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tv   NEWS 30min  Al Jazeera  November 7, 2024 1:00am-1:31am AST

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the international filmmakers world class. so what's the plan here to that question? the most important part is that we get attention to the climate crisis. bring programs to form an expired on al jazeera, the, the while i can see this election, i do not concede the fight that fuel this campaign. pamela harris sounds a supporter, so except the us election results and commit suite peaceful transfer of power. the clear, i'm for the back to boy, you're watching, i'll just hear a lie from to also coming up. how is the speech follows? one of the biggest political comebacks in us history. donald trump is elected
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president for a 2nd time. and having use is really s likes to get a 1st aid zone in gaza seating, killing more palestinian children. and at least 17 people are killed in is really a tax. the cost never known the town of bar shot and the fall back regions are targeting the thank you very much for joining us. us by surprise and comment of harris has addressed the nation for the 1st time, conceding the presidential election to republican rival. donald trump speaking at a i'm a lot at howard university in washington dc. how is told her supporters to accept the results she also found to keep fighting for democracy and the role of the outcome of this election is not what we wanted. not what we fought for,
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not what we've voted for. but here me when i say to hear me when i say the lights of america's promise will always burn bright. while i can see this election, i do not concede the fight that fuels this campaign, the sites, the vice for freedom, more opportunity, for fairness and the dignity of all people. a fight for the ideals at the heart of our nation. the ideals that reflect america at our best, that is a 5, i will never give a the best bringing all just as can be hawkish who was listening to that speech at howard university in washington dc. so what was the main message from pamela harris
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in this concession speech company? uh, well the main message there was that carla harris obviously disappointed you heard there very hoarse, cobble harris compared to what she typically sounds like on the campaign trail. and she also acknowledge that she has been feeling a range of emotions and that's her support and feel that way too. but what she also acknowledged was that her spirit has not been dampened. you heard there in that sound bite that's. she's not going to give up the fight. she may have conceded because this is the tradition of us democracy in the peaceful transfer power. something that she polls unlike her predecessor donald trump, a in terms of his refuse it to do so. back in 2020, ultimately doing so. but she believes in the traditions. and so she is honoring that something that she's underscore and but in terms of the spirit of her campaign
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folly, she says that fight goes on. whether it's reproductive freedoms, whether it's the fight for fairness in wages, whether it's fighting to protect the children from gun violence. she says that fight will continue. and that's one that she says is lifelong. okay, kimberly thank you very much for the moment. kimberly how could live there in washington dc in a moment will be checking in with the alan fisher who's with the trump camp in florida. but let's just take a look at where things stand right now. donald trump has 295 electoral college votes. the magic number, of course being 270 harris, falling short with 226 electoral college votes. so as you can see, there is still a couple of states that aren't yet colored, which means they haven't yet been called. but even without declaring those phase, trump has more than the required $270.00. while he declared victory hours before the full results came out. or frankly, this was, i believe,
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the greatest political movement of all time. there's ever been anything like 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 reason. the reason is going to be just the best i'm bringing now in. fisher, who's in west palm beach, florida at harris syntron, spoke on the phone earlier before that concession speech in washington dc. what's the trump campaign been up to today? well they've been receiving a lot of phone calls. no, just been coming the holidays, but also from joe biden, who invited donald trump to the white house at some point in the near future. he's
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also spoken to benjamin at yahoo, the prime minister of israel, the 2 of them, of course, a correspond over the last 8 years or so. he's also had messages of congratulations from a number of world leaders, including the prime minister of india, the president of france. i'm betsy's prime minister too, but he's also been planning what he's going to do next. he has to get his to dictate transition up and running as the chairman of that will be, his vice president tvs. events along side is 2 elder sons don't junior and eric, and they will essentially be betting the people who will go before the senate for vehicle information into the most important possessions of government. that donald trump approached at washington at 8 years ago as the mule, quite someone who's never spend much time in the tone and didn't really understand the workings. and so he banked on a lot of experience tags and took advice and people had been in the public and living for some considerable time. that still going to happen this time. what is
