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republicans, and winning. when they overturned roe, i secured abortion rights in our state constitution. when trump attacked our lgbtq and asian neighbors, i strengthened our hate crime laws. i fought for all of us struggling to keep up with the rising cost of living. i'm evan low, and i approve this message for all of our shared values. democrats agree. conservative republican steve garvey is the wrong choice for the senate. ...our republican opponent here on this stage has voted for donald trump twice. mr. garvey, you voted for him twice... as your own man, what is your decision? garvey is wrong for california. but garvey's surging in the polls. fox news says garvey would be a boost to republican control of the senate. stop garvey. adam schiff for senate. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message. online now to request sure. free quote, i'm arlette saenz
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at the white house. and this is cnn you. are in the cnn newsroom. hi, everyone. i'm jessica dean in new york. the us made its first humanitarian aid drops over gaza today, and a joint operation with jordan, us aircraft delivered some 38,000 meals. us official saying they chose the drop zone based on me believing a large number of people to be sheltering mirror that location at the same time, a senior us official now saying, israel has quote, basically accepted the terms of a ceasefire deal to release more hostages how the. decision falls to hamas to accept the deal for scylla alvarez is joining us now, live from washington, priscilla, the white house seems to believe this was a big success. this airdrops of aid today, that's been the resounding message from senior administration officials, though, while they're touting it as a success, they are also cautioning that much more is
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needed as this dire humanitarian crisis continues to unfold in gaza. now, as you mentioned, there, there were 38,000 meals that were dropped in this region of gaza that was delivered in 66 bundles. now only included food. there was no water or medical supplies. but since that has happened they have noticed they being officials that civilians did approach the assistance and have begun distributing it to factoring into them, deciding that this was a success, but this is certainly not enough. and that was the message from administration officials today. they're trying to flood the zone and they're doing that through these humanitarian aid drops. also exploring other avenues, like a maritime corridor, but they're still saying that even with all of that, they need the land crossings to be available to continue to surge aid into gaza. that's one of the hurdles that continues to remain as this unfolds in gaza, the president himself saying hang in a tweet earlier today that
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this is not enough. now, we expect that there will continue to be more humanitarian aid drops. but again, the big question is how much is the big question is how whether this can meet the needs of the people of gaza senior administration official saying this is just one of many steps that needs to be taken >> and then persona, let's also talk about these ceasefire talks. where are they standing at this hour? well, there is still ongoing >> hour by hour, minute by minute, but there was a bit of optimism today about the direction of talks senior administration official saying that israel has quote basically accepted the temporary the proposal that is on the table which includes a six-week ceasefire in gaza. now, what would happen over those six weeks would be that hostages that are deemed most vulnerable, being women, the elderly and the wounded, would be released and aid into gaza could be searched and then also officials could continue to talk about some of the stickier
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points like the release of hostages that are idf members, while also talking about quote, an enduring plan in the region. but of course, all of this is very sensitive and has been for some time, so no deal is done. deal until it crosses the finish line. but of course, this also comes as vice president kamala harris is set to meet with israeli war cabinet member benny gantz on monday. now, during that conversation, they're expected to touch on the hostage deal that humanitarian aid going into gaza, but also critically the day after planning for gaza that has been a priority for vice president kamala harris since the attacks on october 7. the war cabinet member also expected to meet with national security adviser jake sullivan while he's in town. so everything moving very quickly to try to meet that ramadan deadline that us officials say they want to see. this hostage deal come together by then big question remains that if it doesn't, what happens after that they've got just about a
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week now, priscilla alvarez for us. thanks so much. also today, donald trump trying to put the republican nominating race to bet. and the former president making a pair of campaign stops or voters will go to the polls on super tuesday, which is in just a few days now team trump's hope that their candidate collects enough delegates to signal once and for all that, nikki haley does not have a mathematical path to when trump adding to his probable insurmountable delegate lead today well, steve contorno joining us now from richmond. steve, what's the campaign's strategy heading into the biggest day of this election so far, super tuesday jessica, i spoke with the trump adviser at this event today and they are very confident going into super tuesday either projecting >> a sweep of all the, places that are at play on that day and trump himself is speaking behind me right now. he said, quote, we don't need your vote, but he also said, we want to send a big signal on super tuesday. and so we encourage
