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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  August 30, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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two-and-a-half percent up year over year. this is slightly better-than-expected. some contexts, this is tied for the lowest rate since early 2021. and when we look look at the trend here, you can see that there's been massive improvement with this inflation gauge. and really all of them at 1.2 years ago, this was above 7%, so not quite back to the 2% goal yet, but getting there as this chart shows, moving in the right direction. now i do want to stress, no, this does not mean in a prices are falling across the economy. the rate of inflation is down, but that just means that prices are going up more gradually. of course, that is good news because the same time paychecks are going up as well. now, as far as what this means for interest rates, as you mentioned a week ago, jerome powell at that big speech in jackson hole, wyoming heat all but declared victory victory over inflation. and he said interest rate cuts are very likely to come wall street pricing in a 100% chance of a
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rate cut. the next meeting, september the final time they meet before the election. but there's still some debate is going to be a small rate cut or a big one, and that's going to be decided by the next inflation reading. and of course the big august jobs report. >> so something looks like it's coming in september. the question is, how much will say, i mean, this is a report that sort of lends credence to that happening? yeah. absolutely. the question is how much and how many more after the next week? >> absolutely. matt egan. thank you. >> all right. a new hour of cnn, new central starts right now new this morning think the big takeaways from vice president kamala harris's first major interview in her store presidential bid harris defending and defining her run right here on cnn and moments ago, the response from team trump, ohio senator j.d. >> vance just spoke with john berman what trump's republican vice presidential nominee had to say, i'm wrong. solomon
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with john berman, kate and sara are out today. this is cnn new central so in her first major television interview as the democratic nominee, vice president kamala harris, explaining her plans, what she would do if she wins the white house and answering questions about her record from immigration to frack. >> it do you still want to ban fracking know and i made that clear on the debate stage in 2020 that i would not ban fracking and i believe in a town hall, you said you were asked, would you commit to implementing a federal ban on fracking on your first day in office and you said there's no question. >> i'm in favor of banning fracking. yes. >> so it changed in that campaign in 2020, i made very clear where i stand. >> we are in 2024 and i've not changed their position or will a.i. going forward, let's be
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clear. my values have not changed so harris also tried to say she was going to turn the page from what she called donald trump's divisiveness. and on the heels of that interview, the harris campaign this morning has announced plans to kick off a new bus tour there to start in florida, focused on reproductive rights. cnn's eva mckend joins us now with details on that. what are you learning iba well, john, the fight for reproductive justice has always been a central focus of this campaign the harris-walz ticket, they're running under the mantra of freedom and one of those pillars is reproductive freedom on the campaign trail, this sounds like them talking specifically about the decisions to the freedom to make decisions about your own body. but the former president, donald trump now raising ivf is an acknowledgment that republicans feel vulnerable on this issue. but here is the other way, the vice president is talking about other key policy issues that she would address if elected president
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day one, it's gonna be about one implementing my plan for what i call an opportunity economy. i've already laid out a number of proposals in that regard. >> which include what we're going to do to bring down the cost of everyday goods where we're going to do to invest in america's small businesses. >> what we're going to do to invest in families, for example, extending the child tax credit to $6,000 for families for the first year of their child's life to help them by a car seat, to help them buy baby clothes, a crib there's the work that we're going to do that is about investing in the american family around affordable housing the big issue in our country right now. so there are a number of things on day one so john, you get a sense there of how they're crafting their election argument. >> they're talking about reproductive rights and they're talking about the cost of living, the opportunity economy, bringing costs down for american families in this bus tour that they're starting in florida, it's not it's not harrison walls themselves, but
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it's a campaign sponsored bus tour this going to focus on reproductive rights starting in florida, correct? right. it's a whole slew of surrogates. and john, i think it's really telling that it's starting in florida. that means a democrats are feeling confident they can even compete there particularly on this issue. it starts on tuesday in palm beach with senator amy klobuchar and harris campaign manager. julie chavez rodriguez, among others, the bus tour is going to make at least 50 stops in key battleground states. and it also seems like it's aimed to serve as a recruitment tool to mobilize volunteers all right. >> eva mckend for us. eva, thank you very much. >> real oh, i will take this donald trump is on the campaign trail today after the interview from vice president harris. >> and it appears that the former president was watching rahel all right, john, thank you. i will pick it up from here during the interview, trump attacked his opponent on
