tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera November 4, 2024 6:00pm-7:01pm AST
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sanctions connect with our community and tap into conversation as you know, find 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 the, [000:00:00;00] the hello, i'm patty. go ahead and live in washington dc. this is the al jazeera news, our with our special coverage of the us selections coming up. the campaign answer enters is final stress with less than 24 hours until decision dates. cala harris, that's her sites on the one state pennsylvania which could be crucial to paving her way to power. donald trump,
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for parents to visit the 3 battleground states. a day after telling supporters he shouldn't have left the white house after he lost the last election. 9 sammy's a down in the hall. so i had this news out the lights. this is riley strike on northern dogs. that kills at least 15 thomas opinions. as the month long siege of the news intensive fives and rescue workers in eastern spain. such a multi story on the grounds, comp, victims of catastrophic floods in valencia, the hello and welcome to washington dc. there's just one day left before tens of millions of voters here in the u. s. head to the polls to pick the next president. after spending months on the road, the candidates are on their final leg of campaigning with a focus of course. as always, on certain states, tomlin harris is set to visit several cities in the battleground state of
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pennsylvania. that's after holding a rally and another swing state michigan on sunday. busy appealing to black motors, donald trump will head cities in north carolina, pennsylvania and michigan. in the past few days, he's repeatedly criticized the election process and went so far as to suggest that it shouldn't have left the white house after he lost the election to joe biden. in 2020 on tuesday, we've been working for 9 years. we did a great job with the best economy ever. we had the war, we had everything. i built over 500 miles or they didn't even talk about the war. but we had the best border, the safest border. i won't pull down my world's favorite directors. i don't want to waste a lot of your time, but my world's favorite job done by the border patrol. it said we had the safest border in the history of our country. the day that i left i shouldn't have left. i mean, honestly, because we did so we did so well. as harris hudson,
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pennsylvania for her final push to appeal to voters on sunday, she made her closing pitch in michigan here in michigan. right now each of us has an opportunity to make a difference. because in this moment we face a real question. what kind of country do we want to live in? what kind of country do we want for our children and our grandchildren? a country of chaos, fear and hate, or a country of freedom, justice, and compassion. the else is there has correspondence in locations right across the united states. this our were to speak to mike hannah, he's in pennsylvania. john holden in nevada. but 1st to fill it out in north carolina. so still it's been a good couple of days talking to you. he's back in north carolina. he spent a lot of time there. why slow christ. i
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finally policy. he's concerned, you know, he's been here. we usually when say, saturday, sunday, now on the last day a company, they are concerned that they could lose. they say that let me show you why this might give you some indication. he's on stage at 7 know crowns, right? i think to so many of these events and these barriers put up because you will have thousands of people lining up to get inside the school. got again, but still being allowed to go and stuff. there are a few copy ups that we have to. i points out 1st of all, that if you letting people in for a while, so it's not necessarily as busy as it could have been. but then again, at these events, you do tend to find those that are still crowds of people outside. just wanting to watch it on, on the screen. second leave we are in a democratic area. we're in raleigh. so again, you would expect that to be more higher supports is what's driving down the road. you see a lot of the science so you would, you would expect that to be more har. support is that perhaps fewer trump support is. but again, this is a 7 and a half 1000 seat, a capacity. they booked it for a reason. like for these vari is out for a reason. i'm of course you have to remember it's monday morning, especially if people have a cheap we'll have to go back to us again. that said,
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it is the day before the election on the site and some people gotta get to say that they have decided to take the morning off because they want to be here. donald trump wouldn't have to worry about this a few months ago when he was worried where he was off against joe biden. but we've seen those post types and they tend to have him in the least by about one point already. one point is not much to right have about. that means it's pretty much a locked in a dead heat between the 2. yeah, so the republican candidate for the governor of north carolina is how shall i say this excessively controversial? does it seem like the trump team is worried that it can be made drag on the ticket? well, they're not going to publicly bought. we have seen them try to distance themselves from mark robinson. here's the amount that was hand picked by donald from. and they were sent together a lot in the early days, but, but from said there was this expos, a on one of the us tv networks. i'll because a lot like phrase that, but he was electrical himself in the past,
