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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  July 19, 2024 2:00am-3:00am PDT

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it's friday, july 19, right now on cnn this morning i'm not supposed to be here tonight. not supposed to be here less than a week after an attempt on his life, donald trump back on center stage, his message unity that quickly veered into his divisive old ways plus the walls closing in on president biden, top senior aides now believe he might abandon his campaign and in not too much time, plus breaking news right now, mass outages worldwide, airlines, stock exchanges, and banks all being impacted. >> what could be behind it? >> all right it's 4:00 a.m.
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here in milwaukee, wisconsin, 5:00 a.m. on the east coast where we have a live look at hartsfield, jackson international airport in atlanta georgia, flights around the world are grounded this morning. major carriers including delta united and american airlines, all impacted facing a total ground stop. its due to a worldwide it outage. we are monitoring this situation. we had expected an update around this time this morning. we're still waiting on that, but we're going to let you know as soon as we do any updates as we get them. >> but it meantime, good morning, everyone. i'm kasie hunt. it's wonderful to have you with us. we are here inside the convention hall now emptied balloons, popped fluids scattered all over the floors. >> as we break down what happened last night where and we did hear from former president donald trump who of course had that brush with death on saturday. now triumphantly cementing his place as the leader of the
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republican party i proudly accept your nomination for president of the united states that of course was the beginning of a speech that spanned more than an hour and a half, making it the longest televised nomination acceptance speech ever. >> the speech beats the record that he himself set in 2020 and in 2016 before that, trump went into great detail about what he was going through, what was in his mind during the assassination attempt against him, telling us all why he gave that. now iconic fist bump pumped to the crowd that day therefore, i will tell you exactly what happened and you'll never hear it from me a second time because it's actually too painful to tell when i rose surrounded by secret service the crowd was confused because they thought i was dead and there was great,
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great sorrow. >> i could see that on their faces as i looked out they didn't know i was looking at now, they thought it was over but i could see it i wanted to do something to let them know i was okay. i raised my right arm, looked at the thousands and thousands of people that were breathlessly waiting. and started shouting, fight, fight, fight fight fight fight, the crowd started to yell that chance before trump could even get those words out of his mouth donald trump went on to honor the life of the rally-goer who lost his life that day on stage with trump during the speech where the helmet in uniform of firefighter corey comperatore which trump walked over to, embraced he kissed the helmet before he continued his speech a speech which his campaign says he extensively rewrote in
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the days following the attack to try to strike a new tone, one of unity but by the end of the marathon address, it was pretty clear that donald trump was back to business as usual, even going off the teleprompter numerous times and then once again claimed false, falsely, that the election was fraudulent we had that horrible, horrible result that will never let happen again the election result would never going to let that app. >> and again, they use covid to cheat he never going to let it happen again. we have people that are a lot less than fierce, except when it comes to cheating on elections and a couple of other things, then there are fears they're unifying that are joining me now to discuss margaret talev, senior contributor at axios mychael schnell, congressional reporter at the hill. lance trover, former spokesperson for doug burgum's presidential campaign and cnn political commentator bakari sellers is also with us. welcome to all of
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you. bakari, i'm going to come to you in a second. more normal hour over on the east coast here they're still cleaning up. i think a lot of the people on the floor probably been up all night, but margaret talev, let's start by looking at what trump did or didn't accomplish with this speech, because i will say my sense of it was that if he had stopped after that first section where he was talking so personally about what happened that day and buttoned it up and walked off the stage. it would have been a completely different reception than the one he ended up receiving after then continuing to talk for over an hour and-a-half kasie, the first half-hour was like the kind of masterful stagecraft that democrats are really worried about to be able to to frame and an energize and capture those kind of moments i mean, it was like the apprentice and the bachelor and five other shows all rolled into one like trump come the gate comes up
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in, trump comes out and it's all lights in his name is huge and then there's a fake white how set and like then about half an hour in it just starts to turn in the second half is maybe the only thing that gives democrats a window of hope, which is that he cannot help but revert to his own instincts about rambling and talking about himself often going after nancy pelosi and stuff. but i do think the way that so many americans consume media these days, you're not sitting down watching 93 minutes. you watch a few minutes and you're like, oh wow. and then you watch the rest on your phone and bits and there were 1 million bits and bytes to cut depending on what you're into. if you want to see hogan hogan roof bove, an a shirt, and that's why you're voting for president. you're going to get that one if you want to see someone who looks somber and circumspect than his has got his grandchild on his lap. that's the clip you're going to see it was pretty
