tv CNN News Central CNN June 12, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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welcome news when it comes to your wallet. >> a key inflation report shows that price increases went to zero last month. the markets are like what will the fed in the next hour we're said to get an interest rate decision from chair jerome powell and president biden back on the world stage. he's headed to it believe for a highly anticipated summit with a lot at stake. but casting a shadow over the trip. yesterday's conviction of his son, hunter, on felony gun charges happening now, house republicans moving forward in their planned to hold attorney general merrick garland in contempt of congress for violating subpoena requests. now, an uneasy feeling filling his growing among gop lawmakers. do they have the votes were following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central
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we start this hour watching stocks rally after a new report shows inflation cooling down in may, the gains have been a bit in afternoon trading, but the dow roared out of the opening bell on the heels of that inflation report, the s&p nasdaq of jumped as well, pinning hopes that the fed might actually cut borrowing, borrowing rates this summer. a decision on interest rates which affect everything from mortgages to credit cards is expected just about an hour from now prices for everyday items, flatlined in may compared to a month ago, the first time inflation has been at zero in two years over the past year, consumer prices rose 30 rather 3.3% according to the labor department let's bring in cnn's matt egan to break down these numbers, match these numbers are a relief, including
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a drop in gas prices. what does this tell you about the overall economy? >> well, of course this is some much needed good news on inflation. the cost of living is, of course, the biggest problem with this economy. and among the biggest frustrations for voters. so this is much needed progress. of course everything is relative, right? 3.3% year over, year over year inflation. that's not good, right? it's a well ahead of where prices were going up, pre-covid, but this is better than expected and this is an improvement from a year ago, a major improvement from two years ago, prices did not budge at all, month over month, as you mentioned, we haven't seen that in nearly two years and we did see price drops for gasoline, new cars, airfare, clothing. so all of that is encouraging also, core inflation, which excludes food and energy that doesn't capture what americans feel, but it is something that economists pay attention to
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because it's a good indicator of where prices are going next. that was at the lowest rate in three years. so when we zoom zoom-out inflation, of course, is not solved. life is a lot more expensive than it was a few years ago. but this is a significant step in the right direction for us yeah, it's still about a percentage point and change above where the fed would want to see it right? matt, what are we expecting in the next hour when we await this announcement on rates? >> right? so listen, it's a very, very expensive time to borrow right now. mortgage rates, credit card rates, car loans. it is tough out there. rates have admin as high-end 23 years. >> and unfortunately, if you're hoping for immediate relief, don't hold your breath because the fed is very, very unlikely to lower interest rates today, there's almost no chance priced into the market of an immediate rate cut the big question is, what does the fed signal going forward? and after
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today's inflation report, we did see investors start to mark up their bets on an interest rate cut coming up soon, unlikely at the next meeting in july five. >> but look at that now is 70% chance of a reg rate cut in september, that is a particularly important meaning because that is the final fed meeting before the election. >> and the market is pricing in a chance of good chance of at least one rate cut at one of the final two meetings from the fed now the big focus from investors and from economists and really everyone watching it at home is gonna be what the fed says, not in its statement, but in its projections because every other meeting the fed releases what's known as the dot plot. and that's where fed officials, they penciling where they think rates are going previously the fed was penciling in three rate cuts for the rest of this year. >> that seems unlikely. the question is, do they mark that down from three to two or to one? that is going to be a big deal, of course, to investors
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and frankly to a lot of people at home for us, we are eagerly awaiting that dot that matt was talking about will be here live at 2:00 when the decision comes down. so stay tuned for that. matt egan. thank you so much. >> graeme president biden will soon arrive in italy for three days of critical meetings at the g7 summit, the president departing from delaware this morning where he spent time with his family after his son, hunter's conviction on federal gun charges yesterday, the leaders of the world's wealthiest democracies have major global issues on their agenda, including the israel-hamas war four and supporting a huge loan to ukraine backed by hundreds of billions of dollars in frozen russian assets. >> cnn international diplomatic editor nic robertson is live in italy. he's covering the g7 for us. a nick sources tell cnn that the us and ukraine are expected design a long-term security agreement there at the g7. this is pretty big news. what more can you tell us sure. >> i think the best reference
