tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera November 6, 2024 6:00pm-7:01pm AST
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but scientists say $186.00 of the countries, $240.00 lakes have dried up during the last 60 years and the rate of water loss is accelerating as climate change. or since around the world. the, [000:00:00;00] the hello, i'm to go hey, this is the largest here, a news our with special coverage of the us presidential election law i from washington d. c. a political come back. republican candidate donald trump is elected president for a 2nd term. nearly 4 years after he left off
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a victory for the american people that will allow us to make america great. again. his democratic rivals, vice president campbell harris has yet to concede defeat, but is expected to make an address to supporters later on wednesday. and trump's republican party has also won control of the us senate after picking up seats in west virginia and ohio. and i'm sammy's a them here in the hall. so coming up is where the strikes target the 1st stage zoning goal is the city killing more palestinian children will explore tons. victory will need to know more on garza and they wrote something sort of a baha comes under his riley attack. once again, often has the law fires rockets into israel, the hello and welcome to washington dc. the american voters have spoken and elected
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donald trump as they're 47th prison. this trunk comfortably cleared the 270 elect for a low ceiling needed to win back the white house. despite some results you have to come in. he becomes only the 2nd president to be re elected after being defeated as a poles after serving one term earlier he tells his supporters, he now has an unprecedented and powerful mandate, his democratic rivals. pamela harris is not conceited, but her campaign says she's expected to speak in the coming hours. let's do. let's take a look at the results. and here's how things stand right now. donald trump picking up 277 electoral college votes. the magic number of course being 270 cala harris. following short was 224 electoral college votes. as you can see, there's still a couple of states that are colored in, which means they haven't yet been called. but even without declaring those states, trump has more than the $270.00 requires. donald trump declared victory hours before official results were confirmed. he addressed to support his in florida and
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promised to re shake the government. frankly, this was, i believe, the greatest political movement of all time does ever been anything like this of this for i know it's going to reach a new level of importance because we're going to help our country hills that help our country here. we have to be at a diesel very badly. we're going to fix our borders where i gotta fix everything about our country. we main history for a reason tonight, and the reason is going to be just a little bit more on the state of the risk in a moment. but 1st, ellen fisher looks back at donald trump's path to be coming presidents for a 2nd time. i'm going to be a dictator for one day with this. he has promised the most radical overhaul of
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government in american history. a know donald trump will be america's 47 president . he said to deliver, now we're going to get them out of here. we're going to get them out fast. top of the list must deportations of undocumented microns. it was popular with supporters that he says he will build camps to detain, migrants and re institute, his travel button for mostly muslim nations. i will seal the border. i will send them all back to the country, is what trump has an enemies list. we have 2 enemies, we have the outside enemy, and then we have the enemy from within. it's a little more political opponents, one of the generalists that enough prosecutors even to bite. and he's promised to use his justice department to seek vengeance. he wants to increase presidential power with 3 to 4 to, to over the entire government. using parts that used to be independent of the white takes a 2nd. trump, administration would have a tremendous amount of more power than it has in the past,
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particularly because of the supreme court ruling that has said that the president has a automatic immunity for constitutional powers and implied immunity for the regular powers of the president. and that means that he, he's going to be able to do a lot more things without being challenged in the courts. there are 2 of us who work with trump in the white house before, but don't support him this time, right? besides, he was an effect to be said, he wasn't content to wear. trump will be very careful who he hires this time around . he's going to surround himself by a bunch of yes people who are just going to agree to whatever he wants without trying to convince him otherwise, or you know, resort to some tactics that they had to during the 1st administration to under cut some of the actions he wanted to take his election will likely bring a change in u. s. foreign policy, more i solution is closer to israel. hostile to meet 2 things he tried to do before the details are scanned. but trump to point tool will approach the white toast with
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experience and grievance. and we have a team of correspond as following the latest developments for us. you have her time . she is in washington dc. fillable is in north carolina, but 1st let's go to ellen fisher, who's following president elect donald trump in florida. allen, you have covered donald trump for years and years this year. really, this campaign was focused on anger and resentment. it is a really dark toner of the dark vision of the country. if you get a sense of it and he's going to change that now that he is, seems to have been vindicated. well i think the, the argument there is that people might not like the messenger, but they liked the message. and donald trump managed to connect with quarters in a way that the democratic prophets absolutely failed to do. donald trump will not change. we know he is was seen who he is, we've seen through years of in the white house. and even afterwards we saw what he
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was doing that people said that we were told that when donald trump becomes president, he'll become much more presidential. he didn't, we were told after the assassination attempt that he's going to be a little softer with more reconciliation. he didn't, so we can expect more of the same for donald trump over the next 4 years. he is going to put in place a team that will be loyal to donald trump. they made the mistake last time of being a new b near flight in washington and the lying onto additional republican people to staff his departments. this time he will not do that and we know that because of the people who is in charge of his transition committee, the donald white who's one of his clothes, the childhood friends, they're his vice president under. there's 2 sons don't junior and addict, and they will, we don't, anyone that they don't think will follow the trump agenda. this is going to mean a massive change in the united states. it's going to signify a seismic change in american politics. and it's also going to radically alter
