuke the filibuster, nor enough votes to force a talking filibuster.
So is this dead?
Well, I mean, he also says they're going to vote next week.
So the question is, is it just a messaging vote so that the White House can point to
Democrats voting against something like voter ID and something that pulls really well across
partisan and race lines and all kinds of things.
There's incredible support for shoring things up with voter ID.
So do they just make this a vote that forces Democrats, which they can then run the ads
the president can use them as a foil and say, listen, I tried to clean this thing up.
Or is this so substantively important to the president?
I think in some ways it really is that he wants them to find a way to shoehorn this thing.
And they're growing Republican voices that say, do the talking filibuster force the
Democrats to do this thing?
Their argument is, make them take two, three, four weeks, whatever it is, waste all this
time.
They argue for the good of the country long term and for the integrity of elections.
But then you do have Republicans like Senator Lisa Murkowski out of Alaska who's not supportive
of the Saved Act.
She thinks it will end up disenfranchising people who should be able to vote.
And she points out that when Democrats just a few years ago under the Biden administration
attempted some election reform at the federal level, there was a lot of hue and cry from
conservatives and Republicans who said that's the purview of the states and the feds should
not be getting involved in it.
Senator Cornyn of Texas who was forced into a primary runoff this month wrote an op-ed
saying the Saved America Act is more important than the filibuster.
He says off the top of this that Democrats already tried to nuke it two years ago over
their election law and that they've promised to do it again.
So the GOP has to act now.
Is that argument resonating at all?
Well, yeah, he's in that very difficult position of wanting President Trump's endorsement
as he's in that runoff with Texas Seiji, Ken Paxton.
So he's in a really unique place and we've seen an evolution on this which, listen, as
critics and skeptics are going to say, is it legit?
Is it just election year change?
And that's former Senator Joe Manchin who was one of the biggest Democrat voices against
ever blowing up the filibuster.
And there was a lot of pressure from him, for him, from his party to do it, has expressing
real disappointment.
And he says in Senator Cornyn and saying it feels like election year politics to be talking
about this.
And you know, the fact is there are people on the right, there are organizations and analysts
and pundits on the right who say the filibuster is such a sacred protective measures.
The only thing you have when you're in the minority to actually stop something you think
is horrible for the country.
And you know, many of them argue that what you get in the Save Act is not worth it.
The tradeoff is not there because, listen, it's already illegal we know to vote in this
country if you're not a citizen and there are prosecutions, there are cases, those happen.
So, you know, there are certainly other provisions of the Save Act and those who support it say,
yes, blow up the filibuster and let's get it done, it's good for the country long term.
But there are skeptics even on the right who say, you're going to regret it one day when
Democrats are running the show and you literally have not a single roadblock you can put in
in front of them if you give up the filibuster now.
In the Georgia special election from Arthur Taylor Green's old seat, Democrats say their
candidate, Sean Harris, significantly over-performed, he got about 37% of that vote.
It was the highest total that night.
But the Republican field, to be fair, was split, you know, with like 12 candidates.
The Trump-backed candidate, Attorney Clay Fuller, came in second behind Harris.
Are Democrats right to feel some kind of way here or was this just because of a split
field of Republicans?
Well, they have felt really good because they have had successes in a lot of special
elections over the last few months and they feel very buoyed by that.
And you know our Fox News polling that's been out over the last couple of weeks, people
are frustrated, they don't feel like the economic situation for the country is good, they don't
feel like their personal situation is good.
I mean, that's the kind of stuff that drives people out in these special elections is
more the frustration, the anger, the resistance.
And it's really hard to motivate the base, the mega base, sometimes when President
Trump is not on the ballot and it's not the big fall term, midterm ballot that we're
going to see this fall.
So I think Democrats would be wise to have, you know, any, you know, optimism they're
tempered with some caution because you're right.
Once Republicans now have a choice to coalesce around, it would be stunning if they lost
that district.
But this year, I don't think anything's impossible.
