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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  July 17, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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other. what happened was they one of the officers noticed that an individual had not just one life, or two knives, and then proceeded to yell out to them. the vigil to drop the knobs, dropped the knives because he was confronting another person on the street officers then rushed towards the individual, continuing to say, drop the knife, drop the knife don't engage. you essentially, he disobeyed the officer's commands and then proceeded to launch at the individual with two knives there has been some criticism because they milwaukee police officers, but as you were explaining, they were doing a routine sort of gathering and then happen to come upon this what's your reaction to just what do the. >> anger around this right now i understand where some of the anger has come from because they were not local police officers. >> but in my conversations with officers, including local police officer because there's any officer any officer in that same situation where they witnessed somebody who's going to cause death or serious
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bodily harm to somebody with a john or in this case with a knife, not just one, but two knives would have taken the exact same extra preserve life very quickly. >> donald trump did call yesterday. >> he did what he said. >> mr. trump was very gracious in his call. we wanted to talk about the security and how police he was with that and that's what the call was about. >> thank you so much for your time. thank you, kate. back to you brian. >> thank you so much for that and thinking to the mayor for his time as well. we've got much more. we're going to contract that new hour cnn news central starts now and top of the hour, i'm kate bolduan here in milwaukee, wisconsin back inside for day three of the republican convention here in the convention hall. today we are standing by for the, we'll call it the second most important speaker of the week to take the stage behind us,
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donald trump tomorrow, we'll be speaking tonight. the vice his vice presidential pick, jd vance steps into the spotlight with what is likely the biggest speech of his political career so far. it's vp night here at the convention and vance is now just hours away from his first and first for some and reintroduction to some republicans and democratic voters alone like speaking to the republican hopefuls faithfully that are in the hall, but also it could be, he could be setting the tone and the stage for his future face-to-face with the current vice president kamala harris cnn's alayna treene leads us off this hour. she's joining us now. alayna, you have new reporting just today about what he plans to say, what he wants to convey in this big speech. what are you learning well, that's right, kate, i spoke with someone who helped work on his remarks and they essentially told me that this speech is going to focus on his life story wurie, his biography, and i don't think anyone would question that he
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really has had an incredible journey. >> he went from someone who grew up in a very poor rust belt town in ohio. he had a pretty unstable childhood. his family struggled with opioid addiction, but he went on to become a marine to go to yale law school two who work in venture capitalism, be successful businessman. he was a best-selling author and then of course he went into the senate and only after a year-and-a-half in the senate, he is now how been picked as donald trump's running mate. so it is a pretty remarkable journey. again, he's only 39-years-old, so he's still fairly young now. i also think what's important to keep an eye out for kate is the undercurrents that have been percolating within the republican party. jd vance is really seen as someone who could be a torchbearer of the maga movement. and i'm told when i've talked to donald trump's campaign, they've, they've said that that's actually something that has been important to the former president. he wanted to pick somebody who he thought could carry on the movement that he
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has started. and really keep discussing the political agenda, the america first agenda that donald while trump has really drilled into all republicans minds even beyond the end of donald trump's own political career linda also taking a look, a quick look back at last night, it was like rivals night on the stage five of trump's former campaign rivals with a resounding embrace. >> and endorsement of donald trump from the stage and their speeches. i mean, he was sitting there watching it all play out. what are you hearing from his team? how they feel about how that went last night? and the message that was conveyed well what happened last night is exactly what they were hoping for. >> they really wanted to have donald trump's former political foes, people like nikki, haley, ron desantis, those that he had attacked viciously, but also had attacked him viciously and had argued they may not ever vote for him or that he doesn't belong in the white house
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again. they wanted them to come up on stage and say, you need to elect donald trump. i think nikki haley, in particular was very effective and kind of remarkable to see her switch from saying that she didn't think donald trump it was fit to be president once again, to her applauding him and saying she's endorsing him. take a listen to what she said our country. is at a critical moment. we have a choice to make for more than a year. i said a vote for joe biden is a vote for president kamala harris after seeing the debate everyone knows it's true if we have four more years of biden or a single day of harris our country will be badly worse off for this sake of our nation. we have to go with donald trump
