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tv   CNN Democratic National Convention  CNN  August 19, 2024 9:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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history we democrats who continued to write history and make more history i'm proud i'm proud to have kept my commitment to appoint the first black woman to the united states supreme court he brown. jackson the civil forever young woman in america as you could do anything i'm proud i've kept my commitment to having administration that looks like america and taps in both town of our nation most diverse cabinet in history including the first black woman and south asian descent to serve as vice president i will serve as the 47th president, united states
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thank you kamala oh i've long said we have many obligations as a nation well, i got in trouble years ago for saying, i make no apologies. we have only one truly sacred obligation. to prepare and equip those we send to war and care for them and their families when they come home and when they don't that's right. >> so proud of written and signed the pact act the most significant laws ever helping veterans and their families exposed to toxic materials like burn pits and agent orange
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hours around during the vietnam war it's hard. nobody was able to prove that there's illness was the consequences of agent orange and no one was able to prove initially that because they lived in burn pits like my son did live next to iraq for a year that is the cause of their illness but because of the pact act a surviving spouse to two children is now eligible for a stipend about $3,000 a month those children he lost a parent are eligible for tuition benefits to go to college and they get job training it's already up and over 1 million veterans and their families just so far well, i love them and i haven't by so proud of my son service will get him but
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guests who doesn't get him and doesn't respect our veterans we, know from his own chief of staff, the four-star general john kelly a trump win in europe would not go to the grave sites in one of the france the brave service members who gave their lives in this country. he calls them suckers and losers, who the hell is he think he is? >> who does he think he is there's no words were person they are not the words aversion not worthy of being commander in chief period not then. >> not now and not ever i mean that from the bottom of my heart jess as.
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>> though commander in chief should ever bow down to a dictator. >> the way trump bows down to putin i never have. and i promise you kamala harris will never do it will never bow down when trump left office europe and nato was in tatters not a joe america first doctrine changed our whole, let me to the world why spend gave the hours about 190 hours sum total my counterparts are heads of state in europe to strengthen nato where he did, we're united europe like that vein united for years, adding finland and sweden to nato ten days before he died, henry kissinger call and said, not since not since the polian, has
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europe not looked over their shoulder, russia with dread until now until now well guess what? >> putin thought he take kyiv in three days, three years later, ukraine is still free when i came to office we're good vaginal wisdom was the china would never really surpassed the united states. they haven't noticed no one saying that now oh keep working to bring hostages home. an end the war in gaza and bring peace and security as, you know i
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wrote us peace treaty for gaza few days ago, i put forward a proposal that have brought us closer to doing that. we've done since october 7 we're working around the clock. my secretary of state ran a wider war and reunite hostages with their families and surge humanitarian health and food assistance into gaza. now the civilian suffering to the palestinian people and finally, finally, finally deliver a ceasefire in this war most trusted those protesters out in the street. they have a point a
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lot of innocent people are being killed both sides jessica we worked around the clock to bring home wrongfully detained americans and others from russia one of the most complicated swaps in history but their home com, or going to keep working americans wrongfully detained around around the world, home i made it folks. >> i've got five months left in my presidency i've got a lot to do i intend to get it done it's been the honor of my lifetime to serve as your president i love the job but i love my country more my know
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all this talk about how i'm anger all as people said i should step down no. >> it's not true i love my country more and we to preserve our democracy in 2024 we need you to vote we need you to keep the senate to win back. the house representatives we need you to beat donald trump
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president vice president is texas america they'll continue to lead america forward, creating more jobs, standing up for workers growing economy lower the cost american families. so they just have a little more breathing room we made incredible processor progress. we have more work to do and comma and ten will continue to take on corporate grade and bring down cost of food no keep taking on big pharma making insulin $35 a month, not just for seniors but for everyone in america in capri prescription, drug costs, a total of $2,000 oh, there's not just for seniors, but for everyone and folks that's going to save america again, tens of billions of dollars folks now
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by cowsay, more affordable building 3 million new homes providing $25,000 down payment assistance for the first time homebuyer more than the ten we approved donald trump wants new tax on imported goods food, gas, clothing, and more do you know what that would cost the average traveling according to the experts? $3,900 a year and attacks know, that's a fact common. jim we'll make the childcare tax credit permanent lifted millions of children out of poverty and helping manage the families, get ahead know. trump has he put the car? he craves the largest dead any president hadn't for years
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where there's $2 trillion tax cut for the wealthy. well, trump has a new plan. he wants to pride a $5 billion tax cut for corporations and the very wealthy raided put us further in debt and folks you know, we have 1,000 chilean, we have 1,000 billionaires in america you know what their average tax rate they pay a 0.2% we just increased your taxes. we proposed to 25%, which is the highest tax rate even it would raise five 500 billion new dollars over ten years they still be very wealthy look comma and tim you're going to
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make him pay their fair share. they'll protect social security, medicare. trump wants to cut social security, medicare calm on tim. protect your freedom the protector vote to write your right to vote the protector civil rights and you know trump will do everything to ban abortion nationwide oh, he will you know kamala on tim will do everything. >> they possibly can. that's why you have to elect to send an house to restore roe v wade the ag grace taught us the character is destiny character is destiny for me, joe we know
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koblin, doug are people of character. it's been our honor, to serve alongside them and we know that tim and gwen walz we're also people who are great character so like the comma was the very first decision i made before i became when i became morrow nominee and it was the best decision i made my whole career we've not going to gotten to know each other. we become close friends she's tough. she's experienced and she has a normal integrity, enormous integrity her story represents the best american story unlike many of our best presidents she was also a vice president but show me a
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president our children can look up to she'd be a precedent respected by world leaders because yard, he is she'll be at present. we can all be proud of and she will be historic president who puts her stamp on america's future there's a be the first presidential election since january 6 on that day we almost lost everything about who we are as a country and that threat this is not hyperbole, that threat is still very much alive donald trump says he will refuse to accept the election results if he loses again think about that. >> he means that think about that he's probably seeing a bloodbath if he loses in his
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words and that he'll be a dictator. on day one in his own words. by the way, this sucker meizi no, i'm not joking. think about it anybody else said that the past that they use craig. he is crazy, but you think it was an exaggeration, but he means it we can't let that happen folks all of us carry a special obligation independents republicans, democrats we saved democracy in 2020. and now we must save it again in 2024 rowe, to, be just cast this year will determine whether democracy and free freedom will prevail it's that simple it's that sirius? and the powers literally in your hands history is in your hands
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not hyperbole. said your hands. americans futures in your hands because of this nowhere else in the world could a kid with a stutter and modest beginnings in scranton, pennsylvania and claymont, delaware grow up to sit behind the resolute desk in the oval office that's because america is and always has been a nation of possibilities. possibilities we must never lose that never calmly, i'm tim understand that this nation must continue to be a place of possibilities not just for the few of us, but for all of us join me promise you your whole
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heart to this effort and we're my heart will be i promise. i'll be the best volunteer harris and walz has cam. i've ever seen h of. >> us as a part of the american story for me and my family. >> there's a song means a lot to us the captures the best of who we are as a nation the song is called american anthem there's one verse, the stands out and i can't see where the dance i'm not going to try i'll just quote it the work and prayers of century a brought us to this day what shallow legs are legacy be what will our children say? let me know in my heart what my days
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or through america. america. >> i gave my best to you i've made a lot of mistakes of my career when i gave my best you for 50 years like many of you i'll give my heart and soul to our nation and i've been blessed 1 million times return the support of the american people i really bend too young to be in the senate because i wasn't 30 yet and too old to
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stay as president but i hope you're know how grateful i am to all of you i can honestly say and i mean, it's in the bottle. give you my word as a biden i can honestly say i'm more optimistic about the future than i was when i was elected as a 29-year-old united states senator. i mean, it we just have to remember who we are. we're, the united states and there's nothing we cannot do what we do it together god bless you all you've got protect our troops the, 46th
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president of the united states, giving a 47 48 minute long speech an endorsement of his vice president, kamala harris. >> the presumptive democratic nominee who is again here, he is with the second gentleman, doug emhoff, as vice president
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harris hugs first lady, jill biden this is a speech that was about his accomplishments with vice president harris to be sure. but certainly now his legacy and we see other members of the biden family, son hunter, daughter, ashley, and others in and dana. we we were told reporters were briefed that this would be very much focused on making the case for kamala harris he certainly did that but it was also a speech about his legacy and his accomplice perhaps even more so much more now you know, biden world would argue and do argue that his legacy is her legacy because she is not only running on what is coming in the future, but what they have done
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over the past four years. >> but yes, we were told specifically aaa, this is not going to be a legacy speech. and it was going to be about making the case for kamala harris he got there at the end, but there were also a couple of couple of really sort of stand message is given the eat reality of what we know happened behind the scenes, where he basically said i wasn't i wasn't pushed. >> i'm not angry pushing back on that note and also about the fact that what he ended the speech she said he was elected as a 29-year-old kid. and it looks like he might have adlibbed. this doesn't look like he was in the prepared remarks and now i'm too old to be president he was too young to be president of two young young at one point. and now he's too old. yeah.