House oversight is conducting a deposition, though they've been conducting quite a few
deposition lately into the Epstein investigation, but this week, our own Chad program reported
that a source says that oversight wants Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik to appear within
the next 10 days and AGPam Bondy within 30.
What do you think the focus is with them?
Well, I think for Secretary Lutnik, it's been that, you know, photos have surfaced, communications
have surfaced that seem to be in conflict with what he said about what kind of relationship
he had in the timeline on his relationship with Epstein.
And of course, critics, Democrats and Republicans have been really hard on attorney general
Pam Bondy saying she overpromised under delivered.
They think there's more documentation that should have been released and they question
the timing of that.
So, you know, get them under oath.
I think it's interesting that this Epstein thing has been bipartisan in nature.
I mean, when former president Clinton and former secretary Clinton said in this big broad
sweeping letter, they were not going to show up to testify before Congress.
There was a bipartisan vote, I mean, including Democrats saying like, no, you don't get
to be in contempt of Congress.
Are you going to be in contempt of Congress?
You don't tell us no to a subpoena.
So I think all kinds of new precedents have been set and I think Republicans are very much
going to be willing to say, all right, Lutnik and Bondy, we need to hear from you because
we've pressed the Democrats and we expect everybody to show up and give answers on Epstein
and what they know.
Yeah.
Finally, Shannon, you somehow find time to write books.
Your latest one, nothing is impossible with God is available now.
I know you've been traveling and talking about the book.
What has struck you that you've heard from people as you talk about this topic?
Well, you know, I love that people tell me, I mean, it was just been out for a couple
of days as you and I are talking and people tell me like, I'm almost thrilled with it.
Or they're listening to the audio, which when you record that as an author, it's a little
bit tedious and you're like, does anybody really want to hear me read this, you know, for
eight hours or whatever it turns out to be?
But to hear people say, I mean, I've already gotten text and things on social media from
people saying like, I needed this and, you know, this, even the opening chapter message
was for me.
And I just, I love that.
That gives me such joy and hope that it's encouraging people because that's always the
goal of these books to make them feel like God is accessible.
He's there.
He's, you know, aware of their lives.
He loves them.
And these stories in this book, nothing is impossible with God or all people from the
Bible, Old and New Testament, who faced really difficult, insurmountable odds, at least
by human standards.
And some of those were external, some of them were their own internal struggles.
But just to see how people got to work through them, even when they failed, I found that
very encouraging that, you know, he, he wants a relationship with all of us.
Fox News Sunday, Anchor Shannon Green, thank you.
Thanks, Jess.
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The 98th Annual Academy Awards ceremony's Sunday in L.A., the action horror movie sinners
has 16 chances to win, setting a record for nominations including Best Picture, Best
Director Ryan Kugler, and actor Michael B. Jordan as twin brother gangsters and juke-joyed
honors.
I'll give you $20 to come play at our juke tonight.
Yeah, I wish I could.
I'm gonna be a mess next tonight, Simmons, I am there every Saturday night.
You ain't paying you $20 a night, I know that.
You ain't paying no $20 a night.
You paying $20 maybe tonight.
Delroy Lindo there and that scene is up for Best Supporting Actors.
Centres is in direct competition with one battle after another in 11 categories including
Best Picture, Best Director Paul Thomas Anderson, and Best Actor Leonardo DiCaprio as a
stoner former revolutionary trying to protect his daughter.
My name is Bob Ferguson, I don't know if you've ever heard of me, alright, I was part
of French 75 for years, years and years, alright, they used to call me ghetto pad, rocket
man stuff like that.
Only problem is I fried my brain since then.
Those are both Warner Brothers movies.
The other nominee for Best Picture, but Gonja, F1, Frankenstein, Hamnet, Marty Supreme,
the secret agent, sentimental value, and train dreams.
I don't think this was a good year for movies.
Film critic Neil Rosen is the host of Talking Pictures with Neil Rosen on PBS and YouTube.
I mean usually when I do a top 10 list at the end of the year, on a good year, I'm like,
alright, I gotta eliminate this, I gotta eliminate that, you know, because it's 10, you
know.
