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tv   Laura Coates Live  CNN  July 25, 2024 12:00am-1:00am PDT

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and has something to say. >> yes. so we have seen some old video of j.d. vance where he was attacking childless cat lady. so that's what he called a kamala harris, despite the fact that she's raised helped raise two stepchildren. so i just want to make sure that if he's going to be attacking cat ladies childless dog lady in the cha-cha, the man child, her dog the treatment here, right. >> so does zz wants to be treated fairly equity childless, cat or dog? >> ladies, every want fish i mean, a lot of layers. everybody. thank you all so much for watching newsnight state of the race. laura coates live starts right now well, president biden's patriotic swan song tonight on laura coates live so, here's the
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thing. people who know joe biden best. they have long said that they're actually to joe biden's. he got joe biden, the statesmen, and then joe biden, the defensive and stubborn politician. well, tonight we saw the statesman for 11 minutes. president biden delivered a prime-time i'm address that this country has not seen since lbj back in 1968, talking about an american president announcing a decision not to run for reelection or actually explaining his decision. we already had that dear john letter on sunday but at a time when he'd already had earned the delegates, that's history with a capital h those family was seated just off camera to his left in the oval office. his son, hunter, daughter, ashley, and of course, dr. jill biden is first lady among them. but the address, although they were in the room, was actually not to them, was it? it was to you, the american people? his fellow americans, and frankly the
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entire world. and after weeks of pressure, a speculation and punditry about what led biden to make his decision well, tonight, we finally heard from him directly i believe i record as president my leadership in the world vision for america's future all murder to second term nothing nothing can come in the way of saving our democracy that includes personal ambition so i've decided the best way forward is the pass the torch to a new generation in a way, the president returns the same message she used when he ran in 2020. >> you remember that one? >> he say that america was in the battle for the soul of the nation. >> he still believed that to be the case. even saying that he was had earned a second term, but this time around, it's not him who would lead the charge i
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revere this office. >> i love my country more, it's been the honor of my life to serve as your president but in the defense of democracy, which is a stake i think is more important than a title. it's not about me it's about you your families your futures. it's about we, the people now, i called it a swan song, but this was actually not a resignation speech, was it? >> the president made it crystal clear that he's going to run through the tape. he's going to govern until the end of his term, but avoiding a return of trump will now fall to his vice president kamala harris, who, as you know, the de facto nominee, biden, actually thanked her tonight, calling her experienced and tough now, he never actually mentioned trump's name, diddy, but he didn't have to his message was clear great thing about america is here.
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>> kings and dictators do not roll that people do history is in your, he is the powers in your hands the idea of america lies in your hands just have to keep faith, keep the faith well here to unpack this historic moment, right? >> or chris whipple, author of the fight of his life inside joe biden's white house. chris, good to see you. i mean, we knew this was forthcoming. thank you. what we knew was coming. we read the letter on sunday president biden tonight saying that the country is more important than anyone's personal no ambition. did he meet the moment tonight absolutely. >> did this was just an amazing moment of grace you know, it was the most difficult an agonizing decision joe biden has ever made in his amazing career. maybe the most difficult of any president since lyndon johnson in 1960 68. the thing that struck me is
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fascinating was the way he framed the decision. he said he was passing the torch because he had to unite the party. now, if you know, if you gave joe biden truth serum, he might say that in america, the people rule, but so does nancy pelosi i'm being slightly facetious, but the point is that he had to make 72 hours ago and his house in rehoboth beach, he had to make a cold, hard calculation and he made it and that was that there was no path forward with the party leaders abandoning him and what was obviously a bitter he he felt betrayed by some of them so this was a decision he did not want to make and yet he made it tonight without bitterness just grace you identify former speaker nancy pelosi? certainly no one is naive to suggest that although she is a speaker emeritus, she still wields a great deal of power. you think
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that she's responsible for his decision to step aside? >> well, i'll tell you this. i think that if to this moment, joe biden believes that he could win this election can against donald trump i think he probably believes he could serve another four years. i think the calculation here was not that he couldn't win. it was that he saw the party disintegrating around him. there was no path forward with nancy pelosi and the other leaders also ready to lower the boom publicly on him this coming week. so he had no choice. he's fought so many battles and he's been defiant. he's defied the odds time and time again. this was one last battle that he couldn't win. but boy, in the way he left in the way he stepped aside he wanted i think leave it to you, the author of his book really to look at that word, the uniting of the party, i wonder if other people caught that nuance as well. the chris there was something he did not
