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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  July 5, 2024 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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you know what, as long as people like the song, i don't care. so took me a lot long time to get here and you guys have kept me here and i'll always be grateful for my job. my band room. it's just me and up here i'll stage in front of you yeah, it's on a beautiful day let's do the course again. here we go wow, organs your, blank hi the labour party
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secured a majority of seats in parliament and it appears to be on pace for a landslide night. people here and around the country have spoken and they're ready for change. white house officials and president biden himself, stumbling on damage control. >> the president or party is our party leader and the president has told us and he was very clear you back there that he is in this to win this hurricane beryl weakened slightly after battering jamaica and the cayman islands, but that was only temporary. >> there will be significant rip current risk all the way from florida all the way down to mexico hello, welcome to our viewers joining us from all
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around the world. i'm max foster. it is friday, july the 5th, 9:00 a.m. here in london where changes sweeping across the political landscape is 14 years of conservative rule come to an end. the labour party has secured a majority of seats in parliament and it's well on its way to securing a landslide victory in thursday's general election, its leader keir starmer, will become the next prime minister, taking over from rishi sunak. both men meeting separately with king charles later this morning, starmer spoke to to an enthusiastic crowd at london's tate modern museum, telling them it's time to put country first and party second we did it you can pay for it. you've thought for it? you voted for it now, it has arrived change begins. now shortly before
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that, mr. sunak conceded that labour has won this election and took responsibility for that loss. >> he has served as prime minister prime minister since october 2022. the labour party has won this general election and i've called to keir starmer to congratulate him on his victory today, power will change hands in a peaceful and orderly manner with goodwill on all sides. that is something that should give us all confidence in our country's stability and future cnn's international diplomatic editor, nick robinson, live outside ten downing street in london. and we've got to rough sense of how things will play out there now we do. in the next few minutes, max, we're expecting jeremy hunt, the outgoing transfer, the check-in, a step out from the doors just behind me here at number 11, downing street. he will be leaving expect the prime minister to come back here and in an hour or so
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expected to give that speech, go off to meet the king hand in if you will, his resignation to the king and within a few hours were expecting keir starmer to go meet the king. the king will invite him to form a government keir starmer will come here and we'll expect him to speak outside of number ten before he goes in and then his day gets really busy. there's a lot of official duties to administer briefing buyers, cabinet secretary, a trip to the nuclear bunker underneath the building here i'll have to write in handwriting to the commanders of the four nuclear warhead carrying submarines of the uk to tell them in case of extremis to carry out their orders he wrote, then of course, be inviting the former shadow members of his cabinet into become members of his cabinet. and that will happen throughout the afternoon. so a very, very busy zhi de that
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speech he gave at 5:00 a.m. this morning is an indication, i think have just how tired he might be but by the end of the day, but he said in his campaign speech, how important it was for him on fridays to be able to share dinner with his family by late afternoon. so he will even though moving in here are arriving into his office and what will become his home, begin to put order as he wanted so you back into his country, back into the country and into life is promised change for people is promised people that if they work hard, play by the rules, they will get a fair chance. they will get respect. he really wants to invigorating the public of this country a greater if you will, appreciation of the politician on what they can deliver. he certainly understands that he comes in at a time when there is a low ab in peoples expectations in people's
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feelings about about politicians here. and perhaps that reflects the low turnout around 62%, the lowest in over a century yeah that's significant, isn't it? the other thing that came out here is that there was a lot of support for the extremes. you had reform an ot, you also had the green party doing pretty well, but at the same time, the center ground really held its position and that perhaps marks the uk out from some other countries in europe it does at a time when there's sort of antipathy towards politicians and disappointment that they haven't delivered better for their publics during the ics stream, economic situation of the past couple of years, uk was in double-digit inflation or the country's have also witnessed harm to their economies the price of living going up for so many people, where many countries have gone to the during the center ground has held him, but it's a message not only for starmer