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the issue for people that are loyal to him? people that will follow his instruction. he's also going to start formulating the executive orders. he plans to issue on the one. the has to be drawn up, they have to be legally check. this will not be quite the rush. it was 8 years ago when of course he introduced his 2 colt muslim band, which was struck down by the court almost immediately, but not before the court. a great deal of keels at the airport right across the united states. he wants to avoid that sort of image this time, right. and then, of course, there's formulae take with congress how he's going to stop pushing through some of his important bills, how he can get things through as quickly as possible to try and deliver the promises that he made to the millions upon millions of people who voted for their looking at him to cut their gross a bill to cut their fuel bills to make sure the life is slightly easier. and of course among the l e. actions the plants to take is to seal the us mexico border
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and issue an executive order vesting old joe biden. did this is going to be a different sort of presidency. donald trump is also going to deliver a different sort of america. well, new political ear a begins in washington, no doubt. thank you very much. island fisher lives in west palm beach, florida. while republicans, i've also taken control of the us centers. they are now fighting to retain a majority in the house that they've housed in mid term elections in 2022 vote. counting is still on for some races with republicans in the lead, but it's still too early to call, which party will hold the majority. if republicans control both the house and the senate, trump would meet nearly no resistance when it comes to enacting his policies. if democrats slip the house, it would act as a check on the president's agenda that speak to john, nothing care about all these developments. he's a democratic strategist and former communications director of the democratic national committee. thank you so much, john, for being with us. first of all, what did you make of come to harris's concession speech?
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what was the main takeaway suite? yeah, she was basically talking to the faithful. she was addressing the big, wide spread sense of disappointment we. we thought we had it, we could taste it. it was so close to having the 1st woman president to be able to continue. jo biden's agenda. and obviously we felt our short so i think that the kind of crushing of books should hold below for a lot of people right now was her 1st priority that she was addressing here and saying that yes, we have loss. and we will of course concede, because that's what we do as americans in his democrats, but the fight will go on. so a little bit of hope in there for folks. yeah, she did use the word fight a lot. the fight will go on. what exactly is she going to fight for, and what role will she have in this 5? what does the political future look like? yeah, i mean what she was talking about fighting for were particular issue priorities of
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reducing gun violence in the us and expanding access to reproductive health care for women across the us. and those specific issue fights, of course, will be something that she and democrats broadly will continue to press. the real question, i think, in my mind, and a lot of other different kinds of minds right now is, what is the democrats pastor as a party? there was a lot of talk that if donald trump were to lose the republican party would be at a loss right now that it would, we would have potentially splintered. there would be a lot of soul searching. and now we find ourselves in a place where democrats felt considerably short of what we thought we could do. after putting together a lot of policies putting in place a lot of policies under biden's that we really believed in. but because prices went up so much, a lot of americans were like, yeah, i was better off under trump. and so there's a lot of thinking for democrats to do about how is it that we reach, reach those american ones. where, where do they even begin with this whole searching?
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yeah, i think there's going to be a lot of data process. there's going to be a lot of think pieces and a lot of conversation back and forth. ultimately, i think there was a widespread sense that the democratic party for generations going all the way back to f d r was the party of the little guy was the party we stood up for and looked out for people who worked hard for a living and just wanted to earn enough money to put together a good life with their family and that somehow somewhere along the way, recent decades that has been most part of the issue is that the democratic party is run by a lot of people who are relatively well off relatively well educated compared to some of the rank and file folks. so there's a little bit of a demographic misalignment there. potentially 2, but re establishing that for service of the party to regular work and people to build the middle class to grow the middle class. and enabling the american dream to
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be real. again, that's gotta be at the heart of whatever it is that we present to the public, the broader public, and get our act together internally going forward. so you say they has to be a re, a re alignment of the democratic party. but it brings me back to my initial question about some of the harris, i mean, what's the future? what's the future within this democratic party? and who can lead this party towards this realignment of us who is going to leave the party? that was a great question. it's not going to become le harris, although she will have a voice in this i think what she's just done. yes, she fell short, but i think a lot of people were impressed by what she was able to do in her limited time with her campaign. i think she will probably step back a little bit and maybe go back to a senate or a different kind of role. and so we could see her re emerge as a party leader in the forefront public facing down the road just a little bit. but in the meantime, we have a huge bench of people who are super talented and super popular with the be what
