tv CNN News Central CNN July 24, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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something suspicious which was crooks? then you have other data points which is there was a text thread going on among members of the butler county emergency services looking for him at some point, he utilized a rangefinder and their level of suspicion was heightened on on and on. the more we learn, the more troubling things seem to appear. is there one moment that you can point to, right now? i'll of like fatal error in the plan and the communication or does it seem like this is headed toward a just a systemic failure it seems like this is moving towards a systemic failure, right? >> there's not a single point of failure here. what we're seeing is overlapping failures that compounded the situation in worsened it as time went on. i mean, we're hearing reports that the shooter was up on the roof anywhere for two to three minutes, potentially. i mean, that is alarming to hear however, if the law enforcement officers or the secret service
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were actually covering that roof, that would not have been a problem. i think when we start laying out the timeline of when this threat was or suspicious individual that then transcended into a threat as that timeline is really starts to codify. we understand what that pre-attack behavior actually was. we're going to find more either communication errors a breakdowns, or just a misunderstanding of what their role and responsibility was in the overarching security plan yeah. >> still more to learn even as we learned so much, jonathan, great to see you. thank you. >> new hour of cnn, new central starts now new. details on a presidential address, the likes of which we have not seen in more than 50 years. >> president biden speaks from the oval office for the first time since giving way to vice president harris, who's really prime minister benjamin netanyahu speaks to congress today. while dozens of
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lawmakers say they will skip the address and this morning the director of the fbi testifies before lawmakers as new body cam video shows the moments immediately after the attempted assassination of donald trump john berman with sara sidner and kate baldwin. this is cnn news central and breaking overnight, a bullish new campaign memo fresh off the presses from vice president kamala harris's campaign how her campaign operation now plans to go about defeating donald trump, the campaign looking beyond the blue wall, the states of wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania which was seen as really the only and very narrow path to victory for joe biden. >> harris's campaign chair, jen o'malley, dillon saying in a campaign is not i'd only going on offense there, but also re-expand the map to what she calls an expanded universe of swing voters universe she
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argues is now opened up with harris at the top. at the same time, president biden is preparing for an address to the nation that will echo through history and oval office address explaining why he is not seeking reelection. and also laying out in his words what lies ahead. cnn's arlette saenz is at the white house. she's joining us now. arlette, let's focus in on this new the new moves by the, by the harris campaign. what more are you learning about what their strategy is in this moment well, kate, the harris campaign argues that this 2024 race is now more fluid than ever as vice president kamala harris is expected to be at the top of the democratic ticket to face off against donald trump. >> in november. now the harris now harris campaign manager, a campaign chair, jen o'malley, dillon, released a new memo this morning outlining how they see the electoral path going forward. they believe that harris can expand the support, the democrats drew in 2020, appealing specifically to latino, black, and young voters. and they also a real
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opening for harris with undecided voters in this campaign with o'malley, dillon arguing that there is a quote, expanded universe of winnable voters. they believe that they can win these voters on issues they believe these are people who have leaned towards democrats and they can get on board in this election. now, as far as the battleground states, the campaign stresses does that they are going to go on offense in all of the battleground states, a bit of a difference from what we heard two weeks ago from the biden campaign when they explicitly said that the clearest path to victory was through the blue wall. those states like pennsylvania, michigan, and wisconsin. now, harris made her battleground state debut as a presidential candidate just yesterday in wisconsin, and it was there where she really previewed a lot of the message that could be playing out over the course of the coming months as she faces off against donald trump's, she really leaned into her past experience as a prosecutor and making her case against trump, while also trying to focus on issues like
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abortion rights and also expanding economic opportunity for the middle-class. take a listen a future where no child has to grow up in poverty where every worker has the freedom to join a union health care paid family leave now back here at the white house, president biden is preparing to deliver one of the most important and historic speeches of his presidency. >> he will speak from the oval office this evening to really give americans more of an insight into why he decided to bow out this race. but also chart his plans for the months ahead of course, biden is heading into a lame duck presidency, but he insists he is not going anywhere and will
