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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  February 20, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PST

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this, both teams later issuing a joint statement apologizing for the behavior, but really rough stuff. and minnesota wild fans who left last night's game, it gets you were conducts casing, mr. come for the ages after being down by three goals. in the second period, the wild a storm back seven goals in the third, six unanswered goals in a span of less than six minutes joel erickson, egg curl, caprice off, each had hat-tricks in the 10-7 when convex for jt miller also scoring three goals for a hat-trick of his own. so this was the we're and the three hat-tricks were sported a single game since the la kings did it all the way back in 1992, if you're one of those fans that thought it was over, kasie grabbed your keys, you started at headed towards the parking lot. you missed it and i'm sure the coaches were a little bit frustrated as well, crazy, crazy, crazy third period. yeah. no, for real. and i guess i'm glad i'm not alone and thinking he meant that is a wild score for a hockey game, please
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>> good morning everyone. i'm john berman with audie cornish. we are back for more here in new york, phil and poppy are both off the recrimination surrounding the death of alexey navalny. they are growing louder this morning. his widow is accusing russia of a cover-up insisting that her husband was poisoned as pressure grows for the us to punish vladimir putin, donald trump refusing to condemn navalny's death instead, shared a video of a putin ally declaring that trump should be president again. and the united states offering a un resolution calling for a temporary ceasefire in gaza a clear warning to israel to rethink its next move cnn this morning starts right now
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>> it had now been four days since alexey navalny died in a siberian prison. and the russian government is still refusing to turn over his body. deval nice team says authorities are allegedly keeping it to conduct some sort of chemical examination a new this morning, the kremlin denies accusations by navalny's widow that he may have been poisoned again, with nerve agent president biden is blasting house republicans for not doing more to stand up to putin and for withholding desperately needed aid from ukraine. as russian troops go on the attack >> they're making a big mistake where they're walking away. greg of russia, the way the walking away from nato waiver, walking away our opposition to
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stop. >> donald trump has yet to condemn putin. instead, he's using navalny story to compare himself to the late opposition leader and to slam the american justice system calling the united states, quote, a failing nation now, we're getting a look at navalny's private letters in his final months. they reveal concerns he had about trump becoming president again, in a letter obtained by the new york times, navalny told a friend that the prospects of a second trump presidency and his agenda, we're really scary. cnn's melissa bell is live in paris because and melissa, what more are we learning first about the navalny families efforts actually get answers about his death well for, the time being, audie, they've been told that they won't be getting access to his body for 14 days. now, what we heard yesterday was yulia navalnaya, his widow in that nine minute long video message, saying that the reason authorities are keeping the body away from the family and
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his close associates is to allow any traces of novichok, the soviet era nerve agent has been used so effectively over the course of the last few years on opponents, not just in russia, by the way, but outside as well, allowing the novichok to leave his system. now, those comments were directly addressed today by dmitry peskov, the kremlin spokesman, who described them as boorish and unfounded i saying that neither he nor vladimir putin had seen yulia navalny as video message but clearly, a 14 day period before any kind of access is given is an extremely long time. we saw those fairly harrowing images yesterday of alexei navalny's mother trying to get access either to any information about her son or access to his corpse. she traveled all the way up to the arctic circle to the town years the penal colony where we now know he took his final breaths. now, what we've also been seeing inside russia, despite the repression, despite the hundreds of arrests over the course of the weekend is people
