press her on that. We'll wait and see what happens next. John Glasgow, thanks as always. Appreciate it. Well meantime, the Trump Harris debate still making waves across the nation this morning. So how did the candidates do and could it make a difference this November? Our correspondent Sarah Williamson went to voters to find out their thoughts. Old. Same old. Still don't know anything about Kamala. And we know what we know about Trump. We were hoping for a different questions, honestly, to be asked. So a little disappointed in the whole experience overall. So we didn't get the answers that we were hoping for because the questions weren't asked. Yeah, I mean, I feel like he has a plan and we still don't know what her plan would be if there is a plan. Oh geez. You know, it's I got to say, I didn't really like the format. I didn't like the fact that there weren't, like, a lot of people there in the audience. I kind of like to see more of that, kind of like how humans are actually interacting in the moment. I thought it was a little stilted. Yeah, it almost felt like some of the tangents became debates of their own. I'll tell you what I think. A little bit of that's a factor, a little bit, because now it's more of a personal attacks. And if they just can keep it together and stop attacking each other, we'll be okay. I thought, although I like Kamala, I thought Donald did a very good job. I personally don't like Kamala Harris. I just don't like the way she talks. And I feel like a lot of her views on things aren't really right. Yeah, but I'm kind of in between, though, so I'm not really sure. So as someone who's sitting in the in between, did you think that the debate moved the needle for you or there is or anyone who is an undecided voter? I'm still really torn. So I'm not I'm not really sure. I'm like really dead in the middle. So I feel like right after October 7th happened, I feel like very shortly after she was talking about like Palestinians being discriminated against. And I feel like she didn't focus as much on the issue as she should have. That's something that really, like, steered me away. Yeah, I turned it off in five minutes because I didn't like the direction it was going in. I didn't like what, Kamala was saying, reading all sorts of different reviews, and they said that it was really not not easy to tell. Some review said he won some reviews that she won. We'll see what happens. Would you like to see another debate? I don't know if it's going to really change anybody's mind. Most people who are voting, I think, have their minds made up already, and whatever they say, it's not going to really change it. I think it will be just a waste of time. All right. Sarah Williamson reporting there and going to the streets of New York to see where those voters would stand after the debate. Obviously very interesting responses all really all around. But it gets you to the point of, do you think a debate is really going to a second debate is really going to change anything? I think what you hear the most is many people want to hear from Kamala Harris. Someone sit her down, make her answer the questions because they're limited in this fashion of a couple of minutes. They ask her, why did she pivot on her policy? Well, my values haven't changed. Let me get to why I changed on fracking. My position has been clear since 2020. No it hasn't. You've been on record more than five times saying that you wanted to ban fracking, that you wanted universal health care, which would get rid of private health care. All of a sudden, that is different. A ban on assault rifles or assault style weapons and so much more. But you don't have the time to press that. During a debate. I was going to say abortion. The topic of abortion. Right. Because that was a moment in the debate where I found she was very confident in either scripted remarks or in remarks that she said time and time again. But I noticed that the moderators didn't press back when Donald Trump had mentioned, you know, any limits on abortion. They could say, you know, Madam Vice President, do you believe abortion should be legal at seven months? Do you believe eight months? Eight and a half, nine months? There was no, you know, f