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grow, wants to remain engaged and actually get some things done on both domestic and foreign policy issues going forward. >> arlette, thank you very much so much happening today. sara and this is another thing later today, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu will address lawmakers on capitol hill in hopes of shoring up support for israel's ongoing war in gaza, us and israeli officials have voiced some optimism about the prospects of a ceasefire and hostage deal, but netanyahu's visit is also being met with plenty of criticism, dozens of democrats in both the house and the senate have said they're not gonna be there for the speech protesting the ongoing war because of its heavy civilian casualties. >> in gaza. and of course, the humanitarian crisis that it has caused. cnn congressional correspondent lauren fox, joining us now. lauren, what can you tell us about you've got this schism where you've got all these democrats that are saying we're not going to be there. the vice president is not going to be there, but she is. i know meeting with netanyahu for private talks
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yeah. >> it's really an incredible moment of political upheaval both in israel politics and in us politics. and i think one of the messages you are going to be seeing that a lot of members are looking for today is what is netanyahu's? path forward? many lawmakers who i've been speaking to on both sides of the aisle among republicans and democrats want to see a clear explanation for how this war begins to come to an end. as well as how benjamin netanyahu plans to try and get the remaining hostages back home to their families. that was something that i heard from senator joni ernst, a republican who sits on the senate armed services committee last night when we were discussing what she hoped to hear. as you mentioned, there are dozens of democrats in the house and a handful in the senate who planned not to attend this speech at all. notably senator patty murray, who could have been presiding over the speech, will not be attending today. instead,
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senator ben cardin, the chairman of the senate foreign relations committee, will preside over this address. there's also going to be counterprogramming for many members, including pramila jayapal, the leader of the house progressive caucus, who said in a statement, quote, instead of attending netanyahu's address, i will attend a panel discussion led by the center for american progress and other organizations on the path to peace this event will feature a palestinian leader, a jewish israeli leader, and a former idf soldier, all of whom are dedicated to finding a path toward peace and security. and last night in the lead up to this joint meeting of congress, you saw a number of democrats called the floor and express some of their concerns about netanyahu's policies and his leadership over the last several months. here's one senate armed services chairman jack reed mr. netanyahu, and his government has failed to develop an exit strategy for gaza. >> they have no plan for a
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sustainable future for the palestinians, and no plan to establish security and rebuild gaza is destroyed. cities with prime minister netanyahu in washington, this week, i am again compelled to say that the israeli government must change its path and before netanyahu addresses this joint meeting of congress, he will meet with speaker mike johnson. there will also be a photo opportunity for republican leadership in the house and senate and a democratic leadership in the house and senate just want to remind everyone that senator chuck schumer majority leader, he actually called on israel to hold new elections to replace benjamin netanyahu earlier this year, sara all right. >> lauren fox. thank you so much for that. john. >> right with us now, is congresswoman judy chu of california, congresswoman. thank you so much for being with us. will you be attending the address from the israeli prime minister i will not be
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attending the address by netanyahu i am skipping this address because netanyahu has undermined the peace process and peace is what we need in israel and gaza right now, we need to make sure we bring the house hostage's home. >> we have to stop the killing of innocent civilians. now, 38,000 people have died. we need to have an exit strategy. we need to have a ceasefire that will stop the killings immediately. but we also need to have a plan for what will happen after this all ends. we need to establish a two-state solution. and i don't see any of this coming from net yeah. who in fact, i see him just wanting to continue the war for his own political future because he is facing criminal indictments what message does this send if so many members of
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congress, democratic members of congress dozens of house members, several senators are skipping a speech from the leader of an historic ally of the united states i think that speaker johnson should not have invited him in the first place. >> this is only going to be divisive and already of course, we see enormous protests happening around washington dc it is because netanyahu does not provide any solid lucian for the future. and in fact, he has engendered more protests because he has encouraged settlers to do violent actions in the west bank and close off any attempt towards getting a two-state solution in the middle east. >> it does seem as if vice president kamala harris from your state of california will be the democratic nominee how do you see her policy? toward
