tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN July 23, 2024 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules for their own game. so hear me when i say i know donald trump's tight. >> i take full responsibility for any security lapse. your full of today. >> you're just being completely dishonest. >> it is my firm belief it's director cheatle, that you should resign for the very first time at an ceremony is getting happened. >> noting signed but actually the vein six live from london. this is cnn newsroom with max foster and christina macfarlane hello, a warm welcome to our viewers joining us from the u.s. >> and all around the world. i'm max foster and i'm christina macfarlane. it's
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tuesday, july 23, 9:00 a.m. here in london, 4:00 a.m. in washington where kamala harris has now picked up up enough delicate support to win. the democratic nomination. that's according to a cnn delegate estimate, coming just one day after president joe biden exited the 2024 race and pass the torch to his vice president. biden is vowing to help elect harris and urging democrats to do the same. >> i want to say to the team embrace her, she's the best i know yesterday's news is surprising. and it's hard for you to hear. but it was the right thing to do. >> well, on monday, harris previewed her campaign vision and a strategy for taking on donald trump as a courtroom prosecutor in those roles, i took on perpetrators of all kinds, predators will abused women fraudsters who ripped off consumers cheaters, who broke
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the rules for their own gain hear me when i say i know donald trump's type and in this campaign, i will proudly i will proudly put my record against his meanwhile trump has been lashing out online, calling biden the worst president and saying harris who we refer to as quote, are horrible, an incompetent. borders are, will be worse. >> au the enthusiasm surrounding kamala harris bid for president has sparked a major donor surge. the harris campaign says she raised $81 million in her first day as candidate. that dwarfs donald trump's recent hall when he raised nearly $53 million in the last 24 hours after he was found guilty in his new york hush money case and harris now has another boost. any 30,000 volunteers have signed up to work with the campaign cnn's sunlen serfaty has a closer look at the u.s. >> vice president's run for the white house and his sources
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of support it is my intention to go out and earn this nomination. >> and to win vice president kamala harris seize the reins the moment we have 106 days until election day. and in that time we have some hard work to do moments after president biden called her to say he was stepping aside, harris launching into action working the phones for ten hours to trigger her deep network of support various expanded to live. >> as we all a student sources telling cnn that she made those calls, some of the most important calls of her political career in a howard university sweatshirt. and you won't get those rooms you carry a small but symbolic not to the cornerstone of the coalition this sisterhood has been a part of my life since my earliest days.
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>> that along with the alpha kappa alpha sorority, the nation's oldest black sorority, is now being called on to help power her into the oval office this fight that we're up against that i know she's going to be up against is not going to be easy. the powerful political support within that sisterhood is one that harris has leaned on for years. >> the alphas and all of the greeks, they're going to, there like a family and seeing her through her early career as a prosecutor, it's what's happening on a street corner that is plaguing the neighbors the same your take and then to the u.s. >> senate. >> i am a career prosecutor. i've visited many prisons and jails. that is a prison. >> i'm just living been time in the time since biden's announcement, harris is getting a boost from social media. at some republicans are highlighting harris isms as a negative book can be unburdened by what has been the means are also attracting attention from
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new, younger voters, bringing new energy to even old moments harris quoting her mother last year, do you think you just fell out of a coconut tree now becoming it's something of a rallying cry for her campaign with senators and supporters posting coconut trees as signs of support, right? all right. bloc, little bit volatile and pop singer charli xcx, declaring camila is brett a reference to the singer's latest album and viral meme of the summer but it's nebraska that's with harris's campaign quickly embracing and running with the vibe and one call. among the many, many calls harris made over that ten hour period on sunday was to her pastor from san francisco, someone who has been in her life for so many years. and we are told this is one of the very first call she made, and that the two spent some time praying together sunlen serfaty, cnn, washington
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interesting to say that bratt pickup is no, i'm not going to go there just yet, but anyway, the trump campaign is already shifting its strategy with a new memo attacking kamala harris and calling her dangerously liberal on the campaign trail, donald trump's running mate, j.d. >> vance it's voters not to give harris a shot of becoming president. he also took a swipe at harris. would he claimed is a lack of gratitude what i see her give a speech and she talks about the history of this country, not with appreciation, but with condemnation. >> if you want to lead this country, you should feel grateful for it. you should feel a sense of gratitude and i never hear that gratitude come through when i listened to kamala harris another line of attack from republicans claiming harris is a so-called dei hire. dei stands for diversity, equity and inclusion. so they're suggesting she became vice president because she's a woman of color and not due to any of her actual accomplishments
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100%, she was idea she's a dei hire. >> she's a wallen she's colored, therefore, she's gotta be good. >> do not understand why she was chosen in the first place? she is proven to america why dei doesn't work well. >> us house speaker mike johnson says, democrats should expect legal challenges opposing kamla harris becoming the democratic nominee johnson a republican. >> so states could use the courts to try and block harris from getting the nomination. he also accused democrats have violating democratic principles. here's what he told cnn's manu raju remember that this claims to be the party of democracy, small d democracy, right? 14 million people went through the process and shows this nominee, joe biden, now a handful of people have gotten together and decided he is no longer suitable. that's not how this system works. they are violating democratic principles. >> do you expect lawsuits? plenty well, look if it violates the rules in some of