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a block not. so he said that he supported slavery, he's anti abortion. he's on the guy, and he made some that's a set your remarks that we call and repeat. donald trump campaign is already waiting on this, but what are the pay is mark robinson is uh, uh, tons of it like donald trump, who appeals to that outrage side of people. but that seems to be that limits it. i would type for that from somebody who is not donald trump. josh stein, who is the democrats, who was running against him, is way ahead and the powers were talking about 15 points on any given day around about the more problems. and is that you raised about 10 percent north carolina does have a history of voting for a republican president. for when it comes to governors, they do tend to vote democrat. so that's why we've not seen pops donald trump endorsement problems, and she, much of like thank you so much so. so what's now good luck to michaela who is in philadelphia. it's one of the cities in pennsylvania. we're kind of le harris . we'll be campaigning later on. monday uh hi, mike,
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this just to you to sum everything up. i've been here in from dc, pennsylvania, pennsylvania, pennsylvania. a simple question to you. why is it so important? yes, indeed. what behind me is independence whole, which is where the constitution was ratified both and 240 years ago, sparking off the democratic process, which climax is yet again, in the next 24 hours. why is pennsylvania so important? 19 votes in the electoral college that is the biggest of any of the 7 swing states that also critical to the results of the selection. now, pennsylvania has been switching backwards and forwards for a period of time bite, and one it in 2020 trump one that's in 2016, but critical to this particular race is the nature of the state. now, pennsylvania has a government, a judge shapiro, who is incredibly popular within the state one by some 16 percentage points. now he
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was counted as a possible running late for harris. however, she made another choice, but shapiro came behind to he put in his mechanism to support a race, and this was absolutely crystal for the chances of harris's success. now another thing that is very, very important is a demographic that is actually critical to the success of the democratic party. we're ready to drive to get noticed through the polls is 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 56 $1000000.00 in the seventy's. that's around states. a key demographic will come on. the harris in particular is 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,
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the most loyal of democratic party support is. a recent poll indicates that harris's lead over trump, among white women under the a just city is the team points. but among the 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 of the best campuses are those who look like the people they office waiting to vote because this consistency and because of the demographic 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. 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 the selection, black women are primarily affected by each and every,
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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 grandmother, when it comes from your mother, when it comes from your aunt. when it comes from ms. mary down the street, who always has the barbecue in the summertime. the messenger matters even more so than the actual message, the local community leda. nicky royal and says black women are fighting for the freedoms of old gen 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. as the sign is stuck to in philadelphia commemorates those who fought for freedom. and joining the ranks of the soul of 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 we've been talking
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a lot about swing states that because that's because the outcome of the race for the white house could come down to those southern states. the system to choose a president is based on the electoral college. here's alj a 00, then yay on how it works. it is the thing we are all focused on is the results come in the electoral college and each side's road to 270 the number of electoral votes needed to win the white house. here's our starting point, 43 states and washington dc. you're either reliably read or reliably blue. that means complet harris can already count on 225 electoral votes, and donald trump on 219. now it's not totally guaranteed, but it's pretty likely on both sides. the election will be decided, therefore, in these 7 swing states, which between them carry $93.00 electoral votes along with the one congressional district in nebraska. the yellow square here will come back to that later or harris's easiest past. the victory runs through the so called blue wall. that's
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wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania right here. turning these 3 states, red is what put donald trump in the white house 8 years ago, turning them back to blue, made joe biden, presidents. but because of the actual votes have been redistributed since the last election reflecting population shifts, those 3 states are no longer quite enough. winning them would put harris at $269.00. 1 votes julia victory. she would still need one more state to put her over the top. now trumps wrote to 70 starts with holding north carolina state. he won last time by just 1.3 points. if trump wins the blue wall and holes, north carolina, he's at $279.00. he wins, but lose north carolina and he's a 263 still 7 votes choice. if he holds north carolina, trump could even lose the biggest swing state of pennsylvania and still make it the 270 by winning either arizona with 11 intellectual votes or georgia with
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16 electoral votes. you would need just one of those states, not both. let's go back now to that. earlier scenario harris holds the blue wall and trump takes the other 4 swing states. that's what it looks like. that would leave harris at $269.00 and trumpet to $68.00, which brings us back to nebraska. it is one of the just 2 states main being the other that splits it's electro vote according to who wins each of the states congressional districts now stay with us and this one, since 1992 nebraska to as formerly known, has gone against the rest of the state twice, giving one electro both to brock obama in 2008, one to jo, buying in 2020 in this scenario is harris held onto that boat, which is basically the city of oma. she's president. but if trump wins it, then we're tied to $60000000.00 each. if that happens,
