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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  November 4, 2024 4:00pm-5:01pm AST

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the limits to have a dream contained to study in your own adventure, now counter and ways the the hello on how to go. hey, live in washington dc. this is the l. does your news our, with our special coverage of the us election coming up the presidential candidates make their final appeal to the voters? campbell harris prepare spend the last day of campaigning in the critical spring state of pennsylvania. focusing on mobilizing the males. those donald trump is set to a 10 rallies in 3 swing states on monday while he continues to try and cast out on
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the elections legitimacy. i'm or kyle endo hall also has this our anger and grief in goss. i'm more than $1800.00 pounds us to the ends, a killjoy one month of israel sage in the news as well tells united nations as counseling its agreement with the agency that supports millions of palestinian refugees. and i'm from the guy. yeah, go in. she just outside of valencia, where a community that was resigned to taking on the run of the care up what is now resilience in the face of it, the hello and welcome to washington dc. there's just one day last before tens of millions of voters here in the u. s. head to the poles to pick the next president. the can. let's have one more chance to convince undecided voters,
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republican donald trump and democrat, comedy harris will spend monday, once again in the battleground, states, which will be crucial and deciding who gets the keys to the white house. kimberly hungry, it begins our coverage from pennsylvania. a diana cru, rebate came to the united states in search of freedom, but she says she fear is, it's under attack by former president donald trump. that's why she says she's campaigning to help elect vice president comma le harris to become the next us president. i already lost a country to a dictator and i don't want to lose another one. career rebate lives in the swing state of pennsylvania. it's considered necessary to win the white house. but the hair is campaign also knows it needs other states like michigan we have momentum,
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it is on our side. can you feel it is for harris campaigned on sunday, she's convinced with the health, the 1st supporters. she's close to winning this type. presidents race have the momentum because our campaign is tapping into the ambitions, the aspirations and the dreams of the american people. new data suggest harris, maybe overtaking her opponent republican donald trump. in iowa, a traditionally republican leading state holes there, show harris up by 3 percentage points over trump. to gather will build a brighter future for our nation, where we women, we have outpaced men in early poli. that's helped harris work still this weekend for campaign has been running as during football games, targeting men in battleground states,
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try and pick up mail voters with us. no one came electoral votes. pennsylvania is considered the big prize of the 7 battle ground states. that's why on the night before election day, complet harris will be right here in philadelphia, pennsylvania to hold her last campaign rally and make her final hits to voters. kimberly hell get out a 0 philadelphia pennsylvania. meanwhile, donald trump has been campaigning in 3 states, pennsylvania, georgia, and north carolina. he's repeatedly tried to test out on the legitimacy of the vote . some of his supporters say they're ready to reject the results in less trump wins . ellen fisher, once again has been following the trump campaign. he reports from kingston in north carolina. the one day 3 states, a must win dash for the republican candidate and a very,
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very special hello to pennsylvania. why that graph price 1st pennsylvania and just on the morning, wiley, this close to an election, new event is too early and nothing too late. well, most polls suggest the tight race. trump is already claiming trouble plate. they want to, they are fighting so hard to seal is damned, a look at what's going on, living, what's going on in your state every day. so talking about extending hours, i'd say of what the whoever heard of this stuff. we should have one day voting a day for valid that it was back to north carolina. if we win this day, that will be so big. and you know what i love about this whole quarter was the last 10 events shinji for the state assignment. the campaign isn't convinced this has been locked in like it was for the last 2 elections. there's been a lot of talk of couple of how this is blue will states that she has got to win
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that their democratic clinic, north carolina is the equivalent for trump somewhere he has got to win. and the fact that he's spending so much time here in the closing hours of the campaign, tells us that his team is worried about what might happen here. thank you very much here. now tell you, i love the state. i love georgia. i love the final stuff with the georgia state were legal thing to note has been high on both sides of what you had to get to the boat. donald trump doesn't want to assume that he wins this state and then ends up losing it again as he did in 2020. and complet harris knows that there are still fewer democrats and republicans in the state. but democrats have a chance to win against a compromise candidate if they have a superior turn out operation. america has to be living this election for 2 years. it has been the longest campaign in modern american history and the candidates of $24.00 to create little piece of that. i would say sure,
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i'll just either tends to north carolina. donald trump will be back in michigan later on monday. theresa theresa bo is there for us and joins us from detroit. teresa, i feel like you've been living in michigan for a forever. so you've been talking to voters. let's start with cala harris. what are her people telling you? they're voting for her because the way you talk to people around here, most the main concerns. so the economies better jobs, better wages, better health care, affordable housing, among many other things. and just and when you talk to women, especially i think that this is something that is happening all across the country . but also here is preserving the reproductive rights of donald trump. was a part of the deciding the 3 supreme court judges that over ruled role versus way, the landmark of that made it legal, a portion of constitutional rights in this country. so there's lots of concerns about that. and then of course,