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america's place in the world. donald trump said he wanted to upset everything. he seems to have done exactly that. and thank you so much. i know you were of very late last night, so we appreciate you coming in talking with us. as we mentioned, connell harris has yet to concede, but always described yourself as the underdog in this race. the democratic candidate didn't launch her challenge for the white house until 15 weeks before election day. in the end, her bid to become the 47th president, fell short houses here as rosalind jordan records, democratic presidential candidate comb or harris had just 15 weeks and 3 days to run for the white house and running like we ended up because we are donald trump's been running for a lot the last decade. i've been in this race about 3 and a half months, and the stakes are so high. supporters have terraces, ruins donated more than a $1000000000.00,
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fired up by her promise to leave division and hatred behind. harris seemed stop on stage on social media on campaign walk about but in the end, domestic and international that hurt him for us to support for israel as waged war and gaza, angered arab and muslim american voters in the swing state of michigan. so much, many a band in their usual support for the democratic ticket. this is not just a general conversation on foreign policy. there was a genocide and tomlin harris has continued to paris, basic talking points around self determination of the palestinian people. she has said that she wants to cease fire, she wants release of hostages, but there hasn't been action behind that. voters also said they didn't believe the economy had improved under the bike harris administration despite inflation following. and the stock market rising and voters didn't trust harris to address
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immigration. analysts said harris blew her best chance of winning targeting every day for have the most polarizing presidential candidates in us history. she wants to, when she should talk about trunk, she wants to lose. she said, talk about the economy, which puts in a position of defending the, you know, by nomics in the, by, in harrisburg, on the economy. and that's pretty in defense of all right now for the american voter. ultimately, harris couldn't convince americans to take a chance on someone new they instead chose the man who is tried true and polarizing . russell and jordan elders, era washington j advertising, joins us now live in washington dc ship. i believe you're at howard university that's were kind of kind of la harris went to college also where she hoped to give her victory speech. now likely to go back there to concede, what do you expect?
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and she's going to have to say to the american public and that kyra's campaign being very, very quiet as to what we're expecting, even when she will actually be here. but we are expecting i had was a face to be so different files and had gathered a last night expecting what was at the very least a squeak over. but actually only to find out for up to 7 hours of standing around that she wasn't going to come. it was a much fear that donald trump. well, at the time it seemed donald trump was very likely to win. and it was there, it was confirmed. so a few hours later, we'll publish that trying to fashion what sort of turn to take. that's what a big debate as to what's, what message the democratic party established it is gonna take for this. will they accept that they should have looked at the polls? clearly that they've lost the key segments of the demographics, the base of the product, coffee every single segment, and he within safe democratic regions. maybe they've gone from double digit leaves or the republican just a single digit leaves. so there are 2 donald trump, or will they accept that they got this and tied it wrong with that campaign of
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frankly, aggressively quoting near conservative republicans like live streaming, or do they just blame the vote as elevators don't get how goods harris is? i don't get all a message cuz this is due to any postcard story we all got to get in playing from the democratic establishment of the cycle morning. jo here which is the voice, the mouse piece of the democratic party establishment without doing the loss of that blaming hours if anything splitting to progressive, not being ok. sure enough. so we shall see one of the messages when she does finally arrive here the next few hours. so yeah, thank you so much. so that was from did excuse me, donald trump did well in the spring state, especially north carolina. that's one of them. philip. all is there, he joins us in raleigh quite a night for tron. tell us about the strategy that got them to win in north carolina . so as well, i mean the strategy i'm this is the fact that both tom said being to make sure that they really drive the folks to try it out. and obviously over the recent days and weeks, we've had a lot of talk from donald trump and there was concern from some of these team that
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perhaps they couldn't keep them a message. but the other strategy that they really had, aside from that, was to drive both to turn out in rural areas, not particularly permanent here in north carolina because a 3rd of the state who lives in a rural area. that's why we saw a donald trump particularly talking about her occasionally and you know, we had and so he for weeks about the aftermath of hurricane valley, which decimated pods at the west side of the states. a lot of rural areas where he said the areas that favored him, what thing neglected by those disaster relief team, specifically because they favored him. and so what we saw was, in this particular states, they really embraced the financing, the full post even opened yesterday morning. and the hall of this state had voted eddy, they had cost that bought it. and we were told that the biggest group that costs are ready ballots where those people and areas those rural areas that are being hit by hurricane eileen. so it just goes to show, even though people are in a situation where they lost the homes that cause that livelihood. so they don't
