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tv   The Chris Wallace Show  CNN  April 6, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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not all caitlin clarks are the same. caitlin clark. city planner. just like not all internet providers are the same. don't settle. you want fast. get fast. you want reliable. get reliable. you want powerful. get powerful. get real deal speed, reliability and power with xfinity. she shoots from here? that's kinda my thing.
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again, and welcome. it's time to break down the big story duress, florida supreme court surprise is the sunshine state actually winnable for president biden then the x-factor with rfk junior has pulled number is climbing is kinda nice appeal about much more than his anti-vax view and keep a ring on it. the new post-divorce trend that may have you're saying, i don't the paddle is here and ready to go. so sit back, relax let's talk about up first, the two >>ecisions by florida supre court, which have the biden campaign both angry and excited
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and the trump ca a b nervous this week, the court decided to uphold the law, triggering a six-week abortion ban. but it allowed abortion rights to be put on the november ballot. the two rulings possibly changing the dynamics of the presidential race i'm running to make roe v. wade the law of the land again, the biden >> campaign, putting abortion front and center, slamming florida's new six-week abortion ban as extreme and outrageous >> donald trump doesn't trust women >> i do, >> but hoping that having abortion rights on the ballot in november could make florida winnable for the first time in 12 years. >> we definitely see florida in play >> abortion rights has proved a winning issue for democrats ever since the supreme court overturned roe v. wade with voters support abortion access in every ballot measure, including in red states like kansas and kentucky okay this year, florida is one of about a
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dozen states where voters could weigh in on abortion rights including swing states like arizona and possibly nevada >> abortion >> trump, meanwhile, trying to walk the line between appeasing is pro-life base, but also republicans and independents who believe in a woman's right to choose more and more. >> i'm hearing about 15 weeks. i haven't agreed to any number. i'm going to see here with me today, author and podcast host kara swisher right-hand salam, president of the manhattan >> institute, and contributing writer at the atlantic, new york times journalist and podcast toes lulu garcia-navarro and jim garrett as senior political correspondent at national review, and contributing writer at the washington post. welcome everyone, especially jim khuza'a first timer. yes. i'm excited longtime. you were first time. we've gone, i'm
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ready, right? all right. you got to take it down flat now, look, florida used to be a swing-state most famously in the 2000 election between bush and gore. but it's turned increasingly red. trump be biden their four years ago by 371 votes lulu, as a florida native, does abortion on the ballot in november give biden a chance in your home state. >> it doesn't not i think florida has turned into a red-state demographic. shifts have been huge there where i do think it will help democrats as down-ballot. we do see that this issue is actually going to have some legs there. there are a lot of house races. there's a senate race that's close. and so i do think that's going to be but florida is to read it's to read now for biden to have, i think in my personal opinion, it's to read now, but as we said, abortion is gonna be on the ballot on states all across the country. definitely arizona possibly the swing state of nevada >> jim, could >> abortion swing this election
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on those other states. so i'm going to say conceivably, maybe that's the wrong word could just rooting for the abortion discussion biden would just need everything to break his way for a state like florida. and when they put together their first list of competitive states, they were the blue wall states, pennsylvania, wisconsin michigan, and then they went arizona, georgia, all the ones you'd kinda i've expect they put north carolina on their list, which struck me as kind of a stretch. my attitude is anything biden didn't win four years ago, it's gonna be a tough pull for him this time. florida really feels like it's a little bit out of reach, but abortion. yeah. >> oh, look, it'll be a >> factor coast to exactly what the democrats wanted for their motivation but on the other hand, i think most people vote on the economy probably immigration is gonna be a big deal. it will be held on abortion. women are very reliable democratic voters. and beyond all that, where we've seen actually abortion make a really big difference is in swing states in those close states were actually getting people out to the polls to vote on that issue will be decisive.