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all of those who are voting for cabinet harris at this point are saying that they're extremely concerned about this countries democracy. this is a major issue for everyone. we have spoken to people here, do not forget what happened in this country. back in uh, in uh, january 2021 when congress was attacked. so there's all sorts of issues that are affecting the way people will vote at this point. but a main concern for cameron to harry's right now is turn out how many people with vote for her is convincing people to get out and vote. and that's why she spent sunday here in the state of michigan, but it's a crucial swing states at this point. there's, i'm sorry you're dealing with what looks like a typically fordable midwestern rainy cold day. but let's talk fair play. donald trump, what are his motors telling you? why are they so passionate to vote for him as well? this country is a polarized country and the same thing is happening in this stage. and when you
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talk to people in the cities is one thing. and when you start going towards rural areas, the situation is completely different. almost everywhere they say those were voting for him is the economy to main concern again, but people are also talking about the possibilities of low in taxes. many are struggling to make come to me, it's because of the ongoing economic situation up in rural areas. for example, many are concerned about conservative a conservative values. they do not like the progressive values that they say this administration has been enshrining. and there's the reality here in the united states, in rural areas, to where many people, for example, are concerned. but the right to bear arms will be taken away from them. there's militias in many parts of michigan's. we've been going around and talking to lots of people who believe they have the constitutional rights to bear arms and they want to preserve that. right. so overall, there's lots of people in the state that are say, will say that will vote for donald trump. that's why he's ending this campaign in
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the states in grand rapids, it's about 3 hours away from here to which the western side is the 3rd time that he actually ends that campaign. it's going to be the 3rd time that he has a campaign in this place, but as he's spending more more time here in michigan, what we're seeing is that he has increased uh he support among the blue collar workers. he has been come painting among the workers of the auto industry that play across a role in the state. the members of the united auto workers in detroit, taking part in the last, riley ahead of the proceed, enter the election. folks, cheese at teamsters says that democratic party stands with a working class. they have to start with us and helping build back the automobile industry on other industries here on site as mission. thank you often with me, she then use the swing states. the election is tied here and donald trump is gaining ground among disenchanted blue collar workers. hammer that harry scheme is
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becoming increasingly concerned about her standing among men in blue, low states like michigan. that's why they're appealing to labor union leaders to help them mobilize the voters. michigan is known as the auto capital of the world. companies like food and general motors are located here. but industry jobs trunk by 35 percent in the past 3 decades. and also factories have relocated to countryside, mexico. it's, it's all set by low to get it. i says, some of the jobs are slowly coming back as a state has started to diversify to other industries and started bringing a little by little started coming back, new jobs came up the chips for and they're like it or somebody, conductor, chips that, uh, there's that's a big, big, the big guess and it's driving gamma. harry's has been
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promising more federal funds in the manufacturing industry. she also wants to help ultimate course transition to electric vehicles. donald trump says that transition will cost jobs and says he will impose terry. it's unimportant vehicles having a say economy say, well, trump's policies won't work and we know about tariffs is that they don't necessarily improve the trade deficit to think so what they do is that they reduce trade. and so consumers will both, i think, see higher much higher prices or to workers iraqi voting block and could be the difference between capital highways and donald trump getting the keys to the white house city. so we'll just see to detroit, michigan. in the last days of a frantic campaign, comma harris paused to talk to one of her most important groups of supporters. she
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took partner video call with quote, when with black women, a group that has raised significant money and rallied supporters for her campaign. black women are among the most democratic parties, most reliable supporters. as my candidate reports from philadelphia in pennsylvania, we're ready to drive to get voted through the polls. it's not lifting up, you know, that was putting me on the doors today, right. these get out the vote movement separate. the knocked on more than 56000000 dollars and the 2nd in battle ground states, a key demographic will come on. the harris in particular as women of color, i think black women have shown up for democratic candidate over 90 percent, multiple election cycles now. and if those same black women don't turn out, i think she will have a far more difficult road, statistically like women, the most loyal of democratic party support is. a recent poll indicates that harris's lead over trump, among white women under the age of 30, is so