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these states, i expect that there will be litigation over that oh, kind of a harris has secured enough delegates support to win the democratic nomination and the next step is picking a vp candidates sources tell cnn that the harris campaign has begun vetting possible running mates. >> one of the potential contenders, kentucky governor spoke to cnn just a short time ago and he took a shot at donald trump and is running mate j.d. vance j.d. >> vance is a phony he's spake i mean, he first says that the donald trump is like hitler and now he's acting like he's blinken i mean, the problem with j.d. vance is he has no conviction but i guess his running mate has 34 well, meanwhile, colorado governor jared polis says he's up for the job. >> if harris asked him to serve if they do the polling and it turns out that they need a 49-year-old baldy engaged you from boulder, colorado? they got my number will say this political director, david
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chalian has more on possible vice vice-presidential candidates that harris is thought to be considering. take a look at some of the possible contenders for the number two slot. you see here a whole slew of governors, many from battleground states will get to that in a moment. but notice something else here. all white men on the list so let's zero in on some of the top contenders. josh shapiro, governor of pennsylvania, a critical battleground state democrats need to win if they're going to win the white house. he's 51-years-old, a little younger than vice president harris. he's a former state attorney general, the third jewish governor from the state or commonwealth of pennsylvania, roy cooper, 67-years-old. he's a bit older than the vice president of southern democrat, also a former state attorney general, and from a state democrats are eager to really put in play north carolina mark kelly, battleground, arizona us senator is 60-years-old, former astronaut, really compelling biography. and of course, the husband of gabby giffords and
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governor andy beshear in kentucky, 46-years-old, younger than the vice president, former state attorney general, elected twice in a red state. notice one thing, three of these final four i took you through former state attorneys general, just like kamala harris joining us now from paris is aimee greene in american political science researcher lecture but sciences po and author of america after obama, amy, thanks for joining us first of all, just explain to us where we're at. harris has the delegates and the people that would have competed against have shown their support, haven't can we just assume that she's got the nomination? >> yeah. we can assume that the path is largely cleared for kamala harris at this point. the real question was the delegate math. could she get to enough delegates to effectively secure this nomination. the democrats quickly lined up behind her. you saw just as you mentioned, that any of her potential rivals decided to bow
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out, they wouldn't create more confusion, wouldn't create chaos within the democratic party. once biden pulled out, you know, there could have been a vacuum. he very naturally gave his support to his vice president. and at that point, really the democrats had two possibilities. this hypothesis of an open convention where, where there would be some internal party sort of litigation as to who would emerge ultimately is the nominee or line up behind the candidate of continuity, the candidate of experience. and that's clearly the case that they the path that they chose, they really had essentially didn't have much of a choice. they could have prolonged the process and it could have been a more open field. but effectively they had to look where the money is, where the infrastructure and where the legitimacy is. kamala harris as vice president does carry the legitimacy of the functions in which she occupies today and so really what this does is it allows the democrats to start not necessarily thinking about who could be the ideal person, but focusing on how to line up behind that person and organize
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themselves and do everything they popped possibly can to deliver her victory this november yeah. >> and on that note, of course, all eyes now, turning to who might be heard potential running mate, we heard of the fear of the runners and riders there. i mean, that person will need to have swing-state credibility probably a male, to bring a bit of balanced the ticket. and we saw a we're seeing a list of potential candidates here, but who in your mind, amy, would you think would be the ideal person to run on that ticket i mean, the names that you're reporters cited just a few moments ago are really all excellent choices it's hard to say who would be the best. >> obviously, there's a vetting process. the harris ticket has to decide, where the weeks spots are. the democratic party will have to decide what they need, who can complete harris the best, the choice of vice president at this point is really a political tool. so any of the people that you mentioned, your josh shapiro, your mark, kelly, your bashir those are all people that really will bring something to the ticket kamala harris from
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california from the senate we see that she won't necessarily automatically appeal to all voters. and so she really need someone to come and complete that there has been talk about mark kelly, a senator, obviously an american hero, that many people are familiar with. he would bring obviously a battleground state with him. but there's also really something to be said. for the governor. hypothesis why we've seen a lot of america very successful presidents come from a governorship. it's really a sort of ceo position of a state and right it is also very possible that the harris ticket would would attack a governor who can effectively bring really that political networking variance and the experience of holding a governorship, it was interesting to see the first campaign speech wasn't it from harris seeing how she's going to go at trump it does feel as though it's going to be prosecutor versus the villain that seems to be the narrative. >> there do you think that's a smart one yeah.
