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she reiterated a line of attack that is likely to become a familiar refrain in her campaign so. >> as leah told you before i was elected vice president, before as the united states senator, i was elected attorney general of the state of california, and i was a courtroom prosecutor before them in. those roles i took on perpetrators of all kinds creditors who abused women fraudsters ripped off consumers. cheaters who broke the rules for their own gain so hear me when i say i know donald trump's type the vice president's rally comes as president biden has just returned to the white house this video taken just a short time ago, the first images we've seen of the president
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since he went into isolation with covid a week ago. now, tomorrow, the president will address the nation to talk about his decision to drop his reelection bid and endorsed his vice president, kamala harris cnn's jeff zeleny and kristen holmes are back with us now. >> jeff, we just saw kamala harris in her first official campaign rally as the presumptive democratic nominee. you and i both covered 2020. i remember her on the campaign trail and this is a very different candidate. >> it is. i mean, for years has made her a better candidate. her argument is obviously different. she struggled at a primary race four years ago to kind of define herself. all that is out the window. she knows the assignment here this campaign is being joined in progress, but she's been largely doing these campaign events. but we haven't been watching as much because we never watch a vice presidential candidates as much as presidential candidates and entirely new moment for her. but i think her sharpness, her christmas at really framing
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that argument about we know donald trump's type. who is she going after? there? milwaukee is a great example of it, trying to energize the democratic base in the city of milwaukee and madison some democrats who really have been without energy this is the largest rally that the democratic campaign has had for either biden or harris is 3,000 people. as kristen well well-knows a 3,000 a person trump rally would be the smallest ever. so the reality here is we're about to see i think some more equally between both sides, democrats have not been that enthused. they clearly will be more enthused now, however, the race to define her is beginning a new with both sides. this is still an uphill battle for democrats and she's said that she said there are 105 days and we have a lot of work to do. she's right about that can we define her in a way that doesn't turn off some perspective voters as well i'm curious. tim alberta of the atlantic, you wrote american carnage. he said that,
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quote, most striking thing i heard from trump allies yesterday was the second guessing of j.d vance, a selection they acknowledged that was born of cockiness meant to run up margins with the base in a blowout rather than persuade swing voters in a nail biter. what are you hearing, kristen? >> it's a mixed bag on that. when we talk to people in the campaign, they're all in on j.d. vance i mean, he made his choice. there were a lot of people close to donald trump who are really pushing for j.d. vance to be in this position. there's been second guessing among allies since the beginning, j.d. vance, he's young, he's half of donald trump's age. he doesn't have a lot of experience on the national we'll stayed a particularly donors. donors have all been questioning why he, chose j.d. vance because j.d. vance is not a fan of corporations which he has made clear. so i think this kind of waffling and going back and forth is going to happen not just with a vice presidential pick bought on a number of different issues because yes, donald trump's team was incredibly confident going into
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november, they not only thought that they are going to pull off winning all of these battleground states. they actually thought they were gaining momentum in states like minnesota and virginia, states that hadn't gone republican in years. now, all of that is up in the air. part of the question and this is in this race to define who kamala harris's is this level of enthusiasm and what that means for turnout in the fall. the one thing to pay attention to donald trump's team is going to do everything in their power to link kamala harris, who all of biden's policies in which donald trump has just pulled ahead of him on when it comes to immigration crime. the economy and inflation in particular, they are going to save. those were not just biden's policies, those were kamala harris's policies, but the one thing they're not accounting for and the one thing they're not talking about, but definitely watching very closely is this enthusiasm gap. they know that there was not a lot of enthusiasm for president joe biden and part of why they saw themselves great gaining ground was because democrats were talking about sitting out the race what does kamala harris in that role mean
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for democrats? will those same democrats who were saying they were not going to vote in 2024, still not vote, or does this change what they were looking at for potential? turnout in november? they're just we're in uncharted territory and nobody including us, but the trump team as well have any idea what this actually looks like. they just know what they're, what they're going to do moving i'm struck too by the fact that kamala harris has been positioned by the biden administration is their chief attack dog on the issue of abortion and donald trump and republicans, that is an issue that they've all struggled with ever since roe v. wade was over returned. and yet through the convention, we didn't really hear a ton of talk about it. it was almost as if they were going to get through it without having to get back into that issue. >> and now it's going to be back at the forefront of this. yeah. and we were talking about vice presidential choice is probably feeling pretty good. they didn't choose doug burgum because that would have definitely so frightened to the forefront that was actually part of the argument against the north dakota governor was that he had been too strict on abortion in his home state, coming up with like a near
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abortion ban, which would have brought that back into the limelight. j.d. vance obviously has called for a national abortion ban, but has not really talked about it since he's assumed this role donald trump. one thing is clear. they don't want to be talking about abortion, things. they want to talk about are as i said, immigration, crime and inflation and that's are going to hear them hammering that vice president harris will be talking about abortion. they do want to talk about it. and in a state like wisconsin, it's still resonates because those old laws are still on the books. so this is why this campaign now is a completely, it's an open book in many respects, we are about to see a lot of changes and who knows how many will come up, but abortion, no doubt, this will be the defining test. we saw the midterm election. but in this case, this is one of their central issues. the question is the voters and what is the makeup of the electorate looks like? has that changed because of this? so we're going to have to be patient and look for some signs are other swing states down in play? are they not? this has really changed everything all right.