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>> the role do think abortion play a big role? >> i think it's spin their quietly all over the place and in every, all these elections, it's mattered. it seems to matter whether it's an alabama, whether it's an ohio in kansas, all kinds of places. it pops up. i think it will pop up in florida and big time. well, interestingly enough, in florida, the supporters of the abortion on rights are saying, we don't want those to be a political issue because we don't want people who may be for trump, but one abortion rights not to vote for this. so what it's gonna be interesting to see how it plays trump incidentally says he's gonna make a statement about abortion this week. to clear up where he stands. but as soon as the florida supreme court put abortion on the ballot, the biden campaign started running an ad in that state to make it clear where donald trump stands. >> for 54 years. they were trying to get roe v. wade terminated. and i did it and i'm proud to have done it >> right hand. >> can >> trump find some way to
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thread the needle in the statement he supposedly going to make next week, where on the one hand, he doesn't antagonize his pro-life i've base, but on the other hand, he somehow fuzzers up the issue for people who are pro-choice >> yes, i think he can. and i think that he's somewhat unique in its ability to do that. he has such strong support from evangelical conservative voters who see him as their champion that he is able to be a little bit tactical about but the issue is able to actually moderate his position in ways that other republicans find it very difficult to do. there's another element of this, chris, and it relates to what you were talking about a moment ago with kara. there's a funny way in which these referendums actually decouple the issue from partisanship back in 2020, florida voters voted by 20 percentage points to hike that state's minimum wage. and trump still won. if you look at ohio kansas, kentucky, state after state, you've seen pro choices when referenda was my big margins. but those states continued to vote for
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republicans, but that actually could be something that works the sweet spot new say you think that trump is uniquely qualified. what's the sweet spot? >> i think what he's talking about now is using 15 weeks as the pro-life position he's redefining it around that as what he considers more defensible ground. there are going to be plenty of voters who are still opposed to that, who still consider that too restrictive. but he sees that as defensible and i think it's going to be proven right. >> so comfortable in that spot, that's what he actually thinks, which is unusual for him because he swings all over the place. but i think he probably will push for that. i still think it's gonna be a problem with evangelical base. there'll be very disappointed because they keep pressing on >> but >> he definitely has to say something because he's kind of a jam here. >> i don't think he can bamboozle voters. i mean, i think the very idea that somehow trump can pretend that he wasn't the person who was seminal in overturning roe. and that republicans somehow aren't actually pushing for these very extreme anti against abortion rights and freedom of
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reproductive tract i don't think there is you know, i just feel like you're saying that he's going to play the mentors of sound debate about whether or not they should be handled by voters and democratically elected >> legislatures versus the supreme court. i think that's what we're seeing play out. and by the way, it's been pretty tough politics. here's the thing. i don't understand. and jim, let me bring you into this i couldn't i would think of 15 weeks, obviously there are a lot of pro-choice women. we're going to say, i don't want any risk direction. i could see that been more acceptable to them. how does that square with the pro-life people who have been talking for decades about life begins at the moment. and sap no exceptions, no rape, incest how suddenly is 15 weeks. okay. so we >> asked earlier about whether trump could find that sweet spot, right? is it could it happen? yes. what i bet on trump doing that? no, because he's generally all over the place when he talks about these kinds of topics, he'll say one thing, one sentence that in a separate interview will be completely contradictory trump can make themselves sound like
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whatever he wants. sometimes number my paragraph to paragraph, sentence to sentence. and yet some you think, oh voters will recognize this. largely voters haven't. trump has been missing the sweet spot and all kinds of issues all throughout his whole career, saying things that are incendiary, saying things that are crazy and controversial. and it never really catches up with them, at least not to a point where he's no longer a person who goodwin the president makes trump's so can i just you to briefly running out of time in that segment and for this question, how does the pro-life movement wrap its head around 15 weeks today's say, well, yeah, but trump is our guy and we know he doesn't mean it. >> i'm sorry to say that there are a lot of pro lifers who are really panic right now. and we're trying to find some defensible ground as well. there have been political defeat after political defeat, and they think half a loaf is better than none >> all right, then there's the rfk junior campaign. we all know about his anti-vax views but given as growing appeal is the news media getting it wrong and how we cover the kennedy campaign then the panel tells me why i'm wrong about what
