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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  August 6, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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and z fold6 when you trade in your current phone. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. >> checkout four imprint.com imprint for certain rahel solomon in new york and this is cnn it's tuesday, august 6, right now on cnn this this morning, kamala harris now officially the democratic nominee and interest hours, we expect her to name her running mate will take a look at the final two contenders. plus this so google is really crooked. it's horrible. >> why donald trump is calling for his supporters to stop googling then asia markets are rebounding. will the u.s. follow suit? >> it tells us the strength of this movement because they put millions against us it's the second most expensive house race in history in the squad's
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cori bush survive today's primary all right. 6:00 a.m. here in washington. a live look at the white house on this tuesday morning. good morning, everyone. i'm kasie hunt. it's wonderful to have you with us. it's official. kamala harris has won the democratic party's presidential nomination overnight, the dnc announcing she won 99% of a virtual vote harris is the first black woman and the first asian american to lead a major party ticket, a historic moment that will pass probably pretty quickly in this whirlwind of a news cycle in just hours, harris set to announce who she's chosen as her running mate. sources tell cnn harris is focused on two top contenders, the pennsylvania governor, josh shapiro and governor tim walz of minnesota harris has not commented publicly about her decision-making process, but on monday, allies on capitol hill
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offered these insights i know that she's going to be looking at both who is going to be great on the campaign trail, but also again, that person who could be ready on day one, it's a question of who she feels the most comfort level with in terms of governance, people say, well, who can help us win, but it's about who can help us govern more than that with so much attention focused on harris's campaign, donald trump trying to grab the spotlight back with new attack lines and insults in a series of social media posts last night trump misspelled harris's first name as mob law claiming that she wants to defund the police ban fracking, and cause an economic depression all of the people that she's looking at are considered much better than her. >> these were people that were thinking about running. they would have run except that they didn't want to go through this roadblock with her and you because here the vice president so they wanted to go pick them and i think virtually every one
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of them is considered better, smarter would be a better president at than are so that guy that he's sitting next to trump made those comments in an interview with a highly controversial video game live streamers names aid and ross. >> ross has hosted a white nationalists and neo-nazis on his show. later he gave trump a tesla cyber truck that was plastered with a photo of the former president raising his fist after the assassination attempt against him about dropped tiktok by parents who know so idea what it means that tiktok there was a lot going on in that video, right? >> the hair joining me now to discuss all this and more, our panel's here cnn politics senior reporter stephen collinson, former federal prosecutor, elliot williams, meghan hays, the former biden white house director of message
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planning and bryan lanza, former deputy communications director for the trump 2016 campaign, welcome to all of you. thank you so much for being here. >> steven. i want to start with you kind of big picture because this is going to be a big day on the campaign trail. we are anticipating learning who harris running mate is basically any minute now. but it's taking place in a very volatile environment. obviously trump doing what he's doing. but you also have this massive stock selloff. you have fears about what's going on in israel, a wider potential crisis in the middle east yeah, presidencies are about making choices. and today we will find out perhaps more than we've already known about vice president kamala harris, how she's going to define her campaign is the biggest choice a nominee makes as they head into their convention. as you say, this is taking place against a swirling backdrop of events. the crash of stocks around the world or the plunger stops around the world, crashed it's just perhaps too much underscored the fact that once
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the euphoria of the pick is over, the convention is done. it's possible that outside events could come back into this campaign and we don't really know what's going to happen and perhaps they could give donald trump who has been grappling for a way to deal with this transformed campaign and this new opponent an opening, as you see, he's tried to exploit the stock market issue. the unrest in the middle east, trump is saying world war three is mecca mean he's trying to play to a sense of insecurity among americans at the moment at home and abroad. that is one of the questions that vice president harris has to answer in the next two months? >> yeah. i mean well, you williams, this this kind of underscores and sharpens the reality that she needs a governing partner, right? and that's kind of been the argument we've been hearing. nancy pelosi was making it with dana bash yesterday, as it seems like tim walz may be starting to become the center of this conversation because he's run a state and gotten reelected there. >> now, let me shapiro has to