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people to go out there and vote here in virginia. but he also varied he quickly pivoted to the november election, making it very clear that they already have their sights set on president joe biden. you see the screens behind me. were they displaying from speech? >> these have also been >> flashing statistics about immigration. the board sure and joe biden's agenda and trying to get this crowd hampton ready for november 5 election. this is a states that trump has now won in all the two elections that he has so far in his two white house bids. however, he said, quote, we're going to make a big play for it in november all right. >> steve contorno traveling with former president donald trump tonight. thanks so much for that reporting. and let's bring in cnn's ron brownstein to the conversation. it's always good to have raanan and get your thoughts. >> let's >> start first with what you write about today that joe biden still has an opportunity to change the narrative on the biden economy me but these poll numbers we're seeing from the
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new york times sienna poll are pretty bleak. 51% of voters rating the economy as poor. >> so how does the >> president breakthrough? how does he change the narrative? >> well, you know, he, he's got a situation that is a little ominous for him where you have seen consumer confidence in the big measures, whether it's the university of michigan consumer confidence index, conference board or the gallup economic confidence index. all of those have improved significantly since last september us last fall, you know, awareness that inflation is moderating is broader and yet his approval is not going up. in the past, we have seen particularly the cases of reagan, clinton, and obama, improvements in consumer confidence, foreshadowed improvements in their own approval rating, which ultimately carry them to successful re-elections. and so the question really becomes, is there a point at which biden is going to benefit from a similar
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movement. and i think the view in both parties is that the cumulative weight of inflation, the fact that even though inflation is slowing the key, essentially because of life, groceries and rent are significantly more costly than they were when he took office that is the biggest impediment to him benefit from these other positive trends in the economy. >> yeah, it's interesting hearing you talk through that because it's almost as if there are some americans that just think, i wasn't thinking about the data that we have on do your part policies, have they benefitted you? that's also in this polling. and trump is beating biden on that as well. it's almost as if people want to go back. they think fondly of 2019 and then we had the pandemic and all of these things happened and we can't go back to that time because so much has changed. so in a way, is it that biden is facing a weird headwind in that he doesn't have a time machine essentially for we'll also for his age, but in terms of the economy >> yeah. no, i think part of his challenge on the economy is
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the baseline that people are comparing it against is not something in the distant past. it's what they remember from the first three years of trump when they fell you're in focus groups, that pollsters and both parties will say people will say that they have more money in their pocket at the end of the week in 2017, 2018, 2019 than they do know now, having said that, democrats think there is still a case to be made on the economy. both a negative case that trump's agenda is tilted to watch too much for people at the time i plus that is 10% tariffs as nikki haley has been talking about, that's not going to bring down the price of groceries. has the potential to obviously increase costs for americans and biden does have a lot of positive trends in the economy. you can point to including an absolute boom in manufacturing, construction of new plants tied to the big three bills, he passed it's first two years, but that inflation is just as has been throughout his presidency, a cloud eclipsing all of these other trends that he might want to point to
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>> yes. and if we dig a little bit more into that polling, look at the top lines, aren't, aren't great for the president's campaign. and they would disagree with that. they think that there's ilan a good spot, but but if you're looking at that snapshot americans do seem to prefer donald trump based on these numbers. and we see the core of biden's coalition really softening women tied with women. voters of color, hispanic voters. what is, what, what are you getting? thank from looking into all of this a little deep >> you know, there are some quirks in this poll, like any poll, but this is a good pollster and the results are broadly consistent with what we are seeing and other state and national polling, which is that biden is behind right now, i think the scariest thing for biden in this poll is that only 36% of americans say they approve of his performances president, 47% say they strongly disapprove, as you note, only 18%, only about one in five roughly, say his policies have helped him personally. those are the kinds of numbers that has spelled
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defeat in the past for incumbent presidents, it's hard to dig out of a hole that deep. he needs to improve perceptions. he needs to be really two things thanks to happen. he needs attitudes about the economy to continue improving the kind of stalled and one sideways in february in those big measures like university of michigan. and then he needs more of those satisfy voters to give him credit. so far that really is the dynamic that could possibly get him into the '40s where the contrast with trump could become more valuable for him there are some democrats, obviously that, that are concerned about this. there's a lot of them, but there are other democrats that i'll talk to you that say, look, look at all the special elections, look at the midterms, look at the special elections, look how democrats have one even in this environment. and they say it's gonna be okay. do you i think that's true >> well, look, there's a whole debate about whether democrats are benefiting because they are now a more college educated coalition. and those voters tend to turn out more in these kind of off-year elections i
