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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  March 4, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PST

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thank you. >> all right. i will leave you with this iowa hawkeyes superstar caitlin clark has gone were no woman or man for that matter, has gone before this for college college basketball history just amazing. she's >> on the court all by herself for that. she is now the nc doublet is all-time leading scorer in basketball period, not women's basketball, not men's basketball. basketball, and guess what, they beat ohio state. >> i'm a michigan fan, so that's great. kaitlan past hall of famer pistol pete maravich's record when she did this, her career total now 3,685 points and it'd be hard for almost anyone to be humble about this feat. but after the game, kaitlan once again proved, and this is what makes her part of what makes her so great. she's just built differently a record is a
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record. i don't want that to be the reason people remember me. i hope people remember me for the way i played with a smile on my face, my competitive fire. sure. they can remember the wins, but also just like the fun me and my teammates had together it's amazing all right thanks to all of you for joining us this morning. i'm kasie hunt, cnn news central starts right now >> hours from now, the supreme court could issue a landmark ruling that decide whether former president trump is eligible to appear on colorado's presidential ballot? the stakes couldn't be higher. >> president biden in a new interview out just this morning, losers who are losers are never graceful. he says he doesn't think that he doesn't think that donald trump will concede if you loses in november and there is much more in after two scrubbed launches, nasa's latest spacex mission is finally on its way to the
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international space station. i'm john berman with sara sidner and kate baldwin. this is cnn news central >> this morning, we are stating he by for a potentially major supreme court ruling to drop. it is super tuesday eve as well. and right now, voters in colorado still do not know how the high court field also about donald trump being on their state's primary ballot tomorrow. that could all change very soon with the decision that could not only provide clarity in colorado, but also tell us whether trump's name can appear on general election ballots in november overnight, the supreme court announced it would issue at least one decision at ten a.m. eastern. that's this morning. less than 24 hours before millions of voters across more than a dozen states head to the polls for super tuesday, including maine, which like colorado and
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illinois, successfully disqualify donald trump do the 14th amendment's ban on insurrectionists. cnn senior supreme court court analyst, joan biskupic is leading us off this morning. joan supreme court. this morning will not decide whether or not donald trump engaged in insurrection. but the ruling potentially this morning, as i understand, it, will set a historic standard not only in this presidential race, but in elections to come, correct? >> correct. and it's great to see you, sara, first, let me tell our audience why we think it's coming today. the supreme court, it closed its business on friday with no notice of any opinion, but then suddenly yesterday afternoon around one eastern time put up a notice saying that it would likely issue an opinion which indicates that they were racing to finish something and the something has to be a decision that likely would affect what would happen on super tuesday because colorado, the state that's in dispute here,
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actually finishes its the primary voting tomorrow along with as you say, more than a dozen states. so this is the opinion that we expect and to your question about insurrection, the 14th amendment's section three, which is in dispute here, bars anyone who took an oath to uphold the constitution and then engaged in insurrection or rebellion from holding future office. and the colorado supreme court had used that text to disqualify donald trump from state ballots. but during oral arguments on february 8th, sara, the justices indicated by their questions that they probably wouldn't never even get to the question of whether donald trump engaged in an insurrection as the lower colorado judges found, it looked like they were going to decide, first of all, that this provision of the constitution would need some sort of congressional authorization before it could be used. at this point, obviously, we're just speculating some three
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hours before we'll see the decision. but it looked like from justices on the right and the left, across political and ideological lines were all thinking that this is not the kind of thing that individual states should be able to do, bar a candidate from the ballot now, we'll see what happens at 10:00 eastern but this is only the start of several chapters of the supreme court's outsized involvement in this year's presidential election. as you probably remember, they're also about to hear a case that will decide whether former president donald trump is immune from criminal prosecution for actions that the government alleges amount to election subversion for the 2020 race. now we will look, we'll see how the court rules on that one. but all chances the chances are that the court is not going to give a decision that would require donald trump did go to