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point on this is to look back at the nation to summit last summer when i'm president zelenskyy he wanted a commitment that ukraine was going to be a member of nato. he wanted the equivalent of chapter five support article five support that if one nation as a membrane of nature was attacked than the others would come to their cyber. what was agreed there was at each nation would strike a bilateral security pact with ukraine this is what president biden is going to be doing. this new sort of monetary value put on this at the moment that it is a long-term commitment to ukraine, that if somewhere down the road in the future that they were to be attacked, again in a new scenario by russia within 24 hours, there would be there would be discussion about that. there will be action taken about that france, germany, the uk, 14 nations out of nato so far i've already made these security pacts with ukraine financial commitments of ongoing military support and
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other 17 members patients, yet to do it out of, out of nato. and this will be president biden's decision to do this and move ahead on. this will be a signal to those other 17 that they should be doing the same. and a signal to all nato countries that whoever becomes president next in the united states, whatever their relationship is with nature, we know donald trump has threatened perhaps the cut ties with nato, perhaps the cut military support for ukraine. there is a more enduring committee it meant going, going forward and nick, how is the uncertainty over the upcoming us election hanging over these talks? yeah it hangs right. everyone coming here knows that it's a tight race in the united his states, and that a president trump, if he were elected would have a very different relationship here. but the g7 table are very
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different relationship with nato allies and partners. a fractious relationship, perhaps but look, i mean president biden isn't alone and coming into these these torques facing election turmoil back home, president macron are though has not running in the parliamentary elections, he's just triggered in a snap election in the next couple of weeks his party, and therefore his power and influence in francis is up for question over the next few weeks, or british prime minister here coming for the meetings, rishi sunak, very unlikely to be re-elected in british relations on the fourth of on 4 july, justin trudeau, the canadian prime minister, faces elections next year, the japanese prime minister there's calls for the opposition there, for him to call snap elections. and ursula wonderland, a european commission president who will be here also once the few real delighted and get her job back for another five years. so there's a lot of faces coming in here, not just president
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biden, who might not be around this time next year at the g7 yeah good point. a lot of uncertainty there. nic robertson, life-force from italy. thank you. for us. >> this afternoon. the house is expected to vote on whether to hold attorney general merrick garland in contempt of congress representatives have been debating this issue after a vote allowing the debate past by just a single vote. garland has been defying a demand of a subpoena, refusing to hand over audio of president biden's interview with special counsel robert hur, her of course, chose not to charge biden for having classified documents on his property, and republicans have the transcripts, but they insist the audio is needed to confirm what the transcripts say the attorney general said that releasing the audio could lead future witnesses to resist being recorded, seen as meloni's an owner has the latest now from capitol hill. so melanie, when will the full house get a chance to vote on this? and do we have an idea of where the vote might plant
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yeah. >> well, the house is expected to vote on this merrick garland contempt resolution this afternoon. earlier this morning, the house did take a procedural vote where the advance that resolution. and so now the gop leadership is confident that they are going to be able to have the votes to pass this over the finish line that despite some concerns that were privately phase by some centrist republicans about moving ahead with this vote. as a reminder, this all stems from the doj's refusal to hand over audio tapes of the special counsel's interview with president joe biden as it relates to the classified documents case. now, the doj did provide transcripts to the committees, but republican say that is not enough. they want those trans grabs and they also want those audio tapes to make sure that the transcript is correct. just take a listen to speaker mike johnson and his reasoning for pushing ahead with his contempt vote excuse refusing. you're refusing to comply with a lawful subpoena, and that's a problem under article one, we have to defend the constitution. we had to