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but also perhaps more so for the conservative party that reform on the right political rider, if you will, or the conservative party have challenged them i'm have under mine them in some seats taken, seats offer them in some areas in the country, are really going to challenge the narrative for the conservative voters, going forward in this country. and that's something a challenge at the conservative party has faced, but it has been those smaller parties reform. interestingly, we've seen the nationalist party and wells played qalmri, do well, retain four c's despite border changes in scotland, the nationalist party there, that by the way has been in power for some time. and this i think represents a loss of faith in their leadership abilities have seen crushing defeats north of the border in scotland. and interestingly, in northern ireland, the unionist party is at a hardline union this part is a particularly the democratic unionist party have done poorly. this these
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represent changes around the fringes if you will, if the uk are not hugely dramatic on the impact of a governance of the country because some majority are so big. but it does represent the way that people's votes have been changing and they have changed significantly this time, max okay. >> nick in downing seat back with you as the prime minister arrives back there it's pack his bags olivia sullivan is the director of the uk in the world program at chatham house. thank you so much. so when we look at the uk in the world of the back of this election what do you see changing here? because we do see the center ground holding up, but we that it covers up a lot of movement beneath, doesn't it? >> absolutely. i think what we've seen in this election is so decisive victory for labor, but support has been bleeding to some of the extremes. a lot of people have been talking about reform. and of course about the greens. but the
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other, one of the other big subplots has been that some major labor candidates lost votes to candidates who took a strong position on gaza, were pro-palestine. that might well, it's not been a huge feature of the campaign, but for a new labor government that might mean there's some real pressures to respond on a very tricky he foreign policy issue that divides labour's constituency. >> so you have a landslide victory which gives us a lot of power in this place but you also have quite a low turnout. and actually if you look across the board, the number of votes for labor, the mandate isn't that broad? and they've also got very little money to work with. so how powerful is this government and this prime minister well, you're quite right, and i think the other thing i would add to that is how powerful a day in the wells, right? >> so the labour party has said that they're going to be quite consistent some of the foreign policy positions taken by the previous government on ukraine, on china, they've echoed very similar lines, but this isn't the only election happening. we have the u.s. election in november. and if that delivers a second trump term, there'll
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be big question marks about continued american support the ukraine, which will mean really difficult questions for starmer about whether he can galvanize and work with europeans to fill that gap all or respond to that shift? so at the same time, there's an election happening in france. and as we all know, that might mean we don't know yet, but a weakened macron's who's his so far been a very strong european leader, will starmer have to step in and fill that gap, especially on issues like nato in ukraine. it's psalm has been quite a domestically focused politician is talked a lot about the economy cost cost-of-living, the nhs, but he's going to have some big foreign policy questions quite soon in this parliamentary time to protect them, the u.s. and eu separately. he's pro-european summer and he wants to have increased ties with the european union. as you say, the french debate really plays into that because marine le pen isn't talking about a frexit anymore because she saw what happened here. but she's going to disrupt the eu from within.
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she's been very clear about that. if she gets a big mandate on sunday you're quite right and there's a lot of disruptive right right-wing european political forces and leaders who are being there, not necessarily as on board with the eu consensus on ukraine or other big foreign policy issues. >> so starmer has said and one of the clear positions he has put forth on foreign policy is we need to get closer to the eu especially in terms of security defense, foreign policy, and the sort of undercurrent of that is we need to do that because america is becoming more unpredictable to some degree. but that is going to be trickier as the eu just to the right, or starts to fracture politically in some ways, the story we've seen here domestically, or it feels like we're starting to see here that the mainstream party is a slightly losing their base that's happening in a lot of european countries as well. we're seeing new political forces. and that has an effect on foreign affairs. it has an effect on those countries relations with others and with the european union. so it's going to be complicated.