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trial before the 2024 election qin in november, sara >> all right. joan biskupic is always lovely to see you. thank you for breaking that all down for us, kate, and joining us now for more on this is former federal prosecutor tim heaphy. he was the chief investigative counsel for the january 6 congressional committee. it's good to see you again, tim. >> let's talk >> about the here and now on what we could be learning from the justices in just a couple hours this morning. let's assume let's go through assuming a couple of things. just play along with me. assume that the justices decide that donald trump stays on the ballot. what is the ripple effect of that? >> yeah it's a question of law, not fact as joan just just accurately laid out, that is the court is not winning in if assuming that hypothetical, kate is correct on whether or not the president engaged in insurrection, they would be deciding that section three of the 14th amendment he's not self-executing. it requires some kind of congressional impetus. so it would be sort of a legal ruling that essentially
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keeps him on the ballot in colorado and all of the other states. that's what most people expect given the tenor of the argument. >> absolutely >> let's assume the opposite now, as we're just trying to play this out, assumed that they decide something short of donald trump stays on the ballot. what is the ripple effect of that? does that change your view here? >> i mean, look, anytime that the former president has some sort of victory the political narrative will be one of defiance and it will reinforce his view that a lot of these cases, either in the civil process with respect to ballot access or the criminal process us are misguided. so it may have an effect on public opinion. it won't have much of an effect though, on his ultimate legal position that the criminal cases are much more significant, those are still in the pipeline. the supreme court will decide the immunity case, and this
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doesn't touch the possible trajectory of that at any other criminal cases >> yeah, let's talk about all of it together and let's put up the wording of the 14th amendment, section three. that's in question. that's under examination here. >> the january the >> january 6 congressional committee, which you are lead lead investigative counsel on, it found that donald trump assisted or aided in insurrection >> if he >> stays on the ballot in colorado and other states. does that say something about the 14th amendment? >> it says something about the 14th amendment, but again, it does not say that the supreme court rejects the factual display of engaged in insurrection we found, as is articulated in our hearings in our report, that there's ample evidence that the former president incited an insurrection aided and abetted and gave comfort to insurrectionists the supreme court, if president is successful today, former
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president as successful today will probably not touch that core factual question. they'll say it doesn't even matter because section three of the 14th amendment is not appropriately triggered by an individual state chief justice roberts it's kate during the hearing sort of made the historical point that the 14th amendment was really implemented as a check on state's power to essentially sort of rein in states that might want to do things inconsistent with the constitution. this decision then suggested, that suggests that giving state's power to essentially the unilaterally exclude candidates from the ballot and a federal election would be inconsistent with that historical perspective. so again, it seems like they're going to answer the question of law 14th amendment doesn't apply here, but they won't touch the underwriting factual finding of the colorado court that the former president engaged in insurrection we're a quick and what do you think of the immunity question before the justices >> i think there's no way the supreme court finds that a former president has complete
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immunity. it is not a close case. i was surprised that they decided to take the case given how resounding the dc circuit opinion was, i think they may have taken it because it is such a significant question. and for posterity, they want to be the definitive voice on that question. but i think the special counsel has the much stronger argument. i hope that they reach the question quickly and issue a ruling quickly because the trial won't take place until the supreme court weighs in. >> tim heaphy, it's always great to see you and thanks for coming in. >> john. >> new reporting this morning and all the ways the trump campaign is looking to save money, hand-me-down furniture, maybe take the cheaper uber without the water bottles in the back and now, just this morning, you x or small rare oval office interview with president biden. what the hell he asks about trump's comments about being a dictator? >> a >> treacherous whiteout conditions. the snowfall just continue. some areas already counting more than seven feet