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still coming out very bravely to try and play? there are tributes, pay their respects, put floral tributes where they can, even though they tend to be picked up very quickly by masked men anxious to get rid of any sign that there might be signs of grieving out in the country outside we've seen, notwithstanding donald trump's lateness and mentioning this or tall here in your we're very firm condemnation with growing calls here in europe, there should be some kind of fresh sanctions targeting specifically internal repression. john, an audi, or i'm melissa bell. thank you very much for that. we want to bring in cnn political and national security analyst david sanger. he's a white house and national security correspondent for the new york times. david, you were in munich for this security conference france with all these world leaders there as they got news of alexey navalny's death, what was the change from before and after there in the atmosphere? >> it was really truly remarkable, john, in part
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because mr. navalny's widow, yulia, was in munich. she had been planning to speak about his imprisonment and ended up addressing the group just hours after she learned that he had died it was an emotional moment, but it was also one of great determination and now she has declared that she >> will take up his old cause and become the centerpiece of the dissident movement that navalny was of course, at the center until his death >> but i think >> what really struck people in munich was not just the navalny moment but this in sequence with two other events. one was that russia was beginning to make significant progress against the ukrainians. at a moment that the us this has faltered in providing more arms. and the second was that the revelation of a russian
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plan. we don't know if it'll happen yet to put a nuclear weapon in space came just within hours of this. and i think the three things together made them realize that they have at under reacted to russia. even after the ukraine invasion >> david, i want to add to your point here because in a piece you wrote about some of the anxieties amongst european nations. you talked about how they did fundamentally underestimate putin as well, right? i'm going back several years and how now that contributes to the sense of being kind of unprepared for what's ahead >> that's right, audie. i mean, if you think about it, putin himself came to munich in 2007 and basically said there are lands that have been separated from russia that need to be restored, that should have been the first message. >> then he >> invaded crimea in 2014. europe was very slow to impose
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sanctions, signed the deal in 2015, the next year to get nord stream two additional gas from russia so we was really only after the invasion two years ago this week that the europeans got serious about cracking down and they're way behind in their military buildup. and so the statements that former president trump has been making, the slowness house republicans to provide aid and arms. the doubts about nato has suddenly sent them into something of a panic because they moved way too slowly in reacting to the new reality. >> me putting it simply david, do they think putin is winning? and they do they think the united states will be there in the next 12 months if they do think putin is winning they putin may be winning tactically. it's not clear that he's built up any significant allies other in china, iran, and of course,
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north korea, all of which are helping in their own way with the war but they also thing i believe that our own democracies are faltering. and it was interesting that when president zelenskyy addressed the group on saturday, he referred to self-defeating democracies, and he was clearly making a reference to the united states. and at one moment in jab at congress for being off an out of session while this is going on, made the point that dictators don't take vacations so i think there is a sense that the us and the allies are losing ground, may not be able to recover it and clearly don't have a strategic plan to go deal with from this point forward. >> clear warning signs. david sanger, great to have you this morning. thanks so much >> so >> donald trump, as we said, is not condemning navalny's death, but he is sharing a new
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endorsement for president from a putin ally and john steward responds to democrats who are angry about his criticism of president biden joining manage where do i go to study the particulars >> of unquestioning property? again, i wouldn't need mentorship war in moscow tonight we're here to interview the president of russia, vladimir putin be praised vegas story of sin city >> sunday at ten on cnn this tax season, it's time to get with straight talk wireless. you get unlimited data and the samsung galaxy a 14 on them. so you can give your janky phone here, kid >> turn your tax refund into a you fund with straight-talk wireless when barbus was to turbotax? >> i've wrote for generations of family tradition with five
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>> bowers, mucinex, dm gives you 12 hours of relief from chest congestion in any hof day you're not mucinex da it's come back soon. now, tried mucinex instance suits or probe medicated drops >> the lead with jake tapper, cnn today at four >> but i don't mind because quite frankly, the response to the first show last monday was universally galling mary trump tweeting not only as two words, both sides are the same rhetoric, not funny. it's a potential disaster for democracy >> one i've seen against it was never my intention to say out loud what i saw with my eyes and then brain john stuart firing back on the daily show