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>> which which really is just the embarked audie med. this is the coda the yep. for joe biden and his long political career and his family. that has been through so much and seen so much but it's been an emotional in this room for the last hour or so all of these delegates gathered here about they thought they were coming a different kind of convention and now they are trying to give joe biden and his flowers. and i think he talked dana at the time that he wanted to take. >> i just wanted to say if you can i see he's with his youngest grandson whose name is bo? named of course, for hunter head to head a baby, i don't know how old he is now about three. and he was named for his for his late brother. >> knows there are a lot of people if they've made it this far into what is to be honest on the east coast the second day of the democratic national
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convention is, i'm not the first one to observe it is late which is rather notable. i think for a lot of reason. yeah. i mean, it is fair to say that the report publicans had a tighter ship at up until the moment that their nominee spoke, of course. but they also had fewer people that they had to showcase. i mean, i think this is a thing with democrats that's they had a roster of over a dozen people who were pretty big name speakers tonight, including some maybe less big names. maybe they could have done without on this particular night. but i think they felt like they had to showcase all of that and it pushed the program well into the night, leaving biden speaking the into the dead of the night, but i think that that's probably going to be a microcosm of what we will see for the rest of this week. this is a convention that everyone wants to have a piece and they have several generations of
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political talent 33 former or to former presidents one sitting president there are a lot of people that they have to put on this day. >> well, think about all the un, all members of the democratic bench that we didn't hear from gavin newsom, gretchen whitmer, josh shapiro, but there are three more days. actually now, do have more days. yeah. i mean, it's it's just it's just there are going to be a lot of people who think joe biden kind of got the fuzzy end of the lollipop tonight just because the event went so late that his speech did not even start until 11, 30 p.m. coast time and that is also a microcosm. i think if they were trying to prevent that impression, they failed tonight. i mean, they should have to be honest, given him time earlier in the night they should have kept the schedule a little bit tighter. >> but they didn't. >> there's one i'm sorry.
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>> the only thing i was going to say was i do feel like biden obviously understanding the context of all of this he gave a really forceful speech each i mean, maybe too forceful at certain points speaking to this room at the top of his voice for almost 50 minutes. maybe to prove something that he still has very, very late at night yeah yeah. anderson. >> jake, thanks very much here team. david axelrod. i mean, a much later night, obviously then certainly a lot of folks anticipate and probably than the organizers anticipated. >> look, first of all, i want to talk about joe biden and i want to give him some grace because this was an emotional night for him when he said, i think one of the most poignant moments came on page 52 when he recited that poem and he said, america, i gave my best to you. he did that he did that he served this country honorably
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for a lifetime and tonight he knows it's coming to an end. it wasn't the end that he wanted and that's i think it was powerful. i regret that he he gave half of its felt like he gave his acceptance speech and then moved on to the business at hand, which was to promote the ticket of harrison and waltz. but as for the rest of the night i think what you saw in some ways was the difficulty of switching switching in the middle of the three weeks before a convention, you have a different nominated and what you saw were i think partly was a convention that was planned for biden, which would have been unalloyed carpet bombing on trump and the storytelling around kamala harris that was planned after there was some powerful moments, steve kerr, i thought was a credibly strong the segment on abortion rights and those of those families was
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incredibly powerful and perhaps the most powerful moment was when kamala harris herself stepped on that stage and you know, her tone was much different than the tone of some of those later attacks and it just shows how, how this coordinate was because of ice respectful late planning. and then i think you had some indulgent some speakers who indulge themselves by going longer and one footnote, i know everybody wants to get a swing at the bat here. this was a small moment. i think one that i regret, which was in hillary clinton was talking about trump and the crowd started chanting, lock him up kamala harris has silenced the crowd and it would have been a good thing to do there. but hats off to the president for his service to this country that then yeah, but the old lines last roar oh,
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a long roar. yeah. but it was less than i wish it had been shot. i wish it had been earlier. but this this party needed this tonight there were tears. this was not some stuff at these conventions is already official in this was gediman moment of the parses and love this guy to me, the most awful thing he said was i was too young to go there senate and now too old to be president i gave what i gave my best to you but that's that's joe biden. that's joe biden is a tough game is a brutal game. you're up and then you're down the most important person in the world. and then they cast me away. that happen to everybody in policy it just happened to him in a way that the whole world saw at any handle. it's night with as much grace as anything in being good handle it and i'm proud to it's a good night to be a harris it's a good night to be a biden is a good night to be a democrat and a good night to be an american. this is what it looks like when
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somebody knows when it's time to go and the long night to be in order it did very much sound like thanks. >> yeah. if you wanted to know what he would've said on thursday now you do and there were some nice nods there at the end. i agree the idea of america i gave my best to you. i mean, this is a person shan who has had a multi-decade sort of also service to the country, but also wanting to be president, right? and going for that, i think that i did appreciate the moment with hillary clinton. i did appreciate this speech and she did the work that we talked about earlier about talking about identity being a woman, the significance of that and tying it to the other history. and i also appreciated them trying to introduce some of the other up-and-coming star our is whether it be a jasmine crockett or whoever people who have captured the attention of younger generation and giving them a really prominent spot. she took the point where biden was later in the night, but the whole week is going to be like
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this, balancing the old and the new well, i'm not a democrat and obviously i see these things. >> wait, what you get different? yeah, good question i see it through a little, different, but i do observe democrats and the vibe i felt in the hall tonight was one of i'll use a sports metaphor, anderson, you may want out translate, look but it's like you're, you're cheering for a sports team or you love your favorite team and you're at the end of the game in your way down, you're way down, and then all of a sudden they start coming back and then we're at the end of the game and there's a comeback on that. that's kind of the vibe that i sent from democrats in the hall. they were losing badly for months and they were going to lose and they knew it and all of a sudden now the vibe in the hall is they feel like they've got a legitimate chance to win again, that they thought was lost, that inherently produces site statement and energy. i thought the harris entrance was well-choreographed, well done, and you could feel what you said right there. yeah. that moment that was a january
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electric moment. >> i did think the video they played was interesting. they said, we don't want to be divided angry and oppressed, depressed, but we are divided under biden the american people, 70% think we're up on the wrong track. we are angry and a lot of people do feel economically depressed. so that was their effort to try to divorce her from the feelings in the country and then we had all these speakers, some of them were anonymous, ranting, mediocrity is that pushed joe biden way deep into the night. i kinda feel sorry for biden. i mean, they took this away from him at the pinnacle of his career. i understand why he appeared angry at times and i thought some of the speech met the moment, some of it though, was hyper-partisan frankly false ranting about his opponent and i, you know, i i understand what they had to do tonight, but it's clear to me that the democrats wanted this to be as late as possible, and i hope if you love joe biden, i
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hope you watch closely because you may never see him again. >> i want to bring in also john king. john, you've heard a lot of convention speeches and one in which he made this first night a couple of things when it comes to the president, trump gets his irish up. you could see that in the speech. he was very fire years, very feisty. he was giving the speech that he was hoping to give every day in this campaign. and he's hoping to give that was just noted. acceptance speech here. he thinks to this day he can still do this again. but then there were the parts of the speech about a third of it was the speech he realized a month ago that he had to give, which was the handoff speech to kamala harris while still embracing his legacy and taking the fight against trump, saying now it's time for somebody else to take the lead role in that calling himself a volunteer for me, it was interesting. we're not done yet. we still have barack obama and bill clinton. but i met joe biden 1987. that was my first campaign for president. 87, 88. that was largely covering governor dukakis put spent a little time with joe biden in iowa. my next campaign was 1992, and i got to know hillary clinton and the first lady of arkansas. she of
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course, then went on to be a senator secretary of state, presidential so nominee. we still have barack obama and bill clinton to go. but this was the first chapter in the transitional handoff you heard joe biden at one point talking about the assault weapons ban tasked with dianne feinstein. she is gone now are replacement in the senate spoke tonight. nancy pelosi just released a book. she's here, she's very high profile, but she's the former speaker now. so this giant generational change democratic party, has been fomenting for a long time, is starting to come into focus of vice president harris came on stage tonight, alexandra ocasio cortez was part of it. a lot of younger democrats on the stage tonight two, so it's a little bit of both. but today was the first page, if you will, in that chapter. and by the end of the week, it's the harris party the arena here is emptying out. >> we're going to be staying until at least 1:00 a.m. and i certainly cnn's coverage is going to continue long into the night stay with us as we break down more of the key convention moments tonight and look at where democrats hope to accomplish in the days ahead. we'll be right back this fall.