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significant as they really were one of the administration's most forceful cases that >> they've made in pushing for this ceasefire, which is currently still under negotiation, the vice president spoke down in selma, alabama on the anniversary of bloody sunday, and it comes as the us has been pushing for a six weeks ceasefire as they tried to get hostages out and more humanitarian aid in those talks are still continuing in egypt between all the parties over the weekend, though, israel notably did not attend those conversations. on sunday saying that hamas has not answered some questions on key demands that the israelis are making. but really the us over the past a week, two weeks has really been making this forceful push to have a temporary ceasefire in place. and that is something that vice president harris spoke to just yesterday. take a listen >> the threats of hamas poses to the people of israel must be
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eliminated and given the immense scale of suffering in gaza, there must be an immediate ceasefire and the vice president really spoke in very stark terms about the situation on the ground in gaza, >> saying that people were starving there and facing inhumane conditions. she said that it's incumbent on the israeli government to allow the facilitation of more aid into the gaza strip. that is something that president biden also called for on over the weekend, saying that they needed to push israel to facilitate more trucks, open up more routes to get this aid into the people of gaza. now, the over the weekend, the us also airdropped food about 38,000 meals into southwest gaza. but really that is just one small fix and not a whole solution to the dire humanitarian situation on the
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ground there that is likely something that will come up when vice president harris meets today with benny gantz and israeli war cabinet minister, who is also netanyahu's one of his lead political rivals. so the white house at this moment is really trying to once again push for this temporary ceasefire to get those hostages because out, but also calling on israel to do more to get humanitarian aid in as so many people are suffering in that region. i'll also note this is an issue that president biden has struggled with with some democrats in his party, wanting him to take a more forceful stance against israel's actions in gaza. trying to alleviate the humanitarian suffering that is ongoing there. so the administration trying to show that they are taking some steps to try to alleviate some of these issues. >> are that science at the white house or let thank you very much >> more than 500 people swarming an amusement park in georgia. the chaos ending and gunfire while georgia's top investigators are now getting
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>> stay in the moon this situation room with wolf blitzer denied it six months. cnn, the georgia bureau of investigation says that it is now investigating an officer-involved shooting outside six flags amusement park or teenager was shot and what really he became a chaotic scene on saturday investigators
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say that cobb county police, they were called to help park police with crowd control, more than 500 people were running through and fighting in park. and then it all ended in gunfire. cnn's rafael romo has the very latest on this. he's joining us now. >> rafael, what happened here? >> okay. good morning to you. that's right. the georgia bureau of investigation is now looking into the shooting that happened here outside six flags, the amusement park behind me and kate, according to police, cobb county police were called by a security here at the park who are trying to eschar out the crowd and root and unruly crowds and say between 500 people that they were running through the park, getting it into fights the georgia bureau of investigation also said that as these people weren't getting out of the park, even more fights broke
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out and then the situation get even more chaotic. kate cobb county police say that as they were trying to lead the people out, clear the scene, an unknown number of people started shooting at the police officers, and that's one that's when one officer shot back hitting a 15-year-old who is now listed in critical condition at grady memorial hospital in a planta a police also say that they found a handgun near the minor. we have also heard from a six flags has spokesperson said the following in a statement about what happened here. she said it is incredibly disappointing that our community is disrupted. a public events throughout the region by groups of andres youth. there was police activity involving gunshots. we want to confirm there was no shooting at our property or parking lot. this took place on self-service road that is not owned or operated by six flags and kate, earlier we had an opportunity to talk to a young man and who decided to spend
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his sunday here at six flags. this is what he had to say about the shooting >> that doesn't impact how i feel about it. crime happens everywhere. i don't think it's going to happen you're more likely in one place, in another you know, it's just the chance of where you're going to be at that day >> and kate, unfortunately, this is not the first time something like this happened last year several people were kicked out because they also got into fights inside six flags. >> now back to you, a lot of questions here and a lot of people that need to be looking for right now al, thank you so much. sara. >> all right. thank you. kay. just ahead, nearly 1,000 ic miles to run the i did arade packs are off the kickoff of, is billed as the last great race in alaska. also, this is justin out of new york, why donald trump's former chief financial officer is expected good to plead guilty.
