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tv   CNN This Morning Weekend  CNN  June 29, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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the free app now cnn saturday mornings starting cnn good morning. welcome to cnn this morning, it is well and i was able resolve this. and for amara walker, thank you. so much for joining us this morning and victor, good to be here. the hours not so much good to have you back though. >> it's good. that's the trade-off, right? you got it to be here, know that, but it's good. it's good. all right. so president biden is back on the campaign trail today. he's a new york for several campaign appearances this morning. and he'll make stops in new jersey this afternoon. his team is scrambling to do damage control. of course, after the op-ed from the new york times editorial board, the board joined a chorus of voices calling on the president to step aside after his campaign
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performance. certainly in cnn's presidential debate in the outbid, the board called the president a quote shadow of a great public servant. and said dropping out would be the greatest public service he could now perform but in a friday rally, the president appeared much more animated admitting his performance was lackluster, but saying that he was still ready for the challenge well, i know how to do this job i know how to get things done i know like millions of americans know when you get knocked down, you get back out former president trump isn't campaigning this weekend. >> he made a stop and virginia friday where he took a victory lap during a rally with supporters in chesapeake is every american saw firsthand last night. this election is a choice between strengthen, weakness, competence, and
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incompetence peace and prosperity or war, or no war and he also told supporters he didn't think biden would drop out of the race he does better in polls than any of the democrats that talking about you've seen that blend these polls come out with some of the names have been like gavin newsom, he can't run california. >> he's one of the worst governors then of course camila is somebody that will be on the scope so remember the former president trump is three years younger than president biden, and he insisted that age was not the issue at that debate. >> cnn's kristen holmes has more from chesapeake morning viktor and isabelle, what we heard from former president donald trump for the first time post that thursday night debate at a rally and chesapeake, virginia, he addressed what happened on the stage. >> he did a victory lap and he went after joe biden and take a listen despite the fact that crooked joe biden has spent the entire week at camp david
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resting, working, studying, he studied very hard. he studied so hard that he didn't know what the hell he was doing he got to debate rules that he wanted he got the date that he was he got the network that he wanted with the moderate. she wanted no amount of rest reagan could help him defend his atrocious record now one thing of course to note is the fact that donald trump agreed to the same rules, format and network that president joe biden did. >> but the other thing that i want to point out, donald trump stop short of saying this was about age. in fact, he said he didn't think it was about age. he thought it was about mental fitness. obviously, as we have reported before, trump himself has been hesitant to call joe biden old or point out as age because he is just simply right behind. now the other thing that we heard from the former president was that he do think that joe biden was going to drop out of the race than said that because things he actually
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pulls high air than some of the other people whose names had been floater. but but this was very clear. this was a continuation of a victory lap that we really expect to see going into next week, they feel confident, but what happened on that stage on thursday night victor and isabel kristen holmes. thank you. white house advisors, celsius ended up biden. isn't dwelling on his performance and we'll simply devote more time to pushing back on trump's extreme positions and lies. cnn's camila to chalice joins us now from the white house camila. good morning. what else are we hearing from advisors? campaign officials, tell cnn that biden has absolutely no plans to drop out of the race and remains even more committed to being the democratic front runner and running for presidency. >> now, is abel. on friday, biden held a rally where he acknowledged his week debate performance and he said this, he said, i know, i am not a young man to state the obvious. i don't walk as easily as i used to. i don't speak as
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smoothly as i used to. i don't debate as well as i used to, but i do know what i do know. i know how to tell the truth. i know how to do the job, and i know how to get get things done and his remarks at go a sentiment that i've been hearing time and time again from campaign officials and from white house officials. and that is this, that his debate performance should not overshadow or diminish what he has done since being an office. the policies that he set forth the legislation that he has implemented that should not be diminished. and they really reiterate that voters should be reminded of that to focus more on biden's track record rather than his debate performance that was about 90 minutes and just going forward, that is something that they're going to continue reiterating while biden is on the campaign trail and at the white house, isabel viktor, back to you tell us. thank you so much sooner me now cnn political commentator arrow luis and cnn political analyst julian zelizer gentlemen, good
