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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  August 29, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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walk us through this. >> yeah. ever held the bar was set incredibly high here, right? this is a stock up 3,000% in five years. the stock is down after reporting results about 3% premarket, not down dramatically it, was always going to be almost impossible to meet these expectations. but by all accounts, nvidia is still growing at warp speed. revenue more than doubled over the past year to a record 30 billion. >> profits, almost triple, right? >> and that is insane growth. when you zoom out you put those profits into context. this is incredible growth are up 25 times over the past two years profits, right? mean that's unheard of something that we really have never seen before. it's all because this is company's computer chips are powering the a.i revolution. they'd been compared to the modern day oil and gold because there's so much demand if there's one blemish here, it's the company's outlook
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they're still protected, drawn growth, but some on the street, we're expecting even more spectacular growth and they are actually having trouble meeting all the demand yeah, it's fascinating. it's almost like they did good, but not good enough or looking ahead matt egan. >> thank you, john. it's sort of like victim of your own success. you're doing too good, but apparently not good enough. another hour of cnn news central starts right now. >> counting down to the first interview so for vice president harris, since she has been running for president, right here on cnn, as new polls shake up the race, meet the real women whose real fear he says are being used to promote donald trump against their will and the u.s. surgeon general declares being a parent is the newest public health problem tips on coping with the stress. kate and sara are out our john berman with rahel solomon
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today. this is the franchise cnn news central it's hours ahead of an exclusive interview with cnn, a high stakes critical test for the commonweal harris campaign and a new poll shows he's gaining ground in key sun belt battle brown states. >> today's sit down with our dana bash is harrison running mate tim walz's first as a democratic nominees. and it comes as a new fox news poll shows that harris is in portugal tie with trump and states like arizona, georgia, nevada, and north carolina. voters in that same poll believe that harris can be trusted to do a better job of uniting the country, fighting for people like themselves and bringing needed change the new insight is up a bright spot for the harris campaign as they start to days of a bus tour in southern georgia today joining us now is political reporter for the atlanta journal
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constitution. patricia murphy. patricia, good to see you. walk us through this. we're actually started on what we've seen so far and what it says about the campaign strategy yeah, the tour started on wednesday, vice president kamala harris and governor tim walz landed and savannah yesterday, they did a tour around savannah, as well as liberty county. >> that's outside of savannah. >> and that highlights the fact that a number of these smaller rural counties in georgia are not entirely white. >> liberty counties, 44% black so it's a way for the harris campaign to get into areas outside of atlanta where the harris campaign still believes that can make up important ground and catch up with president donald trump it's been a really long time, decades since some of these voters have seen a democratic nominee swing through their part of the state yeah it hasn't been since 1992 when bill clinton, who did a similar bus tour, he did it in the southwest portion of the state.
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i talked to aides for clinton at the time and called that the baba's for bill tour. that was an effort to get again, a democrat outside of the metro area of atlanta get into rural counties and really start to close those margins with republicans. they know that republicans are probably going to win that area of the state. but if democrats can close those margins and dominate atlanta, that's how they believe that can win yeah and how much more do you think we could see the same sort of playbook in terms of going to more rural parts of the state, not necessarily just the big metropolitan area, but in other battleground states, you think about, for example, pennsylvania, you think about north carolina yeah, this has to be this has to be the recipe for success in states like north carolina wisconsin, pennsylvania. >> all of these battleground states, we look to somebody like senator raphael warnock in 2022. he was the only democrat to win statewide. he also went all around the state of georgia. he went to these
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smaller areas. he went to the rural counties. he made up those margins. so that's the recipe here in georgia. it's got to be the recipe in these other battleground states that are not just metro areas. >> i have to say the dog of the back is a really nice touch, really sort of adding a certain something. interview were very cute. living on yeah, let me ask though on the republican side of things, donald trump himself will not be in georgia today, but the governor brian kemp will be attending a fundraiser. i think mike pompeo is the headline or talk to us a little bit about one, what we know about brian kemp's popularity in georgia, and how impactful that could be for voters. there yeah, governor kemp is the most popular republican here in the state of georgia, including more popular than donald trump. and this rift between donald trump and governor kemp has been a major, major blow to republicans here in the state, not just with governor kemp, but also with his wife, morty camp. so governor kemp marty can probe both going to be at a