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>> i mean, i don't necessarily think kamala harris has much of a choice at this point. >> you know, the republican party will spare her nothing. they've spent weeks preparing for the hypothesis that harris will take over. were biden to step down and so they've been really preparing their attacks. i think for harris to assume a sort of non-attack position could certainly benefit her, but for some voters, but she also needs to highlight the weaknesses of a trump candidacy. you know, republicans have been criticizing harris you know, since, since sunday, but obviously even before suggesting all of the reasons why she wouldn't be a good president. but it's important let's remember that donald trump also has significant weaknesses. he's not a perfect candidate and so really the responsibility of harris and the democratic party behind her is going to be the call out all of the inconsistencies to draw out this contrast of vision of what the united states should become. and of course, kamala harris has to use all of her talents as a prosecutor, as an attorney job enroll as a senator to be able to do so so
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effectively, faced with this oncoming campaign season, which is going to be merciless the democrats have learned that they have to attack as well. and it's important to use every opportunity to really draw that stark contrast. >> an awful lot to do in a matter of months isn't it? aimee greene, appreciate your thoughts today. thank you global markets seemed to have had a positive reaction to president biden dropping out of the 2024 race and endorsing kamala harris. >> so european stocks rose us markets made solid gains on monday, the s&p 500 closed up more than 1%. the nasdaq jumped 1.6%. one expert says biden's endorsement of harris prevented a possible markets spiral by reducing uncertainty about the race. >> all right, still to come the head of us secret service angers both republicans and democrats contentious hearing on capitol hill over the attempted assassination of donald trump and days after a massive tech outage caused havoc around the world, the chaos continues. >> but delta airlines, why? goals of passengers are hoping
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lumi, do.com the us secret service is facing rare bipartisan calls to resign over the security failures which led to the attempted assassination of donald trump it comes off to kimberly cheatle faced a contentious hearing before the house oversight committee on monday, where she was grilled by both republicans and democrats about the shooting of a trump rally earlier this month. cheatle admitted the incident was a quote, colossal failure, but refused to step down. cnn's whitney wild has more i call upon you to resign today. today in a contentious capitol hill hearing united states secret service director kimberly cheatle, found few allies now, bipartisan calls for her to resign as house oversight committee chairman james comer, who called her agency the face i've incompetence and ranking member jamie raskin, say she must leave as a first step to
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allowing new leadership to swiftly address this crisis and rebuild the trust. i just don't think this is partisan if you have an assassination attempt on a president, a former president, or a candidate you need to resign in the face of intense scrutiny, director cheatle immediately took responsibility for what she called a failure. >> the secret service's solemn mission is to protect our nation's leaders on july 13 we failed as a director of the united states secret service. i take full responsibility for any security lapse of our agency. >> however, for more than four hours, cheatle refused to answer even the most basic questions. nine days after the attempted assassination of donald trump i would have to get back to you that as a no, you're full of today, cheatle was asked multiple times, y secret service agents were stationed on the roof where a gunman eventually shot trump from a distance of less than 150 yards. can you answer why the secret service didn't place
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a single agent on the roof? >> we are still looking into the advanced process and the decisions are okay. >> okay members of the committee press cheatle for answers about why the former president was allowed to take the stage, even after she admitted the secret service had been notified between and two and five times, police were looking for a suspicious person, cheatle repeatedly said law enforcement didn't immediately determine that person who turned out to be the shooter was a threat. if the detail had been passed information that there was a threat the detail would never have brought the former president out onto stage. >> the hearing comes as the agency admits it denied some requests for additional security from the trump team in the two years leading up to the rally, though cheatle denied anything was withheld on the day of the shooting for the event in butler? there were no requests that were denied as far as requests, maybe they got tired of asking the chorus for her resignation has only grown louder and she was confronted
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at the rnc in milwaukee still cheatle says she has no plans to leave i think that i am the best person to lead the secret service at this time well, joining us now cnn law enforcement contributor steve moore, he's also a retired supervisory special agent for the fbi. >> steve great to have you with us. i believe you also a former fbi counter-sniper. so in a very good position to tell us perhaps what was going and on behind the scenes at this attempted assassination. but first to that hearing that we have just seen play out it was remarkable that cheatle seemed very unprepared to answer even the most basic questions and the frustration in the room to some degree was understandable given her performance, what did you make? think of it yeah, i have to agree i was astounded by her lack of either information that she had or willingness to provide it. >> i i have to give her the
