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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  July 27, 2024 3:00pm-4:00pm PDT

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and nato, your pushing the limit of what is capable ready to share the world? how good i am. >> i've trained all over the globe and that's what you're going to see an awol whole different speech. >> we wednesday night dynamite aid on tbs you're in the cnn newsroom. hi everyone. i'm jessica dean in new york and we are following breaking news out of the middle east tonight, israeli officials accusing his balah, the iran backed militant group based in southern lebanon of carrying out a deadly rocket attack back in the golan heights, just over that border at least 11 people were reportedly killed. that includes children officials saying that makes it the deadliest attack on israeli civilians since the hamas attacks of october 7. journalist elliott gotkine is joining us now. elliott, what more are you hearing about how israel plans? since to respond to this attack, we don't have specifics, jessica, but i think
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it's safe to assume that the response will be swift and pretty heavy and don't just take my word for it because we've heard from prime minister benjamin netanyahu who said he was shocked at what he described as a murderous attacks and said that it was an attack that the state of israel would not be silent about. we also heard from defense minister yoav gallant saying that we will hit back at the enemy harshly and rattling his saber even more loudly was israel's foreign minister, israel katz saying that we are approaching their moment of an all-out war against hezbollah. now for anyone who is hoping that that doesn't come to pass, may take a modicum of reassurance from the fact that israeli officials have been saying that on and off for the best part of the almost ten months during which it has been exchanging fire with hezbollah, which of course started firing on israel on october the eighth in solidarity with the hamas-led terrorist attacks a day earlier. but certainly this will ratchet up tensions between israel and hezbollah.
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they've still remain on the cusp of all out war, but it's still seems like perhaps we are not there just yet and there's a very simple reason for that. and that is because israel doesn't want all out war with hezbollah. hezbollah doesn't want all out war with israel and it would seem that it's main backer, its benefactor back in tehran doesn't the ceremony want all out war between hezbollah and israel either because at the very least, hezbollah keeping its powder dry should dissuade israel from ever thinking about taking out iran's nuclear facilities. so make no mistake. this is certainly ratcheting up tensions. we are perhaps closer at the tensions are perhaps higher than they have been in the past. what 9.5 months of daily and sometimes i'm let's deadly fire. we're not at all out war just yet, but certainly there will be concerns that we are closer to it than we have been at any point in those past few months jessica hello. >> gotkine for us. thank you for that latest reporting. and former israeli prime minister naftali bennett is joining us now to talk more about this.
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thank you so much for being here with us tonight. we appreciate it. i was just looking you posted on x, essentially the time for action is now is what you were saying in a post what does that mean for you well, first of all, i send my deepest condolences to the 12th families of 12 young boys and girls were playing soccer and were murdered by hizballah this is the worst attack since october 7 in terms of on israel, in terms of the kids being murdered, this is unacceptable. >> it's a beautiful community of israeli druze, which is a small sect in israel and they are our brothers and sisters and it's just a terrible murder attack. enough is enough hizballah has absolutely no basis to be fighting with
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israel. >> there's no territorial disputes, there's none of the nonsense of. >> occupation or anything. they have started war on israel and, you know, it's been now ten months. and i hear all the rhetoric, all the lofty speeches and words were fed up with lofty rhetoric. and the hollow words. and accompany he'd by feeble action. it is time for action. >> you asked what it is what it is, is the state of lebanon which has been part and parcel of has started war with israel and we will no longer make the distinction between lebanon and hezbollah, which is part of lebanon so the state of lebanon essentially shot rocket made in iran. >> we know the name of the guy who shot it his name is ali muhammad these rockets were meeting around iranian rockets,
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50 kilograms of a warhead. and it's time that we hit back and we're still trying to confirm all of that information just to be clear with our viewers, but i certainly hear you. >> you say that they started there's one thing that you don't need to firm there's 12 boys and girls that were murdered by a rocket shot from lebanon on us. >> and we did forensic work. we know it's iranian rocket that could only be in the hands of hizballah we do know, unfortunately, that those children were killed, which is simply horrific you said that they've started a war with israel. there's been a lot of concern especially by the u.s. by us officials that this, that this could escalate into war with hezbollah between israel and hezbollah what is that? what you're advocating for is that what you think is the only acceptable response at this point you can't escalate more