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israel in the conflict in gaza as being different from that of president biden well, i believe that they are working in unity in that they know that israel has the right to defend itself but they haven't actually working very hard to get a ceasefire solution. >> and they have been working very hard to make sure that there is humanitarian aid given to those in gaza, and that food and medical supplies can be given to innocent civilians. so that, so no daylight, no daylight between harris biden that you see i think that they are working together and have similar goals in terms of achieving peace in the middle east in terms of the candidacy of vice president harris we've seen over the last 24 hours a line of attack coming from republican calling her a san
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francisco liberal. >> i had tom cotton, the arkansas republican on yesterday and i want you to listen to how many times he said it in a short period of time she is a san francisco liberal, a san francisco liberal, san francisco liberal, a failed san francisco liberal. >> she is a failed san francisco liberal that had been a drinking game. i would have been plastered by the end of that. a congresswoman but listen, you know, san francisco up the beach, up the coast from you how do you defend her against those attacks she is, an american who stood up for the needs of americans. >> she has been instrumental in may picking sure that we got the bipartisan infrastructure bill so that we could get good jobs in america. and she was instrumental in the inflation reduction objection act, which brought prescription drugs down to only $2,000 a year for
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seniors and $35 a month for insulin for seniors. and she has been instrumental in the chips and science act, which will finally bring back semiconductor manufacturing to the u.s. these are american priorities and vice president harris has been in the forefront of that going all over the united states too. make sure that these monies are spread across every sector of society and in fact, in the midwest where these kind of manufacturing jobs or greatly needed congresswoman judy chu from california. thanks so much for being with us today. appreciate your time kate. >> plastered donald trump back on the campaign trail and stepping into an entirely new race and political lands new details now on how the trump team is looking to reimagine. their playbook to take on kamala harris and sunday was
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just labeled the hottest day in recorded bordered human history for the globe. now we are learning about hundreds of heat-related deaths in one arizona county centered political violence has always threatened our democracy after the attempt on trump's life. where does america go from here? the whole story with anderson cooper? political violence, america is bloody history. saturday at 8:00 on cnn skating for over 45 years has taken a toll on my body. i take kunal turmeric because it helps with healthy joints and inflammation support why kuno? it has superior absorption compared to regular turmeric kunal, the brand i trust rife diabetes. >> there is no slowing down each day is a unique blend of people to see and things to do that's why you choose lucerne to help manage blood sugar response uniquely designed with carbs, steady glue, sirna, bring on the day if you have graves disease and blurry
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can create tech packs, videography photography, sketches, and just hold hopeless, bring our dreams to life washington crossing the delaware at acidic the lifeboat the practical joke to tbs history in practical jokers, all new thursday's attack on tbs, set your dvr now, donald trump is back on the campaign trail in north carolina. >> today, one of the states that the harris campaign believes is once again now in play for them now with kamala harris at the top of the ticket, one example of how the race has reset and also has the trump campaign taking a new look at its campaign playbook
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with a new memo telling republican lawmakers one issue they need to now laser-focused on is what republicans call harris's failed policies at the southern border. cnn's priscilla alvarez is tracking this one. she has much more on this priscilla. >> what are republicans planning to do with this? >> well, they are going to call her the borders are this is something that they introduced back in 2021 when president biden tapped vice president kamala harris to tackle the root causes of migration in central america and over the last three years, they have occasionally use this term, borders are even though that was not her he asked and they're clearly going to lean into it even more. and in a show of that foreign president donald trump just yesterday, held a very rare phone call just to go after the vice president and the administration's immigration policies. take a listen as a result of her dangerously extreme immigration policies, the largest invasion in history
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is now taking place at our southern border and it's getting worse, not better the management of the us-mexico border was going to be a political vulnerability for this campaign from the get-go and they've tried to flip the script on that, but the vice president's task in particular has been lost in a lot of the attacks and criticism. she was specifically looking at long-term fixes and central america, honduras as water mola under, as i'm sorry, in el salvador. and she has been shoring up private sector investments into that region. and i have talked to experts. i've talked to administration officials and they all say that there has been some early success more than $5 billion have gone to these three countries to try to create jobs and keep people from moving north. the numbers from those countries has also did. but that is going to likely be lost in these attacks by republicans as she hits the trail and try to notch that victory in november yeah great perspective for so we're going to looking
