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jackpot party, a party and every spirit five good things listen wherever you get your podcasts it's tuesday, july 30, right now on cnn this morning, vice president harris looking to seize the momentum as she heads to the battleground state of georgia for the first time as the presumptive democratic nominee, plus he's not against anything. but he he loves family donald trump comes to the defense of his running mate after a week of bitter backlash and cnn's exclusive new reporting on how the supreme court came to its controversial decision. >> in the former president's immunity case. and trump agreeing to meet with the fbi in their investigation of the attempt on his life it is just
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past 6:00 a.m. here in washington. here's a live look at the white house, looking pretty this morning. good morning. i'm jim sciutto in for kasie hunt. great to be with you this morning it just hours. kamala harris will head to atlanta for her first rally in georgia as the presumptive democratic nominee, traveling with her a wave of momentum and a staggering pile of campaign cash. the vice president is trying to reenergize and particular black and hispanic voters. her campaign is not just the blue wall states, but also the sunbelt on its hoped for path to 270 electoral votes. president biden won georgia. you'll remember, by less than 12,000 votes four years ago harris, looking to build on that last night, you got to boot boost from a white dudes for harris zoom fund raiser of 4 million boost to be exact, a three-and-a-half-hour call attracted more than
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180,000 participants including the minnesota governor tim walz, who is a potential harris vp pick how walk in 100 days to get to change the trajectory of the world, how often 100 days do you get to do something that's going to impact generations to come and hoffman the world. do you make that wake up afterwards and know that a black woman kicked his in san him on the road making his case. the trump campaign is still trying to find a way to slow harris has momentum. the former president appearing last night on fox trying out a wide array of attack lines i would rather run against her than him i think she's easier than he is. she got rid of the laugh. i noticed haven't seen that crazy laugh that she gets crazy. that laugh. that's a laugh of a crazy person. she's 60-years-old. a lot of people i didn't realize she was 60 virtues only younger but she's 60. everybody knows who i am. and now people know who she is. she's a radical left lunatic. she'll destroy our country
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she's 59 by the way, joining me now to discuss all that saleha mohsin, senior washington correspondent for bloomberg news, former white house communications director kate bedingfield, david polyansky republican strategist, former chief of staff to senator ted cruz, david, if i could begin with you. >> laugh of a crazy person i mean, why is this necessary? i know it's not new for trump. a wise, it's necessarily to attack a female candidate for president in such a way. >> well, look, i've been a part of two campaigns against donald trump and it's not exclusive to this race. it's how he campaigns he is unpredictable. he's hard to pin down and sometimes what seems like an erratic measure on his part is sometimes pretty effective with voters. so i think we all just have to recognize it's sometimes it's donald trump being donald trump but at the same time, i think the harris campaign is mindful that sometimes his erratic behavior can be effective and land with voters. >> so yeah, but i mean come i mean, listen to senator senator kennedy, who is a sitting us senator speaking on fox news. listen to the language he used.
