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tv   Inside Politics With Dana Bash  CNN  June 10, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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free with tableau switching to tableau has really been a money saver without a monthly corruption is amazing. >> quarter today at tableau tv.com today on inside politics, breaking news closing arguments about to begin hunter biden's federal gun trial, which means the first son's fate will likely be in the hands of a jury as soon as today cnn is inside the courtroom to bring you all the developed plus donald trump is about to do something. >> no former president or presumptive presidential nominee has done before. meet with a probation officer. we have new details on his pre-sentencing interview and what it could mean for potential prison time. and they're destroying our hunter and turning it into a dumping ground. that's exactly what donald trump is saying on the campaign trail about undocumented immigrants. are those comments playing with the latino voters? he's trying to win over manu raju in for dana bash and washington. let's go behind the headlines and inside politics first up, presidential
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candidates usually have meetings were donors, pollster, voters, and strategists not probation officers? but that's exactly what's on donald trump's scheduled today. >> he'll have a virtual interview. the new york probation department, which must submit a pre-sentencing memo to judge juan merchan before trump is sentenced. next month. cnn's kristen holmes is talking to our sources in the trump campaign. so kristen, tell us more about that meeting and what else donald trump has on his schedule today? >> well, monday, i'm going to start with reiterating what you just said that there's absolutely nothing standard or routine about the fact that a former president is sitting down with a probation officer, but that being said, it is pretty routine for someone who has been convicted of a felony before their sentencing to sit down with this probation officer, have this pre-interview that is going to form really the report that is sent to juan merchan that could impact how donald trump is sentenced or what his punishment actually looks like.
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so donald trump will be down in mar-a-lago. they're doing this virtually sitting with his attorney, todd blanche, talking to a probation officer in new york as they put together this report before that july 11, in sentencing. >> now the rest of his de it looks like kind of a campaign trail. >> he's going to be delivering remarks at the dan barry institute event. now this is a bar, right? christian conservative group who won of their goals is to quote unquote eradicate abortion completely. now i am told donald trump's remarks are very brief. they don't touch on abortion, they just talk about religious freedoms and freedom of the press this is more of an introductory video, but that really goes to show you how donald trump's still continues to try and walk this fine line talking to these far-right christian conservative groups about being anti-abortion. but not really talking about abortion and itself. we know we wants to take credit for it while at the same time trying to distance himself from it. now, this is a pivotal moment for the campaign. they are trying to separate the legal from the campaign. we saw him
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on the campaign trail in las vegas over the weekend, making promises to voters. take a listen when i get to office, we are going to not charge taxes on tips, people making do i gonna do that right away first taken off as speaker? because it's been a point of contention for years and years and years and you do a great job of service, should take care of people now donald trump there obviously talking in las vegas, a place where it's critical to talk about taxing tips since it is an industry or place that relies on the hospitality and entertainment industry again, another big part of what they did in las vegas was launched latino american voters for trump as they tried to siphon voters away from joe biden house we're going to dive more into that in a minute. but first, let's dive into the numbers voters have now had a chance to sit with 34 guilty verdicts against donald trump for more than a week. but the jury is out on the impact
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those verdicts will have on the voters will decide this election students harry enten joins me now. so here we what are the numbers telling us? >> yeah, i think you hit it right basically matt's a slight movement towards joe biden after trump's conviction. but of course, the race was so close that even a slight movement towards joe biden could make a very big difference. we've had three polls that have been conducted since the conviction. we have them from reuters, ipsos, we haven't from new york times sienna college, cbs news, uga, and what you see all those poles is movement towards joe biden were intercept sosa two point movement. now, biden leads by two well within the margin of error, new york times-siena college was a recontact survey. respondents who had previously answered the poll three points pre conviction. now, one point for donald trump lead cbs news, yougov with the largest move of any of them. but again, only a three-point movement from a four-point trump lead to a one-point trump advantage. well, within the margin of error, the way we might describe this as a race that is way too close to call nationally. now you may be