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a team points. but among women of color, under the age of 30, this increases to 55 points. this is clearly not just an important demographic. it's possibly a defining one about the future. the best campuses are those who looked like the people they office waiting to vote because this consistency and because of the what kind of i could be defining for this election is why we want to have people come from those backgrounds and come from those communities. actually talking to each other, simply personal story about me and it was not just the message that's important. it's the messenger as well. but i'm also a mother of daughters. and i realize like right now when we think of all the issues that are on the line and this selection, black women are primarily affected by each and every, as every one of them we have been demand for years. the company, a message might be just as important or even way more. so when it comes from your
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grandmother, when it comes from your mother, when it comes to your aunt, when it comes from miss mary down the street, who always has the barbecue in the summertime. the messenger matters even more so than the actual message to my local community leda. nikki royal and says black women are fighting for the freedoms of origin does not just the we're not going to return back. so what it was, were going forward with strength and numbers and communicating and connecting yes with all humanity. the sign is stuck to in philadelphia commemorates those who fought for freedom. and joining the ranks of the skull, all the women fighting to ensure that this exercise in democracy does not end in a winter of discontent. by kinda, i'll just hear a philadelphia, pennsylvania immigration has been a hot button topic, the selection season, border security and unauthorized migration into the us are big issues for the soon state of arizona. rob reynolds went to the border town of nogales to find out what
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voters think their immigration at border security are among the top issues for us, voters in the candidates have sharply different positions for donald trump, immigration, he is a source of crime in economic decline. he claims without evidence that migrants are dangerous criminals and mentally ill. it says that they take americans jobs away and are pointed in the blood of the country. pamela harris called hers saying from has torpedoed a bi partisan bill in congress that would have strengthen border security and she promises to get that bill passed if she becomes president. now we came here to nogales arizona. talk to the people who actually live along the border about their opinions. they come and work over here. the, like they say they will for less money people. they actually want to work. they can
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actually find a job it, and it's not like the people from a few cars beginning or just from us. i think it's unfair for the actually people who are running away from actual violence for running away for a better life, for them to be put in this category, where they all seen of some braces. amid all the political spin, one fact stands out. the legal border crossings are down sharply this year after the by the administration tightens rules on asylum seekers. rob reynolds, l to 0, nogales arizona. both the republican and democratic vice presidential candidates are campaigning in wisconsin since the presidential election in 2000 it's emerged as a key swing states with some of the closest margins of victory. it's a perfect example of the divide between urban and rural voters and the parties. they support serial then yay 0. san diego explained back to the us electro map and
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we are headed north towards wisconsin, which carries 10 electrical votes. it was a reliably blue state for decades until the 2016 trump shocker. donald trump carried wisconsin by nearly 23000 votes out of nearly 3000000 cast and recriminations over how little time hillary clinton had spent in the state of haunted democrats ever since. here's how trump did it. he took all these areas that had previously voted for democrats, and he turned them into so called trump country. why? because the mostly white working class motors in these areas were unhappy about wages, poverty rising health care costs, and the fact that their lives weren't getting any better. many flocked to trump message make america great again. in 2020, the map looked pretty much the same as the county level, but the difference was the turnout. the 2 large blue spots in wisconsin south or the city of milwaukee and the state capital madison binding one. both of those by much larger margins than clinton had 4 years prior. and that was enough to pull the
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state as a whole back into his call him to hold onto wisconsin harris needs to maintain or boost for margin in big urban areas. trump, as he did in the last 2 elections, will focus on the huge rural spaces in the states, west and north, and everyone expects the result. once again, to be close. let's introduce our panel of guests this hour. we have kerry sheffield . she's a senior policy analyst at international women's voice, also joined by nadia brown, professor of government at georgetown university. and we have jeff houser, founder and executive director of the revolving door project at the center for economic and policy research. thank you all for joining us on this sprint. it has been such a sprint. we are so close carry. i want to start with you. there's a pull of presidential historians and the rates of effectiveness of all the presidents. donald trump is ranked as the 4th worst president, and that's behind it. went to the president. it was too drunk to speak. it isn't
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all your agent and the people that created the civil war. and but you're a trump supporter. i am yeah. explain it to me, what's the disconnect between what the leads, obviously present to the story and the leads and your support is, i mean you went to harvard. yes. it's a yeah. yeah, i got a masters from harvard. um yeah, i think the leads it so the contrast between commer harris and donald trump could not be more explicit because come over here as has never in her entire life received a presidential electoral vote. not even from our own party. she was selected by her party leads, and that is why i believe she's going to lose. where is donald trump? he was selected despite the party leads. he was selected by the grass roots of the party. and so i think we're talking about your democracy is under threat or democracy is under attack. quite often it is actually the leads themselves who do not understand democracy is about the root word is the people the most the people.