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powerfully crafted and carried out until the moment when he went off and did his own thing? >> yeah. no. it and you could see where i was. we were actually sitting i was sitting right here as he was speaking stages. right. you can actually see the teleprompter. it's off at the moment, but it's a big, it's about the size of the team tvn. most people's living rooms now, right? it's huge and you could see it what just it just stopped for many years at a time was just saying the same thing as he's talking and talking and talking and mychael schnell, i mean, one of the things i noticed and if we're able to put up on the screen some of the wider shots of what trump did when he first i came out and was been talking about the assassination attempt. they covered the screens down here with some of those now iconic photos from the day. and when you watched him come out after he was in front of this, as margaret points out to me, was like a vegas mark key, right. with trump in lights and then he stops and he poses for we
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call them the snap pack right there. the photographers that travel with the president and both doug mills and evan vucci to the people who took these photos, were right there on the stage. you can see them in that wider shot. and trump quite literally stopped and post right in front of them, right? i mean, this was someone who you can see some of them right there. he's walking out pass them. eventually he stops and turns and lets them shoot him from mere feet away, right? i mean, this is the kind of thing that as margaret notes it gave us the instinct to stagecraft is kind of what trump, what trump is, what is, what is your reporting been so far? about the reaction to the speech and how this plays into this dynamic. >> i mean, i think that this gets back to the donald trump, who we knew before. he was president of united states. he was of course, he created the apprentice. he came up and television, he knows how to be a producer, and he quite literally produced this picture that everybody watched with the lights in the background. as
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you mentioned, he knows to turn to the cameras to get that perfect shot that he's looking for. the pictures that were shown from saturday shooting. it was such a striking image. i thought the one that was most striking was in for president trump is talking about the moment when that bullet whizzes by his ear and pierces his ear, and they put up the photo that actually shows the bullet moving through the air. it was such a striking moment and i was on the floor for that entire speech. i can tell you it was an aid bill on the floor for all four days of the convention. it had never been as quiet then that throughout the convention than it was during those moments when he was talking about the shooting. i spoke to a number of house republicans after the speech and i asked what they thought, and they thought that it was a fantasy. past six speech, that it was really touching when he spoke about his experience with a shooting, i spoke to 100 republican who said, they think that they saw that donald trump changed and softened up a little bit following the shooting over the weekend. now arguably were they just talking about the first half? probably because we've mentioned the second half sort of went into
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your marquee, typical trump crazy nancy pelosi railing on the media but again, going back to what margaret said, people are going to remember what they want to remember from that speech. and i think a lot of republicans are going to hope that it was just the first half when lance we had heard ahead of the speech that he didn't plan to mention biden's name, president biden his name at all. he ended up doing it more than once and then he said he wasn't going to do it again. what did you make of it? what are your hearing in your republican text chains this morning or maybe people, babies still up, maybe still up getting overnight. >> toffees, text chains. it's with my buddies. it's all about whole cogen and how he was paid for. if you're my age range that was like, oh, my gosh he did what he needed to do. right. and it's really it was not just about the speech last night when i'm hearing from operatives, i mean, republicans went into this week in a pretty good mood. they left last night operatives, you name it in a quite a jovial state you couldn't go to a republican operative who does house and senate races and said, sit down on a laptop and script for me
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what you would want to july of 2024 to look like, and they couldn't script it any better than where we are right now, given what is going on on the democratic side and where we are speaking of that bakari sellers, let me bring you in on that. we're going to dig into what's going on in the report and what's going on with the president at president biden in just a minute, but i'd like to get your take on the speech because chris wallace, host, sitting next to last night, i came on the air afterwards and said well, it looks like we have ourselves a presidential campaign again that democrats are going to look to that speech and find reason to be hopeful after a pretty tough couple of weeks, what was your view no. >> i mean, i respectfully have to throw a little water on what's on my colleagues are saying this morning, it was actually the best day for democrats in a very long time. it was there was nothing about that speech, which i think excited anyone who is watching very low energy born and it was, it was typical trump. i mean, this is the reason why trump is extremely beatable.