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fundraiser tonight in atlanta that is seen as a major, major effort to mend this fight between these two gentlemen. they need to focus only on the election if they have this story line of these two camps fighting each other about my only damage the campaign will only damage republicans so camp it's doing this to make amends with trump. trump started the fight. i have to say that camp is coming to the middle to try and mend those so that they can just move forward, putting money and donald trump's pocket is a great way to do it. and i think that kim summit that as well. >> wow, really interesting. patricia murphy live for us there in atlanta. patricia, good to talk to you. thank you. >> don all right. with us now, cnn political commentators, republican strategist shermichael singleton, and democratic strategist paul begala, overnight, fox news released this series of polls will put up the top line numbers. so everyone can see them right now from key sunbelt states, arizona, georgia, nevada and north carolina, you can see basically no clear leader here. but a one or two point edge for harrison three states trump up one in north
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carolina, it gets even more interesting as you dig under the numbers. if you ask bringing the needed change to the country. in other words, who is the change candidate? georgia, nevada, and arizona and georgia, nevada and arizona. again? harris up by a few points in north carolina, trump by a point no clear leader, but the idea that a sitting vice president's seen as a change candidate, notable and finally, on the issues i want to put up so people can see how the change has been on issues, abortion, health care, the economy, the israel-hamas war, and immigration you can see that on the economy and immigration, donald trump still holds healthy, leads her. this is just georgia, but it's basically the same in every state. i wanted to show you how much better harris is doing. then biden was in the fox news poll on all of the issues including the economy and immigration and abortion up five points in some 13 points on abortion there. so paul, what do you see in all these numbers? what's the most important thing the most important thing, the best
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political strategists, shermichael is great, but the best ever henny youngman you comedian they ever asked him, how's your wife? >> he said compared to what? >> okay. compared to what i went back and looked at the emerson poll of swing states three days before joe biden got out. >> kamala harris in arizona has gained a 11 point since then. she's gained seven points in georgia. she's game five points in nevada she's gained eight points in north carolina pollsters tell you trust the trend right compared to what compared to before she got in a race where democrats were they were close to writing off those sun belt swing states now, she is tied or ahead and all of them as you point out, many of the internals, she's showing strength. but you're also right if i worked for kamala harris, i say we still need to win the economic argument and she's not yet doing that. the trend is very good for her, but she's still got to make her economic case. that's why this interview today tonight is so important. >> what are the trends tell you shermichael and how does this change the map? >> i mean holy smoke, john republicans have a problem. i
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would not underestimate vice president harris. the fact that they're campaigning in rural parts of georgia, as noted in the previous interview, senator warnock did the same. the expectation strategically speaking, i would imagine is not necessarily to win there, but if you can increase your margins isn't atlanta, which includes fulton county, dekalb, while also targeting those lower propensity african american voters in the rural south of the state you can potentially win the state and you would probably exercise their strategy in places like pennsylvania so that you're moving outside of the urban core doors and so this is fascinating to me for a lot of different reasons, but it suggests that the former president john absolutely has to continue to make this message about the economy, immigration and israel and hamas, you need to find some areas where not only you codify your support, but maybe some of those skeptical voters, who may remain that are in the middle, you can turn them out over for those kitchen table issues because that's principally where there are concerns still allies what are the stakes in
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this interview which takes place in just a few hours, you're michael well, look, i think to my point that i just made in paul also alluded to the vice president needs to talk about this economic issue in cost if given another four years, if given four years rather, what would she do and what we're governor walz do to make things more affordable for the average person republicans have been very effective with messaging, running ads across the country over the past two weeks. now saying, well, what has the vice president done over 3.5 years? she's talking about what she wants to do later, but what about now? i think that is a compelling and effective messages. so tonight i'm going to really be looking for some type of signal that the vice president and governor walz recognized as how important of an issue this is in politics are saying, i said senator chris murphy on, and i was asking him about some of the position changes that the vice president has on fracking, for instance he said he feels he says, i guess learn more about fracking. i think it's safe now, so my position has shifted. maybe that's what harris will say. how, how useful do you think a response