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last night to the backlash of his segment last week, where he called out both president biden and donald trump's >> advanced ages. >> so the biden campaign is coming out this morning with some pretty impressive january fund raising numbers more than 42 million. raise the campaign says it ended january with more than 100 million on hand, which is the largest cash on hand figure for any democratic president presidential candidate ever at this point in the campaign cycle. with us cnn political commentator and spectrum news anchor errol louis, political reporter joyce koh, and capitol hill reporter for axios, juliegrace brufke so errol, you talk to democratic donors democratic activists and as john stuart noted, people see in here, president biden and see and hear his age. and while they might have concerns, it's not drying up. the fundraising, not drawing up the money yet. >> that's exactly right. i mean, the big money or the smart money, whatever you want to call it, they understand and that there isn't going to be some other candidate that emerges out of the weeds and
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suddenly becomes the nominee. there's no clear path to overturning where the democratic party is going at the convention. so that biden is going to be the nominee of everything else follows from that. a sitting president who's done pretty good job is polling and polling isn't okay, shape, not perfect, but in okay shape. and is on his way to becoming the nominee why are you not going to write a check if you support the policies? i mean, it's really pretty open and shut. thank you. might turn on your tv and see something like what jon stewart is doing and start to think the broader culture is maybe telling you something. can you talk about this context for democrats, like they thought the leader of the resistance might be coming back and not working out the way they would. >> probably i feel like when it comes to fundraising numbers, this is definitely a concern for republicans right now. but i think we're going to continue to see republicans try and highlight biden's age. and i think there definitely kind of loving with john server saying last week, which just kind of a rare thing for republicans. so
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it's kind of interesting where things are gonna pan out. there. was money and happy monday or both grain. >> i think that's to say i just call it money and if votes, so i was going to say, i mean, if you look at nikki haley's campaign, they have touted that she's had her best month yet in january, she raised 16 million in fundraising money. for someone's speech later today about the state of the race, right >> i think all >> indication is that she will at least ride the race to super tuesday where 15 states will be voting in the election and gives a much better indication of where the country is in this primary process. but we are going to be looking forward to that speech later today. >> president biden's got money, whereas donald trump, the likely republican nominee, he's got some serious fines possible core convictions and a new european strong man in his corner, viktor orban, who was the leader of hungary, basically like endorsed tim. we have some video there to show people what happened take my
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word for it. there we go. >> i think i'll do not trump saying that this vacate joyce, viktor orban, the kind of endorsement you want. >> listen, this is multipronged. in this endorsement video, which basically looks at campaign ad there's a couple of things to mention in terms of relationships here. so trump and or ban go pretty far back. or ban was at the white house in 2019 as trump was trying to build relations with hungary when he was president then following that or ban has spoken at cpac, he has tried to make inroads with this maga coalition of republican voters. and he's not seen >> as some vilified figure. >> no, absolutely not. yet. one thing to note is that orban is a close ally of vladimir putin, probably his closest ally in the eu. so when you put those two connections together and on
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top of that, you look at former president donald trump's delayed response to the death of alexey navalny this weekend. it does raise a lot of questions. i don't think trump is making it very unclear where he stands on this issue. >> yeah, it's not a question so much as answers. i mean, donald trump wants to follow in the path of viktor orban and lest we forget, this is somebody who for ban has, over the last decade systematically compromised or diluted all of the democratic institutions, short of actual voting? yes, they do have elections in hungary, but independent judiciary. it has been under attack. free press has been under attack. he's undermined european support for ukraine at its critical moment during this war in all anti-immigration, anti immigration policies outlaw transgender existence, not just that was the on-ramp.