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know what they're doing from one day to the next. they really felt that they had to get all the they had to vote, and it is likely that those will vote just particularly with the ones that help donald trump get. not just the smells of victory, but a pretty big victory here because it was 1.3 percent or with joe biden. this time it was 3.4 percent are become a lot higher, assembled in twice the previous results. failure. we're talking about hurricane helene. there was a lot of this information in from lies coming from the trump campaign during that saying that female was giving money to undocumented migrants and that's why they weren't able to help. did that really sink in with folders? and they believe that as you know, the, i think the big issue for focus here was the economy as it was in many places and thought there was a survey done by a page just before the election where they set to volunteers. what is your big concern? how do you going forward and overwhelmingly 42 percent stuff. they would vote because of the economy. 19 percent of them said they would vote because of immigration, which, you know,
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you might not think would be as big of an issue. hey i because we're not in our resolve that were miles away from the boat, but even the other day of the donald trump valley. i spoke to a gentleman who came out. i asked him what his big issue was. and he said to him, it was the economy. the other issue was a portion of the 11 percent that they were in favor of kind of the house has police policies on reproductive rights. you've got this large evangelical christian population here, but of the state. they will have had to way up to they put a man who was a convicted felon into the white house, but also he's a month that supports best on says unemotional release, giving it back to the states. so that was a big issue. but you know, because a lot applicants are american population who i spoke to one mind the other day, he said like it was kind of a i couldn't even work to the post office. and yet we're looking at putting them on with multiple felonies into the white house just goes to show house. it was such a complex issue, but ultimately it was like the, the economy, the greatest one that had of the thanks so much bills. really good insight. i appreciate it. so now let's bring in our panel a guess. robinson woodward burns is an assistant professor and the department of
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political science at howard university. patrick, patrick myra, excuse me, is german of the dc republican party. nadia brown is a professor of government at georgetown university w. excuse my voice. i feel like i've been talking for ever nadia. i want to start with you because i think it's very important. we have seen joe biden give israel prime minister netanyahu benjamin netanyahu, whatever he wants political come. busy the bombs, recently he came out and there was a leak letter and said look, you've got to get more humanitarian aid into gaza. you've got 30 days to do it. or were they in case it was, they were going to invoke the laws that say you have to cut off offensive military weapons? could he do that now? what's he got a, is he a lame duck? is there anything you can say the less than the suffering of the pals to me for the palestinians in gaza and the people 11. so i think there is a technical answer and then there's the political answer for the technical answer. is that yes, to fight in technical we can do that right. he could work with the city,
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members of congress to put pressure on the m yahoo government to be able to curtail some of the, the desk and the 10 assignments happening in palestine. however, the political answer is that the job item is a lame duck. donald trump, one resoundingly one, not just the presidency by the side, his party into congress. uh and so american people will say, well that's not what we voted for. and so in this time period between january 20, what, what donald trump will take the oath of office for the 2nd time. and today jo buying is really at the mercy of what the folders have said they want to see happen next. and so anything mental biting tries to do now will be seen as he's out of step with the american people, and he's overstepping his boundaries in the white house, although, right. he is still legitimately and technically president because as donald trump one was such a resounding victory, it seems like it would just be the put me wrong thing for joe biden to do at this point time. thank you, patrick. i wanted to bring up something that alan mentioned. ellen was saying that
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he's not going to have the other the people he had around him before. i mean, we've learned so many things in his former secretary defense book. he said the trump told him to start bombing the next can drug cartels. and can you make it look like someone else did it? and they were able to rein him in. alan said that his reporting is that he's going to put only his loyalists around him. what is that going to? what's the impact of that going to be if that's the case and you agree with this? that's the case. i believe he's got to put loyalists around him, but he's going to put skilled loyalists around him. i think we went through this in the 1st administration where you just can't put sure loyalists around you. i'm sure there's going to be one or 2 of those. but if you look at the campaign, the to campaign managers, susie whiles and chris lots of data, they're extremely confident. and they capture on message susie, whiles, as someone who could serve as the chief of staff, the white house chief of staff. she's more of a behind the scenes person and she's very new cut and dry. let's get it done. person. you could see kevin mccarthy back. you could see
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a successful cabinet officials from the previous administration who come back so not anyone who went away. but folks who stuck around and were a success. i think you can see some of mike doug burg. them serving in a cabinet? i think kind of a hail mary here. maybe maybe they can. healey eventually does do something, but you do have a lot of confident governors who have a number of people from the presidential contest, even who will be serving in a trump cabinet. thank you robinson. i want to talk again, we can't talk enough about what's happening in israel in gaza. and obviously donald trump is ed moore's and wars are going to end the day i take office, but he's also very deferential to he is really prime minister. which way do you think this is going to go? is you going to say stop the war now? or is it gonna say, do whatever you want, and hey, if you want to land grab, that's cool to a great question. i was sitting in this chair 4 years ago when i was asked that question about joe biden. i said it's hard to predict. and the last year is proven
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just how hard it is to predict what will happen in israel and, and cause over palestine writ large. i think it's fair to say that within the american congress, there is still broad support for spending arms or funds. israel, i probably won't change. there's a fairly strong relationship between is rarely lobbying groups or pro israel lobbying groups. and congress that will outlast different presidential administrations. and well, some voters chose not to vote for harris as a protest vote. you know, donald trump is not a clear alternative to support a god or dogs and so it, and besides, it's hard to say. but continuity has been to some degree, the theme and congressional support for, for israel, and that may continue now to get back to the inflation reduction that was the largest, largest efforts to combat climate change that this country in most countries of a, probably any countries ever done,
