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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  July 27, 2024 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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xfinity internet customers can enjoy the ultimate entertainment experience and save on some of the biggest names in streaming, all for just $15 a month. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. all our viewers joining us around the world. i'm max foster ahead on cnn newsroom. but summer games are officially
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underway. france pulled out all the stops for olympic size spectacle. but we'll live up to the hype. kamala harris's rise to the top of the democratic field is already bringing some unwelcome attention and attacks from hope republican counterparts and hundreds of thousands of acres are blaze in california will get the latest on the efforts to contain that disaster live from london. this is cnn newsroom with max foster 2024 summer olympic games are underway in paris with the first gold medal is being awarded today and mixed team shooting and women synchronized diving the games opened with an elaborate show. >> it was breathtaking in size, and it was uniquely french. it was the first opening ceremony ever outside the stadium. it was centered around famous landmarks and the river seine where the team's road in the
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flotilla of boats famous entertainers performed, including canada's celine dion, with a love song by france's late superstar edith piaf cnn's world sports. amanda davis joins us now, live from paris. i watch a lot of it. i thought it was pretty amazing. i know there were complaints on the ground because the rain, but on tv looked amazing and we've really got saline ringing in our ears today yeah. i mean, the organizers were not dana favor by the weather, were they it is still pouring with rain here. this morning, a very wet and grey starts to the official starter of competition here at the olympic games. but the organizers had promised something unique from that opening ceremony and unique. it certainly was the scale of the
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number of boats we had the dancers, we had the history, we had the fashion the athletes did get very far sorry, when there was a lot of ponchos on display, we're judging by what they've been posting on social media. they were all really excited to be part we had the great sporting legends. we have zinedine zidane down carrying the olympic torch. we had rafah nadal and serena williams course this is a city that has been so integral to their tennis career. some of their greatest moments. and then we did have that much rumored moments celine dion, the iconic singer who had said, you in the midst of her health concerns with this stiff person syndrome that she he's been dealing with she said she was dreaming of just being able to see the eiffel tower again, not only did she see the eiffel tower, she performed on it in the most
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emotional spectacular fashion, wearing dior. there were, there was not a dry eye. i think it's fair to say from those watching on that lighting of the call we'll during the hot air balloon rising into the air, which will without doubt become one of those iconic opening ceremony moments. but that is really the moment that the baton, the torch she gets passed now to the athletes from the iconic moments of the opening ceremony is now over to the athletes to have their moments and take it from here. >> yeah i'm excited about seeing the poll and the race is there. but you've got some gold medals today as well yeah. >> excuse me. yes. you've advised not. it's not good to be losing my voice on day one but yeah, there's a lot of high hopes france around the rugby sevens. antoine dupont, arguably the greatest rugby player of all time and made that huge decision to miss out on representing his country six nations earlier this year,
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because he said he's been dreaming of this moment taking part for the sevens team here in paris he's been holding up his end of the bargain so far. he has helped the french side. he didn't even qualify for tokyo three years ago into the semifinals. they'll take we call on south africa, had started to france later today, hoping to book their place in the final, the other semifinal be very hard for though fiji again, australia, fiji, the two time defending sevens champions, australia, arguably the team in form, but we always talk about the important the host nation of an olympic games, getting off to a great start this is the one that people are really putting their hopes on an if the atmosphere at the rugby 16 in, in 70,000 fans who've been attending the first round of matches ahead of yesterday's opening ceremony. are anything to go by. they will certainly be doing all they can to get to for their
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team on. but yes. you mentioned the pool is being billed as the race of champions that we will see later on, arguably three or four way head to head between three world champions, three of women's swimming's biggest stars in the 400 meter freestyle seven time olympic gold medal winner katie ledecky, going head to head with our ariarne titmus, who beat her to the gold in tokyo, going head to head with summer macintosh, that the girl she has been trading well records where the end this events summer was the youngest member of canada's olympic team, three years ago. but this is the moment he really wants to step up and get the gold medals for herself. >> amanda, enjoy. thank you for joining us from paris, some france's high-speed train services have been restored now, hours after what official say were coordinated sabotage, attack to disrupt several rail
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lines before the opening ceremony. two trains carrying olympic athletes were affected. the paris prosecutor's office is investigating, but so far, no one's claimed responsibility for the attacks. cnn's melissa bell has more the organizers of the paris olympics believed that they were ready for anything. but it was early this morning, just hours from the opening ceremony. that is french authorities put it coordinated sabotage, arson, cause chaos with three of the nation's high-speed rail line was agreed to today, all the information we have i've clearly shows that it was deliberate to simultaneous nature everything happened at the same time. >> who's andy robbed everything now points to the fact that these were arson attacks, particularly the timing, which is more than suspicious security in paris is tight with authorities keen to make sure that things go smoothly. but this was one attack carried out simultaneously across the country that was impossible to imagine intelligence services