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have a listen the polling that i've seen shows that many americans think that the vice president is not a serious person. as i said, that she's bit of a deep down. >> i'm just wondering how you think that will resonate with women when she is called and asked him crazy and adding dogs like color, a ding-dong i'm telling you what the polling shows. i'm telling you what the polling and it does and i'll be glad to sit down with you and walk through i'm not aware of a poll that his language ding dong to deal kudos point, there. is that an opportunity for democrats and women voters? >> look, i think it's certainly energizes democrats. it energizes women when you know, when trump, when the republicans talk about her in this way, i mean, it's also, look, she's, you know, certain i would argue the most qualified person in the race she's been vice president for four years. she's in the senate. she was a prosecutor. she was ag, so the idea that
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we're going to have a debate between j.d. vance and kamala harris and donald trump about who's more qualified to be president that seems a little ludicrous, but yes, i think attacking her in this personal way, is certainly motivating to democrats, motivating to women, especially fully in the context of the larger problems at this republican ticket has with women and the comments of j.d. vance has made about women's families. obviously, what they're trying to do and taking away a woman's right to make a medical decision for herself. so taken within the context of what substantively this tickets trying to do to limit women's rights? yes. i think it is. it is absolutely going to light a fire under under democrats and moderate women, suburban voters slated to that point that you hear tim walz seven and by the way, when you see these vp potential picks on television, they're making their case right to be vice president. part of which is to be i suppose an attack dog, but i mean he's he's calling the former president a what strikes me is slightly different from the the harris
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campaign approach has been, let's make it less apocalyptic about trump and more well, they're just kind of weird. so i mean, is that a smart tack for democrats to take to kind of hit back with similar language which and attacks. >> i think it might be something that resonates with some parts of the electorate. what we're seeing in the trump campaign is there on the backfoot. they did not expect kamala harris to become the presumptive nominee, but when there was all this talk about biden stepping off the ticket should he will he can he they were out there saying no, no. the primary process show that goodness, a candidate they wanted to go against him, not kamala harris now, having to figure out how do we attack this person and maintain our support among the black constituents and white women and all women. >> yeah, i listen and by the way, we in a shorter timeframe, right. i mean, you've got 98 days until election day, shorter than usual to frame a candidate and they had done all this work on yeah. >> what's that attribute you're absolutely right. >> i mean, where is your sense? i mean from the republican, democratic point of view of
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where the race stands right now, if it were held today would kamala harris win? >> i think unbelievably in a week, we were just talking about being in milwaukee, just ten days ago looked at the race has changed, in historic ways, not just fundamental ways with president biden, look he met the article two requirements to be president, but i don't think he met that next threshold which was did people feel he was competent and up to the job? >> she clearly crosses that hurdle and now we're back into a campaign. which candidate should lead the country forward for the next four years? and over the last week, she's done a very effective job making her case the opportunity ahead of her to pick a vice president and head into the dnc convention. all of that plays in her favor. and i think it's a transformed race that is a jump ball at the moment. >> yeah, i agree. i mean, i think we're back into a dogfight here. i think she has expanded the map in a way that biden's biden's map was clearly narrowing. she's expanded it. i think that's
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you see evidence of that and her going to georgia today and she's also reenergized the democratic coalition in a way that has really infused a lot of energy here. now the challenge for her campaign is to take that energy to take some of what we've seen in this last week. which has been unprecedented and incredible and channel it into getting these people out knocking doors as we move toward september, when people start early voting and then into november, i think one thing i will say having worked with a lot of the people who are now running her campaign, i do think they have put in place a terrific field operation. i think they have the for structure to take this energy and channel it. that will be the next step for their campaign, which i know they're very, very focused on. >> i mean, listen, they're talking up volunteers by the thousands. you've been heard the segment with ron brownstein earlier about how the numbers for biden on the abortion issue we're not as positive, this cycle as they were in 2022 and 2020 not as clear cut between him, him, and trump clearly,