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israel needs to do after killing those seven aid workers. and lighter, sending your boss to voice mail. the proposed law, every worker planning a happy hour needs to know about jim, if your boss call you, answer the phone >> after i >> what i there is no media personality >> businesswoman celebrity chef, like her >> the many lives of martha stewart now streaming on macs >> the ancient rash of moderate to severe eczema disrupts my skin night and day despite treatment, it's still not under control. but now i have revoke or invoke is a once-daily pill that reduces the itch and helps clear the rash of eczema fast some are invoked patients felt significant inch relief as early as two days. some achieved dramatic skin clearance as early as two
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independent presidential candidate, robert f kennedy jr. is gaining support potentially getting his name on more ballots and spreading a message that seems to be resonating. no matter how unconventional it is >> i can make the argument and biden as a much worse threat to democracy >> independent candidate, robert kennedy jr. attacking job biden doesn't. >> biden is >> the first president in history that has used the federal agencies to censor political speech. the well-known vaccine skeptic, climbing biden's censored him after instagram briefly suspended kennedy and 2021 carsharing debunked claims about the corona virus or vaccine in recent weeks, kennedy's star has steadily risen introducing a running mate, lawyer and multimillionaire, nicole shanahan and robert f. kennedy,
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jr. and the healing of america from being to double-digit polling in the presidential race. and after getting on the ballot in utah, now claiming he's got enough signatures to qualify in several keys wings days. i'm going to be on the ballot in every state. if that happens, he could pose a serious threat or both of the two leading candidates are campaign is a spoiler for president biden and for president trump. >> rionda polling has not all at all clear of years, one poll indicates one thing, one indicates another. so let me ask you, who do you think kennedy is more of a threat to trump or biden? >> i'd say right at this moment, he might be hurting biden more longer term. he could hurt trump more. and i think if you're looking at the swing-state surveys right now, there's only one state where it seems like kennedy is making a difference. that's wisconsin and it's making a difference to actually help president biden. so it's very unpredictable. but why >> do you think it's going to
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end up being more of a problem for trump than then by this is a big if, but if kennedy winds up running a disciplined campaign over time, big f and if you actually get some >> decent media attention, he could excite a lot of low propensity voters who want an exciting alternative. that is what separates trump from the pack of other mainstream republican in candidates. those low propensity voters who don't trust institutions kennedy scratches that inch from a is certainly trying to make it clear where he thinks kennedy sets on the political spectrum. take a listen he's a very liberal guys, probably the most liberal person in the race, including the green party. so i think he's probably going to hurt biden. i don't see him hurting me. are people are solid lulu, who do you think kennedy threatens more? >> i mean, at the moment both, but i think also long-term, it's probably going to be trump and you see him deliberately making a play for
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trump voters. justice week, he's been talking about how january 6 wasn't actually an insurrection. he's really trying to appeal to that side of the demographic the other thing that he's doing, which i think is very smart, is that he's going into podcasts. he's got the biggest following on tiktok of any politician. and so he's really trying to appeal to these voting blocs that perhaps aren't served by the traditional media. >> let's drill down on some of kennedy's positions beyond being an and he vaccine skeptic, which we know about his pro-choice and abortion, takes populous positions like reducing student debt loan, a loan debt, and says the war in ukraine as being fought to advance us interests but most of all he is somebody new is not trump, is not biden what do you think has appeal it as gender? one as we have two exceptionally well-known, one literal incumbent and one quasi-incumbent running. and so he's the fresh face.