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than murdering 12 boys and girls in their young teens. >> i have four children that age exactly imagine if it was your kids. my kids are the viewers. kids. >> this was totally unprovoked absolutely no reason. >> and this is a result of a feeble week policy of many words and speeches, but not enough action the only way to stop all of this, the only way to detour our enemies from hitting us. dan night from yemen, from iran, from iraq, from lebanon, is to fight back and to hit them. there's no other way i hate war. i lost my best friend and work. we hate war. >> but when someone in unprovoked action kills our children and make no mistake. those druze israeli kids are my children we have to hit back. >> we can't have any more speeches. it's time for action and so we know that prime
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minister benjamin netanyahu, who was here in the u.s. is cut that short. he's headed back to israel now, he will meet with his war cabinet. >> what do you want to hear from them when they meet? >> what do you want the outcome of that meeting to be? >> the fundamental duty of a government is to provide security to its people. >> that's it. >> it's time to provide security to the israeli people. we can do it. let someone else do it and how to do it i just explained because balah equals lebanon, we make we should make no more distinction between the two and i'll tell you if nasrallah wants to understand what he's causing the state of lebanon, he can look down in gaza and see what happened in gaza. >> you see he says that he is the defender of lebanon, but in fact, by doing what he did this night, last night, and during the past ten months, and having
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80,000 israelis evacuated from our homes he effectively effectively is bringing destruction on the state of lebanon. and let all the people of lebanon know that hizballah in australia is playing games as a proxy of iran. and it's destroying lebanon. but we are not going to tweezer our way through and look for hizballah a minute. lebanon hezbollah as part of the government, because bola is part of lebanon and what lebanon needs to do tonight is move all of his villa away from the border all the way up to the river of latane and stopped everything they're doing. that is the only way they can prevent an all-out war. >> and i want to ask you to because these, these negotiations over a ceasefire and hostage deal are supposed to resume in rome tomorrow. israel just sharing its latest proposal for that deal. what kind of impact do you think
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that this attack is going to have on those talks when someone kills our children, we cannot talk we have to act with this is such a horrendous murderer attack because they shut a rocket, not a military days not against fighters. >> they shot it on a quiet, peaceful druze village in the golan heights called much than champ's beautiful people and kids were playing on a soccer field. and these are very accurate rockets the guy who did it, right? we said ali mahamane here. he is a commander in the hizballah. now, nasrallah denied that its hizballah. he's a coward he shoots rockets and murders kids. >> and then he claims it's not him, but we have the forensics no one else in lebanon has iranian rockets with 50 kilograms of a warhead. no one
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else and so i just want to be clear though, an underscore, you would not support a ceasefire and hostage deal at this point. >> is that is that what you're saying? you don't think that's the way forward? >> down in gaza. i'll support whatever the government does i'm supportive of the government even when i think they're not doing the best of things, i have to be supportive of my own government, but up in the north it's a different war right? and we have hezbollah just shooting us unprovoked. and they can't get away with this. >> so there is a way to reach a ceasefire up north. and the only way is for hizballah to move far away from our border we have agreed upon location in israel. it's called the litani river. >> as they push away. >> if they stopped all of the hostilities, then they can avert all our destruction of lebanon all right. naftali
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bennett, thank you for your time tonight. we appreciate it thank you, jessica and i want to bring in cnn military analyst, colonel cedric leighton and former state department middle east negotiator aaron david miller. >> thank you to both of you to be here to kind of talk through and analyze what we're hearing, what we're learning colonel leighton, let's start with you. there has been concern militarily that this could this exact thing could play out. and we just heard from the former prime minister there, obviously he is one voice is real, is government is going to act in the way that the government wants to. but he, you heard him there saying that for him and for other israelis that the only way forward is to strike back that in his opinion, war is that's what he said. they've started a war with israel what do you make of this happening today? and what is your level of concern that we are headed toward this escalation yeah. >> jessica, it is very concerning and in fact, one of