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address he didn't address trump by name, but he certainly made it very clear that americans have this choice to make about the direction the united states of america is going to go into. listen america connect to choose between moving forward or backward. >> between hope and hate between unity and division we have to decide, do we still believe in honesty, decency respect? freedom, justice, and democracy in this moment we can see those we disagree with, not as enemies, but as fellow americans. can we do that? does character and public life still matter i mean, that sprint split screen is not very subtle issue of character, certainly identifies and points to one opponent. he didn't have to name trump by name, would that line about character set at all and i think everybody got the
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message the thing that surprised joe biden shocked him really during his presidency more than anything else, was the lasting power of trumpism. he thought that donald trump would be in the rearview mirror by now. he had this old school idea that he had a mandate of 7 million votes and the trumpism would go away. but it hasn't. and i think he, among other things, not only did he was he vintage joe biden, he was he was humble. he was he was plain spoken. he was eloquent tonight, but he also clearly laid out what he sees as the existential choice that phase he says the american public this year. >> what did shakespeare say out? dam spot. see, i still remember shakespeare, chris whipple. thank you so much. >> great to be with you. >> joining me now the first senator who called for president biden to step aside, senator peter welch a democrat from vermont senator. i'm so glad to have you here this
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evening. i've been really curious about your position knowing now that biden has decided to step aside what was your reaction to his speech this evening you know, if we step back from the political analytics and just think about this on a human level. >> it's pretty extraordinary. my view, very inspiring. i mean, this is a man who at 29-years-old ran for the u.s. senate one he lost his wife and daughter later. he lost his house and other son. and he had another son who suffered from addiction he had the will to work through that incredible personal tragedy. any al-adha, he had enormous number of political setbacks so what you know is this man finally achieved the office that he was seeking for all his life. did an enormously good job, had the enormous affection of democrats. he had that debate, which is a disaster and he had to reassess. could he win in what would it mean to our country? and despite his
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determination is willingness to engage in yet another up mountain battle his conclusion was it would be better for the country if he stepped aside. there's a lot of humility in that. it's humility and a man who had shown throughout his career enormous ambition enormous strength and i find that inspiring that his sense of public service, that he had when he was 25 and being local supervisor endured through this moment when he stepped aside from the presidency of the united states, just think about that. he relinquished power even though he had already won the nomination of the democratic party. so i find this an extraordinarily inspiring moment i'm glad to talk about that human element of it because it must have been particularly difficult. and he spoke about personal ambition being subordinate to the love of country and the irreverence he had for the office as well. and to your point about public
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service, he says he's going to keep working. he's going to work right until he leaves office. he talked about issues in the economy. he talked about gun violence, supreme court reform, just to name a few. what do you think he ought to prioritize in these final months because none of these are really lame duck criteria. these are significant things to do. >> two things, number one, his priority is preserving our democracy. and i think this decision liberates him. can you imagine your president, united states, you're also having another job where your, the candidate for reelection in a fierce campaign with there's going to be negative. we all know that so now what is it already is he can concentrate on being above all of that and as fundamental questions where when he does like supreme court reform, we've got a really bad supreme court but it gets partisan he's not in the situation of a candidate for reelection. he's in the position of president who's relinquish power, but who's
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saying for the sake of our democracy, we've got to have supreme court court reform on that issue and democratic issues like access to voting like the importance of securing the right of women to make their own decisions about their body. i think he's liberated to be a statesman who's not seen as somebody who's just in the hurley burley of a campaign what's fascinating to me though, is that this is a kind of a rorschach test, for example, you have this view and then senator j.d. >> vance viewed his decision to not run for reelection as a threat to democracy at its core. listen to what he said actually really, what happened was the leaders of the democrat party and a very undemocratic move the bosses, they said either you get out or we're going to throw you out. >> that is not how works. that is a threat to democracy, not