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asking yourself, monte, why did we not see an even larger movement towards joe biden after donald trump was convicted on those 34 counts. well, s voters essentially what would be a major factor in your vote come the 2024 election. number one is still the economy at 81% inflation. number two, at 75%, the state of democracy number three at 74%, you have to go all the way hey, down to the seventh major factor to see the trump convictions. and that comes and get this at just 28% far less than the economy or flation the state of democracy, which are also in the 70s or 81% in the case of the economy. so the trunk convictions, not a major factor but then again, we have such a close race. so what's exactly going on given that joe biden's approval rating, his favorable rating is so low at this particular point. well, take a look here. is your 2024 vote more about judgments about joe biden, which is all the way down at the bottom of 22%, you normally wouldn't see that for an incumbent in facts slightly
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more likely voters say their judgments are about donald trump in 26% or the majority, 51% say they're 2024 vote is about comparing joe biden and donald trump. perhaps that's not too surprising given we have a quasi incumbent and trump against an actual incumbent, joe biden. >> and then you look at how well-liked these guys are, or perhaps better put, how well dislike these guys are. >> and what do we see on the positive and negative views of joe biden versus donald trump will look at this negative use dominate the day. 55% of voters have a negative view of donald trump, 56% have a negative view of joe biden, far less have a positive view of either one of those because gentlemen, and ultimately the election will come down to voters who don't have a favorable view of either one. and we'll just have to see how they go. mano. yes. so interesting that conviction, maybe small impact, but maybe a significant one will say, all right, ariane. thanks for that. thank you. i want to bring in my great political panel on this. cnn's jeff zeleny, seen as melin is nonna laura
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barron-lopez, a pbs knows that newshour and cnn's kristen holmes is back with us. nice to see you all. happy birthday, birthday boy has absolutely. >> since you are the birthday boy, i'll start off with you won one of the things that was interesting in this is in these numbers is about why people are supporting joe biden, why his supporters are moving in his direction increasingly, this is a shift between march and now about why they are backing joe biden, his supporters back then to oppose trump, 47%. >> that is a seventh. now it's 54% is 7%. uptick about why they're supporting trump. is that the biden, it's not because they liked them. in fact, he's down among voters as they, they liked them. but it's because they are out, because they're supporting their their just want trump to lose. is that enough for biden to win the election? well, we'll see if it keeps heading in that direction perhaps. but look the this is what the biden campaign has been hoping for, for voters to pay attention to the choice between donald trump and joe biden is opposed to
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having this election be a referendum on the biden policies. but as i travel across the country and talk to a lot of voters, it's still very much a mix. one thing is constant on both sides. the exhaustion and fatigue factor with both candidates but as we head into the summer here, the republican convention is next month. the democratic one in august. >> people are realizing this is the choice that they have. >> so that's, i think explained some of the top line number there. but look, these are on the margins. these are effectively just slightly outside the margin of error, but we know that this is going to be a extraordinary tight race, but that's what the biden campaign that's why the president is talking about these convictions. yeah, that's why he is sort of going hard after trump, but voters that i talked to still talk more about the economy, they still talk more about immigration, inflation certainly. so it's not clear that voters actually want either trump or biden to be talking about each other's problems. >> but as we facing this first