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like that would be? >> i think very useful. i think it's what happens. look, you represent the bear and not a lot of fracking in the bay area, but then you start to learn about texas, oklahoma, eastern ohio, western pennsylvania again comeback to henny youngman, madam vice president. here's free advice. suppose she loves berman, she can watches your show every morning and here's what you need to do compared to what yeah, i support fracking, but compared to donald trump, who offered big oil to suspend every environmental protection if they gave him $1 billion in campaign contributions. so it's not just this is not jeopardy. tonight, madam vice president, this is compared to what in every answer the only question that voters want to hear is, why are you better than the other guy, right? that's what we're doing here. it's a job interview in a competition. so if only if she only says, here's why i switched on fracking, that is necessary but insufficient she's got to then attack the
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other guy for getting an a bed with big oil, which has a lot more problematic for most voters than him getting in a bedroom. stormy daniels map by wrote in the washington post today but i'm just going to move past the washington post map. >> i wrote. he really mostly about the debate how he feels harris should approach trump and then bait. but i think applies to the interview to, and matt writes, voters don't need to see contempt and moral posturing from harris. they want a candidate who can respond to craziness with grace, warmth, humor, and confidence. all the things trump so painfully lax so shermichael, is that the key here? the contrast i mean, look, the contrast is, is important and i think one sort of deciding factor for a lot of voters, if a politician changes their stances on something, john that they previously believed or held in the past. >> a lot of times voters assume this is because of political expedience see but if you can make the argument that will look, i've been vice president for three-and-a-half years, a heartbeat away from the
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presidency. and one of the things i've learned in that role is that your expectations about governance and the reality of governance, it ultimately changes. i think voters would actually be persuaded by that argument, obviously on the republican side you could also draw the contrast. okay, sure. you're saying that now, but why didn't you say that a year or two ago and it's up to voters in the middle to decide which argument they would like to believe. but i think drawing that contrast of stability if if you will, what probably yield some benefit to the vice president, which is why a lot of republicans continue who john, to remind the former president, stick with the message people want to believe and see that you can lead without division without chaos and with a level of stability. and if he can do that, then i think this race will continue to be competitive all the way till november yes. >> see truth, social, over the last 36 hours or so shermichael singleton, paul begala, henny youngman. thanks to all three of you this morning. appreciate
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thanks. alright. john, newly released evidence shows what the would-be assassin had planned at the donald trump rally. because the fbi, any closer to learning a motive and new warnings about recalled boar's head deli meats as the death toll grows from a listeria outbreak. >> and the long holiday weekend travel rush is on which signs will be the worst for traffic tie-ups we'll get into it tonight the most to subpoenaed interview of this election, kamala harris and tim walz sit down with dana bash for the first interview. harris and walz cnn exclusive tonight at nine back makes good luck to you ever seen anything like this here's to getting better
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>> new details this morning on donald trump's would-be assassin. the fbi says the shooter was determined to carry out some kind of attack and became hyper-focused on trump's rally in butler, pennsylvania which was just 40 minutes from his home. cnn chief law enforcement intelligence analyst, john miller is here in john. you've got new information, some new cnn reporting about what was on his electronic devices. >> that's right, john to federal law enforcement officials briefed on the investigation, have confirmed to cnn that in his searches for bomb-making instructions a document that he not only searched, but then downloaded. so he could refer back to it is a dhs primer on improvised explosive devices. and this document, which is still online as far as i know explains what are the elements of an ied to make a bomb you need an initiator, you need a power source, and so on. what are the main charges that are used in that? and it goes through different chemicals and compounds it comes complete
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with charts about blast radiuses that show how many pounds of explosives you need to kill people within certain distances. so the question we put to dhs was, if this individual found this document useful in his planning of an attempted assassination of the president. remember, they found to live improvised explosive devices in the trunk of his car at the rally site. is this too much information? what homeland security told us was the department provides information to the american public to protect against a range of security threats which it doesn't really get to the core of our question. so i spoke to bomb squad commanders i'm a 20-year member of the international association of bomb technicians and investigators. so i ran this by some people who said there's information in here that when provided to law enforcement is considered law enforcement sensitive so why is it in this document by the national academies of science and the department of homeland security raises some questions.