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with harris by the way, she's a woman, more credible, you might argue, spokesperson on this issue is this going to be an even more central message to the democratic presidential campaign? >> it might be something that will resonate with voters democrats have been looking for a white space where they can kind of move in and really combat trump. and now what we're seeing with j.d. vance has kind of petering out. he has not had the best 1012 days. kamala harris has had a fantastic 10-12 days absolute sugar high honeymoon is there. i would just caution that it's just the beginning there's a couple of concerns about kamala harris, how she performs in that broader stage. if she can bring the charismatic approach to it and also her staffing in the past, there has been issues can cheat manager stop appropriately, which will reveal can she'd govern lessons can be learned and there is so much enthusiasm and energy beat behind it that hopefully she can overcome that and give americans many two options for devote. >> i do think the fact by the way that donald trump is having
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to defend j.d. vance, sitting down with laura ingraham having to defend j.d. vance on particularly on this issue of family and women you know, it shows you that there is massive opportunity here. i think there already was for democrats, given the dobbs decision, but there's huge opportunity here for democrats to push forward on these issues that are particularly relevant for women who by the way, are going to be very decisive cohort. >> that's not a conversation i'm sure the president wanted to be having, right? >> yes, i have to be making sure he was thrilled about that. alright. stay with us much more to come coming up on cnn. the growing scrutiny as we were just talking about j.d. vance has more questionable comments from his past, more than surface plus, cnn's exclusive reporting on the key role of chief justice john roberts in the supreme court's decision on broad presidential immunity and republican congressman david joyce will join me live to discuss the assassination attempt of donald trump in the ongoing investigation. >> cnn this morning brought to
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>> that's the certainty of four imprint.com. imprint for certain maybe on the edge moments that shaped our culture coming this fall on cnn i'm coy wire in paris. >> and this is cnn made a statement having to do with families that doesn't mean that people that aren't a member of a big and beautiful family with 400 children around and everything else. >> it doesn't mean that a person doesn't have he's not against anything. but he he loves family. it's very important to him all he said is he'd he does like, i mean, for him, he likes family re like family. >> donald trump defending his running mate, j.d. vance, as he continues to face backlash over
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his now viral remarks aimed. the kamala harris and supporters of her we are effectively run in this country via the democrats, via our corporate oligarchs by a bunch of childless cat ladies new reporting this morning by cnn's kfile indicates that vance has a history of making disparaging remarks about people who happen not to have children, including this comment he made in an interview in 2020 there just these basic cadences of life that i think are really powerful and really, really valuable when you have kids in your life. and the fact that so many people, especially in america's leadership class just don't have that in their lives. >> you know, i worry that it makes people more sociopathic ultimately, our whole country a little bit less less mentally stable. >> and of course you talk about going on twitter. final point i'll make is you go on twitter and almost always the people who are most deranged and most psychotic are people who don't have kids at home i mean, all
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right. my panel is back. david sociopathic. if you choose not to have kids or can't have kids, are happen not to have kids. explain well i can't i i want to go to the politics of its first is easy. i don't think people are going to vote on either the vice presidential picks. i think this is going to be erased between donald trump and kamala harris. that being said, i think as a party, we need to reassess how we talk about issues and look that's out of line. it's not how we should approach these issues. it's by the way, not just from a voting standpoint and electoral standpoint from a common sense standpoint. and. i think hopefully as a party we learned lessons from watching these types of hits, especially in conservative media, where we tend to get loose and relaxed to take a more nuanced approach. and frankly focus on the issues that matter. and right now, the issues that matter in this country are immigration. it's the economy,
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and it doesn't matter whether you have kids were you don't whether you're a democrat or independent or republican, we should talk about those issues in the way that we view them from a philosophical standpoint not from radicalized language and pulled loose and relaxed and there's just right, i mean, that's very dear lucid relaxed. >> you're like conveying what you really think i mean, that's also, i mean, this is not a one-off. he made a sarcastic comment and then he was like, that's not really what i meant. i mean, we've seen this repeatedly. he has continued to make these comments. he also in his first attempt to sort of clean this up after he became the vice presidential nominee apologized to the cats that he offended, but not know and women. so i think that was pretty telling so, you know, it is look, it is incredibly divisive. it is as i was saying earlier, i mean, i think it is part of a larger problem, but this ticket has with women as they should in my opinion but it's also going to continue to drive the
