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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  May 1, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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worsens, headache and sore throat may occur. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection step back out there chaos on campus, violence overnight festers at universities across the country. >> we're following the latest and vice president kamala harris is in florida as the state's new six-week abortion ban takes effect, we are moments away from her taking on former president donald trump and the republican party as we start to see tighter restrictions the knocked at all across the country plus the accusations against him spark the me too movement. now, the question, will harvey weinstein be retried, the disgraced hollywood producer is important for the first time since his rape conviction was overturned we're following these major
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developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central we are following new developments as universities increasingly crackdown on student protests across the country. these are scenes just hours ago on the campus of the university of wisconsin onsen madison police say they arrested 34 people during a clash with protesters, and that four officers were injured. you can see police using pitons, pushing protesters back in order to remove a pro-palestinian encampment. >> and then at columbia university in new york city. this is video of an off-campus protests that took place today. but police have cleared demonstrators from columbia's main campus that encampment that we've been talking about for the past few days officials just announcing that final exams at the main campus will be fully remote let's start in wisconsin, cnn's whitney wild
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is there at the university of wisconsin in madison. so whitney, a dramatic few hours there on campus because what are you seeing now what we see now is this protest has geared right backup. >> it was several hours ago that law enforcement came into this area. this is the library mall at the university of wisconsin madison and cleared many of these protesters according to the school, most of the protesters laughed when that police action began. but as you mentioned, 30 for people were arrested of the majority of them. we're left with no citation for people were charged with different types of charges which include attempted to storming of a police officer or a battery of a police officer, charges like that. but even after that clearing, again, this protest is geared right back up. so let me just kind of walk you through the scene. so these orange tense right here, you guys this is pretty much all that was left initially after that police action and then everything else you see all of these other tents. this is all come up since that police action began. as you can see, there are hundreds of students out here. this is a very popular part of
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the campus. so basically what you see here for some students, but also some protesters who remain out here. we spoke with one student. she's a junior here at the university of madison, wisconsin, madison. she's a mediator. she rushed down here the moment that she heard there was a law enforcement action, we talked to her about what she saw and how she feels about this law enforcement action. that happened earlier today. here's what she said i was raised to be anti-war. >> i was raised to be pro peace. and it's not a jewish versus muslim issue. it's not the jews aren't doing anything wrong. it's the leaders in israel or doing things wrong. they're bombing gaza so as you can see, there is still pretty big protest presence here. and this is despite what the school says is an explicit law banning camping here. so the big question now is is this going to get cleared again, we do not
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have an answer to that question, but what i can tell you right now is it there is still a law enforcement presence? there are a handful of sheriff's deputies over here. there were a few on the other side of this diag here there are a few. i don't know if you can see that off-camera to my right, but there's still law enforcement presence here. the question now is how long will this remain? and will there be another police action back to you? >> cnn's gabe cohen is at columbia university. the school just announced that it's adjusting the final exam schedule their game, and other protocols after these protests tell us about their reaction here. >> look brown are the reality is the protest is not over. there were demonstrators back here just a few minutes ago that were marching along this public street just outside the main entrance. so that camp is the message at the end of it was that they are going to be back here tomorrow and the day after that and the day after that until those divestment demands that they've been making for for weeks now are met. you can see some of the signs that have been left here by those protestors saying no
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cops on campus, referencing, of course, the nypd, dozens of officers coming on to campus into hamilton hall last night, arresting more than 200 students and heard from faculty members and students were extremely critical of the president of the school for calling in the nypd, basically saying that there had been peaceful protests, that the school had not been negotiating with the protesters and good faith. and that is what ultimately led to that police action last night, i want to bring you out into the street now where are you can see the number of nypd officers who are here right now because the school has asked them to stay here until may 17, two days after columbia graduates, they want to maintain order, but we know that the protesters are saying they are going to come back day after day. i also interviewed just a little while hello, go, one of the protesters who was in that encampment last night, who says she was handcuffed by police officers when they arrived on the scene. she described what she experienced. take a listen