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>> you expect to a labor leader what less? well with donald trump if he gets into power that a conservative leader, what damage does that do to the uk going forward? and how might it affect america's relationship? she with the uk and europe well, stem and trump, but obviously not ideological bedfellows, right? >> there are, there is some signs that starmer and david lammy who were assuming will be the foreign secretary of though all of that is not confirmed yet, have clearly seen this coming and they've spent some prime time trying to build relationships with republicans and with the right in america. so david lammy visited a lot of republicans. he spoke to jd vance, the author of hillbilly elegy about bear shared christianity i think what starmer and lammy will try to do is appeal to american conservatives by showing that the uk is not a free rider on us defense spending, that the uk hits nato spending targets on defense that the uk is very staunch and taking
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responsibility for european security but we'll have to see if that very transactional approach will work in other ways, trump could be very confrontational and unpredictable on china, on the middle east and on trade tariffs as well. >> but we're not sure about david lammy yet then will we be some has been clear, some people talking about david miliband we've had lots of things. david miliband, douglas alexander, i mean, i wouldn't speculate out today. they'd probably where we probably will find out today and lammy has spent time meeting not just leaders in the u.s. but leaders in europe as well, famously at the d-day celebrations. so it's kind of difficult to see what will happen olivia sullivan. thank you so much. thank you so that's politics on this side that you've antic, on the other u.s. >> president, joe biden's still trying to control the fallout from his disastrous debate against donald trump. turns out key, maybe it may be as simple as getting more sleep because mr. biden, observe the fourth of july holiday with vice president kamala harris at the white house on thursday, briefly address speculation. they might exit the race after
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someone in the crowd appeared to offer him support. i've learned you got me, man i'm not going anywhere all right. cnn's priscilla alvarez has more white house officials and president biden himself or stumbling on damage control. and a week after that poor debate performance we've got to be honest about that, so we need a reset, we need a course correction. we've got to acknowledge that this was not just one bad night, biden telling democratic governors gathered at the white house wednesday, his plan is to stop scheduling events after apm, so he can get more sleep. that comment according to sources, leaving some governors privately frustrated. biden was also asked about his health by hawaii governor josh green. according to the new york times quote, mr. biden replied that his health was fine. it's just my brain and attempted humor according to his campaign chair, that fell flat with some
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in the room despite their public support, the president is our nominee. the president is our party leader, and the president has told us it was very clear back there that he is in this to win this. >> the white house is evolving reasons for biden's bad debate are also raising eyebrows. officials now contradicting the white house press secretary, saying biden was seen by his doctor days after the debate. >> he did not get checked out by the doctor. it's a cold guys. it's a cold and i know that it affects everybody differently. we have all had colds and so though he was not checked by the doctor, a white house official tells cnn biden had a brief check, not a physical after the debate in private biden has acknowledged that the next few days are critical, packed with a high-profile interview and two stops in battleground states and appealing directly to black voters in a pair of new interviews and a bad night and the fact of the matter is that you know, it was i screwed up.
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>> i made a mistake. that's 90 minutes on stage. look, what i've done in three 3.5 years are still alvarez, cnn, washington trump meanwhile, mostly laying low, but a covertly film video shows the foreign presence speaking about the debate, and mr. biden that were shot shortly after cnn's debate last week and obtained by the daily beast. >> the comments were made on a golf course and came as trump asked a group of people how they think he did in the debate however they do with a dna broken down pilot well, in case you missed that, trump refer to present biden as a quote, old broken down pile of crap when asked for comment on the video, the trump campaign referred to referred cnn at least to a statement from wednesday in which campaign managers called biden quote, week fail, dishonest, and not fit for the white house. >> we should add trump to
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posted the video on his truth social page. now, britain's next prime minister says, change begins now, just ahead, we'll see what the business world thinks of keir starmer, the labour party its policies as well, are they affordable? plus conditions are deteriorating across the yucatan peninsula, right now, when we come back, the latest as major hurricane beryl approaches mexico's coasts also ahead, iranians head to the polls in their presidential runoff to choose from two candidates who could hardly be more different from each other thinking of banking in africa thinks today's fast moving, fast changing world, you need a financial partner that understands your unique expectations of bank with presence in major financial centers the labeling platform to facilitate seamlessly whenever wherever however bank with best-in-class financial solutions from a superb
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stoke our.com, right away, or scan the qr code on your screen, order now greatness hertz but with care you can keep chasing it that's tylenol that's care without limits our top story today voters here in the uk have handed the conservative government a thrashing defeat in national elections. >> labour will win in a landslide, taking more than 400 seats in parliament. the party's leader, keir starmer, will become the next prime minister, ending 14 years of tory rule, the outgoing prime minister the rishi sunak, accepted blame for his party's drubbing. he's led the conservative since boris johnson resigned in october 2022 joining me here in london, as cnn business journalists, hanna ziady i mean, this was a debate as it was in every