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>> jeff zeleny and kristen holmes. our thanks to both of you for being here let's talk now with someone who actually wrote a book on vice president kamala harris, veteran california politics writer, and harris biographer, dan moraine is joining us now. he is the author of camilla's way, an american life. thank you so much for being here. we just spoke in the last hour with it's good to have you with marianna pokhara, who heads a gen z non-profit organization. and she described commonly harris as an ally of our generation. we are seeing harris really taking off and energizing these younger voters through a lot of memes the other things, but also just watching her in her first speech there i'm curious if this is the kamala harris, you know, and what if any, changes you're seeing? >> well, you know, i saw her as a candidate for california attorney general and for us senate yeah, this is kamala harris who i who i saw in
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campaign stops along the way you know, she she's a high energy person she can be very engaging she can give a good speech. she's good in a smaller room yeah. >> she's this is a kamala harris. i know. and truthfully, i'm 3,000 miles away from the white house and the beltway not the kamala harris. i've been reading about for the last four years are you having written about her and followed her for so long? >> are you surprised? to find her in this moment well, am i surprised well, of course. >> i mean who would have funk this but you know what, when she ran for attorney general the first time in 2010? >> i'll tell you, republicans
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wise republicans could see her comment and they tried very hard to stop her. >> then she was a star who was rising and they figured if they could defeat her that first time in 2010, that there would be one less star they'd have to worry about i wrote about this back at the time and wrote about it in the book, this she can energize the crowd she can be a very good candidate and republicans saw that in 2010 i saw it in 2010 and 2014, she would come to the editorial board and i worked at the sacrament to be victorious page editor. i could see it there. she you know, she she's so she can be an impressive person. >> and yet, when she ran for president in 2020, she wasn't able to even make it to the iowa caucuses. she dropped out before that. it was just not a successful campaign in several regards. >> but now we are seeing jeff
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zeleny, our colleague was just explaining her evolution. >> do you think she's been able to identify her own weaknesses and better prepare herself for this moment that she now finds herself in you know, i found kamala harris to be a very quick study yeah. i'm sure she knows when she doesn't connect. and she she can self-correct. i believe that's that's part of being a good politician of good professional, you make a mistake, you try not make that same mistake again, some of us do over again. but i'm not but i think yeah, i think just what i'm seeing from a far this is the kamala harris that i saw in california, and that california and saw it and they elected three times statewide. it's not easy to run in
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california's statewide and to win and she did it three times. yes, it's not something to be dismissed. >> it's a big place says this californian right here all right. dan, i gotta be honest, you're not setting expectations for her very low and you know that so much of politics is an expectations game. i wonder you know, are there, are, there are certain things that you see i don't know if weaknesses or things that she will need to work on. i mean, what what are you seeing as far as that area that she needs to kind of shore up? >> sure. well you know i wrote about this when i was a columnist, have heard about this when i was a news reporter. and i wrote about this when i wrote the biography of of harris she, you know, she can be very difficult. she can be tough on her staff. she can
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she she doesn't take stands on certain issues where when those of us in your line of work in mind wish that she takes a stand. so this is this is way different stage. then than running for district attorney in san francisco or attorney general and california she is a fighter. she's a good campaigner she can stumble and i have no doubt that there will be stumbles in the next 105 days. this is huge stage. and the bright lights are going to be especially prayed i know her in california and i know what i saw here i wrote. some very critical pieces about her when she was attorney general and when she was in the u.s. senate at the same time as somebody who's covered politics for a lot of, a lot of years out here in california. there aren't a
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lot of politicians, so i've seen at her level dana, it's so great to get your perspective as someone who has watched her for years and it's great to see this through your eyes. >> thank you so much. i'm sure the book has some newfound power popularity as well. we appreciate you being with us right? >> thank you so much. >> and still ahead. we're learning new details about the attempted assassination the nation of former president trump as the director of the secret service resigns from her post saturday on the whole story, political violence has always threatened our democracy after the attempt on trump's life. >> where does america goes from here? the whole story? with anderson cooper, political violence. america as bloody history, saturday at 8:00 on cnn looking nature boys, stop birth get some man finch i