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back on your reporting and your context and your clarity on this issue throughout. thank you so much, sara. >> all right. in less than two hours, fbi director christopher wray will be on capitol hill to testify on the trump shooting investigation. >> what we are learning from new body camera footage taken in the moment, right after the gunfire. and 100% protection against it's hiv, the game changing new experimental drug that scientists say could potentially prevent infections. those stories and more ahead our special holiday, happened and search for suspect how would really happen the atlanta olympic bombing premiere saturday at nine on cnn look we know it's going to be a big change, but it's the right thing to do for all of us. >> it's just your mother and i
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podcast from cnn today's top five stores, all in one podcast the five things you need to hear in under five minutes, prime members can listen to buy things ad-free on amazon music all right, we have some brand-new body camera footage this morning showing the moments after the man who attempted to assassinate donald trump was shot and killed. >> we do want to warn you the
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footage might be disturbing to you. you see armed officers on the roof in moments after thomas crooks was killed. that is the video there for roughly two minutes, they explain when they first saw the shooter and when they lost sight of him later today, we'll learn more about the fbi's investigation when director christopher wray testifies on capitol hill, cnn, national security reporter zachary cohen has more on the story. what are you? where do you learning? what are investigators learning from this footage that has now been released yes. >> era. we're really seeing how officers grappled with the aftermath of the shooting in real time. as you mentioned, you can see the body of the gunman in that video. you can see the trail of blood coming off the roof. but more importantly, investigators are looking at this interaction between the secret service agent. you can see in the clip and the local officers that are also on the roof. and as you said, they're talking about when officers first saw the shooter and noticed and reported him as suspicious. i want to play one moment in particular where the secret
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service agent and these local officers are effectively trying to figure out what went wrong and when the shooter was first identified this is the guy that aren't yes yes, he beaver county this isn't. okay. we don't know we don't know. i don't know treating that as suspicious device once i got i believe the sniper that scene needs and send a pitcher's is right in the saddest building so you can sense the confusion that's happening in the immediate aftermath there there's undoubtedly will come up during today's hearing with fbi director christopher wray as lawmakers and officials in the law enforcement. >> community are still trying to piece together a timeline and understand what went wrong and how to prevent it from happening again. >> all right. zachary cohen. thank you so much. appreciate it. >> john all right. new polling just in shows how vice president harris is doing among young voters since she entered
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challenge, i want to come if he does face she would house of the dragon streaming exclusively on max all right. in my hands, i am holding a memo from now, harris campaign chair jen o'malley, dillon, in which she outlines this morning the advantages that she has says that vice president kamala harris gives to the democrats efforts now to maintain the white house. and one of the things she says is that harris has support unique support among young voters. that's what she says here. we've seen all these internet means over the last two days as well. so is it real? one man knows the answer is cnn's senior data reporter, harry. and in this case, i say, you know the answer, what you've done is you've looked at the numbers since sunday. what do they said? yeah. you know, all this stuff about brat summer and all that jazz. so i want to take a look at trump versus democratic margin. just remind folks where we were at the end of the 2020 campaign. joe biden won voters
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under the age of 35 by 21 point. what do we see? what kamala harris well, she's still ahead, but the margin here is significantly less than what we saw with joe biden back in 2020. she's up by just nine points. you may make the argument that was better than biden was doing before he got out. but compare to that democratic baseline, where democrats have historically in presidential elections, at least this century been carrying that young vote by 20 or more percentage points. she is way down from that. so if this is unique support among young voters i'd like to. know what non-unique support is. is it even worse than this? is she doing better than biden wants those he was doing slightly better maybe biden was up by like six on average or five. this is maybe slightly better, but this is not game changing stuff. mr. berman. all right. what have we seen in terms of motivation? yes. so the other thing is we talk about vote choice, right? but let's also talk about motivation. right? because it's not just who you would support, it's whether or not you'd come out to the polls. and this i think is rather interesting to democrats, say they're more motivated to turn out after biden left the race. well, we do see a significant portion of