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a lot of that money has been spent on solar project when projects trying to clean energy nuclear, but donald trump is said no, we're rolling that back. how much does he roll it back? because there is a lot of money in a lot of republican communities or does he roll it back and what is the impact for the global fight on climate change? while it will be really hard for donald trump or the any trump administration to roll? i roll this back, primarily does have the money. it's already been spent and the communities where the money has been spent. they've already seen the benefits of spending this money . so an example is luanna was bed, you know, large part of their economy and of their infrastructure and putting together pipelines that they now use for oil, but on the east coast, right. some of those same pipelines are now being built by members of the working class folks that were on the ground in louisiana. and of doing that on the east coast to build wind turbine rates. the same kind of technology, but they got the money to do with the louisiana. they're getting the money to do it in other parts of the united states. but those that have the skills, the expertise,
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they know how because they've been doing it for another form of energy production announcing that they can do so same skills and transfer it to clean energy. and so we're going to be really hard pressed to tell people i don't think i like the climate policy, but these things are providing jobs and jobs impact our bottom line. and so i think it will be really, really hard to pull back something that has already been working. and also as you mentioned earlier, right, we've been best to stay there. congress with devastated by series of back to back hurricanes that have hit the same place twice. right, in less than a month. and so americans are waking up and they're saying some things going on whether we believe that climate change is manmade or not trade. that is a political debate for some, but for others, the reality is they're not safe. they can't get insurance for their homes because as far as it won't cover them, they understand that their school system, their ways of life, whether you can go to the grocery store is all impacted around what's going on in the climate. and so the cats out of the bag, right, there's nothing that the company ministration can do to wheel back in the disasters of,
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of the climate. but then also people on the ground or seeing jobs are created because of never cetera pets. or do we know well, j events, the next vice president feels he held up aid to ukraine. donald trump, the said the war needs to and you have any doubt that on his very 1st day, donald trump cuts off all u. s. military systems to ukraine. i do not think he will and, and here's why that is a little bit inside baseball, but at the republican national convention, donald trump, personally in the republican platform, it was not widely reported because it may have looked favorably upon donald trump. he removed bad language on ukraine, he removed bad language on eligibility issues on the abortion on all these other things. he moderated the platform, he made it less controversial and he gave himself room so that he could continue to a new crane in that platform. and so i think donald trump has said a lot of things, but he wants flexibility. and i think, i think aid continues the day, you know,
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the day after his inaugurate, i did not know that he had taken that out of the onto the platform. all right, that's a very, very interested in robinson. my last question is for you job, i do have one job. i didn't, didn't want to drop out of the race because its, she, she said behind the scenes campbell harris can't when and my question for you. what role did sexism and racism in this country playing her to feed versus her vague policies for her and not very sure campaign. really not talking about the economy. other than say, monopolies are bad. i'll fix it. are great, and that's a broad question on which to and i could buy a new one counterfactual is a really difficult because i don't have any evidence from the world in which jo button did when. so i can't tell you what voter turnout did or didn't look like and not election really hard to guess. but we, i, we can talk about what happened a bit was calmer. racism and sexism certainly played a role. let's compare voter turnout for democrats. in 2020 to 2024 democrats
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had 81000000 ballots cast in 202066 1000000 in 2024. as a drop of 15000000 ballad square of donald trump only went down from, went down from 4074 to 71 balance democrats. some democrats set out this election question is, who and why? and that's something we'll be able to see is we dissect at a pull to see who did vote. and also think a little bit more about who didn't. some of which may have been on identity or in grounds because come where since we're running as a woman and as a black. and so that is an absolutely astounding number that i don't think we've talked about enough. so thank you for bringing that up and thank you all for your insights. i think it's good enough, very informative and i appreciate your time. all right, so that's it for us here in washington dc. we'll hand you back now to sammy and the rest of the team in the thanks past due. i'll fill ahead here and i'll just say we're, we're live in guns away. death industry auction is month, another day of as well as war children being killed at the 1st stage zone. and up
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to 20 of is it killed by miss riley, strike on a residential building in southern lebanon, the the weather skies of clayton uruguay. and most of all engine team is looking 5. initially there is still kind enough to give the hint of snow shares in category pronounced as much as there was on tuesday, the temperature wise. what about where we should be generating a few channels and none of the heavy ones in option t? no, i'm not just, you know, i'm moving away and showing themselves up in the southeast to preserve all parts of this general system, which is sort of folding your pump. which is good news if you're an amazon. yeah, because typically we've been to dry and that we're getting daily sun just don't, not everywhere i recently, but they all, they're all the same into the tributaries of the amazon itself to that, the active where the came out of the caribbean is rafael. now