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whopping 39% of us adults say they worried they won't be able to pay the bills every month. and the last time things looked like this, the great recession chen, the numbers even higher among black and latino americans cnn's matt egan has been looking into this trend, joins me now. matt, we see unemployment low and inflation cooling and yet so many people are still really struggling yeah, that's right, jessica, listen, this is all about the cost of living, whether it's groceries or car insurance or daycare, life is just a lot more expensive than it was a few years ago. >> now, it's true the rate of inflation is down but prices aren't down. they're still going up. just that a slower pace. and so that is why we're seeing that 39% of us adults say that they worry most are all of the time that their family's income is not going to meet. their expenses, 39%. that is up from late 2021, and that's roughly in line with what we saw in mid 2008 during
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the early stages of the great recession. now, of course, this is not everyone. some americans are feeling pretty good right now. they're going out to dinner, they're going on vacation what's notable about this is they found that 46% of black americans saying they worry about making ends meet. and just over half, 52% of latinos say the same that this really is the number one financial headache for americans right now, roughly two-thirds of adults say that the number one problem facing their families from an economic perspective is the cost of living. and look that is down a bit from two years ago, but well above what we saw in the summer of 2020 21 and listen, i talked to a woman in ohio who worked for the cdc and she said, it's just outrageous what she's paying at the grocery store. but that's not it. rush. she said it's astronomical what it costs to get insurance right now or what it costs to buy clothes and listen, i know there's a lot of focus on the palace intrigue at the white house and
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mar-a-lago are the latest swing-state polls. but really the cost most of living. this is what it is that is keeping many americans up at night. and it's what they want the next president to address. >> all right. matt egan for us. thanks so much for that reporting. brianna all alright and joining us now is congressman dan kildee. he is a democrat from the key battleground state of michigan. he has endorsed kamala harris for president alright. i just want to be frank with you. i've talked to some of your house lawmaker colleagues, democrats and before biden has stepped aside in one breath, they were saying he needs to step aside and in the other, they were saying we have concerns that harris is not the person to get the votes that are needed. what do you say to them because those concerns don't evaporate. >> well, i loved my colleagues but the people we should be listening to, or the people, on the ground. and what we have seen in the last 48 hours is an incredible surge of energy around cobble harris as are as
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our nominee for president of the united states. i listened to with they have to say tens of thousands of new volunteers walking into the headquarters hundreds of thousands of first-timewant to chip in and b of this. so while people may have had their own predictions about what the reaction to accommodate harris candidacy for president might be those predictions don't match what we're actually seeing among the people who matter. especially young people i love joe biden and i consider him a friend, but i do think we have to acknowledge the reality that the enthusiasm for his candidacy he wasn't aligned with the great track record that he had as president. what we're seeing now is enthusiasm around the biden-harris agenda now, led by vice president harris is our nominee. but a dramatic uptick in enthusiasm, especially among younger people who see this as the passing of
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the torch the generational change that so many people are asking here, you're saying she's sort of defied expectations. there. are you hearing when you're talking to your fellow democrats? what are they saying that are they saying there's surprised by what has transpired here? >> i think some people are surprised. i can't say that i'm entirely surprised because i've known and watched vice president harris both when she was in the senate, she and i actually worked together on drinking water lead i'm from flint, michigan. that means a lot to us so i wasn't overly surprised, but i'm pleasantly surprised with the level of enthusiasm that people have. again, this especially goes to younger voters, people who were going to have a hard time persuading to participate, had they participated, they probably would've voted for joe biden if he had been on the ballot. but the question was not where their allegiances lie. but were there in louisiana some level is and what we're seeing there is just a dramatic increase. i know my republican colleagues are trying to pretend that's
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not happening. they're petrified it's still going to be a close race, but we have got a chance to win michigan. and if we can win michigan, we can win the white house. >> he did that because obviously, you know what it would take to win in michigan. what does she need to do? to win over michiganders? >> i think she has to be their like she has been in the past. come to michigan come to flint, talk to them about the concerns that they have about their own future. there's a whole generation of people for example, right now who don't really believe they're ever going to be able to own a home. we have a set of policies that i know vice president harris supports that we can move toward that gives people the chance to do that. what do we know about the republican agenda? they want to control people. they want to control women and their reproductive rights. they want to continue to concentrate wealth in the hands of the few just look at their project 2025. manifesto and you can see the two different, starkly distinct visions of america and i think