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now, kate it is interesting as well. >> i think what donald trump's campaign is also trying to do is target those more moderate or conservative leaning independent voters. nikki haley's voters in november, that's really core to their campaign strategy and what they think will be a very close election. and what we saw nikki haley did was give her own voters permission to vote for donald trump in the fall yeah, she sure did in that speech very directly. >> it's good to see you, alayna, thank you so much. joining me right now here in milwaukee at the side of the convention, republican senator tom cotton of arkansas. he had a primetime speaking slot on the convention stage last night are you up their senator and then saw you sitting with the president in his family box as well. thank you so much for being here. thank you. let's talk about jd vance. i've heard a lot in the leadup to his night tonight of one he can appeal to working class voters he can appeal to suburban women don john donald trump junior
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saying he can appeal to young voters it feels like a lot is being put on him for his appeal, appeal, appeal. what do you think is most important that jd vance should do for this campaign? >> well, i think americans are going to love jd vance and his wife usha. and there are beautiful kids. they're going to love his story. i think he'll appeal to all americans. i mean, this the land of second chances and jd vance, as we just heard, had kind of a tough upbringing. his mom dealt with addiction, his father wasn't really president. he was raised by his grandparents. he wrote a bestselling, wonderful memoir about that. i think a lot of americans can identify with the struggles that young jd vance went through. he got into the marine corps. he said that that helped learn help teach him the maturity and the discipline to be a strong contributing member of our society had tremendous and to success at law school and finance and then went into politics. i think the american people are going to love jd vance in his story. i think they're going to be able to see him as someone who can understand the struggles that hard-working americans go
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through every day it will be very important counselor and adviser to president trump one thing i want to ask you about what about jd vance and his agenda, his career and his record in the senate so far is he really has become the most vocal opponent of us support to ukraine that at least, at least in the senate, i mean, track the things that he said with vance joining the ticket do you think ukraine or nato allies should be nervous that us support for ukraine could dry up. >> what is the message that sentence? >> no, i don't i mean, president trump has always been strong in defense of ukraine. the reason why ukraine was able to win the battle of kyiv in the early days of this war is because president trump sent them the javelins and other weapons. they needed something that barack obama and joe biden had failed to do. one point that jd vance has consistently made with which i strongly agreed is that we need a much stronger industrial so in manufacturing base, in this country, so it's not draining these crania. he's concerned
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as am i, as are many republicans that if we have war in europe with ukraine, if we have war in the middle east with iran and all of its proxies from hamas and hezbollah and outlaw rebels in yemen and we have china threatening war in taiwan that are current defense industry in our manufacturing base cannot support all of those wars and our defense as well. that's something that we have to fix. something i know that president trump will fix its just things that i've heard him say like, i don't really care what happens to ukraine one way or the other, that it just doesn't square with what i know is that bipartisan support that exists for ukraine in the congress. and when it comes to if that's the place that a vp comes from and joins the ticket. what happens with that when it comes to, obviously it's donald trump's ticket, president trump has said from the beginning that vladimir putin shouldn't have invaded ukraine, that this was an unprovoked war regression, and that he wants to see it brought to a peaceful conclusion. >> but he's also said that he's going to support ukraine as well. and again, the thing that jd vance is concerned
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about that we should all be concerned about is that we've led our manufacturing base in this country atrophy to the point where we may have to make hard decisions. i'm not worried at all. i know at jd vance believes in a strong and competent america, the way you are strong and competent is to have a healthy, prosperous economy with a strong manufacturing base that makes stuff, makes defense materials, make stuff for our economy. that's what he wants to bring it. that's what he campaigned on when he was running for senate in ohio. that's what he's worked on in the senate or over those last year-and-a-half. and i know that that's what he's going to help president trump do on the assassination attempt. >> i was saying that there's an all-senators unclassified briefing, phone briefing later today. you're on all the relevant committees have you received any update that you can have you guys received any information about what's known or not no. >> not really. kate just to be frank, since the assassination attempt on saturday, we've been an obsession. i haven't been there a classified phone or classified space. i don't have the critical classified details. i've heard the reports