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ironically, a kennedy and then the second thing kind of struck me as we were just talking about his voice. no professional political consultant would tell a candidate to sound like that. so there's an authenticity there. this is not perfection, this is not blow dried, this is who he really is. the second thing is as this outsider, i think a lot of americans who probably feel like light, their life stink their lives, allows, they've had a lot of you tough, tough breaks in life. and they want somebody to blame. and kennedy is the guy who is outside. he's not of the establishment, is not establishment, right? he's not establishment left began running against clip. he's against everybody. and so i think if you're fed up with everything, the american version, i think being outside as nothing says simple people like can entity, i was just like it's such, i think what he feels so like the bernie bro okay. those guys who moved who didn't quite know where to go, didn't quite want to go to trump and he's a more appealing trump and a lot of ways and i do think he's going to hit trump part because he has those stances and you'll continue to do so and they're also attracted to some of those
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liberal ideas to pro choice. and things like that. and he's he's he's interesting and he's not them. and that's >> you know, you made your the crack about kennedy. but the fact is jack kennedy and bobby kennedy rfk junior's father, they both very much worse as champions of the little guy. >> he worked 100 i'm just saying, i don't think he's a populace that he makes out to be. he also though well, he has there's going to be a lot of slime thrown at them because he's got some somewhat of a history and i think that'll enter the picture that might make them appealing to some of those people. because if they, if they hit them hard to really let me just want to follow up with kara given the fact that he is the most popular in terms of this jarring and the polls, third party candidates since ross perot in, 1992, is the media making a mistake and not giving you more coverage? >> i think they should cover them completely and his vice presidential candidate, there's a lot there to cover and they should be treating them seriously. i think he has a lot of bros bros. a good example. but if rostra was around today, he'd appeal to
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trump voters minus here's what's really scared very for president biden. it's the fact that even though it does seem like kennedy is hurting trump somewhat, trump is still significantly ahead of biden in the swing states. so i mean, i think it's funny because biden was saying, i don't want third-party candidates in the race. i want to clear one-on-one contest. he might need other folks to jump in here to kind of chip away at trump's. >> it isn't something i'm talking about where kennedy appeals since kennedy has announced that he's not running as a democrat anymore but as an independent, the coverage of him in a lot of right-wing media, including my alma mater fox news, has gone down a lot how do you explain that? >> well, i'm sure that that's related to the fact that he is less interesting to them as someone who was a third, a thorn in the side. >> i'm >> that is not why he's that's not why they're not covering them is they're nervous, they're worried. they see him as a threat to trump. they see him as someone who potentially if they give him airtime, could actually take how it works, the
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way they cover biden is bigger threat to democracy than trump is. bending that they love him when he's hitting biden whatever all our coverage of them has gone down since he became an independent yeah. do is lulu right? they seem as a threat. i >> think the >> foxnews crowd is probably very comfortable with a trump vs biden matchup. you throw when those extra of options in there, it gets a little bit more nervous for those who are pulling for trump >> a serious dilemma at the white house, president biden, outraged over israel's killing of aid workers while also sending more bombs to israel's military. is that diplomacy or is it hypocrisy? that's seven astronauts setting off on a scientific mission, columbia used in check. >> i didn't know anything concerning it happened. there were people that did though >> the space shuttle accident, it's usually not one thing, it's a series of events >> you follow the debris. what's it telling you?
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not all caitlin clark's are the same. caitlin clark, city planner. just like not all internet providers are the same, don't settle. get real deal speed, reliability and power with xfinity. she shoots from here? that's kinda my thing. get the real deal with xfinity internet today, and get fast speeds and a reliable connection to all your devices in the home —even when everyone is online. serfaty in washington and this is cnn closed captioning
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brought to you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you >> 808 to one 4,000 now, tell me why i'm wrong where i get my personal take on something. i feel strongly about and then my friends here way yen for sexual months, we've witnessed the deaths of tens of thousands of palestinians in the gaza strip the idf striking back at hamas after a killed more than 1,000 israelis in that savage attack on october 7 for some that's the collateral damage of war for others, it's a slaughter that violates every rule of humanity then this week, the israelis killed seven workers from world central kitchen, who are trying to bring food to gaza starving people striking. they're three