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i'm going to say, well, that's what i was going next, but yes, that josh shapiro also has but that would be casey under the conventional wisdom that someone would pack an individual who was ready to lead on day one or rounded out some aspect of their resume that they need to clean up that throughout history, that's how vice president have been picked. >> but just look at the volatility of the last, i don't even know month if you're ranging from an assassination, it's only been a month feel like it's been a year assassination attempt on the former president the debate performance of the current president the switching out of a candidate, the replacement of a, of another candidate. and lord knows what happens between now and october and so it just seems to me that the rules that would typically apply to how you pick a vice president just may not even apply here. and it might just be what works for the vice president at that given moment yeah. bryan lanza, let's talk a little bit about what we saw from trump yesterday because here's how the new yorker talks about ross, this streamer that he
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talked to 23-years-old, a twitch streamer first became famous for playing nba 2k online with lebron james's son. before he was banned from the platform after repeated use of slurs as he has grown into his fame, the gen z streamer has grown for more conservative, hanging out with andrew tate and hosting white supremacist nick fuentes on his stream. now clearly that dance he was doing is like a tiktok for tiktok. he's talking about, well, kamala harris is the one that would end tiktok. there is an appeal to gen z voters. there, many of whom whom have been engaged with the harris campaign because they have found some traction in some of those spaces what do you make of trump doing this with this guy in particular, is that what you think the party needs to be doing as they try to win this general election. and was it say about how they're running against harris? >> well, first of all, thank you for having me and listen. i think if you look at the trump campaign in the last year, they've done a lot of non-traditional media. you know, they've, they've done
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podcasts. people, we haven't even heard of in the podcast spaces is just know the person, but the message is still the same. the messages you know, inflation is driving is driving bankruptcy to the working class and middle-class immigration is a serious threat. we're border and the biden had the biden-harris administration have done nothing to address it, and you have these two wars abroad that could potentially lead a third. i don't think the platform matters, at least he's not thinking were the platform matters where he is delivering this message. he's just delivering the message to and to sort of an external platform that we're not used to if he delivering that message or is the campaign delivering that message? because i don't think that's what people are hearing and also that's great that he's appealing to gen z voters. but this is gonna be one with independent suburban women in these battleground states. and i don't think that they are listening to this very extreme podcast person yeah. >> i mean, i will say it doesn't seem like it's just any other person hear me clearly. there are a lot of questions. i hear. if he's being banned, there but meghan, let me ask you kind of big picture here for harris. steven touched on the potential
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looming controversies for her. this is going to be the biggest day for her campaign so far of 100, 110 total yes. exactly. what, do you expect to see from her today? do you any news you want to break your the white house told you this is going to be i have no nudes break, however, i do think that this is an important link to why i'm like won't tell anybody knowing i think that this is an important pick for her as we've all discussed, it isn't important persson, but to elliot's point, this could just be for a moment in time, she needs to win pennsylvania. >> you can cannot govern unless you when they need to be king about that. and i think that they very much are thinking about that. i also think that while it is more progressive than people are probably tracking, are giving credit for at the moment. so i think there, has been an attack on josh shapiro, but i don't necessarily know that that's warranted with the walls having a more progressive ceo, but should be more progressive. and kamala harris, she comes out as san francisco politics, which is the far left of the american