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that the administration said they've had a threat on president trump's life from iran. that sounds like something iran would do. there are several former members of donald trump's administration who still have bodyguard prior to this day because of iranian death threats i am concerned again about the lapse in security planning on saturday and that if what we saw saturday was the enhanced security detail that president trump had because of the iranian threat the senior leadership at the secret service really has a lot of explaining to do and we need to understand why that lapse happen again. not to take any way from the bravery and skill of president trump's detail and all those officers and law enforcement officers who helped protect not just the president, but the crowd as well, but the senior leadership, the secret service has some serious answers to provide that you're also on judiciary and president biden, we have reporting that he is seriously considering publicly endorsing major reforms the to the supreme court including among them chief, among them, term limits for the nine justices pushing for it, even talk. there's even talk of trying to pursue a
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constitutional amendment is that something you would support? >> know, i think our supreme court is constituted. well, it's been like this for more than 100 years. president biden doesn't like some of the decisions that court has issued, but i would point out that this court is not a partisan court. they've had many nine nothing decisions this year. they've had split decisions that don't break down cleanly over ideological lines, but you have a court is a court that follows the law, applies the law to the facts justice scalia, one of the great justice of all time, famously said, if you don't sometimes disagree with your result as a judge, you're not judging, right? and i think most of the justices on this court would in fact disagree as a personal matter with the opinions they reach, but they reach them because that's the right decision on the law and on the facts. those are the kind of justices that donald trump appointed when he was president for four years. if he's elected again, those account justices don't point again in the future. >> it is the supreme court hugely important when it comes to who is chosen as president. and it definitely it seems that a lot of people do believe that
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politics has seeped into the court these days, but this is why it's become a huge huge conversation as part of this election. it's great to see you, center. thank you very much for coming in. thank you. good to see you here. >> john, sara. >> all right. thank you, kate, her life changed overnight and now she could become the second lady of the united states, who is usha vance? a closer look at the wife of trump's vice presidential pick jd vance and misleading and flat-out false claims are daniel dale back again for a fact check of some of last night speakers at the republican national convention president biden is making a strong push to try and secure support among minority voters. how he's doing so ahead tomorrow live from milwaukee, former president trump accepts his party's nomination for the nation's highest office. >> jake tapper and anderson cooper lead cnn special live coverage the republican national convention, tomorrow at seven on cnn if you have generalized myasthenia gravis
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show the world how good i am. >> i'm trained all over the globe and that's what you're going to see an awol whole different be bc we wednesday night dynamite tonight at 8:00 on tbs in an exclusive interview with cnn secret service director kimberly cheatle now says her agency was solely responsible for security at the site of the attempted assassination of donald trump. >> cheatle also responded to exclusive cnn reporting on increased security around trump that came after intelligence on a pause possible iranian assassination plot targeting trump with all of our protectees, we're constantly monitoring the threats that are out there and we design our security plan based on that i also, depending on the venue and the environment that we're in. and on that particular day a full advance had been completed, but this is also why we are doing an internal review and we look forward to the external review as well. and obviously, if there are things that we need to change about
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our policies or procedures or methods. we are certainly wanted to do so the services they hit increased security surrounding trump before the saturday rally, sara. all right. cnn chief national security analyst and anchor jim sciutto is joining me now with more on this. jim, what are you learning? i know there were sources telling cnn that no indication that the gunman at saturday's rally had any ties to the iranian plot. but what, what are you bringing your reporting to be clear? >> yes the attempt on saturday is not tied to this information, but this information about an alleged iranian plot against a former us president, current candidate for president is truly alarming we should put some context here that this is a foreign state and adversary of the u.s attempting to take out a former and possibly future leader of the united states. and it's interesting here because going back to the year 20 20, when you'll remember the u.s under the direction of donald trump, took out qasem soleimani in a