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this is going to have to be message that she brings to places like michigan, like wisconsin, like pennsylvania. >> she has been vice president for this whole term. right. so you've had democrats in the white house now for about four years. and when you do look at michigan, i think it's important we remember that there were nearly 150,000 democratic primary voters who did not vote for joe biden. joe biden, kamala harris chris obviously together in this administration there were over 100,000 uncommitted, about 20,000 each for marianne williamson and 20,000 for dean phillips does she just i mean, those concerns that folks had about biden, do they not just carry over to harris? how do you see it? >> i don't think it's automatic that we get everybody back but what she does is she gives us a chance to get them back. if she comes to michigan and she addresses those issues about our future. again younger voters so i going to make the difference. i think we
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sometimes overlook younger voters as we get, we know that generally speaking, they don't participate at the same levels of people say, my age israel policy stay with younger voters. is she different have to differentiate herself. >> i think she's a different person. i think she will have to speak with some clarity on the issue of israel and gaza. i've had my differences with president biden's approach on this, and i've expressed those to him directly. i think that's one of the things people are listening for. i represent a significant arab and muslim population in the few conversations that i've had in the last 48 hours, they seem to be open to a kamala harris candidacy. they're interested in what she might bring bring look. she's a woman who understands what it's like to sometimes have to be forced into the shadows growing up as a young woman of color, she understands what these communities have dealt with. and i think she understands the path forward for this country has to include everybody this is really going to be a new race and i'm obviously pretty
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because he asked about it just really quickly, you know, this saying that, you know, that she's bratt. were you also, you know, about this? this is sort of a meme. were you also today years old when he learned what this yeah, it might have been this morning years old. >> this morning years old. all right congressman. great to have you as always. thank you so much. thank you. >> still ahead, the director of the secret service resigning one day after that heated hearing on capitol hill at the same time, we are learning new details about the attempted assassination of former president trump will have more on that when we're back tv on the edge moments that shaped our culture coming this fall on cnn you have to do is just look into his eyes and you know, he's got it the passion the fearlessness there's no doubt
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accustoming.com erin burnett, outfront tonight at seven on cnn there are some new details about the assassination attempt against former president trump, and they're pretty alarming today during a hearing on capitol hill, pennsylvania state police he's commissioner christopher parris revealed that two local law enforcement officers actually left the building that would have given them cite. they would have had a view of the roof where the would-be assassin ultimately fired from. >> harris says those officers left their posts to join the search following reports of a suspicious person at the rally that person, of course, turned out to be the 20-year-old gunmen. let's bring in secret service agent and cnn law enforcement analyst, jonathan wackrow jonathan, thanks so much for being here with us. this is these are some while new details that we're getting, which also included that local law enforcement, there were minutes from when they had
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spotted this suspect with a weapon and had communicated that. what do you make of all of these details? we're getting because the secret service, the former secret service director said yesterday that she believed it had been seconds yeah. >> well, listen, i think this is the drip drip, drip of information that we're getting and we as the viewer and listening into these hearings are trying to piece together exactly what what happened on that tragic evening rather than having the director come out yesterday? give us and provide us additional information yesterday's testimony was a disaster in terms of transparency and accountability. but now, let me just get back to the point we were talking about the local law enforcement in the way that they reacted to me. this is very clear that roles and responsibilities of the local law enforcement at their specific posts to support the overall security plan. we're not clearly articulated or that
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the governance and oversight of those officers wasn't there. so that's problem number one. problem number two is, as you said communication, once there was a potential threat identified by local the law enforcement, the ability to communicate that to the broader law enforcement group. and specifically back to the secret service and the working detail that surrounded the former president that was absent. so we need to understand where was that breakdown in advance in the coordination with local law enforcement and in the communication struck yeah. >> because jonathan, just to be clear shortly after this happened, we were under the impression that someone in local law enforcement at they pop their head up on the roof are sort of popped up on the roof a little bit seen the would-be shooter within view and then actually had a weapon turned on them so they got down because they were now at risk. and then very quickly the shooter took aim and shot at
