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Fox Report With Jon Scott 8/31/25 FULL END SHOW | FOX BREAKING NEWS TRUMP August 31, 2025
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00:00We're keeping an eye on three major stories this afternoon.
00:03The war of words heating up between President Trump and the Democratic governor of Illinois, J.B. Pritzker, over crime in Chicago.
00:11Will another bloody weekend in the witty city be the last straw before President Trump sends in the National Guard?
00:17Tens of thousands in Ukraine without power as it keeps trading attacks with Russia,
00:22while President Trump's latest deadline looms for Vladimir Putin to agree to peace talks with Kiev.
00:27And still no winner after last night's billion-dollar Powerball drawing.
00:32Will the jackpot keep growing?
00:35Good afternoon. I'm Mike Emanuel in for John Scott, and this is the Fox Report.
00:47More on those stories in moments, but first, President Trump renewing calls for better election security,
00:52promising an executive order in the works to mandate voter ID laws.
00:57This latest push comes after an appeals court dealt a blow to his tariff policies.
01:02Lucas Tomlinson is live on the North Lawn with more. Hello, Lucas.
01:06Good afternoon, Mike, and hot off the true social press.
01:09The president replying and responding once again to that appellate court's ruling,
01:14striking a blow to the president's agenda.
01:16Let's read it for everyone right now.
01:18It says, quote,
01:19Without tariffs and all of the trillions of dollars we have already taken in,
01:24our country would be completely destroyed,
01:26and our military power would be instantly obliterated.
01:29In a 7-4 opinion, a radical left group of judges didn't care.
01:33But one Democrat, Obama appointed, actually voted to save our country.
01:37I would like to thank him for his courage.
01:39He loves and respects the USA.
01:41Here's Trump's trade czar, Peter Navarro, on the court's decision.
01:47This was weaponized partisan injustice at its worst.
01:51Politicians in black robes.
01:54You had six out of the seven judges, Democrats,
01:57but you also had 12 blue states intervening against Trump.
02:02Most curiously, the five importers, very small companies,
02:08trying to preserve the right to import cheap Chinese crap.
02:13The case is expected to go to the Supreme Court,
02:15where the White House will likely make the case
02:17these tariffs are needed under national security grounds.
02:20The court doesn't see it that way, Mike,
02:22and said Trump does not have the authority
02:23to use this Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977,
02:27which does not mention the word tariffs.
02:29The court ruled there is no national emergency.
02:32Trump's trade rep, Jameson Greer, thinks there is.
02:37I think the key here is that the emergency that we're looking at
02:40are all the conditions arising from having this massive trade deficit
02:43of $1.2 trillion in goods with the rest of the world.
02:48And so the legal authority that was used in this instance
02:50really is the best legal authority available for this.
02:55And here's Treasury Secretary Scott Besant speaking to Lara Trump.
02:59If they're so bad and the American consumer's paying them,
03:04why do we hear the European companies or the Chinese companies
03:08or the Chinese complaining about tariffs
03:10if it's all being borne by the American people?
03:13It's just not happening.
03:16The Congressional Budget Office estimates that over the next decade,
03:21those tariffs could bring in upwards of $4 trillion.
03:24Critics of the president's plan say it'll be the American consumer
03:28who eventually pays for him.
03:30Mike?
03:31Lucas Tomlinson live on the North Lawn.
03:32Lucas, thanks very much.
03:34Let's bring in John Kudunas, president and CEO of Calamos Investments.
03:39John, welcome.
03:41Mike, nice to see you.
03:43We'll see how it plays out in the courts, John.
03:45But what happens if President Trump's tariffs are found to be unconstitutional?
03:50He doesn't have the authority.
03:51Well, first of all, I think that the Supreme Court will probably rule
03:58whether you're a Democrat or Republican.
04:00I think they will rule in their favor because I think they've been leaning that way.
04:05Having said that, if they don't, it's not the end of the world.
04:08I think the markets at first will be, because of the uncertainty in what happens next,
04:14will fall a little bit.
04:15But as they figure out that the president and this administration still has many levers
04:21to pull, all the secondary treaties on the industries, whether it be automotive,
04:26whether it be steel, aluminum, all the copper and everything else, those are still in place.
04:33All the treaties that were signed and the tariffs that were signed are still in place.