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defend the authority of congress. we can't allow the department of justice and executive branch agency to hide information from congress now, we said point out here that some house republicans including judiciary committee chairman jim jordan have defied congressional subpoenas in, the past. and meanwhile, president biden did exert executive privilege over those audio tapes. and nonetheless, the house de is expected to move ahead with his contempt resolution. and if it passes as we expect it to do, it, then gets over to the doj. but the doj is not under any obligation to pick it up for us. >> yeah previous attorneys general have been held in contempt in the past and they've seen nothing come from it. a meloni's anodal live on capitol hill force. thank you so much. still ahead this hour on cnn news central, a, you and report accusing both hamas and israel of committing war crimes were in the middle east following ceasefire negotiations as well will take you there, live in just moments. plus military families
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in virginia ripping state officials for putting new limits on a military benefits program. the governor says he wants to repeal the changes before they take effect next month will it get done? and they say age is just a number unless you're a lawmaker in north dakota, we're going to tell you about the new age limit that voters just put on their lawmakers when we come back 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, the cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27, nine live on cnn streaming unmapped lawmakers are trying to shut down planned parenthood, the health care of more than 2 million people is at stake. our right to basic reproductive health care is being stolen from us. planned parenthood believes everyone deserves health care. it's a human right. future generations are beginning to lose the rights we
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mounting over whether a ceasefire and hostage deal can be reached to end the war in gaza, secretary of state antony blinken was in qatar this morning pushing for an agreement to the latest proposal on the table. but he says hamas keeps changing its demands based on, what we've seen and what i've discussed with the prime minister and what we discussed with our egyptian colleagues were determined to try to bridge the gaps and i believe those gaps are bridged. >> doesn't mean they will be bridged because again, it ultimately depends on people saying yes cnn's paula hancocks is with us live now from jerusalem. >> polo where do things stand? >> while briana from the biden administration's point of view, it certainly feels to them as though hamas is moving the goalpost so at this point, we heard from the secretary of state there and he has said in a press conference in doha that
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questioning whether hamas is now negotiating in good faith now, we did here an official response from hamas, but it was not a rejection or an acceptance according to hamas into those familiar with these negotiations, but it was adding amendments to what had already been agreed to by certainly the the biden administration. they're asking for more of a timeline of permanent ceasefire in gaza. they're also asking for a complete withdrawal of israeli troops from gaza. now what we have seen within this proposal is it, it is a three-stage proposal. so once the first stage in the six-week ceasefire is agreed upon and it comes into into being. there really does seem to need to be an evolving into the permanent ceasefire and more negotiations ongoing. we have seen from the israeli sayyed a desire to be more vague when it comes to agreeing to these terms. they don't want to have a timeline of a permanent ceasefire we
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have heard though that there are hopes that it can still be salvaged. we're hearing so msm from sydney from secretary blinken in catera, standing next to the qatari prime minister and foreign minister. but there's also a sense of reality see feeding into this as well. the worry that there have been more changes now put to this set. we've heard, though from the route that represents the hostages still in gaza and they have said they want an all-out effort to secure this deal. there really isn't an alternate but at this point, so as we see both sides showing willingness, but neither side actually agreeing outright, riana very important step they need to take their paula hancocks. >> thank you for that report. life-force from jerusalem for us let's talk more about these developments. >> we're joined now by former hostage negotiator grew sean baskin. he's the middle east director for the international community's organization. her
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sean, thanks so much for sharing part of your afternoon with us. >> given the update, we just got from paula, what do you see as the likelihood of this truce actually coming together boris. >> it's done a matter of hamas moving the goalpost as was in the report, the bottom line is that hamas has been saying since the very beginning of the war that there will be no hostage deal that doesn't include an end to the war and israeli withdrawal from gaza israel on the other side has been saying that there were no deal that israel will agree to, that will end the war. and this is the basic gap that we have between the two parties, which seems quite unbridgeable i am encouraged by secretary blinken's optimism but quite frankly, i don't know where it's coming from because hamas is very, very clear of what their demands are, as well as israel. and i don't see how to bridge them. and yet there are 120 hostages is israeli
