tv CNN News Central CNNW March 5, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PST
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to help people take care of them >> my plaque psoriasis was so bad. i couldn't get my hair done. >> my psoriasis was all of >> them. >> my joints started hurting. found out it was psoriatic arthritis. who that could be connected many concentric works on both five years and counting >> did you know people with psoriasis on the scalp epa four times higher risk of developing things. psoriatic arthritis, which have left untreated can lead to permanent joint damage. coast syntax works on all of this and help stop further joint damage. >> talk to you, dr. find something that works for you. >> serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema and an increased risk of infections, some fatal have occurred. tell your dr. if you haven't infection or symptoms had a vaccine or plan to or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen
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we also have with the cnn business and politics correspondent, vanessa yurkevich. migrant issue is affecting how they cast their ballots while immigration top of mind, especially for republican voters here in texas. and we've heard that from voters here this morning who are casting ballots in the republican primary, where one of the polling locations in el paso, texas, one of many border communities have been affected by the ongoing immigration debate. we know the republican party intact x is also finds itself in the midst of a civil war. and this election day will really be an interesting test of the influence that donald trump has on texas republicans. he's been very involved in actually somewhat lower-level races here in texas. he's been endorsing candidates for state house races and that sort of thing. so it is really interesting to see this tension that is going on between the donald trump wing of the republican party and what would
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would have been the old bush wing of the republican party in both of those are really colliding. and there are many races down-ballot from the presidential election we're really going to see that here in the coming hours. and that is what many people here in texas will be paying close attention to. the other thing to pay close energy, boris and as you mentioned, this immigration issue, especially down in the rio grande valley and the eagle pass area, where that has been such an intense issue. just how many latino voters begins switching from democrat to republican. that is something that many political operatives paying very close attention to especially in this election cycle, to really kind of get a sense of how that immigration issue is going to affect these races, especially in the general election in november all right. >> ed lavendera. thank you so much >> donald trump can beat joe biden in november. >> yes >> even with all of the troubles he has even though even though joe biden won in 2020, joe biden has nothing to
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help the country, nothing so, yes, we want i want joe biden white house. >> do you think donald trump won the 2020 election or do you think he lost it? >> i think at one we won. >> we lost >> due to chicory >> but you believe the 2020 election was stolen? just yes. >> yes. >> big time. >> even after several years of evidence proving otherwise, you still don't believe that. >> well, nothing has been proven because everything is been a cover yes, but i do believe that it was stolen >> so brianna and boris, yes. you know, you kinda get a sense of just that intense grip that donald trump has on republican voters here in the state. that that was voted, that we spoke with just moments ago. >> all right. ed, thank you so much. let's go to vanessa yurkevich because the economy,
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vanessa, we not surprisingly it's a top concern among voters. there are some strong economic indicators. the question is going to be, if they're strong enough to counter some of the negative experiences that people are having when it comes to their day-to-day you can omic life. >> yeah, the economy is a top issue for voters. it's always has been a top issue for voters. but there has been some progress for people on the economy. and when we talk about the economy nowadays, we're really talking about prices, inflation. we have come a long way when inflation was sitting at 9.1% in june of 2022, inflation in january has come down to about 3.1% and also a way to figure out how people are feeling as consumer sentiment. we saw that in the end of last year, beginning of this year, consumers were actually feeling pretty good about at the economy. you can see that line ticking up in november. however, in february
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of this year, we saw consumer sentiment start to drop a little bit. and that is because inflation has been stuck around 3% above 3% and you started to see consumers pulling back on spending and then starting to feel not as great about the economy. this is the hurdle for joe biden. things go up and down. the numbers do not lie, but it's really hard to tell people that their feelings about the economy or not, right? >> vanessa, some of that frustration with key barometers of the economy is being filled in in different places. i want to show a tweet now from a voice i've often gone to to get important perspective, a key american consumer of cookies, the cookie monster from sesame street, he tweeted, quote me, hate mission. cookies are getting smaller. this vanessa comes as president biden is launching a strike force aimed at price gouging ahead of the state of the union address. >> it tell us more about this >> well, number one, do not mess with cookie monster hanh