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a hurricane having dumped the load of rain in jamaica and not going cross that came in. i was when it hits cuba, it will still be a how it could and still possibly strengthening. it looks like it would go across the, on to the west of how far. obviously precautions being taken now, because the given the amount of rain, there was a risk up in the high ground of land slides from a storm surge on the bay. you would, it makes contact with cuba and then it goes across the on and those are the quickly somewhere into the gulf of mexico. i can't tell you exactly where just yet in the us itself, the biggest weather story is winter in the west, somewhere in the east, from the stones between the he says he went toward towards syria to provide a lifetime entail was very interesting, but not in the eyes of his government, this has been our home for so many years. in the final parts of the series, we followed the story of
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a british age worker as he flees from it live with his family. after being arrested by a powerful village shop. one of the toughest times when they tortured me state list in syria, now to 0. 2 stories of strong willed, challenging traditional female stereotype in the middle, dominate to society. to make a difference. if i go how some of these with the will to is highly contaminate to living in the class, the risk in it all out. is there the the
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the welcome back. you're watching out. is there a time to recap, ah, headlines. republican candidate donald trump has been elected the $47.00 surprised that until the united states a clinch the $270.00, like total college boats needed by winning swing states, wisconsin, pennsylvania, north carolina, and georgia. trump's rival campbell, a harris last habit to become america's 1st female president, she has not conceded yet, she became the democratic policy candidate in july, off the president of biking, withdrew from the rice on the pressure from within the policy. the miss riley strike has killed at least 4 people. i'm injured. several others in gaza
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. city bodies of the victims was strewed on the street as palestinians scrambled to help the wounded. the strike targeted a 1st aid center across the strip is right. the attacks of killed 22 peoples installed these 15 of them in by july here in northern garza. so you don't have anymore. mo, joins us live from data about in central garza and had a one could only imagine when y'all scrambling to pick up pieces of children at the 1st aid sent to i guess there isn't a lots of risk fights for people to reflect on what a donald trump presidency might mean for the war and garza, the of the time is very difficult situation across the gaza strip. since early hours of this morning we're talking about for the internal and force displacement for people who
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are really been displaced. more than twice or 3 times in northern gaza, a toxic garza city where more residential buildings are being targeted. but what the pattern that we're seeing so far is more the ways people ended up in these residential building. so during the, from the horror of the, on a predictable bonds are getting bomb main thing filled inside these residential building. noticed finding the talk, despite of what we are seeing that the world is busy with the results of the election with. busy elected president, donald trump, people who have mixed feelings about what he could actually do to change the conduct of, of this more across the gall, the script bite is really another guy you remember for a whole year palestinian, despite all the challenges that they were raised with do, do you knew that by the end and it does ministration, could have done many things to stop the atrocity to. but what the decision did decided not to do any of that. and that's probably the, the lots of good on the how. how is this for, for
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a lot of people here as people understand why, but now for, for it's from, as he showed in the past in 2016, he preferred that he favored us from the pro is rel assessment that by the, into wavering support. for israel and its military and this time the fear and now that is going to change again and it will further support is really atrocities across the gust of so right now, nothing gets significant. change on the ground is really monetary. still doing what it's has been doing for a whole year, more destruction, more depth of how the video and across the gulf. thank you so much. hi, me, my load that reporting to us from data by law in gone. so us, at least 7 palestinians have been killed and is ready set for the violent submitted free rides in the occupied westbank. these really minute free enter jeanine from several directions, triggering violent confrontations with palestinians. several people were detained
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in the raids bottles of also being taking place in the total caught them. kemp and his riley strike targeted a residential building in the coastal town of bar, just south of bay roads and killed at least 20 people. lebanon's health industry says several people have been wounded, rescue teams of woods through the morning to find those possibly trapped in the rubble. these right, the military is not stated. who it was targeting in the area. child stratford joins us now from the lebanese capital. so strikes that also continuing the o this, against the backdrop of the us selections going on chinese. the was at least a push to try and secure a seas find loving and how people looking at the dynamic and how it might change. given the us selection results,
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you can imagine certainly there is deep skepticism here about any us administration because so many people see the us potentially as being a policy in this war. and they say that the us should not be there and negotiate to or in, in any way really involved in, in, in folks to try and forge a ceasefire. there's, there's great skepticism that, of course, donald trump is described himself time and time again as a man that wants to end was, but he's widely known as being closer to these ready prime minister benjamin netanyahu. then for example, bite and was so there is this concern that we could well see an escalation. certainly an escalation between now and january, the 20th, when trump officially takes office. interestingly enough that have been strikes this afternoon, at least 3 strikes on this, on the suburbs, all the routes and in the last off an hour or so,