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benefit of the doubt and saying she wasn't willing to provide some of it because if she didn't have that information the only conclusion you can come to is that she's not able to really lead that organization some of the things like why did they not have somebody up on that roof she knows secret service generally don't like people on high ground around them because they'll have higher ground they can make sure that that's clear and if there's a policeman up there how do you know it's a real policeman? how do you know it's not somebody faking to be a policeman. i mean, it's just basic things people know about it, at least if you've worked with the secret service, you know and she couldn't even answer that i watched a lot of it and i did see the frustration because this is a democratic panel. >> they were speaking on behalf of the american people and americans wanted to know some
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basic facts and she wasn't but willing to give any of them out, but just explain why she might not have done that. is a fair reason that the investigation is taking place or is it that she just didn't know and the investigation is failing already? >> if she didn't know, then she then there's no excuse. she would absolutely not be the person to lead the secret service through the investigation of what happened. that's if she didn't know if if she knew and didn't want to reveal techniques and practices that this secret service uses, which i would understand that should have been her answer. she should have said that would reveal tactics and procedures that the secret but service uses. and we don't want to make those public. i get both things. but i mean, just simply right now before that event,
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there had to be an operational plan. ops plan is what we used to call it. it's going to detail everything from who's on the detail, what their responsibilities are maps the location to where the nearest trauma hospital is that existed before the event that has most of the answers that they were asking. so she either needs to come clean and say, i'm not willing to provide it or explain why she doesn't have something that they knew before the event steve, just to draw on your experience for a moment, i think one of the more stunning revelations of this hearing was the fact that the secret service had been informed of an individual on the roof somewhere between two to five times before the gunman opened fire why in that instance was trump even allowed to go up on the stage? >> why was there no secret service agent on that roof
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that's that's a really really important question to have answered. >> let me let me just put it in perspective. if a person climbs on that roof and they are suspicious person that is still not authorization to shoot them. i mean, that's not that's not a crime punishable by immediate depth if a person all of a sudden producers a weapon, then maybe but they have to actually see that what really bothers me is that they had a person who was, who because obviously suspicious. he had ranging devices which are used by long district shooters and they didn't aggressively pursued this person i mean, at that point, you don't say, oh, let's keep an eye on him. that's like somebody kicking your door in at three in the morning and you tell your for spouse, i'll keep an eye on him. now, it is time for action. it is time to get that person separated and find out what's going on. the lack
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of response beforehand, forget the snipers, forget bringing him out on stage. why weren't they addressing that? very suspicious individual who is a potential threat steve moore. >> thank you so much. i mean, you just so many questions about an you just wanted some basic facts. >> you can understand the calls for her to resign, all right? well to say you know, surely an assassination attempt where someone actually gets injured. that undermines your position, doesn't it? i guess you could have been explained why it was, which is what steve saying give some reasons as to why there were failures all she was saying was there were gaps, but that was such an obvious thing to say is not helping herself no, it seems the israeli prime minister benjamin that netanyahu meanwhile, in washington will explain why his trip is fraught with tension and later one of the world's top golfers is playing around with donald trump. why he says
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and right now, get up to $800 off the new galaxy z flip6 and z fold6 when you trade in your current phone. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. scan the code now and ask about the bosley guarantee i'm pete muntean at reagan national airport. >> this is cnn welcome back to cnn newsroom. here are some of today's top stories us vice
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president kamala harris will be campaigning today in milwaukee, wisconsin, a key battleground state aurises now enough delegates endorsements to win the democratic nomination for president though nothing is official as of yet president joe biden is expected to return to the white house this afternoon. he has been self isolating at home in delaware since testing positive for covid-19 last week, the president has no public events scheduled for today. the eu is moving its august meetings out of budapest in protest over the hungarian prime ministers stance on the war in ukraine. viktor orban recently angered eu leaders by claiming the union as a pro-war policy. >> it's for prime minister benjamin netanyahu is in washington right now on monday evening, he met family members of hostages held in gaza and vowed to bring their loved ones home. netanyahu scheduled to address a joint session of congress on wednesday. normally vice president kamala harris would preside over that session, but she declined to do so. citing schedules, travel. she's expected to meet him
