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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  July 19, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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but the 60% on family-friendly hotels, so many great trips we might just leave here with another video occasion, baby i'll take it easy. >> paris and youtube for modal. >> lisa wasn't alito earlier happy line of chronic kidney disease. >> you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with bars sega their places like to be for speaker can cause serious side effects including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infection didn't low blood sugar, a rare life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur, stopped taking for sica and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of disinfection and allergic reaction or ketoacidosis the president versus many in his own party. >> biden's campaign dismissing rumors that he could step aside and says there will be no alternative many even
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emergency services hospitals, airlines, and banks worldwide. we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central hello, i'm brianna keilar alongside boris sanchez fresh back from the republican national convention. >> and what started as an effort to gently urge president joe biden out of the the race is now threatening to turn into an all-out intraparty showdown in just the last few hours here, eight democratic lawmakers have publicly called on biden to drop out, and that includes for the first time, a member of the congressional black caucus, another democrat on the list is california congresswoman zoe lofgren. >> yes. >> she sent a letter today to biden writing, quote simply put, your candidacy is on a trajectory to lose the white house and potentially impact crucial house and senate races down ballot. it is for these reasons that i urge you to step
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aside from our party's nomination to allow another democratic candidate to compete against and beat donald trump in the november election. as cnn has reported, senior ranking officials in both the white house and campaign privately believe that biden must quit the race. there's a widespread feeling that the end is near. but in a statement released just a short time ago, the president says he's looking forward to getting back on the campaign trail next week after he recovers from covid cnn senior white house correspondent mj lee joins us now, mj, we're getting too vastly different messages from those close to the president. what do you make of it? >> i mean, there is a real divide right now. there is a sense within the democratic party that it feels like the end is near people who are completely freaked out about the fact that the president needs to go in their minds. and as you said, this includes senior people who privately think this inside the white house and the campaign as well. and then there is the campaigns public position as of today, which is that the president is not stepping aside and they've
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really been on full blast today. we saw the campaign chair going on television earlier saying the president is absent it's slowly staying in the race. the president himself put out a statement saying he's going to hit the campaign trail later next week, and then this campaign memo that they put out which said, quote, there is no plan for an alternative nominee in a few short weeks, joe biden will be the official nominee. it is high pass time. we stop fighting one another. the only person who wins when we fight is donald trump. i was also told last night, but the senior-most west wing aides have had no discussions so far amongst themselves or with the president himself about preparations for the president dropping out. but the problem right now is that the panic inside the party is so deep and it is so a growing including the democratic lawmakers who are still publicly coming out, the donors who have stopped writing checks. and meanwhile, the president has been completely sidelined. so i think at this point we just need to make the distinction between what is actually going on and a lot of wishful
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thinking. >> and we are looking at some live pictures. we can talk about kamala harris because she is here in washington she didn't dc that is tyra banks isn't it? it's kind of okay. so tyra banks, this is a top pop up ice cream store. and as you know, it's normally president, but i feel like there's some subtext to this. >> yes question because i feel like we've seen president biden a lot getting ice cream. >> it's something you do on the campaign trail. here we see the vice president kamala harris out and about here in dc at this ice cream shop. and there are a lot of people, mj talking about their fealty to the biden harris ticket, which is no accident that they are phrasing it like that. it seems like they're covering their beds. yeah. were seeing the vice president do the thing that the president loves to do the most. >> as you pointed out, going to an ice cream store, it looks she has been in an incredibly delicate position. she is the vice president and needs to be