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hostages still in gaza. it's believed that about 80 of them are alive every day that there is a risk to their lives. and we're stuck. the israeli government doesn't want to make the deal that will end the war. and we are stuck here. we're also stuck because the war in lebanon is escalating. >> and we know that if the war in gaza ends, the war in lebanon will stop as well. sure. >> the reporting about hamas, it being described as then moving the goalpost is based on comments that we've gotten from officials like antony blinken, who have said that hamas is now turning down aspects of the deal that they previously okayed you don't seem to see it that way no, i think that hamas is negotiating on the margins of the deal, on the timeline, on the number of hostages, on the number of days between each phase. >> but the bottom line is that in phase two, there should be a complete israeli withdrawal
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from gaza and end to the war. and israel has never agreed to ending the war. and this has been said by prime minister nothing you and members of his cabinet in his cabinet. now it's made up once again of the extreme right-wing and religious parties in israel. the middle of the road party of danny gordon says left the government and it seems impossible to imagine that they're nothing you government could accept anything that includes the end of the war, while hamas is still in power in gaza. and that's the reality israel has done nothing to advance any kind of other political solution that might be able to replace the hamas in control of gaza. and that's why we're stuck is it fair to say that you don't see off incentive for both sides to come together on this because because as you just outlined it doesn't sound like netanyahu is eager for this war to end. conversely yahya sinwar, those messages that were leaked
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recently, he's talking about having the israelis exactly where he wants them. it doesn't sound like there's any urgency on his side to see this war come to an end? >> yeah, i know what those messages were. i think this part of psychological warfare, and we don't really know what you feel. sinwar once we know that the people in gaza are suffering terribly, we know that the people who lived alongside the gaza border and israel are suffering terribly as well as the israeli police who live in the north of israel along the lebanese border with gone no longer the government, i think we will see an increase in israelis taking to the streets demanding of deal and demanding new elections. because the majority of israelis no longer have confidence in the government of israel, and a majority of israelis, i believe won the hostages to be the number one problem 30 so quickly on this un inquiry, finding that both israel and hamas have committed war crimes and have violated
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international law does that change anything on the ground as it changed the approach during negotiations? i don't think so. hamas doesn't observe any aspect of international law. it's been bombing israeli civilians for year in breaching international law the taking of civilian hostages, holding them in civilian homes is all a breach of warren and israel has violated international war in your law, in gaza as well during these eight months of this war and that's the reality of war i don't know what the international community will do about it israel tries to protect itself by having all kinds of internal legal mechanisms and investigations. but nonetheless, the reality on the ground speaks louder. then everything else there's john baskin, always great to get your perspective. >> thanks for joining us. >> thank you. >> of course next, the nation's largest protestant denomination voting today on and whether to banish church members with female pastors are
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policy. >> this was a narrow decision. the vote received support from 61% of the delegates, but it failed to get the required two-thirds. soon for majority joining us now is beth alice and barr. she is the james vitamin professor of history at baylor university, and she is a former southern baptist beth. your thoughts on this vote, are you surprised by it? >> i am a little surprised. i thought it would probably pass. however, the margin was so narrow, i think this issue is not resolved. i think this is just perhaps the first time that we see the law amendment go before the sbc beth, more churches were expected to voluntarily leave the denomination. if his ban had passed, do you think that was a factor? >> i think it could have been a factor. i hope also the implications of the law amendment. i mean, it in order for it to be fulfilled the
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churches would have to be examined the websites of the churches would have to be examined. it would be extremely intrusive. it would definitely violate bapta just ideas about local autonomy of churches and i think that probably gave a lot of people pause. i hope also that the understanding of the black churches within the sbc, around 4,000 black churches who were opposing the law amendment because of the many women that serve in pastoral roles on their staff. i hope that also played into it if this does come up again, and it does pass, beth, i wonder what you think the effect on the church overall is going to be i think it'll be interesting to see how this plays out over the next year. >> the new president, who was just elected was a supporter of the law amendment. >> he also is associated with some of the most conservative elements of the sbc, including