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comedy u.s. common to cnn what could go wrong i got news for you for me or saturday, september 14, nine on cnn so why don't you actually a good sister and gave me some world baby back ribs. >> he directed at china go get you gut. >> drama maybe i'll just go get wings for everybody as a cardiologist, when i put my patients on a statin to reduce cholesterol i also tell them it can deplete their coke. you ten levels i recommend taking qn all co queue uten. q and all has three times better absorption than regular coke. putin, kunal, the brand i trust. >> she grew up in a middle-class home she was the daughter of a working mom and she worked at mcdonald's while she got her degree. kamala harris knows what it's like to be middle-class. it's why she's determined to lower
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health care costs and make housing more affordable donald trump has no plan to help the middle-class just more tax cuts for billionaires. being president is about who you fight for and she's fighting for people like you. >> and kamala harris. and i approve this it's message. >> once upon a time, there was an infinity meticulously crafted to stir your imagination. >> and dare you to dream luxurious three roe dream introducing the all-new three roe infinity qx at it's really been a gift having mom live with us. >> but as a nurse my training told me she needed more help than i could provide. so i connected with a place for mom, my senior living adviser understood our unique situation she quickly recommended communities and set up tours, a place for mom, helped us get to a decision and now mom is so well-cared for. >> talked to an expert senior
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99.9% network reliability. so now they can focus on doing what they do best for the next five years. that's a lot of bread. you got this. the comcast business 5-year price lock guarantee. switch today for a limited tim. edition smart let's get 0% interest for 36 months, jumped out to sleep number store near you i'm bill weir on the california coast and this is cnn first-night, the democratic national convention is in the books with president biden's headline speech extending late
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into the nightcap, i show unity with his vice president, the party's new nominee kamala harris, are kaitlan collins is down the convention floor delaware senator chris coons of delaware, congresswoman lisa blunt, rochester kaitlan anderson. we just had senator chris coons here with us know lisa blunt, rochester, but obviously one of the closest allies of the president to introduce him on stage earlier as senator coons, one of the lines that stuck out from president biden speeches. the end, he said america, i gave my best to you you are watching right there off stage. what did you make of his speech tonight? >> i was choked up listening to joe biden talk about his love for our country, thinking about the selflessness and the sacrifice of what he's chosen to do in elevating his vice president, kamala harris. and frankly reminding us of what a deep hole we were in four years ago and how much progress we've made with joe and camilla's leadership. it was a wonderful speech. it was an inspiring evening, and it was great to be able to spend it with a delaware delegation. >> you're one of his closest allies. i mean, you have been there through the crisis after
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the debate and his years in office? what was it like to i mean, we've never watched something like that before the last time when lyndon b. johnson dropped out, he did not attend the convention. we've never seen anything like what we just witnessed on stage. >> now, this was genuinely historic both in president biden's decision and in kamala harris and tim walz now being the candidates for for the democratic party, they are going to be great candidate, strong and compelling candidates. and i think tonight we kicked off in historic convention. >> do you consider the torch now passed absolutely. and i should note the delaware delegation, anderson is behind us as they did do something special. senator coons was on stage, so he does not have aviators, but the rest of them did have ab gators that they put on, obviously, and joe biden style as he got up to give his speech. i mean, just what does this moment like for delaware to be here with a prime spot, i should note on the convention floor, it's been great for delaware delegates to be here to be able to be a part of joe and joe biden's speech
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tonight, be a part of history and to sell hello, break. just how much we as a state love and are proud of joe and jill biden senator chris coons, thank you for that to the delaware delegation that stuck around. >> thank you, guys. anderson, back to you, kaitlan. thanks very much. the whole really is emptying out very, very quickly. john king, let's talk about the path ahead for for this party ticket, but it just after listening to president biden said again, you heard the feisty this, you heard him essentially making the case. i could still be the candidate. we know he's still smarting over that, but then he pass the torch because we've talked a little bit about this after milwaukee it with you are faced when joe biden was still in the race where his only path was the blue wall states plus nebraska's second congressional district. and even that was very unlikely both from the polling and anecdotal reporting on the ground in those states. now, harris has several different paths you could start with the blue wall. she has a sun belt strategy. the race has fundamentally changed. let me just show you this way using this polling here and stretch this out. forgive me. i turned my back to, you can see a little bit better. this even is not as his recent we know
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harris has had some continued momentum, but if you look at the race here, this is all the way back to march, right? and this is joe biden, the dark blue with donald trump. and they're running pretty even, but then trump pulls up and then you see since harris is in the race, trump's moved up to support for the third party candidates has gone down in both parties. people are coming home. trump's come come up a little bit, but harris has gone up more. this is national polling now. but by going up more that has made her competitive. and when you have african american women more excited younger voters, more excited other voters of color are typically latinos out in the southwest, more excited. it puts her into play. she now has you can do five or six reasonable paths to 270 now now i want to say at the same time, donald trump has those same paths. the same five or six because it is such a close competitive race. but that's not where we were leaving milwaukee. we were going to race that donald trump look like he was on a path to a landslide after night, one of the democratic convention, harris now has the torch passed from biden? she's in a much stronger position. the challenge anderson is to use the next three days to make what is she right now? she has
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the baton, she has the momentum in the race. can she use the next three days to build on it? >> john voloiq, a here with the panel, so i didn't ask her how how much of a bump does a convention traditionally give a candidate and should democrats be concerned that with all this talk of momentum still in the battleground states. i mean, it is seems statistically pretty much debby look, i think what democrats should feel is we're in the game, worn in the game a month ago, and we've got a shot and we've got to be we've got to be a situation and committed to the battle here. >> and you've got a debate coming up. but these next three days are important. i believe there will be the a pivot and there's going to be a big focus on harris and on the issue she wants to elevate in these next three days and that should give them a bump. you don't get the kind of bumps that you could get. you know, i remember the days of the ten point bumps and i don't see that in this kind of an
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environment she will get a bump and she should be a little bit more ahead in the national vote coming out of this, maybe she'll close in some of these further in some of these battleground states. but this, there are battleground, they're called battleground states for a reason. right? there, very close and they're going to be close. and this is gonna be a battle from start to finish. >> do you think she already got some of it? i'm i've been wondering about the last several weeks, the way she got into the race when? she picked walz and it was almost covered in carried like it was a convention. the way at all. have been wondering, i mean, maybe she will get a little bump out of this week, but she may have already gotten some of it. i think the base consolidation is almost complete. the question is, could this week possibly deliver? any persuadable independents or swing voters? and i'm not sure he i'm not sold on that yet, but to me it would be the strategic question i storytelling here. >> already telling will help the people you see that deeper understanding look, i mean
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people are happy, but the consolidation isn't as complete as it feels. >> you do have people in the party who need to know her better. you still at yep. you look, they're happy. they're glad we're running somebody who's got a pulse. but some of the stuff they did tonight, i don't come here to 25 years. i know some of these stores there, things about her, their pieces of the puzzle. they have to be put together because all the bus sunday's are not yet in the barn you've got some young men of color who are not confident in her. she's a prosecutor. what does that mean you've got some silicon valley donors that are still jumping the fence and putting billions of dollars, millions of dollars against her ishi, a pro innovation democrat which being from the bay area in silicon valley in california. she could be and should be. they need to hear something from her. there's some bunnies not yet in the barn. and so this is the week, i think to really consolidate their people standing near it, but they're not in the pool. >> i don't i don't know that a lot of barnes are full of bunnies. >> but it's going to
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liberation. >> i starmer and i want to follow up on something that john was saying, which is that, trump basically, he hasn't moved all that much in his numbers. it's it's her that is trending in a different direction and she's also what makes the map expand is by didn't was deeply unpro underperforming with some of these communities. if you think about a georgia, if you think about north carolina, north carolina was in play under barak obama because he completely invigorated the black voting population there, the student voting population there. i think that these are, these are the places where she can make serious gains and that's why the map looks different. because that's where he was openly struggling or the way i see report that condition officials are saying that the reason went long is because of all the rockets applause at that sort of thing. you build into we expect him to have had conventions before, like, you know what that's amazing spin.