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>> it does raise really two things going on here. number one, gosh, do you want anything available to would-be assassin's are terrorists that they might be able to use to help them carry out their plot. the other part of it that's interesting is that this guy i had it, that this guy went and searched for it. what does that tell you about and saved it which meant it suggests he kept coming back to it and had it downloaded to hihis phone. >> we also in again, this is part of the news conference yesterday. have new photos that were released of the gun and of other things that this would be assassin u.s. what does that tell you? >> it tells us a couple of things. i mean, one, when you see the gun with the backpack that was recovered with the shooter on the roof you see the gun disassembled. it's got a folding stock that folds back a barrel that can be removed. and that meant it could fit into that backpack has a lot of people have said, if this guy was walking around with a rifle that's more than three feet long. how did he get by everybody and managed to climb up to the roof? we also learned from the time he got on that
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roof to the time he fired his eight shots is just a space of six minutes during which people said there's a guy crawling on the roof. he appears to have a rifle and that's when police literally tried to chase him up there and he turned on them with the rifle. and we know the rest. >> john miller, great to see you as always. thanks for sharing that reporting here too, john. all right. new this morning, russia launching a new wave of drone attacks on kyiv, ukraine's capital as president zelenskyy prepares to make a request of president biden that he hopes could change the course of the war and the pro maga influencer on your social media feed. may not really be a trump supporter. >> or even an american but it's saying vote for trump in 2024 what's your reaction my to be honest? >> what was my reaction? that was my reacting because i have nothing to do with see the united states was from the tv
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the apple app store, android, and m. taylor.com fall comedy, u.s. >> coming cnn. what could go wrong i got news for you for me or saturday, september 14th at nine on cnn welcome back in new this morning, ukraine says that two senior ukrainian officials will travel to the u.s. as soon as this week to meet with the biden administration and share a list of targets inside russia, the visit comes after russia launched another massive attack on ukraine overnight. the third this week let's bring in cnn's oren liebermann, who joins us now from the pentagon with more on, give us a sense of what the goal is for ukraine with this visit rahel, the goal of this visit from two of ukraine's top officials is to try to press and convince the biden administration to ease restrictions on the use of u.s weapons against russia and in russia so far ukraine is only allowed to use u.s. >> weaponry right across the border in a fairly small area.
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they want to be able to use some of the u.s.-made long-range weapons against priority targets inside of russia. and that's what they're here for. they'll present a list of priority targets deeper inside russia to the biden administration in the hopes that u.s. will loosen or ease the restrictions on the use of u.s. weapons by ukraine, those two officials, andriy yermak, the head of the office of the president of ukraine and rustem umerov ukraine's defense minister, will be here tomorrow for those meetings. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy made it clear why he believes the u.s. and others should ease those restrictions so they can hit longer range targets inside of russia what's the likelihood that this visit would actually insist that their determination now lifting the restrictions on long-range strikes for ukraine. >> now, will help us to end the war as soon as possible in a fair way for ukraine and the world as a whole are ukrainian
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lawmaker says it's important to change the restrictions and ease those restrictions so that ukraine is able to change the course of the war and oren, what's the likelihood that this visit would actually shift or move the u.s. >> position on this so far u.s. >> has indicated they're not changing, or at least haven't changed so far, the restrictions on the use of long-range weapons, we have seen ukraine use u.s. made long range atacms missiles against priority targets in crimea, in occupied crimea, such as air defense systems and it's important to notice the context of all of this ukraine is pushing on its kursk offensive from its northern border into russia in which it's still able to gain some territory. meanwhile, at the same time in eastern certain ukraine on the frontlines, there, russia is able to gain some territory as it pushes on its own kharkiv offensive, which has been moving over the course of the summer. so even though the u.s. hasn't changed its position, just yet ukraine has noticed over and over again what we've
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seen repeatedly and that's that the u.s and specifically the biden administration well, very often say no, no, no, no, no, yes. we've seen that with patriots. we've seen that with f-16s abrams tanks and this is clearly what ukraine is hoping for now that when it comes to restrictions on weapons, the u.s. will once again say no, no, no, no, no yes. >> hopefully for ukraine yet we'll see if that happens and if this visit is what gets them there, oren liebermann live for us at the pentagon. oren. thank you a trip of a lifetime that ruin by rotting water pipes. house some vacations are getting covered short at the grand canyon and still ahead. why a ruling from the supreme court is putting president biden's student loan relief plan in limbo onight the most
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anticipated interview of this election kamala harris and tim walz sit down with dana bash for the first interview. >> harris and walz, a cnn exclusive elusive tonight at nine with four nays, allergies, don't have to be scary. spray flonase sentiments daily for non drowsy, long-lasting relief and a scent free, fine mist flonase, all good priceline. >> most families have 60% on family-friendly hotels. so many great trips we might just leave here with another vacation baby take it easy harris and u2, fort lauderdale. lisa wasn't alito gertner happy priceline.