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morning to you, arrow. i'll start with you, the president looked strong. he sounded strong in north carolina, even have more energy of the waffle house on thursday night, then he did on stage with donald trump is the level of panic within the party justified still in my opinion, no the level of panic. i think just blaze people who either really never liked joe biden or don't understand how politics works. i mean, where less than 130 days away from an election, we don't have have mechanisms in place to simply swap out a sitting president of the united states and put in somebody of their choice some unnamed candidate of their choice. we have a process to determine that it's called the primary season and it ended a while ago. so i'm not sure what it is. you're talking about. but as we saw there's a candidate who's likely to be the democratic nominee, the sitting president, who had a really bad debate performance followed by a pretty good rally the next day. yeah. and some of those
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people who are panicked are close to the president. some of the reporting is from out of the white house where they say they are in a dark period, but they're moving forward. julian, let me come to you about the history three here and what how it can inform what the president does next, this is it was an unprecedented debate for several reasons, but there had been presidents on the ballot who were in less than top shape what are his options? what does history tell us about what he can do next to salvage this well, add debates have been overcome, and many people have reminded us about president obama who had a terrible first debate. >> and you can come back. president reagan had the same thing happened i think part of it is going to be performance is rallies and appearances like we saw. the other day. i think the vice president will be very important the more they can showcase her and show her strength, not as a replacement, but as part of the ticket i
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think the stronger the support for biden will be, but ultimately mentally, they have to survive. the next, you now, 72 hours of discussion of replacement. and focus on the campaign and focus on the threat, the democrats see from trump rather than the problems democrats are talking about with their own candidate? >> if anyone wants to read more about julien's thoughts on the utility of the vice president. he has a new piece on cnn.com about kamala harris is the key to biden's political future, is the headline of that. let me read to you arrow a portion of this new york times editorial board piece calling for the president to step aside but there's no reason for the party to risk the stability and security of the country by forcing voters to choose between mr. trump's deficiencies and those of mr. biden. it's too big a bet to simply hope americans will overlook or discount mr. biden's age and infirmity that they see with their own eyes.
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now most americans don't read the new york times editorials. but we know that those in the white house do. and maybe the megadonors do. so what's the significance here i'm not sure what the significance is as the biden team pointed out, this same new york times editorial board endorsed two of biden's opponents four years it's ago endorse the elizabeth warren, amy klobuchar, some sort of strange joint endorsement during the democratic primaries four years ago. so they're saying, look, the times was against us four years ago and we want so don't worry about it. more seriously if you read the editorial, i think about halfway through a couple of hundred words in, they finally say oh, by the way, donald trump's performance in that same debate was also disqualifying. and it really raises this question of why is it that they think both candidates had a poor debate performance only one of them should drop out of the race. i just don't understand the logic of what they're getting at or who they're trying to
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influence. but to answer your question, it's not going to influence the biden team very much at all. i don't think julian, former president trump lied and lied and lied and made false statements and claims that were bunk but there appears to be no cost for that because it's part of what people expect from him at this point i think that's right. >> i think everything that he did, which is not proper is something that is now totally familiar and normal. it is literally the essence what the trump presidency was about, and what the trump campaign is about. so supporters don't care. in fact, they like it. and i think a lot of opponents at this point kind of shrug their shoulders and don't really have a response whereas i think part of what's driving all this concern with president biden among democrats? that's is a fear of trump rather than a fear of the problems with biden. i think that's the essence of what the questions
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are about. we'll he lose, will he lose? and hand the white house to the trump presidency part two. and i think that's really the essence of the difference but it is notable. it's not simply the debate performance. let's remember the former president was just convicted and in some ways there was less of a reaction to that. then there has been to a bad debate performance arrow pennsylvania senator john fetterman is telling democrats calmed down, cool down and he uses his own 2022 debates with mamet eyes as an example he was just in the early days of recovery from a stroke. >> is that a comparable example for the president that you can have a really bad debate and still win oh sure. i mean, look, if you think back to 2004, victor john kerry beat