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the elements year is when we were trying, as you mentioned, to avoid in as prime minister, former prime minister bennett was talking, it struck me that this is exactly the scenario that hezbollah and its masters in iran really want to see, they want this chaos going in israel on the one hand, you have that southern front in gaza on the other hand, you have that northern front been affected by this attack on the druze children. >> so this is exactly the conundrum that iran wants to put his into. where they have a two front war and they have to make a choice which front they're going to prosecute first, this is basically something that was to be expected but it is still a very big challenge for israel and quite frankly for the united states as well. >> i'm erin, i am curious what you think of how this is all unfolding, what you're making of the former israeli prime minister's comments to us just now and of course, just
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reminding everyone this is all unfolding the day before these talks are supposed to pick back up in rome. as the secretary of state, the u.s secretary of state has said, not too long ago that he thought they were inside the ten yard line with a lot of work to do, but getting closer to a deal yeah. >> thanks for having me, jessica, it's great to be here with cedric. look, the middle east wars don't happen by accident there are either will plan 1956, 1973, or their preceded by a long fuse of tensions and they're triggered usually by an event and or miscalculation. what you see now over the last ten months is literally a mini war, although it's controlled escalation between his balloon and israel i think that if naftali bennett is reflecting even 30% of what the idf is thinking then this
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attack on magill champ's predominantly druze time is going to prompt a going to describe this a massive response by the israelis. i'm not sure. i think that the israelis, some israeli planners believed that there is a middle option a major incursion, air and ground in southern lebanon essentially to try to do what naftali bennett suggests, to push the rod one brigades and his vallow's forces anywhere from seven to 15 miles north of the blue un line signaling or identifying the border between israel and lebanon the question is, if the israelis undertakes at your mean, can it still be controlled? i i still believe given the stakes involved and the reality that this will be a war against civilians on both sides and a war against
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infrastructure on both sides. and it has the potential clearly not just of involving israel and iran withdrawing the u.s. and in fact it has the potential of creating a situation that we have never seen in this region a major regional war, which could draw in the gulf. and again a major us iranian computation, i still believe that the iranians don't want this. that his bullet doesn't want it the only party i think this serves franklin is hamas. they wanted this from the beginning. >> they thought the october 7 attack would or should trigger the kind of regional escalation that i fear we may we may well be approaching and what this will do with respect to any hostage deal. i think it will fundamentally undermine it and you're going to end up essentially with two or three
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fronts. now act extremely worrisome to say the least and let's not forget that there are dozens of hostages still being held against their will to your point and that deal still hasn't he? >> happened and they remain in captivity. colonel cedric leighton, aaron, david miller. thank you to both of you. we appreciate it thanks. vice president harris says she knows full well that it's going to be an uphill battle to win the white house is donald trump try a new lines of attack against her and it just a few days a california fire has exploded into one of the biggest in that state's history. >> we're live from butte county ahead in cnn newsroom tonight on the whole story, political my 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? bloody history tonight at 8:00 on cnn, camila tried the new sense of gain, relax flings and a
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faster, cheaper, and easier than a new windshield. and with your insurance, it's usually free i'll let the chips fall. your trip booked today cnn this morning with kasie hunt, weekdays at five eastern we're now about 100 days from the election. >> major new polls showing former president trump's lead against biden has evaporated. now that vice president harris has entered the race as the candidate, it is now a statistic to gold tie both harris and trump are out on the campaign trail today trump speaking to a crypto convention earlier, are now headed to minnesota for joint rally with his running mate senator j.d. vance. >> cnn's alayna treene is in minnesota alayna, we heard from the president earlier today at that crypto convention. what are we expecting from tonight's rally oh, well, jessica, i'll get to that in a moment. >> actually, we do have the proof program going on behind me as you can see, a mike
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glendale is actually speaking right now. we will not hear from donald trump or j.d. vance or another few hours up. but first i do just want to talk about some of what he said at that nashville conference that bag point convention that you were mentioning, he really ramped up his attacks on vice president harris he called her far worse than president joe biden more radical polin, more liberal than the president. he also test drove some new lines of attack. take a listen to what he said was this room is amazing. >> the people in this room high iq individuals, i'm running against a low iq individual on i'm not even talking about him. her i got a low iq individual we have a country to run. >> the problem is that kamala is worse than joe which is worse. she is a radical left lunatic defund the police all of the different things. and so far we're doing. she got a little honeymoon going on right now, but when people hear about her and she's against crypto, by the way now, jessica, that