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would say that the part that that is true and should give democrats some comfort is what we saw in 2020 two in unusually really an unprecedentedly large number of voters who are dissatisfied with biden, who thought the economy was moving in the wrong direction, voted for democrats anyway, because they view the republican alternative as too extreme a threat to their rights, to their values and to democracy itself. that dynamic think is almost certainly going to be there again in 2024. it's there even in this poll, but it's not a get out of free card. i mean, if you look at this poll, biden is running further ahead of his approval rating and presidents usually get to do, you know, people, young voters, only 30% of them approve of biden, but he's 80% in the head-to-head with trump, with independencies the two to they have a negative view as performance, but he's even with trump's. so the contrast with trump is helping him, but it's not an infinite ladder, right? i mean, if his approval rating is so low, there's a limit to how many
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people will say, i don't think he's doing a good job, but i'll vote for him anyway because i find the alternative unacceptable. clearly, there are people who will say that we saw it in 2022 but it's not infinite. and if you're a 36%, that's a big hole to climb out of. >> all right, and i want to ask you before we let you go about some of these cox's that are going on tonight, just into cnn, we are projecting that trump will win the caucuses in missouri and michigan and idaho oh that makes his delegate count far and away ahead of nikki haley, 51 to four there. and now we had enron as you well know, we head into super tuesday on tuesday were so many delegates are up for grabs. what reason do you think haley should continue to soldier on? she said she's committed to staying in through through super tuesday. how will how do you think super tuesday could push this dynamic forward? >> yeah. first of all, you know, republican other than an incumbent president has ever won every primary and caucus
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outdoor, did it among the democrats. so trump is on and in historic pace. but even as he's doing that, we are seeing this consistent 30% or so, a higher in some states when she's had time to campaign supporting haley, she has made that point there is a portion of the repub, republican coalition, mostly college-educated suburban that is still resistant to trump. not sure there's much point in making that point beyond super tuesday. she's demonstrated it. the question of what she does next, i think will be no different if she stayed in the race for a month and if she got out the day after super tuesday >> all right. more to come. ron brownstein. great. to see you. thanks so much. >> thanks for having me. >> a rare blizzard is putting people in california and nevada on blizzard watch as the snow totals pile up by the foot there with a whole lot more to come this weekend. we'll talk about it. you're in the cnn newsroom >> eliot spitzer preceding governor by day wanted to be present in the united states client number nine by night's
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>> you to dream about it for years we were made to help you book as in minutes, vegas, the story of sin city tomorrow at ten on cnn >> we have a developing story out west california, sierra nevada, is buried under a rare and relentless blizzard with ten to 12 feet expected in some mountain areas the powerful storm wreaking havoc on interstate 80 with drivers stranded, multiple collisions prompting authorities to shut down a major stretch in california near nevada. cnn's elisa raffa is in the weather center tracking the storm. this is a big one. lisa yeah. >> and it's really rare to get blizzard warnings like this for the california mountains, we're talking about extreme impacts
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we were talking about impossible travel, really dangerous travel. no one should be out in this whiteout conditions, not just from heavy snow, but we're talking about damaging wind gusts, guts have already been over 100 miles for our end though consistently be over 60 miles per hour. that's what gives you the blizzard conditions, heavy snowfall rates over four inches per hour possible. we've already gotten over three feet of snow in this in some of these mountain areas, i mean, 42 inches and king valle soda springs nearing 40 inches and we still have a couple of more feet to go. blizzard warnings let's continue through the night tonight and into tomorrow, where you see the orange. because we will continue to pump the snow. it hasn't really slowed down at all, and we'll get the lightning remarkable over salt lake city. and then more off the coast. it just shows you just how intense the storm is. you have all the rain coming to san francisco. but as soon there's you hit that colder air in the higher elevations, it is a snow machine that just keeps pumping and that's where you get some of those 12 foot totals in the