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democrats who say yes, 39%. the thing i was interested in was it disproportionately younger voters who said that they were more likely to turn out are more motivated to the turnout. and what we see here is it's 42% not a big difference between 42 and 39%. so this idea, again, that the vice president has unique potential to dig in and get young voters to turn out john. it's just not there in the numbers despite all the internet memes that are going around it, at least not yet in one of the issues has been harry, this trend which i think you were among the first to point out, young voters have changed or say they are changing in a relatively short period of time. >> yeah, the oftentimes, it's difficult to go against the grain. kamala harris may be fighting uphill, so i want to look at party identification again. voters under the age of 35 go back to 2020. this is the pew research study. this is one of the best studies that we have and look at that 56% of young voters said that in fact, they were democrat. they identified as democrat or lean democratic. you looked down at
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20:24 it's 49%. look at the republican jump from 39 to 49%. so when we say that harris is doing worse than biden, it's not that she's uniquely bad. it's rather she's fighting a pill. she's trying to fight against a wave that is going against the democrats among young voters. and harris maybe unique in some ways, maybe she had a slightly better than the generic democrat but not all that much. >> yeah, it what this was, was shaping up to be a generational shift. the question is, was it just about biden or was it about his administration? we may find out soon. >> we may find out soon, but at this particular point, it doesn't look like harris is going to be able to fight against the grain too much mr. ariane. >> thank you. thank you joining us right now, cnn, political commentators, se cupp and errol louis. errol is the host of the big deal. errol louis on spectrum news. so the young voter conundrum, part 175, how do you get young voters to turn out? what do you think? one, do you think harry enten is, right? errol, just kidding harry. he's standing right there staring me how focused i
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wonder how focused either campaign should be or is going to be on turning out young voters when they focus on turning out lots of other aspects of their, of their coalition. if it's a big puzzle, everybody's got to try and do everything, right? but this is, this has been and always right by the way there's this it's think called an asian version that pollsters have picked up and have been talking about, which is that democrats normally do much better with young people. and that has just not been true, is one of the things that set off the panic that led to a lot of the discussion about why biden needed to step down. he was doing better with older voters. unusual for democrats, but they are in fact the most reliable voters. and so they're going to have to see if this is a realignment. is this a reversion to what normally happens or is there something else going on? and that's something else again, goes back to the pressure, the reports that were coming from the field, the strategists that i've talked to keep saying something huge is happening and we have to do something about
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it. let's get biden in out of there. okay. that's fine. but if it's a true realignment, if it's a true change election, it really doesn't matter whose name is at the top of the ticket. if republicans are going to win this year in a big landslide because they'll coal country is changing, then that's going to happen no matter who the candidate and i also se, but then it something else we've been talking about is kind of the reset. i'm sure the trump campaign would say we're not changing the playbook at all because they say that these are the same policies of joe biden that kamala harris is pushing, but one thing we know from can't their campaign memos that they have said to lawmakers focus and laser focus in on the border and lay as they try to label her and want to label her a borders are which is a misnomer. does this become, do you think the border issue a bigger or smaller issue now with kamala harris at the top of the ticket? >> it's still a big issue and they are right to focus on that policy. i would add the economy as well. these were two huge drivers before biden got out there still going to be huge
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drivers and they can attach to the border. she was appointed to solve this crisis, or at least oversee it. and there are plenty of areas and avenues to go after her on policy what they're doing because they're scrambling and they might not admit it, but they are panicked for sure now they're sort of fighting again, this once unified party that was very excited and on the same page is now divided over how to attack her. so you've got republicans like tim burchett talking about her being a dei hire. you've got other republicans like mike johnson now speaker saying, please don't do this directly. >> please do not yeah. >> so the unity has gone right? it's it's now a new day and the party, it's, it's funny, it's like both campaigns are starting from scratch now. so they're all kind of scrambling. >> let's say, how do you run precedent presidential campaign from scratch in six months, we're about to find out you talk about new campaign strategy, new campaign memo from now, kamala harris