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when nypd came in, they push all pass away from from where we were so they couldn't document anything and then they ambushed. >> they tackled us to beat us. and i want to also highlight that majority of the protestors there last night where young woman we're young college woman from marginalized communities and this is what the nypd de, to us were you arrested last night? i was handcuffed us night she also claimed that the claims that have been made by new york mayor eric adams, as well as officials that most of the protesters involved here are outside agitators, not affiliated by not affiliated with columbia. >> she claims that's a lie that the vast majority of people she has met here are students we should find out more. alex, briana in the days ahead when we find out information about those people who are arrested when they're arranged indian court
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potentially charged. so we may get some of that information. but again, the reality here along the campus is that protestors are planning to return even when so much of the campus restricted to just those students who live there, as well as any essential faculty. those are the only people who are getting through that entrance and that graduation ceremony, columbia, just two weeks from now, did cohen at columbia. thanks very much for all your reporting now to ucla in los angeles, where classes are canceled after a violent confrontation broke out between pro-palestinian and pro israeli counter protesters. supporters of palestinian said that police did quote, nothing when their encampment was attacked overnight, university said police remain on campus at this hour, joining us now is eli sanchez, a jewish student who attends ucla and eli, i understand you were on scene where this all took place around to this morning. can you tell us what you saw, what you experienced? >> yeah, of course. first of all, thank you for having me i
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all the group chats are going off last night. we saw i was watching a live stream and we saw like some pro counter protesters come and shoot fireworks at the encampment and throwing bottles and trying to break into it. and then around 2:00 a.m. this morning, i decided to go. i wanted to see this with my own eyes and i went and i stood there are a lot of other students who gathered. it seemed like a majority of people who were participating were not students, but there were a lot of that, a handful of students who've gathered around the outsides, the periphery, and we're just witnessing was going on and i stood there. royce hall in the bushes and saw us a lot of counter protesters were trying to get into the encampment and there are a lot of pushing and shoving and throwing things and a lot of police there. but they weren't doing anything you've said that you believe that students should have the right to protest, but now we're seeing classes that have been canceled today as a result of these violent clash so what are you hoping happens as far as the protests goes and that it
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that encampment on campus yeah, of course. and i strongly believe that students have the right to protest and the right to free speech. however, they can't min, is against all you see like guidelines i actually i was one of there's a group of jewish students who had the pleasure sure. to meet with the administration at the beginning of winter quarter and the chancellor gene block and talk to them about how they can better support jewish students on campus. and one of the things we talked about is jean mentioned that they have a list of guidelines and then need to be better about enforcing their guidelines and campaigning especially in that area, encampments or against their guidelines a lot of the rhetoric that we see, it's is important. it's really hard to be jewish or non campus. and i hope that then cabinets will end and that will be able to go and to every part of our beautiful campus and go to all our classes in-person. and that midterms will happen. we still were not on in the semester system. we still have seven weeks remaining in this quarter
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before summer yeah, it's a while before they have graduation. >> yeah. eli, we've been speaking with a number of people on campus, including a classmate of yours just about an hour ago and he had this to say, take a listen as a student of jewish history, i think one thing we need to be very incisive about is how we make distinctions between jewish and israeli and zionist and of course these things bleed together. i understand the political zionism that is dominant to be a settler colonial political ideology the g, that has sought to establish a jewish ethno state in historic palestine. and that's resulted in massive amounts of material harm you like you mentioned that feeling of being threatened as a jewish student. >> do you think those pro-palestinian protesters are making enough of a difference? between opposing israeli policies, opposing zionism, whatever their definition of that may be. and support for