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i'm losing weight keeping it off, and i'm lowering my son tv risks check your costin coverage before talking to your healthcare professional about before limited time. >> so we just drop the price of every foot longer in the app to 699 subway did what? 699 foot long says right ear, 699 for any foot-long, get this deal in the subway up now, before it's too late. >> it became we wednesday night dynamite live on tbs we are counting down to the first interview with vice president kamala harris with dana bash in just a few hours. the vice president and governor tim walz, they are in georgia right now on a bus tour that's a state that joe biden won by less than two well, thousand
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votes last time. and the harris-walz team is focused on the southeastern part of the state, right here, specifically, they were in liberty county yesterday at a high school that is a county that joe biden won. you can see by 6,000 votes in 2016, hillary clinton, only one up by 3,000 votes. so clearly that, is something they want to extend their also in chatham county, that is where savannah is that is a county that joe biden won by 25,000 votes. hillary clinton for her part, only won it by about 17,000. so again, you can see where they would want to expand the lead from last time with us now to talk about georgia someone who certainly knows it jason carter, the grandson of former president jimmy carter, jason, thank you so much for being with us. i know you can't see the map. you have no return video, which means you can't see my beautiful face or the map here, but talk to us about the importance of southeastern georgia here there's a lot of red down there sure i mean, i know that map and i don't miss your face, honestly, i'm just
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teasing. we have a georgia is a swing state. we elected a republican governor last time and a democratic senator. and so we have a lot of folks out there that are willing to take a look at candidates and make decisions and i think you see kamala harris down in this red part of the state where nobody's been for 30 years as a democratic presidential candidate, telling people that she's going to be the president for everyone. and i think that message helps down in south georgia. and i think it helps across the rest of the country. it's exactly what people are ready to hear is that we're not running against anybody supporters we're running two to unify this country. and i think it's a, it's an exciting moment so the popular republican governor brian kemp, seems ever more slightly on board with donald trump now, maybe some of those broken fences have been mended. >> what kind of a difference will that make? >> you know, it's interesting. i mean, i think you have brian kemp doing sort of his duty as a republican in this state. i
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think when donald trump attacked his wife everybody was shocked me. marty camp is a wonderful person. she's done a lot of good for this state and a host of different contexts. and donald trump came out last time he was here and attacked her. i think people were surprised by that. and i think that whether they're publicly mending fences or not, i think you've got a lot of republicans and a lot of my republican friends who are still super uncomfortable with what that says about the candidate they've got for president let's look quickly at sumpter county. if we can, which of course is where plains, georgia is famously the hometown of your grandfather, jimmy carter. you can see president biden won in sumter county by 1,000 votes or so, little less than 1,000 last time, obviously something kamala harris would like to win this time. but let's talk about your grandfather. how's he doing? >> he's doing okay. i think obviously he's been in hospice for 18 months. and so his body is very, very diminished. folks who saw him at my grandmother's funeral back in november. where maybe surprised
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by how physically diminished he is, but lately, he's really been engaged more with the news susan and with our family. and so he's he's doing pretty well and the key to this whole moment for him, as he knows that he's not in charge and this part of his faith journey, i think is really continuing to sustain him as it has for his whole life. >> and he wants to vote for kamala harris this fall, correct oh, sure. >> i mean, you know, we have been talking about his hundredth birthday. what's coming up? we have a celebration planned and as we've been discussing this, he really has said multiple times now that he is excited for that, but he's most excited to cast that ballot for kamala harris. and in part i think he really wants like a lot of other people to turn the page on this trump era that has been marked by darkness and meanness and a lot of things that are very different than the way my grandfather sees the world you said you're plenty of celebration to celebrate your grandfather's 100th birthday. i understand it's a concert in