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later this week au president biden will meet netanyahu on thursday. >> the white house is unhappy with netanyahu over the state of the war in gaza, as well as ceasefire and hostage release negotiations. >> another is here with more on this. i mean, it's a rare honor, isn't it? in making this address how do you think that he's going to use it? >> like it is interesting. he has already appealed to both sides of the political aisle in the u.s. saying, well, whoever takes leadership of the united states israel remains the united states closest ally in the middle east. so he has appealed to both sides. he has traditionally had closer relations with republicans. and of course, we have seen those tensions between president biden and netanyahu over recent weeks and months. and of course, there has been that huge focus on the ongoing ceasefire negotiations and efforts to release all the hostages held captive in gaza. there has been that back-and-forth. we've heard netanyahu publicly contradicting things that biden has said it contradicting us foreign policy goals, even in the gaza strip. but we did hear from netanyahu yesterday, he
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met with family members and representatives of some of those hostages and he said that the conditions to release those hostages to ensure that they are brought back in his words, right? that they are seeing some certain changes at this current point in time. so perhaps a message signal of hope there. we know that the state department has said that they aren't close for there are still issues which remain and we've heard that message time and time again, those final sticking points always very difficult of course, but clearly, this will be an important week. he is set to meet with biden on thursday. we know he has a meeting scheduled with kamala harris later in the week and of course, we'll be waiting to hear from other democrats and republicans as well in terms of their response to his address to congress on wednesday? yeah. no doubt he's going to come under immense pressure for that ceasefire deal, especially in light of that devastating attack on khan younis yesterday. what more do we know about the casualty count will look, we are seeing the casualty count rising still even today, the authorities in gaza have said that now at least 81 people were killed as
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a result of airstrikes and artillery fire in the southern city of khan younis, at least 250 others injured on what we've been hearing from the israeli military now is that they are warning civilians in the eastern part of khan younis to evacuate, to relocate to what they've described as a readjusted humanitarian zone. >> and in the al-mawasi coastal area. now it's important to note that we've heard these evacuation orders before. the al-mawasi coastal area has previously, in other forms been designated as a humanitarian safe zone, but we have seen airstrikes targeting this area. we have seen airstrikes targeting other so-called safe zones as well. so there is very little confidence from many civilians who are now being forced to flee again. over their safety in this adjusted humanitarian zone, of course, for many civilians, this is not the first time they've been told to evacuate. they've had to move time and time again oftentimes they have been targeted in the areas that they have fled to. so there was real concern then as we continue to see the security situation in the south worsen, there is real concern for what that will mean for humanitarian organizations as well. the south, again, a
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vital gateway for aid. we've seen for weeks now obstructions in aid getting in through these areas. but of course it hit job patient is only worsening the famine situation is only deepening. and that will certainly be a key focus as ceasefire talks continue. >> all right. thanks very much days after a massive tech outage caused havoc around the world, some users are still struggling to get back to normal. >> among them, delta airlines, the atlanta-based carrier, canceled more than 1,000 flights on monday, more than any other airline that's after a rough weekend that grounded thousands of flights around the world leaving passengers struggling to find a way home i don't know, how we could have prevented it truthfully. i think it was just something something happened and they weren't prepared for it and we're just kind of, you know the guinea pigs to something that was pretty attack catastrophic. i'm going to get conceded for because this is out of control. it's not it's not okay. so i just i want them to take responsibility accountability, and compensate
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us where we're due delta says the crowdstrike outage disrupted its crew scheduling software, and it will take a few more days to get things back on track. >> britain's prince george's turned 11 and her tradition, his parents have released an official portrait to mark his birthday i take my the princess of wales, the black and white image was published on kensington palaces official social media channels with a message wishing a very happy birthday. i think it's always a bit of a story there in these shirt jacket bit more sort of regal formal moving into that. >> i just can't believe he's 11 already. he's my own child you realize how old were getting indeed ahead worldwide reaction to kamala harris becoming the democratic torch in the race for the white house. >> with the olympic games just days away, see what we did there. paris is gearing up for a massive security operation