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campaign. the memo saying that they're not only from jen o'malley dillon, they're not only going to be targeting the blue wall there now also kind of opening back up and going on offense on the sunbelt states, nevada, arizona, georgia, north carolina bullish too, bullish. no, no, no strategically important and necessary. i mean, the biggest problem again, that why the strategists were panicking over a biden candidacy was that they were going to have to sort of really try and win all of the blue wall. and that's about all that they could do. they were going and to give up on georgia, the numbers look terrible in nevada, the numbers look weak in arizona just to be able to say, okay, we've got some possibilities here. you know, a lot of this is about making the other side spend money to the in north carolina, say, and memos released to the press can also have another intense yeah. >> exactly. right? a lot of that and of course, she is credible in a lot of these areas the other thing, by the way is that she and redefining this campaign in the shape of it for democrats is going to talk more about the economy. because when people say
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inflation, inflation and that's the only story the stock market hit record highs, 36 times this year according during the rnc and the democrats, once they start talking about that, you're going to see in certain areas, the economy is red hot. the economy is doing just fine. and that's going to get them some votes a re-imagined way of talking about the economy and getting people to how voters feel about the economy. >> that is something that campaign definitely needs saga, defining howard dean, who ran for president 2004, saw his chances evaporate after the scream speech, which he himself calls it the scream speech. he was just on with john and was talking about the lessons that apply i today from again, what he calls the scream speech from back then, let me play this really is like in my situation to biden's, i couldn't change the narrative after that. i couldn't change the narrative and joe biden shouldn't change the narrative about his age and his in dementia and all this other stuff. and you just, you know, it's not fair, but
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that's politics. and i think common is the antidote to all of that so antidote on the, on the age issue, kamala harris, but also it mean had me starting to think about just the whole mantra of you need to define yourself before you, before anyone else does a special player competitor. >> do you think kamala harris's work to do there yes listen, she's got big name id. >> we know who she is, but no one's ever voted for her. and now she is tied to an agenda that in many ways they're going to want to leave behind. that's why she's there. because she's not joe biden and because she can be a bridge to future democratic party. so she's an a tricky spot. she's going to defend the biden agenda. he's the sitting president. she's still the vice president but she also has to say, but i'm different. i'm not joe biden. she's got to address some of his policy holds the policy areas that were dragging him down can she be a new voice on gaza, for example? can do the howard dean pointed to that to you, please
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that's a place as she could defer role for democrats, especially among young people. maybe she speaks differently about that. i don't know. her people are putting out that she is lockstep with joe biden on israel it's going to be weird for lack of better word because she's going to need to say, here's how i'm different, but here's the way i'm going to build on the legacy that joe biden has already created. she can't be totally different. she's still defending the guy she works for, but she's gotta be a little different or else what's the point of her little bit? >> lot of different. >> it's a whole new day. >> well, yeah. i, may. look something as a femoral, as a scream speech, or really bad debate the good thing for kamala harris from her point of view, is that we only got like what, 100 days, hundred and two days until narrow certainly what could go right? which is that she's got this wave of enthusiasm. it's going to perhaps start to change the numbers with some of the young people. and there's no way to defend that if you have chris rock and whole hogan and she's getting all of hollywood, right? and now she's got decades worth of connections
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with them. it's going to play out very differently and not, and not much chance to sort of do anything about it that's why i think you're seeing some of the panic on the republicans have gotten kid rock this will make sure we know exactly what we're talking about kid rock. oh my god i've heard chris rock i did because i know i've been believe we when i say things that i'm thinking and things that come out of my mouth or if he's completely different scenarios good to see you guys ability of thing sarah, errol, chris rock is riding you a stern email, right now nasty gram all right. >> stunning findings from an hiv drugs while drug maker, gilead says, it's twice a year, shots could potentially prevent new infections. here's more of a cnn health reporter, jacqueline howard tells us about this drug. this is a big deal it is a big deal. >> sara, this drug, it's called linac capa veer and in a phase three trial, it was found to have 100 percent efficacy
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and preventing new hiv infections. now this was a trial conducted in south africa and uganda and included more than 5,000 women and adolescent girls. and in the trials, some of the study participants were given a daily prep pill. this is a pill that's already available. you take it one staley and it it helps prevent hiv infections. the other participants were given linac capa veer. this was a shot given twice a year and over time, the researchers looked at both groups to see how many of the participants acquired hiv infections over time. in the linac capa veer groups era zero participants acquired hiv infections in the daily prep pill group researchers saw about 55 infections over time, but because zero occurred and lynnae cape of the or that's what's really getting a lot of attention. the researchers are conducting other trials right now, looking at linac capa, the air, this trial was among again, just women and adolescent girls. the researchers now studying this and men and they're going to