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the republican party, which is fighting for democracy. every single day it's quite a split screen. >> do you think this is a threat to democracy or anti-democratic in any way. >> you know, it's his foreign to me about this, not just the president, but he had a bad debate in. every day i come from vermont where he got the highest margin of victory and people who love joe biden said to me, peter, we've got to do something. this isn't going to work. so instead of ignoring the reality of what we saw a lot of people mobilized, enacted in the president responded, you take the republican party, some me and my colleagues and deter in the senate privately say what we all know. trump is kind of nuts but they won't do anything about it we acted it was a situation where we were putting our obligation to the best to do the best we can to have a candidate who's got a good shot at beating president trump reacted. >> and the republicans are
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accommodating a guy who's destroying the republican party. >> you have to think about candidates, though, the complete ticket would include a vice president or running mate for kamala harris who do you think that ought to be? >> all of the people have been mentioned are good with me. here's what we have to do our campaign has to be about the future. and we've got to speak to folks who are feeling that the democratic party is a little out of touch. we've got to convince them that we have a vision that includes that's making housing affordable, having kids that they have real security that they can have the american dream, that things could be better, that we focus on common needs that are true for folks, whether there on a red state or a blue state, we've got to have affordability. we've got to have a health care system that works. so there's going to be a lot of talk by our presidential candidate about the failings of trump. but i also think you're going to hear kamala harris talking about our commitment to
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meeting the common needs of 15 whether they're in a red state or a blue state, whether they voted for trump in the past or not, we have to have common solutions for the common challenges that all of his face and america. >> while senator welch, we'll see how the voters feel about it. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> well, former president trump, holding his first rally since president biden dropped out of the race, testing out his lines of attack against his brand new opponent, kamala harris. and let me be clear, they were not pretty will bring them to you next if you don't mind, i'm not going to be nice. is that okay what's considered normal for your cat is interesting. >> but if your cat isn't there, corky self, lately, they may have pain from a common condition called osteoarthritis. now, they're so when cia so when cia is a once monthly injection to control your cat's away pain veterinary professionals administering silane, cia, who are pregnant, trying to conceive or breastfeeding
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i'm dr. sanjay gupta in atlanta and this is cnn tonight. >> donald trump headlining is first rally since kamala harris as presumptive rise to the top of the democratic ticket. and if this rally was any indication, it's going to be a long and bitter campaign. listen if kamala harris gets in, she would be the most radical far left extremists ever to occupy the white house times ten there's never been a lunatic like this in the white
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house her name, first of all, is kamala, cannot camila await know it's the way other or as it's commonly not, kamala you get that right? she's been the vice president united states for almost four years and something tells me he knows exactly how to pronounce her name. >> joining me now, former trump white house deputy press secretary, sarah matthews, reporter for politico alex isenstadt, also an hillary clinton's 2016 campaign manager, roby i'm expecting everyone's name right now just to prove the point that everyone's name was quite clear to everyone listening today, right? >> let me bring you in here, sara, though, because trump said it himself tonight, that everyone seemed to expect a change in his tone following a tragic and devastating the nation near assassination attempt. but that's not what he delivered tonight. it seemed to be a reversion back to the earlier days no it was pretty
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funny watching him say that everyone wanted him to be nice and he says, i'm not going to be nice. and that goes against exactly what his campaign told us that tone was going to be moving forward in his campaign we were told that he was going to be softer, more unifying and then we all saw that rnc convention acceptance speech that wasn't the trump that he delivered. and then in this speech tonight, we saw him say things like the democrats stole the election, that it was rigged and moving forward with this divisive rhetoric. and i think it just goes to show that he hasn't changed at all whatsoever so not even an attempt on his life will do that. he's always well, he's going to be trump and so no matter how much wish-casting the trump campaign tries to compel him to be the unifier that's just not who he is. >> and by the way, the crowd seemed to love it when they were feeding off of him saying, i'm not going to be nice tonight. they were roaring with applause and he is somebody to feed off the crowd. there's also this mispronunciation, bank robbing and of course i
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jokingly called you roby, but obviously it's robbie, but, you know, you're at 20:16. hillary clinton campaign alum. did you pick up on just how many times he had actually mispronounced harris's name. i mean, our producer counted what, 41 times during his speech tonight. i mean, how should she counter hampshire? do you even try to address it yeah. >> i think this is best left to others. this is a trap he wants to set with hur, and it's interesting because he wants her to start to make this about her and she needs to make it about the voters, right? this what's in it for them that's really important for her in this introductory period, it's comment on her to first of all, introduce herself and tell her story. but then explain what's in it for people and we know prices are high, there's a lot of uncertainty about the economy in the world so she's got explain what's in it for them and i would not take the bait on this and i know i know this team really well. i don't think they're going to it would be taking the bait. we