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the local authorities in battle back saying that there were trying to use radio strikes today at least 13 people killed at least 35 others injured in terms of actually official reaction to the selection results in the us. we had a statement, certainly from the, the new secretary general of as bullet and i am causing there was no direct reaction to the election results in the us. but some very telling statements. he said in, in a defined statement, this, the 2nd recorded statement that he's made since becoming a new secretary general. they said there is one thing that will end this war, and that is the battlefield. this will is not winnable for the ease. riley's, he said there is no place in these rail that is off limits to planes and missiles, the enemy is losing on little ground. he said, he said that as well as sale has plenty of weapons. and perhaps the most challenging was the final statement, which was the basis of any negotiation should be the cessation of aggression and
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the full on diminished protection of lebanese sovereignty. well, who proposals so far as being basically rejected by the lebanese proposals for as a spa. this would be very interesting what happens between now and january, the 20th, when trump officially takes office and it goes there often when trump is the president and whether he is basically as predicted as is aligned with net to and yahoo, the many people, 11 fed thanks so much child strength of the, from favorites. now these, right, the army says at least 10 or all kids have been launched from lebanon towards the central and northern israel. the lebanese on group has the law says it launch the tax on several targets, including the sacraments of saucer in northern israel. debris from an intercepted rocket struck upon the car in the central city of ronada, a rock. it also landed, may have been good in that port in tel aviv. let's go to mohammed vile in the joel
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damian capital is covering this from my mind because these writing government as banned down to 0 from reporting in the occupied westbank and from inside israel. so how about also all of this happening against the backdrop of donald trump's weight and judging by just how quickly that's in. yeah. who congratulated donald trump these these ready prime minister see it has that is one of the happiest leaders with the results of us selection today. of this lee sammy who was a who was they're both of the, the 1st to lead outside the us to send a letter of congratulations to donald trump. but it was a brief letter in which you t emphasized the fact that this is go to a strength and the partnership between the 2 states that you started come back for tom. as everyone knows that these ladies, i've been waiting for this moment to know himself. the decision that you took
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yesterday evening when the election was going on to sock. and his defense minister was seen as a gesture to what stump and gazed by doing who used to invite to the defense witnesses or your defense minister. you off go out to the white house many times a day as the whim of the town. yahoo! so that's a, that's an indication of the front of the thing. you always happy with that development and judging by what's prompted for is that i am doing his best to, can you uh, he, uh, he, uh, he moved the cops to him from tennessee to do us loan. she gave them the green light to a next the, the going on heights, and now they are expecting much more of the same. they are expecting notice a green light to a next the hold of the west back. if not the ghost, even. thanks so much for him. a valve very important to us from my mind in jordan. what does the 2nd from presidency mean for us?
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iran relations to hey, that's it, a right to an expert in the writing and it says, joins me now live from the arabian capital. and of course, the people will remember to have that don't from is was the president who cancelled the wrong nuclear deal. how our officials doing is return to the white house now as well. actually, the main office will risk paul's k comes from the rain in this post this one of the garments proximately. behind your on a who said today that for you ron, it's that's, that's much important who comes to the office as he's, as she said that the country is ready for any sort of scenario either. then by then harris comes to the office or trumps wednesday election. this is sort of the official response that'd be heard from the uranium side as of now. but if you go to people, you see a sort of mixture of different sentiments. there are some obvious concerns among the people considering the very fact that trump was the president that imposed talk
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sanctions maximize backs and maximum pressure upon the reigning ordinary citizens. and he was the same person that ordered the assets nation of uranian, popular military commander goss. i'm so they money and add up to that is a list of other hostile activities that from the bid it gets the reading and people for that. there is a clear, historical perspective. and the same time, some people are, they expressed a sort of hope that for a president, clark trump, it's going to be a little bit easier to continue negotiations. bits iran due to the very fact that there is a more direct approach baton and bid in president the discount in the office. there is a possibility of for hope to a better ties between the 2 countries. thanks so much to have as a data from to hold on. instead of heading out this era,
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we looked at donald trump's relationship with the russian president, vladimir. but we can what that means for the war and ukraine, and what does the future hold for nato? the last time trump was empowered, he had the alliance in his sites. stay with us. the business latest is sponsored by him to lot global. your real estate destination in due by
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a president funds commitment to the peace through strength approach and global affairs. this is exactly the principle that can practically bring just pace and ukraine closer. i'm hopeful that we will put it into action together. was that and ski is always had an uneasy relationship with trump. it has made no secret of his admiration full russian president vladimir putin. the shop obama joins us now live from moscow. so you the a donald trump, he's valid. and the conflict. by the time he even gets into an organization, is that getting any calls full of optimism all hope in moscow? to hello, really, to be honest, the most popular opinion express here is that the relations between russia and the united states will remain, tends, according to criminal spokesman. demetrius called the united states of colson, faith rose kerosene, into this conflict,
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and is directly involved in war against russia. but still laska, positively reactive to trumps was an error on today that he intended not to stop rules but ends them. the criminal believes that under the new president, the united states can help and the rashid crane conflict, as you mentioned, from one's promise to ended within 24 hours. many in t a. c a. the that he will order to reduce us weapons supplies to ukraine or dissuaded to make territorial concessions or freeze the conflicts ukraine completely reject, sold on, but still many heard the negotiations between the 2 warring sides can review on the don't trump presidency and it will be a big step forward for peace, but once again, there is no illusions about donald trump being nice to russia. just recently. he reveals that he has been the one who stops the no stream to gas pipeline, according to, from its construction, was russia's most important task. most who remembers that during donald trump's