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>> straight ahead out of democrats stuck to the facts kristen, their speeches and i will also tie up the convention appearances by the obamas tomorrow tv on the edge, moments that shaped our culture coming this fall on cnn. >> he's there when i got there when we leave, he's there whenever we come back home from school, he's just they're always. >> national ever since we introduced him to the farmers dog, his quality the of life has been forever changed. >> he prefers real human raid food it's like real food it is. he's a happy dog now, the hat have they duck? >> he's a happy, happy be doa
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sunlen serfaty in washington, and this is cnn president, biden earlier this evening being greeted with chants of love, joe and he didn't hear it. >> it was spelled out in those vertical signs. we heart joe as he used his democratic convention speech to try to celebrate his legacy as well as to try to get for hampshire one of the biggest parts of his legacy, vice president kamala harris elected as his successor. let's bring in cnn senior reporter daniel dale for a fact check of tonight. speeches. daniel i guess let's start with the precedent. what did you make of it there were certainly some false or misleading claims. >> there, especially on the subject of the economy. i want you to listen to something he said on the subject decked of u.s. imports and exports we understand pork products and export jobs now we export american products and creating
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american jobs my hearing or jog belong this claim is misleading. jake, us exports of goods have increased under president biden so far. so good with that claim. but contrary to the other part of that claim, we are still importing a whole lot of stuff to what he didn't mention is that u.s. imports have increased during his presidency, increased, not decreased. in fact, increased by more than exports have increased. so therefore, the trade deficit in goods has increased under president biden not declined as this claim suggested, it was over 1 trillion in each of his first three years in office. it never hit that level before. i also want to play something else. while he said on the subject of the economy in the budget, this is something he said about billionaires and tax rates we have 1,000 billionaires in america know what their average tax rate they pay a 0.2% i've called this misleading before.
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it's still misleading. an expert at the nonpartisan tax policy center has told me this number is quote, way too low. now he said the average federal tax rate for billionaires is 8.2%. what he doesn't explain is that that number is not an actual tax rate. what what it is is an alternative calculation from economists in his own administration that factors in unrealized capital gains that are not actually treated as taxable income under current law. and there's nothing wrong with using an alternative figure when you explain it as the white house does, but biden himself uses it like it's a tax rate under current law, it's not so what jake do tax rate? what tax rate do billionaires actually pay a precise figure is not publicly known at the moment, but a study from two well-known economists estimated that the top 400 households paid an average effective tax rate of 23% in 2018, much higher than the president's number all right. >> daniel dale thank you so much. >> we should let's talk more with the panel let's take one moment to acknowledge it is not
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generally the case that a unsuccessful presidential candidate from years past speaks at a convention the way that secretary of state hillary clinton did. but she, among democratic voters, especially is iconic. so i don't think there was any chance that she was not going to be invited republicans. of course. hello, senator coons, good to see you. were live on air well i think we already we just got an interview with you, so we're good. we're good. we're good. >> thank the american people got a lot of coons tonight a lot of coons all right the toxic dose anyway, so the republican convention didn't have previous precedence or content or nominees for their own reasons. >> yeah, they don't support donald trump. but this was interesting right? >> i mean, lots of reasons. but the most important reason was that she, hillary clinton
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before kamala harris, was the only woman to be the nominee of a major party. and now there's another yeah. and it's and it's kamala harris and are we going to i don't even know. >> are we going to hear from john kerry and al gore bring this convention i don't think so. i didn't know the math was going to be on this time. >> i didn't think so excel i but i i think that there's so much there's so much that's different, but there's a lot of symmetry. obviously, she ran against donald trump and she lost her clinton, kamala harris is now running against donald trump and hillary clinton very much wants kamala harris to win and there were a lot of callbacks to clintons race against donald trump, but i thought one of the most one of the things that surprised me the most was how forward-looking hillary clinton was very much about kamala harris.