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spectrum. so everybody to her is mainstream. and so whether it's tim walz or even governor shapiro mean that is a more conservative position than what she came out of san francisco, which is it's what she's selling is a campaign. she's doubling down on biden, which the voters have rejected. >> well, i just don't think that she has defined all of her issues and i think that she's probably an evolving candidate, which i but i think she to your point, we have video of her defining her issue but i don't think that she is defined herself as the presidential candidate, and i think that she needs to do that. and i think that there's a lot of room for her to do that. right? she needs to do interviews. she needs to be out there, but her pick will be important to do that and they will go re-introduce themselves to the people and let the voters decide brian with a line that i'm sure chris lacivita and susie wiles wish that their own candidate would actually stick to it harris all right. we've got a lot more coming up this morning. how yesterday's market tumble could shake up the race for the white house. plus this this is a once in a thousand-year potential rain ball of death debby's soaking the southeast as it stalls
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dumping an unprecedented amount of rain on the region and donald trump's surprising compliment for one of his harshest critics the congresswoman aoc sunday on the whole story, donie o'sullivan dives back into the world of misinformation their computers that are used in our election have software that was still legal, will miss information cause chaos in november's election the whole story with anderson cooper, sunday at 8:00 on cnn. find a great deal for your ideal. the dow opened your vargo typing where you want to go select your check-in and check-out dates, who search compare prices for the same hotel and save up to $30 a-night hotel. >> trivago switch to shopify and sell smarter at every stage of your business take full control of your brand with your own custom store scale faster with tour was it let you manage every sale from every channel
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the worst day on wall street in nearly two years. this morning though millions of americans still nervous about their 401k and fears of a recession are still growing with just three months to go ahead of the election. stephen collinson, you put it this way in your new piece, quote, in a tightened election, likely to be decided by a few thousand votes in a handful of swing states, any issue can be decisive, any economic shocks in the weeks to come could prove treacherous for harris given she's tied to the current administration. you also go on to discuss that she doesn't she might be tied to the administration, doesn't have the same power that the president has. but the economy at the end of the day, i mean, we've talked so much about what's in the control of the various candidates. biden's decision to not run for reelection was in his control, who she's going to choose as vice president within her control. what happens in the economy, not within her control. and no matter how either of these people run their respective campaigns, i mean, it could be the entire ball game that's right.
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>> administration is probably get too much credit when things are going well and too much blame when they're not but this is a central issue of the campaign. this is not 2008. there's not an impending financial crisis as we know, the banks are sound growth has been decent unemployment has been low for a long time, even though it's now rising but any sense that in the weeks before the election, americans in those key suburban districts, which will decide the election, are looking at there for one k's cratering. if there's an economic shock that occurs, that's going to put the focus on what is a key issue in the election. and one that the president and the vice president really trail trump. that's probably his best bet to win back the whitehouse is to play into this sense of great insecurity among americans. prices are high every time they go to the grocery store it's possible that could overwhelm me anything we've seen in the last few weeks. >> and if anything is that people don't quite understand the mechanics of how these things work. they understand
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this is what gas prices are, this is what, how much a gallon of milk is. and if you think back to tie this into campaign or campaign, think back to 92 a big moment in the debate. clinton versus bush was where a woman gets asked a question. i think it was about the deficit or the debt, not knowing that she was asking them about price that she just she didn't understand the question she was asking and had actually trip george w bush up people really 70 which party, but people don't really understand the mechanics of it really comes down to something visceral. how do i feel? >> i would say that they certainly understand inflation know that's what i'm saying, right? the democrats feeling about the field at every, every time make a purchase, they feel them the democrats have talked about wages have gone up in the u.s. that's a positive sign. oh, the unemployment rate is at a historic low. let what's now rising, as you said? it's going to continue to rise. but the reality is it's sort of there speaking a different language to what the voters are concerned about. the voters like, what are you doing about inflation and democrats where we have low unemployment, okay. what do you do about inflation? that's wiping out or