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last line there where he talked about a harris being a little bit of a honeymoon phase i found that really interesting because i know from my conversations with donald trump's advisers that his team, as well as his internal poster have been telling him this exact thing, not in the short term for him after her announcement that she would likely see a bit of a boost. >> they wanted to prepare the former president for that, but this was the first time we actually heard him say that himself. now also just to briefly explain why he was at that crypto conference, i have to tell you, i have covered donald trump ever since he first entered the white house and went to washington and it was pretty remarkable to see the 1e80. he has done on crypto back when he was president. he actually called crypto scam. he said it wasn't real money but now we're seeing him say that he wants america to lead the way on crypto. and part of that is because many wealthy donors within the crypto community have been courting him over last year or so, and you're kind of seeing that result with
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him traveling there to speak today. now, to give you that preview of what we will hear in minnesota tonight, you're going to continue to hear that attacks and kamala harris, but i find really interesting is that donald trump has even coming to minnesota and sell you know, this is a state that democrats have one, republicans have one for more than 50 years for since richard nixon won it back in 1972. but donald trump really does believe and his team believes that he may have a pathway here. they also believe that j.d. vance, who is also from a midwestern rust belt city where he grew up, could appeal to some of these voters. so you'll hear some of those themes this evening. jessica alayna treene reporting from us for us in minnesota. thanks so much for that. we appreciate it. and we have a lot to unpack with our political panel as we approach the 100 day mark until the election included the latest on who vice president kamala harris is considering as a running mate. can of vp pick, make, or break a campaign we're going to talk all about it. on the other side of this break.
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lifesaver more than liebermann at the pentagon. >> this cnn closed captioning brought to you by meso book if you or a loved one have mesothelial mac will send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 800 a31, 3,700 with about 100 days until election day, some major new polls showing the race has gotten much tighter joining us now cnn senior political commentator, ana navarro, cnn political commentator and democratic strategist, maria cardona and senior political commentator and former special assistant to president george w bush, scott jennings, i'm so happy to have all of you guys. we got. this is quite a panel and we have much to talk about. i will have no time. we will have no problem getting through all this time on let's start first with you one of the new polls out this week shows here is closing this gap with trump in some key battleground states, which will likely decide the outcome of this election. and
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we're showing people right now some of that polling. do you think this is just new enthusiasm or a sugar high as the trump campaign pollster has called it, or is this an actual real moment? and i'm that could be dangerous to trump both. look, i think there is sustained support. i think the people who were supporting joe biden have united very quickly and are behind kamala harris. but there's also a bunch of new people. there's also a new universe voters, there were a lot of people who before were voting against trump. people are now voting proactively. happy enthusiastically for kamala harris. i was on her residence on thursday with a group of latino leaders. >> you can see the energy, you can feel it, you can hear it. >> and i'll say, i give a lot of credit to this campaign because they have gone from practically being parched to drinking out of a water hose and they have been able to do it very effectively in a matter
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of five or six days. i've seen a lot of campaigns die and turn on a dime for the worst this campaign has risen from the ashes. and what i'm seeing is it's going from a traditional campaign to a movement. it's very organic young people are on tiktok doing their own thing. this isn't a campaign. kamala harris wasn't on tiktok until five minutes ago it's these young people. this this new universe of voters. >> it is so much fund i can't believe it's only been six days, scott, we've lived a lifetime since last weekend how much do you think? this way? the whole six days nauta to take this all in, but, but it has a lot has transpired how much do you think that this switch with harris now at the top of the ticket has actually campaign. >> i'm sorry. go ahead. they may no no. >> has just changed the trump the trump playbook. what are you seeing kind of unfold as they're reacting to this?