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former president trump the rally. i just want to read what we've learned from paris said he said that if the first shots rang out at 18:11, 6:11 p.m. the hoisting up, the officer occurred probably know more again, i'm not going to give you a time, but i wanted to just put into context have you sequence of events. i would say at most 2.5 to three minutes before the first shots rang out. can you just explain to us the logistics of the officer sees the shooter gets a weapon pointed out him now realizes exactly what's going on. is there one kind of, i mean, on the radio, how were they communicating? explain to us how this should have flowed? >> well, the way it should offload was that upon the threat identification right now we have a man with a gun on an elevated position identified by law enforcement on the radio, it should have gone out just that man with a gun at this dislocation. that communication
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should have been understood by local law enforcement, as well as all law enforcement stakeholders off of a unified network that didn't happen, or it didn't happen to any reporting that we have because that would have been critical. you're talking about 120, 180 seconds going by from the moment that that threat was identified. the moments that shot started being launched towards the former president. that is almost eternity when it comes into the protective realm, there was enough time for that communication to go back and forth. and that's where we have to understand was where was that breakdown? because if the president wasn't on stage or the president could have been move quickly upon the initial identification of a threat. we could have avoided this tragic situation, but we didn't. and we have to understand where was that communication breakdown? >> yeah adapt point. he would have been on stage because he'd been on for several minutes and clearly should have been removed jonathan wackrow. thank you so much for your
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insights. we do appreciate it. still ahead. we're told that vice president kamala harris will not preside over israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu's address to congress tomorrow. she will meet separately with him this week. her first meeting with a world leader since president biden said he was stopped i think out of the race. in the meantime, these are some live pictures of a protests happening now in the capital at the cannon rotunda just actually to be clear, this is a office building near the capital the cannon house office building. there are 300 members of the group, jewish voices for peace protesting tomorrow's visit by prime minister benjamin netanyahu will be monitoring this stay with cnn right and mikah are taking on to hotels. >> what if i took on one of the hotels and you did the other two teams, we are going to be brian 100 days and the best hotel when 100 day hotel
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president biden on his 2020 victory what do you think of these two, meaning and trump agreeing to this meeting? >> well, good afternoon, jessica. i'll look. i'm not surprised that they're meeting both have a political interest in meeting bibi netanyahu, of course, to rebuild a rapport with president trump in case he gets elected in november, he would have to of course deal with president trump and his, in his administration when he comes into power and he knows he needs to make amends over a number of slides that president trump has taken apparently had taken from him. and i think president trump likewise, his political interests is to show support for the israeli people and the country given the ongoing onslaught by hamas the challenges they have on the northern border with hezbollah. and of course, the big bad guy in a region which is iran. so for these reasons, i think it's both in mutual political interests to meet and vice
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president harris is going to meet with netanyahu. she will not, however, preside over his address to congress. we're told she has a previous commitment. senator j.d. vance is also skipping this address to campaign. >> what does this mean? politically? >> yeah look, i think for kamala harris, it's a ceremonial duties of constitutional duty, but one that is ceremonial, but she has more important things right now to do. that is to pull the team together think to her policy positions, prepare for the convention and really run a race against president trump you see, she's in milwaukee today. she was speaking yesterday. so she's got a campaign to run. i think the other thing too is i think the i assume her campaign wants to put her in situations that make her look presidential and kind of elevate her from her current role to what they hope will be her future one. and so i think skipping the ceremonial role where she presides over the bibi netanyahu's remarks and having a separate meeting with him where she side-by-side and who knows, maybe take questions
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with him would be what they would want to do to elevate her appearance, her perception with the american people and what about for the vice presidential candidate j.d. vance, do you think that makes any sort of difference i don't i don't think for either them, again, for him, he's on the road as well. >> he had his first appearance the other day with president trump. he's gonna get out there. he's playing the traditional attack dog role of going out there and they're obviously going after her right now, but i think again, for both of them, i think we're in a different situation. many have been reporting the importance of this visit by bibi netanyahu was much more was much greater, was a few months ago when it was planned and what it is now. and in fact, the reporting is that many people israel think that just now isn't the time for him to leave the country that he should be back in israel. so i think this meeting will come and happen the address to congress will come and happen it'll be curious, frankly, to see what he says. more importantly, i think politically jessica is what will come a harris say about