04:38And the leverage that he still has used with these tariffs to do the deals,
04:46that's not going away because he could take one by one and look at the industry
04:50and where the particular country would be hurt the most in order to use that leverage
04:57so we could have a fair deal that we haven't had in the past.
05:02And that's why part of the reason our budget is through the moon.
05:05I want to pick up on a point you just made.
05:07Markets and investors don't like uncertainty.
05:10So could we be in for a bumpy ride in the markets after the holiday this week?
05:16Look, I think it opens up on Tuesday a little bit lower on the news,
05:20but then, you know, it'll bounce back.
05:23It's a non-event because the actual tariffs that are still going to be in place
05:28through October till the Supreme Court announces their verdict.
05:32So I don't see it being a huge bump.
05:35I do see potentially a small bump.
05:37It's because of the uncertainty.
05:39But when they realize that even if the Supreme Court rules against the administration,
05:46the president, you know, the irony of it all is a lot of people didn't want the tariffs at first
05:53and the market at first didn't want the tariffs.
05:55So it will settle in and it's going to be just fine.
05:59I'm not worried about it, although there will be volatility for sure.
06:04We know President Trump has been pushing for interest rate cuts.
06:07Do you anticipate aggressive interest rate cuts?
06:13Look, I don't anticipate aggressive cuts.
06:16I think the market is pricing potentially 25 basis points in September,
06:22maybe one more November, December, three to four next year at best.
06:27But, you know, until there's a new Fed governor chief, I don't see anything more aggressive.
06:33And I don't think the market's going to really need it to be more aggressive.
06:36We'll wait and see what happens with the labor markets next Friday.
06:40But I think that we're looking one and a half by the end of next year percent going down.
06:47That's not that aggressive.
06:48And I don't see it getting that much more aggressive because the economy underlying outside of labor is still very strong.
06:57Strong consumer buying, strong, you know, inflation in terms of the energy and stuff has been a big positive of bringing those numbers down.
07:08So here in Washington, obviously, both sides can't agree on anything for the most part.
07:12So you hear very partisan reactions to what's happening.
07:15You're a big time CEO based in the Midwest.
07:19What's your view?
07:20Big picture of the American economy right now.
07:24I think GDP is going.
07:27I mean, we saw what happened in the second quarter.
07:29You know, we go from a dollar and a half to three point three up.
07:34I see it continuing, maybe not as aggressive in the second half, but it's going to be up to two and a half.
07:40Who knows?
07:41And we're going to see it continue.
07:42I think that the American economy is strong and it's very resilient, Mike.
07:47Everything you see through the consumer and everything else, it bounces back.
07:52It always has.
07:52And it's continued to do that.
07:54If you look at the underlying numbers, we're still strong.
07:57And all the things that the administration is doing, it still has not all kicked in.
08:03That's very, very powerful.
08:05Tailwinds for going to be strong and do really well.
08:08The markets are going to do well for the next year or two.
08:11John Cadunas, president and CEO of Calamos Investments.
08:14Great to have you today.
08:15Thanks so much.
08:17Great to be here, Mike.
08:21President Trump warning yesterday that he'll deploy federal troops to Chicago if the Windy City is rising.
08:26Crime isn't contained.
08:28U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., Janine Pirro tells Fox that crime has dropped in the nation's capital after National Guard troops took to the streets earlier this month.
08:38Madeline Rivera has the story.
08:39The White House has been putting out numbers almost daily of what they say has been accomplished in D.C. since they began their multi-agency operation on August 7th.
08:49They say there have been more than 1,500 arrests, at least 12 of whom are of known gang members.
08:54Five missing children have been found and more than 150 illegal guns have been seized.
09:00This is about crime.
09:02This is about protecting the public.
09:04You know, they talk about the shining city on the hill.
09:07Well, this shining city on the hill is upside down.
09:10In a new Truth Social post, President Trump repeats his threat that a similar effort will be coming to Chicago if Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker does not quickly straighten things out.
09:18The president points to violence that broke out in the Windy City last weekend where police say six people were killed and at least two dozen people were shot.
09:26But Pritzker remains defiant.
09:27This kind of deployment he's set up in Washington that he says he wants to do in other cities, at least in Washington, is showing potential success.
09:35And what I hear you saying is, well, sure, if they show up, it might help us, too.
09:39I'm saying we don't want troops on the streets of American cities.
09:43That's un-American.