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and so there's a disconnect between these historians and the people who select the president's. now, the, the republicans, if you're looking to be like i got to get the yeah, the republican or the republicans really gone on this whole idea because it is a weird phrase. we've never seen the current president say like for 3 and a half months to go. you're right, i'm out of. so how would you say, but it seems like couple of harris has proven to be a more effective candidate then i think a lot of people thought before that day. so if what is this talking point about? the people didn't pick her all my colleagues absolutely correct. like tamela harris at the base of primary. joe biden was on the top of the ticket and it wasn't until july 21st, when he decided to step down and endorse his v p. i think it's a misnomer to say, but she was not selected because she was part of that ticket that was been running the primary and the voters didn't have an opportunity. the taxes are valid for a bite in harris administration. and the top of the ticket step down and then she
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stepped up and she was preparing for 3 years to be at the top of the tickets. right to the 2nd in command and the vice president. and so i don't think that it's accurate that she was not selected by people because there was a rightful primary period as well as the delegates at the bmc and the convention that route with their support and got behind it to represent their constituency. and so, yes, donald trump was elected by the people, but it's really important to note that he was not elected by the popular vote. he was elected final at pool college. and joe biden was due for the elective by the electoral college. and he won the popular vote, and so all of back the se, then providing the fight on the, on the ballot this year, a camel harris as his running mate is. just let me ask you this, because i think just to give a sense of the international audience, everyone's looking at the polls are incredibly tight. they're looking at 2016 when everyone's on. hillary clinton was going to win. i think a lot of people in america are expecting a repeat of that because the polls are so close. can you explain again for
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international audience, how much of a factor of racism and sexism could play in the selection? i mean, we're seeing black men saying that they won't vote for a woman and talk us through the just the general sense in this country. racism and sexism are obviously foundational to america unfortunately. but they're also somewhat more complicated then you might think there's definitely sexism among the black community just as their sexism in all communities. and that's going to be a factor. i think pollsters have a challenge because they are trying to figure out 2024 looking back at 2016 in 2020. and those are very different election cycles and they're very different with respect to race and they're very different with respect to gender. i think hillary clinton is deemed to be the model for how female candidates operate and what they, how they perform, and perhaps how they under performing the electorate. but i think come on,
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harris has proven herself to be a far superior candidates to hillary clinton. i think she was a rock star and the democratic party for 20 years. so uh yeah, you can say clearly did not win the nomination in a traditional matter. but for 20 years she was identified as somebody who could overcome racism, who could overcome sexism and could be a star. and i think she is in the last few months campaigns like people expected her to for the last 20 years. okay. so, you know, this is so interesting, i was talking to a political scientist, but it was the one of the most. and we're one of the that i respect the most and all of washington. and she said that this is going to be the end of modern polling because of how ever it turns out. and she went into a really long explanation which i can understand. but kerry and i told you she was really smart cherry. one thing that is never discussed by either side is the debt and the deficit. and under trump, he said he was gonna cut it by fit it, but it went up to 50 percent 14.4 trillion to $21.00 trillion and half of that was
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the pandemic. but the bible brought up to $27.00 to. busy $10.00, i mean, that's an insane amount of money to be for a country to. oh so why is it not an issue and do you think either candidate is actually going to address it if they get to the white house? yeah. so i, in 2020, when all the spending was rushed there under chum, i repeatedly asked the term and ministration. what about these dots? what about the depth system? so uh, i understand there was sponsible, this is an unprecedented pandemic. this is why it needs to happen. i wasn't convinced, and now we are seeing massive fraud that came as a result of how quickly it was rush through. and yes, i agree that both f as does that and f as it should be, address. i've been speaking with people from the trump likely beach, had economic team about this issue. they say that it is a priority for them. the committee to at least prosperity, which has a number of people who were in the trump economic white house. they say this is one
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of the top issues, and this is something that must cause, talked about that the, the massive, you know, pairing down of the federal bureaucracy is part of that. and it's something that needs to happen in order for us to get our fiscal house in order because our interest payments alone are going to be surpassing the amount we pay on our defense . and so it's going to be continuing to crowd out education spending and numerous other priorities. know, 3 for half of the increase was not pandemic, but i get your point now that i want to talk to you about what i'm seeing right now . i don't think our audience can cx, the trees are blocking it. the white house is now fenced off. their security perimeter of the white house. businesses are boarding up their windows all around this area. capitol hill? it's. it's freaky. how word are you about violence? cuz i did this is just weird. well, i went up to odd. it's weird. so i students think this is normal. and so for me that's tricky because my students came of age during that were born during the
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obama era. i became a little kind of age and awareness thorn from the era. and for them they are preparing for political violence just like you prepare to go back to school shopping or right, any other routine part of american politics. is this become the new normal for jen z? and i think it really is something that's off putting for, i'm gonna geriatric millennial is off putting the for some of us who remember a time where political violence was something that we watched on television in other countries. and as a professor of american government, something that we often didn't talk about in terms of a what, 12 politics. and i think it is this new era, particularly when a bunch of, you know, new american people have been voting some for the 1st time. others that this will be their 2nd presidential election are pretty accustomed to political violence. so this perhaps might be the new norm, all the way that we've been desensitized to school shootings and math violence. first generation, the same political violence as something that is that's routine. as america,