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see how many capable performs in these other trials. but having this 100% efficacy, researchers say this could be a potential option for people in the future, people already taking prep potentially could have the option of justice twice yearly injection. sara. >> wow. all right. jacqueline howard thank you so much for that one republican attack against vice president harris. >> is that she was now this is their war is quote, a dei hire new reporting this morning and how voters are responding to that. and hundreds of people dead due to record breaking heat in the planet, just reported the house hottest day ever in history hill this morning. >> brought to you by mj. learn more about thyroid disease at help my ted you've had thyroid
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and enjoy a spotless house for $19 saturday on the whole story, political violence has always threatened our democracy after the attempt on trump it's life. >> where does america gill from here, the whole story with anderson cooper, political violence, america as bloody history, saturday at 8:00 on cnn the lead with jake tapper
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today at four on cnn he liable. that putting kamala harris the top of the ticket has energized democratic voters, especially voters of color, hours after she announced her presidential campaign, 44,000 black women joined a zoom call and now black men rallying behind her bid for the white house earlier this week a virtual wind with black man conference event helped raise more than $1.3 million for her campaign joining me now is michael blake one of the host of the wind with black men conference the first thing i want to ask you is what did you hear on that call? that stuck with you that stood out to you? >> incredible pride, incredible energy that brothers did not want to wait to be engaged. that we weren't going to allow someone to paint a narrative about the vice president. it wasn't true and which we're already started here and we're trying to say that she was negative what came to criminal justice? it's not true too. she isn't still at brothers. it's not true. and that brothers wanted to be able to
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mobilizing immediately. and so our final numbers, sarah, was 53,862 who joined that call over that span on for hours $1.4 million raised for the campaign, as well as for black men organizations. such as win with black men collective cairo's democracy project. brothers are not going to wait right now because we understand what's at stake for us, and we should be clear when he says brothers, humans, black men just in case, i mean, no question about that full stop you understand the assignment out hear. >> in case anyone is confused about what it's not her actual brother. anyway. all right. i want to i want to get to a new poll came out sort of comparing black voters and seeing who they would vote for whether it'd be donald trump or kamala harris. now that she is going to ascend, it looks like top of the ticket. and the numbers that came out were basically 70 something percent 77% are there to 76% would go with kamala harris 21% with donald trump. those are historic highs for a
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republican nevermind donald trump, who i think got a lot a heck of a lot less than that. how do you what does she need to do in your mind to try and get potentially some of those voters back. and we know that black men are the numbers that are growing for donald trump. >> absolutely. so when we think about it, typically republicans get about 12% of the black men vote in blackboard, collect so we got a shift that 9%. and i think it's pretty good to assume and presume that what they black woman at the top of the ticket the same way we have a brocco mom and 08, those numbers will shift dramatically. i was in iowa in 2008 when people wonder, well, can white folk and others vote for him? well, yes, but we knew we were going to win because blackwell going to show up. i think it's pretty safe to presume that kamala harris and the tracker that she has and me being an alpha, her being an ak. i think we're going to have a divine nine mobilization that's going to happen in that regard. but there's an excitement we can't ignore that. the reality is, when you had close to 100,000 black folk
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and a 48 hour span mobilizing on their own. then why do we think people will not show up the data that always stays with me when i look at from brilliant corners and cornell belcher, it's not a question on will we show up? is just making sure that we don't go vote third party donald trump's rhetoric is not going to work for us when it becomes a conversation around justice, around jobs, around housing, all of those spaces, the vice president's goal, mobilize black folk in a much better way than donald trump ever could you talk about that sort of those folks that might go out and vote third party and there were between 76 and 21. there's still some space there for people to vote. third party, and i just want to again clarify the divine nine, these our historically black are black attorney 55 attorneys for sororities. and we're excited about the mobilization that is happening. and recognizing that there is an effort happening that people did not realize. and so when we say not like us and playing off kendrick lamar, that's what we're trying to communicate that they are people that are ready to get mobilized, that are going to make sure that she becomes the