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truth social saying, i look so forward to debating comrade, comrade kamala harris and exposing her for the fraud that she is. let's bring in cnn's jason carroll, who is in johnstown, pennsylvania, where trump is expected to deliver remarks at a rally this afternoon, jason well, this is the moment that the trump campaign has been waiting for. they've been waiting to try to challenge kamala harris on the issue who's in her own words. and now that she's given this interview, they're able to do just that. i mean, you have to keep in perspective, this is a campaign that for some time has been trying to to portray kamala harris has this sort of like chameleon type of candidate who changes her views on particular issues. one of those issues that means so much to the people here in the state of pennsylvania fracking, for example. she was asked about that last night. she said, at one point in 2019, she supported a ban on fracking, but then explain how her position had evolved. well, former president trump weighed in on that on truth, social
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posting, and saying the following her answers rambled incoherently. he then went on to say, under harris, the border would remain open and that there would be no fracking. the campaign also at this point not wanting harris to control the narrative, the news cycle narrative going forward. so trump came out with big announcement of his own yesterday and that's when he talked about ivf and how under his new administration, if reelected ivf would become covered, not only by the government, if it was not covered by the government, then it would be mandated that insurance companies would pick up the total cost. of course, when trump made this announcement yesterday, he was lying on specifics in terms of how exactly this would be paid. four. well, just during the last hour, our own john berman pressed vice presidential candidate that j.d. vance on this very same topic. here's what he had to say all details
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get worked out in the legislative process and we're not in the legislative process because we haven't won yet. >> but i think that president trump again just believes that we want women to have access to these fertility treatments. he wants to make it more accessible, more affordable well, for more families because we believe in the republican party and donald trump believes american families are the foundation of our country. they're the best thing about living in this great country. you have a lot of young women today who say they'd like to have more children. but for some reason health or financial, they're not able to. we want to try to solve that problem because we want young women and young families to have the family life that they want and that they choose it should also be noted that i spoke to a republican ally after the harris interview who hopes that now going forward there will be more focused on harris and her own words and where she scans on the issues and less focus by the former president on things like re-posting, vulgar posts about the vice president or less
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stories about what happened and what didn't happen at arlington national cemetery and that there will now be more focus on harris and specifically where she stands on the issues. >> later on this afternoon when trump takes the stage, expect to hear more about harris and wears he stands on fracking and more about that controversial ivf proposal. he is now putting out a lot more questions. >> jason carroll, live for us there adjacent. thank you. john. >> all right. with us now, is the harris campaign co-chair, delaware senator chris coons center. thank you so much for being with us here in the other side of the world which is why it's dark where you are right now. we appreciate you staying awake for us. i do want to talk about this fracking thing because vice president harris last night, though press by dana didn't explain the evolution, how she went from saying she would ban fracking in 2019 to now saying she would not in and supports allowing it to continue. are you satisfied with the explanations she gave? she said that in 2020 on the debate stage, she said she supported a fracking, but she didn't really all she said was
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that president biden supported it well, john, part of what you're pointing out here is that vice president harris, as vice president to president biden, has supported fracking for the last four years and was the deciding vote in a landmark bill that was the single biggest investment in fighting climate change any nation has ever made. >> so i'm comfortable that i understand that vice president harris has a position that we've made huge progress in combating climate change and fracking has unlocked natural resources that helped make the united states secure, both from a international perspective and a domestic perspective. i'm here in tokyo, japan right now, you pointed out that it's the middle of the night here i'm halfway around the world and many other countries look to the united states. and the fact that we are the we are the nation that leads the world in