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say this tactic has been used before by far-left groups now, this group fiscal zui can to leave playing against the games, is playing against france. >> it's playing against your camp, is playing against your country. >> these are exactly the kinds of images that the organizers of paris 2024 to avoid french authorities warning that it is 250,000 travelers likely to be impacted this friday hundred thousand over the course of the weekend we read the value, i was supposed to go to the olympics this morning. they told us it would be three hours and 20 minutes late. >> and in the end, the train was canceled. >> so we had to take a bus to paris real and tough issue. i wanted to get to paris for the olympics. so i have no idea what i'm going to do because they told us there won't be any trains until this afternoon. and they don't know when it will start again. >> it wasn't just spectators affected with one official telling reporters that only two of the four trains carrying athletes, we're able to run as
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repairs get underway. the national railway companies, regional directors said it could take a day they are more before lines start functioning again the latest drama likely to dampen the spirits of the french, many of them heading off on family holidays. even as paris mayor and adele go believed that enthusiasm the games had finally grip the country i'm watching. >> i felt that the enthusiasm arrived a little before during the passage of the flame in paris on july 14 and 15th, deal limbic flame was paraded in paris. and there were people everywhere. children, elderly people all social classes everyone was really happy. and i said to myself that it's the magic of the games working with the olympics. now firmly underway, organizers will be hoping that this will be a short-lived memory. melissa bell, cnn, paris, about to paris now where alexander, steve, the president of finland, is cheering on his country's olympic athletes. he joins us now. thank you so much for joining us. you would have
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seen obviously the opening ceremony. what did you make of it? and that huge ambition of doing it on the river? >> while. it was epic, historic in many ways, it was pitted, i was raining but, you know, we all looked really good in the ponchos for me, probably the biggest moment was selling dion. she was absolutely phenomenal and her performance was very emotional yeah, in the way balloon went up as well around the same time it's pretty spectacular, isn't it? >> in terms of the games you're cheering on your team? what you make of what was coming up over the next couple of weeks, there has been concerns about security, but i was in the area where you are. is pretty tight, isn't it? >> yeah i mean i think i just hope that the game starts so we can focus on the relevant stuff. i think there's a lot of noise about security and other things which are of course, very important. but let's focus on what we have here. we have the top athletes of the world
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and all the different domains we have over 200 countries around. it's simply a phenomenal experience to do. i myself i'm gonna go watch the women's time trial cycling today. we have a good finish. ryder, there. i'm also going to be watching some judo, some badminton mountain biking, swimming, and other things is just an exciting prospect to be here. >> and presumably bumping into other heads of state along the way. >> i'm sorry, could you repeat that? i'm having a slight problem with my ear which is not catching them wiper. >> go ahead you'll be bumping into two other heads of state along the way as well. >> what sort of conversations you have, events like this yeah, that's probably one of the best things we have about 140 heads of state and government here so you spend a lot of time as a matter of fact, yesterday, i think we were at the elysee a first for three hours and then for hours at the opening ceremony. >> so you see everyone from all around the world sometimes we
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europeans hang out mostly in european events or transatlantic events. and here you get all the continents coming together. so a lot of good small chitchat. we exchanged phone numbers and invites each other two each other's countries to visit. so there's a good spirit as well, and i sort of sense that most heads of state and government are actually quite relaxed here because we don't do that much shop we just basically focus on the sports and talk to each other. so it's a lot of fun obviously, one had to say, who isn't there. >> it's president putin, but some of his athletes are what do you make of that? >> well, if it was me personally, i wouldn't have any russian athletes here at all, nor belarus and as a matter of fact, because the war of aggression is such an atrocious violation of international the law. but of course it's not as politicians that make that decision. it's the olympic committee, but if i look at a silver lining, it is probably that russian the russian population will understand that
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they have been isolated. this is not a voluntary boycott. most of the russian athletes are out of here, which i think is a good thing. and of course, putin tried to organize some kind of friends in la. games and no one showed up. so if this starts a conversation in russian apartment blocks and kitchens about the fact that it's what we're doing in ukraine, right or wrong, then i think it's a good thing okay. >> president alexander stubb enjoy watching your team today in paris. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you us vice president kamala harris is looking to prove herself to the public in the early days of her presidential campaign. >> harrison, her top campaign advisers are laying out their vision for the next 100 days before the election. whilst also discussing plans for the demo chronic national convention in august. cnn's mj lee has more now on how the vice president has hit the ground running i'm ready.