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it is the us house of representatives which chooses the next president with each state getting one vote. that is something that hasn't happened in nearly 200 years . another thing state is in play, that is of course in nevada, where we find john hallman, he's going to join us now from las vegas. hey john. so i think we haven't really been at the haven't having a chance to talk to you. why is nevada in port the right street? hudson mission tool can expect to swing states. it's about 6 of them. but it could still be crucial because it's rice and southern climb. so relating to issues here, it's got one of the highest unemployment rights in the united states, one of the highest cost of living to right. so, so got something else. there are more registered known parts as invited, susan, nevada, than they're on democrats and republicans on certain things. and just putting into
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this state, i'm really of the terms and kind of a her as haven't. my name is going to handle that, that connect care in a statement school. another thought was population as well. 30 percent on the population latino, there will send them to the kid hit. so it has other things in place for nevada. so one of the things you hear when you talk to voters and all of the spring states is housing, they're really, really annoyed by the costs of housing rents or high home prices are high, getting a mortgage is expensive. what is going on with housing in america? as it probably is just know enough for what you can see behind me. this is affordable housing is going up in the outskirts of las vegas. why isn't there enough affordable housing in the state. so as i come from clinton, st bills as an experts, one of those is read type of restrictions and taxes from local authorities. when it
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comes to just getting the line i'm in building on it for they serve as another problem as well. so many things now in the science that water in my backyard is there's your existing local residence and running price isn't. phone won't really building without splinters of pressure on schools. curious, it was supermarket, whatever it is, and retrieve those 2 factors. there's not enough building during the united states and there's a huge cost through that about how some people in me are going through sites that are renting and things, you know, i'm not spending starting percent. oh, very income on the rents unless especially a cure this program in nevada and you said in our report. busy house probably, she's going up in nevada and not just barely to the one who buys one an emmy and looking at his w. i said, he's samuels simply, i it, almost about 10 years ago it was easier to buy a house. you now times have changed. personally,
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i love this one. come my salary isn't going to be enough. in this back to grand state, from vegas to reno, verizon, brent and the house price is, is an election issue of driving the increased cash rich buyers from neighboring welfare california local wages, just not keeping up the worst affected those at the bottom of the latter part of the fact that it's a lot rosario, showing me eviction. what is she says a room went up by almost 50 percent in 2 years. then you're going to try to kick her in a family out of a c k. every time i saw a court order at my door, it was hugely stressful because i knew i had to find a solution. that's no easy. she cooks and a food truck hunting $2000.00 a month. she doesn't know where she's going to go next. there's a huge deficit of mostly price properties here. housing for low income families is being built in nevada, but the mound is really out stripping supply just right now,
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the state, so i can about 80000 affordable housing units. meanwhile, more than 2 thirds of low income households here are on the danger line, spending of a 30 percent, their income of rent, a lot of families of 15 or more folks have been living under the same roof uh to be able to afford rent, or folks who have to pay uh, either their groceries or a light bill and they have to decide on whether which bill to pay a it's a big national problem too. so what are the candidates proposing? we are going to cut red tape and work with the private sector to build 3000000 new homes by the end of my 1st term. and this from donald trump, specifically to nevada. i will work with you governor, to open up new tracks of federal land for large scale housing construction and you'll get it from much lower price. many votes is here,
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a desperate for something to work. as the hold on shelter gets more, not less precarious. joan, home and out. is it a las vegas? all right, now let's interview our pedal guest as our way of carry sheffield. she's a conservative commentator and senior policy analyst at the international woman's voice. we're also joined by nadia brown, professor of government at georgetown university. and we have with us, of the knox, senior national, corresponded at us news and world report. i was just thinking, this is my favorite part about l 0 because you're not just talking heads we have between us 3 masters degree is a ph. d from universities like factors, harbor, johns hopkins. mine was not one of those. so let me, i want to start with you, the polls. it's just like, why are we keep polling because everyone's going well. i don't know. it's a tossup, it's 5050 to buy it, to buy that it's a tossup i do actually, um, i think what we saw in 16 and 20 was a 2 presidential election, decided by tens of thousands of votes and