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on your phone, install the free keepsake app. we would love a chance to frame it for you tomorrow. its super tuesday >> 16 races, one it's a wonderful day. no one can read to you like sienna and the best political team in the business. super tuesday, special coverage begins tomorrow at 06:00 p.m. on cnn and strip to me on max >> this is called the world's oldest living person, turns 100 and today. maria, maria her i was born in san francisco on march 4, 190, 1907. she and her family eventually returned to spain where she currently lives in catalonia. she posted on x day, but the hell but for
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daughter quoting a spanish bishop, she said, old age is a kind of sacrament. you lose your hearing, but you hear more because you hear life not noises. how beautiful is that >> all right, in alaska, speaking of beauty, the mushers are off for the official start of what is billed as the last great race. the idea good arade, the famous dog letting competition will cover 998 mile starting in anchorage, alaska and ending in nome. five-time, i did a ride champion dallas, ct is on the trail again this year in hopes of breaking the record for the most wins. also us stock futures flat going into the workweek as big action in the asia markets overnight, japan's nikkei to-25 index or passes 40,000 for the very first time today, this followed a surge in us stocks late last week peak as you'll remember with the nasdaq and the s&p 500, both hitting record highs on friday. both recorded highs are fueled by a boom in chipmaking and of course, artificial intelligence stocks
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tape. >> and this just into cnn. allen weisselberg, the former chief financial officer for the trump organization. he is expected to plead guilty to perjury charges this morning. let's get straight to cnn's kara scannell, who has more detail on this kara, what is this all about? what is this meaningful? weisselberg and what does this mean for donald trump >> yeah, good morning, kate. so allen weisselberg, who is a longtime confident of donald trump, just arrived at them and hattan district attorney's office, we caught him on video as he walked in this morning and he he's expected to plead guilty today, according to sources. now, weisselberg has been under investigation for testimony he had given in the new york attorney general's civil fraud investigation into the trump organization and into donald trump himself. he testified during their investigation, which has been ongoing for several years, and he also testified at the trial last year and some of the testimony that people have raised questions about the accuracy involved and we know that prosecutors have been
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looking at involved his what he said about his dealings with an insurance agent and also about what he said about the size of the trump triplex apartment at trump tower, that was one of the issues in the case. so he is expected to plead guilty today. he had been in talks for several weeks to do so. this is a blow for him, but this is not a blow for donald trump. he is not expected to cooperate in donald trump's criminal investigation involving the repayment and reimbursement of hush money payments. that he is facing trial on later this month. so weisselberg was is that the center of these financial transactions? but he is not cooperating against donald trump. as a result of this guilty plea. so it will not change the dynamic for trump as he's heading into trial, weisselberg is not expected to be called as a witness by the manhattan district attorney's office or by donald trump. of course. now this will be the second time he has pleaded guilty to criminal charges. in this case, perjury charges would make him a difficult witness, even if someone were to change their mind and decide to call him, it
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would put some taint on that, but weisselberg here, he's expected to plead guilty later this morning, then we will learn more details about the specific crimes that he's pleading guilty to, but they are perjury charges related to the new york attorney general civil fraud investigation. really important context. you're offering care as you followed all of the ins and outs of this very closely. we're going to have much more detail on this today. hopefully, we'll bring it to john, right. >> new this morning, a deeply revealing new interview with president biden. biden tells evan osnos of the new yorker that donald trump will quote do anything to try to win in november, he says he does not think trump will concede if he loses, quote, losers, who are losers are never graceful this as the trump campaign is being forced to learn how to be a little more frugal. the campaign is trying to cut costs with donald trump's mounting legal fees that is proving to be a difficult proposition. cnn's alayna treene is in washington with the details here, you know, maybe fewer trips to starbucks make the
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coffee in the office i mean, there are some great anecdotes in this story, john, but it all stems from really, you know, donald trump is gearing up for a >> very costly general election campaign against joe biden, while also facing the enormous legal costs of all of the legal problems that he is facing. and because of that, his campaign in his really trying to rein in spending. now, we have one anecdote about how staff on the campaign often refer to susie wiles, one of the campaign managers, as a miser, something that she agrees with. we have one story about how a staffer had been telling others to make sure to tell others, i should say that he was only taking uber x is one of them more less costly? uber's because if he didn't, susie would quote kill me. now we also know that chris lacivita, he is another campaign manager for the trump operation. he is privately grumbled on multiple occasions about how expensive donald trump's rallies are. and he's