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strike in iraq at the time sources told me that irans retaliation might not come in weeks or months, might come in years. or it's attempted retaliation and if the information behind this plot is true, if the intelligence is correct, that would be years later and quite a brazen attempt and not the first time remember, john bolton trump's former national security adviser. he faced his own thread. he still goes around with security today because there is iranian plot against him. there is an iranian plot against the saudi ambassador here in washington, not american, but that plot aimed to take them out with a bomb at a restaurant here in dc. i mean, that speaks to what iran might be willing to do, right? to carry out its intense and interests abroad. and i will say this iran is denying any connection, but, but listen to their statement they said the following. these accusations are unsubstantiated and malicious. from the perspective of the islamic republic of iran, trump is a criminal who
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must be prosecuted and punished in a court of law for ordering the assassination of general soleimani. iran has chosen the legal path to bring him to justice so even in the denial, sara, they point to the cause or at least the theory cause of this plot, that this was and attempted or at least an alleged plot to carry out retaliation for that strike and we know the reach of iran. >> you all you have to do is ask author salman rushdie about what his life has been like and what happened to him being stabbed multiple times can you tell us about this new bulletin that is also come forward after the assassination attempt on donald trump's life from the fbi and the dhs, what do they warning of? >> they're warning of a couple of things. one, they're warning about the specific dangerous of outdoor rallies. outdoor rallies are just harder for them to secure. and this is a message that have been passed on before from those in the secret service. donald trump
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likes outdoor rallies, but they're fundamentally harder to secure than indoor events. so that's one in piece of this. the other pieces, they are deeply concerned about retaliatory attacks in response to this that those on the extreme right wing extremist groups might, at some of them, frankly, who are buying some of the worst conspiracy theories floating around out there that perhaps this was an inside job, right? they might then target security services or even those tied to president biden. in part because of those conspiracy theories in retaliation for this attack, they're talking about lone actors, hoax bomb threats, swatting, attempts to attack election related infrastructures. you see there, and leaking of officials, personal information and what strikes me, sara, looking at this warning here, is that all of those things there are things that have happened, right? extremist groups have used these methods to go after election workers, to go after, you may remember there was an
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armed attack on an fbi office right? in the past. so the basis of this threat doesn't come from nothing. it comes from tactics they've already seen and tactics they fear might be used again now, it bears repeating that the shooter was a registered republican as was his father, where he got the gun. jim sciutto. thank you so much for your reporting on all this. appreciate you this morning. >> all right. this morning, the trump and biden campaigns and erase to secure a minority voters and elon musk moving to spacex headquarters out of california. what he says was the final straw cnn is live from milwaukee as republicans unite behind their nominee, his vp, and their plan to take back the white house follow cnn for complete coverage that we public in national convention coverage continues. >> all week on cnn and streaming on max i love this moment when the audience knows the show's about to begin. >> a great show tells a great
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demographic in a key state he will do the same with latino voters shortly. cnn's priscilla alvarez at the white house. priscilla, what's the plan? >> well, look, john, these are two voting blocs that have shown waning support for president biden. so he is trying to shore that back up with this stop in nevada, both appealing to black voters and latino voters, but he's also tasked with navigating a quite delicate political moment. the president really starting the camp pain again in earnest just yesterday after letting it sort of sit on pause after the attempted assassination of former president donald trump on saturday. so yesterday remarks really focused on policy versus attacking the former president personally and also extending prayers to the former president on the policy front though, he made the point that his record has been better for black communities going after four example, the former president's remarks on black jobs. take a listen to that i love his phrase, blacked job a
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lot about the man at, about his character full trying to win a black job is it's a vice president united states. >> i don't want to apply chavez the first black president now the president also. >> talked about his record on health care for the black community he talked about the trumps are trump's response to the pandemic. and today we'll hear more of an extension of all of those arguments as he appeals to latino voters, but he will also be making i'm announcements on immigration, including a date for when those spouses and children of us citizens who are undocumented can apply for legal status. remember that's an announcement that he made last us month in an attempt to appeal to those voters. and then to he'll make an announcement about the department of education and proposing a rule to help low-income dreamers it's in daca recipients get the funding that they need to go to school. so look, all of this is an