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>> let's go. we're going to have some fun with this too, aren't we are not playing around a whirlwind five days for kamala harris with swiftly marching towards the democratic nomination for president since president joe biden's decision to drop out of the 2024 race harris, working at breakneck speed to raise a stunning amount of cash lock in major democratic endorsements like this one on friday, when you call to say michelle i couldn't be prouder to endorse you and hitting the road to court voters who will determine the outcome of the 2024 election. >> you helped elect joe biden, president of the united states and me as the first woman vice president of the united states harris also turning to weighty matters of foreign policy this week in her first days as a presidential candidate the vice president meeting with israeli
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prime minister benjamin netanyahu at the white house as us officials are pushing to try to finalize a ceasefire agreement afterwards, harris issuing the white house is most forceful comments, yet about the israel hamas war. i also expressed with the prime minister, my serious concern about the scale of human suffering in gaza. i will not be silent. >> those comments clearly unsettling israeli officials with one telling local media outlets, hopefully, the remarks harris made in her press conference won't be interpreted by hamas as daylight between the u.s us and israel, thereby making a deal harder to secure as netanyahu who met with former president donald trump in florida on friday. >> she's actually worse than the prime minister himself also questioning harris is remarks about the war hamas comments,
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don't change the vice president's office quickly rejecting that suggestion with an aid to harris telling cnn in a statement, friday, i don't know what they're talking about. president biden and vice president harris delivered the same message in their private meetings to prime minister netanyahu who it is time to get the ceasefire and hostage deal done. meanwhile, the prospects of the next general election debate now up in the air, harris saying she's eager to face off against trump in september. >> i'm ready to debate donald trump, but the trump campaign, refusing to commit until they say the democratic nominee is confirmed. harris is top surrogates mocking that move back in the bag now now, on friday, the vice president called into a meeting of her national finance committee expressing gratefulness to her top donors for their support in the past few days top donor that i spoke with who was on that call said that this was
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really about the vice president and top campaign officials laying out their vision for the hundred plus days that are now left until election day. they said when it comes to the vice president's calendar, of course, a top priority is going to be the vice president traveling to key battleground states. they also made clear though that there is a quick reshuffling going on as they figure out what is best for the vice president and her calendar that is upcoming now that she is in this role, that is only a couple of days old mj lee, cnn at the white house donald trump then meeting with the israeli prime minister on friday, it came on the heels of benjamin netanyahu's meeting with harris on thursday as mj was saying, and it was the first time the two men had met since trump left the white house. >> later in the day, the republican presidential nominee spoke to a crowd of conservative christian activists claimed that the vice president doesn't like israel. he also urged christians to vote whilst making a startling promise about what he would quote, fix if he is elected you
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won't have to do it anymore four more years, you know, it'll be fixed. it it'll be fine you won't have to vote anymore. my beautiful christians, i love you. christiane's at my christian. i love you. get out. you gotta get out and vote in four years, you don't have to vote again, we'll have it fixed. so good. you're not going to have to well trump campaign says it's not committing to any further debates until the democratic party formally chooses its nominee. but harris says she is ready to go as mj was saying. now wildfires continue to burn furiously in california. and throughout the western united states, a california fire back battalion chief he joins us when we come back, plus us vice president kamala harris takes a barrage of political fire from donald trump, but it often fall short when it comes to accurate chrissy you've got some winning genes and for a limited time ancestry dna can show you
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jasper, a major tourist destination, but critical infrastructure has so far been spared. >> a total of about 25,000 residents and visitors were forced to evacuate the area officials say rebuilding a could take years, a wildfire in california, exploding in size, burning nearly 240,000 acres or some 375 square miles north of sacramento, more than 1,600 firefighters are working to contain that fire it's scorch the vast area and is still growing. the western united states has been suffering from extreme temperatures, high winds, and that has made the fire threat worst. let's bring in cal fire battalion chief josh so there in santa cruz. thank you so much for joining us. i mean, how does this compare with recent fires you've been tackling good morning we've been lucky than the last couple of years in california. >> we've had below average fire years over the last couple