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>> yeah. i mean, i thought it was actually one of the best speeches we've heard from hillary clinton. >> i mean, it was more focused on harris than biden's. yeah. i mean, i remember that part at the end. she talked about wanting her grandchildren and her grandchildren's grandchildren to see this moment for kamala harris, i think that was really poignant. she said she looks through the cracked glass ceiling and sees harris and what she's about, what she wants her to be able to do. so for clinton, this was a powerful moment, but to your point about al gore, john i'm john kerry. all of the people from past generations of democrats are going all the way back, even to jesse jackson. this is a democratic party that is still embracing their past, which is a market difference from what's happening on the republican side. all right democrats now, looking ahead to the rest of the convention, we are technically already in day two, including highly anticipated remarks tomorrow by former first lady michelle obama. >> and former president barak obama. wednesday's line of features, former president bill clinton and the vice
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presidential nominee, minnesota governor tim walz. it's all leading up to vice president commonly harris formally accepting her historic presidential nomination on thursday, cnn's convention coverage continues right after this very brief break. >> tomatoes are they a fruit or a vegetable? >> vegetable that's trouble for food? actually, you're both, right, wolf blitzer botanically speaking, a tomato is a fruit, but in mixed v hadn't the u.s. supreme court ruled that a tomato is a vegetable because it's of how it's used in cooking. >> and i didn't know that. >> now you do what i'm so glad you asked people are afraid of what they don't know. i am fighting for our used to have
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not breathing, i determined that i needed to use something to remove the obstruction from his airway. >> it's super important for every household to have a life. >> everyone should have won in their home anything can happen in any moment. >> i want my friends and family and people that i served to know that we have this device to potentially save lives, protect your family, go to light back.net, go to live fact dotnet or call 877 life back she grew up in a middle-class home she was the daughter of a working mom and she worked at mcdonald's while she got her degree. kamala harris knows what it's like to be middle-class is why she's determined to lower health care costs and make housing more affordable donald trump has no plan to help the middle-class. just more tax cuts for billionaires being president is about who you fight for. and she's fighting for people like you. >> and kamala harris. and i approve this message were your supplements developed by amateurs or pros doctors preferred supplements or doctor
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mother and camilla's the mother could say us. >> they would say he going wasn't possible. justice as a cheerful our best days are behind us. therapy for us are ready to elect kamala harris and said well as the clock strikes, midnight night here in chicago is a new day in shy town, and it's lit by the torch, just pass from president biden to his second in command on laura coates inside the united center with cnn special coverage the democratic national convention. >> they literally burn the midnight oil and a night that drew from a deep bench of
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democrats, all of whom were eager to convince voters why their party he is for the people democrats trying to take the momentum they have gained this past month and exponentially increase it in the mirror. 78 days from election day. now the page was turned tonight on that stage right behind me, but not before one last curtain call from president joe biden. he walked out to a roaring and i do mean roaring applause everyone was on their feet and it was a pretty fitting minutes long on ovation after night that saw speaker after speaker after speaker thanking him for his leadership, for his service and know some didn't outright say it for his decision to drop out of the race. >> and of course, paved the way for his vice president, kamala harris to now sit on top of that ticket she was there at night watching from the wings this time by choice, as biden delivered an impassioned swan
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song well there's talk about how i'm angry all those people who said i should step down it's not true because of all of you in this room and others. we came together in 2020 20 to save democracy as your president i've been determined to keep america moving forward, not going back because of you and i'm not exaggerating because of you. we've had a lot of those extraordinary four years rocket ever period well i say we i mean, come kremlin, me in crime. okay. keep coming down. when we put a prosecutor in the oval office instead of a convicted felon i want to bring in the executive producer of the circus and former advisor
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to george w bush and john mccain. >> mark mckinnon is here. cnn political commentator and senior spokesperson for hillary clinton's 2016 campaign. karen finney, cnn political commentator and former deputy assistant to prison president joe biden, jamal simmons and deputy campaign manager. got for governor ron desantis, his presidential campaign. david polyansky, so glad to have all of you here. this was quite a night. i mean, this is how you start, right? and you think about all the energy, all of the long hours and the speakers who were there but what i wonder stuck out to you, i can tell you from my perspective, it was that phrase, the saying of america. i gave my best view. that's probably going to resonate because clearly it was a bittersweet moment for a man who got those delegates and now is passed the baton absolutely. >> remember when he walked out, his daughter had just given him this rousing very personal. i'm introduction and he went out and in tears in his eyes. i mean, we hadn't really seen joe
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biden christ, jesus wet. right. >> so we hadn't it's. not i thought first bible verse but know, so he walks out and he starts to try and everybody goes crazy in this place. >> and i just think it just it lends to the point of how big this moment was. and we saw him say that the other thing he said, if that was very important is that he said, like many of the best president's, kamala was also vice president and he really gave her a very heartfelt endorsement about why she's better to sit in the oval office. and let's get a prosecutor in the oval office, not a convicted felon. >> and i hate to bring it down. i think there were a lot of big moments night. joe biden not one not a terrible speech, really angry, cranky, mad, where was the joy? there was no joy in that speech. >> i thought was terrible, but that was but i think in fairness, job so biden has been running that kind of speech throughout this campaign all year. i agree with taking it to
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donald trump, i think it really clear that he's not the nominee that was it for you? >> to mark. i want to hear from you as well. what did that for you, mark, do you think was a missed opportunity? i mean, he was obviously there should have he should he should have showed some joy himself. he should, he should have been joyful handing off the baton. if he sounded madden, cranky like i was passing the baton is passed and gas and talk the we had now we've got a family i'll keep it now. >> keep it a g level here i look, i agree with marc in the sense that, well, number one i mean, they president and his team have to be disappointed that by the time folks on the east coast, we're watching this, most were gone. it was almost like the old school late night pac-12 football where andrew luck might have thrown four touchdowns, but nobody on these coasts saw it it's pretty disappointing for them. i'm sure. but to his performance, i actually gave them a c as well. i thought he missed the moment. tonight, wasn't a night to talk
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about his own emotions and frankly, it wasn't a night to talk about what he had accomplished or felt that he had accomplished. in fact, i think that hurts the vice president when he does that tonight was a night where he should have passed the baton with care and love and emotion and passion. and i thought he missed that moment and miss that opportunity. and the one thing i'll say that i thought really stuck and i think you'll hear republicans say it tonight. he said that the united states has the best economy in the world. >> i think there are a lot of people in pennsylvania, wisconsin and in nevada and arizona and elsewhere that are going to disagree with him. >> and that is not just a biden narrative that is now a biden-harris narrative after that speech. >> well, i think what he was referring to though is it's sort of by the numbers our economy is doing better than any other economy of well around the world at the same time, look, i did it did feel to jamal's point like a lot of his campaign speeches. but he also seemed like he was trying
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when he said, here's what we accomplished. and by that i mean comma, he was trying to give her the benefit of here the positives i know are my republican colleagues will always say 16 million jobs, peace shaw, who cares i don't know that people who have those jobs, my care i mean, we're as democrats. we're very proud of that record. and i thought he was really trying to give her credit for some of those important moments, like the role she played in helping to make a hit doric deal to get some americans home most recently, i'll tell you what stood out to me was strategically for you get to that point strategically. is that beneficial to the harris-walz campaign to have that association? i mean, obviously she's a part of the administration and obviously she's going to want to have the feathers in her cap he's going to want to shed whatever dead weight that she might be perceived as part of the administration isn't a good thing for her to have that connection at this juncture in which he's trying to define herself or is it inevitable? >> well, but it's the it's
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the truth. it's not a fact. the fact is that it is the biden-harris administration look republican talking points say no, it's not good and it's noose around her neck and all those sorts of things are weighed around her neck but there's a lot of positives from the biden administration that she does deserve credit for. and look, i think part of what you will have to do, the rest of this week and going forward in this campaign is identify those places where she will do things a little bit differently. i think our goals and our values are still the same, but she may have some different ideas about how we get there. i just wanted to make one point though, about joe biden that i thought was really important about tonight. he didn't get this four years ago because of covid. he didn't get to have the moment where you come out on a big stage and have the crowd go out and it was nice to see him have that moment. and have that joy, at least in the audience towards him and that appreciation because i felt