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highest elevations, jessica. >> all right. elisa raffa for us. thanks so much. >> there's also just >> so much devastation in the texas panhandle tonight strong winds and high temperatures, there are major concerns over the weekend as the wildfires in that state rage on. we know at least two people have died in the smokehouse creek fire, which is now the largest wildfire in texas history cnn's camila bernal is on the ground in fritch, texas. camila so much heartache, so much direction and these fires are nowhere near contained >> they're not 15% for the largest fire in the state of texas at the moment. and it's been so heartbreaking, it has been so hard for a lot of these families and this is just the beginning of that mourning process and that cleanup process, the johnson family there here behind me, they're trying to look for anything they can. they're using metal detectors. this used to be the master bedroom of the home, which is why they're trying to look through the rubble here
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but it's been extremely difficult for them. take a listen to what susan johnson told me about first seeing her home after the destruction >> i'm sure that as time goes on all think about some fain and mourn it >> if you will but we >> can't take my memories away. >> and we're seeing that impact both emotionally and financially, not just for these families, but also for the ranchers in this area, 85% of the texas capital is raised here in the panhandle's. so a lot of these ranchers are dealing with the deaths of their cattle. and so that's been very difficult for them as they continue to see the injuries and as they continue to just evaluate that damage. so again, it's been extremely difficult for this community, but we've also seen people coming together to donate hey,
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to donate water, to do everything they can for his families and for the ranchers in this area address the economy being affected personal, personally, they're being affected. it's just a lot camila bernal for us on the ground and texas, thanks so much for that reporting. we'll be right back. >> backroom deals, cia secrets, a fair bribery, corruption, prostitution there's so much more to the store. >> united states of scandal with jake tapper tomorrow at nine on cnn. >> shake up your shower with a flavor for every feeling. this stub fractions you up. this stub winds you down, this dub, the deep glowing, this stuff keeps you going. so whatever care you care about, there's a dog for everybody. >> when you're the leader is disaster cleanup and restoration. how do you make like an ever even happened happened
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the difference at moon pod.co >> the whole story with anderson cooper tomorrow at eight on cnn closed captioning. he's brought to you by christian faith publishing, right? for a higher purpose published with us christian faith publishing is an author friendly publisher who understands it. your labor is more than just a book color scan for your free riders guide, 804551827 tonight a soul opinion piece on what lies ahead for the united states and what america can learn from the bravery of ordinary russians thousands this week line the streets to say one last good night to alexey navalny that's not him. of course. the kremlin critic who perished in a russian jail, they did so at extraordinary personal risk.
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their mere standing in line to fight a decree from vladimir putin. but here in america, more and more people are falling in line to the steady drumbeat of would autocrats. that is the argument. and the new opinion piece from tom nichols democracies, dark winter, which you can read now in the atlantic and tom joins us now to talk a little bit more about this. tom, just for people who haven't read it yet, describe the central thesis and your new piece. >> the idea is that it's been a pretty hard winter for democracy around the world and here in the united states, putin has continued his war against ukraine murdering thousands and attacking civilians while the us congress and a small handful of people in the republican party hold up aid so that you can defend itself. putin finally has what he wanted. navalny died, not just in jail, been in a russian penal colony in siberia the russian government says it's of natural causes, but it's no way
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to know that right now >> here at home i mean, people have just tuned out on the kind of autocratic unhinged language that's coming out of donald trump and some of his supporters in the republican party. they're just not thinking about it and i think what the russians have really shown us and in this war is that they're not going to like, like authoritarians everywhere. they're not going to let up and what the ukrainians are showing is tamar cracy takes work, it takes, it takes a fight and i think here in the united states, we've simply shrugged our shoulders and giving and up on that >> you mentioned the former president who today at one of his rallies, once again compared himself to alexey navalny, saying that he is, he trump is also a political dissident >> what do you make about it's obscene. >> same >> scene comparison it would merely be absurd except that
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for what navalny went through and what trump is accused of doing are in different universes. and trump who has no particular affinity for someone like navalny it actually has a great amount of affection for putin. it's really one of the only things trump has ever been constant about in any of his positions is that he never tries never to cross vladimir putin >> it >> really is just obscene. navalny went back to his native contrary to agitate for democracy. and he was thrown into prison on trumped up charges by a regime where the rule of law really doesn't exist. donald trump is using the courts and the norms of american jurisprudence against the american system. he's accused of trying to overthrow the government, and he's using every legal weapon and his disposal to avoid any kind of accountability in a court of law for his financial crimes for defamation, for his accused financial crimes for his