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a handful of swing states as you and your correspond to able to documented a are for the show. there is one big question about this, right? which is the, if the polls missed the way they missed in 20162020 been donald trump is the next president had states. if the polls missed the way they missed in 2022, when they underestimated the, the power of the reproductive rights argument from the democrats then kind of the harris is likely to be the next president. okay. there's also a world in which these to all of these states swing the same direction and we end up not so much with, you know, pennsylvania going one way in wisconsin. going another. but one candidate carrying all of these which case will have an electro college rump. okay, so which one is it? i was born at night, but not last night. see, i said you are more than a talking head are valiant. one of the things that we've been focusing on a lot in our coverage is that when you look at again the falls, yes. harris is the vice president, harris is not getting the status report. the job i did with really 2 groups. which
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of those groups and why? so what's it making a news? a lot is what's going on with black men. and so it's really important to understand that no democrat can win without black supports. and black women reliably democratic voters voting for the democrats, upwards of 90 percent. that's also a problem because that means that their vote is essentially captured by the democratic party and the republicans aren't doing enough to reach out to, to black women. but black women are also reliable democratic voters, the racial life, engender gap is much, much closer for african americans. and there are for other groups like we've seen, those are white americans. but if african american men are moving slowly over to the republican side, it really damages the coalition that a couple of harris would need to win some states flat out. and so my, i, for when we start counting the votes, and what reliable has happened is what our black men doing. i don't think they were donald trump and their public if they're going to pick up
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a large number of black men. but it would be no notable if he picks up even 2 to 3 percent, which shows that there is a small schism. but again, in comparison to other gender gaps, african american voters are most reliable democratic voters. jerry want to talk about the economy because that's your trump supporter, and that's where he gets his highest marks with voters. and i want to explain to people why because of this. so i want to talk about the michigan consumer suddenly cut the michigan university, michigan's consumer sentiment. paul wit, right before the pandemic trump score 101, i didn't even know it could go above a 100 and the lowest it ever. it's ever been was june 2022 under bite. and, but you are use it. presidents do have a role in inflation, but i've heard some economists say us, presidents don't impact inflation at all. and inflation is a huge issue. yeah, it is. and, and i didn't apparently been for him, we argue, and it's not just us, numerous other economists also argue that it's
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a presidential policy does in intent them with congress as well. so in the white house you have things like regulatory policies, so competitive enterprise institute and elsewhere, they've done analysis to show the regulation under trump versus biting, and biden put significant constraints on the economy on gross, even on things like what type of dishwasher i can have there are a lot more regulations and burdens under democratic white houses versus robinson white houses. there's also bills like depletion reduction act that was passed over by the breath of a hair. thanks to comma harris. economists have shown that that was a significant driver of inflation and so cumulatively, over the course of dividing white house wages, real waiters are, are below. so people feel less wealthy. they feel like they're underwater because we have a 20 percent price increase over the, the lifetime of the buy and ministration. and we look a gallop pulling the, the recent pulling on the top issue for voters. it's the economy. and that's why they trust republicans. and that's why trump's winning to 87 to 251 and the like pro college or that's your prediction. 42 real car politics. yeah, we're no,
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i don't buy off the depth of the a you and i cover george w bush together. we did add can you ok the immigrants are eating pets. uh yeah, i mean it protect women whether. busy liked it or not man was 90 plus felonies. he's actually convicted felon. so when we were covering george w bush, the scandal was like when he choked on a pretzel. how do you explain that this shift in this policy like this man, this, this rhetoric? well, he's, he's taking over the republican party, a body and soul. so it's now the, it's now she is part of the, you know, we didn't expect that necessarily to happen when he came down the escalator, a trump tower in 2015. but he has taken it over and he's taking it over as the sort of the consummate outside of someone who did not want to play by the the old rules of american politics by someone who was constantly testing the outer limits of what was permissible to say even from that very that,
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that very day when he announced and he's paid no significant political price, the party has the party wouldn't be in better shape in congressional races if he, if he and his endorse candidates, including for example, the, the republican gubernatorial candidate in, in in north carolina, for example, the party would be in better shape without the kind of company and rhetoric that we've seen. but he is not really paid a meaningful price for a uh, unless you want to argue that 2020 with some our vote a robust of, of that style of politics. okay. but we'll see what they say this time. nadia. i'm fascinated by the numbers of early, early voting. i had one person say to me, look, the republicans are voting in like record numbers and they're public and say, really building the edwards public and say see that's a good sign. but i've had other people say they think they're, those are republicans voting for harris. why are so many people voting early? and are they afraid to go to the polls because everything is so scary? oh, okay, so that's why i called, i feel like you're smarter than the average fairs. i love this. i love this sort of