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next president. >> i was saying that there is a lot of the donations that have come in. there have been thousands of them that are exactly $19.08, 19 over eight is when alpha kappa alpha, the story that he is in a historically black sorority was formed. and so you're seeing this kind of thing and i think the alphas were 1906, so we'll are we looking at just how many people? globalized that's for her there around the world i do want to ask you about her history as a prosecutor because this has become a point of contention. she you know, this country has a long history of imprisoning black men. in particular disproportionate she was a prosecutor. she did put folks in jail, how to black men look at this and grapple with this issue? >> well she did her job as a district attorney and making sure that justice occurred. and when we think about what did she do? what they don't want to tell us the story is, what does she worked on in terms of addressing recidivism where they don't want to talk about is how there was actually an a
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pathway for those that wanted to get jobs afterwards, but they don't want to talk about is that xi actually ensured that they weren't pursuing the death penalty when others tried to do so. so when we talk about justice, i would rather have vice president harris, who has clearly had a record of justice that's one for the people rather than the alternative of a man who had 34 times when people demonstrated that he was breaking the law. and so the comparison is that they're afraid deepen, don't dig in deeper than that. we talk about a black job, a black job was a black prosecutor a black ag of black united states senator, a black vice president and she will become a black president he just hopes to have a job and he's afraid that he's running against a black woman. and so the reality is that we see that they only have distractions similarly, the disastrous campaign has happened for j.d. vance. people need to understand there saying these things because they have someone who was anti-dei, they have a project 2025. all of these things are trying to make sure to deflect. and so for all the black men that want to hear the truth mobilized with us, one with black men. our next
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call is sunday, 7:00 p.m. eastern going with black men.org, follow our different efforts because we're focused on this and the reality is we can't be divided my mom a two-time breast cancer survivor. god bless you for what you have gone through as well. it is important for us to say people are saying these things because they want to divide brothers from the sisters that's what they're talking about. maybe donald trump, if he had a record that actually was good rather than his own criminal record, you won't have anything else to talk about. >> thank you so much for coming on and explaining all that to me. it will be interesting to see how this plays out in the future. appreciate it. thanks, sara, john. >> all right. the wrong kind of record. the hottest day on earth ever, the global average temperature monday was 62.87 degrees. now remember that includes like the north and south pole and the entire southern hemisphere if your words winter right now, it breaks the previous record held for a whopping one day in the phoenix area, the heat is suspected as the cause of nearly 400 deaths this year. cnn chief climate correspondent, bill weir is
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their bill yeah, john, they shut the worst kind of record here in maricopa county last year, 645 heat related deaths this year is on pace to break that with these new numbers out, as you mentioned, 27 confirmed nearly 400 under investigation. >> it's interesting that about half of those involved drugs, those victims, about 40% or folks who are un-housed. so the addiction crisis, the home housing crisis that exists on the best of days around here, it turns deadly when the temperature gets up, when he got up around 118 degrees for a week there you saw the biggest jump in fatalities. this is a cooling center behind me, the burden bar library. the first one of the first 24 hour cooling center there's they're trying to also get more help for the folks who come in off the street with addiction problems beyond just cooling them off in the moment i also talked to firefighters, emts, john, now, it is standard in phoenix for every truck, every ambulance to carry body bags and body bags and bags full of ice in order to cool people
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down as fast as possible that used to just happened at the hospital. street teams are giving ivs on the streets now, trying to mitigate this as well adaptation happening in real time as last june was the hottest ever here in phoenix five and-a-half degrees above normal july on pace to be six degrees above normal very quickly build these hottest days on record around the world. >> what's the significance there? >> well there's 1 1,000,000,000,000.5 tons of extra carbon dioxide pollution in the sky and the more that it's put their through the burning of fossil fuels, the hotter we get here on earth, just another record that fell. they've been falling year after year. it will continue to unless that is fixed all right. >> bill weir for us in phoenix, breaking all the wrong kind of records. thanks so much for your report this morning. >> brand new hour of cnn, new central starts now the expanded universe that is the
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