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defamation, for anything that he's been accused of doing by jack smith. these are two completely unrelated cases and it really is an obscenity for trump to talk that way. >> i want to read part of your piece. you write in the atlantic, the world including america, is facing a monopoly of dangerous. but such perils we nothing to a group of people for whom congress it's just a lark, a way to live in washington, raise money, and be on television. >> who are you talking about? there specifically, the reference television was nancy mace. in a recent story was revealed to basically tell her staffers just i just want to be on tv. all we can make sure for that. you do that. but i'm thinking of other people in the republican party, matt gaetz. may mark marjorie taylor greene there, there's a group of people for whom this isn't about governing, it's about living in washington and raising money basically being
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celebrities and these arts areas people, but they are dangerous people because of their incompetence and their inability to take anything seriously around them other than their own careers on their own professional prerogatives. >> really the argument you're making is that the earlier point is that there is so much at stake right now and people will say, well, we've lived through this, so we've lived through that. we're in this really interesting confluence of events with some actors on stage across the world >> and >> it's serious, is this very serious time, and you're saying there, these are not unforced. you're making the argument that the people that we have elected to congress are not rising to the occasion to use the logan roy rule but logan roy comment, many of these people, not all of them, they're good people in congress and a lot of people working hard. but these are not serious people. and that wouldn't be such a problem. but the world has become an
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incredibly dangerous place. because again of authoritarians who are on the march and who aren't going to stop. and these are just people that are completely unable to take these challenges seriously and really don't care about them. and that's a danger to all of us and to world peace or really i'm just quickly before we let you go, former president trump is hosting hungarian leader viktor orban at mar-a-lago. what do you think that demonstrates to european leaders who are looking nervous, nervously at the upcoming us election well, i think we're already hearing it from european leaders that they fully expect that if trump is elected, that nato >> will be on the chopping block the russians will be able to do in trump's words, whatever the hell they want that their security will be endangered, which means eventually our security will be the endangered. unlike americans, i think the europeans are actually listening to trump and taking him seriously and believing
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what he says about what he's going to do. i think in the united states we have a normalcy bias. we just sort of wave it away and say nothing could ever really get that back i'd things can't change that fast. this time around. i mean, trump got really close to some of this the last time around this time around, he he has people around him who figured out how to work the levers and turn the knobs and that's going to be incredibly dangerous. >> all right, tom nichols, we will leave it there. your piece, your latest piece in the atlantic. thanks so much for joining us tonight. we appreciate it >> thank you. >> former president trump is following a familiar strategy, delay, delay, delay, and a bit to push the trial violinists classified documents case until after the election. what we know about the timing of trump's legal woes. >> you're in the cnn newsroom sunday, >> van jones, it's home to find out what is driving the divide in tennessee politics. >> there has been a very active 20 the 30 year effort to
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>> silence >> the people who will change the nation >> are those who speak out, who refused to be bystanders, who raised their voices against injustice when we stand up to silence, we stand up to all hate >> news night with abby phillip weeknights at ten eastern on cnn no decision yet on when exactly donald trump could go to trial for allegedly mishandling classified documents at his florida estate his attorneys are arguing for it to start later as part of their overarching legal strategy to delay as many of trump's court battles as long as possible. cnn's paula reid explains how trump is balancing a presidential campaign and legal troubles >> former president donald trump at federal court in florida for a high-stakes hearing to decide when you will be tried for allegedly mishandling classified documents
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>> an indictment was unsealed. charging donald j. trump with felony violations of our national security laws, as well as participating in a conspiracy to obstruct justice >> trump faces 40 felony criminal charges related to the alleged mishandling of class the fight information. some seen here in properly stored at mar-a-lago. >> they raided my house. they did it for publicity reasons. they did it for election interference reasons. they want to interfere with the election. >> the case is currently scheduled for may 20, but judge aileen cannon, a trump appointee, who is overseeing the case. base, has signaled she may push the trial back in court. cannon pressed prosecutors and defense attorneys about they're suggested schedules. special counsel, jack smith proposed a july 8 start date, but during the proceedings, cannon suggested that aspects of smith's proposal were unrealistic trump's, lawyers insist the trial should be pushed back. a trial that takes