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atlanta and i'll just put fulton county up so people can see it in atlanta, you know, there's a documented that grayson and documented rock and roll president. i mean, your grandfather had the best music when he ran for president first time in 17, 76. so what's this concert going to be like i mean, it's going to be like that, you know, he loved music, he thought it was one of those things that impacted him as a person. >> i mean, he would he would tell you that bob dylan taught him as much about the world as anyone else he loved the almond brothers who loved georgia music thick and believed it was a way to bring people together. so this concert on september 17th, for which there's tickets and for which you're invited. they have are going to have a huge number of people of very diverse group. and it's just going to be a celebration of all different kinds of music and it's going to be a celebration of my grandfather's love for that and for bringing people together. so we're really excited about it invited despite my face, jason carter and great to see you this morning. >> thank you so much for being with us. really appreciate rights guy. >> wasn't there is something to
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be said about georgia music and atlanta music in particular. pretty good class of its own, pretty good. >> alright, president biden's plan and to wipe out billions of dollars in student loan debt is still on hold this morning after the supreme court opted not to lift a block on it, cnn white house correspondent arlette saenz is traveling with the president. >> she is in delaware so arlette, how is the white house responding to this? >> well, rahel, the white house says they will aggressively defend president biden's student loan repayment plan, even as the supreme court said, it would remain on hold for now, this really marks the latest chapter in the ongoing legal challenges against president biden's efforts to offer some student debt relief. you'll remember that the supreme court had struck down president biden's sweeping plan that would have offered about 400 million billion dollars in student debt relief in 2023 after that plan was struck down, the administration had put the save plan in place. this student loan repayment plan basically structures the
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payments based on individuals, incomes and their household sizes. now, this plan has been on hold since earlier in the summer after a lower court had blocked it following a challenge led by republican led states, the biden administration then went to the supreme court asking them to put this program back into play. the supreme court says that they will not step in, but they do expect the eighth circuit court of appeals, which is weighing this challenge. to act swiftly on this case. now, as they've been preparing for these legal challenges, the department of education had actually put those who are currently enrolled in that program, about 8 million borrowers into an interest free forbearance. so they're not going to make payments on their monthly loans. a. during this time as these legal challenges a play out. but this is all part of president biden and vice president kamala harris is efforts to try to alleviate some of the financial burdens that americans are facing
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relating to their students. a debt biden's team had long viewed this as a key issue, not just for young voters, but also for family, young family is trying who are struggling to make some of these payments. they believe that this would be a key issue in the campaign i just president harris herself actually just last night, a weighed in on this saying that she and the president will continue to try to defend this type of program going forward. so for the time being, they're still awaiting for all of this to play out play out the course in the courts as they are hoping that ultimately this program, it would be put back in place and offer some relief to those facing those high student loans? >> yeah. and as you pointed out, for at least the moment, everything is sort of on forbearance where those students are those borrowers who were enrolled in this sort of plants are everything is sort of on hold. arlette saenz live for us there in delaware. arlette, thank you. john. >> all right. this morning, nine people are now dead due to the largest listeria outbreak since 2011, the cdc is urging everyone to check their
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refrigerator for boar's head ready to liverwurst, as well as other deli meat products. some of the recalled products have sell-by dates into october this year. symptoms of listeria include a stiff neck fever, fatigue visitors heading to the grand canyon this weekend may want to pack extra water after the park's main pipeline broke now, officials say the waterline failed after a series of breaks forcing a sudden shutdown of overnight hotel stays prc officials say water restrictions we'll run throughout labor day when hotels are near or at capacity in just minutes, blue origin will launch a new tourism spaceflight from west texas the eighth man commercial spaceflight for the company founded by amazon billionaire jeff bezos it is unclear how much each of the five ticketed customers paid but a ticket for the company's first floor fight auctioned off at $28 million. so it's probably not cheap and the travel window for labor day weekend opens today, there is some good news and bad news it's for travelers, the bad news, longer lines at the airport, the tsa expecting its
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busiest labor day travel period on record, the good news, some lower prices. aaa says overall well, it is seeing a 2% dip in the cost of traveling domestically over the holiday weekend compared with last year row, khairullah airline fares have fallen as well. >> so perhaps some good news for folks traveling while coming up, parents are stressed out and that stress is now being directly linked to the well-being of children. why the surgeon general says that a change is needed now and what it means for you and your family images of models and influencers are being used to urge americans to vote for donald trump in november there's just one problem. >> they're all fake cnn's harry enten we got a race for the ages here with nibbles, the hamster jumping out to a ten point advantage over jaws, the goldfish, what the heck is going on here swim can kill