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the production of renewable energy and the production of natural gas. and that makes us a competitive economy. it increases our national security and it increases our trajectory in reducing our total emissions she was also asked about some of her economic proposals and what she has promised to be a focus on the middle class and the question is, well, if you're proposing this now, why haven't you done it yet in the three-and-a-half years you've been in office and one of the things she said in response to as well, we need to recover from the pandemic and we have recovered. she said you feel like americans believe we fully recovered well, you're making a distinction there, john between what has actually happened in the economy, which is we have fully recovered from the pandemic more strongly more quickly than any other advanced economy. >> and what your average american feels. there is still a hangover, a sense that prices rose too quickly and have stayed too high and vice
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president harris was again the deciding vote on critical legislation. that allowed us to bring the price of prescription drugs down some of the most expensive drugs, things like as a role to and eloquence that your average american knows from the ads on the evening news with an announcement just two weeks ago, their prices are going to be cut in half $35 a month out-of-pocket costs for insulin $2,000 a year total out-of-pocket costs for americans who get their prescription drugs through medicare these are big steps forward in reducing costs that kamala harris as vice president, played a central role in what she's now proposing are additional steps for example, to reduce the price of housing by accelerating the production of both single-family and multifamily housing. i hear all the time that housing is a significant concern. for families, and i think she's got strong proposals. i hope that in this campaign for president
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in the next couple of weeks that we'll hear comparably substantive proposals from her opponent, donald trump. instead of what we've mostly heard at his rallies which are long and rambling and unfocused diatribes about all sorts of things from sharks and electrocution to hannibal lecter to the 2020 elections. so i think the vice president in her interview on cnn, put forward a positive and clear and forward-looking agenda. and i'm looking forward to the debate on september 10, where i think she's going to be putting forward more of her positive view for the future and donald trump will likely continue to put forward a negative, backward looking ad hominem attack laced performance on that debate stage and i don't know how much you've been able to pay attention while you've been over there to what's been happening over here. >> but yesterday donald trump proposed making ivf somehow available and paid for for all
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americans, either the government or insurers now, if he does win the white house and you were still in the senate, is this something you would support i likely would. >> i'd have to look at how it would be paid for i'll remind you, the national deficit, national debt went up more under donald trump presidency. than any other president before or since. that's because he passed on a party line vote massive tax cuts for the wealthiest americans in the most profitable companies. he claimed they would pay for themselves. they didn't and then his mishandling of the pandemic drove our economy into the ditch. cost nearly 1 million american lives. and resulted in the worst job creation record of any president since herbert hoover most americans have forgotten because they'd rather not think about it, that the badly mishandled pandemic left a terrible record in the wake of donald trump's presidency so
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frankly, it's my hope going forward we're going to continue to see strong economic growth. we're going to continue to see inflation come down and we're going to continue to see the job creation record that the biden-harris campaign has had extend into the next administration led by kamala harris and governor tim walz senator chris coons, enjoy one of the greatest cities on earth. we do appreciate you staying up for us. thank you real all right. john, moments from now, defense secretary lloyd austin will meet with his ukrainian counterpart at the pentagon. what kyiv is asking for that they believe could change the course of the war. new inflation numbers out this morning and they are better than expected what does it mean for the prices that you is we all pay at the store i get ready for a record breaking crowds the holiday weekend marking the unofficial end salma will be filled with airports and highways the pros
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same old tired playbook next question, please that's it just part of cnn's exclusive interview with vice president kamal harris with us now cnn political commentators maria cardona, and se cupp, se biggest surprise from the interview for you well, that answer was a surprise to me. >> i understand wanting to take the high road and not getting in the mud with donald trump. but i think it was a missed opportunity she could have used that moment to point out a 21 point gender gap between donald trump and kamala harris, where women are really turned off by the way, donald trump talks about kamala harris and other women and women of color i think it was an opportunity for her to say, listen, we know how important women and women of color are in this election. we're not going to we're not going to talk about them in ways that turned them off and