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place before the election is a mistake and should not happen. trump attorney todd blanche stated, saying it would be unfair to the former president and the american people for trump to be in the courtroom and not on the campaign trail. that's something that former president has claimed and as well, all of this persecution is only happening because i am running for president and leading very substantially in the polls. >> trump's attorney attorneys did concede if the trial has to go forward before the election, they would be okay with starting august 12th, but prosecutors pushed back saying, if team trump believes the trial before the election is unfair, those are fake dates. why did they even propose those dates? kenneth noted that trump's upcoming criminal case in new york must be considered as she schedules this one on march 25th, trump's hush money trial begins in new york and is expected to last four to six weeks and already busy court schedule for the former
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president trump. prosecutors did clarify a key issue how close to the election would they be willing to try trump, attorney general merrick garland has set a speedy trial, is in the public interest >> cases were brought last year. prosecutor has urged speedy trials with which i agree and this now and hands of the traditional system, not in our hands in court though. prosecutors said that a justice department policy discouraging public investigative actions 60 days before an election does not apply to cases where charges had already been filed prosecutor jay bratt told the court that when it comes to that policy, quote, we are in full compliance. >> judge cannon is >> expected to schedule at least one more hearing in this case, and then she will also likely put a date on the calendar now, she didn't seem open to placing this case in july, so likely be put on the calendar in august at the earliest, but that date is not
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a guarantee. the trump lawyers or even the process uterus could always come back and try to push it back further. so this point, it is still unclear if former president trump will face either one of the special counsel's federal cases before the november presidential election paula reid, cnn, fort pierce, florida. >> all right, paula reid, thanks so much for that reporting and former federal prosecutor, renato mariotti joins us now. >> we're >> not we just had paul allay a lot of that out. but bottom line is we have multiple trials, condensed calendar, which we're showing ever everyone right now. how do you see this? all unfolding ahead of the november election >> you think that the manhattan criminal trial is very likely going to go forward barring some unforeseen circumstance, like an illness on trump's behalf, something like like that. i think that the manhattan case is going to go forward well before the election the question i think
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is, what is going to happen with the january 6 case? the calendar you just showed had an immunity argument in the united states supreme court. realistically, i am pessimistic that the january 6 case we'll go for that. the trial will go forward before the election. because as your calendar points out in, it's literally the end of april when the supreme court hears argument i don't think that the supreme court is going to release an opinion on until june and at that point, there may be some work for the trial judge to do before trial would even get underway. and realistically, i would say that would be maybe september, october, and i just it's hard for me imagine are starting a trial then. >> all right. so that's from mar-a-lago? >> yeah >> that's what i was going to ask you about what lago there's so many criminal type that are upcoming as far as the
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mar-a-lago goes, judge, aileen cannon has really shown a willingness to push this trial trial and to give as much latitude to trump's team is possible so it's just really hard for me to see her putting his feet to the fire, particularly given the fact that the classified documents at issue add an element of complexity give her opportunities to delay further. i just think that realistically it's unlikely that she's going to force them to go to trial before the election. >> and do you get the sense that the trump legal team is angling to get one of these trials over another, maybe one they prefer like for example, that dc federal case, the january 6 tribal trial, if it's perceived as a bigger threat to them, are they trying? do you think to manipulate the calendar and the rulings and all of that to protect themselves essentially >> so i often juggled multiple cases on behalf of clients that
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i typically want to have the weakest one first. so i think that they're happy that the manhattan da case the first one i do think that's the weakest case of all of these cases. it's still creates problem to the foreign president because it is a felony charges. and i think there is some strong evidence there, so we'll see what happens, but i think they want that one going first. >> yeah. legally speaking, the mar-a-lago cases, this is the most challenging for them. >> you think that one is not georgia >> georgia i think is never going to happen before the election because there's so many defendants. we have this now, this whole sideshow regarding what there are not the da is actually going to stay out in the case. i don't see that that a fast-track >> okay. so i did want to ask you because we did watch that hearing with fani willis looking into whether or not she will stay on that case or not,