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continued playing that role. and i think her aides and her team have made very clear all we're going to do right now as the party descends into chaos, is keep our heads down and continue fighting for the biden-harris ticket. i don't know that she has any other choice. obviously, behind the scenes within the party, there are furious discussions going on right now about a possible plan b. i'm not saying this is some official up plan that is coming together, but there are discussions about whether it should be the vice president, whether there's any scenario where the party sort of skipped over her, that scenario is going to be incredibly chaotic. it is going to prompt a lot of anger, but the bottom line is, we don't know if there there's going to be a need for a plan b because the president right now says he is staying in. >> yeah it is an open question. i just want to quickly point out the vice president is there with her two nieces and tyra banks has been giving a very animated description of the if you've been watching that this is a pop-up shop called smiles and dream that he opened up
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during the pandemic. mj, please stand by because i want to get some reporting from cnn congressional correspondent, lauren fox, who has the capitol hill angle of all of this. and just watching the full screen grow mj or rather lauren, when it was only a few lawmakers and now it's almost 30, if not, at 30 or more i can imagine that that pleases the president. >> yeah, this is a really difficult inflection point for the party, in part because they are weighing right now individual members in their offices as they are on recess this week, whether or not it makes sense and to join the chorus of democrats who are calling for the president to step aside, or whether it might make more political sense to let their leadership in others take that task at the moment, given the fact that you have to imagine a scenario where if biden does not get out of this race some of these democrats running in difficult districts,
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running as frontliners may be running in the same state, the same place that biden also will be running aggressively. and so i think there's just a lot of calculation happening behind the scenes. i will tell you that the dynamics could start to shift also when lawmakers get back to washington next week, let's say we can goes by. there isn't any substantial change in terms of joe biden making any announcements. that means lawmakers are we come back to washington next week and they are going to be faced by even more questions about what they think the president's future should be that puts on additional pressure on many of these members who maybe have doubt privately about biden's ability to win, but have so far held back in expressing any of those concerns publicly. and so that dynamic is going to be really interesting to watch next week. and i think there's just an exhaustion that members are feeling right now they do not like being in the spotlight at a moment when they would rather there'll be talking
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about older reasons that donald trump is a liability for the country, but they also understand that there's a reason that they are being asked these questions. there's a reason that democrats are in the news cycle right now, and there's some frustration with the fact that perhaps the president does not recognize the hardship that this is putting on many remember, so a lot of dynamics at play and each of these members has to make this choice for themselves about what they think is most politically advantageous in their race right now. >> yeah, i would note as we look at the graphic of these lawmakers, they're not the only democratic voices calling on joe biden to step aside. but we're to that point when you start taking a tally of people saying something and the pictures of their faces start getting so small you can't make them out because there's so many on the page and that's really that says something about where we're at. we expect that there will be more phases added to that and lauren, i do want to just talk a little bit about something that seth moulton congressman
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from massachusetts. he's written an op-ed in the boston globe, and he's talking about how much joe biden well, he's saying why jill biden should exit the race but he's talking about how after he had won his general election as a congressman, that joe biden would invite him to breakfast at the vice president's house that he was really someone who's been a mentor to him. and he says more recently i saw him in a small group at normandy for the 80th anniversary of d-day for the first time, he didn't seem to recognize me. he said, of course that can happen as anyone ages, but i watched the disastrous debate a few weeks ago. i have to admit that what i saw normandy was part of a deeper problem it sounds lauren, that we're starting to hear the inside thoughts becoming outside thoughts with so many lawmakers. >> yeah. i mean, so many of these members have had either limited interactions with the president over the course of the last several weeks or if
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they've had interactions over the last year may have had concerns, but maybe had a reason why they thought that maybe it was just a bad day, bad moment et cetera, when they were meeting with the president. but i think yes members are starting to get more public about those concerns and part of that is just a reality that they feel like maybe no one is listening. and so they're getting more specific about what those concerns are there's also just the sense right now in the party that they are tired and they want to move on from this moment. now of course, mj brought up an excellent point. what comes next is completely unknown could be chaotic, could be messy for the party as well. but i think that's why you're starting to see people like moulton and others be so public about those moments of paused that they may have had over the course of the last several weeks or months lauren fox, thanks so much for that reporting. let's expand the conversation now with cnn