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they, they they know that about us. so i think it was a bit of a it was a bit of a dodge and it was sort of a great opportunity for her to lean into that maria missed opportunity no, i absolutely completely disagree with my dear friend, se i think she respects this brilliantly brilliantly because i agree with everything se said in terms of the effect of donald trump's disgusting insults that he engages in almost every day against so many americans. but specifically including women of color but she doesn't need to do that. she has so many other people to do that. she has all of her allies, her supporters, her surrogates, her campaign can do that she can stay above the fray and it actually shows americans that she is about helping them, that this election is not about her it's not about her hurt
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feelings as, you know, as much as that might be the case, right? >> it is about her waking up every single day and focusing on growing the middle-class, lowering costs expanding rights and freedoms, protecting americans. >> and that's exactly what she talked about last night. so i think her next question please. was exactly the right tone to take because that shows americans that she is serious about this, that she's not going to get in the mud that donald trump is a bully, but she can handle it. and it shows the contrast. i think brighter than anything else she could have said se were he lost a great question earlier in this broadcast where she was talking about, what do you think voters in pennsylvania? took from this interview this election really could come down to one state and that state would be pennsylvania. so what did they have to like or not like yeah
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i'm here right now in pennsylvania where i i do a show that really explicitly talks to swing state voters, especially in pennsylvania where there are 19 electoral votes at stake and listen, voters here are diverse, just like anywhere else, but they're not stupid. and i think another missed opportunity for kamala harris, i think this interview was good. it was fine, but another missed opportunity really goes back to something maria just said when she talked about her evolution on issues. i think people are very forgiving. they understand that people change their minds, but they're not stupid. i think they realized that she's changed her mind on some positions because she's now running in a general election, and i would've leaned into that. i think she went halfway there in saying my values are the same, but my policy positions have changed. i would have used that opportunity to say just as maria said, i am running to be president of every american. this election is not about me. it's about voters, unlike my opponent, i
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am not going to jam unpopular legislation down the throats of voters. unlike my opponent, i'm going to listen to women. i'm going to listen to minorities. i'm going to listen to all of our constituencies and i'm going to be a president that represent since everyone and reflects where a majority of americans are at. i think that would have sort of vanquished the flip-flop talking point. and there's not really good way to combat it from the trump maga side maria, what are you think about that? >> a missed opportunity? >> i think that this is a question that she's going to get repeatedly, john, as she travels to these swing states and especially pennsylvania, she's going to continue to get that question. so i think she will have the opportunity to expand on what she said last night and look, i think that the message that came out clearly clearly to me until a lot of people that were listening is that the true mark of a leader, of a competent, smart leader is somebody who
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changes their views as they go through their lived experiences and look, she was a prosecutor. she was a da for are san francisco. she was ag for california. she was senator for california. then she was vice president for the whole country. you learn through those experiences. and so what she was talking about, fracking is, i think she just wanted to be very concise and very clear that she is not going to ban fracking, that she he said he said that before and that that is going to be the case from here on out. i think that's what pennsylvania one's really want to hear whether that industry and those workers are in any jeopardy. she made it very clear last night that they are not. and then she went on to focus on how she's going to fight every your single day for those working class middle class americans, contrast that with donald trump, who is only in this to work every single day for himself as he very
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quickly, because we're just about out of time here donald trump and reproductive rights over the last 24 hours. >> a lot happened. >> i a lot happened having to do with the amendment four florida, where he said he would vote for more than six weeks, but then his campaign had to walk it back and then i had senator vance on this morning and he sort of did the same what have we learned from that? >> i was struck by your interview with j.d. vance because it was impressively disingenuous. the idea that donald trump has been consistent on abortion could not be further from the truth. and i think i mean, he's literally held every position one person could have on this issue and you're hearing it from life republicans who are frustrated with donald trump on this issue and you're hearing it from women who want to know where does he really stands. so i think jd vance's attempt to completely whitewash all of that with this new talking point was really something and just an indication of how big a