And then I decided to do on my round table critic show, I said, let's just all do our
top three movies.
Wow.
So you could even stretch it to 10.
I couldn't stretch it to five.
I mean, it was really, I go, this is just not, not a bad movie, it's not worthy on being
on a top 10 list.
Right.
So I would say not a good year for movies.
The Oscars obviously the big two are one battle after another in centers.
There's never been a more head to head matchup at the Oscars that are against each other
and 11 categories.
What are some of the arguments for and against for director and picture, for example?
You know, uh, centers is kind of gaining momentum.
If you would have asked me this a couple, I mean, it's got the most nominations like ever.
It's 16 nominations, which breaks the record for any movie and it's the 98th Academy Awards.
It was up for, I went down the ballot.
It was up for everything it could potentially you've been up for, except for one, except
for best actor.
And it's not a bad movie, it's an okay movie, but to break the record, does this movie
deserve more nominations than the Godfather, Lawrence of Arabia, Citizen Kane?
I mean, seriously, I mean, it's just kind of crazy.
I mean, it's an okay movie, but I don't think it's worthy of the most nominations.
And if you would have asked me how this movie would fare in the actual Oscar ceremony a
few weeks ago, I would have told you that, you know, I don't think it's going to win
that much, but ever since the BAFTA Awards and what used to be called the SAG Awards,
and it's now called the Actor Awards, and it's won a bunch of stuff.
I, you know, I would say that it has more of a shot of winning now than it did, you know,
if you asked me a few weeks ago.
I generally don't give a lot of opinion or editorialize on this thing, but because the movies
I will, I saw centers in the theater and I came out of it thinking, well, there you go.
I know it's very early in the year, but that might be best texture.
And then I thought that I thought that all year, and then I saw one bad after another,
and I thought, okay, maybe not.
Maybe it won't be.
Well, you're right.
It's a two person race.
I mean, it's a two film race.
And then when you get into the categories, it's also, I have never seen, I mean, I've
been doing this, making predictions and covering Oscars.
I don't even want to tell you how many years, but let's just say a lot of years.
I've never seen races that are this close where I can tell you what I think is going
to win, but I could tell you it's a flip of a coin.
And it's a lot of races, it's just, it's a two person race.
And the same with best texture, you think it's a flip.
I think it's, yeah, I don't think anything else has a chance.
And probably it's probably also a coin flip for best actor.
Best actor is a coin flip.
Best actress is not a coin flip.
We'll get into the best actresses a lot.
Best actor Michael B. Jordan for centers playing the two main characters, I guess.
If you would have asked me this again a few weeks ago, I would have told you the Timothy
Chalamet for Marty Supreme, I would have said he would have won.
And I would have told you that he, and if he does win, he's not winning for Marty Supreme,
he's winning for playing Bob Dylan last year and one of those where they gave you the
delayed award.
Yeah, it's like he was like slighted last year for a complete unknown.
And I would have said that's what he's winning for, you know, not so much Marty Supreme.
But if you asked me today and, you know, what Academy Awards are coming up really shortly,
I would tell you that if I had to put the lay money down on bed, I'd tell you that Michael
B. Jordan is going to win for centers that he wouldn't put a lot, but he wouldn't put
a lot of money on it.
No, it's a coin flip.
It's like being in a casino with a roulette table where you bet red or black or auto
even, and they could go either way, I'd say 51% to 49% it's that close.
And then, and then Leonardo Caprio is like, is like the double zero.
Not happening.
Yeah, he's the, he's the green double zero on the roulette real exactly.
As you mentioned, I'm assuming you're going to say Jesse Buckley's your lock there.
That's the lock for him.
And now, there are a couple of movies this year for Amit, yeah.
The two, I guess, front runners are both for playing mothers who are going through a lot
between her and Rose Byrne, Rose Byrne was great.
Yeah, she's not going to win, but she was great.
If I had legs, I'd kick you and, and she's known obviously mostly for comedy.
And Conan O'Brien is in that movie, and he's hosting the audience, so he's got a little,
but she's not winning.