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they were from thinking of governors. like gretchen whitmore, we're a cooper in north carolina. they chose not to take a more prominent role this time. so they're, they're a bunch of them and other folks in the senate and down at the mayor's lever level as well. there are democrats, we're doing the service and are recognized for doing the service to the middle class and to work. and people that i think is where we want to be as a party. so it's going to be a question of sorting out, finding those people elevating those people and, and re presenting herself, reintroducing ourselves. i think, to the american people more broadly. john, thank you so much. very good to talk to you about this. thank you for joining us. john nath finger democratic strategist, 5 there from washington. dc. thanks for donald trump's re election is us present, has the potential to reshape the country's economy. the stock market has search following his election victory with the down jones hitting a record high. that's because investors expect to business friendly administration, including tax, scotts, trump, as also propose adding
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a tariff of 10 to 20 percent on all imports, with significantly high levies on him. for some china, these tires could raise additional revenue for the government, but trump's overall plan will deepen the federal deficit unless he also makes major a spending cuts. the policies did not connect. she kept saying stuff about, you know, the middle class, but trump, for me at least probably was a lot more better suited for the middle class. and she was she tried to connect pretty well, but from there a whole lot better with those presentations and stuff like that. i think unfortunately, you know, the democrats, the last time around got saddled with most of the financial burden from cove it and a lot of the blame from that. but the fact is, donald trump, when he left off is the last time left us in a better economy. i speak to maxwell for bob. this is an economist and visiting
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professor at the school, a new school in new york city is also the founder of system adventures and is joining us from new york max. good to have you with us. so what happened was it, the economy stupid, a solid economist. so we're all kind of inclined to talk about what we know about. i do think that the democrats missed the upset from lower income earners where are rising portion of, of america. and i think that was something that they paid for. i think the inflation argument was pretty successfully hung around their necks. although i don't think that the problem for most american households as inflation. i think more of the problem for a lot of american households is that their wages haven't kept up with inflation for 50 years. and while the democratic party is certainly a part of that story, it's hard to blame at all on on joe biden. but i do think that a really poorly message, their successes may left the story of the democratic party, largely up to a professional machine, an individual and,
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and president trump who have been running for president and mastering these narratives for 10 years. i'm playing catch up on a 100 days when you've mismatched the rhetoric and the explanation for, for 10 years. this is a pretty tricky business by i think i would always start with the numbers. and so just so we sort of, there's no one tells the story. there's 350000000 americans for each one who went to the polls to stay at home. it's hard to know what america think. so that's true, no matter what happens in election. and then it was roughly a tie in terms of the number of people who actually voted for these 2 folks. although obviously he did much better in the all important electoral college and did a bit better in the general election seems to but so it's hard to infer depth, fair. but i think the story of migrants as an issue and the story of affordability crises, which are very real resonated, much better than her story about rates and building a bigger future, which is fairly abstract and may not speak to pocket book paying very well. all right, so we, we perhaps may understand what happened they had,
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but now looking ahead to what he's promised to do when it comes to the economy. he said he would slap terrace on invoice, cut taxes, and government regulation on the taxes. first the tax scotts, we saw the stock market react very positively to his election to his victory. we saw a surge. what will be the size and shape of any tax cuts and what would that mean for the american economy? yeah, see if you saw the stock markets rally a bunch starts to things, lot of that's relief that it's not a long drawn out process with multiple people saying they one i think every when it was was really by that given recent history. and then there's some sense that the republican party might be good for the stock market, although it has under performed the democratic party. sometimes it's been very good another times for any type of tax cuts that leave more money in the hands of the folks who invest in stocks and bonds is good. i would caution also that the bond market try to figure out because tax policy was selling off