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the palestinian people no not at all. >> i believe vast majority of people and then comments, i don't want to speak for everyone. >> i'm sure there are a lot of people with really good intentions, but i think a majority of people are not doing a good job differentiating between zionism and anti-zionism and anti-semitism. and people are so vehemently opposed to the state of israel existence of israel, which is a very important thing for the identity of me. and a lot of other jewish students. and there's so much against israel that it is anti-symmetric. and in that sense, anti-zionism is antisemitism. it's one thing to criticize the israeli government in israel, like any other progressive and democratic nation has its flaws. but we see a lot of, a lot of people who are not just criticizing the government, but saying that israel as a whole should not exist as role as a terrorist state that zionists are nazis, that they're committing genocide and apartheid and all these really false things and it's just, it
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makes it really hard to be a jewish sign a student on campus you lie, it is a great to have you. >> thank you so much for spending some time with us as we're all keeping her eyes on what has been happening at ucla thank you guys let's bring in the ceo of the anti-defamation league, jonathan greenblatt, joining us now jonathan, talk to us a little bit about what happened last week. he called on. first of all, you what bravo to eli, what a strong, amazing young man. >> i really appreciate him i'll tell you, guys over the last two weeks, i've been to places like harvard columbia ucla, usc. i've seen this firsthand i've seen the sort of craziness manifesting on these campuses. and look, we need to have you know, really just just fierce hope for the hundred and 33 hostages still being held in gaza and deep compassion for the palestinian civilians still
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in harm's way. and yet what's happening at this campuses is way beyond that. when i was at ucla on sunday, i saw the pushing and shoving. i saw i saw the anti-israel students locking arms and preventing people from passing. i witnessed it firsthand. i saw once students stepping on and smashing and american flag into the ground. i mean, it was a real reminder that there's a kind of bethlehem on these campuses and look, my heart breaks when i see police using what might appear to be excessive force. but there has to be a restoration of law and order like it's not fair to all of the students to see their classes interrupted their study periods totally disrupted i mean, that's not okay. and it hurts everyone ultimately as well as of course, the jewish students, jonathan, we heard just moments ago from a jewish student at the university of wisconsin in madison who was saying, there has to be a differentiation between what those who support. obviously
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the existence of the state of israel and the israeli policies. so what do you think the people who should, who are protesting against israel's war in gaza, which has now killed 34,000 people against the israeli occupation of some of the palestinian territories. what should they be doing, if not what we're seeing? >> look, you can vociferous. lee criticizes israeli policy, alex, you can strongly oppose moves by the met and yahoo government, like we have strong opinions and adl. >> but something is deeply wrong when your answer to the jewish students is when the way you express your frustration is telling jewish kids to go back to poland. >> when the wave that you manifest, your anger is by waiting a hezbollah or pflp or hamas flag like that isn't normal, like you can have strong feelings about what china's doing too. its minority is the way mexico, he also drug policy, but you wouldn't threaten asian american or latino students so look, jewish students of
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whatever political persuasion, whatever their identity should not be harassed or men newest because of who they are, what they believe. so protest all you want but don't intimidate, threaten, or assault your classmates. and certainly don't disobeyed a university rules to the point where again, as at columbia, they have to shut down the university entirely. that's way outside the lines outs we just heard from that student from ucla and we've had a lot of thoughtful students from ucla on the program here the last couple of hours he was saying that he was watching and click clearly, he does not agree. >> at all with this encampment. it doesn't make him feel like he can walk freely around campus. and yet jonathan, he was saying that the police were standing by and not really doing anything so i wonder what you think about that is you hear him saying that look, i don't understand it, but i will tell you i've heard from
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kids at columbia who say that the public safety officers at columbia, briana, they do nothing. >> i saw at ucla myself the campus security willing nothing. i mean, i witnessed it and i felt that i was getting pushed and shoved on sunday morning. so i don't really understand and i think the university needs to coordinate effective with law enforcement. again, we don't want to see excessive force. but these images out of ucla if you are wearing a full face mask by the way, whether you are anti-israel or pro-israel? no one should be dressing like they're in an like an isis fighter or a bank robber and throwing things are assaulting people. i don't care what side you're on. and by the way, if the university had listened to adl and i'm sure to others two. and it just in still some motor come of order and regulated things and enforce their own policies. briana, we wouldn't be in this position in the first place all right.