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political commentators, maria cardona and jamal simmons, also back with us is cnn's senior white house correspondent, mj lee muddy. i want to start with you to pick up on something that lauren just said and that is that these lawmakers are becoming more vocal because they don't feel like they're being heard. i think part of that is also sort of a permission structure. or a an allowance, if you will, by the leadership in the democratic party, folks like former house speaker nancy pelosi, even minority leader, hakeem jeffries saying that this is an ongoing conversation when the white house had shut the door on, the conversation what do you make of that so clearly, the white house has got to continue to take these ideas, these pushes what they're hearing in the media into consideration. >> but here's my point where we are right now, the president has said, he is staying in, he
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is the nominee of the democratic party what we're not seeing on tv and on your screens are the 1,400 black women who signed a letter saying they still strongly support the president the members of the congressional hispanic caucus, who said they strongly support the president that millions of grassroots voters who say he is our nominee, we voted for him. we have faith in him. he had our back. we have his that's what the white house is hearing as well, because they have an incredible infrastructure in the states that is going door-to-door. and that's what they're hearing. so it's not like they're ignoring all of this they are hearing from the voters who nominated him and who put him in office and that i think is an aspect that it's not get reported very often. and we're hearing it from the communities that would be most in danger if donald trump gets into office again. and so at
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some point and i'm not telling all these lawmakers who have legitimate concerns to be quiet. we don't do that, right? that's the other party. we don't do that but i will say to them at what point if president biden is going to continue to stay in the race? at what point do they say okay, we have to embrace it because if they don't, let say that's a scenario, we know what the other scenarios are. people have been talking about them nonstop. what we don't know is how they would work and how chaotic it would be if it comes to that. >> but what if the scenario is that president biden stays in at what point do these lawmakers say? >> okay, he's our nominee. we have to embrace him let's go win this thing. because if they don't, then what are they saying? they're going to throw up their hands and that's it. we lost because if they're going to do that, we might as well inaugurate donald trump tomorrow i have heard some democrats say that these people should be quiet. >> i've heard multiple democrats say that at this point, well, i respect that you don't maria certainly jamal
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i've also heard democrats who want joe biden to step aside also saying that he has a great legacy and i wonder if you think that the president has a grasp of what he is dealing with, if he is seeing accurately the poll numbers also knowing that he is isolating right now from covid. so it's sort of maybe hard to absorb what's going on out in the world i think it might actually be the reverse. >> one thing when you're president, you don't have a lot of time to watch tv you're going in and out of meetings on the trail imagine he's at home seeing more of this. i've heard this from people who have worked for him in the past that they think he's probably paying more attention to this than we give them credit for you know, the danger for this is for the party that if you're one of these members and a marginal district or you're in a state that's a swing state.
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you might be thinking, i just don't know if i can run with this particular ticket. and so that's why you're speaking up. they have very legitimate concerns as maria just said the onus is going to be on the campaign on the president to continue to show people that he's actually, he's up to the job. he can handle the job, he can do very well on the stump and he's going to have to keep doing that. this isn't a question that's going away. this is going to be something for the democrats to manage. it's throughout the rest of the campaign. now, the more we talk about project 2025 and what happened with donald trump last night in that rambling disaster of a convention speech that he had. i think the better off democrats are. and when i was in detroit last week with my family with bunch of working class african americans. they were a little more skittish. it maybe was the word that we use. they would say they didn't actually care how the democrats decided about this. they were supportive of president biden, but they just wanted to democratic get it over with, get it over with quickly. let's move on and let's get back to donald trump. so whether it's biden or harris or whoever the candidate is,
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let's just settle it and let's move forward. >> tamala. you perfectly teed up what i was thinking of asking mj about when you first said that the president doesn't have time to watch tv because i was wondering was he watching the rnc last night and jamal pointed out the remarks from donald trump, while many had been touted, many republicans there at the rnc had been touting this message of unity it quickly went off the rails and he started talking about a stolen election and he started talking about joe biden being the worst president ever. and these things that were not unifying at all. but hearing the analysis and even in some of our reporting i got the sense that democrats, when they saw that they saw opportunity and they saw this race not being over. i'm wondering if that's what you you've heard from. >> absolutely. i mean, i think you can sense from the campaign this morning, you sense that late last night after that very rambling speech from the former president, they were saying this speech was exactly the reason that the president is going to stay in and why we