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attempt by the president to get these rotors behind him as he looks toward know november. but all of these stops to come with the increased scrutiny from members of his own party about whether or not he has what it takes to be the candidate and the democratic nominee. so all of this is certainly high stakes, not only in shoring up those voters, but also in convincing members of his own party that he is up to the task under the microscope to be sure priscilla alvarez thank you so much. kate and joining us right now on all of that is cnn political commentator, former communications director for hillary clinton, karen finney, and jason osborne, former senior adviser to the trump 2016 campaign. >> hello, friends. good morning. they give are waking up early. let's start with what priscilla was talking about and what she was and what she was highlighting that were hear from president biden in his appeal to black voters. but every night here the convention, every theme you've seen a very direct appeal to black voters here at this republican convention. what how
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much does that concern you? is it too? is there a level of freakout that even losing a you know, a fraction more of black voters, which are so key to the coalition what it could mean. >> well, look, i think we understand that you can't take anything for granted and we've saw the president, former president trump, i should say, made a run for black voters in 2016, made around for black voters in 2020. and we also saw that in 2016, hillary was not actually able to pull together the full coalition that she needed. and we've got to make sure that doesn't happen in 2024 the challenges, it's sort of asymmetrical because former president trump doesn't have to do much and he gets a lot of credit for doing outreach to black voters. voters. and he's looking to really add 2% in the right places. and that is a big deal that could, that that
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could present could be a big deal, but i will say that i've been really pleased to see the biden harris campaign. i mean, they started outreach to black and brown voters last year, and it has been and part of building the ground game means you have the opportunity to have an ongoing conversation rather than what democrats in the past had done, which is show up close to the election and say, well, hello so i think that's also been really important. >> how much, how much hope for you putting you bet in the house on wednesday over. it's being the deciding factor for trial. >> i think it's very telling the fact that we're in mid-july and the trump campaign is actually looking out at all the different demographics that traditionally haven't been with republicans, whereas the biden campaign is still going back to solidify their base. so the trump campaign, i think has done an incredible job of just getting his message out there, explaining that under his administration previous administration that black unemployment went down. yeah, i get it. that biden's unemployment rate for black americans have, have gone down
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even further. but the point is, is that donald trump made a concerted effort to appeal to all americans. and he's going to do that again here in the speeches that you've heard have been pretty impactful. i mean, these are americans from all walks of life that have been impacted by the policies of the current administration. >> but i have to tell you, i very much agree with what president biden said yesterday at the naacp as a black american, i was more terrified during the trump administration then, in many times, in my life as a person who has lived in the south and has experienced racism because the language that former president trump uses poisoning the blood that actually comes from jim crow. and that's sort of one drop of blood. even last night from the state age when you heard people talking about immigrants, illegal aliens, and sort of the nature of that language. it's harsh and the hits people's ears very harshly. and you've
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got the president today speaking at that one of those conference, where again when we talk about immigration reform it does matter to a majority of americans that you're talking about humane immigration reform? yes. be tough at the border, but we're not talking about mass deportations. we're not talking about separating families were not talking about some of the harsh rhetoric that we've heard from president, former president trump. >> one thing that was also noteworthy in the speeches last night is that speaker after speaker took time and time and attention to going after kamala harris specifically in, attacking the biden administration. watch this kamala harris encouraged and enabled the criminals in the rioters. joe biden and kamala harris have spent your tax dollars trial questioning america's finances. joe biden and kamala harris. >> will they stand with the criminals of vote for joe biden
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is a vote for president kamala harris. camilla had one job, one job and that was to fix the border is this just in cases type of thing like what i want to lay the groundwork if she ends up being the nominee, if something happens is it's absolutely i mean, i think we've been we've had this discussion over the last couple of months about what happens if biden drops out or if he gets pulled out and i've been pretty consistent and i think many of my colleagues have have as well as it's got to be the vice president. >> i mean, how can you not pick anybody other than the vice president? so reminding people that, hey, there is that high likelihood that joe biden does not finish the rest of his term. if he was reelected and so i think we're making sure republicans are making sure that we're, that we're actually talking about who could actually be president. >> but she's been kind of, i would say, the butt of many of trump's jokes for years and we