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i think to interest in him was the immigration issue. right. >> that somehow like, look, this is what it looks >> like if you close the board, right? >> right. has tried to until close borders and otherwise moved away from the democratic project of europe that's been going on for 80 years now. and so when trump hugs up on him and says, this is the direction i want to go. that is a real warning for all of us, not just that or ban is embracing trump, but that trump indeed is enduring you're saying an or ban like government, which is what we can expect if he gets reelected, you know, we've shown great restraint to not play more jon stewart's out. i think until this point, but viktor orban is a good place to bring it up because tucker carlson went to russia, met with vladimir putin, did his grand grocery store tour. tucker carlson, also a big fan of viktor orban, but this is what jon stewart had say about his front tucker overnight >> perhaps. if you're handlers had a loud, you would have seen there is a hidden fee to your cheap groceries and orderly streets. ask alexey navalny or
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any of his supporters? >> no joke there. i mean, that's just a statement effect that i've spoken to a lot of gop lawmakers that are very concerned about trump's comments on this side. i mean, well, there has been pushed back on ukraine funding and we've kind of seen mike johnson get a lot of pushback abroad for that on that, i think that kind of trump's rhetoric on this, especially for defense hawks. it's kind of a huge problem and it concern with him being the nominee where you don't see a lot of them publicly saying it, but we kind of like to see nikki haley kind of prevail on the primary front because of it. >> and we've seen biden trying to take advantage of this situation with johnson kind of being slow to move, right? >> oh, absolutely. i mean, i think that there's a ton of pressure now and i think especially with seeing foreign leaders abroad kind of pushed that. i think you're gonna be seeing a lot more of that. i mean, there's a lot of talk of democrats kind of trying to force a vote potentially via discharge petition and i think that's a strong possibility, but johnson's job could be at risk if he brings it up voluntarily. >> it's interesting is to support that a music for the
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security conference so there were a lot of european leaders talking about discharge petition something most americans don't know about it all on it to get to this point. they all of a sudden their life and death for them, right? everyone stick around. we've got much more historic flooding threatening california, the heaviest rain is set to hit los angeles today, we are tracking the storm ahead and a suspect in custody a deadly shooting on a colorado university campus. what police know about a possible motive that's ahead >> i'm sure lay and i lost 75 hands with gallo. i went from my size 22 sides six before i go lot, nothing seemed to work. i was exercising her over an hour every day. it was really discouraging that golos so easy, the weight just falls off this is an important message for people on medicare today. we are talking about medicare advantage plans. if you're new to medicare, moving are losing coverage called now for your free medicare benefits checkup and see if you're eligible to enroll in medicare advantage plan that could help save money and may include additional
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>> and this is cnn >> i think it's william byron. >> i think so 40 years. >> all right. >> you can see the >> cameras speeding up to me. it felt like the daytona 500, the first official race of the 2024 season then ended in a pilot >> now logano, the outside, they can't get rid because she gets turned by william byron bland. he gets caught up. gilliland truex and more of may at what a mess. >> and that 18 car wreck happened to the last lap and knocked out several drivers, including past daytona 500 champions, including joel gano. nascar says all drivers have been evaluated and released from the infield care center william byron was involved in that crash, but because of made it out as champion. and this is his first daytona 500 width. >> i guess i was brutal so this morning, gusty winds driving
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downpours across california for a second day, as nearly the entire state remains under flood threats, torrential rains, soaps the region monday turning many roadways into rivers, leaving major cleanups for multiple communities and travel chaos after thousands of flights were delayed meteorologist derek van dam is tracking the system derek, you told us it would be bad. here. can you talk about when this ends? >> well, here's the deal we've got another 48 hours of rain possible across the state of california. this is the concern in this state. these creeks and tributaries turn into raging torrents of water in a matter of seconds, the water lifts so quickly because of the amount of rain they've had and it sweeps all kinds of debris, including full vehicles and su these along with it. and of course that could be so, so dangerous. and just to put this all into context, we're talking about, we're approaching, we're inching closer and closer to the wettest february ever recorded in los angeles, for instance, we're just about two