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the council for biblical manhood and womanhood, which was one of the supporters adamant supporters of the amendment. so i think next year it's going to really be a testing period to see. and i think also, even though the law amendment did not pass i think women in the sbc should still be very worried about the implications of this. i mean over 90% the vote yesterday to kick out a historic virginia church over the issue of a pastor of a female pastor on their staff who was not a senior pastor? as well as the fact that the vote was so close, it was only about margin of 500 votes that kept the law men from passing. and that is a very close margin. and so there are more people who voted yesterday full. i mean, who voted today for the law amendment, who's support the law amendment in the sbc, than
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there are who do not support it so i think that's a very dire place for women in the spc to be so overall, beth, what message do you think this sends to women about the church and especially to young girls i think it sends a terrible message to young girls and all women within the church. >> it tells us that our voice is continuously having to be on trial. that that our ability to serve in the columns that that women feel that they are to be egn, that that is continuously on trial that we always have to be careful about what we are called and what we do and that even this still plays into the sex abuse reform that is ongoing. that is, become rather lukewarm and in many ways, within the sbc he pc. and i
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think that sp the sex abuse reform has also told women that our voices do not matter as much as protecting mel pastors and so i think this is just reaffirming the trajectory that the sbc has been on for a long time, that women are less value within sbc churches and thus, in the eyes of god for women who are in the sbc abef, it is great to get your perspective. >> obviously, this is a very big day and it's not the end this issue, both alison barr. thank you thank you so much. next, we're following the backlash in virginia after lawmakers cut a key he benefit for veteran families and families of fallen service members. we are joined by a retired naval officer sir, and navy seal who confronted state officials over the move this week we just shipped are
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four today the greatest general in history his body and his tomb are missing with these, you know, the new season begins with the hunt for alexander the great's tomb. >> next wednesday at 9:00 and discovery and stream on max on homefront. this week, virginia is for lovers. that's the states official slogan. but did you know virginia is for veterans to or at least usually is nearly one in ten virginia and served in the military and last month state lawmakers overwhelmingly passed a budget that governor glenn youngkin's signed into law obliterating one of the state's biggest benefits for veteran families, free tuition at in-state public schools for families of a service member killed in the military or i'm a veteran who is severely disabled. it's called the virginia military survivors and dependence education program. and as the rollback of it left many virginia gold goldstar and veteran families scrambling the blowback was swift and loud. they gave state officials some
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frank feedback about what the sudden change means at a meeting earlier this week louise is supposed to reflect the will of the people as far as i can tell, the only people who wanted this change with the administrators of the colleges where you're trying to justify their high costs and worrying about their bottom line. >> taking went promise to the families of severely disabled veterans and goldstar families shouldn't be an accounting item. >> how can someone sleep well at night knowing that they have stolen a ray of hope to those who have endured the most unimaginable, awesome hardship knowing the district away this vital support leaving these families to struggle with the dual burden of emotional and financial distress this is a pop and a tremendous breach of a covenant not to provide an entitlement to our most protected veterans are gold stars and severely wounded warriors. but something that was earned at the highest level
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that last speaker is retired naval officer and navy seal lieutenant jason redman, and he is with us now adjacent. >> thanks so much for being with us. can you just tell us what this will mean for families like yours? >> breanna, i mean, the cutting of this program was so unexpected. nobody saw it coming. >> there were some rumors about at happening had been it's been put forth probably six months prior and tried to be put into bills and it had been stuck down multiple times. >> and then in the death of the night on may 13th, they slid this into the bill and it was only given two days before was approved. there's a lot of finger-pointing happened, but regardless, it canceled this program. this program that so many of us, me as a severely wounded warrior, my kids abuses program, my teammates individuals who have fall and jason lewis was a teammate killed on my deployment his widow is there, donald louis goldstar, family member talking about how this program was caught for her kids it was so