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saw this pretty aggressively in 2020 and a lot of those attacks on her never went away. they went to it's dark, minors working with its worked with republican voters. >> yes. however, some of the attacks are typical racist, sexist tropes. the sound of her voice, her laugh she's not smart enough. she didn't earn it. we hear those kinds of tropes about women. a lot. instead, i think what you're going to hear from democrats, obviously is real excitement about kamala harris and what she's done. she has brought a lot of excitement to our ticket. actually, she is also doing she has very broad support wrong. the democratic party base particularly among young voters, african-american latino voters, and the work that she's done to lift up reproductive freedom from ivf to access to contraception, to access to abortion has really given her a unique opportunity to talk to women voters, particularly those suburban women voters, that trump is trying to read just what i
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would say. >> i don't think she is that appealing to all those different groups that you're talking about? if we're actually having a discussion right now about who else could be the presidential nominee for the democratic party well, as i think some of the criticism of her is somewhat well-deserved because you have gaffes all the time. i don't know who writes her speeches, but clearly, she's not talking i'll also what i've seen crystallized since i've been here is you can, you can focus on appealing to in broadening your base and being big tent when you've got unity and everyone is unified behind one candidate and that's the problem that democrats are having right now. >> they've got a conversation of like, well, you're not talking about commonly harris talking about other april because what's going on with the democrats right now they've got to get their house in order and do it real quick, which i mean, it's apparent in the polling and it's apparent in the conversations that were clearly having, but stay with me stay with me thank you, guys so much. >> alright. so coming up for us, the wife of trump's newly minted running mate has now been put in the national
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want to come if he does face we'll take bigger house of the dragon streaming exclusively on max so she could be the next second lady, the united states. and this just send me the breaking news. we've just learned that usha vance will introduce her husband, jd vance tonight on stage at the republican national convention, where he is set to give the biggest speech of his career. cnn's brian todd is learning more about usha vance. he's here with us. good to see you, brian, along with jd vance introducing himself to the public, to the country, reintroducing himself too many will be his wife that's right, kate, what we can tell you about usha vance. she is a 38-year-old mother of three young children who seems to have effectively balanced that role with some impressive professional accomplishments. >> she grew up in a suburb of san diego. she was raised by parents who are hindu by faith. she married jd vance in 2014 in
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the state of kentucky, the couple has three young children. again, she is the daughter of indian immigrants who are hindu in their faith. she met jd vance when they both attended yale law school, they graduated from there. he did at least in 2013 now, usha vance also has clerked for two supreme court justices. she clerked for chief justice john roberts, and for brett kavanaugh. ivan all when he served on the us court of appeals. now from 2015 until just recently, she was an associate at the law firm, munger tolles and olson, where she handled civil litigation and appeals in sectors that included education, local government, entertainment, and technology. i spoke with a historian named kate anderson brower. she's the author of several books on first ladies presidents and vice presidents. she said, usha vance is ability to be comfortable appearing with her husband in public. that contrast with melania trump, who rarely appears with the former president in public. here's what kate anderson brower had to say we don't see melania trump humanizing her
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husband. that's really not the role that she's ever played. and so perhaps you should could be a really big advantage to this campaign, just like her husband as she's young, she's well-spoken, she's successful now in interviews, jd vance has actually joked about how tough it is for him to win an argument with his wife at home saying that she uses so many facts and so much logic that he simply can't win a debate with her at home. >> kate at my prepare them well for a debate with kamala harris brian todd. >> thank you so much, much more to learn and sea of jd vance and his wife, john all right. with us now, political reporter, ian war back in march, you profile jd vance for political magazine and just released a new piece titled, are republican voters ready? >> for the nerdy radicalness of jd vance? >> and it's great to have you here. these are great articles and what i liked most about it was the nuance you spent a lot of time with vance back in december or january of last year when you talk about the nerdiness, what do you mean? >> yeah, i mean jd vance, it's