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problem this is for that campaign. >> se cupp maria cardona great to see you both. thank you very much. >> right. thank you, john. thanks alright. >> still ahead for us defense secretary lloyd austin meets with his ukrainian counterpart at the pentagon today. what it could mean for ukraine's wish to strike targets deeper inside russia and swifties for kamala, the group's co-founder joins us ahead on cnn news central the tv moments that took culture over the edge. >> people who are watching and then are world he had an explosive reverberation tv on the edge from airs sunday, september 22, did nine on cnn for limited time and just dropped the price of every foot longer in the app to 699 quake subway did what? 699 foot long says right here, 699 for any foot-long get this deal in the subway up now, before it's too late. >> let me introduce you to plus 500, the intuitive and easy to
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holding steady according to the latest numbers from the federal reserve's go-to inflation gauge 2.5% in july. that was better than expected but what does that mean for the prices we all pay for things? what does it mean for interest rates let me bring in lael brainard. she is the director of the national economic council. director brainard good to have you. thanks for being with us today. >> thanks for having me on. >> so i imagine this is the type of report you wanted to see what's your reaction to what we've learned about an hour ago yeah. >> this is exactly the kind of report that gives us confidence that inflation is sustainably coming back down to normal levels we've seen a string of monthly reports now, inflation at 2.5% that suggests the economy can continue expanding the employment can continue expanding with low inflation. and that is good news, but i'm the work on lowering costs needs to continue. many middle-class families are still
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facing high prices and that is the focus because of vice president harris, president biden lowering costs. they're doing that on prescription drugs real focus on housing affordability a plan to build 3 million houses. and of course, we are actually seeing relief at the pump. so $3.35 national average, that's objection. of about $0.50 since last labor day and the lowest labor day gas prices we've seen in three years yeah. >> we did talk about those lower gas prices a little bit earlier, but i want to focus on something you just talked about. their shelter inflation, obviously, i don't have to tell you a pain point for a lot of people, the plans that had been rolled out. will obviously take time talk to us a little bit about how we get to a better place with shelter costs when people are suffering and dealing with right now you're exactly right. affordability of housing is a major pain point for so many american households partly, it's good to see
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mortgage rates now coming down into the low 6% range. that's going to unlock the housing market, which is really important. but rental costs are still too high the presence of vice president want to move forward on a plan to build 3 million more affordable houses that's critically important. but also there already making more federal land available for more household housing. construction were already giving grants to states to do more innovative things in terms of zoning and other ways it's two unlock that housing market. but that's going to be a continued top priority for the vice president and of course, the president yeah. >> no, you can't speak to specific campaign activities, but i did want to give you a chance to respond to something senator j.d vance, actually, just said on our air to my colleague john berman, take a listen i actually think what
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donald trump has tried to do is identify some common ground so that we can focus on the big national questions like why can't americans afford groceries and housing? >> american families can't afford groceries or health care. young families can afford to buy a home to raise their families in those are the real crisis that we should focus on directly. >> we did just talk about housing affordability there, but i wanted to give you an opportunity to respond to that yeah. >> so completely agree that those are the issues that the president, the vice as president won a focus on on behalf of the american middle-class families that are being squeezed. now, if you look at the tariff proposal walz that some republicans have put on the table interestingly, those would amount to a national sales tax. of about 4,000 some dollars per middle-class family. a lot of that would raise food prices. so we have made incredible
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progress already on bringing down prescription russian drug prices, $35 insulin down hundreds of dollars per month for american families capping ten prices in medicare, or at least negotiating those prices for the first time. capping out of pocket costs on drugs for seniors republic every single republican voted against the bill to get that done, to bring down health care costs. the president, vice president, understand how important health care costs are they want to make those kinds of lower drug prices and caps on out-of-pocket costs available to all americans. and that's what they're going to continue working to do okay. >> dr. lael brainard, we appreciate director lael brainard. thank you. we appreciate the time. thank you. >> thank you all right. >> happening now, defense secretary lloyd austin is meeting with his ukrainian counterpart at the pentagon. ukrainian officials in washington are there to meet
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with administration officials from the biden administration to present them with a list of targets inside russia in an attempt to push the us to lift restrictions on the use of american weapons against the russians. earlier this week, ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy once again called for allowing ukraine to carry out strikes deeper inside russia two arguing it would end the war on ukraine sooner good news for anyone hitting the road this labor day weekend, lower prices at the gas pump from, leading roles leading remodels. i did stars, makeup renovation to give back in a big way celebrity iou, all new monday night at nine hdtv your shipping manager left to find themselves leaving you lost unique to hire. >> i need indeed, indeed you do indeed instant match, instantly delivers quality he candidates