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made a very concerted effort to try and host these large rallies at smaller venues to try and save some money. we also have some great color about how in the trump headquarters across the country they've been pulling furniture from yard sales. they it's all mismatch as one senior advisor described it, they don't have mahogany desk. if they do, they're falling apart. that just gives you an example. ample of really how they look at this. now i do want to share with you a quote from lacivita who remarked on some of this. he said, quote, any organization that is concerned, or at least puts that level of concern at the forefront. you're gonna get better bids for business he added, if you're not spending the majority of your money on touching voters and pushing your candidate, then you're not running a good campaign now, john, i can tell you that this frugal approach is something that many of donald trump's top staff and aides do take pride in, but it also has been a point of frustration for many as you look at past campaigns, they were able to spend a lot more money. they were a little bit more free
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with their expenses this time around and they're very much to keeping a tight leash on it. >> yeah, every campaign i've covered, they'd like to brag about how frugal they are, what's different about this one is the candidate running it's got like a ton of legal bills. how much is that factoring into this? >> it's a huge part of it. and the way that i've heard from my conversations with donald trump's campaign about this as they look at it as twofold. one is about, they recognize that in 2020 when donald trump was still the incumbent and money was supposed to be one of the big assets of his campaign. they actually spent and burned through hundreds of million scenes of dollars in just a matter of months. and that left them in a really dire financial situation in the leadup to the 2020 election. and so that's something that his top advisers very much fear, but you're right, one of the bigger and i think driving concerns of this frugal approach is the legal bills and they recognize that that's been putting them at a disadvantage. we know that at the biden campaign has fundraised far more than than they have way more money in the bank than donald trump does. and there's a few ways they look at paying for this. one is
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the trump campaign is still planning to rely on save america, his main leadership pac to underwrite his legal bills, except they had actually spent 50 million or more than 50 million last year. and so they're in their own dire financial situation. but one way that this is new reporting, john, that they're also planning to pay for. this is donald trump himself has been putting forth his own money to underwrite his own legal bills. and this is from amanda, we know as long loathed paying lawyers, he stuffed his lawyers in the past. and so this is a departure for the former president the departure is using his own money to pay his own legal bills. what should tell you something in and of itself, alayna treene. thank you very much for that. sara >> all right. thank you. john, was what do you use your legal bill? i mean, i'm going to handle legal bills what i do, i pay well, i would like to use your money. your money >> john nikki >> haley is celebrating her first big primary win. cnn projects. she will win the republican presidential primary in washington, dc. this victory
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comes on the eve of what could be a doer die moment for her campaign today, 29 gop delegates in north dakota are up for grabs tomorrow. it's of course the big one, super tuesday, 865 republican delegates will be doled out over 16 states and territories. cnn's kylie atwood is on the campaign trial traveling with nikki haley's team. kiley. is this the momentum haley needed or is it just not? nuff when you look at the polling >> well, listen, it's certainly significant that she has now won a single contest. this part of this republican primary process, but it is just that sorry, it is one single contest. it's 19 delegates in dc. it's not necessarily enough to boost her to the top the pack with the former president. now, one interesting thing that we're looking at today is the fact that over the weekend, she very clearly said that she doesn't feel that she it's still bound by her
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commitment that she made last year to support the eventual republican nominee for president. listened to what she said on nbc i mean, at the time of the debate, we had to take it to where would you support the nominee and you had to in order to get on that debate stage, you said yes. the rnc is now not the same rnc. now it's so you're no longer bound by that pledge now, i think i'll make what decision i want to make, but that's not something i'm thinking about >> now. listen, nikki haley, just a few weeks ago, did say that she would uphold that pledge. so this is a key change for her and she is saying, obviously that she will make the decision that she wants to make. that comes as we have seen, her criticism a former president trump become sharper and sharper and sharper over the last few months as the two of them have battled it out also comes, as you said, on the eve of super tuesday what are more than a dozen states that are going to be voting? it