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a little bit today. so tax cuts are always popular. however, when you have major structural damage, that's like we do. you actually can't cut taxes without massive spending cards, which cause the economic pain that god, donald trump, elected, confusing other side of that and pointing to failure. so the democratic party. so i think if we see anything like mass deportations or tire ups, we'll have the kind of insulation we haven't seen right before in a long time. and we will not have a happy house stock market. so the hope is that we don't see that on the terrace because there's a great deal of concern from, from, you know, european countries from china and so on. he's promised to add tires of 10 to 20 percent on all invoice, which significantly highlighted these on imports from china, right? that's going to increase inflation, you say. but what about what it would mean for the global economy? what, what will be the consequences? so that a, so be a shot, it would be a shock waves into the global economy. most of the relatively, historically moderate inflation. we saw the got people's upset is much lower than
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this because it's also a kind of 19th century economic view, which is why every single major professional economist of all political stripes as advised against it. because when you increase tax, you're just charging consumers more. what we know of as inflation, and you can't actually reproduce specialty economies and production systems around the world. it takes years and big investments. and people don't always want to make big investments and spend years if they think that the policy in question might be reversed and for years that creates a big problem. it also takes years and it's a supply chain shock. and what did cause a fair amount of arts ation, where supply chain shots coming from the trade wars that we had right, going into to accommodate that. and create also just tobin which really threw off production and distribution prophecies. so it would cause a massive inflation as with any kind of major deportation of the immigrant community. sometimes under documented or on, documented here, which does a grocery disproportion amount of work in and around or agriculture and food businesses, care, businesses, construction businesses,
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etc. which would make things more expensive. so we're looking at 2 massive supply chain shocks with depressive growth. 4 through and spiking prices, which we know of as stagflation, but less popular cousin of inflation. thank you so much. mike's for your inside. very good to talk to you about this maxwell phase and economist joining us there from new york. thank you for your time. thank you. and still ahead on ology 0, i will look at what the us selection could mean for both nato and civil war in ukraine. the, the coast, we will think of australia is largely sending most the time. but there's actually a pulled dramatic side coming across at the moment. so i think for the full cost assess, it'd be a fairly cloudy one, or a good path of south australia and new south wales. and victoria outbreaks of light
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is right here. it's pretty happens. the red interior with temperatures are about to come down a bit. and there's also right in developing further west and western australia and the full light to share housing, a fair amount of clients and maybe a little unusual. the sun is returning to new south wales by this time sidney's up to 30 degrees. there is rain on his way so i have to sign up for not so much on thursday night just but on friday that will become fairly heavy. in today's is seeing more or less the end of it, it's dry period, neither osh out developing and sort of raise the into the east. well, so much in java, admittedly most so into marcia bonia this line and meanwhile is, or the office as is in sheet. now the engine is a type of food which is scraping across the north of the zone. most likely during says day to then also that the stations enjoying fine weather for the most part, 1st snow of the seasons, return demand foods, but you're charging itself. the significant type of food probably will stay just
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off. sure. but still gives a lot of risk to lose on the right here it is. sure visual and see us some see through possibly. i mean i was in fear, i shot him dead. the controversial us little stand your ground you're seen are these laws actually encourage more violence? giving assailants the right to kim. we're sending the message that you can just do this. this is ok. i'm denying justice to victims. families. lines investigate, license you on out you 0 of the the,
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to watching out a 0 life from don't i reminder about top stories, us vice president, come a, how is the summation for the 1st time, conceding the presidential election to republican rival donald trump has for speaking at her alma mater, how is university pushing courage, i suppose to accept the results. and she also vowed to keep fighting for democracy and a concession comes ours up to republican candidate, donald trump was elected. the 47 president of the united states has already changed 292 electro college whole defend is on track to win all 7 swing states. trump will be inaugurated on january the 20th, or several. well, leaders have congratulated donald trump with his victory among them. ukraine's president jordy music lensky was released a statement saying, i appreciate present terms, commitment to the peace through strength approach and global affairs. this is
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exactly the principle that can practically bring just space in ukraine. closer. i'm hopeful that we will put it in action together. or zalinski has had an off intense relationship with trump, who has made no secret of his admiration for russian president vladimir fulton. usually a shop of oliver has more from moscow. the most popular opinion with he in russia is that relations between moscow and washington will remain tense. but still less could believe that under the new president, the united states can help and the russia, ukraine conflict. trump once promised to ended within 24 hours, but many in key of fear that he will order to reduce us weapons supply, su, crane of his way to, to make territorial concessions or freeze the conflicts. and these are unacceptable conditions for ukraine, but hope for negotiations between the 2, worrying sides on the trump presidency remains. so no illusions though he about donald trump being nice to russia just recently,