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>> jonathan greenblatt from the anti-defamation league. thanks so much for joining us. de appreciate it. >> thanks. you guys appreciate you take care and we have this breaking news. the fed just made a decision on interest rates. cnn's matt egan is following this. so matt the fed did what was expected and kept the rate steady that's right, alex, the fed just announced it's keeping interest rates unchanged for the sixth, meaning in a row, that means no relief for borrowers first interest rates remain at 23 year high as now, this was largely expected that officials, they tip their hands in recent weeks because of stronger-than-expected inflation reports. >> but the fed did make a significant change to its statement, adding in this line, and i'll read it to you the fed officials, they wrote that in recent months there has been a lack of further progress towards the committees 2% inflation objective. objective. now, prices, of course they're not skyrocketing like they were two years ago. but the cost of living does remain a problem
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food and housing, those are the big issues. >> but then we've also seen pricing creases for other things like car insurance and the cost to bring your dog or your cat. cat to the vet. >> now, when you think about interest rates i know that the fed can sound kind of like a mysterious organization sometimes, but this really does matter to virtually everyone because the fact that interest rates are staying steady means if you're in the market for a mortgage good right now, you're not going to be getting any sort of relief their mortgage rates are above 7% same-store. if you're trying to get a car and finance the purchase of a vehicle, paying off credit card debt is very challenging right now, because interest rates are at record highs. now, if we look at the market, you can see not a major reaction. markets are sort of flat from where they were before the fed announced this, there was one change that i do think it's gonna get some attention from traders on wall street. the fed announced that it's going to continue to shrink the size of its balance sheet, but going to do that at a slower pace, and that could boost the markets. now in the next ten minutes or
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so, we're going to hear from fed chair jerome powell two big questions that i think he's got two dress, how concerned is the about inflation and we'll defend still consider cutting interest rates later this year all right? >> matt egan. thank you so much we'll be looking toward that, especially. and ahead this hour on cnn news central, we have some live pictures out of jacksonville, florida where moments from now, vice president kamala harris will be speeding gang as the state's strict new abortion ban, a six-week ban kicks in. we're going to stay on this. we'll be right back a florida man is hospitalized, infected with anthrax sunday this became the bureau's number one crying to solve how we'd really happen? with jesse l. martin sunday at nine on cnn. >> i will never again lose to my brother. decided isa, because i've switched to consumer cellular and maulik at the same coverage, he's got for up to half the cost i'm the
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camp luck june injury morgan and morgan for the veterans. >> i'm sunlen serfaty in washington and this is cnn florida's abortion ban just got even more strict. >> the state's new law makes nearly all abortions illegal after six weeks and of course that is before many women, even realize that they're pregnant. and before many doctors will even schedule an initial visit until today, the state had allowed the procedure up to 15 weeks, making it a key abortion access point amid widespread restrictions, vice president kamala harris is set to speak any moment in jacksonville, florida, we're monitoring that in the meantime, cnn medical correspondent meg tirrell is live in jacksonville, for us. meg. so just how far reaching are these consequences going from 15 to six weeks? >> yeah. alex, i've been hugely far-reaching from the people that we've spoken with here today. we have been at this abortion clinic, a woman's choice of jacksonville since yesterday. so we were here in the final hours of
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access up to 15 weeks. we spoke with patients who are really afraid about what this meant for them, including for their daughters at some of whom had teenage daughters, they worried about that as well. >> florida has been a key access point for abortion across the south, 7,000 people sought abortions, obtain abortions in florida per month last year. >> and a lot of people across state lines, we talked with the owner of the clinic here. she was on with wolf blitzer earlier about the impact that they're already seeing today. here's what you said there's really no right way to prepare for this, to have to turn patients away which we've already had to do today. >> we turned three patients away. that will have to travel thousands of miles so get their procedures done she told us that that applies to at least three patients who were beyond six weeks in pregnancy just past six weeks are up to eight weeks. >> she said at least one of those patients already, they've had to make plans to get to north carolina. that is what a
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lot of patients will have to do here in the south and increasing number had been turning to florida after roe v. wade was overturned approaching 8,000 last year, according to state records and perhaps even more than that by some estimates, the closest states now or north carolina, which has a 12 week ban. >> and beyond that, virginia yeah. >> and there are logistical problems that make those difficult two guys we should mention, of course that a lot of folks here now are turning your focus to november, where abortion access will be on the ballot. and so that fight is going to get continued to brew guys. >> all right. meg drill live for us in jacksonville. >> thank you. and let's talk more about this band now, i end the vice president's visit to florida with state representative on a money can you talk to us a little bit on about how local providers and clinics have been responding to this ban. they ceased operations since or is it split as of today? >> well, thanks so much for having me. we have been bracing for impact due to the sixth pick abortion ban. i actually worked at planned parenthood for about seven years. if i ran for office and yesterday, was