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political science professor. i love seeing the numbers of more people voting early because it shows that more people are engaging in democracy. so the predictions are that americans are going to have record, turn out the selection because this is billed as a very consequential election. and i think that the because there to start choices between the direction of the country americans feel this as opposed to just the rhetoric of this is a very topic once election and we have to do it every 3 years or every 4 years, every 2 years. and americans don't understand why i think this election, people really understand why. and yes, there are people who are afraid to go to the polls. i've been doing a lot of community engagement here in dc and also some things online. but i had a real telling question when i visited a beauty salon last monday, and people were asking, was it the same for them to put their to do voting by mail or that they were them to go into the ballot box. and this is right after 2 ballot boxes had been blown up in oregon, in width and washington state. that's why i understand people's fear and trepidation
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from going into the ballad booth. but then they were also afraid of their vote, not counting. if they put this in the ballot box, and so i think doing some of this work, i'm just the spelling this about, you know, how, how likely is it that your vote will count on? won't count how safe for you if you are to go out and vote in person on tuesday as opposed to doing absentee ballot mailing in your ballot or voting early. all of these things have been questions that americans have had, and i think this is somewhat unusual like this hasn't been um, you have this level of local violence and the hyped up rhetoric around political violence. i think that this campaign and bad as alarming. and that's because we've never had a presidential candidate who refuses to concede or trust for to that it hasn't the instruction. so kerry, i think one of the biggest concerns for. busy the republican party is the issue of abortion. the supreme court decision is over well, mentally unpopular abortion access is going to be on the ballad of 10 states. is that going to be decided that the selection will again going back to gallop,
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they found abortion was. i think number 6 or 7 in terms of priorities nationally for what voters care about. most of the talk to anyone. i mean it's the gallup method ology. so yeah, it was. women are included. yeah. civic um, but the, uh, but the thing is uh, as a, as a woman myself and just speaking personally because independent women's firm does not take a position on abortion. abortion is about a human life at the end of the day. and that's really what it has to do. it also has to do with a man who impregnates a woman and that man needs to be held accountable, which is interesting because mike johnson, when he was not the speaker, he introduced a bill that would actually require any man and pregnant and a woman to be held financially responsible in utero for that child that he helped create. i think that's something that republicans should focus more on is making sure that men are held accountable because this is a driving reason why women get abortion is because they feel abandoned by men and us or something. if republicans care about being, you know, responsible, this is what they need to be doing to help support women there. i'm going to push
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back on next. there's plenty of married women who have husbands and need to get abortions for different reasons. but thank you all for being here. i think this was a very intelligent discussion and i really enjoyed it. i do ad l 0 will have comprehensive special coverage on election night. make sure to join us from 22, gmc on november the 5th. that's 5 pm. here on the east coast in the us, we're going to have coverage from across the country with guests and discussions, both here in washington, dc and in del, that's it from us here in washington dc. we'll hand it back now, 270 and the rest of the team in don't saying so much patsy. let's bring you what's coming up ahead here on out to 0 as well, telling the united nations it's cancelling its agreement with the aid agency that supports millions of palestinian refugees. and we report on the children of war in lebanon,
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the innocent lives maimed by as well as increasing attacks. the, the color of the weather is looking while the store will make the northern parts of odds and tina right over the next couple of days. little find a plan out here that will become more expensive, right across the river plates monday. going on into tuesday, really popping up? pushing across into power. why south is that drive right to where the coming back in behind bought a service. $26.00 celsius in the sunshine, blustery showers down to cost, southern positivity, tropical showers, right across the amazon, pushing up towards the caribbean. and here in the caribbean we have golf course the consent. we've got this last massive tab, which is a developing harken that'll become a tropical storm is it runs this way up towards jamaica. monday, coming on into tuesday to make a sing some really heavy rain. that is a ton of the k manadis. eventually that will push its way up to what was that
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western side of cuba, probably as a hurricane power compress the out. at this stage, that will push its way into the gulf of mexico. and we have seen lobby storms across across the deep south of the us, oklahoma with a raft of tornadoes. this long line of from the re down pools, slowly pushing its way further east was east disabled generally staying dry, bottom storms along that system there. and then behind that tiny wintry across the rockies, the, the climate has changed every year for millions of years, decades of talk, a little action. it's all about distract, create confusion to create smoking mirrors. the shocking truth about how the climate debates has been systematic, cir, purchased the oil industry, was a main bank roller or opposition. the climate act, the campaign against the climate. do you think that's a bad thing?