09:45And frankly, the president of the United States ought to know better.
09:48This one doesn't seem to.
09:49Still, Chicago's mayor, Brandon Johnson, is getting ready for the possibility of troop deployments.
09:54He signed an executive order that is aimed at stopping the president from deputizing local police.
09:58It states that Chicago police can continue to enforce state and local laws, but it will not work with the National Guard or federal agents on patrols, arrests and immigration enforcement.
10:07The order also reaffirms the police wear masks, body cameras and their official uniforms so they can be clearly identified.
10:14Mike.
10:16Madeline Rivera, thanks very much.
10:19Now let's bring in Chicago Alderman Raymond Lopez.
10:22Alderman Lopez, welcome.
10:24Thank you, Mike.
10:24So Chicago's led the nation in the murder rate for the past 13 years or so.
10:30Is that a sign perhaps a federal surge would be helpful?
10:35I think a federal surge would, in fact, be helpful.
10:38Even though we see our statistics are trending in the right direction, who would argue against making them trend even further, even lower, meaning less victims on the street?
10:47It's absolutely asinine to me to hear my Democratic colleagues say that we don't want more help, that we don't want federal intrusion into our city,
10:54even though we know that we are not only both relying on federal grants, but that we've always worked hand in hand with the FBI, ATF, DEA and other federal agencies here in the city of Chicago
11:03to go after those most dangerous threats that are on our streets and in our communities.
11:08Why now we don't want them here?
11:10Why now is just a symptom of this derangement syndrome that seems to attach itself to Donald Trump at a time when we're playing this pissing match with our communities
11:19and putting them behind the eight ball when it comes to criminal activity?
11:24Your mayor, Brandon Johnson, signed an executive order yesterday which he says will protect the rights of Chicagoans.
11:30What do you make of it?
11:31You know, that order isn't worth the paper it's printed on.
11:34I put that on a tweet, and I know it sent my mayor into a panic, but it's very true.
11:40We have no authority over the federal government.
11:43He was a teacher.
11:43You'd think he would understand that concept.
11:45What we do know is this, that rather than making all of these wild, performative attempts to get Donald Trump's attention,
11:52Mayor Brandon Johnson should have taken the last seven and a half months to actually communicate with Donald Trump,
11:57to speak to the White House, to find out what we can do to assuage his political concerns
12:02as well as our political beliefs here in the city of Chicago.
12:05One of those missteps that we've seen the mayor take is that he refused to amend the Welcoming City Ordinance,
12:11which is our sanctuary laws, to allow our officers to work with our federal partners
12:16when we arrest someone who is a non-citizen choosing to engage in dangerous criminal activity.
12:2189% of Chicagoans want that, and yet the mayor refuses to do that,
12:25and I think if we had done that back then, we probably wouldn't be in this predicament now.
12:29Governor J.B. Pritzker talked about the potential crime crackdown in Chicago today.
12:33Let's play it, and I'll get you to react.
12:35No one in the administration, the president or anybody under him,
12:43has called anyone in my administration, or and me, have not called the city of Chicago or anyone else.
12:50So it's clear that in secret they're planning this, well, it's an invasion with U.S. troops,
12:56if they in fact do that.
12:58The other thing is, you know, the book tour starts in a few weeks.
13:02A federal child exploitation investigation found that an illegal migrant from Mexico
13:09and his girlfriend targeted minors in foster homes in California.
13:13Authorities there are warning parents to keep an eye on social media
13:16and who their children are communicating with online.
13:20Christina Coleman is live in Los Angeles with more.
13:23Hi, Christina.
13:24Hi, Mike.
13:25We must warn you the details of this case are disturbing.
13:28Authorities say an illegal alien from Mexico and his girlfriend at the time
13:31worked together to prey on girls living in foster care group homes here in Southern California.
13:37Here's a photo of them.
13:38Authorities identified the defendants as Nancy Jasmine Castillo,
13:41a U.S. citizen who lived in Anaheim, California,
13:44and Jonathan Gonzalez Reyes, the guy you see there standing behind her.
13:48They say he's been in the U.S. illegally for 31 years.
13:52Gonzalez was sentenced to 23 years in federal prison this week
13:55for befriending a 13-year-old girl in 2021, providing her with alcohol,
14:00sexually assaulting her, and taking photographs and making videos of the attack.
14:05Authorities say they tried to further drug the teenager during this incident.