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grainger.com, or just stopped by granger for the ones who get it done? >> the pros for have i got news for you are pretty odd yeah. >> what are the kinds we could run on the news before then i would never happen if i got news for you. >> the mere saturday, september
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14th at night on cnn and streaming next day on max this is cnn the world's news network welcome back. >> if you are a parent who feels stress stout, and burnt out, you are not alone so much so at the surgeon general, dr. vivek murthy is now sounding the alarm on this quickly growing mental health crisis 48%, nearly half the parents are saying on most days, they're completely overwhelmed by their stress is intensified culture of comparison that we're all living in, that's really a potentiated and fed by social media and the online environment where parents are looking around them and comparing themselves to sometimes hundreds of other parents, some of who may know some of them, they don't know, but they often come away feeling worse about themselves and they're falling short as feral joining us now is emergency physician and dean at the yale school of public health, dr. megan ranney, dr. good to see you so really
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upsetting here that the surgeon general there i'm sure a lot of people can relate. what can parents do? >> you know, as a parent myself, honestly, i cheered this. i think it reflects the experience of so many parents across the country. to me, this advisory serves as a reminder to all of us as parents to put our own oxygen mask on first and we spent a lot of time talking about the mental health crisis among kids. and i will say as a parent as it and as an emergency physician, that i know that we can't help our kids get better if we're not better ourselves. so as a parent tried to find help, try to find time to take care of yourself and advocate for policies in your community at your workplace, in your state or city that help other parents we need paid leave especially during those early childbearing years we need access to good childcare, not just in the toddler an infant years, but also throughout, like nobody he's workday ends when the school day ends and we need to
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have communities that look out for each other so to me, the advisory really illustrate all of that. yeah. yeah. >> and i wonder how damaging you would say stress is and how much of a toll that actually takes on the body. i think sometimes we sort of right it off as you know, it's just stress, it's just life. but it can also have a damaging effect physically on your health absolutely. >> and i frequently tell my patients in the emergency department that the connection between the mind and the body is very, very real. when we are stressed or body releases hormones presses, other hormones that can have an effect on our gut, on our immune function and can actually have long-lasting effects on our vascular system on risk of asthma, on risk of infections. so taking care of that stress not just helps your mental health, but also your short and long term physical health and what about the connection between parental stress and how it might impact
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your children absolutely. kids need to see that their parents are okay if you are stressed, if you are anxious, if you are depressed your kids are going to see that and feel that makes them feel unstable, which is not to blame the parent for kids mental health crisis, but rather to say, if you can take care of yourself, it will help your kid in the long term. now, of course, again, we have to deal with some societal problems to help with our stress let's decrease the risk of gun violence in our schools. let's provide safe places for our kids to play after school. let's make sure kids are taken care of so that we don't have to struggle between work in parenting, but there are also things that you can do yourself, like working with your extended family or friends to help care for those kids to give you a little break. >> doctor, i want to switch gears really quickly and get to something it's labor day coming up. a lot of people are going to be outside. what do we need to know about this, this virus? it's being spread by
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mosquitoes. it's apparently still rare, but we've already seen one man die from it. >> yes. so this new virus, i will, it's not new, but the one that's in the news right now, triple e or eastern equine encephalitis been around for a long time. luckily, relatively rare. but when it does develop into this encephalitis or brain-swelling, it's quite, quite dangerous. about 30% of people who end up with encephalitis from the eastern equine encephalitis virus end up dying. now, there's two things to no one is that it is borne by mosquitoes. so the best thing to do is to prevent mosquito bites. so i'm trying to stay indoors after dusk. make sure you're wearing deed or piccard in some sort of a real kind of chemical bug spray and try to not spend a lot of time around swamps are standing water where there are lots of mosquitoes that's one thing. the other thing to know is that triple e is actually much less common than things like west nile virus, which of course dr. fauci recently hat. so i would