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most you to a different spheres? absolutely. on, on just even the humanitarian crisis and 11 and calls for immediate and says, day and action. okay. foundations loving an emergency response subs as a vital lifeline for many in desperate need. your donations can play a crucial role in alleviating suffering, promoting community wellbeing and contributing to the recovery. join ok, foundation and its mission to support 11 and during this critical time. cool now or visit okay, tool tool. the the
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photo back here watching, i'll just do a time to recap those headlines now with just one day left until the us presidential election. the candidates are having that final riley's and a bit to sway on decided both as democratic candidate kind of house is expected to arrive in the swing state of pennsylvania. the next few hours arrival. don't sound well, he'll be around across the 3 swing states of north. 1 a line of pennsylvania and michigan in the past few days, trump has repeatedly criticized the election process of this campaign events, claiming the polls of rick, the gates, the, the civilian desktop is rising across gall. so is this rel attacks homes and vital infrastructure? much of the north is now being reduced to rubble. palestinians that been cut off from basic necessities. well,
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this is the scene of the late to strike in the line here. these right of the army struck 2 homes, killing at least 15 people, the director of the nearby come, i loved one. hospitals says there isn't a single ambulance left in northern garza and that hospital is things hungry, advised lady shelley. it's the 2nd time it's been hit in as many days and honey. my mood joins us live from data by in central garza and honey. yesterday we were hearing from the director of the hospital that there is one doctor. one medical assistant left him come out on the wine hospital walk shape, is it in today? officer this intentionally signed me. the theory right now is the hospital list without anybody come in? stop after the he already tell you the targeted major parts of the hospital in the past hour. this is the 2nd time it was done a week was being this particular health facility right after this video manager,
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a band aid visual and every other medical emissions are from reaching to the hospital. busy damaging the medical warehouse that was designated on the 3rd floor that was last week. but again, ever since these medical emissions and the wto are banned from region to hospital is really monetary by no deterrence of from attacking the hospital repeatedly, the heavier identity cause injuries not only do the, the patients inside the hosp particular the children doesn't targeted the children ward pediatric department of the hospital also some of the medical stopped there were also critically injured from the attack then also preventing anyone from the out of scared of the hospital or from region to the hospital and provide any sort of assistance whatsoever. all of this combined along with the, the acute shortage of medical supplies and the fact that the hospitals turned into more of a graveyard and a positive view. this it just give many people doubt that this hospitality is able
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to provide any medical care whatsoever to the many of the injuries. lars transferred to the hospital and on foot for the most part or, or a truck or if cards for the vice animals because there are no single ambulances operating in the, in the northern part of district, the situation is, are, are becoming much more wave right now. not only for the civilian but also for the medical, the staff who have been there and working to. a misplaced to provide medical support, but not anymore it if you're now is growing and it's more concern to see this is happening to the only hospital that has lifted the northern part of this trip. thanks so much connie mcpherson, down in dallas. now israel has notified the united nations its canceling. its agreement with the main aid agency for palestinian refugees follows a recently approved is write a law which band oil under was 8 operations,
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millions of palestinians including manual of gauze. this population depends on the agency for survival view and is wanting cancelling the agreement worse than the humanitarian catastrophe. with di consequences across bill supplies howard treat julia to ma is under a global director of communications. she says as well as band will have catastrophic consequences, particularly for education. a hey, it's a waste against time for a number of states around the world to work with the state of as well, to nothing payments. they saw this, them, you see 2000000 people in golf of depend on now for their shoes to viable, including food assistance and finally 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 learning to what we estimate this $400.00 pounds in
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boys and girls who go to the school to what is the plan, we don't have any answer to that. for example, any united nations agencies that have education home in smell, that is not the able to run the school slide under. that as you see, 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 capability to do this in the absence of a political solution. for up and just and in the cities, there is no alternative this to okay, so it's easy to adult aid. so the question is, what are you going to do about them? and how are you going to the feet to avoid you? meaning the state of israel is writing forces of attacks, residential homes in southern lebanon. thousands of explosions could be seen in the neighborhoods of may so devil, and the motor to you and districts. the houses are near a hospital. several villages have suffered similar damage since, as well as ground defensive began,
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and 11. a. this rattle size is trying to avoid civilian casualties by issuing forced evacuation warnings before striking what it says off has the law of targets in the evidence. for the child with a save, the children says more than $100.00 children have been killed. that since the end of september, child strikes a report from beirut some view as may find the images in his report to be disturbing. 2 year old ivona, slowly recovering from the 3rd degree, burns. she suffered opportunities really as striking close to her home and saw 11. she saw fit extensive bones 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, the stairs ought to be. there was a start close by the house was shaking. i. com. describe it. are someone who can go
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on the balcony. i saw her old black and looking at me. charlie's pain from under the rubble following these really striking because the something level of this is happening every day. a lot of lockbox 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 11 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 sets up on the united nations children phone unicef by route. the 11 year old nama and his family narrowly escaped a series of these rarely storks, in the southern city of time, that we were on the road. then there was a hit between 2 buildings and the rent was the car is here and the building the it was scary. i felt like is paul nom as mom 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 will. he's at least alive. tell us drop it, i'll just 0. they root or i model on the shot a is, i'll just say are a senior political unless the joins us from here in doha and of course, oh, but we're reporting on model one, whether it's in lebanon or whether it's in terms of what's happening and garza is coming against the backdrop of the us selections. we just want 24 hours away. so let's talk about that. and let's take it step by step. and the 1st thing i want to ask you is taken off through the different rhetoric between the on, from, between pamela harris, when it comes to the middle east conflict, just the rhetoric before we get into actual policy issues.
