STUART VARNEY (HOST): In Baltimore there was a vote yesterday and the Black Lives Matter activist DeRay Mckesson, he was crushed. He finished sixth in line to be the next mayor of Baltimore. He got, what, under I think three percent of the vote. Now what do you make of that?

GERALDO RIVERA: I -- first of all, I'm giving a standing ovation to the voters in Baltimore for their good sense. I covered the riots there in the wake of the Freddie Gray -- you know -- death in police custody. What I saw was a bunch of troublemakers in a town that desperately needs urban renewal. Troublemakers setting back their town, burning the assets of those poor people, burning their access to drugstores, burning the facilities in the community, making a lot of noise, attracting a lot of attention to themselves. Not caring if you take the Acela through Baltimore, you see vast swaths of that city in ruin. That city needs a lot of tender love, it doesn't need troublemakers running for mayor. The people off Baltimore showed their good sense and rejected this guy.