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you're going to, you've given me something, you look up geriatric millennial didn't know that existed jeff, i would have talked to you about the poles and there's a pull in iowa from a really respected poster cuz i mean, i followed her for decades. she puts harris up above trump, up 3 percent. iowa is, i mean, just thought of iowa going democrat is just unheard of, or the polls going to be right on this or they completely wrong. so after being wrong in 2016 and then 2020 fosters have a gun to their head. they not literally got it. yes, we were to probably not literal, literally, by the thing like, some people are suggesting, the pulling industry could be dead. and there's definitely a lot of reputational risk. and i think what is going on is that holsters cannot be on wrong. and under estimate from 3 times in a row,
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if they underestimate harris, after having underestimated trump, well that just seems like pulling it's hard. it's to go either way. if they under estimate trump a 3rd time in the row, there is a problem. and so there's been a lot of discussion and you hear this chatter in washington dc. that posters are when they're creating their models of who's going to vote in what voters to way higher or lower, that they are making sure that they are not underestimating trunk. but and selzer is an iconic figure within the need square all the of the american political polling and as such as she has been bold before. she was much more pessimistic for clinton in 2016 than many of her peers. she has a long history of being different and willing to trust the data rather than trying to herd to where everyone else is. so that is, i think, a significant reason for democratic optimism. but then again,
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it's one poll and there can be weird thing. so only in washington, do we have rockstar posters? yes, exactly. it is. in fact true. we do have rock star posters. thank you all. that was a very important discussion. so with just one day before election day, let's check out what the both of the candidates are up to on this monday kala harris is set to campaign and several cities in the battleground state of pennsylvania. will donald trump, will hit cities in the 3 feet. the 3 key swing states, north carolina, pennsylvania, and michigan and al jazeera will have comprehensive special coverage on election night make sure to join us from $22.00 gmc on tuesday, november 5th. that's tomorrow. ok, so that's it. from here in washington dc, we'll hand it back now to laura and the rest of the team in the past. a many things indeed. well, let's bring you know, a jack on the web and hit that button. hello, we have another developing tie. started making his way towards the north west pacific will close it on that's in a moment. i have it flat, but we have got
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a lot of dry, dry and settled weather for mount chauffeur. china too bad across the crate. potentially this feature here that will bring some cooler fresher, designs, blustery showers in across the good parts of japan thinking my wife or the south with an east with as we go for tuesday and on into wednesday. so some, what's the weather coming through here? what scars come back into the korean peninsula? and i think safe, i'm not to china, it is jen recycle. i'm fine. look a little further south. this is a developing tie food color as a tropical storm is making its way very close to the north of the philippines that will run between the philippines and the taiwan as we go through the next couple of days. a lots of wet weather coming through here. it just gets pushed a little further south. may we as it to just bumps into those ne leave wins those waves, bringing some wet weather into uh, in the china garage, the showers the across southeast asia rush. that was to into southern positive india into troy lanka to try whether it's i for the northern plains of india,
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few showers into the final face into the pool. but hot and dry baptist dom, still a head hair on this house. is there a news on the most innocent casualties of war, a rising number of children in less than a being injured or killed and israel's increasing attack? the unique perspective we don't want ahead to well, but we no longer have any private spaces on the incident. that's a scary well on heard voices a year into this genocide, it still remains large, one section to connect with our community and tap into conversation if you don't mind elsewhere. but humanity, the number of people who want to stop sending weapons has gone up and up, despite what they hear in the mainstream media in the united states. the stream on out just the, or a libya torn apart for over
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a decade. the squad don't care about the country, but good ideas from the past and the term while drinking 3, sensitive to types, need those urgent them to embrace forgiveness. subjects violence. join l g 0 world on a historical journey with the poets and a composer. creating an answer them for peace lips, a voice for reconciliation, phonology era. the other again you are watching al jazeera has remind you of on top stories this our u. s. presidential candidates and making the final pictures with just one day to go
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. that's what you said the election democratic has that kind of hire says expected in the swing state of pennsylvania, the final push, make sure that is critical to securing have cost to the white house. and the arrival of donald trump. few sundays, ronnie's across 3 swings days to accuse the democrats of trying to break the elections. he has another punch day of campaigning ahead of 3 of us across north carolina and pennsylvania before his final run in michigan. later on monday, the is there any forces are again talking residential areas in northern gaza. at least 5 people were killed on monday in the attack near the owners or at refugee camp. it's part of a month from siege, which has killed hundreds of palestinians including children in recent days. fuel prices are on the way now to come out and one hospital in, but last year. but people i believe, to be trapped on the russel is rarely forced,
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as recently talked to the nursery destroying essential medical supplies, including an oxygen station the sides of the houses of cities after they destroyed our oxygen station. many of the children lost their lives. this little baby mohammad is the only survivor. his entire family of 6 people were killed. he's only 4 days old as baffling to survive. his life is hanging by a thread. busy here a come out loud one hospital, we are suffering not only from a shortage of medical supplies, but also a total absence of doctors and medical staff. as well has notified the united nations but its counseling, its agreement with the main agency for palestinian refugees. millions of palestinians, including any will of golf as population depends on our view and was canceling. the agreement will lessen the humanitarian catastrophe with the consequences across the occupied territories. jeanette toma is the online global director of communications,