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middle-class, they're saying, oh, but wages have gone up disconnect, which is why you had joe biden request the debate as early as he did because he knew there's a disconnect and he was trying to sell it and he failed at selling it. >> conversely, conversely, that's also why donald trump is able to say inflation is up 25% this year misrepresenting the numbers because he knows i thank that people are caught up about in-flight, are concerned with inflation percent are talking about this issue and neither, neither side right now is talking about the actual issues that the trump campaign is just throwing insults and personal insults at the vice president, which i get that to style. >> but until we start talking about the economy, until we start letting people and the voters understand and i'm like getting that issue in front of them. we're not going to have people deciding on the economy like i would say this. we were all political players here, most of the times in the presidential year, voters will make the decision on the economy in july, which was if they made a decision in july, joe biden-harris, it is an abject failure to their pocket book it's an abject failure to their future. and so we're going to see what this new, this new thing with comma
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coming in the last minute, if it's able to reset it, the reality is as pocketbooks are still drain, they're still in the red as a result, as a direct result of the kamala harris joe biden administration and the policies have caused you can and say long term presidents don't have control. they have controls over policies and those have long-term effects. i think we need to talk about the ira juicing up inflation. we can talk about even even meal college debt relief and how you're juicing a more money into the market that's creating more inflation and so i disagree with your policies actually do lead to inflation and it's been these policies that have led to out-of-control inflation for the last time i was going to be really it's democrats have a new chance for the new candidates are trying to address this. that's the test for the vice president. if she can find a way to talk about the economy that the president it didn't come up when we are an absolutely unprecedented times on all of this wakulla. >> all right. coming up next here on cnn this morning we are going to unify this community has been devastated by this race squad member cori bush fighting to keep her seat at the after the ouster of
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congressman jamaal bowman, just weeks to go and there's a tornado taking the roof off a building in buffalo, new york that is one of the five things you need to see this five things ron to you by karwan karwan? dale, dr. you happy belly. i need help with a clicker. one second. grandma disguise can apply my car he still there that you need carbonic. >> what's your plate number? >> boss? move vehicle features no accidents, right? >> no good generating offer. guard mana can pick it up tomorrow. >> that's an amazing offer. >> but do you still need help with the clicker? >> i'll ask your sister sell your car the easy way with carvalho, upset stomach, bureau guest, indigestion, a bureau
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now, there are no proposed candidates for an interim government a history-making podium wraps up the olympic gymnastics competition for the first time all three medalists, black women gold went to brazil's rebeca androgen, simone biles, jordan, chiles bowing down to her. i absolutely love this. they collected silver and bronze there, but hey, you know dame recognizes game all right, let's take a close look at a small tornado tearing the roof off a building in buffalo, new york. it started as a waterspout over lake uri, the twister damaged buildings, flipped, cars, sent debris swirling over the downtown area debby, we can from a hurricane to a tropical storm making its way through the southeast united states and sarasota, florida county saw record rainfall on sunday, putting entire neighborhoods underwater and that brings us now to weather as other parts of the southeast united states still on alert with debby continuing
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to threaten historic levels of rainfall in parts of georgia and south carolina. the severe weather leading kamala harris to postpone events in both raleigh and savanna where she was supposed to be joined by her, yet to be announced, vice presidential pick the slow moving storm, also expected to produce life-threatening flooding historic or unprecedented rainfall totals for our area with a probability of less than 1% happening on any given year in our area. >> this is a once in a thousand-year potentially so rain fall of that alright, let's get straight to our weatherman van dam, derek. >> good morning. at what should folks be preparing for down south well, kasie, what i'm seeing right now is a concerning situation unfolding in charleston with a fire hose of water being aimed directly at the city so what you're looking at here is the remnants of debby's center of circulation is still over southeastern georgia.