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conversation to david's point, it's going to prevent the republicans from being able to get to the issues they want to get to, which i have to imagine is driving donald trump crazy so i mean, the other point is for every he's even made the case that people with kids should have more votes and be able to vote for the kids. >> so there's a policy hello, to that as well the other issue for vance is his past very, very strong criticism of the former president and current president, current candidate for president. i'll give you a couple of these come from the new york times, excerpts from jd vance's emails to classmate of his from the else clause school october 23, 2014. i hate the police given the number of negative experience i've had in the past few years, i can't imagine what a black guy goes through. october 4, 2016, speaking of trump here, he's a bad man, a morally reprehensible human being, that by the way, not a singular comment. i mean, he referred to trump as america's hitler here how does this play for him? among republic republican
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voters here, right? because to the extent that fox news is playing this kind of stuff i mean, some of them are going to see this. >> i think what we're seeing here, the fact that trump came out and cleaned that up shows how comfortable members of the party are. but i also think that we don't know this party very well as it is now in 2016, the trump part of that trump took was one that was against him and he was constantly fighting the forces of the establishment and traditional side of the party. and now he kind of owns it, but even he does not know exactly what does that mean and how far can i and my men go in making these kinds of attacks? and they're finding that those lines are interesting. but also we have no polling right now of how you will do against camila and how these kinds of comments since when you have a woman running for president, how those resonate. i think it's really interesting. it's 98 days out. we don't actually know from just data how this is playing out at me as you see, trump struggle there to explain some
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of these comments, you get a sense that even he seize the political sensitivity, potential damage from this stay with us. much more. discuss coming up next on cnn this morning protests in venezuela after president maduro is re-elected, because every planes, one of the five things you have to see this morning last relief for the west. after just record breaking key to end, a massive wildfire the assignment with audie cornish, listen wherever you get your podcasts this is a future. go daddy arrow creates a logo website, even social posts and minutes ai, ai who was the gum? >> see the view viewership, get your business online and minutes with godaddy arrow if you're 50 or over, you can be taken advantage of everything. aarp has to offer, right now, joining aarp for $12 for one
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tapper today at four on cnn closed captioning is bronchi bayou cora help maintain a healthy urinary tract with eu core. i can having eta ice for ten years. >> you, cora, we make uti relief products. >> we also make proactive urinary tract health products. you cora is a lyptsi right today at your core.com core.com, 25 minutes past the hour, five things you have to see this morning, protests heating up across venezuela's nicolas euro claims and election victory. a strong man says he won 51% of the vote, but us secretary of state antony blinken says he has quote, serious concerns about
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those numbers, that there is opponent claims he has proof. the vote tallies were in the liberals favor torrential rain temporarily turning dollywood into a waterpark storms shutdown dolly parton's theme park on sunday caused flash flooding, flooding across eastern tennessee and this at first there was there were a lot of dragonflies and then there was millions that's funny. >> i've seen a lot of dragonflies to an invasion of dragonflies at a rhode island beach, sending everyone running for cover this weekend witnesses say they vanished just three minutes later, scientists believed the unusually warm water temperatures and strong winds may have steered the dragonflies ashore. and it's pretty scary at least 24 people killed by landslides in southern india, dozens more are feared trapped after heavy rains in the state of kerala. kerala, rescue operations hindered by more rain and the
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collapse of a crucial break hundreds of firefighters still battling california's enormous park fire. >> the state's sixth largest fire ever it's insured more than 111 structures forced evacuations across four counties ronnie dean stout is facing multiple charges of arson, is going to be back in court on thursday and some good news out west. cooler weather on the horizon. after record heat and those wildfires meteorologist derek van dam joins us. derek where and when are we going to see some relief out there? >> yeah. well, it's coming it's here today, but i first want to show you just this erratic fire behavior that these firefighters have been dealing with on the ground. i mean, this is just a heroic effort by this particular firefighter with some of this newly obtained video footage from cal-fire here at cnn. now, the reason we're experiencing this brief break in the fire conditions is because of a cold
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front. this is moving through cooling the temperatures, but it's doing a number of things to the weather. not only is it picking up the wind ahead of the cold fronts, so making fire-weather a bit more erratic behind it though, rush of higher humidity levels will actually come help at least help the firefighters contain the wildfires that are ongoing. you could see the cooler weather across the pacific northwest. it doesn't last long. we heat up into the rest of the week. a lot of the heat has shifted eastward. we have 50 million americans across the central parts of the u.s under heat alerts, triple-digit for many locations, you factor in the humidity levels downright unbearable and then i want to point your attention to what's happened overnight across northeastern sections of vermont. a flash flood emergency for st. johnsbury. this is in northeastern vermont. we're up to five to eight inches of rain has fallen leading to multiple swift water rescues. there aren't many ways to really put this, but vermont has hit, been hit particularly hard by flooding this year. this type of rain does not