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turn to alex on this because i'm sure he wants to get into discussion on name-calling and kind of a for tat rolling in the mud, so to speak, which can distract you from the mission and purpose. but he did eventually pivot his way back to the teleprompter in those moments, he did talk about the policy issues. listen to this kamala has been more unhinged than her wild pursuit of open open-borders. she cast the tie-breaking votes that created the worst inflation and a half a century, if you want socialists health care nation reckon inflation, the death of american energy, and a line radical left, liberal san francisco extremist, as your commander-in-chief. then kamala harris is your candidate. she's the one for you i mean, that sentence was chock full of so many different policy positions and talking points. i do wonder the name kong aside and that's one thing that he's trying to do. but is this the policy issue where you think the rubber meet the road well he's trying to attack her
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on any number of policy issues. >> he's trying to take job biden, who clearly was less popular clearly at this point, let's pop it with a comma harris and she's trying, he's trying to attach her to him on any number of issues that that are part of the biden administration. and so he's trying to take immigration and really trying to hone in on that. >> he had a call with reporters yesterday. >> we talked specifically about him so that's clearly sort of a focal point, but there's also what you also saw in that clip was a real lack of focus. it's not totally clear to me at least how they're going to how he's trying to go after harris this but there's no real clear argument. so you're seeing some of immigration, you're seeing some, other issues being thrown there. you think she's soft on his, thinks she's soft on crime? it doesn't feel like they've really found the sharp message that they found when they were running against biden, which was that he lost his mental acuity losses step and he had been effective. it doesn't feel like they've quite found that message to use against her yet, i find that so
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surprising for so many reasons, sara, not because i think there are the list of reasons to attacker but because they had been asking or saying that biden should not be running any longer. if you just want to follow that thread a centimeter, the next conclusion would be that she possibly would be the presumptive nominee, that they really not think that there had to be a message or a strategy as it relates to the vice president yeah. >> i mean, you would think that they'd be better prepared for this moment and kudos to them because clearly their messaging about biden worked. the voters believed it. they thought that joe biden was too old to do the job and continue for another four years and seek a second term. and so you would think then that the trump campaign would have been prepared to take her on as a candidate and they kind of kept saying in their messaging before biden dropped out, i think in the months leading up to this, they were saying, oh, well, you're really voting for kamala harris. and so then you would think that they would have their lines of attack ready to go or commercials or more poll
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testing on what the message is that is best used against her because as alex noted, it just seems like they're throwing whatever at the wall and seeing what sticks right now. >> and again trying to wrap rev up the base in a campaign rally, different than trying to rev up a base in a general election. >> and what weight actually resonate with them. but robbie, let me ask you, because there was this illuminating policy moment of sorts where trump revealed field where he stands today today on abortion. listen to this i happen to support the three exceptions, rape, incest, and the life of the mother. >> i think that's the way but follow your heart but you also we'll have to remember, you have to get elected. you have to remember it because we have elections and elections are about a lot of other things too that are very important but remember, follow your heart. >> follow that particular logic. was he trying to undermine his own statement? i mean, we know that just had the
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last week's rnc reproductive rights was not even talked about all that a much. he knows though that this issue is not a winning one, particularly for him. could you decipher the code that he was trying to say yeah, well, he's trying to have it both ways. >> look, he gave the extreme right-wing what they wanted, which is they wanted to get rid of roe v wade states now can pass whatever laws they want not. according to the limitations he just laid out note, they don't have to have exceptions, so he's undermining his own policy right there and he's doing it because he knows how unpopular it is and it's interesting you were talking about him mentioning policy. i think this election is going to be about culture. it's going to be about some big lies. >> big myths. >> there's not going to be a lot of policy details. i think this is one place where policy is really going to matter. >> and these sorts of details leave him very vulnerable. >> this is a critical issue in this election. i think one of the many things we gained by having kamala harris now as our
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candidate is someone who can really speak to this even more powerfully than joe biden could and you just heard it right there. trump's scared. so he's trying to roll it back. he's trying to spackled over, but the facts speak for themselves. >> i wonder if hedging in politics will work in this campaign. thank you all. robbie mug sarah matthews, alex isenstadt. i pronounced all your names correctly. the point has been made. thank you yeah. ahead. the fbi director says that trump rally shooter was actually googling jfk's assassination. and that particular question that he's searched for and what it might reveal about his motive i'll tell you next. and next. vice president harris tells the backbone of the democratic party that she's counting on them. congresswoman cam leg or dove was there. >> and now she's here after this. >> allow these extremist want to take us back, but we are not