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president bush like a drum in the debates and then he lost the election. i mean, we're not casting a movie we're not casting and tv show. we're not going to collapse the future of the united states into 90 televised minutes. i would urge people that if they want to think about this seriously, to look at a transcript of that debate his voice was week. his voice was shaky. it wasn't great to see the split screen. but if you read the answers to the questions that were put to the difference the candidates you get an entirely different impression. and i think i hope that does set fetterman is right and that people are going to calm down and think seriously and carefully about the choice that lies ahead for the country. yeah, we don't have to look back 20 years. we can look back just 12 at governor romney and then president obama and their first let's debate. that was part of what informed the tweet from former president obama. he said that bad bates happened. trust me, i know because he went
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through it and in 2012 our error, lewis, julian zelizer. thank you both thanks. >> thank you. didn't conversation there. well, new ruling from the supreme court is limiting how january 6 rioters can be charged on friday. the high court raised the bar for charging defendants with obstruction. the court's ruling indicates a justice department overcharged hundreds of insurrection cases attorney general merrick garland says the ruling is disappointing, but not expected to affect the upcoming case against donald trump. cnn senior crime and justice reporter katelyn polantz has more, caitlin isabel and viktor. this is a major ruling from the u.s supreme court on the january 6 rioters. and how the justice department can charge them. so the attorney general, merrick garland, when the ruling came down, he said he was disappointed because what the supreme court did was limit how the justice department is able to bring felony obstruction cases against rioters. so at
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the beginning of this very soon after the riot, the justice department use this felony obstruction of a congressional proceeding charge against rioters to really bring the hammer down on people who weren't necessarily violent we were taking some extra steps inside the capital to contribute to what happened there. the riot inside the building now the u.s. supreme court says those charges need to have more specific language and showing what these writers wanted to do too. struct and have the intent to obstruct documents evidenced other things that were used during that congressional proceedings. so it's not cutting out the cases altogether, but it is limiting and what it's going to mean in the next coming days is that judges will have to revisit the rioter cases, the sentences that rioters received, and also how riders may be charged. one man, jacob chancellor lee, one of the most well-known rioters because of
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the image he, he had of himself all over the news after january 6, 2021, he was the man in the horns with the flag with the bull horn urging on writers. he was not violent, but he was charged with obstruction case. he ultimately pleaded guilty, served time in prison. but the justice department says that they may want to retry him. so we're going to see things like that in the trump case. very likely to become an issue there as well, where there is going to be a discussion in court of how the supreme court could be affecting donald trump's own charge of obstruction of a congressional proceeding. but the special counsel's office has been quite clear already months ago. they don't believe that what the supreme court did on friday is going to affect that trump case at all. they're trying to to convince his trial judge not to change anything with the charges against him because they say his scheme to obstruct the congressional proceeding was much broader,
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much longer than any of the rioters who showed up in washington on january 6, and involved the fake electors to having their ballots falsely come to the capital to try and keep him in office back to you katelyn polantz. thank you. still ahead. the first criminal charges in the botched response to the deadly 2022 robb elementary school massacre are filed in texas after the break, we go inside the indictment against the former uvalde texas schools police chief and another officer last weekend of freedom, at least for awhile for one or former president trump's closest allies. why the supreme court rejected steve bannon's bint to avoid prison and a summer surge of covid cases. >> the 38 states dealing with a ryzen infections. and what the cdc is saying about at all a little later on cnn this morning july 4th, cnn concert event which performance by keith urban, bb wrexham the
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counts of abandoning were endangering a child some of the victims parents say they are happy to see charges brought forward, but they also voiced frustrations and more officers were not charged for their role in that failed response. joining me now to talk more about this as former prosecutor jeremy saland. jeremy, good morning to you. what can you tell us about what these indictments meet it's a serious indictment, obviously, and it's emotionally driven and i can understand why. >> but at the end of the day, it's an interesting matter because on one hand you're looking at this, not as a engaging in a negligent homicide or a man store as if they were the people who are involved in the perpetration of the unfortunate what should a deaths of these children during the shooting, but their failure to act this omission of duty or not fulfilling their responsibility to despite being trained to do so as police officers, which ultimately is leading to this felony charges are felony charges, plural, for both of these individuals. and i would add that although it's