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happen in such a short period that often jim, that eight inches in six hours, that's crazy. derek van dam. thanks so much ahead on cnn this morning. >> new cnn reporting about exactly how the supreme court came to its broad presidential immunity decision blocks. >> we're tracking critical primaries in key swing states that could alter the makeup of the senate when to trade bitcoin plus oil plus gold plus so much more let me introduce
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satellite-free directv. never thought i'd see the day well, our lifespans are quite short, extreme directv without a satellite dish. >> are you gonna do this thing with just for a bit six years that was akin the american spirit i shall not seek, and i will not accept the nominee nation of my party for another term. >> as your friend, 1960 years, sunday at nine on cnn. i'm stephanie elon and los angeles. and this is cnn we are learning more this morning about exactly how the supreme court came to this historic decision on broad press presidential immunity in a new exclusive cnn report, sources familiar with the deliberations tell joan biskupic, there was an immediate 6-3 conservative majority after oral arguments in favor largely of donald trump's immunity claims, chief justice john roberts reportedly made no effort to sway the three liberal justices to the majority to try and come to a more, you unified decision. >> cnn chief supreme court
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analyst joan biskupic writes, quote, all told roberts appears to have reached a turning point his vision for the high court became more aggressive and he has perhaps shed the aura of ineffectualness that permeated some public commentary in recent years, my panel is back. i just wonder let's set aside partisanship for a moment and i want to ask you, david and kate on this wouldn't have been better for the court and the country had there been a more unified decision on this find some agreement. so it wasn't seen as so purely partisan good yeah, i suspect maybe thing, but yes, i think no question. i mean, look, the the court has suffered a crisis of public confidence. that's true for institutions across the board, not just the court, but i that has contributed to a lack of faith in government in elections in the media. i mean, these are really the, these are the threads of when we start
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pulling these threads, this is how authoritarianism creeps in. that >> you know, an adversary or, or not, depending on my political views that is a scary place to be. and i think not good for the country writ large wherever you think of the decision on the merits, right? >> would the results have been better had it been more across the board absolutely. >> i just don't know that you are ever going to get that there. it would be interesting if you ask all the justices behind the scenes if it were donald trump or joe biden, would you prefer to give them absolute immunity in terms of their core constitutional powers? i don't know how that would have played out. i suspect they probably would have come to a different resolution, but the reality of this on both sides is the supreme court has become an
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element of politics in american politics today and i think the american people recognize that too. i don't think the solving problem, the way to solve this problem is to go as far as president biden is, which is term limits in expanding the court. i don't think that's the solution at all. i think people just have to recognize the importance of these elections because they have consequences in one of the consequences is not just that court, but the appellate courts that lie under them. and even the federal bench across it country. >> well, david mentioned that the president biden's suggested proposed reforms since supreme court, which is, as i understand, it does not include expanding the court, but he does talk about ex and he does talk about term limits listen, it's not going to happen today. it may not happen for months or for years. i mean, the political hurdle girls are enormous, but was that the right message for the president at this time? >> well, he needed a message to
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talk about some accomplishments that he could propose he is attacking what has been going on the way rule of law has been lee about presidential immunity, and that's how they're coming. i think it's really interesting the point that you made that if if it was this president or that president, how would you view it? but i think i'm going to pick up on what kate said that this is really about american people's trust in the institutions that govern. and it's at a historic scoring low right now. and this is not helping it at all. the only thing to get at is transparency and that's where it seems biden was headed, was toward the transparent and listen to the polling to to your point, the polling chose massive drop in confidence in the supreme court. i think it's below 20% now, but also broad public support for reforms to the supreme court, including term limits see i mean, it's like, as i remember, 80, 90% which has to include democrats and republicans. >> yeah, and i think i mean, you've got like, what biden is put forward here is an effort