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what you saw was president trump has a very, very low ceiling and a high floor and he is a 43, 44% candidate. you see it in all the polls, it gets as high as 46. that's about it. >> and you see what the challenges and you see how beatable that donald trump is just from that speech i will also tell people that the rnc this week reminded me a lot of 2016 dnc, mainly because of the over-confidence and exuberance that was displayed. >> i remember in philadelphia, you had people who were picking out ambassadorships. you have people who were talking about their roles in the administration. and then we saw what happened november of 2016. and so while july has been a great pumpkin, publicans as they believe i'm not sure we actually elect presidents in july i haven't seen that done in america trump of trump last night, there was a lot of showmanship but people dig deeper than just hope hogan ripping his shirt off measuring
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the drapes is usually usually ill ill-advised. >> generally speaking. all right. bakari, stand by for us up next here. why widespread acceptance in the west wing. many of president biden's own people now believing that he can't win, will bring you our latest reporting plus wins and losses that historic week that was in politics that could have changed everything. and we'll get an update on our breaking news that global outage that's grounded flights and disrupted the businesses around the world getting older is part of the journey. >> even with worsening heart failure so when i had carpel tunnel syndrome, lower back pain, and shortness of breath, i thought that's what getting older felt like. >> thank goodness. i called my cardiology i have att rcm a rare but serious disease, and getting diagnosed early made a difference if you have any of these warning signs since
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including delta and american have been grounded here in the u.s. in europe and asia airports, bank's stock exchanges, all experiencing similar outages marc stewart. following all this for us from beijing. marc i will say this is the talk of a panel in between our segments about the politics that are going on here in the u.s what do we know about what's causing this and what's affected? >> right? kasie. good morning. first and foremost, i can't stress enough just how significant of an issue this is and the tremendous impact it's having on people's everyday lives, not only here in asia where i am, but also in the the united states. and of course europe, as far as why these outages, why this disruptions are happening, according to industry experts, people who watched these kind of things, they are citing an issue with the cybersecurity firm called crowdstrike microsoft is one of its clients we're still
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waiting official response, but that's what the industry experts are telling us. a big point of problem is with air travel. we know a lot of our viewers at this hour are getting ready to go to the airport if you are flying call ahead because there is more than a good chance that your flight is either canceled or delayed. this is of course impacting airlines and air travel across the united states with many domestic routes, but also internationally. some of the biggest carriers in the world, such as cathay pacific our reporting issues, klm in europe, reporting issues. this is extremely widespread. people are having problems even with the most simple of tasks, checking in on airport kiosks. so the problems with air travel are not only going to be in these next few hours, but we are definitely seeing the problems mount it's going to impact people, perhaps throughout the day, if not, the days ahead. so if you are traveling today, be prepared
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for some heartache and some hardship. this is of course, also impacting financial institutions such as banks. we heard of some problems at the malaysia stock exchange. interesting to see what is reported across europe. it's even having problems at grocery stores and grocery stores in australia chain there as having a problem for people to conduct some of their orders. i'm bringing that up because was a problem now, here in asia will likely be an issue in the united states. as the hours move ahead, the real problem though, really started here in asia around 2:00 just after the lunch hour when people started seeing balloon screens on their computers, that indicated a problem, it's now 5:00 in the afternoon, and these problems are still continuing so kasie, we heard on top of this, but i'm telling plane i'm just putting the information out there. it's going to be a rough day, especially when it comes to air travel indeed,
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while we've got thousands of people trying to get out of not terribly large airport here in milwaukee, wisconsin for this republican national convention. >> just one small microcosm of what you are describing mark really appreciate your reporting. i'm sure going to he back to you throughout the next two hours with more thanks very much. >> all right. let's get back to politics though. new this morning. it doom loop. that's how one leading democrat is describing the situation surrounding president biden's reelection bid list of democrats calling on biden to step aside only getting longer despite biden's public assurance and insistence really that he is staying in the race yesterday. senator jon tester, who is a key vulnerable democrat facing a tough reelection battle in a red state with the latest to publicly call on biden to withdraw from the campaign. and as those walls seem to close in, cnn is reporting, quote, more than two dozen sources familiar with the dynamics inside the west wing and campaign said there's now widespread acceptance that