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well clearly come of the highest is trying to balance out biden's diehard. the zionist approach to is right by the stein and to is or 11 on is unconditional support is a financing farming and enabling genocide in guys all just trying to balance that out, but not adequate, not enough in, as far as many of those passionate i'm a guns, whether they are out of america as was getting american progressive americans, even liberal americans who thinks that the by the administration should have done more, at least on the humanitarian, should try to address that in michigan, especially should try to say something about the need to stop the war and for the human if they're going to get in to stage solution to happen. so that's certainly important enough and i'm going to be contrasted with trump,
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who's simply was satisfied by saying i wouldn't be able to dissolve, but from the 1st day it would take me, i don't know how many hours to resolve it, that he just, you know, talks with the same over confidence uh the same assurances that 1st done fly for many americans. he said that to about you create on brush out get resolve it before he office. so he didn't say much about what's to be done, but we know the following to be true. coming or how does and by that by then they really love is read. uh they don't care very much for nothing you know trumps. on the other hand, there's a lot for the likes of nothing. you know, the really care about much what is right personally. and as far as is concerned, it's a political issue. you can benefit from it who will definitely invest in. what does that mean then in terms of actual policy differences that you see they might bring
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to the next white house? you know, the people in them, at least are a bit tired of the fact that they, they talk a lot the lives a lot and the contrast and compared to log. but in terms of they, they somehow end up with very similar policies on the part of the democrats under presents. having said that, of course trump was a bit of a radical case. judging from his 40 years in office. he clearly was so transactional, but he had absolutely no issue that were the worst that abrasions against the most horrific to heal violations the home on rights. one that in is there about a spine or the this in general and right there. and for he's transactional contracts of selling farms or, or lower their current products or, or whatever the commercial transaction number is, is right?
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so he is also cared more to uh, to have his allies on the, in the middle east as you know, but also in europe, but at the southeast asia to pay off. that was, is always his condition for on the lines you wanted. the saw with these and golf and others to pay off for whatever protection america provides for them. so that's what trump, i think the come. this tends to be more of a sort of a mainstream liberal dental. she would continue to voice unconditional support change, right? but at the same time, she wouldn't be in to my eyes speaking more vocally done by than was about the need to respect human rights in protest and, and, and never, not. and for the war to stop. i don't think as i said, she cares. this is certainly very much for nothing now. and i think that sense she would probably be more interested to put more political pressure is right. again, having said that, at trump could
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a wildcard and all of this because this wouldn't be his last turn if you wins. i'm like, come on the header, so would spend would want to build on, you know, the part of is there a lobby drop would not be need, is there a lot be after the next 40 years? right. and so he could probably say that whatever policies that serve his power to some interest, so i'm so very sorry my why am i being totally goes and breaking news? we're gonna have to fight model on the shower. and let's tell me what's going on in the middle east itself right now. we're bringing some breaking news out of syria. what city and state media is reporting several is riley strikes of talk through the town of a site design of that south west of the capital, damascus. just repeating, we're getting reports is really strikes of hit targets near the syrian capital will bring you more details as we get them.