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and look at how officials are planning let's keep paris safe after this short break this election season, stay with cnn with more reporters so on the ground. >> and the best political team in the business follow the voters follow the results, follow the facts follow cnn you've got some winning genes and for limited time, ancestry dna can show you how your genes stack up against world-class athletes find out which athletic traits you inherited. but hurry. >> the clock is ticking that was paying for my x's wind club membership for months before i caught it after we broke up, i forgot all about it on my credit card did not that's why i downloaded rocket money, an app that shows you all you're subscriptions in one place. >> and any you don't want, you cancel right knee, raise a glass as smarter spending and download rocket money today, ocd is more than what you see on tv. and in the movies, it comes with unrelenting
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million coin bonus jackpot party a party. and every spiri t you don't say some freedom. >> you've been hearing a lot more of it. common ai harris has ramped up a presidential campaign, of course, who better beyonce has given harris the approval to use the song. and harris did just that and know first official visit to her campaign headquarters on monday clearance guidelines for her music. but a source close to harris says the popstar quickly granted permission for the use
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of freedom but also his mother, tina knowles, endorsed harris on sunday post-coup picture of herself with harris on instagram calling her youthful, sharp, and a great leader. i think that's interesting because she's got such a broad base. beyonce hasn't she? yeah. and just the idea of having a support is one thing and it appeals to the female ticket. yes, we know already now less than two days after us president joe biden bowed out of the race for the white house his vice president is on the cusp of becoming the democratic presidential nominee. >> according to cnn estimates, kamala harris already has enough diligence good, endorsements. they are non-binding, but she's been backed by more than 1976 pledged delegates needed to win the nomination are crossed that threshold after a wave of endorsements from one state delegations from state delegations on monday we're getting some global reaction to the rise of harris, the kremlin
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spokesperson said, it is too soon to assess her candidacy, but noted that are past statements about russia contained unfriendly rhetoric, but she received praise from the german chancellor olaf scholtz, who called harris and experienced and competent politician will also kind words from the australian prime minister salma's been looking across it all. i mean, it's difficult, isn't it for these world leaders, they've got to stay out of internal politics, but they clearly have a view on who they prefer over the two candidates that have lined up now. >> and i think, look, it's a roller coaster ride. american politics isn't it? i don't think anyone is going to count their eggs before they hatch. this is absolutely a wait and see moment yet another loophole in the 2024 race. and you have to remember for world leaders, kamala harris's are relatively unknown known entity heard that comment from all of scholz, the german chancellor, of course, describing her as experienced and competent. so that's the hope among world leaders is that she's a steady pair of hands that she would continue
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biden policies and that she would be a known entity in that way. but there's no guarantee of that. of course again, there is a huge foreign agenda that she has to deal with and president biden was a towering figure, of course, on the world stage. all of those many decades of experience, how is she going to pick up the israel gaza conflict, for example, that's a very key one. we know prime minister netanyahu is in dc this week. he's going to address congress. we know harris is not going and to be in attendance, but she will have a one-on-one meeting with him. so already she's building her negotiating position on that key issue of course the other one nato and ukraine. where does she stand on that? the ideas is that she would continue biden's policy continue pouring that support into kyiv, continue bolstering nato that again everyone is going to be waiting, listening, seeing if that's indeed her intention. she also brings a great deal of diversity to the office. of course, first black woman, first female, first asian-american. what does that mean in terms of her outreach
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around the world? so i think for many world leaders to be frank, there was a, acceptance that a trump presidency were coming and a preparation for that now, we have another question mark and another candidate for them to get to know. >> and perhaps the degree of relief as well. >> all rounds somehow, thanks very much. donald trump will join the u.s. open golf champ, champion bryson dechambeau. what is a break? 50 youtube golf channel tuesday, dechambeau drop the news about the taped episode. monday right? >> 50 is a challenge where dechambeau and a guest tried to score less than 50 from the shortest tee boxes over 18 holes. dechambeau says he invited both trump and biden to play. he says, this is about golf, not politics. it's an incredible honor to be able to enjoy a round of golf with any sitting or former president and all have an open invitation to join me any time.