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and his cookies. that's for sure, but he's really expressing a lot of what americans have been seeing both with prices but also for the amount of product that they've been getting. corporations often will shrink the product to try to keep the prices down. but americans are not fooled and you see so many responses to cookie monster's tweet saying thank you for calling this out. you see senators elizabeth warren and bob casey it's calling on corporations to do better. they have a bill in place to tackle this. and just today, president biden announcing this joint strike force between the doj and the ftc, aimed at going after corporations that they believe are a legally he simply illegally causing prices to be higher for consumers. and so this is a way for president biden to be able to put his stamp on the fact that he's trying to lower prices. president biden doesn't have a lot of pole in terms of how to
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bring down prices. but this is a way that he can show americans that he's trying to make the price is more affordable for everyday americans guys. >> yeah, more cookies, hard to argue with the politics of that. vanessa yurkevich. thank you so much. we are keeping a close eye on several other key races as well, including in the swing state of north carolina. that's right. cnn's dianne gallagher is live outside of a polling place in the charlotte suburb of cornelius dianne, what are you hearing from voters there about the race for president >> we've talked >> before about this long down-ballot after the presidential race. so there are a lot of people coming here for different reasons, but it's terms of issues that are inspiring them to come out here. i have heard pretty much unanimously abortion, education, immigration, and talking about just what they see for the future of the state and the country. now, i've spoken to people who have cast ballots for president biden, former president trump, and me
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bachelor haley old saying that they have their own reasons to do so. now, in terms of votes for nikki haley, the majority of people whose tell me they've cast her ballot for her did so because they were unaffiliated voters registered unaffiliated. they can go in and choose whichever ballot they want to participate in. republican, democratic, libertarian and they did so and voted for haley as a form of protest >> i just do not really agree with trump's rhetoric and all of his will, not all of his policies, but i just think that the deserve a better choice and i think as nikki haley it's nikki haley, someone you feel like you could vote for in november? no. >> i will vote democrat in november >> now, north carolina has a very robust early voting and absentee voting period here. and so we're looking at about 695,000 votes that have already been cast before we started voting here on primary de. they
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anticipate a nice healthy turnout as well. polls close at 07:30 p.m. and again, a lot of races on the ballot for people here in this state to choose from all right. >> dianne gallagher. thank you so much. live for us from north carolina and on this super tuesday, former president trump is on track to potentially win more primaries and caucuses rep presidential candidate other than an incumbent. >> yeah, here with us now to discuss republican strategist and partner at on message inke, brad todd also with us cnn senior political commentator, ana navarro on i will go to you because it's not just super tuesday. it's also three or five days. shout out to alert miami people out there >> i was very thankful that people told us very early in the morning. >> you posted something on social media >> it has to surprise you that we're here right now. given everything that happened on january 6, given the four years of donald trump, he's poised to become the republican nominee. in very short order. >> are you surprised? >> i'm appalled
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>> i guess i'm not that surprised because i live in miami-dade. and as you know, in miami-dade, there's a lot of those voters like our mondo, who we heard interviewed by ed lavendera, who it turns out the hispanics are conspiracy theorists two and believe in lies too. >> look, it's, it's appalling to me as somebody who grew up in the republican party, that the law and order party is skate, you know that this donald trump who's got 91 counts and at least four jurisdictions who has been found liable of sexual assault to the tune of 83 million, who has been found liable of fraud to the tune of half $1 billion is skating to the nomination. >> and so >> it's it's, it's hurtful, it's shocking, it's appalling, but i'm also a realist and i, you know, i realized a long time ago that this was going to be a binary choice and that this is where we were going to end up. i just i'm glad nikki haley still in the race. i
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think that anything that gets under trump's skin and she does is good. i'm glad that people have an ability to issue that. her name being there gives them an ability to have a protest vote but it's going to be biden versus trump >> read what do you think and what are you thinking about this moment in the race? >> i think we did look back a year ago, a year ago, ron desantis was ahead of donald trump, 39 to 28 11 point. so a, for a former president on states it literally just barely above a quarter. donald trump ran it gets ronda santa is you're going against nikki haley rig is chris christie has a fairly strong field especially considering he's a former president. and i think you have to give the trump campaign credit this is the best campaign he's run technically of the three. and he had started out with within the electorate were maybe we a third were eager for him to be the nominee again, and he's won over enough that he's going to probably get pretty close to the delegate lead tonight and i don't think we're spending enough time saying that they've run a pretty good campaign. and