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>> but look how it's pulling in moisture from the atlantic ocean creating these tropical feeder bands and directing them right at the city. you add that in. so that's inland rainfall, that's accumulating, but you've got the surge component with that onshore sure. wind as well. >> so we still have two to four feet of storm surge into charleston harbor. >> so both of those work against each other. and the water rises very quickly downtown charleston, i've been in that city several times covering tropical systems. it doesn't take much to flood. so that is an ongoing threat going forward today. now, it's not just southern it's. carolina. look how the moisture over spreads much of the east coast is going to interact with a cold front. and that is going to bring an uptick in rainfall across philadelphia where the vp will be today into new york city. we have flood watches located across that location. and we have are very rare multi high level risk of excessive so rain leading to flash flooding across coasts of georgia and south carolina. because computer models depict in
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again, over a foot to upwards of 20 inches of rain from the system, but it doesn't stop there. the moisture all gets strewn across much of the eastern seaboard for the rest of the week, kasie, it's going to be a long drawn-out process. >> for sure. all right. derek van dam for us this morning, derek. thank you. i really appreciate it. >> coming up next here on cnn this morning everybody should maybe just go off google, not use it my donald trump is fuming about google and interview with deeply controversial video game live streamer. plus the ntsb looking deeper into why that door plug ripped off the boeing in passenger jet hen to trade
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search dominance, the biden administration praised the landmark decision as a quote victory for the american people yesterday, donald trump also criticized google, but for very different reasons in that interview with the deeply controversial live streamer, trump suggested that his supporters should abandon the search engine altogether over accusations. it's hiding information about the former president when you put up the word assassination, had also said you took kamala to come and people were really angry. i look something wrong with google. it's so illegitimate, they have to do something about it. >> and i mean the markets speaks. >> everybody should maybe just go off google, not use it our panel is back, so let's just kind of dig into what this is about, right? so elon musk tweeted about this a couple days ago, i believe july 28, and he says, wow, google has a search ban on president donald trump election interference,
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question mark. so he shows that we all know that populates automatically, right? when you start typing in google suggesting things that you might want to look for now google told cbs in response to this, that the issues due to anomalies that are causing autocomplete not to work as intended for some searches about the names of several past presidents and the current vice president google didn't specify the anomies, but said that they were technical in nature and that we're looking into these anomalies and working on improvements which we hope to roll out soon let's just put up what our intrepid producer found when she plugged kamala harris into the search engine or, or rather vice president k, which mirrors what ilan did with donald trump. and here it seems like kristi noem might be higher up because you get vice president killed dog, which of course she was being considered for donald trump's vice president at one point then there were allegations that she killed her dog, but vice president kamala harris does not appear here bryan
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lanza, obviously, donald trump complaining about these companies often, i think you would say probably yields a phone call to folks like yourself who might be able to help the company in question but what do you make of this? controversy that mosque is sort of ginned up here. this is something that's been percolating on the online, right about google suppressing information they've sort of a escaped scrutiny that like facebook and twitter came into under when trump was still president, yoon, listen, i would say if you go back to 2020 during the presidential campaign and evening, i hate bring up the word, but sort of hunter biden and how social media companies and tech media companies pressed, the information of that going out, sort of that, that that stood stands in the back of president trump's mind is social media companies and tech companies putting their thumb on the scale. and he probably viewed it the same thing here. but you know, it's anybody i saw that pop up. i went to my phone and i went to the google app and typed up it's all the same issue and so president trump
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and his supporters clearly feel that tech companies are putting their thumb on the scale and trying to either cover up what took place or hide what took place. similar to what they did in 2020. and you're gonna continue to hear that grievance because 2020, it's still fresh on everybody's mind of how the meetings social companies, suppressed valid information towards the election and then claim that it was russian missile information which adamantly prove false stephen collinson, i mean, i will say i they seemed to fix the problem. >> i can't i can't get my google to do what elon was able to do with donald trump the issue still seems to persist for kamala harris it's true that these companies have a lot of power the courts are saying google has too much power because it's directly built in here. >> does trump have a valid complaint or not? well the complaint has been one that is very resonant among as brian was saying, trump's supporters because it plays into this idea that there's this deep state, this liberal, its structure in