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number one doctor recommended it works fast and last for hours. cortisone ten i'm arlette saenz in rehoboth beach, delaware. >> and this is cnn all right. >> we have some breaking news into cnn, a devastating loss for the hockey community the columbus blue jackets all star johnny goodrow has died along with his brother, which roe was 31-years-old. but jersey state police say that they were both struck and killed by a suspected drunk driver while riding their bikes that's according to cnn affiliate wpbi and kyw, known to fans as johnny hockey. goodrow was a seven time nhl all-star and hoagie baker award winner at boston college, the blue jackets, sharing a statement this morning saying, quote the columbus blue jackets are shocked and devastated by this unimaginable tragedy johnny was not only a great hockey player, but more significantly a loving husband, father, son, brother and friend. we will miss him terribly and do everything that we can to support his family
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and each other through this tragedy. >> john, there really is just so sad all right, shifting gears here. the official end of summer is here. tsa expects today to be the busiest day for air travel. united airlines expects its busiest labor day weekend on record with more than half 1 million fliers for today on their airline alone drivers will also see gas prices at a three-year low for the holiday weekend seen as rafael romo is at the world's busiest airport in atlanta actually looks okay behind you're all fail it. >> not bad. let me tell you, john. good morning to you and it has been a good morning here because yes, we've seen wave after wave of passengers getting here, but it seems like as soon as they get here, they get processed because we don't see the long lines that sometimes you see here at the world's, world's busiest airport? yes. atlanta's still retains the title in just a moment ago and you can probably
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hear her in the background. they brought an a violin player lifting up people spirits so that they're now in a better mood that they would have been otherwise. and today is going to be the peak air travel day with tsa processing 2.86 million people here. and if you add up all the people traveling between yesterday and next wednesday, september the 4th, were up to 17 million people. so that gives you an idea about how busy airports around the nation are going to be earlier we had an opportunity to talk to some passengers who shared their experiences about getting here at the airport. and this is what they have to there's a lot of holiday travel happening. people want to make the most of the holiday break so just be patient with people to get a hiccup, but that's okay. delta done an amazing job and we're going to still get to our destination and time. >> can you share what the hiccup was?
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>> oh, our flight got canceled due to weather, so we just had to wear routing. so but we're not upset or anything. we're still going to get there for my grandma, his 95th birthday jon, a lot of people are going to be on the road as well. >> and you may wonder why. well, it's because gas prices our considerably considerably lower this year just to give you an idea of the average national price according to aaa today, his 35 that compares to 337 last week and 350 last month. if we go to last year, it was three at once. so that gives people an incentive it's have to get out there, go visit people whatever they want and jalen makes everything better. >> rafael romo at hartsfield international airport led rothfeld. thank you very much. >> so it is they're voting error. >> the coalition of taylor swift superfan rallying behind vice president harris. they are trying to turn there are numbers into voting power cnn
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literal by today i hanako montgomery in tokyo and this is cnn the family oh, let's have a little killer stuff on friday, taylor swift may not have endorsed a candidate yet, and the 2024 our election but apparently many of her fans already have swifties for camila. >> that's a coalition of taylor swift fans that have already fund raised over
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$100,000 for the harris-walz ticket now, the group has no official affiliation with taylor swift, but they have already drawn in some pretty big names hosting senator elizabeth warren and carole king on a fundraising zoom call here with us now is the co-founder of swifties for camila irene kim. irene, good to have you. thank you. >> thanks for having me. >> so this is not necessarily affiliated with taylor swift how, did this idea even come out? >> yeah. we're absolutely not affiliated with taylor swift. it all starts with my co-founder emerald madrona, literally just tweeted the night biden stepped down and said he felt like swifty should do somethings for kamala harris. i agreed lots of other swifties agreed in the next thing, you know, we had a twitter group chat quickly moves over to discord and now we have a fully functioning volunteer organization i was in chicago. >> was it just last week further for the democratic convention? and there was this massive sort of rumors swirling thursday night one that there was beyond say to that it was taylor swift, one, beyonce with taylor swift. she wasn't there. >> how important is it for you?