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to say, you know, the court is also not above the law, and i think that that that goes to we've seen obviously, donald trump has continued to make a political argument his campaign the entire summer that he's above the law. you see republicans kind of falling in line behind him to say, he's above the law obviously, the ethics issues that the supreme court has struggled with. justice thomas in particular is indicators giving people a sense that the court believes that it's above the law. and so i think what biden's trying to do with these reforms is to say no. in fact, the court is not above the law. no one is above the law. and that's a really important message. and i think the idea of i believe it's an 18 year term limit. he's proposing would also remove the kind of the game of tennis between republican presidents and democratic presidents in terms of, you know, who gets to put their, their justices on the court, which in and of itself, i think would also help restore a public sense of trust. so it's i think it's an important thing
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that he's trying to do it. it's going to be challenging in congress, but i think what he's proposing is important. >> and if the senate allows the president to bring up their supreme court we're candidates, to bring up a sensitive point. but there is the fact of the matter stay with us up next on cnn this morning. they call them clark kent and he just won bronze in paris. this is a great story. we're going to check in on team usa at the olympics. in this morning's bleacher report plus ohio congressman david joyce is here to discuss the investigation of the assassination attempt on donald trump recipes recipes that are more than their ingredients recipes written by hand and lost to time can now be analyzed and restored using the
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>> if we, when we get to tell you how liberty mutual customizes car insurance. so you only pay for what you need. >> isn't that what you just did stand no you gotta if you want to win time-out, only pay for what you need. every day, every day we just shipped are millionth monthly coffee subscription box. >> so we're sending custom thank you gifts to our team, our customers rep. is just as excited as we are and knows what great quality products to get celebrate your milestones with custom gear, get started today hey, i'd accustoming.com . want the effects of viagra, but faster meet roe sparks. they contain so dana, phil, and to dalla fill with sparks, dissolve under the tongue, dissolvable work faster than old school cia sparks are right for you at row dot coast last sparks so i hear some of you
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you are concerned about the fact that i'm taking over the company who rest assured companies in great hands marcy hit the homes.com. >> we've done on your homework now, that is worth celebrating i love it. thank you home work ve with so much entertainment out there wouldn't it be great... ...if you could find what you want, all in one place? show me paris. 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.
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start watching at fubo tv.com closed captioning bronte by guilt visit gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands has the designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry. >> they'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% or so of gilt.com today so some good news for team usa for the first time in 16 years, us men's gymnastics team has made the podium at the olympics and the metal was secured by a tie. >> my team usa's very own clark kent andy scholes has this morning's bleacher report, but this is i mean, the olympics is always full of
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great stories about individual athletes. this one is one of my favorite is it's so jim, the women's team is so good that man kind of always kind of live in the shadows of that team, but this year the men's team, they went to paris on a mission to get back on that metal stand and they're led by twenty-year-old tiktok star frederick richard, the michigan wolverines junior. he was just phenomenal yesterday, especially on a high bar and his parents in the crowd and say what they were just loving it. they could not be more proud of just going nuts the whole time. that brady malone, paul duda, and asked her hang they were also stellar for team usa yesterday that set the stage for stephen nedoroscik and the pommel horse specialist, if he could deliver a flawless routines, the u.s. would metal and boy, did he deliver and he knew right off the dismount the whole team mob nedoroscik to celebrate. now he's known as clark kent because he wears thick-rimmed glasses and he certainly was superman yesterday at got the
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us the broad it's the men's first team medal since 2008, and just there fourth since 1932 the martin and during that dismount all right. i guess we lost that there. let's move on to some women's rugby. i mean, while they're on the brink of history we tried to become the first american side to win an olympic medal in rugby sevens. the eagles, as they're called, avenging their quarter finals lost at the tokyo games rally probe 7:00 deficit to upset gray brynn, sami sullivan scoring to seal the 17-7 victory and advance to the semifinals are going to play the 2020 silver medalist new zealand 930 eastern this morning. >> all right. finally, one of the worst things that cabinet baseball happened to orioles catches james mechan yesterday. he took a 95 mile per hour fastball, right to the face in the first inning, his nose certainly likely broken. it was just gushing blood, but get this mechan stayed in the game.