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that my local planned parenthood clinic supporting the staff but providing them with with lunch since it was a long, long day. and as you just heard from jacksonville, having to turn away patients because they are not only pass a six-week mark, a florida is also a 24 hour delay state, so when you meet with the doctor, you have to wait 24 hours before you can access the procedures. so it's going to be even harder if women do realize they're pregnant for six weeks, that delay law pushes them beyond their legal threats. shold represented as commodity. we're actually looking at live pictures here of vice president kamala harris was just taking the stage in jacksonville, florida, we're going to be monitoring that but in the meantime we know that harris plans to explicitly blame trump for the supreme court's historic overturning of roe v. wade. that's according to the king campaign. they're clearly seizing on this as a political issue for november, but in terms of what they can do practically, what do you think they should be doing more of on a national level well, that's a great question and i do appreciate
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the biden administration and the biden campaign for champing this issue and really helping to remind voters what's at stake this november, we have to hold donald trump and ron desantis and the entire republican legislature accountable. >> and as we gather right now, it was just announced that there may be a special legislative session, to add more constitutional to our november ballot to confuse voters. so they're party will stop at nothing to trip us our freedoms and our rights. and we have to be just as aggressive and finding back. and i do think that we can pursue more protections, reproductive rights. and of course we have two separate pending supreme court cases for this summer what decisions impacting abortion access. we need to prioritize patients stories, break the stigma around abortion, and utilize every tool we have in the federal government to protect our freedoms representative if you could stand by, we're going to listen now to vice president harris there in jacksonville. and passed laws that criminalize doctors punish
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women laws that threatened doctors and nurses with prison time, even for life simply for providing reproductive care laws that make no exception for rape or incest. >> even reviving laws from the 1800s across our nation we witness a full-on assault state by state on reproductive freedom and understand who is to blame former president donald trump did this donald trump hand picked three members of the united states supreme court because he intended for them to overturn roe and as he intended, they did now many of
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you here may recall, i served on the judiciary committee as a united states senator and i questioned two of those nominees so, one of them i asked quote, i will quit myself can you think of any law that give the government the power? >> to make decisions about the male body and it will come as no shock to everyone here. he had no good answer that day. >> we all knew what was about to come and it happened just as donald trump intended. >> now present day, because of donald trump, more than 20 states have abortion bans more than 20. >> trump abortion bans and
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today, this very day, at the stroke of midnight another trump abortion ban went into effect here in florida as of this morning 4 million women in this state woke up with fewer reproductive freedoms than they had last night. this is the new reality under a trump abortion ban starting this morning medical professionals like dr. ten could be sent to prison for up to five years. >> for providing reproductive care even earlier in pregnancy. reality, under a trump abortion ban starting this morning, women in florida became subject to an abortion ban so extreme it applies before many women even know they are pregnant
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which by the way tells us the extremists who wrote this ban, either don't know how a woman's body works are they simply don't care trump says, he wants to leave abortion up to the states. he says up to the states all right so here's how that works out today. >> one in three women of reproductive age live in a state with a trump abortion ban many with no exceptions for rape or incest now, on that topic, as many of you know, i started my career as a prosecutor specializing in crimes against women and children. what many of you may not know is why so when i was in high school i learned that my best friend was being molested by her stepfather and
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i said to her, well, you've got to come and live with us. i call my mother and my mother said, of course she does. and so she did so the idea that someone who survives a crime of violence to their body, of violation of their body would not have the authority to make a decision about what happens to their body next that's immoral. that's immoral and one does not have to abandon their face or deeply held beliefs to agree the government should not be telling her what to do all right we've been listening to vice president kamala harris there in jacksonville, florida speaking as florida's new six-week abortion ban goes into effect,
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talking about those tightening restrictions for reproductive rights all across the country with the speaking with representative eskimo one in florida, i wanna go back to her representative. >> der colleagues in the state legislature, you and your colleagues, you have a plan to go after this ban to take to counteract it in some way well, the reality is that our only option forward really is amendment four. >> so florida voters are going to have a chance this november to restore a fundamental freedoms in our state constitution. this was a citizen led bound is shooting more than 1 million signatures were collected. 35% of which were signed by registered republicans and it will be on over unbowed this year. and we need 60% to secure its passage when that happens, we will be able to go back to legislature and repeal these disastrous and dangerous laws to ensure that personal decision making on your pregnancy is once more restored. >> congress representative as