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country in europe, probably across the west about the cost of living how did keir starmer win that? huge issue in this election, as you point out, the economy at the center, people still struggling to pay their bills. keir starmer promising change for people which i think a lot of british people are desperate for given the state of public services, given waiting lists on the nhs, given that they living standards have been squeezed in recent years by anemic economic growth. so just i'm a promising to fix ailing public services, promising to hire 6.5 thousand more teachers, promising to cut nhs waiting times with 40,000 more appointments all of which cost money and that is what the government does not have. the government has a debt burden approaching the size of the economy. public finances are stretched and strained. and so the degree to which a customer can really deliver on these promises remains of a promise. i think some people would say yes, i think some people would say that he hasn't been honest about the trade-offs that are going to need to be made between tax he says in spending
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either texas will need to go up. all spending will have to be cut. he has committed not to raise taxes on income on vat on corporations. there will be some other tax hikes on wealthy individuals which, which labour party says will help pay for some of these things with the nhs and education but i think that they are going to be some tough decisions i can do is hope that the economy grows and the tax money increases off the back of that. >> how can he do that within the restraints that he set for himself? >> that's exactly right. i think labor is banking on a uplift economic growth quickly, and perhaps materially. they need business to invest. business investment has languished in the uk since really the 2016 brexit referendum, which introduced a lot of instability and uncertainty. and that is one thing that the labour party is promising to deliver for businesses certainty, stability clarity around policy, and i do think we could see if they get that right. we could see an uptick in business investment is certainly a lot of
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businesses waiting to see what happens. labour has promised to fix the planning reform in this country. so if they get that right and that unlocks a construction boom in infrastructure in housing, then we could definitely see an uptick to economic growth, but i think label will need that to deliver in terms of the european contexts, the spacing the same challenges as all of these west european countries. isn't he? but we've now got a center ground government, whereas other governments in france, for example, probably germany, certainly austria, maybe the netherlands, italy is already there. they're all moving right who's in a better position? to grow? economically because it might be an interesting situation where brexit might ultimately help the uk couldn't it? because they've got more freedom over policy. >> i think it's an i think the uk is presenting its stability in a sea of uncertainty as you point out in all these countries where there's been a lurch to the right and
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certainly in some of those countries, the right is making quite big promises on tax cuts in france, renal pins, national rally promising to cut vat on a range of goods and then the phi lift, promising to increase the minimum wage and freeze the price of certain goods. so there's a lot of nervousness that, that will just add to these swelling dip burdens in those countries and bases are very nervous about that i think the uk probably had a lot of freedom over it's ever its own policy before brexit. i don't know that it needed brexit to get that uncertainty breaks. it has been very bad for investment and for economic growth. the long run impact of brexit, according to the office for budget responsibilities forecast, which is the government let's go watchdog. likely a 4% hit to uk gdp over the long run. so brexit hasn't delivered the economic promise that i would full circle to the prop reason probably why the tories have done so badly today amongst a string of leaders coming and going. thank you so much, hannah now maybe 140
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million people across the west south and mid-atlantic states of us are under heat alerts currently unlike the uk more than a dozen high temperature records were either broken or tied yesterday and it's only going to get hotter, especially in the west where the worst of this historic long long-duration heat wave is just about to get underway and is expected to last throughout next week bringing with it temperatures tend to 20 degrees above average mexico, bracing for major hurricane beryl. it's we can temporarily but has regained strength and is now a category three. once again the president urged residents of toluene to seek shelter and higher ground. the outer bands are now starting to lash mexico's yucatan where it'll make landfall in the hours ahead. but even after that danger isn't over because meteorologist chad myers brings us this to explain clearly this is going to make a big impact
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here for the yucatan peninsula. without a doubt, along the beaches, we will get storm surge. here's an awful lot of water under this storms still and we do know that it's going to get into the bay of campeche and eventually possibly even into the gulf of mexico, whether it gets far to the north or not, there will be significant waves with this. and so for all of this holiday weekend, there will be significant rip current risk all the way from florida all the way down to mexico, there will be quite a bit of rain as it comes on shore and mexico or eid the south texas, that heavy rainfall will be right on top of where we've already seen heavy rainfall from the tropical storm a couple of weeks ago. here's a european ensemble forecast. they'd computer model and then they change a few things, make it farther north, make it a little bit weaker, a little bit stronger. on 50 different successive runs of this model. and you want to look for where this whole thing think is kind of congealed, where you have all of the lines close
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together. you look at the ones to the right because it's a possibility. you look at the ones to the left because obviously that is two, but you want to see where most of what we call these members of the european ensemble are going. and the big question is how much of this high pressure is left? the north of it to push it to the west the big story here is that beryl was a major hurricane category three or higher for four days and six hours. the average date of the first major hurricane per year is september 1. let that sink in a little bit because that's how warm the water was there in the caribbean scary numbers. >> now, more from london on the labour party's landslide victory in parliamentary sections, just ahead. plus what this labor victory could mean for the special relationship to the uk and the u.s. will labour leaders work with another possible trump administration?