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ever meeting between the president, former president, and it probation officer today. what's interesting about those polls is that trump convictions are ranked lower on the list, 27, seventh most important issue among voters behind the economy, the inflation scene of democracy. so if you're the biden campaign do you take a look at that and say, all right, let's focus just on the bread and butter issues. but you still hammer home the fact that they are going out there campaigning against a convicted felon. >> i mean, their their main focus is going to be on the pocketbook brynn, bread and butter issues. i mean, but an abortion to the list that jeff mentioned. so there'll be talking about economy hey, they'll be talking about the rest of the monarch pros, they are talking more about immigration now, but it bortion is going to be a big thing for them to motivate their base and in addition to that, they will talk about the convictions. now, there are some former republican lawmakers who are citing with biden and his campaign who would like to see the biden campaign? >> even, more aggressively. >> hammer the convictions and
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talk more about that on a regular basis and use them to talk more about that. and so it remains to be seen how much they're going to lean into that yeah. and you mentioned abortion and trump as christmas reporting is meeting with virtually with an anti-abortion group today. >> this is how the cbs poll talks about whether this has an impact among likely voters the kind of impact a major factor, but 50% of likely voters, probably most of them are democrats in that. but minor factor is some effect are about not a factor you see 25, 25%. trump's comments have not really moderate. he's sort of been always all over the place a little bit during the primary but he was asked about his how he was responsible for the fact that he appointed 3.3 conservative supreme court justices who overturned roe v. wade i was able to get it done with the appointment of great justices, three great justices plus others that a joint them, as you know, we don't have to
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go into all the names, but they agreed. >> and they were there the courage to end roe v. wade. i think it's working the way that people wanted to work. and it's going to bring the country together so it's going to bring the country together. >> i don't think we have abortion has really brought the country together, but i guess what's interesting is that he's not moderating on this message. and this is of course what democrats hope can sway voters in some of these key battlegrounds to yeah, because he wants the credit for overturning roe v. wade and that's why here i'm talking about it. he's addressing as chris had mentioned earlier, an anti-abortion group he wants that as part of his constituency, but at the same time, he has that he's not going to sign a federal abortion ban. he said this should be left up to the states. we're also hearing that message reflected in what public n's are now saying on capitol hill in terms of what they're going to pursue legislatively. but this is a big political vulnerability for republicans. and we're getting a sense of how democrats are going to message on this as well because of the senate, they are having a number of show votes trying to force republicans to take tough positions on issues like
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contraception, access to ivf. all of those things. so it is clearly going to be a big issue. and one that republicans frankly haven't figured out how to talk about in just trump ever since he's come into the political scene has been all about base. it's always a base, base strategy, whether it's about abortion, whether it's about talking about the january 6 attack on the capitol. this is what he said. oh, just on saturday in las vegas about the dark on january 6 those j6 warriors, they were worries, but they were really more than anything else. they are victims of what happened all they were doing is protesting a rigged election that's what they were doing. and then the police say go and go in, go in water, set-up. that was what a horrible, horrible thing. >> and you know, that blows two ways. okay for that was sudden de, but okay. first of all, they're protesting a rigged election, wasn't raped as we, as we, as we know, he says the police were facilitating them
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to come into it wasn't they weren't facilitating their entrance. he says that this they were is essentially set up facts aside. is this one the trump campaign wants him to be talking about, because obviously the biden campaign is using this as a core of their message. >> yes. >> so i would put this on abortion in two separate categories one, no, they don't want them talking about january 6 and two, you can see donald trump shift. i mean, since after the attacks on anywhere six, how far he's really bought into these far-right conspiracies and perpetuated that there was a time in which he was saying he wasn't involved. now he's saying that he's going to pardon everyone who was involved in january 6. so no, that's not really the rhetoric that they want. trump focused on. they want him focus more on campaigning on issues like the economy that we've talked about, like the aggression. but this is something he's doing, throwing red meats the base, i will say on abortion, i know that we're not seeing him moderate, but he's really been saying the same thing. he is not going all in on abortion. he wants as mel said, the credit for