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like, i mean, he deserves it. >> i just would like reflected that joriel thing about it i mean, it just seemed i mean, what would that have looked like jimmy first before you today, i wanted to play for everyone. it wasn't you think he made the point it should have been about joe biden. it wasn't as if he's a person who talked. i mean, he was praised multiple times by nearly every speaker. listen to this little montage i've got a range for you right when i look at dad, i see race, strength, and humility. >> i see one of the most consequential leaders ever in history he brought dignity decency and competence back to the white house joe biden for your leadership. >> we are forever grateful to you just a few moments, we're
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talking about here, but to karen's point, you're talking about the joy and whether and you gave me a c-plus. >> i think it was but i mean. this is a different moment than we've seen before politically. we have about a month ago, he was on the top of the ticket. this is a swan song. is there a different standard that you would apply for someone right now? it was what was he supposed to do? >> he should he should have come out tonight and tomorrow? point taken the joy in them motion and all the compliments and simply said, thank you for that. yeah. but tonight's about her tonight is about me telling you about this woman who should be our next president. and i think he failed miserably. it should have been. here's where i see the end of the day. >> the president united states was supposed to be giving a big speech on thursday night. he's not he didn't do it because he he recognized the moment he realized what was happening, he decided to give his vice president the mantle and let her go ahead and run with this baton. and i think the man came out tonight. he wanted to express himself. he wants to talk about his record. he wanted to put a thumb on the scale for his vice president, and he did it in the way he
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wanted to do it. and that feels like everybody else, like kick rocks, like let him do what he has to do thankfully. >> right. let's let them do it. >> he had he had his night and you know what, i think robert kraft should be happy. he wasn't unprimed. but what? >> but tomorrow night, we're going to move on. and then in the there'll be the obamas and no big bill clinton. and then the vice president will have tonight was his night, and he did it the way he wanted to do it. and he has taken care of this party and i think the party says thank you, and we move on tomorrow night to the next to the next agenda. >> it wasn't just the frank sinatra my way moment, although he did say chicago was his kind of town, i don't know if you pick up whatever but thank you. but the point is, it wasn't just him talking. i want to hear you so we're you heard hillary clinton. you heard dandrae ocasio-cortez, you heard jasmine crockett, right? >> right. >> great great but i wonder how you evaluate and assess those who are part of the bench and the so-called future of the party were just somebody who is clearly saying, i'm out well,
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listen a judge differently. >> i mean, i'll say i thought the best speech night was hillary i showed up there with a motion she touched on the mood and the energy of the crowd and she met the moment which everybody in this arena wanted to hear and so that's why i'd give her a higher grade and put the president much lower. again, deferential the him it's his night it's a very tough circumstance form she met the moment, but at the end of the day, when you balance out who were trying to reach here both republicans and democrats probably 100 to 200,000 voters, swing voters in 76 or seven battleground states and you know, i'm not sure that parading any pass politicians up on the stage, whether it's hillary or aoc. certainly even the president is really the message you're going to drive. you know what i'd probably stand up there with whole cocaine and kid rock and and and find that a little more attractive to the type of voters that we're going to be going after. >> i guess the question, what type of voter that's about it
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is that i don't have any my bad. we have a lot more to talk about. there were a number of speakers, so please everybody standby, but i do want to bring in cnn's harry enten, who's live at the cnn-politico grill right here in chicago. did you save me a hot dog? >> i saved you all the food and the world. i've saved you a few drinks once you get off. but not when you're on the there we're here at the cnn grill. there is a ton of action going on as you may see. and someone who came up to me no more than a few minutes ago, i am honored and blessed the star of encino man, the star of rudy town of course the rings as well. sean ask them my friend, how you doing i came up to you to tell you as a fan i'll take it
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right. i mean, who could i couldn't have a bigger fan or a better fan than you i know you the smartest, guy in the network is, and i'm not afraid to say it is it may yeah. i was just making sure. okay. i was just making sure. >> i you know, i just want conference formation. i have to take a poll. so you're here. >> you were showing me the map on your phone. >> you know, your a big political junkie what. >> are your feelings after tonight? all the action that was going on well there's so much cynicism and so much nitpicky yes. >> and so much kind of, you know people, a lot of times don't appreciate like the history of what this is. a convention you, know, what we saw tonight was a moment of consequence. so as a person who campaigned for hillary clinton from the time i was 20 until tonight then someone who has supported joe biden to watch them with such grace resolve a
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season of their legacy enhanced and it over with such power is what sets our nation apart from the world what is the feeling that you have right now? >> then the feeling that you might have had a month ago, right? joe biden looked like he was running obviously that debate performance support in the polls according to most experts really wasn't up to snuff. and then he drops out, you know, you're a big joe biden. and as you just said, and then kamala harris comes on the scene and just the enthusiasm and has to be bitter. sweden he says well, i mean my sense of pride in president biden is is full. >> watching him come out and work through that. both he and hillary were forced to wait. i was so proud of the room for understanding the moment. like of course they would, but sometimes, sometimes people
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don't get it. they wrote, they made those two people wait while they cheered and choose feared and cheered and cheered and cheered. so whatever cynicism exists out there in the world, it's not bitter, sweet, it's not bittersweet. this is what he said. he was going to do. he said he would be a trend that's formational figure. he said that he would pass the torch. >> you don't want to hire somebody to do a job like that. >> who's going to stop unless they have to he didn't stop. he was we're going to keep running or he said he kept on but he pass the torch and now we've got 78 days of, america how's that credibly intense decision to make. and i'm going to do whatever i can to try and help let me just say the cynicism that i might have had before seeing you has melted away. >> i have cynicism know more laura coates, all my new york cynicism has melt away. sean says, hello i say hello, laura coates, and i am going to throw it back to you because anytime i talk to you i got a giant
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smile on my face i mean, look, your neck to sign action on behalf of my 1993 trauma that fortune moment and a short and shimon shimon prokupecz says, we miss you and we're you're hoping to see you at very very soon, laura, that's what i can tell you. >> john is clapping slow clap from rudy i'm just saying everyone i'm a 90s parts that i'm at anyway thank you so much, harry, what i got to show, i'm doing here, we are talking about hey welcome back okay i'll be here i'm not working. thank you so much. you gotta go right back. everyone will come right back. it's still a real night as hillary clinton walking out to a huge ovation during her return to the dnc and she invoked the
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clinically validated ingredients and triple tested for purity and potency, don't trust your health to the amateurs. choose doctors preferred. >> i hear that music and my feature start tapping my grandchildren, their fixed generation of dancers what my family's all about i thought i knew a lot about our irish roots. i was surprised to learn so many more things from ancestor it's three 391892. >> now and here's the boat. they came over on. >> i think there was a julia healey, a mary healy. this is her name. yeah why? >> oh yes. >> fall comedy, u.s. coming to cnn. what could go wrong have, i got news for you? from the or saturday, september 14th at nine on cnn and the other side of that glass ceiling is kamala harris raising her hand and
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take king. >> the oath of office this is our time america this is when we stand up when waves bright future the 2016 democratic nominee, hillary clinton returning to the dnc with well, some unfinished business. >> this time pushing for vice president kamala harris to break the highest hardest glass ceiling. my panel is back with me also joining us comedian and host of the upcoming cnn comedy series. have a.i. good news for you, roy wood, junior. >> is it come with a wink to that part of the sherman? >> maybe. i'm working on my charisma yeah. >> i know what he's talking about, what this given, i'm all i'm okay. i'm good i'm hipaa
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alpha and as i know, i don't know. >> i'm still trying to figure out what demurer means. >> we'll get to that listen karen, can you be very demure, very mindful right now when you describe what you thought of hillary clinton talking about that glass ceiling, in many ways, you talk about biden bittersweet this had to be a moment for her and she certainly addressed it head-on. yeah. i was standing actually with i'm gonna get a little emotional a couple of women who we worked for hillary in the white house, we worked on her senate campaigns. we worked in a presidential and i'm seeing her have that moment which really meant everything. it really did because it was so beautiful to see the love for her when she came out which again, well-deserved and an understanding that here we are in an ark just eight years later, and we have one another woman who is the top of our ticket, who has the nominee of our ticket. my mother said to me the other day, oh, my god, i might actually we'll have to