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of years though we have gotten substantial rain, which has added to the grass crop up and down the state and those grasses that grow seasonally or what we refer to as light flashing fuels and that's what's attributing to the widespread wildfire that we're seeing up and down the state you haven't got it contained at this point. >> when do you hope to be more control of it? >> we're hoping that as we see the weather change in our favor, where we get a cooler, more moist conditions, we can start to turn the corner and gain some ground on this fire and start working on containment how many people are affected by this? the images we're looking at at the moment, thankfully, look at what as though there away from homes it's currently burning in two separate counties. >> it's burning in butte county and into him a crap county fire has grown
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substantially since yesterday. we're currently sitting just over 307,000 acres on top of the park fire. we are currently engaged in 12 other major incidents up and down the state and it's proving to be a very busy firing year for us. and how it's affecting countless people. >> how the crews coping with it. you've got enough the cruiser are doing good calfire statewide is up to our peak staffing level for virus season. >> even with our peak staffing level, we have to reach out to our cooperators both locally and nationally we have assistance from other states currently municipal departments and other states. here in california assisting with these wildfires as well as our partners from local government agencies in california and the
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federal government with us forest service and our partners from the bureau of land management as well if you told the weather you need it's a worrying situation, isn't it? >> because it is traveling so quickly? >> it is. it's a very rapidly moving fire it's being fanned by seasonably high winds very steep, rugged terrain which make access very difficult. getting cruisin to engage right on the fires edges is being improved to be more difficult than anticipated, especially when you have such a fast moving fire trying to get down into some of these very mountainous areas and fight fire effectively makes it very difficult when it's moving this rapidly is it moving towards a residential areas? is that one of your worries it's currently working in a very remote area. >> there are going to be scattered residents that are
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affected by the park fire but it is currently working in the wilderness area as it spreads, it it has the potential to get back into the populated areas again those people have had to be evacuated, haven't what's the plan for them and where do they go we currently have evacuation shelters in the area some of the areas are providing shelter for your large animals or livestock. >> we do have just evacuation shelters for families, individuals to get out and have somewhere to go and have some sense of normalcy you know, it's, it's being provided the creature comforts that we're used to it's obviously not your own home but if you can take 11 worry out of those peoples that are evacuated. if you could take a worry out of their mind no, they had knowing
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that they have a bed to sleep in and they're basic logistics are being met. it makes it a little easier to leave your house at that point allow firefighters to do the best they can? >> can, you just silver i really appreciate you spending your time with us and good luck with the continuing effort there also scorched more than 3,000 square kilometers and counting and bolivia, this drone video shows a huge plume of smoke coming from grasslands consumed by flames. at least 25 fires have been burning near the city of santa cruz, where a state of emergency has been declared, but no fatalities have been reported so far officials say no communities are directly at risk the devastation from typhoon gaemi is far from over these are scenes from northeastern china where where they saw heavy flooding from the most powerful storm to hit the country this year, the remnants of gaemi threatened to bring heavy rain to other parts of china to
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taiwan, where the storm injured more than 700 people and killed seven rescue attempts are underway after fire, a freighter rather sank off the island's coast on thursday four crew members were rescued. one was found dead and four remain missing. crew members on eight other freighters a stranded and still awaiting rescue still ahead, french security forces are on high alert. the paris olympics are underway and authorities are taking extra steps to protect israeli athletes and amid the tense political climate over the war in gaza plus how a major mexican cartel boss was lured to the u.s and handed over to federal agents tomorrow. >> the whole story digs deeper into historic weekend presidential politics first, the rise of kamala harris this followed by the story of joe biden's withdrawal from the race. the whole story with anderson cooper starts tomorrow at 8:00 on cnn lysol knows
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i'm max foster. a more now, on one of our top stories, high profile french athletes, lit the cauldron on friday night to signal the official start of the paris summer olympic games before the torch reached its final destination, thousands of athletes floated down the river, seine on boats amid spectacular entertainment, athletic competition he's now in full swing with metals expected to be handed out in swimming and other sports. meanwhile, some france's high-speed train services have been restored hours after what officials say were coordinated sabotage attacks to disrupt several rail lines before that opening ceremony of the paris prosecutor's office his investigating so far, no one's claimed responsibility. french authorities say they've gone to great lengths to ensure a safe olympic games that are meant to be above politics. this includes ramping up security, particularly for the israeli athletes, and also learning from the past, cnn's fred pleitgen reports as