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>> he swapped out, got it clean jersey. >> the crowd gave a huge standing ovation when he came back up in the third inning and jim, these are catcher to he had to stay work catcher coming through he's got a. >> ct scan to see what's going on there, but i made the toughness, i take a fat 95 mile or fast ball to the face. i'll probably in a coma. >> he's ok. i mean, no concussion i mean, yeah, you play the rest of the gate. >> wow. >> i would not go for credible. >> and he's great stories as always, thanks so much. it is 47 minutes past the hour. here's your morning roundup primary day in arizona. former news anchor turned maga star, kari lake, seeking the republican nomination for us senate. if lake winds she will face congressman ruben gallego, who's running unopposed on the democratic side. and this sign yet you felt sania standard friends with failed our community and i stand here today before you. my arms wide
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open and i ask for your forgiveness the sangamon county sheriff and illinois acknowledging the failures of his deputies in the shooting death of sonya massey 36-year-old black woman called for help on july 6, deputy sean grayson, accused of murder after shooting and killing her in her own home he's pleading not guilty tell us swift says she is completely in shock after two children were killed and nine others injured. >> after a stabbing rampage during a taylor swift-themed dance class in northern england. >> swift posting to her instagram story, quote, the loss of life and innocence and the horrendous trauma inflicted on everyone who was there. the family's the first responders these were just little kids at a dance class, such a sad story turning now to the latest developments in the investigation of the july 13 assassination attempt against former president trump. trump confirming last night that he will be meeting with the fbi on thursday for what's known as a victim interview, in which he
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will tell the bureau bro exactly what he's shaw and experienced that day. the news of the interview, which has standard comes as the new acting director of the secret service is set to testify before congress today. one on roe took charge after the resignation of the former director, diane cheatle last week, he is likely to respond in newly released text messages showing that law enforcement was aware of the shooter for some 90 minutes before he opened fire on the former president. the officer who flagged the shooter to his colleagues is now speaking out he was looking up and down a building and just walked around just seemed out of place. if we had a text group between the local snipers that were on-scene i had sent those pictures out to that group and advise them of what i noticed. know what i'd seen. i assume that there would be somebody coming out to speak with this individual or find out what's going on? >> joining me now is republican
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from ohio representative david joyce. he is one of the 13 members of a bipartisan taskforce. now charged with investigating the trump assassination attempt, congressman, thanks so much for joining us this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> so it's our understanding that the director is going to say today that he's ashamed of what he saw there that day. i wonder what are you hoping to hear for him in terms of hard answers beyond remorse? >> well, i'm sorry, but he should be ashamed this is romantic failure in a presidential protection detail and it goes to the heart of what we do. each and every day. this is a group cannot afford to make mistakes i was out of mistake for me. for president obviously, president trump and now vice president harris, as well as aren't they for the living ex-president itself. and
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that a lot on their plate, but they need to be at the top of the game all the time. i think we want to work together with look at the fbi investigation and things are being done. >> there, get the facts, and unable to deliver to the american people and formative package that shows him what went wrong and what we're doing in places an after-action to make sure it doesn't happen again. >> the wall street journal is reporting that trump's would-be assassin, thomas matthew crooks, that he made 25 different gun-related buys online this between the spring of 2023 in the first half of this year, sometimes purchasing materials with an online earliness alias. i wonder is your committee going to investigate? how he was able to make so many gun purchases online. and should that be a focus of this investigation i think the focus is going to be on again when the labs and security was that allowed this guy to get within a perimeter? there's two things that happen at any one of these events. >> one, when you have a counter-sniper agency, you have
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people on the ground, also an intelligence group, but the secret service on friday, they should have had a complete walk through with all the local agencies that they had involved in know where everybody is supposed to be to a tee and the only thing that can really explain that at a second delay in this neighbor taking action was the fact that he didn't know if that was friend or fall on another roof that cannot happen. >> and so it'll be interesting to see what happened on friday. who was there? i was laid out in why this occurred on saturday as to how the suspect got they've done. it is apparent that he got it from a legal weapon that he received from his father so the gun aspect of it, while sickening is also an important part of the investigation, i think more is complete, an after-action to figure out what happened and why it should never happen again. >> and that's going to concern what kind of training these folks got cheatle was in my office because i used to be
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director for the homeland security appropriations. >> she had agents, she had the money there had to be some dropping the ball. >> as far as the training of these young men and women the shooter is, you know, used an ar 15, which is so often been used in mass shootings in this country, it's enormously powerful, high-velocity weapon as you look at this, does it make you reconsider whether whether this is a weapon that should be available, broadly available? for purchase in this country well, look, i believe in the second amendment, and i believe people have the right to own arms unfortunately, every now and then you have a kook like this. >> does something that creates a suspicion as to whether it was the weapon in people. >> i know a lot of good people who are going to collect just some never even fired the guy. >> they just like collecting them. >> i don't necessarily fault the weapon i fought the suspect and i fall to lack of follow through on behalf of the agency but why wouldn't a gun also be part of the potential response?