She's great though, you know.
I think she gives a better performance than Jesse Buckley, who's the lock to win.
Yeah, that's your lock.
Okay.
The one, that's probably the one of the big ones that everybody, that most people consider
a lock.
That would be the biggest upset of the year.
If she didn't win, that's the headline news, you know, that then what wins the best
picture probably.
That's supporting actress.
No, Amy Madigan has Gladys, the witch or whatever she is in weapons.
She might not win, but she's the character who's most likely to be a Halloween costume
for the next few years.
Yes.
And it's a fun performance, and she's been around for a long time.
Well, again, that's a close category.
I mean, I think, I think Tiana Taylor from one battle, yeah, from one battle, if you're
another, has a very good chance of winning.
Sinners gets caught up in a sweep, you know, we're like, this movie's, you know, like
you'll see it, like if you watched the Oscars, as the evening progresses, if Sinners starts
winning everything, then Tiana Taylor could, that could work to her benefit, and she could
get caught up in that sweep.
Talk about the business for a second, K-pop demon hunters, up for best song, a cultural
phenomenon.
But so it goes from being, it goes from being really popular on Netflix, to then becoming
a box office hit.
So that's, that's, that's a unicorn, that's kind of a weird thing.
But I wonder, that's where long it's going to win, by the way.
Yeah.
Every says.
Now I do wonder with all the consolidation, why not try to squeeze every single penny you
can out of these movies, put them in theaters for a couple of the weeks, get that money,
and then you bring it to your streamer.
People aren't going to unsubscribe to Netflix because something wasn't a theater.
Correct.
Two weeks first.
Well, let me tell you a story.
I live on the Upper East Side of New York, and within a seven block radius of my apartment,
when I moved in 30-some years ago, they were, I think, at least, at least, maybe more, but
I can definitely count 16 movie theaters in a seven block radius.
Take a guess how many movie theaters there are now.
Let's take a guess.
We got three.
One.
One.
But one real movie theater that's showing, you know, one battle after another or centers
or something.
Yeah, that's one movie theater.
One, two, three on 60th Street and 3rd Avenue.
That's it.
So what's your advice to assuming everybody still wants to make money in that business?
What's your advice to theater owners?
What's your advice to studios to make as much money as they can while still maybe is a
side effect even serving the audience best?
I think it's a great question.
I think that it's very expensive to go to the movies.
I mean, if there's a tent pole movie like a Marvel Cinematic Universe movie and everybody
wants to see the new Avengers or Avatar or just something or a mission impossible, which
I mentioned earlier, or a James Bond film.
You know, people want to see that on a big screen and they will come out to that.
But to see some of these, if you look at the nominees for Best Picture, something like,
I don't know, Secret Agent, you know, or like, or like train dreams that might have
been something that people, you take a family of four, let's say, to a movie.
He's like 20 bucks, you know, a ticket.
So if you have a Netflix subscription or a Hulu or an Amazon Prime or a Paramount Plus
subscription, and you pay in nine to 13 bucks for that a month, as opposed to going out
with your family and spending a hundred bucks, and in some cities, you know, you've got
to pay for parking, you know, and I mean, you're talking about $120, where you spend
in nine to 13 bucks, you know, nine bucks if you want the commercials on Netflix 13,
if you want premium package, and you're getting all these movies, and they're coming there
a few weeks later.
So what advice would I give to answer your question, which is, I gave you a long preamble
before I gave you the answer.
It's not so much the movie theaters, it's the studios that have to churn out this stuff,
these big blockbuster movies, which people don't want, which people want to see on a big
screen, or just something where like, they don't want to wait, they want to see it
immediately, and there's really very few movies that are like that.
So advice, theaters are going away.
I mean, I think that the nail in the coffin was the pandemic, you know, people were streaming
stuff, but they were still going to the movies, although the movie theaters were dying,
and then everybody just got into the habit of like, well, you know, I'll just watch this,
I'm paying my subscription, I'm paying for these four subscriptions, or if I have Amazon
Prime, it comes with my Amazon Prime, and it's a lot of money, and there's no advice
I could give.