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the israel and its actions in gaza? and will she strike a different tone or take a different approach than president biden? she can't go too far and i think she has to my view, move more to the center away from the progressive left that wants to see them take a more detached position from israel. but this is what i'll be watching for closely in the coming days is how does she approached a us policy toward israel? so now that she's campaigning i think a lot of people will be watching that as well. secretary mark esper, as always, thanks so much. we appreciate it thanks. >> jessica next five days after friday's tech outage, delta e is still in meltdown. >> that is alive look at an airport with all of that baggage in atlanta, just stacking up still. the airline has already canceled close to 500 flights today. we're told the problems could it's in through the week. >> why the airline is struggling so much to recover saturday on the whole story political violence has always
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contributing to the success and growth of our business i'm oren liebermann at the pentagon this cnn the meltdown that delta airlines is facing after that global tech outage could last all week. >> the airline canceling more than 400 flights today. that is on top of that, thousands that have been scrubbed since friday, and that is left scores of travelers stranded. some most passengers now, desperate to be reunited as well. what they're missing luggage. cnn's isabel rosalas, is it atlanta's airport where the bags are piling up? we see them behind you, isabel, tell us about that and what you're hearing from folks rihanna, passengers are understandably frustrated we are on day five of this thing and right now, it really appears to be a delta problem all the other airlines
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are pretty much returned back to normal operations, but delta is leading the pack in the number of cancellations across the u.s over 400 cancellations so far and this is what you're looking at. just take a look at this passengers having to go through this maze of luggage almost as though they're looking for oblast pair of keys here trying to get reunited with their belongings. it is a fresh trading mess. and at the crux of the problem here, brianna, is delta is saying that they were very reliant on microsoft and some of the most delicate some that they have, including systems for tracking cruz, where their pilots are were the flight attendants are deeply intertwined with microsoft to the point where they're having to repair and rebuild and reboot those systems by hand. and you were just seeing there in the second floor where my photographer is that even more luggage just keeps going and going and going listen to what passengers are
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saying they would cancel the lay and then it will start all over again. >> so we've actually been canceled three times today. >> my belongings or on the tarmac being loaded onto a plane somewhere. i'm no longer going to see my placement canceled and i'm likely it's going to go back home our flight, delta 95% of the time. >> so that really suffer. they do a fabulous job most of the time, all the time normally right? >> and delta saying this could take several more days, possibly until the end of the week. we now know that secretary pete buttigieg of the department of transportation, they have opened up an investigation into delta, making sure that passenger rights are upheld throughout this entire process. meanwhile, the ceo of delta, ed bastian is saying that they're going to make it right, that they're working around the clock on this. and also so offering passengers skymiles, vouchers, and refunds as well. brianna
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all right. >> isabel and i bet some folks are looking at your live shot here saying that's my bag. there it is. we've spotted it for you here, stepping. have no fear. all right. isabel, what a nightmare. all right. thanks for that report from june gin and juice to wine and the gaetz the one and only snoop dogg has earned the honor of being an olympic torch bearer ahead of the paris games. >> or details next my father chose me to succeed him. he held to his deficient until we have the budget, the dragon the war will be fooled. and many will die house of the dragon streaming exclusively on max payne means pause on the things
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of the final torchbearers of the olympic flame. the rapper posting a photo of himself with the caption, you ready, paris 2024 olympics yet dig i dig, yeah, full on. >> snoop dogg says that he grew up watching the olympics. he is thrilled to see the incredible athletes bring their a game to paris so snoop will actually be carrying the torch through the neighborhood of santini, which is the flames final stop before it reaches the eiffel tower. and then i don't know what is he going to do like fascism, my nism, drop it like it's hot. maybe what if he does do that? it would really add a little flair to the opening ceremonies, but it is going to be so hello to see that smack dab in the middle of paris with the eiffel tower, or it's going to be, it's great. i love it. all right. can't wait to see snoop dogg and all the other folks live pictures of paris. so beautiful it this late evening, there. the lead with jake tapper starts right now

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