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and there's no catch. it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. scan the code now and ask about the bosley guarantee we are following breaking news here in the uk with a labour party is won a huge victory in
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parliamentary elections. >> keir starmer will take over as prime minister in a couple of hours. it will be the first time that labour has led the government in 14 years in his victory speech, starmer promise to get to work straight away, addressing voters economic concerns. who replaced conservative prime minister rishi sunak, the tories had a dismal showing. former prime minister less trust defense secretary grant shapps commons lead a penny more than all lost their seats in parliament. take a listen to what voters had to say going into this election we really want to change it's absolutely essential this country, i feel there's going nowhere. >> the whole thing about brexit if you had incredibly competent, hard-working government, may be some advantages could be had. but with this lot absolutely. i just, i can't believe it happened in this country as well first time voting i think it's as a policy student as well. i think it's more important. now than ever. i
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think this so many problems internationally, nationally and locally. and the best way that we can get these solved is by getting rid of the present block and getting an a labour government that knows what's it, what it's doing, what it's about nefise a new conservative government tomorrow, be very concerned for future britain the uk's shadow foreign secretary says the labour party will work with former u.s. president donald trump if he defeats president biden in november, david lammy notes that both the uk and the u.s. are democratic countries. that cooperate successfully in areas like intelligence and the military here's what the shadow secretary set to itv mather, the american people decide should be incumbent at the white house. if we do get over the line tonight, i look forward to working with tony blinken and joe biden over the coming months. and then we'll see who takes the helm into
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jeep palmer joins me from london, his professor of international politics for city university of london. thank you so much for joining us. i mean lammy been quite confident there that he's actually going to get the job. we don't know that he's gonna get it. dewey, there's even talk of dated milad back and getting it keir starmer hasn't been clear. it's been clear on who's going to be the finance minister. he hasn't been clear on his going to be foreign minister, foreign secretary but either way, we know that labor is going to value that us relationship because it's so central to say so many of our institutions already absolutely. >> i mean, it has been going now for many, many decades since it's after world war it is fundamental to both states. the united states and britain and it has been part of the way in which britain has read read three formed itself after losing an empire. and its relationship in nato through
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the orcas, the alliance in the pacific through the five i's system and so on is very, very strong so in practice, it doesn't matter too much which party is in power or who is the particular foreign secretary there's a great deal of continuity and i think one of the problems actually, people asked about continuity, but actually the biggest problem is change. and the change, if you can embrace that change like you're the people, the ordinary people whose voices you play just a few minutes ago they are fed up with the fact that things are going in the old usual directions. and they won't change at home. and they see that they are not happy with what's going on in the world as well. in regard to ukraine and gaza and many other things too. it's the question is not continuity. but what changes or they're going to make. two actually cope with the way in which the country has gone. europe is going, america is going and the global south states are relating to
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the west as well. so i would say there are massive challenges ahead and i wonder whether continuity is the call. they should be making. it should be, we're going to go for change and actually it's to cure people much better at home. and secure the world a better, because at the moment, it looks like the way in which it's going to go is like a threat oriented that strategy in the world, which is china's threatening, we need together the west and others together, rather than an opportunity in raising strategy. so i think there's some massive issues so you take relation the relation. and that's why the special relationship becomes so important, particularly to the uk, but also to the united states who needs this key international ally that always supports it and any sort of military operation, for example. but we do now have a prime minister that's gone to the left or we might have a president and the u.s. he's going to the right, how do you see keir starmer and president trump getting on and working together well, president trump