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>> yeah. i mean, you know, campaign operatives who've been on campaigns and seeing dramatic things happen or dramatic things in the news. we'll give it a little more time than six days. so i'm sort of in a wait and see mode honestly, there has been some polling in the immediate aftermath. i probably get another seven to ten days to find out where we really are. but there's no question that joe biden was struggling, dropping, falling off the map that the country was leaving him behind. and so it was donald trump. >> so harris has certainly change the trajectory of that to some degree for democrats, i think what they're not pricing into her candidacy is that she is now the most liberal candidate. the democrats have ever nominated in the history of the democratic party. and she is a treasure trove of positions from her time in the senate, from her short-lived presidential campaign in 2019 she never made it to 2020. and from her time as vice president, in terms of the playbook, i don't think they have to change much. they were already arguing that the vote for biden was a vote for harris anyway, because they didn't expect biden to last but she's been right there next to joe biden. any administration that
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65% of the country disapproves of, and you throw on top of it all kinds of positions like defund the police, eliminate fracking and you can see how easy it would be for the trump campaign to find a vector that will work and allow them to stay ahead and maria, by all accounts and even what's got to say, look, it's been, it's been a big start to her campaign. >> she's had a lot of fundraising success, historic fundraising success. she has the gen z you know, on tiktok is ana was saying and yet even her, she herself today or in the last day or so said to supporters, she's the underdog in this, in this race, this is going to be really hard. this is, this is very tight race how do you think the campaign can best harness? this moment in time that they have and carry it out through the long haul for what is going to be really hard race there's no question about that. >> jessica, she is the underdog. this is going to be a really, really tough race and i think it's really smart of her
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campaign of the vice president herself to acknowledge that but look, the momentum is real this past week, she raised to 200 million off of that energy that we've all been talking about, the calls of the black women, the latina women, the white women and the lgbtq community, the white men. i mean, everyone is joining in here they recruited 170,000 new volunteers across the swing states just in these last couple of days, jessica and to your point, they're not taking anything for granted. they are embarking on a slew of events across those battleground states. 2,300 events where they're going to continue to make the argument that she is going to be the one that is going to be fighting for families the way that she and president biden have for the last three-and-a-half years that we're not going back that
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this is about a fight for our democracy, a fight for our rights and freedoms of fight for the future and look, i do think it will be difficult the other side i think has become completely unhinged and discombobulated. they don't know how to run against her. but what i do know and why i think this is going to be so difficult is that they will throw everything and her no matter how dark, no matter how demeaning, no matter how degrading, no matter how degenerate we have already seen it. >> i think it's smart of her to not take anything for granted to continue this momentum to give all of her energized new mobilized voters and supporters something to fight for for the next hundred days. >> this is a sprint and i think that the people that have surrounded her with that kind of support and the new voters she is bringing into the fold are going to have the energy to pull her through until she gets elected in november on i want to play a sound bite from
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former president trump from last night, he was talking to a christian group. let's just play that clip you won't have to do it anymore four more years. you know what it'll be fixed, it'll be fine you won't have to vote anymore. >> my beautiful christians, i love you. christiane's, i'm a 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 after our colleague, steve contorno had reached out to the trump campaign, they said, in trying to explain that that he was talking about prosperity for all americans, that that was the point of that what do you think he's trying to say there? you know, whenever he said something like that he they always have to interpret and decipher what he said and say that it's different than what most people heard him plainly say but this is a man who is clearly a threat to democracy. he has shown us this before. he showed it to us. on