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because listen, i'm guns like this. they have a greater range. they have greater power. i mean, the ease with which he was able to buy a gun, make gun-related purchases online. it makes it easier for someone to take a shot at the president and the wake of previous this assassination attempts, you go back to reagan's assassination attempt that the brady bill that eventually followed or, or gun rights or gun control legislation that followed the assassination in 1968. why wouldn't that be a natural part of the response to this assassination attempt? >> all we only have five months and so we want to focus this our energy and our time what happened in butler, pennsylvania in what we can do to make sure that never occurs again. >> i mean, people been killing people since biblical times with rocks people can also, by all the things and necessary to make a bomb and i mean, we can't continue to chase down things that really germane to
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our purview, which is to make sure that we oversee this investigation into worker in pennsylvania on it to lie day and make sure it never happens again. before we go. political question here back in 2022, when you were asked about the republican presidential field you mentioned there would be a lot of people in the primaries. there was, of course, donald trump emerged from that primary. you said there there were a lot of other good quality candidates out there, and i wonder, do you believe that? here we are 98 days from the election that donald trump is the strongest candidate, the best candidate for the republican party in this election what i think our party's filled with great candidates in obviously donald trump is the top of the pyramid because he got there through the primary process as republicans good run at all or defeated by him? >> so he's the winner of the primaries. that's our system. and he's going to be our nominee is our nominee and he's going to be running for president. >> as you said, this year
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representative david joyce from ohio. >> thanks so much for joining us this morning. we appreciate your taking the time. >> thanks for having well, just a few hours, the senate is taking up a vote on a set of bills aimed at protecting children online. >> the bills are expected to pass on a sweeping bipartisan vote, a rarity. as you know, these days in a divided washington centers, richard blumenthal and marsha blackburn lead the push from both parties to get the bill across the finish line i am hopeful because of the big bipartisan majority that we have today for this bill, it is really just about empowering young people and parents to take back control over there lives online to make choices that will enable them to disconnect from the evil that has been driven at them by social media. once
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the senate formally passes kosa, i will work is not done we must ensure that the house quickly passes this bill and since it to the president's desk democrats and republicans united on this, i mean, this is back to the panel here now, a bipartisan issue. it's become quite a vocal one. >> yeah, there and there are many unfortunately right now, but i think there's no question for those of us who have children, you see how your kids interact with social media. it is pervasive, it is dangerous, often dangerous i should say and they seeing congress actually function as it's supposed to work across party lines to do something that protects children. that's really the bare minimum that we should expect but it is it is nice to it's something i mean, does this bill have teeth in your view absolutely. does. and look at senator cruz, mild boss was a leading champion of this as well. and i think to see that broad diverse coalition in the numbers that the senate is going to come out puts a lot of
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pressure on the house to move and move pretty quickly. and, you know, as parents with small kids as well. yeah. i love not just the more power and protections, but to make sure that the data that our kids is not sold and used for untoward means. and so i'm super excited about yes, to the point that the bill creates a duty of care for social media companies to protect kids online also gives it has a number of other protections contained. i wonder if this could be a model for other attempts to regulate. here you go, gives minors options to protect information limits, features which drive engagement. and the ftc will enforce these new rules could this be a model for before we go? other attempts to regulate the tech industry because there's a whole bunch of but there's a whole bunch of things under discussion. >> absolutely. in those probably should come a little bit sooner in 1998 been the last that was before we had iphones. so it's great that congress has done this now. but hopefully the spurs more action, i think one important takeaway is that it's a big
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hit to the economic landscape. the finances here, $1 billion of ad revenue was that stake with this bill because people want to sell products to kids, right and that's not there. i think that shows how big of a hurdle it was and that it is huge. were able to overcome it's amazing. >> we're still operating under a 26-year-old law, particularly in the tech world where things move so quickly. i mean, that's just like show our data the idea that you had logged going for social media was brandon anyway, kind of wonder, maybe we build it better without david kate selina, thanks so much for joining this morning show, much news to digest. i'm jim sciutto in washington in for kasie hunt. today, cnn news central starts right now standby for new reportg

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