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isn't present. >> trump just yet. but i agree president trump has trouble with every pardon leader. if they don't agree with exactly the way he he wants to express himself in the world. he had problems with treason. me, a conservative but historically it hasn't made too much of a difference. but president trump, if he wins, is a different kind of character. and i think they're probably up to have a two level strategy to deal within what is going to be in public where they're going to have to challenge some aspects of what he says because he does have a view if you like, which is not as internationalists, as historic or policy establish in the u.s. has been, he's going to attack leto. he's going to cozy up to perhaps to russia. he's going to say a lot of things which are quite wild and exaggerated. and the language and rhetoric is going to be firing and so on. so they're gonna have to deal with him public in a certain way to distance
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themselves from that. but at the privately, they're going to have to carry on because as i say continuity is really the big issue that they seem to, the way the see the world but changes what actually they need to embrace i'm to some extent, trump does represent a kind of changed attitude which is now reflected in many other states as well, which is nationalism looking at your own state in relation to globalisation and the inequality that's driven which has caused many of the problems inside the retinal in the united states as well. so to some extent, trump is onto something but the way in which he expresses himself can be very difficult diplomatically to deal with okay entity top hamas. i thank you so much for joining us with your analysis there of what wendy brits see is a special relationship. i think other countries feel they have with america as well as, as britain wraps up its parliamentary election voting it is actually in full swing in
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iran's presidential runoff, the country supreme leader ayatollah ali khamenei cast his ballot right after polls opened earlier. this morning, iranians face a choice between two polar opposites for their next president, reformist lawmaker masoud massoud pesach qian, who is, who won the most votes in the first round, which was last week and hardline reformer or former nuclear negotiator, saeed jalili. now, dozens of other candidates were banned from even entering the race by iran's powerful guardian council. so some questions fred, about the choice that the public was allowed to make, but they've got a pretty clear one now, haven't they they certainly have a pretty clear one now and there were a lot more candidates who were actually in the final round and log take place in the first round of the election as well. >> it was six candidates. and having a moderate in that field is certainly something that i think spice things up in the first round of voting definitely does. so again now and you're absolutely right
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the voting max is fully underway, are ready. we know that said jelly lee, who is the conservative candidate in all this. he has already cast his vote and apparently masoud pezeshkian who you were just saying as the moderate who is also running, he apparently has also cast his vote as well as wanted 60 million people we're actually eligible to vote in this election. and that's sort of one of the big factors that the iranians are definitely looking at, certainly the supreme leader at iran is looking at because they say turnout is very important for them. not only because of course it is something that's key to the election, but also because it legitimizes their political system. and earlier here today, as we've seen there before, the supreme leader ayatollah ali khamenei was the first to cast his ballot, and he once again, urged people to go to the polls. here's what he said. >> about a, boom. >> of course, the effort of the people should be more because they need to finish this task or and hopefully we'll have our president tomorrow morning show
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so hopefully they'll have their presidents tomorrow, as they said, that's exactly when we are expecting the results to come in. in the probably early afternoon tehran time of saturday. and the choice as you've mentioned, max, there are some differences between the candidates, so huge illegally is of course a conservative who has said that he wants to continue as he put it, the path of ebrahim raisi was of course, was the president who was killed in that chopper crash on may 19, which will mean a tough line towards the u.s. and even tougher line, of course, towards israel. and then you have masoud pezeshkian, who's calling for better relations with countries in the greater middle eastern region but also with the west. so certainly some nuances there with a politicians differ on key issues is going to be quite interesting to see in the end who comes out on top? max fred pleitgen, that with you as you get more results from that fred pleitgen in berlin. now the french government says, it'll display a deploy additional
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30,000 police and security officers for sunday's parliamentary election runoff. there it comes after a wave of election linked violence. this government spokesperson and her team were attacked. boss campaigning on wednesday a politician with the national rally party was assaulted in the market in southeastern france. and the republican party candidate said, left-wing campaigners attacked him in sharable president emmanuel macron has even warned of civil war. if the extreme right or left wins, sunday's runoff signs of progress in the gaza ceasefire talks. finally israel indicates it's ready for more detailed discussions around bringing the hostages home. the latest developments in that region. next i love milwaukee cnn is lai from milwaukee as republican tonight behind their nominee, his vp and their plan to take that the white house follow cnn complete coverage, the republican national