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vehicles in three separate attacks this is how jose andres, founder of world central kitchen responded >> humanitarians and civilians should never be paying the consequences of war disease. a basic principle of humanity at the time this looks like he's not a war against the resume anymore seems as it's a war against humanity itself. >> now. let me be clear. the deaths of seven aid workers are no more tragic than the dow sub thousands of innocent palestinian men, women, and children but for me this is personal. i've known jose for years, a world-famous chef. he has made it his mission to feed people in need as an act of love two years ago, my daughter, kathryn volunteered at world central kitchen to help feed ukrainian refugees who fled to poland she's the
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woman on the far right. and that man in the center, damian sobol who catherine says, was incredibly kai. he is one of the seven world central kitchen workers who was killed this week now i'm no military experts on i know hamas is hiding in a civilian population but there's got to be some way as real can fight this war without killing so many innocence, without killing people like damien sometime over these six months, continuing to fight this war, this way they unacceptable all right. ryan, tell me why i'm wrong. >> the responsibility for civilian deaths lies with hamas. hamas has engaged in an information war against the people of israel. one element of that information patient war is frankly issuing false deeply unreliable information about civilian deaths. and another element of this is that they built an incredibly deep, incredibly extensive network of
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tunnels, hundreds of kilometers of tunnels that are very difficult to reach and they deliberately built them underneath hospitals underneath civilian neighborhoods. this is a nearly impossible situation that israel is handling exceedingly well. and we need to continue to support them as they run a genocidal organization >> well, it's not. israel has lost the narrative here. they've lost the high ground that they've lost they lost the high ground and they've lost the story of a terrible attack amid all this. and this story. and you're right, it doesn't seven people dying. compare it to thousands and thousands. and especially children dying. all of them are terrible, but this encapsulates it perfectly. the collagenous the, we made the mistake and everything else and i get your point, but they've completely lost and i hate to agree with donald trump, the pr war here it is now become that in many ways littler with somebody who has reported from the middle east for years. is there
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another way to get to right hands point? is there another way that israel could fight hamas without killing so many innocence without pushing a population into famine >> i mean, the problem here is that benjamin netanyahu, the prime minister of israel has two different objectives. one is to defeat hamas and the other is to bring the hostages home. those two things are actually at odds. and so he is caught in a position where he wants to defeat hamas after this terrible attack. but he also needs to bring the hostages home. the people of israel themselves. and you've seen this now in the most recent protests are saying, we don't trust you and we don't believe in you to be able to bring the hostages home. we don't believe that that is your aim anymore. and so what we're seeing right now is a lack of faith in this government and in their execution of the war, not by us pundits, but by the very people of israel themselves. >> i want to bring another partner into this equation. the white house says the president
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here's angry and shaken then, and that he told prime minister netanyahu, unless israel changes how it addresses civilian casualties. and the humanitarian crisis, there will be changes in us support for israel. >> jim is >> biden being a hypocrite on the one hand we're hearing how outraged he is. on the other hand, the administration is continuing to funnel funnel weapons of tremendous disruption for weeks or even months. now, the biden white house has wanted people to believe that biden is more opposed to netanyahu. that his policies actually are they let slip that he calls him the a word but he's constantly raging and fuming about it. and critics of israel have a fair point to say, well, when does all that anger turn into actual policy changes? maybe we're going to see it but i have a sneaking suspicion. now there's this confluence of factors of people who want you to believe biden is really opposed to israel biden wants you to do that because he's afraid is going to lose michigan people who are opposed to israel want to look influential, look at us. we've
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put pressure on biden and he's coming around to our position. >> and those >> who want jews to vote for republicans want to emphasize this note, by the way, even supportive of israel might appreciate, look, were being abandoned in our hour of need, even by president biden. i want to get back to you do on those cara. >> this >> has been going on for six months? yes. >> tens of thousands of palestinian innocents killed along with more than not just these seven, 200 aid workers. but you continues to send war plans and bombs to israel including 2000 pound bombs, which i read this week can kill people 1,000 feet away. yeah. so how does the white house's supposed concern for the humanitarian situation here square with their continuing to sand. and even this week thousands of bombs and more and more heavy munitions >> speaking of threading needles, it's possible situation for anyone running it and it's, it's on biden for this period. it is. >> it's interesting you saw