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i think you have to give him credit for that. >> certainly the most organized that we've seen from trumpworld so far, immigration, as we heard from ed, there are a key issue in this campaign, but i'm really curious to get your perspective on the rhetoric that donald trump has used. let's play some of the sound from donald trump. i believe this is from fox news earlier today our borders are an embarrassment all over the world. we have millions and millions of people coming in from jails, from, from mental institutions. nobody's ever seen in, nobody's ever seen anything like this coming in from jails and prisons and mental institutions, insane asylums. there terrorists seven yep, terrorists pouring in at a level that we have not seen, maybe ever. and what they're doing to our country is incredible they are poisoning our country and we're going to close up our border and we're going to deport people were going to get them out because no country can sustain what we're going through right now. >> fact checking some of the details in there is just the it'll consume too much time,
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right? but what does it tell you, brad, that that kind of xenophobia is a winning issue for trump? >> oh, i don't think that's what it is. i think the fact that the border is out of control and the biden administration has made the problem worse. it's what's a bigger problem? the key portion of this electric going to be people who may not always liked the way trump talks or his choice of words. but they don't like the way joe biden's policies are active in immigration is going to be number one on that. immigration in prices both. and that's going to be the pull and push of this campaign. can the biden campaign demonstrate that in fact they're going to take a new direction on immigration and on the economy. they're going to move more to the center or can trump, convince voters that to look past some of the rhetoric, they don't like >> you could make the case that the immigration system is broken. i don't think many people will argue about that, but talking about poisoning the blood of the country numbers, the numbers of illegal immigrants and encounters of the border of what's going to drive the selection it's not going to end up being about donald trump's rhetoric. it's going to end up being about the numbers under joe biden of the reality american citizens are seeing in cities across the country. >> this is a golden oldie for donald trump, right? it worked
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for him in 2016. let's remember the first thing he said was he went after mexican immigrants calling them rapists and criminals. so he goes to this over and over again. it's funny because, you know what he's talking about. there's zero evidence that countries are opening up their insane asylums and there are jails and letting the people go to the border that did happen once you and i remember that it happened and in cuba, when casual opened up the insane asylums and the jails and a lot of good people in a lot of crazy people came at the same time. and i actually think he's kinda like taking a page from that from that historical occurrence, married in 1980 and using it with zero evidence, and we do have a problem. the problem is that there's countries like cuba, like venezuela, which you can pronounce, like nicaragua and haiti. three of those are ruled by left-wing dictators who are anti-american. haiti is a complete basket case right now and getting worse by the minute. >> and there's there's seems
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there's no controlling of that and there's no there's no cooperation from those countries. they don't even want to take deportees back and so it is a problem that's not one day in the making, one year in the making, it's been a decade or more in the making. and joe biden needs to remind people i hope he does so in the state of the union that the reason we don't have border policy right now, the border could be shut right now. the reason it's not is because donald trump ordered his minions and congress not to pass the border >> bill. >> biden said, if you pass this bill, then i will shut it down. but she acknowledged that there are executive actions he could take. he could reimplement mermaid and mexico that now he can't brad because mexico won't go along. i mean, we i just don't want to i don't want to litigate that because it's mexico says no, it's not going to uphold it. so it's, it's a moot point. we can go over that. >> the president's jobs >> that next >> it suppresses job they are talking to mexico, brad and
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mexico has said no. let's just be clear, but that's just that's i get what just that. but that's a political talking point. that's not a policy reality. i just wanted to be clear about that. >> it's not a political target point that's a policy difference between the administrator christians and of course it's on the burden of present for president trump's. it's one bird node him to decide how he would get that policy back reinstated, how he could convince mexico to play along. there is a reason independents currently choose president trump, former president trump on his immigration policies versus president biden. many of these save people voted for president biden, but they don't think what they got in the last four years is what they voted, what is not a political talking point as the very real legislation that was crafted in a bipartisan fashion with the help of people like senator lankford not exactly a liberal right, not much of a conservative. and that was >> squashed >> because of donald trump know, it was squashed because the republican house wasn't even consulted. you can't just catch a plan with five people. the us senate and decide that the house has to go squash because donald trump gave the