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pants france, pulling out all the stops to protect the olympic games with just three days until the spotlight shines on paris. >> country's national terror alert remains at its highest level. >> meanwhile, roughly 45,000 police officers are expected to keep the opening ceremony secure. cnn's melissa bell has more harris is taking no chances. >> hopes of a spectacular olympics stopped by fears of the worst part of the problem for french authorities is the sheer ambition that lies at the heart of these gains for the very first time at an opening ceremony is going to happen but actually the base six wanted state archer on the sen. rivers despite a, terror threat in france that's still at its highest level, some 320,000 people are expected to line the banks of the river over six kilometers to watch the biggest
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crowd ever to attend such an event in person we'll have more than 10,000 soldiers more than 35,000 policemen. that will be completely secure street patrols leave regularly from the largest military camp erected in france since the end of world war ii and beyond the terror threat, there also here's linked to crime, social unrest, and cyber attacks buccoo. >> there are lots of exercises, crises simulations, sometimes quite an extraordinary events where everyone during an entire day tries to anticipate and then to manage them and so today, we're ready and we're calm the olympic flame arrived in paris to welcoming crowds, but nothing compared to what is to come officials say some ten to 15 million people are expected far too many for humanize only to watch. >> so ai has been brought in to help monitor cctv the lead to detect abnormal situations like, for example, when there
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is intrusion of people on a railways, when there is unattended item that could be suspicious. package, et cetera we detect them and then the operator gets notified in real real-time so that he can decide what should be done. >> an unprecedented security operation made up of police military, foreign forces, and even ai startups that officials hope has made paris ready for anything melissa bell, cnn, paris back to the sport. >> lebron james helped team usa's squeak by germany, 92 to 88. the final chin game ahead of the olympics. >> yeah, the nba legend 11 of his 20 points in the fourth quarter. he also made some crucial defensive stops and steals. this we'll be his fourth olympic appearance says usa men's basketball. six, a fifth straight gold medal. this year interestingly, brown has also been chosen to be the u.s.
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>> flag bearer for the olympic ceremonies in the paris games. the team you say posted a video showing the moment he had been selected on behalf of the entire men's olympic basketball team. we would like to nominate lebron james to be the flag bearer for all the team usa he got that, honor. so you get away to flag impairs my man au the lakers superstar will be the first male basketball player to carry the flag for the usa. >> you described the feeling of being on to represent america at this particular time i understand it right now the country is so divided au. >> this moment, in that moment united us. or bring us together before escalates. you for au split seconds those those offers present. and we're trying to cross had water and pair, so my whole debris possibility with a lot of honor and appreciate it. thank what
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belts miss him very high flag. very true. i hadn't thought through that thinking no better person to carry them. >> agree? >> those missing paris for the games can enjoy not just the sites, but also the smells of france and they can even take some home with a scratch and sniff stamp showing the country's iconic bread. the by the baguette now we're told the stamps don't actually smell like the gets, but more like the sweet bakery sense paris is known for and that i personally love so much. >> the stamps were unveiled back in may it for santa on auraise day, the patrons st of bakers well, you can say is that smells or baguette and doesn't smell of a baguette. >> i think it's a bit of a get out. i think in these baguettes, a baguette, i would take a bakery smell any day of the week, frankly, i was there recently and it does strike me every time he can go to a regular cafe in france amazing bread but you can never get, to london and michelin starred
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restaurant the case will come to scratch and sniff, i think. >> yeah. but anyway, thank you so much for joining us here on cnn newsroom. i'm christina macfarlane i'm max foster, cnn this morning is up next after a quick break a cable running cousin away, quit on him himself. >> every weekday morning. >> here are the five things you need to know to start your day. >> cnn's five things with kate bolduan, streaming weekdays on max university of maryland global campus is a school for real life, one that values that successes you've already
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team usa is back! let's see that enhanced 4k from xfinity. wow. everything you'd want is right here when you say... “olympics” so, what if your favorite athlete is... "grant hollowa”" nice. or you can't get enough... “swimming” definitely adding that to favorites. now let's check... “medal coun”" and when is gymnastics on? “olympic schedule” it's that easy. find it, see it, count on it with the best seat in the house. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. jackpot party, a party and every spirit cnn this morning with kasie hunt next
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