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trump kinda moving that way this week two in that interview, he did where he wouldn't say he was 100% behind him. i think the narrative is shifting this over to win, is shifting, especially among young people and others about what to do. here, congress you are seeing people who are not on the progressive side who are firmly centrist also now saying that these weapons should actually have some oversight when they're sent to israel, israel as the only country that doesn't have it. the other thing that i'll say as someone who has spent time in gaza, a lot of time in gaza, it is one of the most densely populated places in the world. it is a place where people cannot get out, they cannot move. and you have seen these bombs being dropped on them. people have nowhere to go and so there has to be a different way. this is not only an aerial campaign, you have actual israeli forces inside of gaza, thousands, thousands of them. and so there is a difference way many believed to rayyan final word, just look biden bear some responsibility
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by actually urging delay, by urging restraint. you are actually exacerbating the humanitarian situation. the best thing israel and its allies can do is help bring this war to a swift conclusion. and enter rafah and take care of hamas once and for all. that's ultimately going to be best for the people of gaza, for the people of israel, and everyone that debate is going in and the hostages, what's going to happen to them exactly. >> that's a question. we'll talk about during the break. the debate will continue. and unfortunately so what the bloodshot and the carnage next a story everyone seems to be talking about and traveling hundreds of miles to c plus diamonds are forever, isn't just a james bond movie. it's now a trend among divorce sides. >> tomorrow >> new >> interviews with the return israeli hostages. >> what is the meaning of >> being? hostage? reasonable certainty, >> and the fight for the release of those still in captivity. the whole story with anderson cooper tomorrow at
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>> and >> coldest winters all on one track. >> to prove these three row suvs was built for the unstoppable qia movement that inspires your house solomon in new york >> cnn once again, it's time to get our groups yea or nay, on some >> big talkers up first. what some are calling the biggest travel event of the year millions of americans packing their bags to catch a glimpse of the total solar eclipse which we'll cross america monday afternoon on a path from texas to maine. there won't be another total eclipse in the for 20 years, which is why people are flocking to town's big and small along the 115 mile-wide path to see it why han ru yea or nay, on traveling
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to watch the eclipse absolutely not. i do not want to have my retinas fried or those of my little children or are you aware of the fact that they have glasses? you glasses? she masses. this is some kind of mysterious witchcraft and i want no part of it, no thanks to the eclipse. >> all right. kara alaimo, try because >> this marjorie taylor greene for that one. yes, it's witchcraft >> this sounds like the kind of thing that you would get on board >> absolutely not. no. i saw an eclipse when i was a kid and that was plenty for me. and in 20 years when i'm really old with everyone here, it's amazing, >> it is one of the most how far, far would you go to get see the eclipse? i walked three feet outside and see the 89% occlusion that's going to happen in the dc area. i'm not flying anywhere for it. i'll see you on talk will cover he got more things to your nih next the legal right to disconnect california lawmakers have introduced a bill, gibbon, workers the right to ignore emails, to ignore calls or texts from their bosses after
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hours if it passes, it will be the nation's first law allowance. such a thing. >> and it would follow similar >> rules are ready and effect and more than a dozen countries, lulu, are you yea or nay? hey, on ignoring your boss after hours, if it's legally protected, i'm a hard yea. and that's what this is about. i mean, i wouldn't do it now, obviously, because i want to stay employed, but i would certainly do it if there was a law that allowed me not to have to answer. and i'll tell you, i see everyone shaking their head and let me tell you why i think this is good. this is already there and france the reason i well, at the front i love >> oh yeah. >> what's the matter with the french? all right. listen, what i want to say about this is that just say it quickly. i'm going to say quickly, which is you know, there are laws regulating every part of our life. we now live in the digital world. they can bring make us work at anytime we need to be able to sort of put a, put a stop to it. okay. jim, are you where are you on the right to disconnect after our