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israeli athletes arrived in france, making their way to the olympic village under heavy french police protection protests against israel's participation in the 2024 games had already erupted in paris. france has government acknowledging the threat level for israeli athletes is extremely high. posey and i proposed to the president of the republic that the israeli delegation be fully protected by the french police 24 hours a day. the interior minister said security forces are on high alert french and international police patrolling the area around the olympics, trying to prevent mistakes made in the past. november piece of this you know, but we took this decision because he israeli athletes and we've known this since the munich games, of course, but more recently again, are particularly targeted by attacks munich west
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germany at the summer games 1972 palestinians from a militant group named black september storm that dormitory, housing the israeli team they immediately shoot and kill two athletes and take nine more team members hostage the games continue as the hostage crisis drags on but gunman, often seen on the balcony of the olympic dormitory german police. finally attempt and completely botch a rescue mission, leaving all of the israeli hostages, a german cop, and five of the terrorists dead esther roth, show more off was on israel's 1972 track and field team at the normative parent shut the hosea. >> i was sitting in the plane transporting the coffins of my coach and comrades. i had trained with they returned with you in coffins. that was the
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thing i couldn't understand and i kept thinking, what's going on here. >> nuchal whipple, at this moment, eight or nine athletes are the israeli team are being held prisoner black september. israel's intelligence service, mossad to launched a campaign of assassinations targeting those connected to the munich massacre depicted in the 2005 steven spielberg film, munich, which also depicts the botched german rescue attempt and while 1972 is in 2024, the trauma remains and so do the lessons learned israel sports minister recently met with the country's domestic security service, the shin bet since october 7 of last year when hamas attacked israel, killing more than 1,100 people and taking roughly 250 others hostage he israel has launched
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a punishing military campaign in gaza, killing many hamas fighters, but also scores of civilians israeli athletes say they're well aware of the anger they face. >> it's something that we're used to and i'm feeling really safe my parties to connect with everyone by sports french authorities say they will do their part to try and make sure violence doesn't disrupt the games that are supposed to be above politics fred pleitgen, cnn, berlin well, the israeli military has issued an evacuation order the people in southern khan younis in gaza, the idf warned it would close forcefully operate in the area, and told residents to head to al mawasi. however, the designated humanitarian area in
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al-mawasi has come under repeated israeli attacks, including a strike on july the 14th was reported killed 90 people and injured 300. israel says the orders to evacuate come after what it calls a significant terrorist activity and rocket fire coming from the area high level talks for a ceasefire in gaza and hostage release deal are expected to resume in rome in the coming days. but diplomat familiar with the plans tells cnn that us cia director bill burns and israeli intelligence officials are set to meet with him egyptian and qatari mediators. those talks could happen as soon as this weekend, though the situation is fluid and nothing has nailed down, families of hostages expressed optimism that a deal is within reach after meeting with the israeli prime minister and us president this week now, one of mexico's most notorious drug lords is now in the u.s. in us custody, thanks to the help of el chapo's son, cnn's polo sandoval, has the latest details on that well, as we
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learn more about this takedown, it seems a betrayal is really one of the prevailing themes in this investigation. do oftentimes the heads of these drug cartels have to decide between fleeing from authorities and potentially getting hunted down by them, or do they choose to? cooperate with them? and thus far based on information coming in, it seems that this may have been the latter, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation telling her colleague, evan perez, it is believed that one of the sons of joaquin guzman, who we know as el chapo likely provided us authorities with critical information that allowed them to nab this narco is my l some bar that known as el mayo. remember mayo. and chapo guzman or two of the partners who created the sinaloa cartel decades ago. the doj, yet to confirm the following plot, but we have heard from multiple sources that have been briefed on the investigation who say that it's likely that mayo was led to believe that he would be flying to go see a property