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think we have a path that this way a speech that was self-centered and all about him. it didn't have the vision and it certainly was not meant to bring in more voters into the trump tent i will say though, in terms of the impasse that the democratic party is in, the reason that people are completely freaking out right now is because they can hear the clock that is ticking. they can't debate. they've already been debating this for three weeks or whenever the cnn debate was, they feel like if we continue staying in this place where the president is saying he's running. everybody else in the party is completely freaking out and there's no decision made then what happens heading into convention week? what happens? i mean, you know this better than anyone when the delegates start voting, which is supposed to be the beginning of august they just truly do not know right now where things are headed. and i think that sense of panic and unease is just something i have never experienced before. >> i think it's interesting how when you talk to people who democrats who want biden to
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stay and who want biden to go, they seem to have the same reasoning because of what they see the stakes to be. we had congressman glenn ivey on and he's firmly behind biden and he said he's hearing from his constituents that they feel like it's biden being unfair clearly pushed out that he's been ill treated alright. so to that point, what would it take maria to get past that, but also have joe biden step aside in a way that does not alienate those voters. >> well, i think therein lies the question and right now, like i said before, the white house is listening to those people who do believe that the democratic elite and washington are not listening to them. and so there is a scenario, brianna, where let's say biden steps aside and again, that opens up to an unknown process. >> and we don't know it. >> even camila, i think she would wipe the floor with donald trump. but there are
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people as you know, very well that won't support a black southeast asian daughter of immigrants woman as president and probably even some in our own party i'm talking about the unknown, right everyone can talk about their fantasy football ticket. what this is not fantasy, this is real life. and last night's speech clarified it for so many people. i can't tell you how many texts i got from my immigrant friends. who were saying, oh, my god donald trump just put a target on my family's back and as an immigrant latino myself, i feel that way too. i think god, i live in washington, dc. but if i lived in texas or in some other rural red area and my kids were out speaking spanish i would be in fear of their life for the words that donald trump spoke last night. and that is what is at stake regardless of what happens here, i have been saying, you know, we absolutely can beat
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donald trump, the democratic party has got to get this still an off the air and let's cancel it and focus on eyes on the prize. and that is donald trump, project 2025 the danger to our democracy and the danger to so many communities that today support president biden as the nominee for the ticket jamal, i want to give you the last word on the dynamic that modi has describing where it's like the devil, you know, versus the devil you don't in the potential chaos that could be unleashed by opening up pandora's box you know, there's no safe place for the democrats. i mean, that's the challenge for this moment, right? there's no place where you say okay. we make this choice. this choice will get us to the white house again, right? you, so whether we stick with president biden or we pick somebody new, now, i support president biden as long as he's going a run the question though, becomes, is it not just about joe biden, is it about the entire party? is it about as achieving the goals that it is? we say we're going to get to something about the language. i think in how the conversation is developing, its becoming so much about joe
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biden, the person know, i know joe biden. i worked for him. i was honored to be there, but it's really about these families that maria talking about, about my family. and i think we've got to stay focused on the ultimate outcome. and who's the best person to carry the democratic flag into the next election right? now, that's joe biden. and if he's the nominee at the democratic party, that convention, i think more democrats will be able to go along with it. i think the time between here and there, you're going to have more robust conversation stationed among democrats who have been sitting on their, on their opinions about this for a long time unlike maria, i'm actually not that worried about the telenovela. i think that americans have been watching reality tv for a generation and they are perfectly interested, maybe even happy to get a little bit of drama. and maybe donald trump is the one who's nervous. that democrats have so much drama. they hit his entire convention was a split-screen instead of him dominating. and if we come out with a unified party when this is over, we probably will have more people bought in to the end of our, to the end of our campaign and us winning this campaign than we did before we started, we're