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overturning it so that he continues to have as base, but he doesn't want to talk about abortion because he believes that it's not a political winner and so that's why you see him kind of dance around this because he wants to take the credit for it. but then he also wants to be more moderate on it. but you can't have both. >> it's hard to have it both exactly. as you're donald trump. it's hard to have nuance to donald trump's rhetoric to say the least. all right. more coming out, we'll go to live to wilmington, delaware. were jury prison, the hunter biden trial are about dihedral closing arguments. and then start delivering henry james is cold, calculating, cynical, and needs the money not only was the cia compromise, he also was compromised secrets spies, a nuclear game sunday at ten on cnn start, your day with nature
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to get my force clean, wet jet absorbs and logs grime deep inside. look at that swiffer wet jet silent birth with liev schreiber sunday at night on cnn breaking news closing arguments have just begun in the hunter biden federal gun trial, the president's son did not take the stand. he's facing multiple charges related to a 2018 gun purchase and has pleaded not guilty. cnn's paula reid is live outside the court paula, what can you tell us about what's going on all not in this is it sources tell me each side will take roughly an hour to present their closing argument before this, a jury, then the judge says she's a few more instructions she wants to give them before they begin their deliberations this afternoon and monitor this is a historic task for this group of 12 people to decide the fate. >> this is a first time that the child of a sitting president has been criminally prosecuted, and hunter biden's a verdict, whatever it may be, will be in their hands. it is
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possible certainly that we could get a verdict today, but it's almost impossible to say how long it will take them to deliberate. you never really know what a jury it's gonna do. i was in court for a few hours. this morning, and of course, the big question was whether hunter biden was going to take the stand. never any defendant. this is a risk reward calculus. one source has told me they believed that the possible reward was that they believe hunter would play well before the jury. they thought because he did well and his recent appearance on capitol hill well before some pretty at times hostile lawmakers. they said he held up well, there they believed he would do well on the stand here. they also thought that maybe he can add some additional context to some text messages that have been presented in this case that suggests during the time he owned the gun at this center of this case, he was texting his sister-in-law, hallie biden things that appear to possibly be related to using drugs. he was going to add context. i'm told to say no now, he was just making things up because he didn't want to see her. but ultimately, you decided not to take the stand because mano a mano, we know we know that
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appearing before lawmakers on capitol hill, quite different and then appearing before some of the top federal prosecutors in the country yeah. no question about it, but will be on verdict watch as soon as this afternoon, paula. >> thank you for that report. >> so all right. so let's just say that the verdict comes down today tomorrow house. the biden campaign going to deal with this look, i mean, this is deeply personal about his personal as it gets for the president. the first lady has been in the courtroom every day, but one flying back and forth from paris. so look, the campaign is largely treating this as a family matter. but democrats sort of outside the campaign are using it as exhibit a about how the adjusted department is not weaponized. there is justice under the law for both sides and using him as an example that the president's son is on trial here by his own doj. obviously, there's a special prosecutor, but the campaign, it's very hard to hear anyone at the campaign headquarters, which ironically is just a couple of blocks from this courthouse than wilmington. they're not talking about it
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publicly. >> and when it comes to the actual impact on voters, i mean, i don't think we've really just seen any impact in terms of voters and focus groups. i've sat in on even to time trump voters, even voters who swung from voting trump in 2016, devoting by an n in 2020, they feel like it's a family matter and they say hey, that they've dealt with addiction in their family and it's not something that they necessarily attack president biden on. >> we'll see how trump deals with the verdict as well. all right. coming up, trump says that undocumented immigrants are destroying our country. but rhetoric like that does not seem you're hurting him with hispanic american why not republican governor of nevada thinks he knows the answer. >> that's the most anticipated moment of this election. and the state next couldn't be higher. the president and the former president, one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27. nine lives i'd cnn and streaming on max first, we did bm possible.