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unexpected that no one could be ready for it. no one had saved money, no one had put things in place to be able to offset this. and literally with this too, de notification, it said and explosion atomic bomb across virginia and the gold star and severely wounded community i know that when you were wounded in iraq, knowing this benefit was there for your kids was so important for your family and virginia has actively tried to attract veteran families just overall, it has a third highest share of veterans as for any states. >> any state who bring with them their tax dollars, they're desirable resumes for defense work that helps sustain the state economy. there what message does this change? send two military and veteran families about their planes? in this state it's pretty appalling attack and a hit on us. >> and not only did it impact us, a lot of people didn't know there were also law enforcement
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and buyer this program in impacts fallen police and firefighters. >> but but for all of us, i mean, it was just colossal so our message and this was one of the big things i got a lot of messages online when i posted about this. >> most people were incredibly supportive and said, hey, virginia needs to hold this up for 100 years. this program has been in existence and all of a sudden overnight, it went away and there were a lot of people who would say to me, oh, it's just another entitlement program we need to cut and this is not an entitlement program. this is something that needs to be clearly understood and i talked about this in my message. there is a huge difference between an entitlement, meaning maybe you're part of society as a citizen or resident, the state of virginia, you do some sort of benefit just for being part of the state are part of a federal government as opposed to something was earned at the absolute highest level through tremendous blood and sacrifice. and it was a covenant. the state of virginia made to all of us. we were aware of it and
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it was promised to us. and now that promise that covenant has been broken so this was one of the biggest things we are pushing for the general assembly june 28, they meet again, they need to repeal and replace this bill in its entirety and fix this massive disservice to virginia veterans. >> well, let me ask you about that because governor glenn youngkin he's signed this budget, which was a bipartisan budget, right? democrats and republicans almost overwhelmingly behind this. he, he signed it into law now he's calling for that special legislative session later this month that you mentioned we did reach out to his office and we asked if he can guarantee that this we'll be repealed. his office could not. they said they are working to repeal it. do you have confidence that lawmakers will change this? and what's your message to them and to the governor? >> i don't have confidence yeah. >> i've done a lot of digging. i have not been able to confirm this fact yet. i was reaching
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out that several of my friends that are in virginia, government, i was told that the language that was used that they reworded a lot of the original language in the bills that were submitted six months let's go. and what was submitted in this bill on may 13, they removed many of the key nomenclature, like bem step, which stands for this program, bms dep. i have not confirmed that, but that's what i was told. i was told this was very shading and done under the cloak of darkness and i've had several people said that's how this managed to slip through the cracks. i cannot confirm nor deny that at the end of the day, i don't care if you're on the right. i don't care if you're on the left. are veteran 700,000 veterans severely wounded warriors are goldstar families who literally laid a loved one upon me, ultra of freedom. this program is owed to them. it was promise to my message to me from from governor youngkin to anyone who has a political title here in the state of virginia, there are 700 veterans in virginia,
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there, 15,000 gold stars. and we are watching your guys decision that you're going to make on june 28. i tell you what if you don't make the right decision? we will remember when elections come yeah, i'm hearing a lot of frustration by very surprised military and veteran families. so we'll be keeping an eye on this retired navy seal, jason redman. thank you for coming on and thank you so much for your service and your sacrifice riana, my honor. >> thank you, guys for having me on and we'll be, right back home, front brought to you by cornea saada had the endless summer grill now it go then corona carney is awda. >> it's gotten me. i saw them. that's what i said. god-man, saada carnegie got to me carnot. well with more flavored gotten me carnage. i sing it like this. >> juicy governor salah hernia power and use this election in
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got job and god, keith legato said, you up this precious closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law meso three oma 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 that old adage about age just being a number is no longer true in north dakota, at least when it comes to running for office last night, 61% of north dakota is approved a ballot measure that says you cannot run for congress if