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could very well determine the fate of nikki haley's campaign. she has said she's not looking past super tuesday at this point and we're here in texas today where she will have two events. her final events ahead of that major event tomorrow as she watches, those states vote, sara >> all right? hey, kylie and you're looking at the states that will be voting on super tuesday. we are very close to that point in time, john. >> all right. happening now, a new crew is headed to >> the international space station, but just minutes before lift a small crack raised big concerns in the first over-the-counter birth control pill ever approved in the united states is now on its way to pharmacies across the country. >> welcome to stormy heights, where the windows are always pellet. pellet fiberglass is the strongest material for windows and patio doors every glass frame is even scratch and dent resistant hello, windows tested for extremes, designed
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you'd like to get schooled? >> frequent burned, right money this morning, ron, to you by e trade from morgan stanley, drain commission free today, we'd know account minimums feelings are facts which has nf it comes to the economy and the 2024 election. the latest new york times siena poll shows that emotions may be overriding the numbers more than half of registered voters say the us is poor that's nearly double the number of voters who say it is excellent or good seen in global economic analyst and financial times, associate editor and global business columnist, run a ferrari joins me now. run in your latest column, you talk about the gdp being up. inflation is down. job markets solid, good numbers but voters not feeling good about the economy. when you say as someone who's not an economist, not looking at all the big numbers. i don't think the us has good. are you really saying my economic conditions
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are not good? you just nailed it. it's all about that felt experience. how do we feel when worrying the groceries? door when we're paying our rent, when we're filling our car, and that gets to where people live, how they're going about their daily lives, what they're feeling in their wallets, which frankly doesn't really reflect those big numbers. on the one hand, if you look at the headline on data, i mean, this economy is roaring, right? gdp is up, the jobs market could hardly be better inflation, which we know has been a problem. we've all felt that is actually moderating, but what did people feel? they actually feel that, hey, over the last two or three years, the price for food, the price for rent, the price for what i'm paying for my car has gone up maybe 20% in some cases. so they're angry, you know, that's one thing that i'm really taking away from my coverage and talking to voters. they are very, very angry about those prices and they don't feel, even though the numbers are getting there, they don't really feel it in their pocketbook. >> when you're already down.
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yeah, you're in debt. you view, we know credit card debt is up under for senate, then it feels like punishment, even if the prices stay the same or lower just a bit that's right. all right. >> let me ask you about about this. something else that you put in your article, which is really interesting for the first time in several years, americans believed that immigration is the top issue. yeah, the number one issue. that's according to gallup a gallup poll how does immigration though affect inflation? because you argue there is an effect there. what is it? >> well, it's fascinating immigration. the numbers are showing is actually one of the reasons we haven't seen more inflation, particularly in labor markets. so if you think about who's working in restaurants, who's in the care economy, who's taking care of your grandmother, your a child? a lot of that labor is immigrant labor. now, what's fascinating is there's some new research to show that both legal immigration, but also illegal immigration has been part of that lower inflation story. now this is a very
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controversial issue, right? because if you look at illegal immigration, for example, you see a lot of folks coming in to sanctuary cities. i mean, we see this in new york a lot of them are not working, but some of them that are working are in the informal sector. they're working maybe off the books in restaurants and the care economy that actually does have a dampening effect on inflation. now, what's fascinating is you could argue if there was a way to fast-track these folks into legal positions, get them work permits. we've seen some exemptions with venezuelans, et cetera that could be a good thing, right? for the inflation story overall. but most americans, 61% of americans believe that illegal immigration in particular is a huge problem. 91% senate republicans think that no matter what immigrants are doing for our inflation story, there is still a sense that hey, we're concerned about the border. we're concerned about security, illegal immigration, huge issue she'll all right. this is also interesting. it