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he revealed his involvement in the shutdown of the russian notes stream to gas pipeline during trumps previous presidential tents. despite his seemingly nice relations with presents regiment, patient washington continued to impose on to russian sanctions and expelled, dipping lots. washington also withdrew from several arms control agreements uh, the on of tracy, which was signed by ronald reagan and may have global charles as well as the multi natural open skies tracy. but at the same time, defiance has that during the previous time, it was relatively calm in the don't boss region in don't ask a new governess with very small number of civilian casualties that well during the obama bytes and advanced ration russia to control the crimea in 2014 and under the binding house administration is unleashed its special ministry operation in ukraine in twice twice to. and from many times blamed his opponent, drew binding full starting its you less of a to z, right most are the,
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the war on guys and now and, and these really yes, try go scale it nice for people and injured several libraries in guys. a city bodies of the victims west through and on the street is kind of simeon scrambled to help the wounded. this ride target to the 1st age center, across this trip is really a time since killed 22 people since don't at least 15 of them in big law here in northern casa honey, my mode has more from down by in central gas. as the, as the world, the tension is fixed on the us of presidents or waste israel. the salt and garza has not closed this. don ruskin workers in gaza. city have been assisting us for what's left of this residential building. it was hit by and is really as try among the injured our children. they play after the north
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has seen intensified military operations, with residents forcibly displaced by his regular soldiers. the patterns of destruction repeats in hon. eunice were mourners gather to prey beside the bodies of palestinians. guild and reason is rarely strikes. enough is enough. we are tired, we are really tired. we have no energy to breed. no, we have slowed the dying every day. and come out one hospital unit reports a dire situation. the organization saves about 4000 babies, have been left without taxes to critical care. meanwhile, the world holes organizations save it, has organized the 1st medical evacuation of from gauze and 6 months. more than 100 patients are set to leave garza through the term of asylum and crossing to receive a treatment of drugs. the valuation of from there and by that has a lifeline for some of the critical patients. but in gauze as decimated health care
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system. 1000 more continue to wait and hold. honey, my hood, i'll just the, or from the central area of the gods through how this guy to is there any protest as a variety to, again, in west or was late in the day after from mr. benny minutes. you all fired his defense minister. you i've kalonde. busy fires in march, tennessee. i was house on wednesday night. they said glance removal could delay an agreement for the release of captive housing guys. the former minister has been publicly critical of the prime minister's handling of the war and he's really strike his target at a residential building in the coastal kind of fire shots south of february 11 on capital killing at least 20 people and in the bomb back region. of 11 on at least 50 people have been killed in these really strikes. the lebanese government has accused israel of rejecting diplomatic initiatives. why has vanessa is it's open to talks only after the aggression and spread. as in a honda reports, a diplomatic channel is will likely be on pause until the new us president takes
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office in january. and i thought about hard on these rel, had issued a new bombing threat not long after the bombs started dropping on a route southern suburbs. it coincided with a new pledge by his beloved, not to surrender. these neighborhoods were already largely empty, but as well as war on hezbollah has no frontline and more often than not, the strikes come without warning. it's air force is targeting anything or anyone affiliated with the group. in places where it's supporters are and the death toll is climbing. at times the strikes are outside has been less traditional strongholds, but the group believes its strength comes from its ability to continue to resist. so possible, so that there is only one thing that will stop this war of aggression, and that is the battlefield. yet all this includes resistance fighters confronting these really that the border met,
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the and the rockets and drones fired deep into israel norm has the law has expanded the geographical reach of its attacks hitting a military base near tel aviv main airport. but at the same time, it is leaving the door open for negotiations. when that body a little more follow up, there is a roadmap for negotiations and we made that clearly through, in direct negotiations conducted by the lebanese government and the speaker of parliament b. barry, the basis of any negotiation must involve in into israel's oppression and respect of loving non sovereign. as well as prime minister benjamin nothing whose proposal contradicts that. he has made clear a deal must involve and is really role to prevent has beloved from rearming, that he said is more important than a ceasefire. loving on government is renewing its call for a cease fire and the implementation of un resolution $1701.00 to bring an end to as well as the war that would involve.

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