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potentially to purchase it and not head to an airstrip near el paso where federal agents were waiting to actually do detain him. so essentially, it is believed at this point of the doj has not confirmed it that he was hand-delivered by the son of his former partner, by joaquin guzman lopez was the 38-year-old man who was also aboard that plane, also behind bars in federal custody and also stands accused of taking part of this massive criminal enterprise responsible for quite literally tons of narcotics that have ended up in the united states, specifically fentanyl as for el mayo, he was in courts at the end of this week and entered a plea of not guilty. now in terms of what could be to come, the sinaloa cartel, certainly not going anywhere even though one of its leaders is now in federal custody. what we do know is that over the years that group has actually splintered into other factions. so the arrest of el mayo certainly leaves behind a massive power void, a
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vacuum, so to speak and it's very possible that we could see some infight, some infighting within the sinaloa cartel. so yes, this a arrest of now a second founding member of the sinaloa cartel could be the end of one era. that this may likely lead to the bloody start of another. polo sandoval cnn new york donald trump unleashes a new salvo, a political attacks on us vice president kamala harris. but when they're scrutinized, many of them don't quite add up. that story is just ahead. >> the russians were trying to spy on us. we were spying on them. >> this is a secret war secrets now streaming on max i will warn bro, i can't wait to see how you make out as an equivalent manager lysol laundry. kaiser it says here kills 99.9% of border causing bacteria in laundrie. everything snow, so fresh i'm
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jackpot party, a party in every spirit, i would really happen to the atlanta olympic bombing premieres tonight at nine on cnn donald trump is ramping up his attacks on us vice president kamala harris is new polls show she is closing in on him in the presidential race. >> but as tom foreman reports, one thing is often left missing from trump's attacks, and that is the truth i say, bring it on amid cheers from fans and jeers
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from foes. >> vice president kamala harris is being pelted by republican claims about her life and career. many unfounded at his first rally since harris became the presumptive nominee, former president donald trump tore into to what he said are her views on social security. >> she's talking about read let's take the retirement age on wet abortion should be legal even after birth. >> the execution of a baby and on his own legal cases, which he long blamed on president joe biden, there was all headed up by all three of those cases about his opponents are patently false, but never mind, by the way, on this show, our vetting has only begun while some right-wing media stars are erupting over the new democratic challenger. >> others are accusing harris with no evidence of building her career primarily on race and gender some on the right in the past, rebooted trump's birther claims against former
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president barak obama by falsely saying harris, who was born in california to immigrant parents, is not a us citizen. now they say switching biden to harris on balances full is illegal. listen to trump's running mate this was fundamentally illegitimate and republican speaker of the house, mike johnson, it would be wrong. and i think unlawful in accordance to some of these states rules for a handful of people to go in a back room and switch it out because they're they don't like the candidate any longer. >> but that's false too cnn contacted every state and aside from two, which did not reply, they all said there are no obstacles to putting harris on the ballot and on it goes kandula can't have my gun. she can't have my gasoline engine and she sure as hell can't have my stakes and cheeseburgers suggestions that harris wants to outright ban guns, gasoline, cars, and red meat that she could couldn't pass the bar exam. and it's totally against jewish people. all of those are
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false. harris has talked about some gun control, about alternative fuels, about everyone eating better. so there are real issues that republicans can engage her on but right now it looks like what they're doing is just throwing everything at her to see what sticks, whether it is true or not. tom foreman, cnn, washington well, as you just heard, common house is erasing donald trump's lead in the presidential race at fox news poll say is a statistical dead heat in the three battleground states of pennsylvania, michigan, and wisconsin. >> and harris leads trump by six percentage points in minnesota a new poll from the wall street journal. and in case there's no clear leader nationwide among registered voters, trump is polling at 49% with the vice president have already 7%, an improvement from biden's numbers in the last poll from early july, mr. biden trailed trump by six percentage points. the margin of error is just over 3% kamala harris is
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being noticed in china as she advised to replace joe biden in the white house. cnn's will ripley found out what people there are saying about her who is kamala harris? a common question on chinese social media in a nation ruled almost entirely by men. many are shocked to learn the vice president of the united states is a woman some calling harris are female obama but online polls show most chinese don't think she has a chance against former president donald trump. >> i don't know too much about her i think a lot of people well, don't know a lot about her in china. everyone knows about trump. >> the drama surrounding trump and u.s. president joe biden trending on china's internet for weeks untouched by beijing's usually heavy-handed government censors a flood of comments criticizing the u.s. political system as a circus saying whoever becomes the next president, he or she it's going to target china, officially beijing has no