14:10She was in and out of consciousness, and they thought she was overdosing.
14:15Court documents also state that evidence from Castillo's iPhone and social media
14:27showed she invited other teenage girls to spend time with them at motels
14:31and had spent time with at least one minor girl in a hotel in Las Vegas.
14:35The 13-year-old girl in this case is the only minor they face charges for.
14:40She had been housed at a group home for minors in Acton, California, near Palmdale.
14:45And she was willing to disclose information to police.
14:49The defendant in this case preyed on some of our most vulnerable members of our community,
14:55our foster youth, to include the victim in this.
14:59Authorities say Castillo and Gonzalez use social media to communicate with minors.
15:04Retired LAPD Lieutenant Mark Evans says this case is a reminder of some of the tactics
15:09used by bad actors targeting teenagers on social media.
15:12He's conducted over 7,000 investigations related to crimes like this
15:17and warns parents to be aware of who their kids are talking to online.
15:22When the parents are in bed asleep, you don't know who your kids are chatting with
15:28and you don't know what's going on there.
15:30And that's something you need to be very aware of.
15:32As for the woman in this case, Nancy Castillo, she pleaded guilty to one count of production
15:38of child pornography in February, and she has since been sentenced to 20 years in federal prison.
15:45Mike?
15:45Disturbing case.
15:46Christina Coleman, thanks very much.
15:48The Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigrants has faced numerous legal challenges.
15:56On Friday, a federal judge blocked its efforts to expand fast-track deportations.
16:01Let's bring in South Carolina Congresswoman Nancy Mace, a member of the House Oversight Committee
16:05and candidate for governor in South Carolina.
16:07Congresswoman, welcome.
16:10Thank you, Mike.
16:10Thank you for having me.
16:11So what is your reaction to this federal judge blocking President Trump's immigration crackdown?
16:18Well, yet here we have another rogue judge who thinks that they are president of the United
16:23States of America.
16:24And the last I checked, that was Donald J. Trump.
16:27And if he wants to expedite the deportations of criminal illegal aliens here in the United
16:31States, and he has the right and the power to do so.
16:34And I know Donald Trump.
16:36We know him well.
16:37And we know that he's going to fight this every tooth and nail all the way to the Supreme
16:41Court, if we have to, and not praise him for doing the work of the American people, because
16:44this is what we voted for.
16:46This month, we've seen a crime crackdown here in our nation's capital.
16:50There's some expectation that the president could surge resources to Chicago next.
16:55I want to play for you some of the back and forth on that, and then I'll get you to react
16:59to it.
17:01We will not have our police officers who are working hard every single day to drive down
17:08crime deputized to do traffic stops and checkpoints for the president.
17:13Everyone wants their community safe.
17:16They want these gang leaders, MS-13, Trenda-Aragua, apprehended and removed from their communities.
17:24They want to know that their kids are going to be safe.
17:26What's your reaction to what we've seen here in Washington, where you work and live part
17:32time?
17:33And would you welcome federal resources going into a part of South Carolina with a high
17:38crime rate?
17:39Well, Congress is back in session on Tuesday, and I hear D.C. and the Capitol is safer than
17:44it's ever been.
17:45And I hope that President Trump has the resources to send soldiers to Chicago, if that's what
17:50it takes.
17:50That is one of the most violent cities in America, particularly for the hardest hit communities
17:56there.
17:56And this is what we're seeing.
17:57The Democrat Party is a party of violence.
18:00They are defending rapists.
18:01They're defending murderers.
18:02They're defending child molesters and pedophiles by keeping those who are committing heinous crimes
18:08and who are here illegally right here in the United States.
18:10I mean, they're fighting.
18:11They're getting out to talk to voters.
18:12We're polling about 10 points ahead or double digits.
18:15And President Trump recently posted one of our polls.
18:19It's been overwhelming.
18:20We've had over 8,000 people contribute to our campaign.
18:23And if you want to chip in a dollar, you can go to nancymace.org and go do that right
18:27now.
18:27We're adding thousands of people every single week who are part of this movement.
18:32We have an opportunity to have MAGA governors, America First governors, and in South Carolina
18:36an opportunity to have Trump in high heels right here.
18:39We're working to do that, working very hard.
18:40And we're excited about this opportunity, but we take nothing for granted, Mike.
18:43And I'm working very hard to earn the trust, the support of the voters of South Carolina.