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order in his indians said yes, speaker johnson had already said it was dead because they hadn't consulted the house. >> donald trump says, he squashed it. >> gave >> him give me the credit. >> i wish we had more time to continue the conversation. i've enjoyed it very much on navarro, brad todd. thank you both. still to come. our coverage continues on this super tuesday, plus palestinians running for aid in gaza as a hunger crisis, there worsens the desperate conditions adding to the urgency for a ceasefire will break down where negotiations stand right now. a cnn news central continues >> king charles tomorrow on cnn >> why settle for one guestimate to see the value of a home when realtor dot com's real estimate gives you up to three independent valuations. >> don't all have to do that. >> not really trust the number one app real estate professionals trust, download the realtor.com app today. >> it's just your mother and i went different things, which is why we got sling tv so we can
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restoration how do you make like you've never even happened? >> abbott brand >> whatever comes your way. >> there's a professor surf pro like never even happened. >> this is americans bipartisan checklist. one, shut down the border to meet three, support or close friends in israel for stand up to china's military threat. we can't afford dc businesses. usual, there's a bipartisan group in congress with a new plan that will put america's resources where they are needed. >> this bill seeks to do, is prioritize the greatest pricey to combines border security with this foreign aid, both existential getting it done, problem-solvers, democrats and republicans contact speaker mike johnson, tell him to allow a vote on the bipartisan defending borders, defending democracies, acting tonight, >> it's super tuesday, 16
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races, one consequential day i know when you breathe do you like cnn in the best political team in the business? super tuesday special coverage begins tonight at 06:00 p.m. on cnn and streaming on max warnings of a full-blown famine in gaza are now giving way too graphic images and we must warn you that >> you will likely find them disturbing palestinian children with emaciated bodies and sunk in eyes being treated at a clinic in southern gaza hear them a nurse at that clinic saying that children suffering from malnutrition and from a range of diseases are arriving now in unprecedented numbers un experts are now accusing israel of intentionally starving the palestinian people they say civilians seeking humanitarian aid and humanitarian convoys are being targeted. israel has denied these charges. you've cnn's paula hancocks in abu dhabi for us. paula
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increasingly urgent warnings about starvation in gaza from international agencies who make it into that war. ravaged enclave. what can you tell us >> what brianna we have been hearing these warnings for months now, ngos, humanitarian groups saying this is what would end up happening if there wasn't more humanitarian aid getting into gaza. and this is what is happening. we have just heard from the who as well, the world health organization that managed to get a team into northern gaza said a growing number of children are dying in gaza. the health ministry in gaza run by hamas says some 15 children have died of malnutrition and dehydration at this point, we can't independently we confirm those figures though as international journalists are not allowed into gaza. but one thing that caught me as well was the who is saying that one in six
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children under the age of two is acutely malnourished and they have pointed out that that is back in january, situation tuition is likely to be far worse today. it is the worst-case of child malnutrition anywhere in the world. they're also pointing out that in the north malnutrition is three times higher than it is in the south of gaza west, some aid is getting through humanitarian groups. you and aid groups finding it increasingly difficult cool to get to the northern part. and we are hearing from biden administration officials, once again that one at least one of those crossings in the northern part of gaza, which borders israel, should be opened by israel to allow the humanitarian aid to get through. we heard from us president joe biden saying there is no excuses, not to let more aid in and we're hearing from humanitarian aid group saying they warned that this was going to be the situation children are bearing the brunt
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of not getting enough humanitarian aid in. and it needs to change very quickly. brianna very clearly from the pictures, paula hancocks. thank you for that report. >> heading into today's primaries or at least seven states whose voters have the option to vote, no preference or uncommitted. they include battleground north carolina, minnesota, colorado, and massachusetts now, this may or may not present a problem for president biden, given what happened last month in michigan, we're a sizable percentage of voters organized and cast an uncommitted protest vote over his handling of the crisis in gaza, joining us now is michigan democratic congresswoman debbie dingell, congresswoman. thank you so much for being with us this afternoon. there is no deal yet. for a pause in hostilities and we're watching closely to see if one is finalized before ramadan and just five days that has been the target if there is a deal and it does hold, do you think that's enough to assuage concerns among democrats who