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january 6. this is a man who just a few days ago, less than a month ago, just a couple of weeks ago, got shot i got shot we saw one, we saw all of this and not even that has changed that. i mean, if there's anything that should be a life-changing experience, is the idea that you could have lost it in one moment that hasn't changed him. and so here you've got gloom and do my hominem attacks all sorts of things going on and on the other side, you've got kamala harris, who has stepped up to the plate. she has gone as she's taken the spotlight and he's doing great she's bringing people along, talking about freedom. >> there. you know, kamala harris, a song, her speech, her life is talking about freedom for you. got donald trump talking about don't vote. you're not going to have to vote again. we're going to fix it and they're going to be no more need to vote. i can't find
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a flood one of those countries nicaragua, where that happens so i take it seriously when i hear scott, what do you what do you think when you hear him saying that help us under understand? >> yeah. i mean, he's saying he's going to do an excellent job. and by the way, he can't even run again. so there won't be any need for anybody to vote for donald trump again, because this is the last time he can run. so i think it's pretty simple. he's he's promising his people that he's going to do a great job and fix the problems in the country and they can move on after that. so i the interpretations of this comment today have been absolutely wild you could read it is weird. it is kind of weird to hear him say like you want we have to vote again, christians, i think that's why i'm just i you know, i hear what you're saying. you're saying that he's saying i'll fix it. so you everything will be okay. kind of thing yeah. >> i mean, he is saying that the country's in the ditch kamala harris and joe biden drove us off in the ditch and he's going to do a better job. i don't know. i'm i'm struggling with the controversy
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today. i'm happy to answer it, but that's how i interpreted it. >> yeah. i know, i just think it's any of you is ana was getting too it's like you hear him say like dictator on day one and you won't have to vote and you kind of, i think it's the context of it all. but i appreciate you walking it's not just it's not just what he just said and it's not that he said he wants to be addicted or on day one. and scott, i don't think it should be so hard for you to struggle to understand it because he already tried to do it. >> he already tried to inspire an insurrection. he already tried to destroy our democracy, destroyer constant to tuition by getting, by telling his followers both in congress and the ones who were here in the capital to attack the capitol. so that we would not, our legislators would not be able to effectively certify a free and fair election that's why when he says things like that
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people interpret it exactly how he means them because he's already shown us what he is capable of doing and the threat is at that time was a practice run because he wasn't successful. he now knows what but he did wrong. who he needs to put in place, i e j. d. vance has vimeo said he wouldn't certify the election. that's why people are so concerned. >> i'm sorry to interrupt you, but i'm being told we must must go, but thank you to all three of you. i really appreciate it. thanks so much. >> thanks, jeff. thank you. >> up next, california wildfire bigger than the city of los angeles. we'll have a live report that's i, started. >> filming this really strong winds. >> i look out my front door and i froze oh my god. >> oh my god. >> my fire. >> i thought it was it's going to die. >> you eye of the storm sunday into on just gov when your home
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battling the fast-moving flames in rugged, remote terrain amid wind gust of 20 to 30 miles an hour in what officials called critically low humidities it is concerning that we're having these larger fires earlier in the season if for having big fires like this in july and august, we may have bigger virus come the fall as the fuels get drier and the winds start to pick up. >> our house gone their house. okay. house next to it. you can see the flames flattened julia garbles home. >> she called the experience surreal as she walked through the rubble serving the destruction it puts a finality to it just going, wow, this chapter over here we go again yet for the park fire brings back haunting memories for residents in butte county. it's the same county where the 2018 camp fire killed 85 people and destroyed thousands of homes it remains the deadliest wildfire in california history, and 18 via lost my dad in the
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campfire. >> we've got her home and we've been working on it a lot lately, fixing it up and it's just where at the verge of maybe losing all that. talking to some of the evacuees yesterday there's a big concern this this county has been tested time and time again. >> can unfortunately, he knows some of our folks that are evacuated now from these fires lost their home during the camp fire and with the state's wildfire season already underway, it's a test this community may be forced to live with for months and i was told that there were three homes in this area, three families that will come back to all of their belongings reduced to ash. >> it is not easy for this community and this fire continues to just explode. it's moving between four and 5,000 acres, burned seeing them every single hour it's been described to me as explosive,