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give them a round of gaza ceasefire negotiations is expected to begin in doha, possibly in the coming hours,
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israeli officials are set to meet with qatari mediators to discuss the specific details of a broad strokes framework agreement with hamas, israel's prime minister authorized his negotiators to begin this new phase. after receiving hamas is latest response earlier this week, if successful, the torts could produce a final deal within a matter of weeks people involved in the talks on both sides have expressed cautious optimism. u.s. president joe biden and prime minister netanyahu discussed the negotiations and a 30 minute call on thursday, a senior us official said the two leaders seem to reach a breakthrough on elements of a proposed deal. soon as paula hancocks has covered the region extensively and you've also covered these talks as they come and go extensively. this really does feel different polar or am i wrong it's tricky, max, i mean, it does feel difference, but i should caution we have
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been here a number of times before when it appears as though the talks were on the cusp of a breakthrough only to then stall ones it's again, but certainly we're hearing more positive notes from a number of different avenues at this point. >> we've heard from one senior biden administration official who says effectively a framework is quote, now in place, just a day earlier from an israeli source familiar with these talks they said that they were at the position it should now where they believed they were on the brink of this framework deal, they could move potentially to the next phase of the negotiations. and it does feel as though this is closer than we have been before. but again the torques have stalled over far less. we're getting more detail though about what could have been one of the main stumbling blocks, which is, as we suspected the the movement from phase one to phase two is a three-phase deal. in phase one, there would be a six-week ceasefire where you would have
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the elderly, the women, the wounded hostages released for hundreds of palestinian prisoners. and of course humanitarian aid being allowed into it's a, gaza and then it was supposed to evolve to phase two, which is where you have the other hostages, the male soldiers, for example, being released and of course that permanent cessation of hostilities, this has really been suspected to be the stumbling block a senior biden administration officials saying that they now have more agreement on that key elements. so during that six week ceasefire, they would be further negotiations between the two parties through the mediators to make sure that it could end in that permanent ceasefire and hamas has said that they're insisting as well on a complete withdrawal of troops from gaza that potentially now is in phase two not phase one. so these are all technicalities, but these details are really what has been de railing these talks
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over recent months. so suddenly it appears from what we are hearing from our different sources that that has been overcome to some extent, but we are also been cautioned that this is not going to happen within a matter of days. there is still details to be hammered out this is effectively the framework which is potentially being agreed on one israeli source saying it could likely still be weeks before a final deal is actually done. max okay. paula, thank you israel's government has approved one of the largest land seizures in the occupied west bank in decades. the area covers more than 1,200 hectares or more than 3,000 acres? of the jordan valley in the eastern west bank near jericho. the government issued the declaration last month, but it wasn't posted publicly until wednesday. the israeli rights group peace now says it's the biggest land seizures since the 1993 oslo accords the group monitors illegal settlement
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expansions and said the seizing of land makes it even more difficult to establish a palestinian state alongside israel russia says its lining up more troops for its military as the war in ukraine grinds on the state news agency says about 190,000 new recruits have signed up so far this year, which would be in addition to almost half 1 million who were reportedly recruited in 2023 that's happened as ukraine is losing some ground in the eastern town of show cvr officials say, ukrainian troops had pulled out of one of its eastern sections after russian forces destroyed their defenses. the town sits on the high ground so it's capture could open the door to more russian advances. ukraine says the pull-out was only a tactical decision and it's still controls the western part of the town. we'll be back in a moment homer glowed just
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you'll replace conservative prime minister rishi sunak, the tories had a dismal showing losing around 200 and 50 seats yesterday, july 4th was of course, independent state in the united states, the annual holiday where americans celebrate their liberty by enjoying picnics, parties, and concerts. and throughout the the u.s sometimes beyond it's always ends with fireworks as well. enjoy this look back of a spectacle
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the political fireworks about to kick off here in london with rishi sunak about to move out of the number ten will bring you all the movements here on cnn, max, awesome london, cnn this morning is up next for you good morning everyone in kasie hunt. >> just wonderful to be with
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