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feel the white house isn't doing enough on this issue. >> so i'm going to talk about this very specifically because i'm meeting with people that are concerned all the time and i have family members i've many family members that live in my district or lived in a district that are used to represent who aren't sleeping at night. but i don't want to take the premise that people that are voting uncommitted are all about this. there wasn't campaign in michigan called listen to michigan. there are democrats that are concerned about that, but there are a lot of other issues that uncommitted on both sides. nobody ever talks about those that are voting mean uncommitted for donald trump rolled never vote for donald trump either. but i am going to tell you that people are hurting and michigan and i don't think we should be talking about it from a political who you're voting for for right now. this is a humanitarian issue. you just saw those pictures. i have family members who have lost 40 members, 20 members in their families now, they have nieces, nephews, cousins who are in
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desperate shape. we have got to get humanitarian aid to gaza. and i think many people believe what hamas did was a terrorist act. what it was inactive evil, but what we are watching now is destroying the hearts and souls of people around the world congresswoman, some of the harshest criticism we've heard from the administration toward what's happening in gaza came from >> vice president kamala harris over the week again, she called the situation in the enclave inhumane a humanitarian catastrophe. she went further than president biden has up until this point do you think that message would carry more weight with your constituents if it came directly from president biden >> look, i have private conversations with both the president and the vice president. there is no rules between them. she has felt very strongly. i know the president does. the president is the one that's talking directly to the prime minister. i know he is trying to get this temporary
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farris ceasefire, which i pray goes to a permanent ceasefire. i do not believe the vice president would have made such strong statement if they were not together. >> i hope the president is announcing a ceasefire very soon. i know he is putting pressure and he's been very public about the humanitarian crisis. nobody with a heart or soul can watch what is happening there and not be worried and know that we you have to do something more than 30,000 people have died it may be up to 14,000 children. we have to do something. it's just not acceptable congresswoman, obviously the state of the union speech is on thursday. it's going to be a huge opportunity for president biden to get his reelection message out there. what are you hoping to hear from president biden? are you hoping that he says some of what you're saying that he shares with you in private, publicly during the state of the union? >> i think that the state of the union is an opportunity for him to lay out his vision for
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the future. what do you want to do in his next term? he cannot not talk about this. this is on the hearts and minds of people across the country so i keep thinking we're going to have that temporary ceasefire any minute and i hope he's able to talk about this new dress. it i would be very surprised if he didn't not very directly and i have no inside information address the humanitarian situation in gaza. anybody who cares and has compassion cannot ignore it >> congresswoman debbie dingell, thanks so much for the time. >> thank you >> have some breaking news. independent senator kyrsten sinema of arizona says that she is not running for reelection. she says she's going to be leaving the senate at the end of the year. let's get straight now to cnn chief congressional correspondent, manu raju on capitol hill manu get us up to speed here. >> this is very significant, of
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course, kyrsten sinema has been a key player in the senate for several years now, being the center of a number of negotiations here in the senate. someone who has actually gotten a lot of pushback, anger from the left flank of a party ultimately drove her from the democratic party became an independent senator, caucusing with the democrats, but there has been a key question about the senate race this year. the senate map about what kyrsten sinema would do in this critical swing seat of arizona she just announced she is going to step aside, will not run for reelection in november, which would change the dynamics in that very critical senate race in arizona just put out a lengthy statement explaining her decision to step aside. she talked about the need to work together, how the need for civility and for compromise. she said that she's she laments the facts and her words. compromise is a dirty road. she said we have arrived at a crossroad we chose we choose anger and division and
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ultimately she sees says that it's time for her to step aside. this is this will change how this senate race could eventually turn out if she were to run, it would be uncertain if whether she would pause support from democratic side or the republican side. there's a republican candidate who is running in that race kari lake, the former gubernatorial candidate. there's a democratic candidate, also, ruben gallego. he's a democratic candidate as well. i just talked to steve daines, who's the chairman of the senate gop campaign committee. he told me that he believes that sinema's decision to step aside will ultimately boost kari lake's chance in this pivotal race. but there's not a lewis seven impact on the map here, brianna, but also on the senate as well, several of these dealmaker types, joe manchin, kyrsten sinema, mitt romney, all saying that they will not run for reelection. that will ultimately change the makeup of the senate, whether they can cut deals and have implications too, for the next president briana yeah >> huge, huge development here with kyrsten sinema saying she'll be leaving the senate at the end of this year. manu raju live for us on the hill