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biden remaining in the 2024 race is wholly untenable it's still of course, uncertain what biden will ultimately do. but when asked whether the president is getting closer to dropping out, here is what one democratic lawmaker said it seems to be moving in that direction. i think there are still conversations being had, but look, the big change that happened just in the last 24 hours, as i think everybody is now getting the impression that the president and those around him are taking the concerns very seriously. and looking at the challenges going forward. and i think that is a very welcome development very interesting. >> bakari sellers, let me start with you on this what is your sense? what are you hearing? i know you're talking all the time with people in your party and there are so many questions buying about not just what the president is going to do, there does seem to be at least from
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my reporting and acceptance that he is going to be changing things. so it's also leading to all these other conversations behind the scenes about what happens next, the process of the democratic national committee. is it kamala harris, if it is kamala harris who's down on the ticket with kamala harris is it somebody else? can you bring us into where the conversation that you're a part of stan's yeah. >> i mean, i think the first thing is the president isn't going anywhere this weekend, 48 hours. i mean, i think that reporting you can you can call that not accurate. i mean, i've spoken to people who are around him in delaware, speak spoken to people in the campaign everybody will tell you that he's kind of dug in and that's just not something that's going to happen. let me also be extremely might not happen until it does i don't want i don't want to leave our viewers with the impression that, you know, let's not rule anything out, but i do take your continue. >> let me be extremely clear. like it's not happening in the next 48 hours i mean, people you've seen the reports that he's going to happen this weekend is happening, saturday is happening sunday. that's
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just not the case, but also want to be extremely clear about joe biden and why he actually gives democrats the best chance to win is because he's winning white seniors, white women, white college and white suburbs. and you've had turnout with joe biden. be with white voters at a number which is, 70% of the electorate that gives you an opportunity to win and all you have to do as buffer that with voters of color, and younger voters, et cetera the state of play is this. if joe biden decides to drop out the race, which that decision has not been made yet, contrary to what people may believe then kamala harris will take the reins and kamala harris has a legitimate shot based upon what we've seen last night with whomever she chooses as a running mate to be president of the united states. the convention is where the convention is, but i can also tell you this, that the donors who were putting pressure on an individuals, on leadership, et cetera to just be slowly intimate medical, political malpractice they're not going to drive the discourse in this party and they're not going to skip over kamala harris if joe
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biden decides to get out the race margaret talev. let's i take bakari's point. we love him. bakari, you're a great friend of our show i want a reality check a little bit because i think some of what i'm hearing is a little bit different than what bakari has been hearing in terms of kind of where hearts and minds are inside biden world. i know you've covered the white house for many, many years. what are you hearing and how do you understand? i guess what i would say the texture. i'm getting is that people who previously were reaching out to the white house, reaching out to the campaign in moments where the president was having a hard time, people that are allies of the president wanted to know what to say, how to go out and defend him. they're getting a totally different response or lack thereof from those people than they were in the previous instances of a new cycle like the one that we seem to be in now. >> and there are a few things that happened that led to that point there's the consistent directory of the polling, not just national polling of us
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adults, but of democratic voters there's the outreach by chuck schumer by nancy pelosi. but he came jeffries. there's the foreign president obama outreach also and despite the very tight circle around president biden, there is a growing understanding that you have got the enthusiasm among the republican base and a circular firing. a know we're not using those words anymore a shade it, a circular situation on the democratic side. and an understanding the weight of the responsibility that president biden does not want to be the figure who drags down not just his own race, but the control of the house and control of the senate i do think the conversation has turned much
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more to if not him, than who is vice president harris elected? able if she is electable, who's her strongest running mate? those configurations, i just think that's where things are going. and you're right. we won't know until we know but there has been a clear shift in the last few days. yeah mychael schnell, jamie raskin wrote a letter to president biden. >> he wrote it apparently before the assassination attempt of this past weekend, but we learned about it yesterday, along with over the course of the week, we've learned a lot about things that happened several days ago. it sort of tells me like they tried to do this tried to do all this behind the scenes. it didn't really work. so all of a sudden some of it started to become more public. the letter from raskin really stuck out to me. it's a long one and it starts out with just profuse praise for the president calling him one of the greatest leaders. >> and then ends with the reminder about what happened and to the red sox pitcher, the