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going back we are not going back saturday on the whole story. >> political violence has always and our democracy after the attempt on trump's life, where does america go from here? the whole story with anderson cooper, political violence america's bloody history, saturday at 8:00 on cnn. >> what does a robot know about love it takes a human to translate that leap in our hearts into something we can see and hold etsy when your home needs work, where do you go? angie. angie guys angie, gay man with angie. find top rated certified pros in your area, plus compare quotes and pricing to help you get all your jobs done well, he's resurfaced my floor great. >> he's done plumbing work. >> i knew it's going to be done right. >> i was able to sit back and let them do what they do with top rated certified pros and
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so-called when 800 73606. now how it when you have the atlanta on monday, balmy premiere saturday at nine on cnn and we know when we organize mountains, move when we mobilize nations and when we vote, we make history kamala harris mobilizing the black sorority families and refer staunchest supporters as she looks to them for help come november, her rally today follows a zoom call on sunday with remember, 44,000 black women that raised 1.5 million
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for harris and her campaign, joining me now, democratic congresswoman sydney can lagger dove. >> she joined the vice president on her trip to indianapolis earlier. >> today. i'm glad that you are with us right now. we have heard so much about the enthusiasm gap. and now this extraordinary amount of momentum the met is here right now, you were actually in the room where it was happening. what was the energy like? and the response to her now being the nominee it was jubilant excitement there. >> women who had been lined up since 4:00 in the morning to make sure that they would get into that convention center. so i was just happy to be able to hitch a ride with her as a member of zeta phi beta, and she's aka we were able to talk about the importance of these organizations rooted in community justice and economic development and sisterhood and service. and then to hear her talk to these women many of whom have lived through generations are times when they were not able to vote they did
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not have access to quality health care or housing. they had employment discrimination that they had to deal with. and there listening to this black woman who is running to be the next president of the united states, share with them all of the accomplishments that have happened under the biden-harris administration and her vision for the future, it was electric even with all of that, i think there are so many people who are excited. and yet there is a level of nervousness given the history of america and the way in which women and particularly black women have been cast aside, except for when it comes to elections. and there were those who were talking even in the room i understand what one person who is in attendance said that she is going to have a hard time. i'm just being honest. she's a woman and she's black, so she's not going to win. but they said, if you had your eyes closed and you just go based on her qualifications versus trump's qualifications? yes. she definitely would win. that speaks volumes about i think think a level of anxiety in
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addition to the enthusiasm about the prospects of a black woman in america in 2020 for being successful at the presidential election. >> well, we're always nervous when one of our own ascends into spaces where we know people don't want us to be. we get very nervous and also very pretty tech so i think that's what she was saying. i remember my grandmother was incredibly nervous about barak obama running to be president, but she shared this bold vision for a future, right? the fact that we have to be protecting these freedoms, we have to be fighting for economic justice, social justice reproductive justice, and all of those things are on the chopping block with project 20 a 25, we have seen through this manifesto that he wants to erode protections, really that black folks fought for to make sure that we would have basic federal protections right, to make sure that the water you drink is clean, that you don't have poison in your food, that you have access to school lunches that you can vote that,
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you have access to the national weather service that you have medicaid and medicare all of these things he wants to erode and then fire 4 million federal workers and then replace them with his loyalists. and she's saying, no, let's be bold. let's talk about climate change. let's talk about greater infrastructure. let's elevate the cries that we're hearing from our gen z's. and let's celebrate our seniors, who continue to need inhalers and insulin at $35 a month, right? who need that medical debt taken off their credit report? so there was so much excitement and i told them, i said, do you all understand the assignment and all of the women said yes. and we know exactly what that assignment is. it's getting her elected. >> well, there's also innuendo and dog whistling that is happening in if it's a dog whistle or horn blowing because there has been those who have labeled her in spite of her qualifications. and last four years as the vice president of the united states relegating her to a dei hire. and one of