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easy to forget this now that he's a star on fox news and has developed this pugnacious attitude online. but this is a guy who came to national prominence as a memoirist, right? he was spending his own personal life into political store is right he, he hit the national circuit as lecturer. he's fancy themselves and intellectual and he's a smart guy. he's engaged with ideas. he reads these niche conservative journals. he's going into the buzzy conservative conferences. he said himself, i like to engage with people on an intellectual level. so when you talk to him, he's got this sort of cerebral attitude that's a bit unusual for an elected policy. >> and the stuff he was willing to go back and forth with you wanted was like railroad cars are, you know, obscure european history. yeah. yeah. he's he's got a pretty astounding range of interests and he's willing to sort of teed off on niche areas of inquiry that you wouldn't expect from a politician. >> so how much of it comes from the core of who jd vance is and has always been. and how much
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of it is. what appears from the outside to be this transform jd vance who wanted to become a us senator, needed to get in with trump world to do so. >> yeah, i think you've seen different identities for vance, right? as you said, he can be the attack dog when he needs he can toe off with mainstream media to defend trump. he can, he can talk smack online, but then he can turn around on a dime and go into these rooms with conservative writers, conservative intellectuals, and hold his own. he's earned respect and admiration among those people. i think a big question for the campaign is which version of him we'll see. we will see will we see? attack dog au really see this sort of more cerebral intellectual jd vance, it might be the sea both at different times yes. >> one of the things that's most district you asked him about being trump's running mate back in december, january. >> it was a different time, but what did he tell you that he told me then that, you know, if the opportunity arose to help trump, he would but he was enjoying his life in the senate. i mean, remember he's only been in the senate for
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about 18 months. this is first elected position as a truly meteoric rise for someone as young as he is au, before the on election day. so i think back then it seemed kind of like a long shot. we hadn winnow the field down to what it was earlier this week, but i think it's been clear over the past couple of months that he was positioning himself to take that role. that was often our ambitious. do you think he is and i asked this because one complicating factor for jd vance, if trump wins, he becomes vice president is he is immediately the heir apparent well, we saw on the stage last night a whole lot of people who think they should be the heir apparent. i'm not so sure trump wants an heir apparent, so that could get complicated in a hurry. >> yeah. i mean, i've been hearing from prominent conservatives for six months that they see him as the heir of the movement even before the vice president was on the table, i talked to people like steve bannon who said i have no doubt he will run for president one day, people like tucker carlson, people like kevin roberts, the head of the heritage foundation. these are
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all people who since vance entered the national scene have seen him as an heir apparent even before trump in fluid him as a vp the option it worked great to see you here everyone go read these articles. the first one is really telling because it was so far before this version of what we're seeing now. so it's good history, greatest here. thank you. so thanks very much. >> all right. thank you both. there were dozens of claims about crime immigration, and president biden's record at the rnc last night, how many of those were actually true? daniel now bringing his fact checking power to the table next, also, elon musk is moving all x's to texas. why he says it's time to reload reload so kate space x and x out of california merrick, his choice 2024 he is brought to you by vip guard high, true law. >> and vip guard if you have
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businesses tomorrow, live from milwaukee, former president trump accepts his party's nomination for the nation's highest office. jake tapper anderson cooper, lead cnn special live coverage. the republican national convention tomorrow at seven on cnn every weekday morning. >> here are the five things you
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need to know to start your day. >> cnn's five things with kate bolduan, streaming weekdays on man why we do have breaking news, former trump white house adviser, peter navarro, has been released from prison. >> he'd been serving a sentence for contempt of congress. cnn senior crime and justice reporter katelyn polantz is with us now with the details. kaitlan, what are you learning? >> john peter navarro is out of prison after spending for months at a prison camp in miami. this is a former trump white house adviser who had written in a book, spoken publicly about his interests, held helping trump overturn the election results. and then when in congress subpoenaed him to testify and to provide records, he blew him off. he didn't do it. and so he was prosecuted. he was convicted by a jury and he was sent to prison for contempt of congress. he always said that he believed trump didn't want him to share the