18:48Is it significantly harder to campaign statewide?
18:53Certainly it is.
18:55This is an audience that, you know, I have one congressional district.
18:58It's one seventh of the state, but we're winning.
19:01We're winning almost everywhere in almost every county, every jurisdiction, every municipality.
19:06We're ahead of all the other candidates.
19:08And so I'm not taking that for granted, though.
19:11No one's going to work harder for President Trump's endorsement, and no one's going to work
19:14harder for the state of South Carolina than I will.
19:16Obviously, in your day job, you passed the president's key legislative agenda, the one
19:22big, beautiful bill.
19:24That's expected to be a central theme in next year's midterm elections.
19:28I'm curious how the big, beautiful bill is playing in the great state of South Carolina.
19:33Well, certainly voters here in South Carolina love the idea that they're going to get thousands
19:37of dollars back next year when they file their taxes through the big, beautiful bill.
19:42They also like seeing our streets safer here in South Carolina.
19:45And we have Train de Agua.
19:47We have the Sinaloa cartel.
19:48We have MS-13.
19:49We have had sanctuary sheriffs.
19:51And they're looking forward to having crime go down and having safer communities.
19:56And that's why we need America First governors to win in the midterms, to make not just the
20:01capital and our nation safe, but each of us, our cities or towns or counties, our states
20:05safer.
20:06South Carolina Congresswoman Nancy Mace, thanks so much for your time.
20:10In Ukraine, as Russia launches another large-scale drone strike at several targets, the Black
20:15Sea port of Odessa was hit the hardest.
20:18A critical power plant there was badly damaged, leaving 29,000 households in the area without
20:23electricity.
20:25Stephanie Bennett is following this all live in London.
20:27Hello, Stephanie.
20:28Hey, Mike.
20:30Well, just over the last few days, Russia has launched more than 1,000 drones across Ukraine.
20:37Overnight, they sent an additional 142.
20:40Now, Ukraine's Air Force says that they managed to shoot down most of them, but they still impacted
20:45about 10 regions last night.
20:48Now, those targets were preferably they hit at power facilities, is what Russia was aiming
20:53for, to the north and to the south of Ukraine.
20:56Authorities say nearly 60,000 households in those areas lost power.
21:01Zelensky said they will retaliate.
21:04Riding on X, the forces and resources are prepared.
21:07New deep strikes have also been planned.
21:10Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin is spending the next few days in China.
21:14Today, Chinese President Xi Jinping is hosting more than 20 world leaders for a two-day security
21:20summit that China hopes can counter Western influence in global affairs.
21:24Then, on Wednesday, President Putin will take part in Beijing's Victory Day parade, marking
21:29the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II.
21:32He'll be joined alongside the leader of North Korea.
21:35President Zelensky says instead of organizing new attacks, President Putin needs to focus on
21:39peace talks.
21:40These absolutely brazen attacks from Russia show there will be no end to the war without
21:47any world pressure.
21:49These are clear messages for the United States and Europe, and those leaders who are meeting
21:54Putin in China in the following days.
21:58And also today, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov announced that European powers, he claims,
22:04are hindering Trump's peace efforts and that Russia will continue its operation in Ukraine
22:08until Moscow sees real signs that Kyiv is ready for peace.
22:15Europeans are in every way condoning and probably encouraging the Kyiv regime to continue the
22:22absolutely absurd line of intransigence.
22:25This is a big mistake.
22:28Meanwhile, European leaders, they are set to meet in Paris on Thursday to discuss the next
22:34steps for Ukraine.
22:36President Zelensky also saying last week that he would also like to meet with President Trump.
22:40Back to you, Mike.
22:42Stephanie Bennett, thanks very much.
22:45Now let's bring in Michael Allen, former National Security Council senior director.
22:49Michael, welcome.
22:51Thank you for having me.
22:53I want to start with Senator Bill Hagerty talking about basically the war in Ukraine earlier
22:58today.
22:59Let's play it.
22:59I'll get you to react.
23:00If President Trump continues to mount pressure, the Europeans can also step up.
23:05I think that's the way to approach this.
23:07Not to hope for some sort of benevolent turn by Vladimir Putin, but to put him in a position
23:12where he has to make a deal.
23:13President Trump is moving him in the right direction.
23:15I think that we need to give President Trump maximum latitude here.
