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Developing now, Monday, Dec. 3, 2018
- The nation will
begin saying goodbye to former President George H.W. Bush on Monday
when his body arrives in Washington and will lie in state at the Capitol
Rotunda
- Tributes to President George H.W. Bush
have been pouring in nationwide and from around the world. Dr. Marc
Siegel, FOX News' medical correspondent, reflects on a battle that may
be one of former president's greatest - but overlooked - legacies
- An
executive with past ties to the Clintons is among three people charged
in an alleged scheme to defraud the Pentagon out of billions
- Mexican
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard is in Washington to meet with Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo to discuss the Central American migrant crisis
as authorities have closed a caravan shelter due to unsanitary
conditions
- Fired FBI director James Comey has
dropped his challenge to House Republicans' subpoena and is expected to
testify later this week about alleged political bias in the agency
- The
90-day trade truce reached at the G20 summit between the United States
and China should boost financial markets through the rest of the year,
some experts say. But the stock market could remain volatile
THE
LEAD STORY - REMEMBERING GEORGE H.W. BUSH: Americans will begin four
days of farewells to former President George H.W. Bush on Monday as his
body will be flown to Washington and will lie in state at the Capitol
Rotunda for public viewing ... The 41st president, who died
Friday at his Houston home at age 94, will lie in state until Wednesday,
the day of his state funeral at Washington's National Cathedral.
President Trump has ordered federal offices closed for a national day of
mourning on Wednesday and is scheduled to attend the state funeral with
first lady Melania Trump and other high-ranking officials and
dignitaries. Bush's body will be flown back to Houston for a private
service Thursday at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church, his longtime church.
He will be buried at the Bush Library Center at College Station near the
love on his life, his wife Barbara, who died in April and their
daughter Robin, who died of leukemia in 1953.
GEORGE
H.W. BUSH'S OVERLOOKED LEGACY: Dr. Marc Siegel has participated in
George W. Bush's annual Warrior 100K ride for wounded veterans since
2012. In an op-ed for FOXNews.com,
he recalls how the younger Bush revealed how he drew inspiration from
his father, who was stricken with Parkinson's Disease, but did not let
that keep him from skydiving ... George W. Bush believed his father's incredible will to live was an inspiration for others - and Dr. Siegel agreed.
"There
is only one President Bush now, but the legacy of the father lives on,"
Siegel writes. "For some he will be remembered most as a war hero, for
how as a young navy pilot he overcame a harrowing plane crash in 1944
during WWII and miraculously swam to safety in a life raft and was
finally rescued by a submarine. For others it was his efforts as vice
president and then president to end the Cold War and his successful 1991
Gulf War against Saddam Hussein. For me, as a physician, it was his
heroic war against the side effects of Vascular Parkinsonism which
included frequent bouts of bronchitis and pneumonia, the ignominy of
drooling and being bound to a wheelchair. He soldiered on, and became a
role model for the chronically ill everywhere."
Click here to read the rest of Dr. Siegel's tribute to Bush 41.
CLINTON ASSOCIATE IN ALLEGED PENTAGON FRAUD PLOT: Three Northern Virginia men --including one who reportedly celebrated New Year's Eve in 1999 with the Clintons-- were charged last week
for their alleged roles in a scheme to defraud the Pentagon after
receiving an $8 billion contract in 2012 to provide food and supplies to
troops in Afghanistan, the Department of Justice announced ...
Federal prosecutors said the three—all executives connected to Anham
FZCO, a defense contractor based in the United Arab Emirates---
knowingly gave false estimates of completion dates for a warehouse
intended to provide supplies for troops in Afghanistan in order to win
contracts. They allegedly provided "misleading photographs" to show that
the project was further along than it was. Abdul Huda Farouki, 75, the
former Anham CEO, was one of the men charged. He and his wife were
Washington socialites and donated to the Clinton family charity, The
Wall Street Journal reported. The Washington Post reported that the
former CEO celebrated New Year's Eve with the Clintons in 1999 and was
invited to a state dinner.
- Reported by Edmund DeMarche (@EDeMarche on Twitter)
HUMANITARIAN MOVE OR IMMIGRATION 'TRICK'? - Mexican authorities shut down a crowded, unsanitary and mud-filled shelter
at a sports complex, moving the remaining migrants who want to enter
the U.S. to a new, government-run facility that's further from the
border ... The migrants were taken by bus to the new shelter
about 10 miles from the border crossing at Otay Mesa and 14 miles from
San Ysidro, near where people line up to file applications for asylum in
the United States. Officials in Tijuana cited "bad sanitary conditions"
- mud lice, respiratory infections - as the reason for closing the
sports complex shelter that holds up to 6,000 people. Still, some of the
migrants were reportedly wary of the Mexican government's efforts.
“People are distrustful that it’s an immigration trick, that it’s not
what they say it is and that they will really be deported,” Amelia
Frank-Vitale, an immigration expert who has traveled with migrant
caravans, told the Washington Post.