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and she joins us now from a my money. thanks for being with us. to outline forest of how this fun is going to affect unrest, operations in goals and the occupied territories. thanks for helping me look at the immediate level we um there was absolutely no i'm fine. how are you really? sorry. i know probably something gone continues to the degree possibly with the many restrictions that we have but takes on our programs. even westbank interesting issue. some of them are also happening as usual. for example, are the schools that provide the learning for 50000 boys and girls? i for the most bang are open today. they're open today, but the file is gonna come into place and that within 30 days what will happen then? a nice thing you can find a sound correct key, the bam is effective in 90 days,
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non 0. thank apologies. so it's less okay. it's a waste against time for number of states around the world to work with distinctive as well to nothing payments are based on the spam. you see. 2000000 people in golf um, depend on now for the shoes. the violin, including fitness systems, on primary health care. the question is, who is going to replace on route? and in the context all, when there's more finally comes to an end, who will provide education and your name to what we estimate this $400.00 pounds in boys and girls will go to the school to what is the plan? we don't have any answer to that. no, because this rel says that it will work with alternative agencies, alternative organizations. but what, who would they be? right. um, so for example, any united nations agencies that have education home in smell that is not able to
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run the schools like under the us use the we are the only united nations agency in the world that wrong 700 schools that provides education to more than half a 1000000 boys in those, no other united nations agency is keep the thing to do this in the sense of a political solution for up and just and in the fifty's there was no alternative this to us, so it's easy to solve it. so the question is, what are you going to do about them and how are you going to the fee to avoid you? meaning the state of israel. oh, i heard of the outrage about this so far because ultimately it damages the credibility of united nations in the, in this has nothing to fact against against the, into a i hate to, to multilateralism. we have received extensive them excellent sonya there and see over the past few days when the beat was passed at the is really part of the
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man, including from united nations agencies, officers from the sector 3 john and from many, many, many, many of the states with our donors included now is the time to translate that sonya diety, into action, that has to be work with the state of israel. and do this. i'm off to implement at the be and put it for the i have to say this very clearly, the consequences of implement things function. they are going to be catastrophic. they are going to have the lives of people who are already hanging by the threat of the serious, serious risk. we're talking about 2000000 people who are relied for their share of step 5 and on and now is real claims that hundreds of employees were involved in october 7th attacks. so the u. n. investigation into that ended with just 9 the hours of some, $13000.00 people being funded, essentially disapproving that claim. and yet it persists in passing this bill
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labeling it a terrorist organization is not like the balance of the united nations investigation, but was done externally to and sad about in the case all 9 staff members where the allegations were received, particularly, or about the participation in but i would say 7 of october, the fact that it is so the evidence that was good find the to the investigation is not evidence was open to keep the opening. there might be the possibility that indeed all staff members have participated. this fact that the commission and i'm going to call and decided to terminate the contacts all these stock numbers. why did they do that for fear of any introduction to the live saving human? attainable ration that is wrong by the inside. they've got a strip. so these where allegations and it's important, we only remember that the old list is happening at
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a time that the new when is demanding. israel get more humanitarian aid in to gauze . if i've got this timeframe wise, it was to be within 30 days and not deadline. comes within 2 weeks. so how does this fits with? that's all we're going to see the us finally taking a hard line with it as well. that i remember what i do now is just before coming on here, we just looked at the latest task for october and in october, on average, every day we're only just over the 13 trucks of humanitarian aid and out into outside much in searcy trucks, as opposed to $500.00 truck that used to come in the 6 percent off, the extra the needs of the population population. but there's all responding many, many people that are stick best. plenty of women, older people and children that have got to be more of a sense in the golf and also to allow them down to bottom and administrate that
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assistance that comes into gone during that time out. we appreciate you taking the time to come on to l 0 to highlight the critical role that unwrapped plays in gaza and you'll find touch me as many thanks. i now as well as being accused of trying to create buffer zones and know them, garza and southern lebanon. correspondence, stephanie deca has more on that research by planet lab shows the extent of destruction israel has inflicted on the border towns and villages in southern lebanon. and now we're going to zoom in on just 3 examples to show you what's happening basically long this border, or this is the lebanese border village of yeah, i don't know. this is october of last year. i looked at the right. and that's one year on look how much of it has been destroyed. and then if we move a few kilometers further west, we're heading to 8. the aisle shop again. going, remember these are homes and lives you're looking at. these were communities just
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a few kilometers on to them. yeah. the same alter devastation. and again, this shows you the difference over here. and this is how much damage has been done . so i'm yeah, that's the same village by israel in just the last month. totally gone now many unless suggested this is part of israel strategy to establish buffer zones inside. so the 11 on merits northern border, just as it seems to be doing in northern goal is that this was about yeah, in october and the few remaining palestinians, they're being ordered out by israel. these harrowing, i'm chilling images were released by the is really army, a forced displacement of a people last spring and then i'll come climb. he's a professor of political science and buying on university joins us now from west to was let me get to have you back on the program. why would israel inflict such total destruction in these areas? if not, to create buffer zones?