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the lowest level felony, it is still a felony charge and punishable by state prison for all of these counts. >> yeah. were you surprised to see this indictment coming down the pipeline again, i think from more of an emotional standpoint, you can understand why there needs to be accountability and the shooter this active shooter who they referred to in the indictment is hunting these children and his teachers that person is no longer able to be to be prosecuted the same way at all as someone else. >> and those are big lapse in judgment. there was a department of justice they came out and this was really done improperly with skating, though locally there was something that really said not nearly as much and not placed boehm's blamed solely on these officers. but there's a reason that there's an accountability here in terms of they did not respond appropriately, they did not set up a command center. they did not breach the room, they did not use the tools they had and arguably allow these children to unfortunately be shot and put in a position that
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death was either happening or potential for the ones that survived? for 77 grueling minutes. sarah and i'm jeremy, i understand that this is a first of its kind in diamond in the state of texas but let's talk about the legal the sum here. can an officer actually be successfully prosecuted for failing to act? and i mentioning this because it comes what comes to mind here as parkland, florida, the school resource officer there, scott peterson, he was acquitted. they weren't able to nail that in court yeah. i think some of those similar challenges will appear here too, because if the supreme court, you have to look and say can you have they allow this type of behavior have meaning, behavior meaning can someone be prosecuted successfully or duty constitutionally for an officer to act even though it's the role, even though they've been trained to that, cannot be the basis of a criminal action. that's a very good question. and that's why i went back to the piece i mentioned for for an emotional standpoint, you want someone to be held accountable and morally, you look at these officers and say, you should have taken action,
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you should not have waited those 77 minutes so it's certainly understand why, but why is not necessarily enough. you have to be within the four corners of the law. and i think that's going to be one of the main challenges here that you cannot charge these two officers solely for their failure to uphold this duty. that doesn't exist constitutionally, but was that act in an emission? was adjusted? should always there. sure. after they did as well, affirmative steps that they took that led to this prosecution. so it'll be interesting, but no doubt challenge and why these particular charges and not something like manslaughter, involuntary homicide yeah again, back to what we said before. it's a little bit more let me let me rephrase that. i didn't really go into detail, but i would say if it gets more difficult in the sense that how did these children die, meaning, you know that there were shot and his teachers were shot and they were killed what how long did they pass after they were shot? how can you
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challenge or bring up the connection for their negligence or the recklessness that actually led to his ultimate passing of these people when they have died regardless, even if they would've gotten their ten minutes earlier and you would have set up the command center when you breach the room. that's a difficult leap as well. and this is where that you want to hold someone morally accountable and you should the question then becomes, how do you do it? and i think this was the appropriate prior to charge, there will be a difficult one from soluble legal perspective in real quick here, just how much prison time are we looking at? >> so presumptively, it's 180 days, six months, up to two years. this is again a lowest of the five level felonies. the top being capital felony in the state of texas. there is a way of mechanism, if you will, that a judge in texas can lowered to a class a misdemeanor sentence of a county jail time, like a year, but not likely. so they were convicted. it's six months up to two years on each of the counts. question about consecutive or concurrent would be an interesting one if and when they get there. but that
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would be the potential sentence jeremy saland. >> thank you for your time. >> well, after that shaky showing at cnn's presidential debate, there are growing calls to possibly replace president biden as the democratic nominee. but there is no mechanism for that to happen. the president would have i have to decide that himself and he says that he is planning to win this election will explain more when seeing in this morning returns the final episode of violent earth. >> there are deadly myelin, and unleash massive blockchain hurricane impacts are worsening is it? >> late to undo decades of climate change myelin earth would the, we have schreiber tomorrow? would nine on cnn, vcc is believing, but with stearns and foster, that's only part of the story. we handcraft every stearns and foster using the finest materials like indulgent memory foam and ultra conforming and telecoil for a beautiful mattress and industry five, bubble comfort, every single night shock now and