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probably surprising to know what party affiliation has a lot to do with how americans see the the economy. you just ride this as cognitive, political divide and it's something you said has been going on for decades what is this? what did you noticed this sort of biden, it's widening, correct? >> it is widening. and i mean, look, we know that we're in a partisan world, right? i mean, things are more polarized than they've been for decades. but what's fascinating is you can literally show the same piece of data, the same number, two, a democrat and republican. and how they see it will be completely black and white now that divide has been growing radically over the last two decades. if you look at say, 1999 versus today, much, much bigger partisan divide and another thing that's quite interesting to me is that, that divide widens in periods of recovery like what we're in right now. and why is that? because if we're in a great depression, we're all feeling bad, right? but if we're going to recovery there's a lot of
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data. it's changing and we've seen inflation hit hard in the last couple of years. we've also seen inflation dampen and get a little bit better in recent years. so you can look at that in two different and and if you're republican, maybe you're saying, i think inflation is terrible. biden's done a terrible job if you're democrat, you might be saying, hey, things are getting better. maybe this bidenomics is actually working. it's all about party affiliation now, even when you're looking at numbers, that is terribly disturbing center being its. and i think it's going to drive a lot of what happens in remember, and super tuesday, we'll be watching. that's coming up a really vast are running for our thank you so much for being here. thanks. >> so asum this morning, the first over-the-counter birth control pill approved in the united states is now being shipped to stores and pharmacies across also the country. >> it's >> called opill and it's a huge moment and it also comes as some us states, as we know, have sought to restrict access to birth control and abortion.
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cnn's jacqueline howard, she has much more on this and she's joining us now. jacqueline, tell us more what happens today >> well, kate, this is a huge milestone starting today, shipments of opill are heading to major retail pharmacies it will be available online. and what we know about opill, it's a mini pill, it contains progestin only to help prevent pregnancy. and if it's taken as instructed. so at the same time, every day, it can be up to 98% effective and as for the cost, we know that it has the manufacturer's suggested report tail price of $19.99 for one month's supply, 49, 99 for a three-month pack and 89, 99 for a six month pack. but kate, as you said, at a time when there has been a lot of debates and concern really around women's access to reproductive health services. this rollout of the nation's first ever
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over-the-counter birth control pill to stores. it's a major milestone, kd where can people find it >> so >> some of the major retail pharmacies that will carry it include cvs and walgreens. again, it will be available online at opill.com and other online retailers. and if you do walk into a store later this month, you can expect to see it in the family planning section of major pharmacies and again, we should expect with shipments starting today, we should expect it to be in stores in the coming days and weeks and online as well. kate >> first over approved, over-the-counter birth control pill. now, where people can preorder it this week, it's good to see you, jacqueline, thanks for the update, john, are happening now, a new nasa space x crew is on his way to the international base station, but there was concern over a small crack minutes before launch
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>> and just full power and lift knaflic crew aid, go falcon, go to space acting, go naphtha going acid despite the crack that was in a seal on the capsule side hatch. but engineers decided it would not be an issue for the mission. now the three three nasa astronauts and one russian cosmonaut are expected to dock at the space station early tomorrow morning. cnn's tom foreman is with us now. small crack doesn't seem to be the type of thing you want to see before liftoff. they're small, talk >> and they were giving it a very, very close look. >> i'll tell you those. it was so small, john, that they debated for a while whether not was actually hair, not a crack, they determined that even if it was a crack, that it would be tightened by re-entry, by the heat and that it did not pose a real threat. so they were confident enough to go ahead with launcher. that was right down to take off. take off really beautiful picture. perfect. there burning about 700 gallons of fuel a second as they took off and got up into orbit and started chasing down the international space station
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to catch up with it tomorrow. and dr. they're gonna do a lot of important work while they're there about 200 different experiments, many of them are aimed really at sustainability in space, about how people deal with things like the impact of micro and uv radiation stem cell study and test pressure cuffs. in this case are looking at circulation that might be happening in the legs, the arms of the astronauts when they're up there, three astronauts, nasa astronauts, one cosmonaut from roscosmos so in three of them flying for the very first time, only one has been up there before, and that is the pilot. in any event, one of the real reasons there's so much focus on human health and radiation and all this is, this is all becoming more and more a precursor for this return to the moon and a potential trip to mars maybe in the 2030s, 2040s, depending on when that might happen, when humans sustainability in that moment is really going to the matter.