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or this one was it is really, really 3 months and bought for his own photo and zip code lapse of a boulder line and the world that is ready to build a ground. gaza strip in october 7. and instead of the less that the boulder system and who doesn't go to work in favor is really security. they want to expand this very trailer experience in to the gaza strip and double and triple the number of visually soldiers on the other side of the go up there all day buffer zone between is one and and the same. yes. and they want to clean those and gaza from it's severely as so it, it,
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these very militaristic group of the you man, i to do the both days where the army added to that was done year old was perhaps more than was declared that he wants being not certification of the palestinian education system. so it's not the only claiming the space, the geographic of space. he wants to clean the mind and the conscious of the c. s and locked into their soul at different ideology. okay, let me just jump in that because these, these, these zones, i mean, declaring all of them, it's happening in plain sight. does that suggest that this plan has the tacit approval of the us on it? i assume that's not. that's so far. it also depends whether the
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republicans or the democrats, when the elections endued in 2 days time. i think i assume the trump of this version will be more on the but the studio. well, i think most of them actually defend a democratic regime. but generally speaking, with bill graphs are in the same page with islam, it gets big what they call jointly excess of every iran hispaniola. hum us and that they don't speak, they stop talking about the 2 state solution in the near future. they postpone it to the far future. so there is no present. the colors go that they've. okay, man, i'll come, climb may, thanks indeed for taking the time to join us here on the challenges era was re forces of attacked residential homes in southern lebanon. dozens of explosions
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could be seen in the neighborhoods of mesa, all chapel and the may much are you in the district? the houses on their hospital is what it says. it's trying to avoid civilian casualties by issue enforced evacuation mornings before striking what it says. all hezbollah targets in lebanon, but the charge is safe for children says more than $100.00 children have been killed this since the end of september. charles profit reports from the root and a warning, but some of you may find the images in this report to stopping 2 year old ivona is slowly recovering from a 3rd degree burn. she saw that opportunities really as striking, close to home and something living. and she felt that extensive funds on her head face, and i saw them how much says he and many others never received these regular evacuations, right? because the mobile phone network was down that should not be that was distract
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close by. the house was shaking. i. com describe it are someone who can go on the balcony. i saw her old black and looking at me because of a charlie's pain from under the rubble following. these really striking because the something level of this is happening everyday. living in the ministry of health says mold in 1200 children have been injured. nearly $200.00 killed since the beginning of hostilities between his bola and is really not sober last year. but since the stall to the escalation, at the end of september, the number of child casualties as increased at the shocking grade for children were among the 18 people killed in this strike strike that israel says was targeting hezbollah member. but that's full of children. of the move in 100 children killed in lebanon during a 5 week period, according to the organization, save the children, and that averages moving to children,
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killed every day. these are some of the mold and 400000 children, with the families of being forced to flee the homes. they receive psychological support, the shelter setup on the united nations children phone unicef bye route. the 11 year old nama and his family narrowly escaped a series of these rarely strikes in the southern city of time, that we were on the road. and there was a hit between 2 buildings. and the rent was one of the colleagues here in the building. the it was scan, i felt mike is paul. now i'm his mom. i describes what she felt well trying to protect the children. i think the fear was possible. every parent was holding their children tightly with fear while trying to keep the children calm. the guilt of possibly not protecting them. and of course,
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crushing yulusef says the psychological soul and children in lebanon is growing as all the number of those like ivana, injured and probably disfigured for life. but she liked the growing number of children killed in this world. he's at least alive. tell us drop it down to 0. they route the emergency services in spain's eastern valencia beach and continuing the rescue efforts of the foss floods caused by heavy down for sale. that is 270 people survive as an undergrad, what they say is a slow response by the government. so they go joins us now from chiva in the province of valencia is. so here's show us how the clean up operation is going to tell us how people are because they were in no small part. people are managing to cope because of the enormous support they're receiving from each other
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amongst the community. here they're out in the streets. they've been cleaning everything up and it is an enormous difference when we came here just 3 days ago when everyone was engaged, including people from out of town as well, mainly well. so farm is with heavy equipment and we're bringing their own tractors and all the vehicles to be able to clear away that rubble which it was pretty much all over the town. now if i just step out of the picture here, you'll be able to see exactly why the situation still is so dangerous. this is the ravine where a, rec, what amount of was a file you had basically 20 months worth of water folding and just 8 hours. and it caused a devastating flash floods as well. you can see the effect of it here. and in fact, overnight, even more damage that was close to these houses here. still a car because of course these structures are very unsafe. you had was collapsing