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today, i didn't bark that.com five good things. >> listen wherever you get your podcasts they're changing the fabric of our country. they are destroying our country. the illegal immigrants are turning and they're turning at a level that nobody's ever seen before. they're fighting. our families that was donald trump. >> it is first post-conviction rally yesterday in las vegas he's leaning to rhetoric targeting undocumented immigrants as polls show, despite rhetoric like that, he's actually making inroads with latino voters. yesterday, trump launched a new group called latino americans for trump and start to tie the migrants search a broader economic problems facing latino voters in nevada they are totally destroying are hispanic
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population. and you know what else said destroying and for you it means a little bit less, but it means quite a bit in this state. they're killing unions. they're killing unions because the unions are not able to to survive. they're not able to survive this onslaught twist so look, in nevada, 19% of likely voters are hispanic voters, 17% in arizona. >> obviously, a key demographic in key swing states is that the rhetoric that what do you make of the strategy, but using that hard-line rhetoric, i mean, in the past it hasn't necessarily work we saw that trump has made immigration a big part of his campaign's even during the 2018 midterms when he was warning of a migrant caravan that wasn't coming to the the us. it didn't work. then it worked in 2016, i guess there are some latinos at the margins that are particularly men that are starting to move a bit more towards him it tends to be on the economy. there are even some latinos who are much more democratic traditionally, that
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appear to be curious about trump because of how they're feeling about the economy despite the fact that there are a lot of good economic markers. so president biden and his campaign hasn't cut out for them. they can't win states like arizona and nevada without turning out latinos in similar numbers. if they don't grow their white or their senior votes. so if trump siphons off, on, off at the margins, it could be a problem. >> this is why the nevada governor believes that that kind of rhetoric is works well in his date with voters, he believes it's about the economy. ultimately, why hispanic voters in particular, of turning increasingly towards trump. today's pocketbook issues have transcended traditional voting blocs allowing voters to evaluate how their vote impacts. their wallet and vice versa is another trump campaign sees it right now that it's trump is going to be, trump is going to go as far as he's going to go on immigration is now going to deviate from that, but obviously doesn't believe in hertz no, he doesn't. and they
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believe that they're going to see a significant amount of movement among minority voters, particularly latino man and black man. >> it's not going to be as big with black men voters as it is going to be with men, latino voters, at least the polling doesn't indicate that and that would be pretty huge for him to make that kind of movement. but remember, this isn't about donald trump trying to win over large groups of latino voters. this is about trying to syphon votes away from joe biden and they don't ban and will still win. exactly. yes. there was no there is absolutely no. i mean, there was complete your polls were all wrong, that there were some kind of insane movement that donald trump would win over these minority voters, particularly latino voters. but if they can get some movement in their direction, that's what they want. i mean, just we continue to talk about this group in the middle that is making up their mind. >> is that group is very, very small. >> and so donald trump needs to do and what they team feels like they are doing is trying to siphon off voters from joe biden also tried to pick up voters who are low propensity
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voters, people who don't always show up to vote, who are right-leaning because donald trump's team doesn't believe he's going to get those votes in the middle. >> well, it's interesting too, of course, is how biden has handled this issue. he has of course, been underwater on the issue of immigration shouldn't he backed that bipartisan border security deal that trump came out and killed even before it was introduced, he believed it was bad politics. trump dead, which is why republicans aligned himself with that. then last week, joe biden issue that executive action to essentially tried to turn away migrants at the border got a lot of criticism from the left for that. then we are hearing about a new biden immigration moved to give parole to undocumented spouses of us citizens and provide legal status to long-term undocument immigrants, marriage or american citizens would also allow them to work legally is they seek citizenship. it could impact 750000800000 people. that's according to our reporting from our colleague, isaac dovere that could maybe win over people in his party, but potentially give, i guess republicans are going to tack on immigration no matter what. so why not get your poly bag,