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inches shy of that record, which has set back in 1998. we have had over 11 and-a-half which is so far this month alone. and there is more rain to come, slight risk of flash flooding, the bay area southward. but let's focus focus into southern california. that is a level three or four from san bernardino to los angeles. that is a moderate risk of flash flooding today, you can see the on and off again, heavy rain showers that continue to move in across something in california, and that will only exacerbate the flood threat through the course of the day today, of course, snowfall continues across the sierra nevada mountain range. there's the millions of americans impacted by the flood alerts, impressive rainfall totals from this latest atmospheric river events, over half a foot and many locations and several inches of snowfall. another one to three inches of rain possible across los angeles county. so watch out for flooding today, snowfall as well. >> derek van dam. thanks so much. >> a university of colorado student will appear in court this afternoon facing two counts of first-degree murder. >> prosecutors say he killed a
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man and a woman in a dorm room on the school's colorado springs campus, just last week, cnn's lucy kafanov has the latest on the investigation audie john good morning. no word yet on the why the motive, but the university of colorado, colorado springs has confirmed to cnn that the suspect was a fellow student. now, he was identified by police, has 25 year-old nicholas jordan, originally from troy michigan. they believe that he was responsible for last friday's fatal shooting of two people, a young man and a young woman in that dorm room he was apprehended, arrested shortly after found being found inside a vehicle on monday, he was taken in to custody without any sort of incident according to police his authorities indicated that the suspect and these victims may have known one another. in fact, the police have previously said that this was quote, not a random attack against the school or other students at
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this university authorities. however, did not go into how they were able to to identify him so quickly, but they did say that they obtained the arrest warrant on friday evening, the same day that these shootings took place, which effectively means this individual is on a loop on the loose. pardon me, for two days and so there were growing questions about why authorities didn't reveal more information about his identity before for apprehending him. that springs chief of police was asked about this. take a listen. >> i have to really balance what what we provide to the community with public interest and private, public trust in the safety of the public. and i fully understand and that but the investigation has to be able to move forward and our goal is, while ensuring that public safety >> now, as for the victims, both are already deceased when police arrived on the scene on friday, the woman identified as 26 year-old sealy rain montgomery of pueblo, colorado he was not a student at the
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school. the young man identified as 24 year-old sam knopp of parker, colorado. now, he was a registered students. the university describing him as a senior who was studying music he was also described as a beloved member of the visual and performing arts department and accomplished guitar player and an extremely talented musician friends described him as outgoing and kind. this now still being described as an active investigation by police who are encouraging any witnesses, anyone with information to step forward. john audie >> thanks to lucy for that so a republican exited the impact of nearly two dozen congressional republicans choosing not to run for reelection. >> plus why joe manchin says he decided not to run for president as a third-party candidate. >> a few notice that when you take a picture, you don't look nearly as good as you do. you look in the mirror because the
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here's how you see yourself in the photo, is how you're seen it. yeah, >> that's the i gotta i don't even know who i'm looking at right now. we >> what did you just say? >> i did the best on the circumstances of a person who hates people yet had to be amongst them curb your enthusiasm. >> the final season, >> streaming exclusively on max >> why choose asleep ever smart bad >> my neck, my side softer my side firmer sleep number. does that >> now say 50% on the sleep number limited edition smartphone plus 10% of all basis ends monday
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your competence back, reset, your style, learn more at reset, smile.com. >> united states of scandal with jake tapper. sunday, a nine on cnn closed captioning bronchi by meso book.com. >> mesothelioma. it's all we do with local offices throughout the country, or does hope you get the compensation you deserve eight to eight to 44, 44 that was a big part of the
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decision because i came to the final conclusion. i always believed that we can we could legislate to a crisis we'd come together for a crisis. well, guess what? we have a crisis. the border is a crisis and i saw my friends walk away when they were determined to pass a border security and they were on board three days before that. and with donald trump coming as hard as he came at them, they coward down and walked away. >> now that was senator joe manchin telling our kaitlan collins that the failed border deal was the main driver of his decision not to run for president and his disdain for the dysfunction on capitol hill is not unique or even partisan. 23 house republicans from this congress have either decided they will not seek reelection or retire early. and that includes some high-profile names, chairs of the homeland security, energy and commerce appropriation, financial services, and china committees. >> the reason colorado ken buck