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overnights as well. and we've been speaking to families as well, who's been having to leave the homes this morning because that being told that it's just simply not say it's enough for them to remain in the homes. so all in a while there is efforts now by official rescue services. we've seen the ministry here as well, coming in with vehicles helping out participation. yeah. it is the community itself, which has been doing the bulk of that work. a very close feeling of between neighbors here who been doing the utmost to try and keep the spirits of of a live mean the people who live here and there. and valencia may be saying the region cleaning up, but flooding is now happening, isn't it? and elsewhere, no visa improvements of catalonia, what will, can you tell us about that? while it seems to be subsiding somewhat, however, there are still red warnings in place because you'll still refuse announcing need
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to keep away from dry river beds, which is a source and can trigger off of flash gloves. some of those awful devastating things that we store and balance, so happened in specifically those areas as well. you've had public transports also being affected as well as flights. people taking the most caution that they can in order to avoid some of the west, things that have been seen here in volunteer province. okay. for like a go joining us that from valencia in spain. thanks sonia. now at least 36 people have been killed in northern india after a boss lost control and crushed into a deep gorge. it happened to be a more a district of cons. it was a crime and the bus skidded before plunging down a 16 need to valley local officials say the over crowded vehicle was poorly maintained. a still has hair on i'll just sarah rainbow ok also
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saw paula with max vistaprint closing in on the championship title and how these days are those details? i mean the,
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[000:00:00;00] the things that some support now as much stuff on is closing in on the formula. one well title also he won a thrilling rein, interrupted san pablo. gone pre some size, land has more clear enough. what do you guys get over?
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that is a lovely it will go down as one of the greatest weather, victories of all the time of the going 10 races without to win the step and was losing his grip from the championship. but despite starting down and 17th, the 3 time will champion produce something special to closing on the full that the north started in pole position 4 races left to overtake the does champion in the standings. it was never going to be straightforward. the intervention conditions, norris and george russel post the pit stops in most positions when the safety car came out. but then came the turning points, a red flag with the crash, frankly called a pinto, which meant a free pit stop for everyone else. russell made his feelings known, red flag, the red flag said it's sure to state out another mistake from norris and a harsh less than a team strategy. the sort of
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a step in search ahead and hopes of victory, you know, setting the 17, i knew that it was going to be a very tough phrase, but uh, we stayed out of trouble. we made the right calls, you say come, we refine so all of these things together, of course made that result possible. but i mean, i don't believe we'll do any or from so far back on the yeah. the steps are now 62 points ahead and will become world champion in las vegas in 2 weeks. if he has a lead of at least 60 points from size and out 0 and the us music tight and quincy jones, he's multi decade career. we shaped pope and boston over the size of the age of $91.00. the is hits on sold both of those. i was among many tribes to be we discovered by later generations. jones worked with the industry. the biggest names including frank sinatra, month's investment credits was as
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a producer of michael jackson's back told breaking fella. album. that's it for me, laura karl. so the news us, we're back in amendments with more of today's the the us selections are finally here from headquarters will bring you live coverage as events and phones. from here in washington dc, we will have special guess examining the challenges of wincing. the next present plus reaction from across the united states. i'll be live on the road with the harris campaign, and they'll be reporting on team 2. i'm assuming that we could push on the swing speed join us for nights of special coverage in what could be the most globally consequential race to the white house in modern science. the us selections on the house is the it was reported to look at actual
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information on the ground. looks at the way that this issue is framed in the media . how it's used to justify the escalation fu escalation, anything new years that are you know, the media and they think it's how it is weaponized is, is online push has been aimed at the smartphone generation. the 1st ever female let this operational, thank you. like what they are trying to sell right now is a full blown genocide, the listening pace, because the media on al jazeera, i might be the only woman in the room, the only black person, definitely the only most from grass roots activism to the holes of power a courageous fate representative struggles to pass a ceasefire resolution because with taking center stage was moving against the time takes on weight is like a ripple and it keeps people energize, to keep fighting for 90 percent. as i stand up for medina,
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witness on the jersey to the us selections. the find me here. join us on november the 5th as the results come in and we analyze what they will lean for the us and the rest of the us selections on algebra. the, the kind of the her as proposed to spend the last day of campaigning and the swing states of pennsylvania trying to mobilize the mails. i've the other them. all right, kyle: this is out. is there a life from the also coming up? donald trump is that to attend ronnie's in 3 separate swing states on monday. well,

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