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the people speaking about that was congressman tim burchett, who came on. my sirius xm show this morning, and i asked him about what the response had been to that statement. listen to what he said about waste ad said no, but it was the truth is not the truth. >> first of all, but why do you think people believe this to be an effective vehicle to undermine her well, it is a dog whistle so they also have nothing else to talk about you know, chip roy said at the best, we don't have a platform to run on. >> we haven't done anything in congress that we can take home and share with our district constituents. so of course they're going to fall back on these very tired tropes. she is the most qualified candidate running for president. i actually actually wish they would talk about j.d vance, who really is a dei hire. i mean, he has absolutely no qualifications and the guy running against her is equally unqualified. so let's spend some time unraveling the
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incompetence that was the last four years of the trump administration. and they can compare it to what she and joe biden have been able to do and just three-and-a-half years an inconvenient truth. >> he may be describing congresswoman. thank you so much for joining me today. >> thank you ahead. >> the chilling jfk, google search by the gunman who tried to assassinate donald trump the about his mindset. and also the motive we create factory great visual solutions to perfect your process that's sides make your statement. >> finish. ultimate engineered for the toughest conditions. >> dry burn tons, stains, dishwashers, very hard water finished ultimate with cyclic technology helps deliver the
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that the investigation ties to the shooter reveals that on july 6, he did a google search for quote, how far away was oswald from kennedy and so that's a search obviously is significant in terms of his state of mind we that is the same day that it appears that he registered for the butler rally but you know, that's not all because right. also said that the shooter flew a drone a drone to 100 yards from the stage where trump was going to speak just hours before the foreign president took to the podium. and then there's the gun that was used by the shooter weapon had a collapsible stock which could explain why it might have been
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less easy for people to observe. >> because one of the things that we're finding is people have observed him. the first people to observe him with the weapon were when he was already on the roof and we haven't yet found anybody with firsthand observation of him with the weapon, walking around beforehand there were also apparently two explosives that were found in the shooter's car and raise said that those explosives, they could have been detonated remotely. >> that is, if the remote receiver had actually been turned on but it wasn't the off position and then there's the question that everybody wants to know why why did this 20-year-old attempt to assassinate a former president? >> i think it's fair to say that we do not yet have a clear picture of his motive. >> well, joining me now, casey jordan, she's a criminologist and behavioral analyst. casey, this has so many unanswered questions now, according to
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ray, on july 5, the would-be assassin actually traveled to the rally site at one point in time and the next day, he searched for how far away was oswald from kennedy that same day here just for the rally. so what can you discern from this timeline, from what a person like this was thinking? >> i think it's pretty obvious to all of us, laura that it was planned. it's just not the act of somebody who was being impulsive, who just had a bad day and decided to do this randomly. he had been thinking about it for a while, but the question is, why one of the reports i've read, but it's unconfirmed is that he had done a search on his phone about symptoms for depression that would help explain why you may have been on a downward spiral. the why that really wraps this up. it especially now that we know that he did a search, you know, on lee harvey oswald. and again, the trajectory is that everyone knows the name of life
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the harvey oswald. >> he wanted to live in infamy. >> he wanted to be notorious, if you will. when we kind of back up and look about the fact that he was a loner, but but nothing about his political affiliation. i mean, yes, it was a registered republican, but he wasn't an extremist are active in politics. >> it really just indicates that he wanted to be famous and we call this the travel travis, because effect, if you remember the movie taxi driver that inspired john hinckley in his failed assassination attempt of president reagan. >> and really it just comes down to when you shoot at a president or presidential candidate, you will be famous forever. >> i mean, just thinking about the many people in the world who are battling mental health and depression don't engage in this type of behavior. and the way you describe it i mean, a 20-year-old male, a seemingly good student, as you mentioned, unclear about what his political beliefs really are is there a profile that you think? think the fbi or investigators
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are trying to map out in an attempt to either understand what happened here or to find a copycat or prevent this from happening again? >> well we don't like the word copycats so much as it does inspire other people with like-minded fantasies of being famous but the bottom line with this particular shooting is that you have to keep in mind he has no diagnosed mental illness, not like john hinckley, who had had a lot of psychiatric treatment before he attempted to kill reagan. and what we do know is that it was legally purchased gun that politics doesn't seem to play a role, but infamy does when people get on their downward spirals. and we do believe that he had actually failed to make the rifle team of his high school. that's been reported repeatedly and there are people who are conflicting reports, but if that's true, then think about the pseudo commandos and that's a typology of mass murder that we see with snipers like the dc sniper or your 2017