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must turn himself in by monday the supreme court has denied his request to avoid serving a four-month sentence ban and faces prison time after being convicted for refusing to comply with subpoena orders for an interview and documents related to the january 6 investigation. >> once again, a new mexico judge has denied actor alec baldwin's request to dismiss his inbox i wanted terry manslaughter charge. it sends from the fatal shooting on the set of his film rust cinematographer halyna hutchins, she was killed in october 2021 when a gun baldwin was holding fired a live round during a scene rehearsal their latest motion, baldwin's attorneys are arguing they couldn't mount an effective defense after the fbi destroyed that gun during forensic testing. all ones trial is set to short next month take a look at this video of fire crews in arizona battling a wildfire near phoenix. the boulder view fire has already burned over 3,000 acres with zero
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containment at least 60 homes in the scottsdale area have been evacuated as hot and dry weather fuels that fire democratic leaders are publicly backing president joe biden after that rough debate performance triggered calls for him to step aside. >> but what would replacing the president as the presumptive nominee look like? here, cnn's tom format hey victor, hey, isabel, primaries have been held. delegates committed president joe biden is the presumptive nominee for the democratic party, short of a true health crisis about the only way he loses that slot is if he agrees to step aside. but even then the process of replacing him would be full of uncertainty democrats could work it out with their convention in august, the way political parties used to various names would be put forward and most likely the more than 3,900 delegates from across the country would discuss debate and eventually decide on a new candidate. almost all of them are
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currently pledged to biden, by the way, and approved by his campaign. but what if they can't agree on a new choice? if it gets really nasty and grinds on weld in maybe the additional roughly 700 superdelegates deep-seated party insiders and elected officials could be key to settling the matter. they normally can't vote on the first ballot for president if it would change the nominee, but they can vote on subsequent ballots. but that scenario raises questions two, would voters who took part in primaries feel pushed aside and alienated from the party of a new nominee was chosen in this fashion, would a new choice be able to mount an effective campaign? and the roughly ten weeks from the end of the convention until election day, for example, would donald trump? agreed to debate a fresh face at that late date? and who would be that choice? there are several big names it could likely be considered, but not until the party decides how it feels about vice president
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kamala harris plenty of democratic voters and party leaders would see her as the natural heir to the nomination. and if she's not chosen, her disappointed supporters could also become a deep problem for the party in november for now, biden's advisors and other top democrats are pushing back on the whole idea of him dropping out. but that talk keeps elbowing in. victor, isabel, time forming. thank you. it is the most pivotal presidential election in decades in iran. we're going to take you laugh to tehran for an update on the tight race and what this means for the u.s. stay with dr. sanjay gupta reports the last alzheimer's patient, july 7 aid on cn once yes sleep i o,
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will. >> pursue. victory at any cost i did not think they would be so eager to die house of the dragon streaming exclusively on max news. and this is coming to us out of iran. there will be a runoff in the presidential election between the reform candidate and one of the hard-line challengers. >> now, this is happening after none of the candidates got at least 50% of the votes, which is required for an outright win. the election is being held to fill the spot of president ebrahim raisi, who died in a helicopter crash back in may. cnn senior international correspondent frederick pleitgen joins us now from turron fred. good morning to you. who made it to the runoff. and what happens next? >> hi, there is about what's actually quite remarkable that
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the reform candidate to masoud pezeshkian did really well in this first round of the election. essentially what the moderates had been telling us is that they believe that they would need a massive turnout or large turnout in the first round of elections. for him to be able to make it to the runoff round. however, the turnout was only about 40%, and yet he has managed to get with by far the most votes than any other candidate. he has 1 million more than say you jelly, who is the next runner-up and whom you'll be facing in that runoff election. now, masoud pezeshkian is advocating for better ties with western mr. nations, better ties with the west as well. in fact, iran supreme leader ayatollah ali khamenei, he said that he's quite skeptical of politicians whom he believes want that too much better relations with the united states, then you have a huge julie, who is gonna be the gentleman that he is going to be running against. he came in a second in the votes so far he said as that he wants a policy in the spirit of ebrahim raisi that president who was killed in that chopper crash, a little over a month ago. and that