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what did just what sense did you get from the judge as we watch those closing arguments yesterday >> wow. >> well, the legal standard is very favorable to fani willis. that's the good news for her. the problem is despite the very high legal standard that the defendants have to meet. the judge has been very interested in the details here anyway, which is bad news for her, because the more that the judge is digging into this, the more it suggests that he actually thinks that he could lose here. and i would say the momentum is really on the side of the defendants. lot of the testimony is not been very helpful for de a. willis, so i do think the judge is concerned and the question is, you concern that there has been a lack of candor for towards him which is one issue, might not mean that her entire office is up the case or is he concerned that there's a conflict of interest if that's the case thought may never see trial >> all right. renato mariotti
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for us. thanks so much. we appreciate your time >> thank you. >> we'll be right back. >> frank sinatra had connections with the mafia and all these night clubs were owned by the mob. >> you didn't want to make those guys that he was to it vegas, the story of sensitive tomorrow at ten on cnn >> so you like your job. >> i love it when i do is really important. >> you'll give eye exams. >> i give fresh starts, better vision, healthy eyes everybody wants that, >> that they do and they don't want to spend more money than they have to true. >> but good eye health that's priceless. >> hero doc save vision. >> that well, >> owl saves money. >> sure. >> great eye exams from great doctors at a great price, better if from america's past meet the jennifer's gen x, gen y, and z each planning their
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this nintendo switch sold for less than $20, go to deal dash dot come and see how much you can save >> i'm jeremy diamond in tel aviv, and this is cnn closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com our firm has offered a free book about mesothelial map for over ten years. mesothelioma is really all we do. >> 80087 to 4901 with news that senator mitch mcconnell will be stepping down as republican leader comes the inevitable question of who will replace them. and ironically, one of his longtime political rivals, donald trump, may have an outsized say in who gets mitch mcconnell's job? brian todd
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goes through the history >> it was a productive relationship, but a contentious one that soon devolved into mutual disdain. the courtly southern senator with a pension for pragmatic conservatism. and the bombastic hard-charging instigator who shook the republican party to its core hi everybody. as donald trump's campaign gained momentum in the summer of 2016, mitch mcconnell said he thought trump didn't quite have the stature yet to ascend to the white house. >> so my hope is that he is beginning to pivot but then become what i would call a more serious and credible candidate for the highest office in the land. >> not long after that, at the 2016 republican national convention, mcconnell crowed about being able to manipulate the selection of a new supreme court nominee toward trump. if trump won and all that sad day when we lost justice scalia i made another pledge that obama would not fill this seat that honor will go to donald trump
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next year. >> still, mcconnell said this to kset after donald trump's shocking when that year, i didn't think president trump had a chance of winning. >> what from that moment, one analyst says mcconnell nuanced his approach to donald trump mcconnell i think has always been someone who looked to see how he could benefit from trump >> rather than forcefully expressing his concerns about trump. and that is really the story. i think a much of the establishment of the republican party during the first trump term, they thought they could by the tiger and get benefits out of it. and they did. possibly their biggest benefit drastically changing the shape of the supreme court in mitch mcconnell has been fantastic. he has >> been really great alongside donald trump, mitch mcconnell, place to three conservative justices on the supreme court and their biggest legacy at this at this time is overturning roe v. wade. >> mcconnell also successfully resisted two separate attempts
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by democrats in congress to impeach donald trump. but then a public schooling from mcconnell for trump's actions on january 6, former president trump's actions preceded, right or a disgraceful disgraceful there are election of duty, trump >> characteristically turned on mcconnell even more harshly. >> mitch mcconnell is a disgrace, even leveling a racist insinuation toward mcconnell's wife elaine chao, who was born in taiwan and served as trump's own transportation secretary, calling her in a tweet, mcconnell's quote, china loving wife, coco chow. now analysts say it's trump, who's likely crowing over the 82 year-old's departure from leadership. >> i'm sure donald trump thinks that this is another victory for him. >> another analyst says, with mitch mcconnell's departure, some of the last remnants of resistance within the republican party to donald trump's agenda will likely
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have collapsed almost completely if trump wins a second term in the white house brian todd, cnn, washington >> brian, thank you. and thank you for joining me this evening. i'm jessica dean. i'm going to see you back here tomorrow morning at 06:00 a.m. up next is king charles, followed by an episode of jake tapper's series knighted states of scandal have a great night >> gayle king and charles barkley are shaking things up on cnn. >> thank you >> us tonight. >> i don't give opinion. don't be opinionated. >> do you make a comment about the world? for years last night, i don't believe everything you read on the internet, king charles next on cnn >> small businesses like this, learning centers all away to find out help communities thrive >> that's why wells >> fargo has donated roughly $420 million to diverse small business owners when a bank
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