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see the first female president because she thought after hillary didn't make it that she was not going to live to see it so i think for a lot of people in this room feel at oncore, you could feel that fuzi, yes, i mean, it's just flat, you know what's making kamala harris possible is not joe biden to tilray clinton? yeah you stand on that was great. great speech. i'm with david. i wasn't a plaz i thought it was fantastic. >> i love what you said about the cracks in the ceiling and what you can see on the other side. i thought there was a beautiful visual and it just a beautiful device to really, you know, again, this is how we move forward. >> she didn't it wasn't there wasn't about her what hillary she wasn't saying this because of me here i made this possible was all forward leaning and all credit to biden and to kamala was really the right tone, right touch, right. everything. >> she appreciate. i'm going to lean into it and she didn't praise camilla's character and also experienced, but she also draw, drew a pretty big change between donald trump, listen to what she had said where her yours, mine as a prosecutor
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kamala locked up murderers and drug traffickers. she will never rest in defense of our freedom and safety donald trump fell asleep at his own trial. >> and what he woke up he made his own kind of history. >> the first person sudden to run for president with 34 felony convictions i mean, roy hillary get some unfinished business serve yeah. >> i thought it was really cool as well that she kind of held back when they started chanting, lock him up yeah. because she really couldn't like just it's a comedian. you could really go down that road and really begin. but to keep them poised, to keep it about the moment in hand, to keep it about what was happening in the moment and now for the party classy, but she didn't get a look back we have is not forget, you know, she should say when they say lock them up,
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she said, listen, well, i'm prosecuting let the courts handle that. what we need to do is lock him out of the white house. >> yeah. that's a good time. >> will it work? >> well, look i agree with everything that's been said here. she delivered an incredible speech tonight. she did it with a lot of passion. she did it with joy she was the crowd felt that in fed off of it. but i think to your point, she also relished it she was getting in or licks, by the way, not it didn't look like she was getting personal retribution back it looked like she was doing it in the context of knowing she could potentially cause damage and harm to donald trump and help the vice president win this race. and that's, that's what, again, going back to the president, that's where he should have tried to go tonight. >> well, and again, remember, after trump was elected in 2016, and all those women showed up in their little pink hat and many of us were like, well, where were you on election day? my sister. you were not there and so part of it was i think she also serves as a reminder don't sit it out
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don't think that your vote does not matter. we don't want me personally i want to hear it. if you don't come out and vote you, i don't even want to hear it from you. >> she didn't want people to be overly when you heard the word underdog, a lot tonight, which at a political convention where everyone is sort of, you their own choir in the preaches are all here trying to jazz. i've worn up. they're still putting that out there at why you do that is because of what happened to her in 26 26, and the hatch she was rounding. it's like those olympic videos you see where the runner thinks they have it. in and you see trump coming around, turn for and catching hillary eight years ago. so i think that's the thing is that keep your eyes on the target only two ways to run scared and unopposed always run like you're ten points down. yeah. >> frankly, that was danger for our party a month ago, we were running as if we were ten points ahead and maybe we were nearing a month ago was like 35 years ago it was a whole different take it we didn't
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come yet. the olympics was two years ago all right. >> well we have to get gold metals ever we did have steve kerr talk about his medal like, you know, if i the way i was in paris, it was a gold medal moment. i'm just okay. president biden also making new remarks just moments ago as he leaves chicago, what he said about nancy pelosi and donald trump next work link relief. work way. >> blank really, the only three and one extended release formula for dry eyes when you buy or sell your car exactly how you want with cargo ruse you might begin to wonder what if you could do things your way. all the time dreams do
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i'm taylor available on the apple app store we're android. >> i had to montgomery in tokyo, and this is cnn well just. >> in tonight, president biden speaking to reporters, right before boarding air force one for california, he did talk about his decision to withdraw from the race and whether he has spoken to nancy pelosi no,
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we don't want to impose my decision no one knew was coming my, panel is back with me along with tara palmeri is senior political correspondent for puck news. tara, i wonder what you make of this first day of the dnc. and one also, he directly talked about this at his speech, all the reports we being angry, that's not true. and now you have this moment about speaker pelosi. what do you make of it? >> i don't believe that he didn't know that the speaker wanted him out. i believe that he was under pressure from the leaders of the party. they had come to him and said that he was losing support within the party and that it was going to get worse. we know that about 20 members of the senate we're about to put out a letter that are laying out that they did not support him and that was going to happen the next week if he didn't step down, he was fully aware whether it was directly from nancy pelosi,
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chuck schumer went to his beach house in wilmington to talk to him. hakeem jeffries spoke to him. he knew exactly what was going on right there, so i don't i don't believe that this was that's his decision. he was being pressured by the party. he knew he had to step down and he knew he lost the support. the bottom had given out. whether he wants to say it was his decision or not. he wants to go out in his own way, but all of the reporting and evidence is contrary. and even nancy pelosi said on jake top on the show with jake tapper and dana bash she said did what i had to do for the party. >> and well, she also has said multiple times it was ultimately his decision that was kind of the big the running joke of its your decision. i'm saying it's your decision. i'm saying well, it's your decision. you kept hearing that, but then you also had donald trump, who would make this could make different comments about this. and recently spoke about almost sympathetically towards by that he had been ousted, but well, biden spoke about trump as well before he left for california. listen to this i think he has a
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problem i think he was hiding his face, not we know was biden sat talking right? i think he has a problem. >> some pretty confirm that it was it was bad. >> what do you make of this though? i mean, he didn't really reference he referenced trump a lot, obviously, during his his speech. but in ways that we're i think expected but when you hear this reaction and not addressing what you're talking about, the influence, what do you make of it? >> well, clearly the president doesn't like donald trump. i think that's pretty evident. >> know what what gave you that it's not just what he said it was in his tone, but look, i mean, donald trump has made a career, political career, at least out of getting under people's skin and making them talk about them. and so whether that's, you know, taylor their swift post today or getting the
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president on his way out of town to go negative on them. that's what he wants this all about counterprogramming, right? >> though. i mean, by that we have that post on this very notion. but the interesting aspect, roy trump is still fixated on biden dropping out of the race. yeah. because i was the playbook i had set up switchover. >> i don't know how to run against playbook can't even pronounce her name right after time. i do think that it was biden's choice to choose whether so not to be pushed so in essence, it was his choice. but you cannot we've all had a job and you know whether natural coworkers like you but the idea that the thing that i think that biden is not getting enough credit for whether or not he was pushed. is that he's what when you look at what he did tonight, ease completely merging into traffic and going go team, go. let's all get it done, regardless of
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what's happening behind the scenes, he's not continuing to be a cog in the machine right now for the democrats, that's a fascinating point because that was something that republicans at their convention were hoping to accomplish, right? they were trying to suggest ever we want to leave everything aside, were unit were unified. meanwhile, they wanted to have a split-screen with democrats. it's just that they were not unified for precise. the reason you're talking about about whether biden should be on the ticket still, it sounds as though he understands the assignments and respects jamal she's the top of the ticket coalescing has begun. now you got 78 days to make it happen. >> i mean, he doesn't understand that assignment because here's the thing donald trump knew. why should a tv guy, he knew that he was supposed to have for under an uninterrupted days of television. and instead, he did have that split screen that you just mentioned and it was all about the democratic drama at the end the democratic drama, we picked a new candidate and that new candidate was fresh it and everybody was happy and everyone is excited and then she went out and found a partner and now they have a buddy movie that's running around the country,
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electrifying crowds, people. he knows the tv guy that this is the worst possible outcome. and there's no natural bend in the river coming up for him to change in the direction of the debate. >> and on top of all of that, you have biden stepping down, you have congressman waltz doing their thing out there on the campaign trail. now you're getting a better president because he got the stress of nancy pelosi sent them text messages at 2:00 in at the end of this week, the race is still going to be tied although she went a little bit, but i mean, he is still going after not just he's not fixate on biden. >> he's fixated in part on kamala harris and does know it's kamala harris? yes. but he is focused on trying to figure out a way to make it stick the stick in the old playbook is not resonating in the same way. >> no, he is trying to make her seem foreign, right? like he tried to do with barack obama. he's questioning her origin. he subtle digs. he's going after her race. he's going out to her gender or her appearance. he's just so