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would mean a really tough line towards israel and a really tough line towards the united states. of course, we know that iran and israel in the past couple of weeks can very close to an all-out war that could have also had massive consequences for the us assets here in the greater middle eastern region. so these two are going to be facing off against one another and please open who could decide that election or that runoff election for themselves. it's certainly is the case that while masoud pezeshkian, the reformer, got the most votes more people actually voted conservative in the first round of the election because there were three conservative candidates who were running. however, the big question is going to be turnout in the second run-off round in the election. who's going to be able to mobilize their basis to actually come to the voting booth hey, a significant election to keep our eyes on fred pleitgen in that on. thank you so much for your time. tropical storm beryl is moving across the atlantic this morning and closing in on the caribbean meteorologist allison
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chinchar is tracking it all straight ahead. get cnn this morning, stick around tomorrow on the whole story. short ban was an american waters dive into the debate between concepts fischer and sharp gutters. story with anderson cooper tomorrow at eight and don't miss discovery sharpening starting sunday, july 7 priceline helps families say, but 60% on family-friendly hotels. >> so many great trips we might just leave here with another vacation baby. >> i'll take it easy. paris harris and u2 for motor to help. lisa wasn't alito gueriniere happy you will mate to find inner peace we remained
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start your will. i trust and we'll dot com and make it count. celebrate, go four is in america thursday, july 4, x 70s on cnn closed captioning brought to you by thunder shirt, constant gentle pressure for a calmer pet if your dog suffers from fear of thunder fireworks, separation, or any other anxieties, thought her shirt can help thunder shirts find it retailers like pet smart and petco as a new wave of covid that's hitting the u.s. just in time for summer. >> and infections arising in the hottest parts of the country, cnn's meg tirrell has more on this well, we often see a summer bump in covid rates in the u.s. and we are seeing that right now as well. experts think this could be because the hot weather forces people inside into the air conditioning. and we're seeing this bump maybe a little bit earlier this year, than we've seen in previous seasons. and we know that we've been dealing with a lot of hot weather typically that comes ahead a bigger wave that we see in the
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fall and the winter of covid. so we'll see if we see that this year as well. but the cdc tracks this through a couple of different metrics. one is emergency department visits and other is hospitalizations and another is deaths from covid across all of those measures we are seeing bumps and the cdc data of between 15 and 25% in the most recent weeks worth of data. but it's really important to put that into context when we have doing that is to look at wastewater virus levels of the covid virus across the u.s. by that measure, the cdc says they levels of the virus are low nationally. they are rising fastest and these sounds and the west. but if you look at the graph over time, they're really coming off. one of the lowest levels over the last couple of years. so they are still low really relatively speaking, where the virus is rising, the cdc has a map of about 38 states where it's rising or likely rising. and those are really all across the map. now cdc advisers met last week and they recommended that everybody over age six months get an updated covid vaccine
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this fall, the vaccines will be updated to more closely track with more recently circulating variants of the virus. cdc also recommends everybody get an updated flu shot this fall, everybody over six months. they point out that more than 75,000 listen people died from covid in 2023. and about 45,000 people died from flu. and the most recent season. so these are serious viruses and they say that getting a vaccine can help protect folks all, right meg, thank you very much. knew this morning a storm system of the atlantic has strengthened. now has a name, tropical storm, beryl, and it's threatening the caribbean and sad time of the year or the storm now brings a threat of heavy rain and hurricane-force winds through the island. let's get right to cnn meteorologist allison chinchar allison were already in the bee's it's june. is this a sign of what's to come this hurricanes? a lot of people asset. so yes, i would like to make the point that on average, the second named storm doesn't happen until july 17, so we are ahead of pace there. this also is
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likely to become a hurricane in the next 24 hours. we don't get our first hurricane until usually august 11th, so both of those a little ahead of the system, but a lot of that has to do with those incredibly warm sea surface temperatures. so let's take a look at where the storm is. now, you can see it is just east of the windward and the leeward islands sustained winds right now about 50 miles per hour. it's testing up to 65. now again, this far east, it's it's very unusual to see us storm form this far east into the atlantic especially this early in the year. but as we mentioned, a lot of that has to do with the incredibly warm sea surface temperatures where that storm is located. it's about three to five degrees above average, so just warm enough that it's allowing these area, this area to fuel some of those storms. now as we go forward into the next 24 hours, we do anticipate this storm to get up to a category one strength. then from there it's going to continue across the windward islands and head into the caribbean sea, likely adding some say jamaica, the dominican republic, up towards cuba. now,