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the rescue teams in east in spain are looking for victims in the multi story a rice. and the multi story raw the on the ground. cobb park in valencia flash floods in the region, killing at least 217 people. all the comp punk was flooded last week when the country was hit by its worst flash floods. in modern history, the government has deployed 7500 soldiers to the region, while the authorities face increasing criticism for their response to the disaster . meanwhile in the northeast of spain, heavy rain is caused flooding in pots of catalonia trains, services was stopped, and more than a 1000 flights suspended and boss alone at apple. all right,
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sonya guy goes joining us now from chiva in the province of valencia. and 1st of all, sonya how is the search for buddies going on there in valencia of the well, it is ongoing. the recovery process was we were observing that the throughout the weekend as well. and it was having to be done with, in a very methodical way, using specialist equipment. but here in the town of chiva, there appears to be more focus on the clear up operations itself, even though we've heard from people that there are still those were missing. and that doesn't seem to be a corresponding number of people who've been discomfort yet from that. but if i just step away from my position here and just show you the extent of the damage that the flooding did hit last week, it is
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a new mess. this entire of beam was filled with water here and it caused enormous structural damage to the houses. here it is quite old houses that you had here. you had people living here as well. they've been told to get out of these areas. it's too dangerous for them. overnight so was that particular building, the whole box will so into that ravine there as well. and further down that there is still worries. families who are living that still and some of them are able to stay there. but some of them, it's just too dangerous for them to continue that we spoke to a family earlier today and they were instructed to leave that homes 1st thing this morning. they don't know where they'll be able to sleep tonight. but nevertheless, those care operations have been done here and have been done in such a way, which is really causing quite a lot of surprises of how it's been able to be done. because of course it has been the community here and volunteers. you've been undertaking that work. you've had it,
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you guys actually have rural town. so you've had a lot of pharmacies come in from the outside who brought in their own special mechanized equipment and they have been able to remove in clear all the day being rubble has got surprisingly effectively in view of the will star to use. or i will leave with that. thanks so much on your guy. you go still, i had them out. just sarah, the demand behind some of the world's biggest hits from jackson to sinatra has died. we look back at the life and career of produces. can see joe and brain causes chaos in south. palo is max by step and closing it on the championship title, details on the way. the
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the the small dove as president. it has won a 2nd tom, the facing have pro rushing opponents in a crucial run off. my assign do secuity mold and 54 percent of the vote compared to 43 percent. fine. alexander, the normal sun do, has pushed for close at times with the west and membership of the european union. the election was overshadowed by obligations of meddling, 5 russia, which must go forth denies. let's take you now to north carolina, where the republican presidential nominate donald trump. is speaking as
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a randy less listening expression, right? the expression actually, but it's ours to lose. does that make sense? you are sometimes if we, if we get everybody a in vote, there's another thing they can do. and if we don't we don't. they have to get every person that ever signs anything is that a, her rent is really dangerous party that's going to destroy our country and it already is destroying our country. we just get, let that happen. we cannot let that happen. so. 6 here's my only purpose and even be here today. get out and about, you know, how to be back in this beautiful state with thousands of proud or hard working american patriots as what you are your base judge. you built this country. you built this country, but i'd like to begin by asking
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a very simple question. are you better off now than you were 4 years ago? you know, there's that question so many times i've never had one and go up for the other where they are about to get out and the domestic assessment all. so i'm saying if we get everyone out to vote, i think they can do, went home to one of the democratic party, things the who ran this, the things respond to that coming just 24 hours or so. the u. s. presidential elections beginning as ever happens now, so it is a small 10 max for staff put in is closing in on the formula one world times. the last a he won the thrilling rain interrupted south pile of ground, pre tom size and has more the right guys get over. that is really lovely. it will go down as one of the greatest, whether victories of all time off the going 10 races without to win the step and
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was losing his grip from the championship. but despite starting down in 17, the 3 time world champion produced 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 russell posted 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 a step in search ahead and hopes of victory. you know, setting the 17 i, i knew that it was going to be a very tough phrase, but uh, we stayed out of trouble. we made the right calls,
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you say come and we refine so all of these things together of course, made that result possible. but the, i mean, i don't believe we'll do any or from so far back on the yeah. the stuff and 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. now us music types and quincy jones, who's multi decade career re shaped pop and bossa, nova, has died at the age of 90. 1 the, his head song, a sole bossa nova was among many things to be discovered by lazy generations. jones works with the industries biggest names, including frank sinatra, among his best 11 credits was a producer for michael jackson's rankel and breaking spring that help. and that's
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it from me for this new south. you get much more on all those stories has been telling you about that over to our web page. 0 stuff. come on back in about the historic elections, consequential presidents get shot at with the potential to impact the shape of the world. we were respected before i will not be upset, tyrants and dictated. we're very close to world war 3 and people don't realize that we're closer than we've ever been with many desperate for change. we need to have these long range capability. nato will become a country of military operations against the nuclear state. what is the world to expect? let us know each other in the world. we. we have to be brave,
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otherwise we're not going to ever go to the power of the choice of one nation. affect us all the the us 2024 of the elections on now to 0. 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 suffice to cease fire resolution before cuz but taking center stage was moving against the time takes on weight is like a ripple, and it keeps people energized to keep fighting for an end of the chance. i stand up for monday, the witness on the jersey to years from i'll just on the go and me tonight out is there is only mobile app. is that the,
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this is where we just fix allies from out is there is a mobile app available in your favorites apps to just set for it and typed on a new app from alta 0 news that you think is it the a final, a campaign portion the us, campbell of harrison dogs from like the last appeal to voters one day before they head to the polls the times. that means i them, this is out just here, a live from dell hall. so coming up, the latest is right, the striker, northern gauze, it kills at least 15 palestinians since the month long seeds of the north
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