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finally having the conversation that is really the conversation about joe biden. but everybody in the party than whispering we're having it out loud. we've got to settle it and then we're going to all move forward and go win together. >> great season finale to the you know, cancel it when a dramas heye jamal, thank you with your very fascinating countervailing opinions, we do appreciate them. jamal simmons, maria cardona, mj. thank you so much as well and ahead this hour on cnn news central, airports, banks, hospitals, even 911 call centers crippled by a worldwide tech outage with the latest on what experts say is the largest it well, you're in history, plus investigators believe the internet trail of trump's would-be assassin could help them get closer to a potential motive will break down the clues. they are following all these games on directv and no satellite on the roof thick about this blue jays cardinals, orioles. >> what's missing? >> the andean condor know, while not brain pigeons,
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health indicators, including your memory, joined the nerivan brain health challenge we're following breaking news on a massive cyber outage and you are looking at the results today across the globe. airports, banks, hospitals, even emergency 911 services, have been paralyzed by what some experts say is the largest. it failure in history. ups and fedex are also now warning customers to expect shipping delays because of this outage. >> it's such a mess and cybersecurity firm crowdstrike says that the problem here was at least partly caused by a faulty software update that it was not a cyber attack but the company says it's gradually fixing the issue, warning, of course they'll getting back to normal could be a lengthy process in the u.s alone, more than 2,300 flights have been canceled today. thousands more were delayed. joining us now is cnn aviation analyst miles o'brien. miles, my goodness, what we're seeing here, how concerned should we be? he that one apparent faulty software
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update is caused so much disruption to airports and airlines it's kind of stunning to me, brianna, when you think about aviation and why it is so safe to fly, it's all about redundancy and redundancies for the redundancies. >> so if you do get a failure you're not going to have a really bad day. and yet the system awful around aviation it does not obviously mission could critical safety issue today, but the system around it where you check in, where you do your bookings, where you get on the flight, where they have the postings on the monitors, all those things can be brought to a complete crawl or a standstill by virtue of one misplaced keystroke on someone's software update that is stunning to me and it shows a little bit of a blind spot, actually a big split blind spot on the part of the airlines in the sense that they're not taking that ethos of redundancy outside what is strictly
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mission critical for safety, hopefully, there is a lesson learned here because we're all kind of realizing what a house of cards this is i'm wondering miles. so then what would a potential new approach look like? would it be sort of a derisive diversification of these protections, software programs yeah, absolutely. boris, i think i don't think that's too much to ask of, you know, the airlines for the flying public to ensure they have a backup system for all of this, you know, i don't want to date myself too much here, boris, but when i used to first fly, they used to actually put stickers on a diagram and that's how they assigned your seat? maybe they should bring back the stickers as a fall back occasionally, ai being somewhat facetious but there have got to be ways to ensure that they have a go-to in these situations, the consequences of it are significant and admit there's not going to be an
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airplane that falls out of the sky because of this but there are thousands and thousands of people right now. are inconvenience to this will end up costing the airlines a lot of money. and ultimately, i would assume crowdstrike is going to have to write some big checks yeah, people are missing weddings. you know, i think about even the critical thing organs are flying around on these airplanes, like what kinds of ramifications are they having here? it's going to be an incredible domino effect. miles great to have you. thank you so much. >> you're welcome so next, former president trump's team says they were not told that law enforcement officials were looking for a suspicious person. >> in the minutes before trump took the stage at his rally saturday. we'll have more on this lapse ahead remember the rock and fraud show a friendly competition between queens.
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coventry direct.com newsnight with abby phillip tonight at ten eastern on cnn lawmakers briefed on the investigation into the assassination attempt against donald trump, say the fbi is using the shooter's internet trail to piece together a potential motive. >> sources say leading up to the attack, the gunman research they 2021 high school mass shooting info about president trump's rally, the date and location of the democratic national convention, as well as information about president biden and other notable political figures. >> and this has led to emerging theory among investigators that the gunman was really looking just to carry out more generally, a mass shooting and that the proximity and timing of trump's rally offered the most ready opportunity for him joining us. now we have cnn, senior law enforcement analyst and former fbi deputy director andrew mccabe what do you think about this theory that's coming about?