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after that, and a lot of people wanted okay, but where does it go after that? we simply don't know. it's too far out and there's too many other factors. but at this point yes, it could continue on to areas of mexico believes honduras, or it could make that right-hand turn and i want to make it very clear that is what storms normally do. they aim poleward. so normally the pole is to have them go to the north, but we just don't know what's going to happen with this. once we get past, say, wednesday of this week, but certainly something to keep an eye on. and it's not the only thing we actually have two other systems that we're keeping an eye on. this one just behind barrel has about a 50% chance of development over the next seven days. this other one that's expected to cross the yucatan peninsula has about a 40% chance of development. so all of those likely to have to keep a close eye on chris and debbie or the next two names on the list. one thing to note though as barrel slides, it's way because it is going to strengthen. you've got a lot of islands that are going to have the potential to have those tropical storm-force winds. so that's 60, 70 mile per hour winds, not out of the question for multiple islands
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to end up seeing some impacts from now in terms of the rest of the country we're also keeping an eye on that incredible heat across the southern tier and also a line of strong to severe thunderstorms. it's expected four not only today, but also tomorrow. so you can see the too de, stretching here mainly for today, we're looking at the great lakes region by tomorrow that shifts ever so slightly to the east, really main focus along the east coast boston, new york philadelphia, washington, dc, all looking at that potential for those strongest severe thunderstorms and still dealing with all of that heat just doesn't feel like it's ever going to go away across the south. >> know, it's got us into to coal that he all right. thank you rain spicy atlantic hurricane season already all right. well, some democrats or sounding the alarm after president biden's disastrous debate against former president trump, right here on cnn could we see a contested convention? we go in depth a little later on cnn judge rock down i
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ice, 242424 with jake tapper weekdays at forms cnn the field of meteorology. there was no season more anticipated and feared than hurricane season every year from june to november millions of people find themselves in the crosshairs of these massive and often deadly storms is week's episode of violent earth focuses on some of the most impactful hurricanes. cnn's chad myers tells us more about what we can expect in the 2024 season we know is going to be rough, but i want to expect it all house flooded. it just started going deeper and deeper and by time we were walking out, we were mid thigh those who. have lived through hurricane that has undergone rapid intensification are often
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shocked by its speed and strength. rapid intensification is when a storm's maximum sustained wind speed increases by 35 miles per hour in 24 hours or less and it could be a significant part of the 2024 hurricane season with both record warm ocean temperatures and developing lead nemea, it means essentially that one day you can look at a storm. it could be a tropical storm, maybe a category one hurricane when you wake up the next morning and it's up to category four or five for the strongest hurricanes that have ever hit the united states, the high-end category four is a category 5s were all tropical storms or less, three days before landfall. one example of dramatic rapid intensification, hurricane ian in 2022, which took more than 100 lives across florida and the southeast i've been here since 1965 in this this is the worst hurricane that i've ever been through. >> i was working at midnight shift when i got on shift, it was a category one to hurricane by the end of the shift, we had
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the aircraft in there and exploded up to category four. >> there's gonna be some huge waves with this. i was working in the morning shift that de and clearly saw the storm intensify overnight. i also warned of a slightly shifting track to the right of the center of that cone. a time to evacuate was quickly closing and i knew this was going to be bad. >> we tell people don't just check the forecast on one day and wait a whole another 24 hours to check it again. you really do have to stay up to date when you live in a hurricane prone an area 2024 has the potential to be a devastating hurricane season. noaa has issued and above-normal atlantic hurricane forecast with up to 25 named storms, eight to 13 potential hurricanes and four to seven of those becoming major hurricanes. now is the time to prepare for all the tropical hazards from storm surge to wind damage, to inland freshwater flooding. all hazards will be in play this year with flooding possible hundreds of miles from the coast, far away from any landfall chad myers,

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