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rattled. he doesn't understand why she has so popular they're why it's a movement, why he just can't get his hands around and he's furious that he's not running against biden. he doesn't get the rematch that he always wanted to prove that he won in 2020. and end. he's got to actually work for it. this is a guy who doesn't like to campaign. when was the last time we really saw him out on the campaign trail? he goes out there once every few days. i mean, he and biden were similar in their ability to campaign their stamina. it was. and now he's got kamala harris out on the road with tim walz and they are everywhere. and now he's got he can't golf. he still golfing got to get out there and it's a harder race and it's a closer race. they are tied, but they weren't before, right? he's going to have to work for and she's actually she's chipping away at white white working class voters. i mean, he should be scared absolutely. >> but i think as we get through this week and we get past labor day, we're going to have a debate. and that debate
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is going to be one of the most important presidential debates we've had. maybe bush, bush-gore, if not reagan, carter. it is going to potentially decide the outcome of this race. and i think it's a chance from both of these candidates to really get their messaging right, and to make the contrast that they want and we saw a little bit of that today. i'm sure we'll hear more of it on thursday, wednesday, and thursday night. but that's going to be a determining factor in the seven battleground states. and i think ultimately the race. so i think that is the contour in the fork in the road. >> if half of the stuff that he said on trail about the vice president, if he says that the debate, she will dunk on him and it will be over like he literally said, well, why is she on the cover of time? i looked better i call it let's reverse call on somebody ugly what he tried to. >> no. >> and all comments to do was flip that and go look, i'm running for president. he's running for beauty queen just keep it moving and cheats quick like that. and i don't think that he's ready for that type of verbal sparring because once you get into the school yard, name calling the same biden,
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it's but she asked to be competent on the policy that's right. and she's gotta be able to articulate her economic plan, which already has gotten some blowback, like when she's even asked about how she's going to pay for it i think it was a cnn reporter yesterday. she kept saying it's a return on investments are return on investments are attorney said it four times in a minute. she's not that great on her feet right now because she hasn't been doing a lot of interviews. and i actually think it would serve her to do some interviews ahead of this debate. just what she gets better about answering policy questions. yes, you can be snappy and fun, which is also going how does seem serious? interviews are great, but this is really a campaign. >> it's not really about policy. >> i mean, let's, let's she went up and i don't know ten or 12 points and economic policy before she even put her economic policy plan out. people aren't really supporting her for that reason, people are supporting her because they wanted to chart a new course. this is a pro-democracy campaign. and he in the magazine good movement or unpopular, they have been in the last three or four elections. >> well, details matter and both candidates are responsible for the details to come out. we'll see how it all unfolds
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standby. everyone will go back to cnn's harry enten at the cnn-politico grill next with the new special so again ties this is your team you have the right set of individuals we're going to take us to the next level hard knocks training camp with the chicago bears, streaming exclusively on max at mid mobile. we'd like to do the opposite of what big wireless does they charge you a lot? we charge you a little they put their names on arenas. we put hours on my lower back. >> so naturally, when they announced they be raising their prices due to inflation, we decided to deflate our prices due to not hating you and if this were one of their ads, they ended here with the happy customer so will end out with
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finally getting the healthy sleep i deserve anderson cooper 360 week today on cnn i think it's really haven't been over at the cnn grill. >> cnn's harry enten is they're talking to all the vips that are showing up. harry, who's he's right. >> it appears baby is when just
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getting more left here. and luckier window peers liz bit jack ryan. and of course, the wire, but we're not going to say the famous catchphrase here because we're going to try and keep it pg at this hour. wendell peers, hey, you do my man. >> i'm feeling great because the exciting night, very historic. this is what i came here for i felt a clarion call it's to make sure that i was going to be as chicago this week and tonight did not disappoint. >> what was your favorite moment are moments from the evening hillary clinton hillary clinton reminded us of this stateswoman that she is a brilliant politics issued and the woman that i voted for and possibility of the president, she would have been and to really stated the case that she broke that glass ceiling into 1 million cracks. and that 70
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plus days we're going to break through. >> so kamala harris comes in and in this campaign comes into this convention seems to have momentum. what is this just the general feeling that you felt in a hall and you felt when you landed in chicago? oh, just what what what i'm adjectives you might use to describe a thing that keeps coming to mind for me, is this clarion calls something that we clearly can here. i'm from new orleans, is the feeling that we had when we were rebuilding new orleans, which was this is a time for us to exercise our right of self-determination florida is the reason we gather in a darkened hall to see a player or movie is because the collectively, we come together to sag what our values are. and then when we leave, we go in mcdonald and that's where we had a sense of tonight in the hall for me, it was a sense of anticipation of what is possible. and, that's american aesthetic. >> well, wendell, let me just say, i'm a huge fan. i know
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laura coates is a huge fan and laura, let me tell you, i spoke with went on laura laura is one is one she's one of our minds one of our great legal mind in political sciences and she like actress as a keen sense of being a student of human behavior and how to tie that into political action. >> she's very keen on pointing that out and that's why i love laura. >> i don't think i could have said it any better myself. i know wasn't that very sweet. unfortunately, we run out of time. otherwise, wendell nih, we're going to belt out a few few notes from laughter in the rain, from uncle neil. but well i'll get there and we'll just say, your beautiful laura coates well, let me return the flowers to him because i am just ban and tell him that he was absolutely divine and death of a salesman is a true actor to be able to be a thespians.
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>> any certainly is one as well. thank you so much for the beautiful words harris harry enten. thank you as well. man did to my mom that's what i'm that's my new ringtone there right now but ahead, let me ask you all this. >> how deep does your dnc knowledge go? >> oh boy, i've got trivia with our panel is coming up next today. let's paint with bare america because most trusted paintbrush we don't have a bear. >> do we need that? >> well, is years of paint and primer it just says ain't he bought, ain't well with bare, you can pay the whole room for under $100. >> how much did you spend? >> a lot more? >> no, i thought you said you researched this all paints the same. >> know they're not don't overpay for your next project. get better quality at an everyday low price only at the home depot dog, i'm not feeling
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>> kamala harris was given one important job as vice president monitor and control southern border. >> how did she do? did she take the job seriously did she do all she could to protect american citizens from an invasion did she do anything? >> in all you haven't done before and i haven't been to europe and i thought i don't understand the point that you're making here. >> her grim scorecard murders, rapes, attacks on children a twelve-year-old girl in texas a mother of five in maryland a nurse some student in georgia all savagely murdered by those biden and harris led into our country unlawfully we have aissam secure we're border kamala harris was and is a complete failure at her job. now, she's asking us for a promotion. >> who in their right mind would give it to her? >> restoration. pac is responsible for the content of this advertising. >> i still love to surf
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hillary clinton, carol moseley braun, or shirley chisholm, put your paddles up everyone got it right. and in fact, as shirley chisholm in bost, everyone there you go. number two, which vp candidates said, if we can do this, we can do anything at their dnc speech. was it a geraldine ferraro be al gore or sea? joe biden okay. >> it's there you go. it's geraldine ferraro. are you guys want to really know. i see a guy do i think? alright, never. number three, how many times has hillary clinton spoken at a dnc? is it a five b6 or c, seven i see be right here you
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go, right? >> question for which nba figure mocked donald trump, epa 2016 dnc wasn't steve kerr, kareem abdul well, jabbar or michael jordan, i guarantee you wouldn't jordan. >> there was not sure you know what it was kareem abdul-jabbar. >> let's play this out. you don't believe me, play the sound? >> no, i believe you are michael jordan and up here with hillary i said that because i know that donald trump couldn't tell the difference we're in the united center to okay. >> we move right. number five, a man who knows, of course michael jordan quite well. steve kerr. steve kerr in the bulls beat home for the deaf, for the nba title in 1996, was it the utah jazz, the seattle supersonics? are the phoenix
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suns i don't know what i got discussing now all sean shawn kemp in the supersonics okay. hello, everyone. okay. let's move on. everyone got that wrong. how about number six? how many people are expected to attend the 2024 dnc is it? the thousands, 75,000 or 100,000? >> what's the answer it's 50,000 people all right. >> hold on cnn going to take my show for me now know we're picking a fair and right. here's one last question, everyone, tiebreak, where is the obama family home in chicago? lincoln park, lake view or hyde park we need you to have that show almost secondary. >> you go kara, you were there, you go that's look invented
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getting the kind of sleep you deserve i'm paula reid in washington, and this is cnn

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