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>> i think it's looking more and more reasonable and plausible some of the factors that are most significant to me or the lack of evidence of any sort of strong political belief or ideology. and then paired with the fact that he's online investigating both former president trump and the rally and also current president biden. so you have this what seems to be a persistent interest in these political locations and the presence of high, high-profile protectees, but not one that aligns with if one political ideology or the other, which gets you away from this idea that this was an act of political influence, influence and more, one of an aspirational mass shooter opportunism versus ideology. >> that's right, right? so when you also hear that the shooter was researching major depressive disorder and depressive crisis treatment. how does that fit into the picture? so contrary to common
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belief, there isn't a great correlation between diagnosed mental health issues and problems and mass shooters, there is a fairly strong correlation between mass shooters and the fact that they are, they all seem to go through some sort of discernible crisis, personal crisis before the mass shooting that can be exhibited in different ways. >> and one of the reasons why we've told people to look out for those folks in your community who may be like exceedingly angry major changes of mood and engaging what they call leakage, which is like actually talking about acts of violence before you do them so the research on depressive disorder and depressive crisis treatment could be exactly that he may have been going through very recently, a period of crisis and spiraling down this hole that ultimately led him to the rally on saturday. >> we're learning now about times perhaps that the secret service or law enforcement maybe should have engaged the
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would-be assassin before he was shooting. and trump's team says they were never alerted that law enforcement was looking for a suspicious person in the minutes, i think it was almost 20 minutes between when they lost track of him and when the shooting began, they weren't told about this before trump got on the stage. they clearly had about ten minutes where they could have been how big? but elapses that well, it's potentially a big lapse, but it's another one of these facts that we have to look at in context ideally, they should have let the trump team know what was going on but if they were handling a whole panoply of calls from people on the ground who are saying, hey, i saw person do this, i saw another person in this place do something else. >> if they're working through a lot of that intel at once, you might not tell the team of every single car all that you've received. >> so that's one that i think we need a little bit more information on. >> as mccabe, always great to get your expertise. thanks so this just in to cnn from our colleague, dana bash, the democratic house maker,
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democratic lawmaker, says that house democrats craddock leader hakeem jeffries, and his team are not discouraging members from continuing to speak out against president joe biden's candidacy the source said it was their impression that's so statements. have privately been encouraged. >> the source also said that there's a fear. the public piling on today of we've seen democratic lawmakers publicly. the dot could be making biden mad. that it could potentially make him dig in even more stay with us for all the updates on this will be right back with more if you have generalized myasthenia gravis picture, would life could look like with viv guard high, true low, a subcutaneous injection that takes about 30 to 90 seconds for one thing demi more time for you this guard high to low can improve daily abilities and reduce muscle weakness with a treatment plan that's personalized to you do not use viv guard had truly if you have
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>> we're saving the meat problem with more meat recipes recipes written by hand last two are now being analyzed and restored i. >> think the power of delhi in response to the trade rumors, we keep kind about a, we talk about little bit. now that's right not it's right. we talked about moving no. >> thank you. >> au you could use open-door, sell your house directly to them. it's easy i. >> guess we're moving close captioning brought to you by meso book.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to 14000 a landmark opinion, the u.n.'s top court says israeli settlements in occupied in the occupied west bank and in east
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jerusalem are illegal. the international court of justice said that israel's policies and practices, quote, amount to the annexation of large parts of the palestinian territory israel has built and steadily expanded settlements in the west bank since 1967 after the six-day war. and while the courts advisory opinion isn't legally binding, it does carry moral authority, and it helps to shape international law and support joining us now live from jerusalem and cnn's jeremy diamond. jeremy, how is prime minister benjamin netanyahu responding to this well, there's no question that there's a lot of outrage in the israeli government and israeli politics and reaction to this ruling by the international court of justice, the israeli prime minister, saying that the jewish people are quote, not conquerors in their own land, neither in jerusalem nor in the west bank. >> and that's because this ruling by the international court of justice says that is rarely presence in both east jerusalem, as well as in the west bank territories that were
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captured by israel during the 1967 war, that israeli presence in those areas, israeli settlements in those areas are illegal according to this advisory ruling by the icj. now this is a non-binding ruling, but it is nonetheless the first time that the icj has issued a ruling on this situation, and it is quite significant. it comes after the un general assembly back in 2022, asked for the icj to deliver this ruling on the consequences of israel's occupation of the west bank. this of course has been the a consensus in the international law community. but to have the icj now saying this officially does give quite a lot of credence, a lot of authority to those claims. they're also calling on the israeli government to as soon as possible effectively withdrawal from the west bank and east jerusalem, as well as remove israeli settlers and israeli settlements from that area. >> and we're getting reaction