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say to protect yourself, not just because of the risk of tripoli, but also because of the risk of all of these he's other mosquito-borne viruses that are out there getting bitten by a mosquito is never a good thing, especially not right now, when we are seeing this surge in mosquito-borne illness yeah, certainly worth a reminder, dr. megan ranney. >> good to see you. thank you. >> jogging give quite a new report this morning on how models in social influencers in europe have had their identity stolen in an attempt to influence the us presidential election. dozens of them have discovered that their images have been used and in some cases manipulated to promote donald trump trump's reelection bid with fake maga accounts. cnn investigative reporter katie polglase shares the story debby is heading home from work in luxembourg, northern europe crossing the border into germany she races back to her son and of course, lu but debby's day, doesn't end there gummy in is also a
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professional model image, not only her identity, but her source of income, helping support her and her son. >> but it's been stolen, used in a pro-trump account on x, attracting nearly 30,000 followers in less than six months here's you will not that's very crazy. and when you see these views, it saying vote for trump in 2024 what's your reaction my to be honest, what was my reaction? >> that was my reaction because i have nothing to do with the united states was trump the political things over there and if people following this account believe that this is, you, what do you want to say to them? it's definitely not me.
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definitely it was never me and it will never be me and they have to i'm furlough police in fact, debby is not alone in partnership with the centre for information resilience. >> cnn found nearly 60 fake trump's supporting accounts. and from these, we identified nearly a dozen women, real women from across europe, from denmark to the netherlands and as far away as russia, whose identities are being used in accounts telling voters american voters, to vote for trump in the upcoming u.s election let's take a look at some of these accounts like alina 33 and voting for trump. but she's not she's really camila from denmark. >> i think it's rare anything that can discriminate other people on my account because it's my little universe i don't think it's fair and this one, eva, she even has a verified blue tick, which is supposed to weed out fake
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accounts. you feel very taken advantage because it's kind of my image. i don't want to think people think that i do. what those profiles sometimes promoting. >> we run this suspicious x photos through a reverse image search engine and found they were lifted from instagram posts certain patterns emerged the fake accounts repost each other, is a sign of a coordinated campaign he has several of the fake accounts post the exact same wording. if you're voting for the man who survived an assassination shouldn't attempt. i want to follow you. it's another sign the accounts are linked and that's not all some of the accounts manipulated the images of these women have a look at debby's post, the original on instagram, and now the fake one on x hat. now reads make america great again look at this t-shirt before, and then trump 2024. for now, we don't know who is behind and all
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these accounts but the former u.s. national security council spokeswoman, who also used to investigate fake accounts for twitter, told us this. >> i don't think it's unreasonable to ask questions about could there be a state actor involved? we know that there are multiple state actors who have been using social media to try to sow dissent nation campaigns and the run-up to the 2024 election regardless, the accounts are reaching influential politicians. >> doug mastriano, a republican state senator for pennsylvania, follows debby's failed account. cnn contacted the senator about the account, but has not heard back back in germany, debby is shocked and upset that her image is being used in this way with. president trump. now back on x and elon musk, the owner of x, throwing his weight behind him, fake pro trump content appears to be flourishing silencing the real women affected once again,
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women's rights at the very heart of this presidential election well, this investigation really show that the process of verification authentication of a council next has plummeted massively under musk's leadership of the platform. and this really shows that the trust since safety team at x, the team exactly designed to catch this kind of content has shrunk considerably. they're just not catching this kind of content. and the question is, why? and that we did put to x all of our findings. we sent them a full list of all of these accounts. we received no response. but we didn't notice that just in the last 24 hours or so before publishing, the majority of these accounts were taping down, which is rather interesting and it's also worth noting that at this stage there is no indication that the trump campaign are involved back to you. >> so revealing it's so many levels, katie polglase. thank you so much for sharing that for brand new hour of cnn, new central starts right now

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