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las vegas massacre so many times you see people trying to prove their worth in marksman ship and if he was really feeling like he was under valued for his marksman ship in high school, this could be a chip on his shoulder. they carried around for a few years until he did that google search, wanted to know how many yards from lee harvey oswald to president kennedy. and decided to replicate that? moment in history so that he would go down in history himself casey jordan, this is as troubling as it is fascinating. >> thank you good to be here. there were pretty tense protests in washington dc today as the prime minister of israel address, congress. now, it'll be biden and harris has turned to hear from him directly and the big question is, did his speech you give us any clues about how those conversations might go liberty mutual
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try new sketches, slip in pants, just slip in an experienced skechers, innovative comfort technology fabrics catcher slip in pants israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu probably not getting the public welcome that he wanted at the capitol today. >> hundreds of people there to protest his speech to congress. police at one point using pepper spray against the demonstrators and more clashes with police sagging and station in dc protesters, they're taking down american flags and burning them, replacing them with palestinian flags also in effigy of the israeli prime minister burned a statute spray painted with hamas is coming. and then in the halls of congress at democrats sitting out, the speaker which with one democrat, the only palestinian member of congress were treated to leave holding up a sign saying war criminal netanyahu responding to the protests in his speech today, listen many
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anti-israel protesters many choose to stand with evil they stand with hamas. they stand with rapists and murderers. you have officially become iran's useful idiots. >> joining me now, david sanger, a cnn political and national security analyst. he's also the white house and national security correspondent for the new york times. and he's the author of the perfect weapon he joins us now new cold war is david netanyahu was lashing out at the protesters. college presidents, by the way. the international criminal court just name a few while, all the while giving a full throated defense of the war in gaza, what was your big takeaway from the speech? >> laura, what's really fascinating about the speech is both what he said and what he failed to say. first of all, it was delivered in sort of ronald reagan style. >> he had up in the galley idf,
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israeli defense force. >> heroes who add had limbs blown off but kept fighting hamas, who responded on october 7 to the terrorist attack one of whom had run eight miles to the site of the attack because he didn't have a car. >> so it was quite the theater what he failed to do was acknowledged in any way, the more than 30,000 nearly 40,000 by palestinian estimates civilian casualties some of those obviously are militancy israelis say afford to 14 or 15,000. but he never came to grapple with the question of whether israel overreacted and killed civilians indiscriminately on the way to
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taking out terrorists. and so he didn't really get to the core issue. >> keep did however make a very full-throated defense of continuing the war and very little discussion of what he'd do the day after there, there were, as you mentioned, there were mentions of the hostages, not much of on a potential deal to release them, which the white house says is close but then there was this moment when he was pressing the united states to deliver weapons more quickly, essentially saying, if you deliver them were quickly, this war will be over all the faster. listen to what he had to say with actually tonight, senator peter welch was reacting to that very point as to what this would look like. listen to what he said it was empty, it was tired there has been enormous loss of life in gaza. >> there has been suffering in division in israel. i was hoping i listened to his speech in my office that i would hear
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a pathway forward. i didn't hear that did you hear that? and do you think that netanyahu gained any support for coming to congress in furtherance of that mission i think senator welch is right. >> you did not hear any elements of the plan for how you get out of this. and you have to remember that that in part his book, because prime minister netanyahu was speaking not only one american audience, but to an israeli one. and in fact, by having this speech take place at 2:00 p.m. in washington he was having sort of primetime in israel and he knew that he's got to hold together ever his coalition, which includes some of the most right-wing parties that have ever seen power in israel that said it would have been helpful. i think for him to acknowledge what parts of the plan that president biden
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announced at the end of may and said was mr. netanyahu's plan. he really meant to go pursue. >> it would have been good if he had could have described who would take control, security in gaza when the israelis leap, because the u.s. >> has said it's unacceptable for either hamas or israeli forces to be providing that security he didn't do that it was more of a speech for the heartstrings. >> but it wasn't as divisive as he was in 2015 when he came to oppose the iran nuclear deal david sanger we look forward to hearing what the conversations with harris biden and trump will look like as well. thank you so much for joining us and his new book by the way, is new cold wars. >> thank you for joining us. >> and thank you all for watching our coverage continues.

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