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money. thank you so much for being with us. we really appreciate your time today. >> thank you next, some pro-palestinian protests on university campuses are turning violent, were following the latest plus representative marjorie taylor greene says that she will move to house speaker mike johnson. >> but does she have the support of her fellow republican lawmakers? that's coming up so it's a playoff. great teammates trust each other. we're gonna do a trust ball stand up, trust what we have dark told you is a dummy at morgan stanley old-school hard work meets ball, new thinking. >> to help you see untapped possibility and relentlessly work with you to make them real if cascade platinum plus, i have up my dish getting in that
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columbia university has asked new york police to remain on campus for the next two plus weeks, officers moved in late last night, arresting some 300 people after clearing pro-palestinian protesters here's from a building called hamilton hall, as well as the main campus encampment the move had echoes of the past. it came on the 56th anniversary of the nypd, taking the same action on that same campus around protests against the vietnam war back then, hundreds of students were also arrested. >> and in april of 19 maybe five, about 150 student demonstrators blocked the entrance to hamilton hall for weeks. they demanded that their university cut financial ties with companies that supported south africa's apartheid regime. they argued in court that their action constituted symbolic speech and was thus protected by the first amendment? joining us now is presidential historian geoffrey angle. jeffrey, thank you so much for being with us. i always think it's hard to
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know. right. wouldn't we all like to be able to see how this moment in time is going to age with history. but i wonder from a historical perspective how you are seeing this moment at columbia and at college campuses across the country well, i think it's very important actually that you began with the idea of aging with history because one of the things that happens as we think about the past, as we tend to somewhat conflate how events unfolded. >> so the vietnam war protests, for example, which began in the mid 1960s, really didn't start to have an effect upon politics for several years after they began. and of course, it was perhaps eight years after the first protests before the vietnam war actually ended. so too with the civil rights movement and so too with apartheid in each case, college protests, which contributed to a broader discussion of the issues, yes. also took years and years and years to happen have any policy effects. so right now, if we're still in the first weeks of at least confrontation over different
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protests on campus. as a historian, i would say there's a whole long way to go. >> what about on the political sayyed jeffrey, this war is hugely unpopular among young people. president biden has really been dinged in his support among democrats because he continues to support israel's war in gaza. how do you think that this is going to play into the november election? >> yeah, i think it could play out on two ways of the first disorder is never particularly good for an incumbent that as just a rule of thumb, that when people look around and see that there appears to be things not being stable, that gives the challenger are usually a leg up. there's a couple of exceptions that but i would caution people perhaps think back to the election of 1972 when richard nixon, who was the incumbent, really tried to argue same theme as 1968, but he was a law in order candidate and that the protests that we were seeing on campus, we're on american were from agitators
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that we're going onto campuses more importantly, those protests i think drove the democratic party further to the left in 1972, ultimately to their nomination of george mcgovern, who lost quite badly to richard nixon. i think most of the people who were protesting the vietnam war and really wanting nixon out actually wanted to contributing to nixon's reelection. so i would encourage the protesters today if they're thinking about their effect on presidential politics, to ask themselves which of the two candidates do i think we do a worst job from my perspective, and make sure i'm actually supporting the one who actually would do better for me. >> yeah, that's a really interesting point. >> this is all look more in the age of social media as well. >> it's been very influential when it comes to how young people are communicating about and perceiving these issues. and i wonder jeffrey, as you look at this moment, what you see that is different compared to other periods of protest
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there's two things i think are really fundamentally different. and social media effects, both of them the first is these protests or actually from a numerical perspective, from a historical perspective. still remarkably small. they're actually only a few, dozens of people protesting on even in the largest instances across campuses and what that tells us is it's going across campuses and seems to be amplified by social media. so that there is an appearance because there's a camera everywhere. there is an appearance that these protests are everywhere. the truth matter is compared to vietnam, compared to apartheid, compared to civil rights. these are still tiny, tiny, tiny protest. but because of social media, i think we have the appearance, the sense that they happen to be much larger than they actually are. and i think the second thing that's important about these protests as different and bij part because of social media, is in the 1980s during the apartheid protests. it was really very unusual to find anyone on campus who, would actually actively argue a pro apartheid
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line, people who supported apartheid typically didn't wind up speaking about on campus. and people who supported the american policy of not going against apartheid usually said, well, it's useful for the cold war or there's geopolitics involved and we don't want to and ally, there were really very very few people that would stand up during that period and say, yes, i think systematic oppression of black people is a good idea. they may have thought it but they wouldn't say it. that's different from what we're seeing today where we see two different groups on campus really coming together and clashing over completely different visions of what the middle east should look like. well, palestine and israel should look like what we're seeing today. a lot of conflict amplified by social media. i think of groups on campus fighting with each other whereas in 1919, 60s and to a greater extent in the 1980s, we didn't see a whole lot of groups fighting with each other on campuses. we saw people simply protesting against a broader international issue. that was funny i removed from the campus really interesting perspective is we are watching