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great pedro martinez, who stayed in too long and lost lost a critical game. >> at the end of the day. >> yeah, this is sort of the sentiment that we're starting to hear from a lot of folks that they're concerned that president biden's going to lose. but also even more than that, their concern that democrats could lose who could miss out on taking over the house with president biden at the top of the ticket. that's a what we're hearing a lot of these vulnerable house republicans and even vulnerable senate democrats. jon tester, a big name right there coming out and saying the president should step aside. i spoke to a house democrat yesterday who had some really interesting insights essentially, he said that it's talking about somebody like speaker nancy pelosi, former speaker nancy pelosi, who is sort of been quiet, guarded rather than what she's saying publicly, but behind the scenes, we're told that she's really maneuvering things to have biden rethink his decision. he said that nancy pelosi is a great vote counter. she worked really hard during her 20 some odd years in as a speaker and then as the democratic leader to win the match jordy she knows how it's
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done and clearly she is seeing that polls say that it cannot be done with joe biden on the ticket, which is why she's maneuvering behind the scenes, but he also had another interesting to say that the way to deal with a president is not necessarily to bombard them with this public pressure, but rather to work behind the scenes. so lawmakers have been trying to work behind the scenes to privately talk to the president about their concerns about this polling. some of it has spilled into the public. i think the big question is, as this gets, gases continues to drag on and as we get closer to the convention, will some of that private pressure begin to go public as a last-ditch effort. think this week is going to be a really interesting one where there could be some movement because the clock is running out for when that dnc is lance trover, her briefly, republicans, my colleague john king had a great graphic and our coverage last night that showed the amount of ad spending. >> the biden campaign in the millions, multiple millions of dollars. the trump campaign at aired about $33,000 worth of ads in the last couple of weeks. i don't have the graphic right in front of me,
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but when i was talking to john last night, he even said, well, that was a mistake. it was just something that they failed to get off the air because really they've just wanted to let, you know. they don't want to convince joe biden to get off the ticket because they really do want to run against him yeah. >> i mean, i was talking to a pollster last night who's pretty involved in a lot of different races around the country. and we game this out. i mean, i mean, i think the thinking is if joe biden stays in this race, i mean, he's taking the house and the senate and that is why you are seeing what they're doing. there's a reason they call it the doom loop that particularly in politics, it's because you're going like this cortex and you can't get out and the options they have are to keep joe biden take it could all go down. he kamala harris comes in. she owns the whole joe biden agenda, but if they don't choose kamala harris, it's like a nuclear bomb going off in the party and that's why they're calling it the doom loop, because it's really hard to get out of your enough, okay coming up next here we are. >> are continuing to follow that breaking news worldwide outages at airports and critical businesses around the world plus, before going off
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the teleprompter, donald trump's starting off his rnc speech last night with a message of unity in an age when our politics too often divide us. now is the time to remember that we are all fellow citizens. we one nation under god, indivisible with liberty and justice for all this tiny home trend not for me. >> this is more like it. the same goes for my foot work through i went hands-free with white fit sketch are slipping just step in and go without bending down or touching my shoes. white bit hands free sketches slip is your skin is ever changing take care of it with goldman healing formulations of seven moisturizers and three vitamins. for all your skins called bond well there's not been a retired governor. >> can do, but a president now
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with us will fani rio or insulin may cause low blood sugar. >> johnny and says really swell a little pill with the big stuff i'll read at morgan stanley old school hard work means bold, new thinking. >> to help you see untapped possibilities. >> and relentlessly work with you to make them real and alternative to pills, walter and is a clinically proven arthritis pain relief jail, which penetrates deep to target the source of pain with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medicine directly the source volterra and the joy of movement i'm alex marquardt in washington and this is cnn alright, for 35 am here in milwaukee, wisconsin. it is 5:35 a.m. on the east coast. you're looking live at philadelphia international airport as we follow breaking news this morning, a worldwide it outage impacting travel,