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previous presidential times this find he seemed to to be nice with the present floods him in peace and he continued to regularly impose on to russian sanctions expelled diplomats from the states. and during his previous time, washington withdrew from several arms control agreements the on f treaty, which was signed by ronald reagan. and he will go with charles as well as the and know to watch full open sized treaty and uh, in 2017, from left to the info on the, on the supply of american chevrolet and on to time systems to russia. all right, thanks so much. you the freight bosco, the last sale. holding on nova is a co founder of ukrainian security and cooperation center. that's a think tank based in keys. he's also a form of ukraine on forces advise that joins us now live from k of good to have you with us. so is this a moment of concern and fear for your crying over its future because of the re
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election? obviously of donald trump. hello. yeah, hello, thank you for having me. festival ukraine has built a strong relationship with both parties in congress, including and we hope and we we assume that this supports, the strong support that came from the us will be coming in the coming years under the trump's administration. as well, if, if we look at the last visit of ukraine in president of limit of the land key to the united states during the pre election period. uh hm. uh, even even though he was a drag, that the boss has tried to track him into the trail, a process itself, uh, the visit itself was very successful for you cream as of and you had meeting with
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us both. pamela harris and donald trump. both candidates for the present president and um, uh donald trump uh, shows uh, showed his um supports off to the meeting that he had with the, with board image dimansky. they discussed the victory plan. you created victory plan and both came into mutual understanding on the steps that needed to a for the plan to came into action. alyssa, and it like that the donald trump has spoken is valid that he will end this school very quickly. how do you think he might do that? will it be by putting pressure on you crying to accept concessions as well? donald trump is well known for his commitment to the peace through strength approach. so this approach is very good for
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a client as well. and for the us itself, like in general, because this could and russian aggression and breeding just b as in europe. as so no matter how uh, no matter the ways that a donald trump could choose being the president is being to present the president in the office. i'm sure that we will have agreements and we will have a mutual understanding of what to do next. because so you create as known for as bold activities to the last couple of months across operation itself. so i believe that we will have mutual understanding and cooperation on that. do think that the transition to a dollar from presidency might take us back to the days of delays and the amount of
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changes in the amount of speed of us weaponry heading over to ukraine and the respondent to your question, i would like to uh, the, to point the last presidency of donald trump. uh, do you inches less presidency, or he unblocked, actually the supplies of american weaponry to ukraine, and he supplied chevrolet ins for ukrainian armed forces. so this time he will be president. we would need a correspond right wrench, weaponry. assume supplied to ukraine, so this would not be easy, of course, but this is the, the time for us to fill up our sleeves and work. all right, thank you so much. well, i see a holiday. i know of, of the co founder of the ukrainian security incorporation center. the thank you, nato secretary general mon corrupts is also congratulated on trump,
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on his victory saying is neither ship will be key to keeping realized strong. however, the prize of intellect has previously accused european members of non contributing and i'll financially defensive is a alex good, helpless as mall go the full the election. donald trump is being clear on how we felt about need to members and the financial contributions to the alliance. i've been saying, look, even though i gotta pay, we're not going to project. okay. american frustration with the lack of european financial commitment to the alliance has been an issue for years. but the invasion of you cream by russia in 2022, we focus nate has result domestic defense spending. spike is european nature members prepared for the possibility of a conflict with russia. in the near future, we are ending up our defense industrial capacity. producing more shells, more ships, more missiles there may have done for decades, which we need to go further and faster. for our own,
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the terms and to supports to create the trip as promise to quickly in the warren craig, after i win the presidency, i will have the horrible war between russia and ukraine. settled that it would have never happened. it would have never ever happened of ours. the overwhelming majority of military h. ukraine comes from the united states during the fatigue is set to. and europe has stepped up to help president follow de zalinski. this is you, we are on your side for us to launch a safety phase. and what the, the, these are we know that the, you need multiple more maybe to support and move, and then for support. a trump administration will likely insist member states pay the fair share of nato's financial button. the board and ukraine is given day to renewed focus, but it's expenditure has stored, bringing of just how much trouble with the superpower cost remains to be seen with
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a member. states can increase their own contributions to satisfy the incoming us president alex patropolis culture 0. now late is across europe have been reacting to donald from victory in hungary 5 minutes to victoria bon describe drums when is one of the biggest comebacks and political history or band has been a vocal critic of the war and ukraine. a will download from promised. he then hush him out of the bottle, as mall from budapest. when hugo in prime minister victor oberon, conrad today to trump, things that his victory was the biggest, come back in us history. it was for a reason. there's going to be a meeting of europe and political community and you are being council here in, but that is an opportunity for all of us to press. i have full the need to and the warning ukraine. and as far as open is concerned, he wants to have this done through a did was put in something which has been brushed aside by the germans and the