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here live pictures from ucla as we see some students moving about and to your point there are i think 34,000 students at ucla. >> we see that encampment. it's created quite an impression but it isn't that many tents when you think about it in the scheme of things. so just important reminder, jeffrey. thank you so much thank you. >> good to talk to you. >> here we see people there. they've water, they're bringing in their to the camp meant justin prosecutors for the manhattan district attorney's say they will retry harvey weinstein's weinstein's case in new york city all of this after an appeals court overturned the hollywood producer's sex crimes conviction last week de trump hush money trial, gavel to gavel coverage. >> the way only cnn can bring it to you, legal insight, expert analysis, and real-time updates live from the courtroom follow the facts, follow the testimony, follows. cnn with
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zero heartburn, closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelial mv victims call now 30 billion in trust money has been set aside. you may be entitled to a portion of that money. all when 8085920400. that's when 8085920400 house republicans are bracing for another speaker fight congresswoman marjorie taylor greene, saying that she plans to force a vote next week to oust speaker mike johnson. it's chief congressional correspondent, manu raju joins us now from capitol hill, so. manu, what are you hearing? >> yeah, we expect this vote to fail and actually happen on a procedural vote the first time that she calls for a vote early next week, soon after that house republican leaders plan to go to the floor and actually moved to what's called table or kill that resolution. they are confident they will succeed. why? because democrats pointed join them in that effort. and a large number republicans do as well. i just put the day talking to a number of republicans, occluding one of the republicans who were supporting marjorie taylor greene, thomas massie about the expectation that this will will
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fail i think the main thing that will get out of next week if we don't succeed as a list. >> a list that people can use when they go to vote in primaries and in general elections, those on the democrat sayyed and the republican side, there are substantive critiques of mike johnson are largely true and accurate no one is taking taking much exception with those substantive critiques but in terms of the timing, i think we've got to be sensitive to the calendar and the realities. >> there's a reason i did this in a non election year. >> why will oppose the motion to table? because i think a privileged question deserves an answer. >> j.d. he deserves to stay in this position. >> i'll simply say that he would not have gotten the position shunned by doing the things he has been doing that last comment coming from a republican congressman plans to vote. >> essentially to advance this resolution further and joining marjorie taylor greene, thomas massie, and paul gosar, the republicans who plan to vote to advance as we execute, expect some democrats also, they're not gonna vote to kill this because they are concerned about mike johnson's
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positions, ideological position, but overwhelmingly we expect republicans including the ones who voted to oust kevin mccarthy, like matt gaetz, you're from just their vote to kill this because they believe is the wrong time to move forward guys. yeah. as he said, he did it in a non election year. i don't know if he should be so self-congratula tory, but nonetheless, he's saying there's a difference. manu raju thinking you so much for that. >> and just to cnn, prosecutors in new york city will retry disgrace. hollywood producer harvey weinstein after an appeals court overturned his rape conviction during a hearing that finished this moments ago, the prosecutor was adamant that they still had a strong case and said that they want to retry it as soon as september if possible. >> cnn's jean casarez was in the courtroom. gene harvey weinstein was there. how did he react well, the reaction was no reaction in court, however, is attorney said arthur aidala on the record that when harvey weinstein was told that the case had been overturned, his
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response was great. >> let's go into court. let's retry it so i can prove my innocence. the prosecution team was huge today than the team the attorneys huge today one of the accusers from his 2020 trial, jessica mann, was there. she was in the second row. she had people around her and the prosecution made no jessica mann is here. there was conviction from her testimony, and she is here to do it again. the prosecution also said this case was strong in 2020. it is as strong today and it was not reversed because of the accusers testimony. it was reversed because there were prior bad acts. witnesses because there was parameters on what the defendant could be asked in cross-examination harvey weinstein looked good. he looked really good. he was in a wheelchair. we it was wheeled in. he looked frail. he looks like he's lost a lot of weight, but as he was wheeled
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into the courtroom, his defense team and jennifer bond, dean, who is in charge of his own appeal in california. they were in the front row. he nodded to them. he acknowledged them. he seemed very aware and arthur aidala said to the judge, he has serious medical issues. however, he is sharp as a tack so the next hearing in this case is going to be at the end of may, but it'll be on a wednesday to not interfere with the trump trial if that is still going on, he is going to a medical unit at bellevue hospital who will not be taken to rikers at this point? returned to the prison ward at bellevue hospital and the end of may is when we will see him again as this case is now proceeding to trial jsr is always appreciate your insights, observations, thanks very much. and we will have much more news. >> stay with us sunday story in
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