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banks, and businesses philadelphia, of course one of dozens of airports around the world experiencing texas nicole disruptions, flights worldwide have been grounded. we are going to continue to bring you updates on this throughout the morning. if you're flying delta american united, you might want to call the airline this morning before you head out to the airport. good morning, everyone. i'm kasie hunt. it is wonderful to have you with us we're going to talk politics now while we wait for more breaking news, one name notably absent from donald trump's acceptance speech for just the first 40 minutes. according to sources that i spoke with ai ahead of him delivering this the speech was rewritten in the past several days after the assassination attempt against donald trump to omit his opponents name entirely. the goal to try to strike a note of unity, but at one point former president donald trump just couldn't help himself from bringing up the other guy. >> if. you. took the ten worst presidents in the history of
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the united states, think of it the ten worst added them up. they will not have done the damage that biden has done, only going to use the term once biden, i'm not going to use the name anymore just one time. >> i wonder if he calls the other guy your excellency. i doubt it got the guy gave him everything well, that lasted awhile. >> our panel is back. margaret talib, i mean, i think the big question that i had going into this speech and it was something that his advisers talked about that you kind of heard donald trump allude to himself. its big question of whether he was a changed man after what happened on saturday night and candidly, i was willing to entertain the idea that perhaps he was just because this is the kind of event that really can change a person. he came very close to death and, and very narrowly escaped what happened to him. and there was some evidence on the stage last night that he was touching a different place
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a place we don't normally hear from donald trump however, most of the speech was a speech that like any that we might have heard from him over any of the last eight plus years that we have heard from donald trump, right? >> i mean, i don't know about his interior person. he obviously has children and grandchildren and he's a human being. that that may have changed in that moment. he may have thought about things or people that are important to him. but in terms of his political instincts from, from the showman start to the fancy policy talk at the end i think he's slipped right back into what was almost instinctive familiar pattern. and it really ended up there were moments where he did make overtures to all americans and he talked about how he wants to be the president for all american, not just half america, but in the end, it was a speech to the base. and it was a speech that i think i mean, it seemed like
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a very male show with messages for men first of all, it's and jake tapper use the word testosterone? yeah. >> what was going on yesterday and this convention as a whole, and i have to say i it seemed to hit it on the head that that's what that's what it seemed like and felt like and so i think part of the reason that he he didn't use biden's name except for the two times they've used it and then said he wasn't even use it is not just because he wants to rise above it all and turn over a new leaf. >> but because he wants to diminish or minimize the conversation around biden and make this about himself. and the other than two-thirds of this speech was really entirely about himself yeah. >> well, i mean, and pass the speech. i don't know guys in there if we have any v0 of hulk hogan. and what he was doing and maybe a little bit of sound of him in the background as we continue this conversation here
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he is. look, he goes ready. can we turn up? >> brother? >> i mean, mychael schnell. it's kind of like it was if anything, it was one of the iconic moments of the night. yeah, that's a lot. >> there's a lot going on there. there was a lot going on there. >> remember this was sort of like seen as a way to try to hype up the crowd. and then after hulk hogan, there was dana white and who is with ucf. so jeremy ufc's to sort of going to your point they're but just getting back to the conversation about is trump a changed man? let's also remember that his speech was loaded into the teleprompter and he largely followed it in the beginning when he was talking about the shooting and he did enter. but in some other details, there but as he kept going, he could could have just filed the speech, but he didn't and he went off speech and he went on these rifts about nancy pelosi and about the media and what have you so he's sort of went back to his
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typical self, right? he went back to what his what his sort of normal i can't they don't tip of my tongue, but what sort of his normal state, greatest state of being right. sits what he's sort of used to so he had the opportunity to follow the speech and just talk and then get through it. it was supposed to be around 70 minutes and ended up being 90 minutes. but he didn't and he reverted back to his normal standard self but bakari sellers. can i bring you in briefly on this? i mean as a democrat who was watching this i heard from a number of people who thought this was a good night for democrats, terrible for donald trump because of the way the speech kind of rambled at the end and kind of veered back into the usual territory it mostly because there were a lot more people people watching, most people in america probably aren't watching trump rallies on regular saturday nights this wasn't that far from what you would hear at one of them, but the audience was a different one.