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aggressive, challenging for these firefighters and despite their efforts around the clock were at 0% containment jessica, this fire is uncontrollable all right. >> camila bernal for us. thank you so much. vice president kamala harris, putting her foot on the gas as the presumptive democratic nominee, but she's doing so without a running mate just yet ahead, a look at her potential shortlist it's and what each option could mean for her campaign. >> you're in the cnn newsroom tomorrow. >> the whole story digs deeper into historic weekend presidential who politics. first, the rise of kamala harris. >> kamala harris is a glass ceiling breaker. >> it has truly been one of the greatest honors it's of my life to serve as vice president to our president joe biden, followed by the story of joe biden's withdrawal from the race. what changed behind the scenes that lead? to the president's decision? the whole story with anderson cooper starts tomorrow at 8:00 on cnn you've had thyroid
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>> rahel solomon in new york and this is cnn it has been just a few days since vice president kamala harris has become the presumptive democratic nominee. >> and that means that the vice president now searching for her own pick for vice president president sources telling cnn that decision could come within the next two weeks. cnn's jeff zeleny reports on the vetting and polling underway the first big solo decision of kamala harris's new campaign could be less than two weeks away. >> it's one of the most accelerated vice presidential searches in modern american history, with harris racing to round out our ticket well, before the democratic convention opens in chicago on august 19th, top contenders hail from some of the biggest battlegrounds, like senator mark kelly of arizona, a former astronaut and navy pilot, governor roy cooper of north carolina, a former attorney general, elected six times.
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i'm statewide and pennsylvania governor josh shapiro, another former attorney general, who was won statewide three times, also on the list, transportation secretary pete buttigieg, a 2020 rival, who now cause michigan home. minnesota governor tim walz, a veteran and former teacher who served more than a decade in congress and governor andy beshear of kentucky, a rare democrat elected in a deep state. >> the search is well underway through private vetting and somewhat public auditions. this is the vice president's 15th trip to the most military and veteran friendly state in the country. >> harris has a long relationship with cooper of feasibly praising him last week in fayetteville, my dear friend, roy cooper and i served together when i was attorney tamila, california, he was attorney down on north carolina. i've known him for almost two decades and he is an
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extraordinary leader, but the vice president is not tipping her hand to any favorites among the contenders, all of whom rushed to endorser after president biden stepped aside, we've been friends for 20 years. she's an outstanding vice president shapiro has drawn even more attention considering pennsylvania is at the heart of any winning white house bid, a point he downplays in choosing a running mate that is a deeply personal decision that should be made free from any political pressure. only harris can say how geography, biography, or other personal factors way i'm her decision so help you god. i do bachelor on capitol hill this week week, kelly was not eager to talk about any vice presidential shortlist. again, this is not about the future of this country buttigieg, less. >> so i think anybody would be flattered to be mentioned in that context. >> no matter what i'm going to be doing, everything in my power to make sure that she's our next president. >> for harris. it's all part of her whirlwind. and a bookend
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moment for years after answering the call from biden to be his running mate, you're ready to go to work. she's getting ready to make a call of her own so this is a vice presidential search out warp speed, time, of course, of the essence, because this weekend marks 100 days until election day. early voting starts much sooner in some states vice president harris, eager to get a running mate out there on the campaign trail. i'm told, even as this vetting is underway she's likely to begin having face-to-face interviews with at least some of these candidates. again, that decision we're told will come before august 7 jessica all right. >> jeff zeleny. thanks so much for that reporting. and we are following breaking news out of the middle east where israel is vowing to respond to a rocket attack in the golan heights that killed close to a dozen people, including children. and what israel is calling the deadliest day for its citizens since october 7. >> you're in the cnn newsroom
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