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comment on biden dropping out of the race and endorsing harris calling it a us domestic affair. harris met with chinese president xi jinping in 2022 signaling how a future president harris would handle one of america's biggest adversaries we do not invite conflict, but we absolutely are prepared to and engaged in what is necessary to compete. >> people in china are posting pics of the presumptive democratic nominee alongside cartoon character lisa simpson from that episode when she became president even had to quite a budget crunch from president trump some are calling the simpsons episode from 24 years ago, a presidential prophecy. and for all the doubters in china about a woman and beating a man allen in beijing says, all bets are off the you think kamala harris has a better chance at winning this election the most talked about thing, the way harris laughs chinese social media
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users nicknamed harris. >> sister ha-ha some call her dramatic laughter, crazy and cringe. others say it's endearing and even assign of good fortune. will ripley, cnn, taipei still ahead an interview with the world's fastest man in american sprinter noah biles sits down with cnn to talk about his remarkable road to the paris olympics when you're home gets bugs the struggle is real that's why you need zero traps ziba goes, we're ever bugs do working 24/7 using blue and uv light to attract and trap flying insects with no odor and no mess, getting rid of the bugs you see and even the ones you don't, four effortless protection everywhere in your home cbo, people friendly, bug deadly to
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friend. we are closed captioning. >> he's brought to you by skechers slip in pants looking for the most comfortable, stylish, easiest pants around, try new skechers, slip and pants. just slip in an experienced skechers, innovative comfort technology why did he fabric skechers slip in pants with the paris olympics on the way, american sprinter noah lyles feels like he's right where he's supposed to be ahead of the games. >> the fastest man on the planet sat down for an interview with cnn's coy wire i'm all about making moments. big moments i want to do things that nobody has done. and that mentality goes to the idea of if i shoot for the stars, if i fall our land on the clouds, three words to describe. noah lyles creative inspirational icon some people were destined for greatness, know a lyles grew up a sprinting prodigy, turning pro as a teenager with
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aspirations of chasing olympic gold. i remember when i saw my personal limbic and i was like, oh, that's cool because so many family members and close friends were already olympians. in my head i thought becoming an olympian was like getting a driver's license it just happens when you're ready to get it. not everybody has a driver's license, but most people had if you want to go get it, you just go get it. that's how, you know, when i was younger, i viewed it by when i tried to make it in 2021, i was like, oh, this is hard this is difficult. you know, this is not as easy as it was made to seem. >> what does it mean to you to be the fastest man on the planet? >> personally, i always knew it was me. it's more for everybody else it's more like proved was like, you know, i've been telling you all this and now i have the title. it's like see, i told you one of those situations, you're widi, you're outspoken. how do you feel you brought the fire back to the sport i'm just be me if you
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want to have more of an hour so i presence besides just running just be used, show people you i know that everybody can do that because everybody has different personalities. but that's what people gravitate towards. they gravitate to the stories that gravitate to the personalities and people just wanted, you know, say, oh, i see a little bit of me in that person's west is what is fear. >> i think it's better i'm just say, what is bravery? because a lot of people say bravery and fear are two sides of the same coin but when you have bravery, it's not the absence of fear but the ability to hack fear and still go into the unknown knowing that it's there. >> how big do you dream? >> the impossible? >> truly? i think of something and it's like, okay, has somebody done this? >> okay. if somebody hasn't done this, why haven't they do it? why can't i be the first to do it and how can we make this? it's always just pushing that envelope belong of okay, let's see how far we can go guy and
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thanks joining me here on cnn newsroom. >> i'm max foster in london. i'll be back with more news after a quick break. >> tonight on the whole story, political violence has always threatened our democracy after the attempt on trump us life. where does america go from here? the whole story with anderson cooper, political violence. america as bloody history tonight at 8:00 on cnn, what's the greatest invention of all time, new hands-free skechers, slip-ins. you just slip in in there on its like they have an invisible built-in two horne. so your foot slides into place so that bending down or touching your shoes, then
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