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society and in the government that discriminate discriminates against conservatives. so whatever the truth of what was going on with the algorithm and when it's fixed, this is something that's going to carry on living in the trump campaign because it fulfills so many goals of the former president's political project it's not just his legal problems, but it's everything else the cultural sense that there is a force attacking trump and victimizing him and lots of millions of americans out in the heartland. so it's a very powerful political argument as with many things in the trump era, it doesn't really matter if it's true. the perception that is true is the key to its political power and don't give elon musk a free pass. here. he's got to 193 million followers and he can tweet a baseless statement like that is putting it out there. i think google's got a search problem and then legions of
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people will pick up on it and run with it. now, setting aside whatever grievances conservatives may have had in the past about how algorithms were set up. those have gone to court, those have been largely resolved to some extent, but what he did there only makes the problem worse. >> i think elie, can i ask you about this ruling? the civically against google because i will say, if you wanted to not use google in your life, good luck would be basically impossible. right? >> and i think just sum up, antitrust in a sentence competition, good monopolies, bad, and what they've done here. and what the court has found is that google, in effect has a monopoly on search engines in phones built into the technology. and so this isn't going anywhere anytime soon. there will be appeals. this is months, if not years, to sort of sort out the question of what is the remedy for google? what will they have to do? maybe it's allow other people to get into phones. maybe it's when you get a new phone, you can decide which
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search engine is the one, whether it's google or bing, or altavista, or nets never somehow that i asked you now as well all right, let's go now to this story. >> a member of the progressive group called the squad fighting off an expensive primary challenge today, congresswoman cori bush has three challengers in her missouri district. she's become the target for millions and pro israeli super pac spending after her comments criticizing the israeli military actions in gaza during their war against hamas in the wake of october 7, in june, there was another progressive jamaal bowman who lost. what is the most expensive house primary in history where pro-israeli group spent 14 million to try to oust him. bush says that the money being spent against her is a signal that she's winning it tells us
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the strength of this movement because they put millions against us, millions if we were so offended when the people didn't like our message. if people didn't like this movement, this movement, this pro democracy pro-diplomacy probe peace broke humanity, pro love, pro hope, antiwar movement if they didn't, if people didn't like it and they wouldn't have to spend so much money trying to shut it down all right. >> meghan hays, obviously, each of these races is unique. jamaal bowman's race in some ways, he had come out of step with the district on many things. it's not just israel that kind of got us there in this case, the st. louis post-dispatch has actually endorsed bushes, most likely opponent. most likely to win. the three opponents saying that even more outrageous has been bushes stance on the israel-hamas war. israel's conduct of the war it's been far from perfect, but it remains a democracy fighting for survival against an evil
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terrorist organization. bushes tendency to equate both sides, even side with terrorists. they write, when she cast one of just two house votes against a resolution to bar hamas members from the u.s. should in itself be disqualifying for reelection. what are you looking for in this primary? >> yeah, i think this is why we have primaries. that's why we have elections when we come out of step with your district, people are able to vote you out and it seems like she's become out of step with her district. i would say out of step with a lot of americans. i think i think she also voted against funding for the iron dome. i don't think that that's where most americans would stand in defense of israel i think this is why we have elections. i think that, you know, she thing that people are spending money, it's because people don't agree with her views and don't agree with her policy. so, you know, this is she's could really lose her seat here. yeah well, this is what cori bush had to say to our manu raju back in may when he pressed her on, this israel issue. let's watch this do you want equivocally condemn hamas for october 7 october 7.
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>> i say how many times have you not looked at my statements? so go look at the statements right, elliot, that seems to indicate how much pressure she's under here. i mean, she's under a lot of pressure. again, the idea of a person, the knives coming out for a person per falling out of step with the party is nothing new. it's happen in the democratic party. it's certainly happened in there republican party, particularly the years under trump, it'll be fascinating to see how this plays out. >> alright, coming up next here, a warning from the secretary of state that an attack on israel could be imminent. plus this she's got a spark that's pretty amazing actually, just got a good spot. a compliment from donald trump i will, talk about what he's talking about there no one second. >> you feel safe and then lease
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>> start watching at fubo tv tv.com. closed captioning brought to you by guilt, visit gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands, it has the designers like 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% gilt.com today all right. >> 45 minutes past the hour. here's your morning round up we are engaged in intense diplomacy pretty much around