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>> yeah. >> first of all, i think that one of the unique things that happened was the media as somewhat got a little been boozled late sunday evening with a couple of the interviews donald trump gave, i believe, new york post where they laid out this narrative that all of a sudden donald trump was a changed man and so we spent the first three days of the week talking about this change, man. >> they'd never really appeared. same most thick and so one of the reasons that democrats have to be decently excited is because the country was able to see what democrats know to be true. when you go out here and you see just the rambling man and one of the things that will also have to say about donald trump in that speech last night is that he looked old i know that we talked about it being filled with terror. really geared toward one group the aggrieved white men. >> but the fact is donald trump looks old. he looked like he lost a step. we've seen donald trump on the stage for the past eight years since 2015, since he came down the escalator at the same person and down the
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escalator, he's definitely a step slower and last night the rambling it was mixed in with some of the regular xenophobic rhetoric that he tosses out there every now and then the same old, same old and so we have somebody who's very beatable and that, that toxic show of masculinity last night not going to win over many all right, very interesting. >> all right, we've got to turn now at for a moment to our breaking outages worldwide that have caused systems to, shut down this morning. this is a live look at harry reid international airport in las vegas. it's one of dozens of airports around the world experiencing it outages that have caused delays. and a full ground stop in certain air for certain airlines, the faa says that flights from several major for us carriers, including delta, american and united airlines, are all grounded. and in europe and asia, airports bank's stock exchanges, all
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experienced in tech disruptions as well cnn's tom foreman is following all of this for us at tom, what do we know about what is causing this mass outage? and when we expect that something might happen, that, that could fix it well, what we know is that this seems to be some kind of to put it in layman's terms, like a software disagreement between the company crowdstrike and microsoft in terms of something in the way this is all interacting with each other is freezing up screens on microsoft systems around the globe right now in case you really hit it on the head there, this is affecting airlines. >> of course it blue screen right there that's what people are getting all over as they're trying to make these systems work. it's happening in grocery stores and hospitals, and trains and listen to this hear the list overseas, london, gatwick, germany's berlin amsterdam, schiphol airport, scotland, edinburgh airport, spain's airport authority to prague airport, ryanair air
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france it's turkish airlines. and of course some of the airlines you mentioned here and more. >> this seems to have kicked off on thursday a bit and has been rolling forward the latest we've heard is that microsoft says that they believe they have identified the problem and are trying to get a fix into place. >> when that'll be done, and how well that will be done. we don't know. we know there have been 500 cancelations of flights already in the united states. not a huge number on a given friday at the moment, but this is very early in the day. this is a day where no matter what you're doing, hospital appointment, anything else, you might want to pack your patience because i think you might run into this almost anywhere where microsoft is. and as you know that's all over the place kasie indeed, it is. >> and even reportedly as affected television networks around the world as well, tom foreman or holding on for now, let's hope we keep doing yes. >> so far. so far we're up on here. >> so far if you don't see
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anything for me until monday while you'll know what happened. >> au he tom stick, i'm sure you're going to be standing by for us throughout the show. thank you so much are coming up here on cnn this morning. donald trump with quite the entrance at the rnc as the walls appear to be closing in on president biden's reelection campaign. we're going to reflect on this historic week. >> plus, i'm going to be joined next hour by former congressman tim ryan, who has been a critic of president biden's. >> we'll see what he thinks about what he should do next most guys get serious in bags as they get but most guys don't do anything about it because most guys don't really
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>> i trust and will.com and make it count. >> i'm melissa bell in paris. >> and this is cnn closed captioning is brought to you by skechers slip in pads, looking for the most comfortable, stylish, easiest pants around, try new sketches, slip and pants, just slipped in and experienced skechers, innovative comfort technology, fabric skechers slip in pants i've got an update to the