- Reported by Christopher Carbone (@christocarbone on Twitter)
THE HOT SEAT AWAITS COMEY: Former FBI Director James Comey announced Sunday he has dropped his legal challenge to House Republicans' efforts to compel him to testify in a closed-door setting about the political bias and mismanagement they say permeated the Hillary Clinton and Trump campaign probes under his watch ...
Last week, Comey's lawyers had resisted the GOP's subpoena and insisted
on a public hearing, saying in court documents that Republicans' demand
for closed-door testimony “exceeds a proper legislative purpose, is
issued in violation of House rules, and unduly prejudices and harasses
the witness.” But Comey relented after House Judiciary Committee
Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., agreed that the former FBI head's remarks
would be made public in their entirety. Comey, who was called initially
to testify on Monday, is now expected to testify later this week.
- Reported by Gregg Re (@gregg_re on Twitter)
U.S., CHINA BUY TIME WITH TRADE TRUCE: The 90-day trade dispute truce reached by the United States and China at the G20 summit
should give a boost to the financial markets. But, until the two
countries reach a permanent agreement, experts say the stock market will
remain volatile ... "You're going to see a ton of volatility,"
suggested Nate Thooft, a senior portfolio manager at Manulife Asset
Management. "There's definitely no shortage of uncertainty." Trump
agreed to hold off on plans to raise tariffs Jan. 1 on $200 billion in
Chinese goods. The Chinese agreed to buy a "not yet agreed upon, but
very substantial amount of agricultural, energy, industrial" and other
products from the United States to reduce America's huge trade deficit
with China, the White House said. The truce, reached after a dinner of
more than two hours Saturday, buys time for the two countries to work
out their differences in a dispute over Beijing's aggressive drive to
supplant U.S. technological dominance. As part of the détente,
China had agreed to rollback its tariffs on American automobiles below 40 percent, Trump announced Sunday.
THE SOUNDBITE
MORNING IN AMERICA VS. MOURNING IN AMERICA - "He
was of that greatest generation and there was a humility and respect
and a decency about him that sometimes is not seen frequently in
Washington today."
- Karl Rove, on "FOX News Sunday," reflecting on former President George H.W. Bush and how the political environment in Washington has changed.
STAY TUNED
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On FOX News:
FOX & Friends,
6 a.m. ET: U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., and Lee Greenwood remember
George H.W. Bush; Kevin Sorbo previews his new Christmas movie. Meet the
82-year-old veteran using a grand Christmas display to say thank you.
The Daily Briefing with Dana Perino, 2 p.m. ET: Dick Cheney looks back on the life of former President George H.W. Bush.
Special Report with Bret Baier,
6 p.m. ET: Daniel Krauthammer, son of the late Charles Krauthammer,
gives the inside story on his father's final book, "The Point of It All:
A Lifetime of Great Loves and Endeavors."
Hannity:
A Department of Justice whistleblower who privately delivered documents
pertaining to the Clinton Foundation and Uranium One to a government
watchdog says FBI agents raided his home.
Don't miss Sean Hannity's exclusive interview with the whistleblower, Dennis Nathan Cain, and his attorney, Michael Socarras.
On FOX Business:
Mornings with Maria, 6 a.m. ET: Complete coverage of fallout from the G20 summit. Karl Rove will be among the special guests.
Varney & Co., 9 a.m. ET: Michael Pillsbury, senior fellow and director of the Center for Chinese Strategy at the Hudson Institute.
On FOX News Radio:
The FOX News Rundown podcast:
William La Jeunesse looks back on the life and legacy of former
President George H.W. Bush. Last week, Marriott International Inc.
disclosed that their Starwood Hotels guest database of up to a half a
billion customers had been hacked, making it the second largest data
breach in history. Shawn Tuma, cybersecurity and data privacy attorney,
discusses this latest criminal attack on private information. Plus,
commentary from FOX News contributor Tammy Bruce.
Want the FOX News Rundown sent straight to your mobile device? Subscribe through Apple Podcasts, Google Play, and Stitcher.
The Brian Kilmeade Show,
9 a.m. ET: remembering former President George H.W. Bush, the latest in
the Robert Mueller investigation and the U.S.-China trade war ceasefire
will be the top topics with the following guests: New York Post
columnist Michael Goodwin; Brad Meltzer; John Strong; and Bret Baier.
#TheFlashback
1992: The first telephone text message is sent by
British engineer Neil Papworth, who transmits the greeting "Merry
Christmas" from his work computer in Newbury, Berkshire, to Vodafone
executive Richard Jarvis' mobile phone.
1964:
Police arrest some 800 students at the University of California at
Berkeley, one day after the students storm the administration building
and stage a massive sit-in
1947: The Tennessee Williams play, "A Streetcar Named Desire." opens on Broadway.
FOX
News First is compiled by FOX News' Bryan Robinson. Thank you for
joining us! Enjoy your Monday! We'll see you in your inbox first thing
Tuesday morning.