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and one of the nicest things that happened yesterday was they haven't anti-gravity are zero gravity indicator that each crew takes long as you basically something to just float around and show that they've reached zero gravity. >> what they took >> this time was a small stuffed toy in this case, a little dog. you can see it just there to the left. he sort of playing within, bouncing around. >> that >> was chosen by one of the astronauts children to represent the sacrifice of families and kids when people have to go to their work, whether other astronauts or anybody else really a nice choice? yes. >> i was going to make front of it, but the kid gave the stuffed animal this show that occasionally, you know, everyone's got to give a little bit oh, tom, melt my heart this early morning. >> amazing mission and when we go to mars or to the moon these people are gonna be up there for about six months. we think. and for a few days i'll have 11 people on the international space station that's a lot of people even though it's about a big as six, a six-bedroom house. but the further we go
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along or they're gonna be out there 11 people and one stuffed dog, tom foreman. thank you very much for being with does 11 people in a six-bedroom house, i guess people are bunking. >> this >> what can you brother hours. >> that would be good. the end is insight for a monster blizzard on the west coast, california, sierra nevada, is still getting hit with snow this morning with some areas reporting more than seven feet of snowfall right now, one ski resort posted this video showing cruz getting hit with strong winds as they tried to clear away the snow on the roads. that has left some people stranded. cnn's derek van dam is joining us now man snow all weekend, you all predicted this? yeah. >> people didn't listen. they gotten their cars. i saw cars buried and it's still snowing and it's still snowing snowfall totals so far above seven feet, like you mentioned, this has been a five-day blizzard. i want you to look at the
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disappearing act that this vehicle in lake tahoe went through yesterday. i mean, poof right before your eyes. it disappears because of the low visibility. i mean, this is what people we're dealing with and contending with when will it end? well, it is wrapping up now, but still a consequential and very impactful storm. and one of the major reasons is not just the amount of snow. yes, we've the accumulated more than shaquille o'neal's height. he's seven foot one. we had seven and-a-half foot total so far. and just look at this 145 mile per hour he wins. you don't even need that much snow on the ground to lift it up into the air reduce the visibility and all of a sudden becomes extremely difficult. whiteout conditions, by the way, that is equivalent to a category four atlantic hurricane. those types of winds that is impressive, 89 inches recorded at sugar bowl. the storms not done just yet, daughter peak, also around 87 inches and yes, it was stranding vehicles, people getting pulled out. i mean that is impressive. so we still have our winter weather alerts,
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blotting the landscape here across the western half of the us because of this ongoing storm. but the good news is just within the past our the blizzard warnings have been lifted for lake tahoe and the sierra nevada region. so that's good news. we do have some precipitation north of there, but that's really not going to impact the hardest hit areas. so maybe just maybe we'll get just a few moments are a few days to dig out of this recent snowstorm, but wow, how impactful is that? snow above shaquille o'neal's head. and you saw the disappearing act there right on your tv screens. so that's something if you've ever seen him in person, you just realize how high that really it yeah. >> exactly. right >> derek van dam. thank you very, very much >> the supreme court jumping into the presidential race like we haven't seen in two decades, the historic ruling could be coming in the next two hours here on cnn, we are

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