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breaking news that we've been following this morning impacting people around the world were looking live at philadelphia's international airport. american airlines has just been able to solve their technical issues. they say they've been able to safely re-establish their operation after being under a ground stop from the faa. it global outage has grounded flights hit banks and businesses, major headaches this morning across the world, quite frankly, we are reporting out exactly what is causing this and how various people are working to get things going. again, we will bring you the latest as we have it in here at cnn and but let's come back to our political story this morning, cnn is reporting allies of vice president kamala harris are making calls to assess the political environment. quote, justin case, end quote that is according to a democrat close to the vice president who emphasized that at the present moment, quote, there is no in
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case and quote, and that biden is dug in politico is reporting some of kamala harris, his allies are worried she could be passed over for an open convention if biden drops out and despite all this speculation surrounding her running mate, the man at the top of the ticket, joe biden harris is pushing forward. she campaigned as vice president yesterday in north carolina so today, we are 110 days out from the election while many of us had been involved with these elections for every four years, practically, nearly every time we will say this is the one well, this here is the one right? >> our panel is back bakari sellers, let me start with you in terms of what is the future here. you you wrote this earlier this week, you mentioned it this morning on the show. >> skip over kamala harris at
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your own peril, and i'm happy to stipulate for you. >> you think biden is not going anywhere? but let's let's talk about the hypothetical here i had a really interesting conversation with a democratic operative yesterday, who was thinking about it from the perspective of if if this person was advising one of these ambitious other democrats, not named kamala harris about what the best plan for them would be if you're josh shapiro, are your andy beshear? these are two governors who are talked about as potential future presidential candidates. would it make any sense for you to try to run against kamala harris? this person was arguing? no, it absolutely doesn't because you would make enemies of a huge constituency of the democratic party right out of the gate as you were trying to build a future for yourself and that it wouldn't make any sense at all. what do you make of this and what are you hearing about how some of these other ambitious politicians are thinking about how to approach this moment so
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there for a couple of things. >> first, i don't think joe biden is going anywhere right now. i think that's probably my framework. ai he ain't going nowhere it as weekend is what i was trying to frame and push back on. there's no space for josh shapiro or any bashir or anyone else to challenge the vice president for the nomination. if it comes down to that look, we're not going to have the chaos of an open convention. there are many people out there. i don't want to be extremely clear like we did not elect chuck schumer. we did not elect nancy pelosi as the presidential nominee, and they don't get a chance to handpick individuals. and i know that coming from nancy pelosi's camp and many others camp that there's this urge to allow the ticket to bow out gracefully, but if joe biden goes and commonly harris is right there. and one of the things that you saw happen yesterday, which is one of the reasons that joe biden is a little bit more dug in as you saw, 1,400 black women who come from all walks of life who were stalwarts in the democratic party sign a letter supporting
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him. the last thing that i'll tell you is that people who talk about this usually have no campaign or political experience and it's kind of weird. but you're not going to have someone drop out of a race on saturday or sunday and literally leave a month between the convention where you are paralyzed and unable to campaign biden harris is going to campaign until there's an opportunity to smoothly transfer nomination over to the vice president of the united states. anybody who thinks otherwise simply doesn't know how campaign infrastructure really works? >> very briefly, margaret, do you agree? >> i think bakari is actually making a lot of smart points and by the way, vice president harris is doing exactly what you should be doing. you mentioned a couple of potential candidates. we hear the donors i talked to in folks in dc and democratic party circles that i talked to talk about bashir. they talk about josh shapiro. they also talk about governor roy cooper, north carolina and mark kelly ascender, former astronaut, her husband of gabby giffords in the swing state of
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arizona. but she has to be prepared. >> yes. you must be. alright. coming up next here on cnn this morning. >> i proudly accept your nomination for president donald trump. >> officially the republican nominee for president for the third time his shift from a subdued candidate right back in to the campaign mode, we all know, plus, we're continuing to follow breaking news around the world, massive it outage is causing disruptions for travelers and businesses your skin is ever changing take care of it with goldman's healing formulations of seven moisturizers and three vitamins for all your skins gold bond welcome to the now way to network they switch to junipers ai native network now,
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get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. imprint.com in for certain i hanako montgomery in tokyo, and this is cnn 5:00 a.m. here in >> milwaukee, wisconsin. it is 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. here's a live look at philadelphia international

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