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you're at first birth falls before the end of your term in office. this question of how old is too old to run for office comes at a time when americans are not feeling great about their choice this is for president, you have the incumbent joe biden at one and his republican challenger, donald trump turning 78 this friday, not far behind him. so let's turn to cnn senior data reporter harry enten all right. harry, how many current members of congress will be at one or older? by the end of their term in office that's feeling 81 count because then if i join congress, i could be up there a look at the end of the day. there are few members. it's not like the overwhelming majority are going to be at one at the end of their term, but it's a significant number and we can look at both the house and the senate on this particular one. look at this 14 awesome members will be age 81 at the end of their current term. eight senate members will be at one at the end of the current term. so look, that's less than 10%. but the fact is we would lose some members if in fact that this was applied
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across the nation so harry, what do voters thing yeah, voters love age limits. >> let me tell you you. they love, they love him for president and they love him for congress. and it's not just republicans and not just democrats who love them. they both love them. and the vast majority of them look at this wednesday ever see two-thirds of americans agree on anything. we got it here and we've got two-thirds of democrats and basically two-thirds of republicans. so, yeah, americans love age limits. they love them like they love fast food will put it that way. >> all right. what if you're an american who loves institutional knowledge, right? i mean, what type of skills and legislative benchmarks are we seeing from these members of congress, harry yeah if. >> we decided to force some of these folks to go aside, who would be at one at the end of the terms, we would lose some folks who have some real institutional knowledge. we can look at their legislative effectiveness scores. this is a metric that's put out by the center for legislative
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effectiveness or center for effective lawmaking, excuse me. and you can see they're 12 members first met or exceeded the effectiveness benchmark. now the word ten, who of course were below that. but the fact is that there are plenty of members who are south of 81 at the end of their current term, who would be below their current benchmark. so we would lose a lot of folks and a kind of put some actual faces to these numbers. take a look at these folks who meet the legislative effective benchmark and would be at one or older at the end of the current term, we're talking about chuck crassly on the senate. we're talking about dick durbin and the senate, we're talking about jim clyburn, a house. we're talking about virginia foxx now it's obviously someone like nancy pelosi is also a plenty north of 81 at the end of her current term. so we would be losing a lot of institutional knowledge but of course, i guess voters aren't necessarily thinking about that. they're just thinking maybe, hey, we don't want those old folk serving. and at the end of the day though, i'm not quite sure that this will necessarily pass across the nation. this is one stay honestly, i'm not even sure it's constitutional yeah. >> we'll have to see, you know,
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i will say one thing of having started as you did to boris in small market news, you cover all kinds of things and i've covered a number of 100th birthdays. oh, yeah. >> something that strikes me about it is the range of what, 100 some people aren't extremely young, 100 to the point where one woman i said to her, you know, like, what's your secret? she seemed like she was 70 and she said, i stretch every day. so maybe we should just vote. we should just vote for stretching for lawmakers. says that unconstitutional. some goods stretching harry ledger line those moves. >> i think not live, learned them from you, boris, when you were here in new york last time around, i look, i of course there's a huge range. >> i mean, my uncle neal was just we had them on ac show last week. he sounded beautiful and look beautiful at the age of 85 maybe neil should run for office he showed he's a singer songwriter. why not run for congress as well? it could be like sonny bono.
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>> yeah, just not in north dakota. >> we've got to have his music some time playing on her show so he random, thanks so much, matt, great to see you thank you alright. a new report on inflation has made for much stronger odds that we may see some interest rate cuts later this year, isn't that music terriers what is the fed going to say here? we're going to find out any minute the central banks announcement expected at the top of the hour, stay with cnn news central control the most anticipated moment of this election, and the stakes couldn't be higher. >> the president and the former president, one stage to fill three different visions for america's future. the cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27, nine live on cnn and streaming on max lumina is the first fluoride free toothpaste i've ever found that actually works. my dentist was blown away with how clean in white my teeth, my gums and teeth are so healthy, it's crazy. you can get luminoso, toothpaste at walmart and target. >> how many times have you tried to clean a stubborn mess
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