23:19He's the one negotiating this.
23:20And I think we need to give him the ability to put maximum pressure on Vladimir Putin.
23:25Michael, what could be the next play to get Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table?
23:30Well, I think Senator Hagerty has it right.
23:33And Donald Trump certainly understands leverage better than anyone.
23:37And in a word, it's the oil revenues that are keeping Russia afloat.
23:41It's allowing them to buy more arms and allowing them to continue a military campaign that while
23:48it's not stunningly successful, it's incremental enough that Putin believes that he should be
23:53able to keep going for some time.
23:55So Trump has, of course, used maximum pressure against Iran.
23:59A few weeks ago, he understood that we needed to sort of secondarily sanction India to get
24:05them to quit using or at least buying so much Russian oil.
24:09I think that's where Trump knows he needs to go in coming weeks because Putin is the real
24:14obstinate party here.
24:16There's not much the Ukrainians can do when there's so many tens of thousands of drones
24:22attacking civilian targets every night.
24:24Some at the White House are expressing frustration with European leaders who they believe are
24:30encouraging the Ukrainians to hold out unrealistic expectations.
24:34What about that concern?
24:36Well, it depends on what we're talking about.
24:38If we're talking about territory that the Russians have already taken, so think Crimea and even
24:44half of the Donbass and these other provinces, maybe Ukraine can look the other way.
24:50They can't admit that it's gone forever.
24:53But maybe in the spirit of realism, when we get to a negotiation, those aren't coming back
25:00to Ukraine.
25:01But if it's giving up territory that the Russians haven't already conquered on the battlefield,
25:05that puts Ukraine in a terrible position because they would lose all these advanced
25:11fortifications that they've built for so long and enable Russia reasonable for Ukraine to be
25:18able to insist upon.
25:19And where are we going to have to go in a final settlement type arrangement that President
25:23Trump's focused on?
25:25The Trump administration announced an $825 million weapons sale to Ukraine at the end of
25:31the week.
25:31What's the impact?
25:34I think it helps.
25:35We need to continue to not only put pressure on the Russians by way of sanctions or tariffs
25:41and the rest, but they need to continue to have a steady flow of arms in order to hold
25:46the Russians back.
25:48And so I think it makes a lot of sense.
25:49And of course, all credit goes to President Trump because he's created a new framework where
25:55we may be supplying arms, but the Europeans are paying for it.
25:59And that's a welcome development for the United States taxpayer.
26:02And I think it makes the most sense because we want to be able to keep Ukraine afloat because
26:07that's the quickest way to achieve what Donald Trump wants, which is a negotiated settlement,
26:11which he's absolutely correct to be focused on.
26:15To the Middle East where the conflict drags on, what is your assessment at this stage,
26:21Michael?
26:21Well, you know, I really wish the Israelis can really go a little bit faster, if you
26:29will.
26:29They're trying to take all of Gaza City.
26:31I understand why they want to be able to do it.
26:34They want to be able to declare Hamas done and gone, root and branch.
26:39And I support that objective.
26:41But sometimes I wonder a little bit, what is the endgame here?
26:45How do we get these two parties to a position where Hamas is sufficiently eradicated and at
26:52the same time, we're able to get the hostages back to the Israelis?
26:56So it's a bit confusing at times to understand what exactly Netanyahu's plan is to get there.
27:03Although, of course, they're our allies and we ought to support them.
27:06But we ought to ask reasonable questions of them.
27:08And I think President Trump and Steve Whitcock have done as much.
27:13Former National Security Council Senior Director Michael Allen,
27:15thank you for your time and your analysis today.
27:18Thank you so much.
27:24Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani is recovering after suffering broken bones in his
27:28back in a car crash in New Hampshire last night.
27:31His spokesperson says Giuliani's car was driving along a highway when he was flagged
27:36down by a woman who said she was a victim of a domestic violence incident.
27:41After helping her and calling the police, Giuliani's vehicle was hit from behind at high
27:46speed.
27:47The 81-year-old former mayor has broken vertebrae and several cuts, but is expected to recover.
27:53We wish him a full recovery.
27:56There were no winners in last night's billion-dollar Powerball drawing.
28:00Caroline Elliott on what the next drawing could bring.
28:03Caroline?
28:03Caroline?
28:05Yeah, Michael, you know...
28:07Caroline?
28:07Caroline?
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