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the clock the very simple message all parties must refrain from escalation us secretary of state, antony blinken, urging calm as israel's war with hamas threatens to plunge the region into a wider war. >> iran is vowing to retaliate for the killing of a hamas leader in tehran, possibly within the next 24 hours happening today, boeing in the hot seat the ntsb expected to question boeing about an incident on an alaska airlines flight earlier this year when the door plug blew off and left a gaping hole in the plane midflight and no joy on the south's child of chicago this morning, the white sox using their 21st consecutive game last night time saying the american league record that was set by my baltimore orioles in 1988. the national lead record is held by the 1961 and philadelphia phillies they lost 23 straight all right, let's
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turn back now to the 2024 race. >> kamala harris now the official democratic nominee is set to name her vice presidential pick in just hours, just 16 days ago, president biden was the one presumed to be at the top of that ticket before ending? his reelection bid. one of the figures said to be key and persuading the president about out how speaker nancy pelosi now acknowledging she's yet to speak with biden, who was of course, a longtime friend and ally since that decision? >> you spoke to president biden since he dropped out. >> they'll have now, do you hope to yes. >> when i hope to yeah. we're all visit is everything ok with your relationship? >> you'd have to ask him, but i hope but he knows. look, i have love joe biden respected him for over 40 years yeah. >> likes, 20 i mean, i think that report i mean, i don't know what the conversations were between her and the
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president during that time, but it seems that they all the reporting has been true. >> it seems that there are some there's not there's some bad blood there sewing be good too. >> and i just be it's hard to imagine that someone who's that discipline to politician doesn't know exactly what she's winking and nodding at their and dropping the suggestion that they're not speaking because there was another there were many other ways to answer the question in that look, he's the president united states and he's a busy man. i haven't had a chance to spoke to him, to speak to him yet, but we will but she didn't say that stuff if selling a book and i think she's also trying to say that she is very much empowered. the democratic party in that state when i think proof and goes forth with that by saying that it's very much showing that she isn't charged here. >> i mean, she she knocked him out of the race. i mean, 14 million people voted for joe biden, kamala harris made 1,800 phone calls and she's the nominee for the democratic party it clearly worked stephen. she's going to have to write another book. >> tell us exactly what went on. >> because presumably is not in this version of her book, but i
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think it underscores yet again but while we've had several democratic presence, the century nancy pelosi is the key democratic figure of the first 25 years of the 21st century. and she has extraordinary power and once again, she's wielding it there. >> and dina, to the point, you'd mentioned brian a little earlier, the idea of the senate and francisco liberal, right? fair, it's a moniker, it's been around in america for they are who they are. well, while making a different point that yes, it's a moniker, whatever you want to put behind it. but for someone who comes from that political world, she is still nancy d'alesandro from baltimore anymore with a deal? her if you look at number one, winning the house of representatives in 2006 for the first time, you want to time shepherding that caucus through up and down its she's just an exceptionally skilled politician and knows what she's doing, even despite coming from this place of
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almost comical liberal would say yes, but similar to we had newt gingrich, you could easily characterize newt. it's been very easy to character, characterize the speaker, speaker pelosi, we've certainly won some congressional seats by highlighting the fact that the san francisco let's go liberal, wants to bring their values to michigan, ohio, these other states and they've gone more liberal with hakeem jeffries. he certainly is liberal as pelosi was hakeem's it's only two more liberal and certainly more militant with the combativeness of politics that just goes to show you where we are militants are loaded and i think what it's going i just think it's early enough in his tenure that we don't know how he's going to govern with as a leader i'm just saying shepherding a diverse caucus over the greater part of a generation even setting aside what her personal politics deep down my being, i don't even know what they are. >> because you don't the leaders are able to set aside what they believe and do what's in the best interest of the moderates and liberals,
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whatever clearly had like a very keen way of whipping her caucus. and i think that that was on display with the president. yeah. i mean, i whatever she may whatever kind of core values she may have her death ministration of her sheer political skill has been on very clear display, really should make, we should stack that photo of her walking out of that trump meeting with the sunglasses on i think what really sticks out to me but someone's of the trump me. >> the other one real quick is after the democrats impeached trump, i want to say the first time and then there was applause in the room. google this everybody pelosi takes an index card and goes like that. and it was just this one. it was mom coming out, but to del sandra from baltimore, it's this is how i'm going to run this caucus. i don't want to hear any of that gloating and dunking on some thank you. yeah. it was a powerful moment as a waiter. yeah i don't have i don't have time to play her moment. >> she also said on sunday that biden should be on mount rushmore in terms of her trying to get this relationship back on track? as we all are sitting