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trig oxide support blood pressure and improve heart health. rushed to walmart and find total bce. >> i'm arlette saenz at the white house. and this is cnn super tuesday today, including in utah, where it is caucus day >> yeah, it could be a great opportunity for nikki haley to score a win against donald trump a wind. she is yet to come across except for here in dc. >> that's right. yeah. the primary here, cnn's brian todd is in utah for us. brian, what are the chances that haley can
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pull off? when upset >> well, boris, most people don't predict her to pull off the upset tonight, but she could chip into trump's delegate count. she could conceivably pull off an upset only in that donald trump has kind of had a history of luke warm political support in the caucuses slash primary season in the state in 2016, donald trump lost the utah caucuses, handling too i'm ted cruz. so that's what kind of nikki haley and her camp are counting on there also counting on a couple of other things. the fact that the governor of utah, spencer cox, the republican governor, has said, basically he doesn't like donald trump or joe biden is candidates. he likes nikki haley as a candidate he has not formally endorsed her, but the governor's wife, abby cox, has endorsed nikki haley as has the lieutenant governor deidre henderson. she has endorsed nikki haley so you've got that as a pool for haley in the state. also, you've got the mitt romney factor, the popular us senator who's retiring, obviously a very harsh critic
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of donald trump over the years will mitt romney's influence so it's maybe influenced some republican voters here to swing to nikki haley. here's what i can show you about the caucus site. this is very dynamic caucus site in about five-and-a-half hours, the caucusgoers will arrive here at alto high school, newly renovated, massive high school here at the foot of the wasatch mountains here, beautiful view of the mountains behind me. you can see but we've got hundreds of voters who will start to converge here at about five-and-a-half hours. they will caucus here. they'll hear speeches, then they'll all vote at one time. and the one thing that could help donald trump hear that there will be a strong pull donald trump's way is that the caucus system here was adopted in 2016. it's run by the republican party, not the state. and that tends to draw more conservative voters that may favor donald trump. so that could be where he really picks up support here tonight, we'll known a few hours, guys. >> yeah. the beehive >> state beehive state going to be buzzing, >> right? >> we know with you, brian todd there in utah. thank you. thanks, brian. you like that. you're entertained by that all
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right >> ahead on cnn news central, we have much more of our super tuesday coverage and also a new satellite could be critical to the fight against climate change ange giving scientists a chance to do something that they've never been able to do before >> this was calling the trap and he couldn't get out >> vegas was having an identity crisis. that was the beginning of the downfall but vegas at a different idea, vegas, the store well, you've seen seated next sunday at ten on cnn >> is, feeling dry, tired, stressed, get a boost of moisture with bio true hydration, boost eye drops for comfort throughout the day. they're preservative free, gentle and maybe naturally
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will help track excess methane emissions. this is a key driver of the rise and global temperatures here, cnn's bill weir 321, ignition and lift paid for by the likes of billionaire jeff bezos and others their donors. the non-profit environmental defense fund, just launched a new kind of i in the stock methane sat is designed to circle the earth every 95 minutes or so and cutting-edge detail spot plumes and leaks of planet cooking pollution, long associated with the production of natural gas. if carbon dioxide is a blanket of average thickness, overheating the earth for centuries, methane is like a blanket seven feet thick with over 80 times the heat trapping power of co2 for about two decades after its release sometimes it leaks from old equipment or orphan wells. and
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sometimes when there's no one to buy it companies just burn it and a practice known as flaring. >> what we found here in the permian basin is that operators are wasting enough gap asked to heat about 2 million homes a year in 2021, edf took us up over the oil and gas fields of texas to sniff out methane leakers with a specially equipped airplane >> carbon dioxide down here >> and this is methane, but now they can fly over every oil and gas basin in the world, or 80% of global supplies are fracked and pumped. >> we can basically create a movie of what's going on with respect to methane emissions before we can just take snapshots when we had a plane in the air and we can get permission to fly this is a whole new game it really creates an enormous leap forward in our ability to really understand greenhouse gas emissions. >> while other satellites can spot methane, what they find is often kept private. but edf says that in about 18 months
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thanks to bill weir for that report. >> will >> today prove to be nikki haley's last-dance super >> tuesday may be her last chance. let's to show that she deserves to continue her shot at the republican nomination. we're going to look at where her campaigns stands now >> backroom deals, cia secrets, affairs, bribery, breen corruption, prostitution >> there's so much more to the store in knighted states of scandal with jake tapper next sunday at nine on cnn introducing ned's black psoriasis he thinks it's flaky red patches are all people see. >> oh, tesla is the number one prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis oh, tesla can help you get clear skin reduce itching and flaking with no routine blood tests required doctors have been describing,