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said of house republicans, we are not doing serious things florida is carlos jimenez says, i thought that some of our members would be smarter and nebraska is don bacon says, quote, when you have folks on your own team with their knives out, it makes it less enjoyable so what does this all mean going forward, we're back with errol louis juliegrace brufke, and joyce koh. it enjoys, i'm going to start with joe if i can, because joe manchin says he's not going to run for president in a third party and that quote right there that we played, it makes us seem like he's blaming republicans, joe block, joe manchin likes to straddle the middle a little but this was less straddling than i've seen in basically him saying it's republicans fault. >> yes. but it also goes back to when he decided not to run for reelection in the senate back in november many people that i spoke to you in west virginia, democrats and other political operatives, like said that they didn't thank that manchin was going to end up
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running because he knows how unlikely it is that there is a clear path to victory as a third-party candidate. so it might be advantageous politically to be calling out what he's seeing on the republican side of things, but he's also not happy with joe biden. and that factored in heavily his decision to not seek reelection in the senate because he thought that biden's unpopularity among democrats and republicans in the state of west virginia would hurt him politically as far as getting that seat back in the next election. >> although that's the point of wanting to run as a third-party candidate, right. so i don't really get the logic, but can you talk about heading for the exits, who is and how you're thinking about it >> a little less, 30 odd years, the number of members of congress that have chosen to leave or retire or run for higher office ranges from like 40 on the lowest slide to over 100 on the high side. and so there's probably more to come. it does though, point to the
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dysfunction, the fact that members are making what in other employment situations you would call a noisy exit, leaving and complaining on their way out the door, not just any members in a way it would be like your management class walking out what exactly right? >> in fact, if you >> being a member of congress has a difficult job in politics, it's being a senator is one thing, but being in the houses, its kinda tough work. but if you're a chair of a committee, when a little bit of seniority life is pretty good. >> or a kevin supposed to be >> to walk away from, you know, energy or commerce or some of these other major committees. just because you can't they get anything done and to have something that's almost comparable to the famous do nothing congress in 1948, as far as their low productivity back, you're taking it back. you actually talked to some lawmakers. are they like who give me the knocking more excited to get out? i mean, i've been there. i mean, they feel relieved about it they are saying nothing's getting done in a lot of these sherman that are leaving the hadn't termed out over gavels yet. they could
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have been there for another two years. and the one early bank a, what's the thinking? the ones that say, i mean, i've spoken to some that are some of the appropriators. so the more pragmatic, pragmatic members that have said they're worried to retire even though some of them would like to get out, they're worried about what's going to follow them afterwards. so some of them are sticking around. but what follow them in terms of what i mean there's just so much to so much dysfunction right now that a lot of these people, they're worried that the next person in a primary is going to be much more extreme and kind of bring more of those dynamics into congress. so you've got some of that, keeping some of these shares around some of these senior members around, but at the same time, those that are leaving, they're like we can't get anything done. the way the rules especially the rules of the house, with the motion to vacate right now, you've got such slim majorities that are really four people can take anything hostage and tankha bill's. so you're not you're not really seeing major things getting done, which is driving a lot of people out. >> you say this was like walking out of a management class no, meaning your management class exiting the company, that's always a bad sign when all your managers leave your kind of like, oh
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wait, what are we doing here then what's the mission? now i understand and yes, it is very bad and it's something i've never seen before in the very few years that i've been in professional life. >> these are committee chairs. these are committee chairs with enormous power right now well, what they hoped would be well, well, that's a great point. or what they hoped would be. it's not what they thought it would be like. and i just want them speaker mike johnson posted this photo of donald trump. they met together. it strikes me that it's possible that this is what these republican committee chairs fear. usually you leave congress when you're afraid of losing zing, right? our, i think republicans feel they have a better chance of winning the white house than they have in some time in these committee chairs are still leaving, maybe not in spite of, but maybe because of it. >> i think the big concern when you're looking at what's happening in congress is whether or not as juliegrace was saying, is the freedom caucus going to be able to make even deeper in-roads into the house with all of these vacancies, 23 representatives, as you said, and potentially