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boss if the office is on fire, if the president's been shot, if there's something really huge and important fine. give me a call. if you want to talk about fantasy football, i'm pretty sure it can make you morning. >> yeah. but you're not going to know when the phone rings, so you're going to pick up the phone and then you're like you're nodding. >> yeah, that's great. i got another call coming and i think it's a source and then you were my house is on fire. let's go >> i hope your sources using your bosses aren't watching. finally, the new breakup trend divorce diamonds according to jewelry experts, more and more women are redesigning their wedding rings after splitting with their husbands as a way to keep the stones, but turn them into something new. they say, it's meant to symbolize a fresh start after our marriage and now qarrah i know you've been through a divorce >> divorce >> the question is, did you take your wedding ring from your first marriage and turn it into something? no, i don't know where it is >> no. no i think it's silly, but whatever i say, mine. did
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you what what do you were around your neck? what do you do with it? i know what's an a drawer somewhere. >> all right. yes >> you wouldn't put it into a row? know, it's ridiculous >> up >> next, the gen z movement that good payoff for all of us, for generations to come if you work in spaceflight, this is the worst possible thing that could ever happen >> my dad died doing what he loved >> space shuttle columbia, the final flight premiers tomorrow at nine on cnn. >> dry skin is sensitive skin to end its natural treated that way, a vino daily moisture with prebiotic is proven to moisturized dry skin all day. feel love are formed you live her face to a vino >> okay. everyone our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition or strength and energy >> ensure with 27 vitamins and
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>> contrast so you can rise from pain i see >> so would you get to nashville hot tenders and three mandarin orange tenders? i would by chew three classic tenders four big butterfly shred for of a kind baby. >> i said, always a competition. you can't handle the shrimps. see about that. >> yeah, we will do want to close out? >> should i normally i'd hold but >> taking the games of smart here feel more competent. what's doc ratings from jpmorgan analysts in the chase app when you've got a decision to make, the answer is jp morgan wealth management lactate is 100% real melt just without the lactose delicious to just ask my old friend kevin. >> now than like enjoying the coal one while watching the game who's willing? >> we are my friend we are >> always abreast deal on a certain way out. how about boko 50% off on long like the irresistible filling. once you've got to say play, there's nothing better than a
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sorry buddy. this deal is so big we had to cut your screen time to fill it all in. no, i just felt way out with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. my skin was no longer mine. >> my active psoriatic arthritis joint symptoms held me back. >> don't let symptoms to fine. you emerge as you with trump via most people saw 90% clear skin at four months. and the majority stayed clearer at five years. from phi is proven to significantly reduce joint pain, stiffness, and swelling. it's just six doses a year after to starter doses, cbs allergic reactions may occur, can fire, may increase your risk of infections oh, your ability to fight them until you dr. if you have an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine, are planning to emerge as you emerge trim fired. ask your doctor about trump via
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>> go to deal dash right now and see how much you can save the lead with jake tapper weekdays at four and cnn >> under the radar this week, a
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new trend among graduating high school seniors, skipping that traditional four-year college rude instead of the wall street journal, put it, gen z becoming the toolbelt generation by increasingly looking at the trades as an alternative. in fact, trade schools had seen us 16% jump in enrollments since 20221 of the biggest factors, the soaring cost of higher ed this new york times headline underscores the point tuition at some private colleges is now up to $100,000 a year for the first time. meaning many gen z-ers are picking carpentry over cardiology. so kara, are they ahead of the curve or are they missing the point? no. how does a curve this as fant i've been talking about this for years. i think it's really important to get all kinds of qualifications and other jobs. they're great jobs, great money, by the way, ai is not going to affect them quite as much and it's a great way to make a living and it's i encourage one of my kids to
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think about it like this because i think he'd be better at that i don't if this is politically incorrect or not gym, but is there any stigma still about being a blue collar worker as opposed to a white-collar >> worker when i knew we were going to talk about this, i asked my friends people in washington, dc were like yes, absolutely people outside of absolutely. >> what? absolutely. that there is still a stigma that you can make. a lot of money, but it doesn't necessarily have status, it doesn't say have a certain class you're associated with white-collar, et cetera, outside of washington, dc? like no, it's actually totally normal. they know plumbers make a heck of a lot of money, by the way, point about the hundred thousand dollars your colleges, they know than two years, the attendance drops off a cliff because because of population changes and there are fewer incoming 18-year-olds, they know that, they know that they're not able to keep charging this forever, always going to say that's making sure question. i've got i've got some teenagers, some very aware of that cost tuition when i went to college course, we didn't have lights or electricity. then 1,000 dollars a year. wow, lulu according to one let's study the median pay