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right? and we talked a lot about how trump is doing the delicate dance with the abortion. >> well, joe biden's doing the same thing when it comes to immigration, right? the fact of the matter is the attitudes in the nation have really shifted towards the right when it comes to immigration in recent years, this is the political vulnerability for biden. and so you're seeing him take steps, are there it's that executive action on the border to start to crack down on asylum seekers or drawing attention to this field border deal that he had gotten behind that trump was behind sinking in the senate was just shifted really to the conservative position on the servant of immigration trump proposal. we've probably seen since we've been up there covering it. but at the same time, he knows he has this left flank that he needs to worry about as well. so he's taking actions like as isaac reported over the weekend, trying to show ways that you can also show a humane way to approach the issue of immigration and show that contrasts with what trump would do on the border. >> and i think always reminder, i mean, voters are not a monolith. obviously get any demographic group, but the economy and inflation is something that spans most groups. so that is still front and center in all of this here. but the biden campaign of all the challenges and worries they
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have latino voters absolutely near the top of the list. >> this potential executive action to which we reported at newshour as well, the one that could be coming to help undocumented spouses that can also help with the economy, right? i mean, places like nevada and arizona, there's labor shortages. you get work permits for these undocumented spouses, and that could be something that could potentially help and the biden campaign thinks of the polling actually he shows them that there's people favor that idea. we'll see how it plays out on the campaign. >> all right, up next, kamala harris is sizing up or potential vp competition. she had a lot to say about trump's top choices plus hoping on capitol hill will be you the inspiring story of a lawmaker battling a disease known as parkinson on steroids but it is not stopping her from doing the job. she was elected to do. >> that's coming up this election season, stay with cnn, with more rubble porter's on the ground. >> and the best political team in the business follow the
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democrats. she said everyone on that list has supported a trump abortion ban in their state or as called for a national abortion ban, went on to criticized them. further on this issue. she's been out there, harris's increasingly come out swinging. >> she did over the weekend, she called out donald trump for being a convicted felon and the like. >> what do you make of her? now going after, but his potential running yeah. >> well, first i'll here says ben, one of the chief messengers for the biden campaign. on the issue of abortion. but specifically hearing her sort of preview what the messaging is going to be when it comes to donald, doesn't matter who it is. >> they're all a pain. i'm in a broad a broad brushstroke tying them all to the maga, right? >> the maga extremists, no matter who the candidate is. and i do think it's interesting, we're seeing this broader shift within the biden campaign where they're starting to really pivot to general collection mode and they're starting to go after trump and his allies very directly. whether it's taking them on over legal vulnerabilities or in this case going after the potential vice presidential pick, we are seeing them start to make these significant
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messaging and policy changes. as some democrats, which they did that earlier, also the question is possible, trump thank and the lobbying that's happening publicly and privately. there was a one person yesterday on our kristi noem, the governor of south, to call it out, indicating props trump should consider a woman all the pools tell him in these swing states that a woman on the ticket helps him when the polls just say that people one in four republican women haven't made up their minds because they want to have a woman talking to them about the issues they care about and women aren't monolithic. >> they don't, they don't care about just one issue. they care about health care, they care about their children. they care about their futures, they care about having an opportunity to have a business and to have a career contains pick me but there's far we know, correct me if i'm wrong, there's only one woman really under serious consideration that's the least the falling right. >> and she's been a loyalist, donald trump now i will say
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when it comes to a woman early on, donald trump is getting a lot of feedback that he should choose a woman and he would bring it up in conversation. he brought it up once when we were talking to him about something completely separate and said, do you guys think i should to reporters, you guys think i should choose a woman. a lot of people are telling me that now since then, he has come. >> many people are saying ready people are saying i should choose a woman. but since then he has also said that he doesn't really think it's going to impact him that much if he chooses a woman or a person of color that ultimately that people will make their decision if they're going to vote for donald trump based on donald trump. and there are people who just don't like donald trump and there's not any one woman or person of color, and it's going thank to change that because they still don't want to vote for donald trump well, just because i mean, he's basing a lot of this on loyalty, right. >> and it's not in the past, mike pence was strategic to bring him evangelicals typically, you might think of picking someone from a more of a swing state, someone who can help you grow your coalition. and none of these dear to be doing a little loyalty is the word i was going to say two and