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more counting. i mean, there are some of this is normal turnover. however, this is a significant amount and what we're hearing from capitol hill is that the dynamics at play, the dysfunction at play on capitol hill has heavily factored into at least some of these decisions in most forgotten, you can double your salary walking out the door, please. there are way more lobbyists and members of congress, but you get into it for the power well, you don't have the power. what's the point? right? yeah. donor? instead? of having to call up done? >> well, then i'll know what you'll be >> errol louis really grace from key joyce koh. thank you so much. now, we've got an urgent call from the us for a temporary ceasefire in gaza is the biden administration about to get tougher on israel? >> vegas, >> story of sin city. sunday at ten on cnn the wind in your
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>> new this morning, the us calling for a temporary ceasefire in gaza in a un security council draft resolution. now in the texts, the us warns israel against its planned ground offensive into rafah we're more than 1.3 million palestinians are still sheltering. the proposal comes after the us vowed to veto and algerian draft proposal calling for an immediate ceasefire the council will vote on that later this morning. the us and the past has rejected calls for a ceasefire, more than 29,000 people have died in gaza since the october 7 attacks. according to the hamas-controlled ministry of health. now on sunday, israel's war cabinet minister benny gantz worried, warned, quote, if by ramadan, our hostages are not home, the fighting will continue to the rafah area. ramadan begins in less than a month now, a senior us official there said there are no plans to rush to vote a proposal, adding that they will
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quote redouble efforts to negotiate on the ground day after day, children are being rushed to the hospital in gaza and civilian say there is nowhere left to seek refuge. cnn's jeremy diamond has more well, john israel's war cabinet is increasingly making clear that a military offensive will come to gaza's southern most city of rafah if a >> deal to free hostages is not reached in the coming weeks. but as they continue to make those threats, they have yet to release any details about what a civilian evacuation of that city be were about one-and-a-half million palestinians are currently living. what that would actually look like and what we're starting to see is people taking matters into their own hands, fleeing rafah for central gaza. but there they are finding that that haven, that they hoped would exist is no haven at all. instead? we are seeing air strikes there just over this weekend, more than 68 people were killed in airstrikes in central gaza. i do want to warn our viewers that they may find these images
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distressing >> one >> after another. after another, after another. >> good about >> victims of the latest israeli airstrikes, mud into this hospital in central gaza. >> most the children some of them still clinging to life. there's bloodied and limb without a pulse the life gone from their eyes. >> here, >> children, comfort children, even as they are still trembling from the shock i was on the rooftop and suddenly i heard an explosion. i flew away and fell down. my back hurts. >> i saw smoke and stones forming then i heard people screaming. >> a hospital spokesman said, at least 18 people were killed and dozens of others injured sunday in an israeli airstrike on a home in deir al-balah. israeli military did not respond to a request for
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comment about the strike witnesses say many of the victims had just arrived from robb for gaza, southernmost city where fear and confusion have set in as israel threatens a coming military offensive. but central gaza is no haven then reality revealed in the cruelest of ways. >> but yeah, navy is i can't speak. >> innocent children >> the kids the molar is it? i didn't even try that. >> in the ruins of the al baraka family home to target of sunday's airstrike, the desperate search for survivors is underway. as one man dives into the rubble another shouts, get out of their die down there. >> we could only pulled to alive from under the rubble and the rest are all missing. we don't see safety in law school or in an onerous school or in a hospital? which safety is not something that exists anymore they evacuated us from place to place, claiming its safe. there