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>> self-described swifties that taylor swift actively endorses in this campaign? i mean, she's previously endorsed kamala harris during the last lecture when she was running as vp. so we have no doubt she will endorse her when the time is right. i think we've seen with the vienna statement recently, taylor will speak when the time is right for her and there's a lot of moving pieces we might not know about. so to us it's more important to justin mobilize our community because we've seen for firsthand how quickly we can rally around each other they're and get support together, help us understand the common denominators between why you guys are endorsing kamala harris and why you're supporting kamala harris and being a taylor swift fan, what are the i'm going denominators there. >> i mean, i think it just comes down to being people who care. so if these care a lot and a lot of us are across very diverse demographics, and those are two very demographics that kamala harris and her campaign are looking to defend. and when they're in office, hopefully those policies will protect this a lot more. and so that's kind of what's brought us together as swifties, we share a lot of values. and so it
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kinda translate over pretty naturally that we would care about this because it's the same way that we try to make merch sales more accessible, whether something for record store day and people will rally around that to organize on people who might not have access. so that same thinking, we're working on making sure that all of our friends and family are protected. >> so how many and how powerful are you well, we just hit over 3,200 members and our discord. >> gosh who's been able to join our kickoff call, had over 34,000 attendees, which is really exciting for us. and as of this morning, we've raised over $145,000 for the campaign very exciting, i guess swift, even beyond the organization like swifties in general, how powerful do you think you are? i think pretty powerful. i've seen it firsthand but i think we've seen firsthand the power our community has, whether it's through organizing for swifties, for palestine, or there's other organizing groups that have always rallied around gofundme is when tragedy
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strikes our community, like we have the very traditional $13 donation. everyone does we've seen the impact. we can have. and so i think we are very powerful coalition. >> and then just really quickly speaking of impact, are you focusing your efforts on specific states, battleground states? how are you focusing your attention? >> yeah. i mean, if we are kind of starting with what makes sense. so right now, we're prioritizing voter registration efforts before those deadlines pass, and we are looking to tackle a swing-state specifically because we know the 2020 election came down to just around 40,000 votes across three swing states. and as of now, we've had over 41,000 voter registration checks just through our partnership with fan out, which he's doing the era's tour tickets give away so you got an entry or time you check your voter registration, make of voting plan and then anyone else you also register ironton. >> thank you for being here and thank you for giving us a reason to play a little bit of taylor swift on a friday any time you and thank you for being here last couple of days been great to have you here. this has been cnn news central,
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have a great holiday weekend. make good choices cnn newsroom is up next monday night, a two-hour whole story special. >> the candidates the record on the key issues of the election season. what does their past tell us about how they will lead the whole story with anderson cooper monday starting at 8:00 on cnn cnn can now reverse support your brain health very janet, hey, eddy. now, fraser, frank, frank bred. >> how are you? >> fred fuel up to seven brain health indicators, including your memory joined the nerivan brain health challenge before limited time. so just dropped the price of every foot longer than that to 6-19 subway did what? 699 foot long says right here, 699 for any foot-long get
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call 187, 7866 at 5:55. >> we're all been programmed to expect some radical industry streaming exclusively on max good friday morning. you are live in the cnn

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