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there is one republican governor who is a woman who has tested for loyalty to trump. that's governor sarah huckabee, standards from arkansas. so she is on my possible list here. we'll see not predicting bucking in list. yeah, i mean or does he did shortly? >> i see a dark dark although remember what their gender did. >> she did not endorse him right away and then she came around the time that he called her. >> but i think the reality is this is not the same calculation is 16. he doesn't need his base to rally behind him they already have. but on the margins, some of these could potentially matter. doug burgum from north dakota is probably still mentioned if among them, perhaps. so. you're right, it's not the same as picking mike pence because they needed to shore up with a christian conservatives at that point. >> now, women, educated voters, suburban voters, does that have by women voters voted would biden 57 42, and 2020. that margin has shrunk according
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term poles posel save that actually if i didn't, how people actually vote in november, but how much is that weighing in on the by the trump campaign on trump himself? >> i don't think that they think they're going to move the needle with a woman. i just don't think i actually think to your point, if there was a woman who was going to move the needle is somewhat would be sarah huckabee sanders however, i do think he was very upset about the fact that the phone call leaked in which he asked sarah how could be sanders for her endorsement and she said, not yet and yes, she came around like many others thursday, but that was the point of loyalty for him. there are not many women who are on the sediment. i'm not sure that kristi noem would move the needle with women or suburban women. >> he is who he is, donald trump, and he is the candidate people don't vote. i'm running mate directly, right? yeah. i mean there are rules really do no harm, which is two doesn't a we saw i'm john mccain pick a pay on which he at the thye he had said, this is the best the best moment of his campaign. he said that to the day he passed, but it did do harm.
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>> and female voters across the board, across race and ethnicity. and then it's particularly female voters who are college educated are a problem for trump and in suburban areas hey guys and when two of the big things that they're going to be voting on based on 2022 and special elections, abortion and threats to the mach i talked to a voter in wisconsin last week. she said she's holding out hope that he picks nikki haley. she's a trump voter, was like i know it's not probably very likely, but she's holding out hope and that is someone, again, not predicting that, but that is something that would certain only be buzzy and could change the needle in the suburbs. i mean, i would've dropped are they actually thinking about donald from self? >> is that no, but i will tell you there are a lot of people, including donors, who are pushing for nikki haley. it really doesn't seem likely given how contentious the primary got, given how what he says behind about her behind closed doors. but again, there is still a push. they know that that is another person, another woman who could move the needle, grab some of those 25% of voters in suburban
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philadelphia counties who voted for nikki haley in the primary? yeah. >> might vote for charles say he says he's going to announce an athlete republican convention i bet it doesn't before we ever know with donald trump, i coming up, congresswoman jennifer waxed and makes history inspires others, after being diagnosed with a debilitating brain disease it may show a future here. this, of this is not my real voice devastating students and sudden power of tsunamis. it happened in faraway lands and it's easy to think it can't happen here if one hits home, we'd be ready hello, in birth would liev schreiber sunday at night on cnn. >> i am eric, i am 39-years-old. i've started thinking about getting botox cosmetic for the last couple of years. i just see myself on video calls all de and i really started noticing the leinz i'm still eric and i got botox cosmetic. i'm seeing a lot less prominent leinz that i did
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facet.com to get your free score today. this situation room with wolf blitzer did night at six point cnn we're back with the inspiring story. >> the congresswoman jennifer waxed up and coming virginia democrat who has been diagnosed with the disease, sometimes called parkinson's on steroids. but that has not stopped over making strides on
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the hill cnn's melanin zona as westerns inspiring story it may shock you to hear this, that this is not my real voice. once a rising star in the democratic party, congresswoman jennifer waxen, flip eight key house seat in 2018 i've been saying since the beginning of this campaign that changes coming to america and changes coming to virginia and that change came tonight. now, a rare brain disease has forced her into early retirement and robbed waxen of the ability to speak but that hasn't stopped her from using her voice. >> i hope i can show that even instability dating a diagnosis has this doesn't have to mean you are powerless and finding moments of levity in sun helps to last year at 56-years-old waxen was diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy to have an incurable disease that impacts about 30,000 americans. described as