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is no way safe >> shouts, praising god rise as a girl is pulled from the rubble but her body is lifeless. added to the list of more than 12,000 children killed in gaza. bystanders try and cover her body. but the man carrying her throat who's the blanket off? he wants the world to see what this war has wrought. >> and our thanks, a journalist muhammad, also, while he who filmed those images for us on the ground in central gaza. meanwhile, we're getting a clearer picture of the desperate humanitarian situation in northern gaza. we've been hearing reports in recent and weeks of people eating grass, eating animal feed just in order to survive. but now, several un agencies giving us a clearer picture on the ground showing that one in six children under the age of two in northern gaza are acutely malnourished and 64% in gaza over all, are only eating one meal a day. john. >> thanks to jeremy for that
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report happening. now, lawyers for wikileaks founder julian assange, or launching a last ditch effort to prevent his extradition to the united states. could he soon faced trial for leaking military secrets and police have identified a person of interest in the case of a missing texas girl. why official? chills are honing in on someone they call a friend of the family. >> and just in alexey navalny's mother issues a new message to vladimir putin. emotional plea in front of the prison where her son died candidate john edwards cheated on his cancer-stricken wife, had a baby with his girlfriend, >> and then tried to pass it off as a camp in pain staffers kid, >> we're here to get your side of the story. did your intimate relationship with him begin that night? yes. >> how did you end up with a sex tape of john edwards and reopened for trash is full alive. john, it was believed he could outsmart anyone's on the campaign trail is still running for president. what >> did he think was going to happen? because all based on a law, united states of scandal
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wikileaks founder julian assange making his final bid to avoid >> extradition to the us and to trial. he was his long faced charges for leaking military secrets. and today the high court of london, hears arguments from assange's attorneys. they want the core to allow him a full appeal. and if it's not granted assad's could be he handed over to the us within weeks. cnn's max foster is in london and max just remind us how we got here and specifically what their arguments are at this point in this case so it goes back to a leak of classified us documents in 2,010.20, 11, the us wants >> to extradite julian assange to the us to face trial. that's had to go through years and years of legal process here in the united kingdom it was approved i extradition request by the high court, and then the supreme court and it was signed off by the home secretary, priti patel, who was priti patel at the time. what we've got here is a two day hearing
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questioning matt, sign off from the home secretary, arguing. in part it politically motivated. therefore, it doesn't qualify and there should be more hearings into this we should also point out that throughout this this long process june assange has talked about his mental health and the risk that he could commit suicide if he's moved to the united states so that is another factor that's played into all of this. that goes gates his human rights he hasn't turned up in court today because he feels unwell. so this is clearly playing into those arguments. >> quickly. could you decision come max? >> well, the decision could in theory, calm at the end of the two days. that doesn't mean he'll be extradited straight away. if the case is completely dismiss the extradition process would start. he could be sent in days, but i'm sure take longer than that. in terms of weeks also, i'm being told
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there is a potential appeal to the european court of human rights for him. but we'll wait to see what the judges say because there's a series of outcomes that could come out of this and there could be more hearings to come. >> all right. max foster covering this it's for us, max, thanks so much. cnn this morning continues right now >> the ban is mother is still fighting to reclaim her son's body >> spokesperson for alexey navalny's, it says russian ortho what she is won't be releasing his body to his family for another two weeks. >> alexey navalny's widow is taking on the russian president. give you are going to be a strong voice of opposition to the kremlin right now, you have to consider yourself a target >> how many more times to get to lose before we say, maybe he's the nikki haley taking aim at donald trump in the leadup the south carolina primary >> he's going to be in court for the rest of the year. if donald trump is the nominee, he can't win once you pinch nikki aliens, a wicker from your dream, i live in reality. the
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reality is, there isn't a path >> not only his two were to both sides of the same rhetoric not funny. it's a potential disaster for democracy because it was never my intention to say out loud what i saw with my and then brain can do better >> good morning, everyone. i'm john berman with audie cornish here in new york. phil and poppy are off this morning and new this morning. alexey navalny's mother making a personal plea to vladimir putin to hand over her son's body. now she just released a video standing outside the siberian prison where he died. she is telling vladimir putin, let me finally see my son, navalny's team says the russian government is refusing to release his body for at least a couple of weeks to conduct some sort of chemical examination navalny's wife is suggesting her husband may have been poisoned again with nerve

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