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now, new reaction from secretary of state blinken on ceasefire negotiations between israel and hamas. what are we learning here? jeremy? >> yes, i'm very optimistic. comments from the secretary of state on the status of negotiations between israel and hamas for a ceasefire and hostage deal. he says that they are now at the ten yard line within, i should say, the ten yard line and headed for the goal line. so you can follow that sports analogy there to get a sense that he believes that these two sides are indeed very close. now, we know that over the course of the last two weeks, israel and hamas basically have a framework agreement to try and build a final deal out of that framework agreement, we've seen officials shuttling between doha, qatar, and cairo, egypt but so far very little indication of exactly how close these two sides are. and even with these statements by the secretary of state, and we should note that american officials have been far more optimistic about the status of these talks than other parties
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that are involved. but even with this statement by the secretary of state, we don't know exactly how close they are because even he knows that he doesn't want to be naive about this, that those last ten yards are often the toughest to overcome. we also know that the israeli prime minister privately has been pulling back on some major israeli concessions, notably of, for example he, he's, he's been pulling back on the notion of a few different things in these negotiations that israel had previously conceded. and so now the question is, is the israeli prime minister actually committed to this deal when he is heading to washington, this weekend will be there next week and certainly this will be an opportunity for secretary blinken and prime end president biden, to try and convince him to stick with this proposal and to try and get this ball across the goalline brown jeremy diamond. >> thank you for that report. >> some breaking news, the number of congressional
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democrats are now calling on president biden to step aside an end his reelection bid has grown to 31. congresswoman betty mccollum, a veteran democrat from minnesota, is now calling on joe biden to step aside. and for kamala harris to become the new democratic standard bearer, they would see cnn we'll discuss this and more in a moment things they say we should stop eating so much meat so we made meat out of plants because we aren't quitters impossible we're
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direct redefining insurance this is cnn. the world's news network this sunday, cnn's the whole story is returning with a powerful new episode that examines the history of political violence in america. >> and of course, in the wake of the recent assassination attempt against former president trump, we have cnn's sara sidner investigating our nation's violent past from the american revolution to the the unrest of the 60s to the politically motivated attack seen today. >> sara sidner joins us now with more sara, obviously, a timely look at political violence in us history. what can we expect?
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>> we all saw on saturday would happen to former president trump, the latest victim of political violence if he had moved his head just slightly, he could have been killed. another man was killed at that rally. he was a father and a firefighter trying to protect his family. he died doing so. and then two others were gravely injured when americans said hey, this is, this is not who we are as a nation. they may need to re-examine that when you look back at our history, political assassination attempts that have been part of american politics for about as long as the country has existed for us presidents have been killed as they were doing the job of president and many more dealt with countless attacks. and some of them were almost killed. an assassination attempts. we took a look inward at our country and out ourselves and examine the history and motivations behind those it's political attacks. we delved into questions being asked by many americans who
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have themselves experienced violence is america a violent nation? i had heartfelt conversations with the john f. kennedy's family, with dr. martin luther king junior's family with president ronald reagan's family, his daughter her talked a lot about how she got through it. aos did the kennedys and the kings and also how the country responded differently after the assassination attempts or assassinations on their loved ones. listen my most lasting memory was the shift of mood in this country and the people who, who came up to me, who i'm sure we're not all supporters of my father were politics was set aside and they were simply coming to me with compassion and with humanity and with you know, awareness that i had almost lost my father. >> what was your gut reaction when you saw that? yet another assassin tried to take out, in this case, a former president.
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>> well, i mean, i did think of his about his family and no matter what one thinks of donald trump and all of them, i mean, again, it's a human being and other human beings were shot who were attending that rally was some of the attendees after donald trump was taken off the stage, turning around to the media and giving them the finger and you could read their lips and the words that were coming out went right along with that middle finger. >> i thought really like this is your response someone just died in the stands behind you to other people or critically wounded the candidate who you have come to listen to, who you obviously support was just taken with blood in the side of his head and that's your reaction? we spoke to each of these families, the kennedys, the king's as well, and they're very concerned about where our country is. now.
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they're very concerned about the rhetoric being used, not just by political leaders, but also by people, especially those on social media. they are concerned that this is an inflection i'm important that we as americans need to choose how we want our country to be a violent one or a peaceful one. boris and brianna very important. >> look, sara, that you're taking. thank you so much and be sure to tune in an all new episode the whole story with anderson cooper, one whole hour, one whole topic that will air sunday at 10:00 p.m. eastern and pacific only on cnn. and we'll be right back this summer snacking just got serious introducing new $3 footlong divers world might not be ready for them. but at $3 a pop your wallet definitely is we're trying to save the planet with nuggets because we need the planet and we also need nuggets impossible.
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