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information with congress and since then, he has positioned himself since his conviction, he was positioning himself as essentially a martyr for trump, a person who was caught in this overreach of congress he is now traveling to milwaukee or at least we expect him to show up in milwaukee after leaving that prison in miami today, so that he can speak at the republican convention and further discuss this issue that he has been caught up in. he says, this issue of separation of powers and congress and people going after donald trump and others. but i have spoken to his prison consultant several times about what it was like for peter navarro in prison. he did do his time all four months of it. he worked as a law library clerk and from what i have heard, other inmates would high-five him. he was quite liked inside john it'll be interesting to see if he speaks
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at the convention in what he says, katelyn polantz. >> thank you so much. there. >> alright. speaking to the convention, speakers at the republican convention made false and misleading claims throughout last night, many focused on three things, crime, the economy and immigration things very important to the american public. cnn senior reporter, daniel dale is here with the facts and the fact check. let's start with some of the claims made by house leadership on violent crime listen to this to biden's violent crime crisis fueled by democrats pro pro-criminal sanctuary cities, and defund the police please policies like we have seen in my home state of new york, we can't survive a dramatic increases in violence, crime, and drugs that the democrats policies have brought upon our communities all. right what are the actual statistics? the actual numbers here when it comes to crime the actual numbers show that violent crime and crime in general have declined to under president biden, they have not
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increased as speaker johnson and other speakers claimed or suggested, we have official data from the fbi that shows violent crime fell 6% and in 2023 and another 15% in the first quarter of 2024, there were even bigger declines in murder at 13 and 26% respectively. and here's the key fact, violent crime and murder are both now clearly lower than they were in 2020. president trump's last year in office? no congresswoman stefanik claims of a biased biden violent crime crisis, i guess is subjective. what constitutes a crisis? but she certainly did not say that there was a violent crime crisis under president trump when violent crime numbers were actually higher it's a great fact check. >> all right. arizona senate candidate kari lake made this claim about elections and immigration these guys they are full, their full of bad ideas. just last week, ruben gallego voted good to let the millions
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of people who poured into our country illegally cast a ballot in this upcoming election is that true? that's nonsense. it's not even close to true. there was no house vote on whether to allow people who cross the border illegally to the legally vote in this election. non-citizen voting is illegal in this country already at is punishable by possible prison time, possible deportation, and it very rarely happen happens. we're talking a tiny, tiny, tiny percentage of votes. what the house of representatives actually voted on was whether to add a proof of citizenship requirement for voter registration shin and guy a go and other democrats voted against it because they said, look, this is already illegal. it already basically never happens. so a proof-of-citizens hip requirement would just be adding additional burdens on people trying to register to vote for. essentially no clear benefit all right we also heard from lara trump, trump's daughter-in-law she talked about this state of the country under the trump administration. >> here's what she said let's not forget what life actually
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look like under president donald trump. >> record low unemployment rates for african americans, hispanic americans he is asian americans and women what do you say to that i say that those claims aren't wrong, but i think there are some important context here. so there was a record low in black unemployment under president trump felt a 5.3% in 2019. what his daughter-in-law did not mention there though, is that that record was beaten under president biden. it fell to 4.8% of new record low in 2023, it's a similar story for women's unemployment. a. yes, there was a low since the 1950s under trump, it fell to 3.4%. very good, while it three 3.3% under biden in 2023 for hispanics, there was a tie, a record low of both 3.9% under both administrations. now, for asians, president trump still claimed the record it was to port excuse me, 2% at its low, though the biden era did come close, fallen to a low of 2.3%. >> okay. >> then you had house majority
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leader steve scalise, focusing on american energy in his speech last night, here's what he said let's talk energy they've are rotated the american energy dominance that president trump delivered. >> we will end the democrats assault on american energy once and for all and you say on that claim, i say that the data shows that the united states under president joe biden is producing more crude oil than any country in the history of the world has ever produced. >> there was a world record of 12.9 billion barrels of crude per day in 2023, easily beating the trump era high of about 12.3 million barrels let's per day us crude exports also hit a record high us natural gas exports are also high. so this claim is vague. democratic assault, eroding energy dominance. you can and offer to specific a fact check. but i think this overall narrative that democrats are crushing us energy is just not borne out by the data. >> it has

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