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in new construction hires has been higher than new jobs. and the information sector for four years. so not only are you avoiding the cost of college, you might actually get paid more for this new job. >> i think it's wonderful. i think you have in germany, which is one of the reasons that you had to to great sort of industrial country there. they really put a lot of money into trades. and so you're seeing that here now. and also there's a lot of new jobs in things like wind energy and solar energy that requires specific skills that don't require for your college degree. and so i really do think it's a great thing real quickly. >> ri khan i go further and say, let's have work study program in high school. that's a great way to keep kids motivated, get them earn and get them to build a sense of responsibility that if they do choose to go to college, they use it wisely and well, they have some skin in the game. i think it's a big improvement. >> where was this when i sent all for my children because the battle is backed by their takes on my heart stories are, what will be in the news before
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it's new? that's right after this break >> get your viewing glasses ready and experience so rare it won't happen again for another two decades. joint cnn for live coverage around the country of the spectacle in the skies eclipse across america, live monday at one get cnn. we're streaming on macs for moderate to severe crohn's disease, sky rosie is the first il-23 inhibitor that can deliver remission and visibly improved damage at the end intestinal lining. >> serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms had a vaccine or plan to liver problems match her and crohn's disease control of crohn's means everything to me ask your gastroenterologist about sccoe rosie learn hello? abby could help you save
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direct redefining insurance this is cnn >> the world's news >> closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com if you or. >> a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to one 4,000 it's time for our panel special takes on what's happening or productions of what we should be looking out for. so jim hit me with your best shot or gas prices are still higher high by historical standards. we're getting into summer driving season, maybe not next week,
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but let's say may, june, you're gonna be hearing a lot lot of people complaining, but high gas prices probably going back to $4 a gallon easily. maybe that's going to be an economic issue that's gonna be a big political issue if it's true, qarrah, you're focused on tech and temblors? yes. and temblors, there's just obviously this earthquake in new york, but it's the very significant one was in taiwan where 80 to 90 he percent of high-end chips or advanced applications are made by companies like taiwan semiconductor manufacturing we, our country depends on these chips in a very critical way, especially around ai nvidia, apple and everything else. a single vibration can destroy thousands and thousands of them. so it's very important to diversify where they're being made and us investors are putting trillions of dollars to build these new fads, but it's slow and it puts critical innovation at, at risk. and i haven't even brought up the possibility of china invading taiwan. we need to diversify rayyan best shot. >> there's a growing black
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backlash against diversity, equity and inclusion programs. recently, the radio megastar, charlemagne tha god, was talking about dei programs as little more than corporate virtue signaling other black voices are saying that these programs are condescending, that they're actually counterpart productive. and actually you're seeing an interesting shift of younger black voters toward the gop, something that president trump, former president trump is looking to capitalize on. it is 2024 presidential campaign. >> so do you think briefly. that the decline of dei is a good thing. >> i do, and i think that you actually see majorities of folks and pretty much every racial group who express a lot of skepticism about using race over meritocratic hiring >> lulu, bring us home this easter weekend, there was a very touching photo of former president trump with two of his >> grandchildren and he's looking if you see there rather svelte. and that caught the
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eye, as you can imagine of many on social media and elsewhere. and there has been a lot love chatter about whether he is on the big o. and by that, i mean ozempic to the point where the new york times, my employer actually ended up writing to the campaign to formly ask them if was on empic. the reason i find this intereing isecauserump is larg than life that is his brand.e's a big guy and this shrinks you and so it ght be that he wants to be healthier. it might be that he wants to b mo attractive on camera for the caaign, but also migh be that it could hurt in the end because u ju doesn't seem quite as imposing peaps if he does go on the you wereorried because you want him to be as imsing as possible, of course. >> of course it's it's really out of concernor him that maybe it mig not be a >> just pot out. we have no idea if he is what he's doing. maybe he's oh, yeah >> maybe it's working out ways to work on such a disciplined guy >> again, thank you all for being and thank you for

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