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front. and many of those are the who believe that the need to continue providing significant political financial and better 3 assistance to the cranium until there is a deal which has to be on the tons of kids for the 5 life and for the conservative in europe. this is a good opportunity, a unique opportunity for them to press a head for the need for more conservative agenda for the liberal democrats. it's bad news, the big plus rated sidelines. and this is going to put more pressure on them to this thing. how to move forward, and this explains why french presidents background, early of this year i spoke about the need to have your fee and strategic autonomy, which is the need to put together and use security architect to them not is beside in the future to disengage from the european continent hushing about,
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but i 0 without this and in the u. k. polls show the majority of the british public had thrown the support behind camelot harris's campaign. they say that relationship between the us and u. k remains highly significant. donor, how has this revolt from the and i think donald trump's victory will be welcomed in some quarters in the u. k, but by no means universally an opinion poll conducted in the final stages of the campaign shows that 64 percent of britons who are in favor of account of the harris presidency, just 18 percent. we're excited about the idea of donald trump, pertaining to the white house went off though how much importance they attach overall to the results of the us election. 76 percent said a great deal. the reason for that. well that while the u. k has been an ally of the us for decades. the u. k. now no longer a member of the european union attaches huge importance, more than ever, if anything, to the so called special relationship with the united states. so here's thomas
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labor government. we do all it can now to smooth the room pools of the past and its relationship with from and most recently across the trump campaign campaign, alleging that the labor party was engaged in election interference in the united states by it, allegedly organizing and paying for its campaign operatives to go and work alongside commer harrison product so that the current farm secretary david, let me describe donald trump is a woman hating. they are not safe. socio pasco, the ones who was asked to go quietly away and hence the warm woods altered by kissed amr and parliament welcoming the victory. cooling it, historic, saying that his places to allies, we stand shoulder to shoulder in defense of our shed values of freedom, democracy, and enterprise. i look forward to working with you and he is a head. he said, hard work. of course it will be sometimes they send to left leg of politics, could hardly different more with donald trump's republicans on a whole range of world issues from trade to climate change to the loan. must you
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repeat and security nato. and of course you cry, joe whole, i'll do 0, but it's basically got some other news now and you find the government says north korean soldiers have been involved in combat with its troops. so the 1st time your crime in west and officials say an estimated 10000 north korean shows have been deployed to russia's coast region. it's been partly occupied by ukrainian forces since in the offensive. in august. as many as 89 people are still missing in spain. a week off, the devastating funds swept across the east of the country. nearly 15000 minute treat personnel and police are on the ground to help with the recovery effort. $217.00 people are confirmed dead with dozens of bodies still on the identified problem is that the sanchez's announced in the $12000000000.00 relief
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package. cuba is bracing for how to turn that off. i add, which is expected to make land full later on wednesday, 9 provinces in west and central cuba, including the capital, have on a, been placed on storm a lot, local media, se molding $70000.00 people have been evacuated from the homes. the country is still recovering from higher can also last month, which killed 8 people. nigeria as presidents, as all the release of 29 children, arrested in jail. the off the wide spread, the anti government protests in august. it will freeze after they appeared in quotes, looking malnourished, sparking a public outcry. president bowler to nubile, says all law enforcement agents involved in the rest, then prosecution will be investigated of this
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website. so me for this news out, get me on all the shows, especially the selections. if you head over to our website, out to 0, don't com. and back in a moment with another 4 shots for stay with us. the a meeting of minds with israel committing genocide before our eyes and none of our mainstream politicians across the board seem to have a problem with it. campaigner andrew fine, stay and photographer shock you do on, on active is on the crisis against each one of us. these are with this, and this is upon us. as with this is to be able to validate for the seeing around us studio will be on script part to own own disease. it is sure visual and see us and the 2 possible that mean i was in fear i shot and dead a controversial us know stand your ground. you're seeing of these laws actually encourage
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more violence. giving us agents the right to kim. we're sending the message that you can just do this. this is ok and denying justice to victims. families, lines investigate, license to you on out to 0, called choose solutions that gives us no for a future that we have to find creative solutions, not just turn our backs on. i don't think that has a number. think about it as a person yourself and that person shoes. so as you can see for this is my us, my life, like at least in my life, you know, stages we want we want to go for it. because the women in my country, they're not sweet, because we are not denies all of who we are human beings on this earth to the trees
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and the coins. we are walking in the footsteps, our ancestors, whatever has been done before can be done even bit on as long as a human being is doing it. you just have to keep pushing because no one else can see the visions keywords. you do the political come back for public and candid a donald trump elected president for a 2nd to for is also he left office victory for the american people that will allow us to make america great. again, i'm sammy's. i then this is i'll just do a live from dell with coverage of the us presidential election. also coming up from
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