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here discussing, i know meghan's when saying that we're talking about pelosi being kind of the key democratic figure. anyway, since we're talking about the house of representatives, i want to talk about this moment from an interview that donald trump did yesterday with that controversial live streamer, the former president played a game in which the host presented him with photos of people and triples required to respond. somewhat surprising response about one of his leading critics, new york congresswoman alexandria ocasio cortez. >> these were people fake, but, but in all fairness, look, but she knows she's got the thing going. it's a good thing she's a good thing for her but there's a certain something she's got she's got a spark that's pretty amazing. actually just got a good spark so i give her credit. >> but she's got a lot of she's got a lot of sizzle stephen collinson, is that the apprentice casting director talking nearly what is going
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on? >> i mean, i guess trump is someone that knows how to use the media and social media and aoc is expert of that, but i'm not sure that's a compliment g is particularly likely to welcome. and, you know, what she would say about him, for example, i think probably wouldn't be that he's got a spark hi no. >> go ahead. >> he started calling her fake to exactly the highest praise, but yeah, i'm also this is what else he said about trump in june she goes she he did this interview with kara swisher. she says, quote, it sounds nuts, but i wouldn't be surprised if this guy threw me in jail. he's out of his mind. i mean, he did this whole first campaign around lock her up. that's his motto it's unequivocal if donald trump wins, we're looking at the potential dissolution of democracy in the united states of america. the question about what happened to me or the democratic party is a joke. compared to the question of what is going to happen to our country clearly, they're not on the same page. >> know. i think she probably not happy that he she was even in the conversation to be
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frank, but i think, you know, it's kind of a compliment sandwich that he's giving her any calls or fake than says she has a spark aides. >> well, i was i think what he's saying mean she's authentic, right. you have politicians who sort of, you just shepard their way up from city council to state assembly, and senate. and finally make it to congress and sort of filter out what they're going to say. because consultant pelton's have told him this and that she came straight from the bar, right? she was a bartender if she broke into congress, there's an authenticity that that trump is this x-ecutive producer of television sees any you know, he was, he was dismissive at first, but he circled back. he's like how he denied that she's a very authentic politician, which is rare. you don't see that these men the days anymore. >> all right. >> well, as we're wrapping up here, we got two-and-a-half minutes left in the show. we've got i don't know how many hours until we get this apparent video that's coming out of the vice presidential picks so quick whip-around. who's kamala harris as vice presidential pick? it looks like tim walz are josh shapiro or go with a darker stephen, we certainly one of them but at the end of the day it's probably not going to decide the election, whoever it is. but you're not willing to say walz shapiro
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unreported i don't what does your reporting elliot? it's not going to decide the election had never does. >> it almost never has except since 1960. with lbj however, 61% approval rating in pennsylvania, electoral votes in pennsylvania, even setting aside the ground swell of concerns among some of the democratic base. i don't see how you don't josh shapiro. >> all right. we got one vote from josh shapiro, manglona shapiro's well, i think for everything that you're saying, i also think that people aren't tuned into walls yet, and i think that probably came out of that that he's probably more progressive than she's willing to lead interesting. >> yeah. listen, i think shapiro for the sheer chaos is going to cause in a democratic party. i mean, they they've him genocide josh. you, there's clearly a faction there that just doesn't want this guy in there and she's now going to have to put it together. >> all right. well, we hopefully only have to play this game for another another minutes. >> maybe guys. all right. i'll leave you with this this morning. a new hampshire woman is celebrating quite a score. toni pappas says that she found 52 rare baseball cards while
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renovating her old barn home in manchester. the cards or from the late 1930s and 90 fittingly enough for the new england home, one of the cards in the collection is a rare ted williams rookie card. the legendary slugger played most of his career for the boston red sox, also fought in world war ii. and then again in korea as a fighter pilot pappa says that the collection could be worth tens of thousands of dollars but she's just happy wondering about what her husband must be thinking. >> like i think he's smiling down at us. i really think he's laughing and happy that we found them that's amazing. >> it's so cool. i actually had a grandfather who had a mickey mantle rookie card that was destroyed in a fire. really wish we still had that in the family today. alright. thanks to all of you for joining us this morning. thanks all of you for being and with us, i'm kasie hunt. don't go anywhere. cnn news central starts right now

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