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oxide support blood pressure and improve heart health rushed to walmart fine total beats. >> i'm kaitlan polantz in washington. and this is cnn >> today, republican presidential candidate nikki haley is firing back after former president trump says she has no path to the nomination. >> this is not personal. this is about the fact that we have to win weekend. want to change the country all day long. but if we can't win an election, we can't do any of that let's
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discuss this big day, super tuesday with former arkansas governor asa hutchinson. sir, thank you so much for taking the time to be with us today. do you see a path for nikki haley? >> well, it's certainly a narrow path that she has and this election day super tuesday with 854 delegates at stake, is a critical day for her. i think there's a couple of things that she needs to show. one, she needs to win, at least one state i think she asked to have an outright wind. she won washington dc. it'd be good to have another one. secondly, she needs to hold donald trump under the 60% threshold, which means there's over 40% of the electorate that saying that we need to go a different direction, that makes her a player as she moves on from super tuesday it is a narrow path, but it is a path if she can achieve those objectives on this particular day. >> if she doesn't do that, if
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she drops out, do you see her endorsing trump? >> you know, of course. she indicated that she would endorse him even if he was a convicted felon. and the debate, i believe she has retreated from that, which was a smart move and so i think that remains up in the air obviously, we all want to support the republican nominee, but she's made it clear that donald trump will take our country and our party the wrong direction. i second that motive, and so i'm hoping someone else will come out of the convention. so i think it is unpredictable exactly what she will do after super tuesday. we will we'll see there's a narrow path there and she's got to decide whether she wants to pull out or whether she wants to be a disruptor, or whether she thinks the cards can fall, just right. so they she can win. but clearly, she's garnered a significant amount of support as demonstrated by the fact
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that 40% is getting close to the number that says, we don't want to have donald trump as our nominee >> what are your concerns? what, what do you think a trump presidency would look like policy-wise? >> well, he has already redefined the republican party and his own image, which means that it is a pro putin donald trump message that he conveys versus be in for ukraine for freedom, supporting our allies he wants to engage in isolationism. that is a dramatic shift for the republican party. he wants to pull back america's leadership and voluntarily withdrawing from the world stage that he wants to put a ring around america and recreate the tariff wars that even with our allies. so those are dramatic changes and the policy differences with donald trump needs to be
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magnified. people need to understand those, not just his temperament, not just his style, not just his grievances and the risks that he poses, but his policies our bad for a second administration and that needs to be emphasized. >> governor, you may have seen just here in this hour, independent senator kyrsten sinema has just announced she is leaving the senate at the end of the year. she's not seeking reelection. and i wonder what you think of her explanation. she said, quote, because i choose civility, understanding, listening, working together to get stuff done. i will leave the senate at the end of this this year. and she pointed to her bipartisan victories, but she said, quote, it's all or nothing. the outcome less important than beating the other guy compromise is a dirty word. what do you think about that? >> well, that's an important message and i believe she's being honest and her comment that you have two political
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parties that want to fight to a large extent versus is trying to get things done. there's clearly differences between the major parties but whenever you look at the opportunities, whether it's border security, they've got to work together to get things done for america. and she's frustrated by that and rightfully so it also reflects that in arizona, it's a very difficult route to go an independent you have the two major parties carrying sway. there's just a loyalty there that makes it difficult for an independent or a third party effort. and i think that's the lesson to be learned from what she's doing today. >> governor hutchinson, we appreciate you being with us. thank you so much >> good to be with you. thank you, brianna. >> and primaries are all about expectations. so what are the campaigns expectations for super tuesday? we're going to break that all down. after a quick break >> tonight, made super tuesday,
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16 races. one counts of module day. i know when you bring it to you like and the best political team in the business. super tuesday special coverage begins tonight at 06:00 p.m. on cnn and streaming on max >> students students have any age from anywhere using our technology to power different ways of learning >> so in minds grow community spouse if you have graves disease and itchy eyes, the truth may be even more uncomfortable. people with graves could also get thyroid eye disease or ted, which may need a different dr. find a ted is specialist at is-it ted.com. >> so you fed on new floors. what i'm buyer today's buy one, get giuffre sale by flores for one room and get carpet, hardwood, vital, and elaborate for two more rooms, free >> today for gentle,
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