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parkinson's on steroids psp affects the brain cells that control balance, walking, speech, and swallowing. >> we did for you the polish shakes when it comes to eunice progressive is not a good thing to be as her condition began to rapidly deteriorate, the congresswoman and mom of two learn to adapt last month, wax and became the first lawmaker to use a voice app is to deliver a speech on the house floor, a history-making moment that prompted an outpouring of support port psp makes it very difficult for me to speak and i use an assistive app so that you and our colleagues can understand me. >> she also uses the app to participate in committee hearings. >> she shows up every time we have a committee hearings and she represents her people and god bless her the people she's representing a getting a hell of a deal with her. and so thinking and to communicate with colleagues and staff in all of the congressional texts chains that exist like she is
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absolutely like top five funniest waxen isn't the only member of congress using assistive technology senator john fetterman relies on an app to help him process what he's hearing as he recovers from a stroke in my recovery was to the point where now italy, this fetterman was so touched by waxen story that he sent the congresswoman a personal note to let her know that she is not alone. >> she is inspiring people by being able to perform her job because a lot of millions of americans have to everyday tasks can still be a challenge for weston, the capitol hill campus has not historically been very ada friendly. >> how have you found? >> the institution? do you think it's been adequately equipped to handle people with disabilities? >> you measure notice how inaccessible of place maybe until it's you who relies on the disability accommodations. >> and weston says some of her colleagues now treat her differently. >> it's especially frustrating and deploying when people mistake my speaking struggles for my cognitive ability. i've
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had experiences where oh, meaning colleagues, always men have approached me seeing hi jennifer, it's soon, and i like yeah, of course i know who you are. i've seen can you hear every day for the last five years the chaotic speaker's race in october took an added toll on weston, who was forced to miss doctor's appointments because of the grueling schedule that was probably the worst i felt physically and emotionally since i was diagnosed but quitting early was not something like ever seriously entertained before she leaves congress early next year, weston is using her platform to raise awareness about brain diseases like psp she organized an advocacy week last month, while the senate recently passed her national plan to end parkinson's disease, she's an inspiration. while many would have been discouraged or loss taupe with a disease like the she has endured she has used her struggled to help others and now the bill goes to the president's desk, a bipartisan bill named in her honor, what
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do you want your congressional legacy to be i hope that one day when we have eradicated parkinson's him parkinson's isms people will say that even though it was it's too late for her to help herself, she helped countless others really powerful story, melanie, thanks for bringing that to us and bringing both sides together, or condition what stuck out to you the most is your interview her sense of humor, and the way it was able to come through. it's not just that she's able to communicate and get her words, that she has her personality. she was cracking jokes. you're in spanberger say she's one of the top five funniest members and you can see that in interviewing her. but look, there's a been so much nastiness and drama. this session of congress as you and i have covered, every once in awhile, there are moments of inspiration, of manatee, of bipartisanship. and this is one of those moments, not only is she still conserving her constituents every day, but she was one of the driving forces behind this bill that's going to establish the first ever national plan to end parkinson's disease. it's the first of its kind. it's about to be signed into law so this is a significant moment. we don't often see bill sailing
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through the chambers of congress with bipartisan support. so it's a remarkable moment and just such a compelling story really as you're seeing people on both sides praising of the county jail arrington in your piece of republican chuck schumer and senate majority leader thanks for bringing that to us. >> all right. thank you joining inside politics, cnn, news central starts after the break the most anticipated moment of this election and the stakes couldn't be higher. the president and the former president, one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash presidential debate thursday, june 27th, nine live on cnn and streaming on max. >> if you have chronic kidney disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with far sega because their places like to be for seeker can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal dehydration, urinary tract or that'll yeast infections in low blood sugar are rare life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur, stopped taking four sika and call your
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