It's just, you know, it's just the evolution.
There's a Neil Rosen Oscar for the most, just you, yeah, up on high, the most entertained
or even moved or whatever movie or performances this year, forget about what the actual nominations
were.
If you could just say, this is what I like, this is what got me this year, okay, again,
a really bad year for movies, but I love Bagonia.
I liked it.
It was, it stars the same people who did four things.
I like this movie Bagonia way better than, than poor things.
I think it was interesting.
It's a simple premise that you could explain in a sentence.
I mean, she's a CEO of a corporation, and she's kidnapped because they think she's an
alien, you know, and her disciples are going to alien disciples are going to wipe out
the human race.
That's what the film.
I did.
And it's one of those movies that I have recommended.
My wife hated it.
You either love this movie.
That's the thing.
I'm recommended this movie with the caveat.
Look, you're either going to thank me or you're going to be really mad at me.
Exactly.
So, but the ending was just, I'm not going to give it away, but I thought it was so clever
and funny.
And it's funny.
I mean, you know, when I just described it as somebody being kidnapped, it doesn't sound
funny, but there's humor in it.
I thought Jesse Plemons was snubbed for a nomination.
I really enjoyed it.
So I really enjoyed that movie a lot.
Well, Neil, it's good to meet you.
I've been a fan for a long time.
You can see Neil in a bunch of places, social media, Neil Rosenapples on X, real with Neil.
On Instagram, he's on PBS.
Well, Neil, I hope to talk to you again.
Yeah.
It was great.
And now, some good news with Tanya J. Powers.
U.S. service members are known for stepping up when they're called to.
Now, 150 strangers have returned the favor for a U.S. Navy veteran in Tennessee.
Money D. Wayman was a Nashville native, born in April of 1952.
He passed away last month.
He had no family to claim him, but on Tuesday, he was laid to rest with full military honors,
honored by rows of veterans, community members, and military personnel who showed up to show
gratitude for the service of a man they'd never met.
A veteran's affairs representative spoke at the ceremony, thanking all those who gathered.
When the paperwork for Lonnie Wayman came across my desk, it was marked as an unclaimed
veteran.
When I say that's incorrect, I say that's a misnomer.
And thanks to the sport of our United States military, the good folks that got to
mortuary and all the support I see here today, we are able to claim our honorable veterans
and provide them the dignity and honor that they have earned.
Video from the service shows people filling the sanctuary and other standing at the back
and outside the church.
The ceremony concluded with a release of doves under the American flag.
Tanya J. Powers, Fox News.
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So what'd be a good thing or a bad thing for the United States to move away from capitalism
and move more towards socialism?
Well, if you look at the polling that just came out recently from Pew Research, a bad thing,
61%, a good thing, 38%.
That is a record high in terms of support for socialism.
Now, when you look at the percentage who say socialism is a good thing by party,
Democrats believe by a solid majority, 55% that socialism is a good thing,
while only 22% of Republicans and 38% of Independents feel the same way.
Overall, 66% of Democrats under the age of 45 favor moving away from capitalism.
What country are we living in?
Meanwhile, 78% of Republicans see a move towards socialism as a very, very bad thing.
So what are the key factors driving this shift?
One is high student debt, if you're younger.
Housing affordability is another.
Healthcare being unaffordable is another.
And this increasing perspective that the current system is working against them.
So what do they do?
They turn to socialists like Zara Mimdani or AOC, Bernie Sanders.
And even given the way he runs a state, David Newsom, but is Margaret Thatcher once said famously,
the problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of everyone else's money.
And as we're sitting here in New York City today, all those promises that Mimdani made
likely will not come to anything resembling reality.
But that's the thing.
It's not about reality.
It's about the prospect and socialist absolutely bet on the idealism of what they're saying,
instead of the reality of actually being able to deliver on them.
And that's a big, big problem, especially coming from the left.
I'm Joe Consha.
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The Fox News Rundown



