tv New Day CNN May 8, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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we have this story covered only the way cnn can. let's begin with richard quest live on the streets of london with the latest. tell us the reaction richard. >> reporter: good morning from the top of a big red bus that is now making its way across westminster bridge alisyn. right on time you join us. thank you for being punctual. it's 11:00 in the morning in the uk. big ben is chiming the hour. and the m.p.s will be returning to the houses of parliament. and it will be david cameron. overnight as the exit poll came out this is how one of the national newspapers is doing it cameron will hold onto power, says the exit poll. it was a shock. we had expected from weeks of exit polls that it would be a hung parliament that cameron would be in trouble, that labor would do well. but in the end the bell tolled for the opposition. and it was david cameron that is going to see the queen in just
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over an hour and a half to say he can form a government to be the next prime minister to remain in office. >> big ben and richard quest, that's quite a live shot. so, richard, what does this mean now for that referendum for britain leaving the eu? >> alisyn i can do better than that. have a look at that it's the million-dollar shot. right up the river temes, the london eye. i answer the question you asked me. what that means is there will be a renegotiation. britain will attempt to renegotiate its relationship with the eu and there will be a referendum on that by 2017. it's going to be two years of should britain stay in should britain leave. one other thing, cameron has already said that he will not go into the next election in 2020 as prime minister. so the brits know firstly there will be a referendum.
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and secondly how long he's going to be there. >> wow. that packed a lot into one live shot. richard quest, thank you so much. we will see you later on in the show for more reaction. thanks so much. well the scottish and national party came in a distant third place, but may be a big story of the election day, party from six seats in parliament to a whopping 56. what becomes of the new momentum for the scots? cnn's erin mclaughlin live with more from edinburg. >> reporter: people here waking up to an absolute political earthquake. keep in mind that the scottish national party is the very same party that was pushing for that referendum back in september, pushing for a breakup of the united kingdom and for scottish independence. now, they failed there, but they're absolutely victorious in this election going from just 6 seats in parliament overnight to
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an unprecedented and absolutely staggering 56 seats. the most this party has ever had 11 seats, many saying that scotland now sending a very firm message to the establishment that it wants to see change in this country. perfect example of that the story of 20-year-old mary black, the snp candidate who managed to unseat douglas alexander, one of the most seasoned labor politicians in all of the land. now the question becomes what sort of influence will the snp have over this government and what sort of concessions prime minister david cameron is willing to make to avert what many are talking about here as a second referendum. chris. >> all right, erin thank you very much. let's bring in christiane amanpour how did the polls get
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it so wrong? what's the conventional wisdom from all those spin doctors this morning? >> well there is no conventional wisdom because the whole herd mentality set in good and strong and everybody went with the herd. there were even predictions that ed miliband would win a majority. that was in some corners of the press. so yeah a real serious dissection of opinion polls, of the media, of this idea that you know you don't perhaps take into account that there were 40% undecided even a few days before the election. so all of that. but the truth is that practically nobody predicted that cameron or anybody would get an overall majority. and what he has is one short of an overall majority. he is going to see the queen at midday to say that he will be able to form a government. so what happened here? people voted for continuity. people decided to trust him, that he would be the man to keep restoring the economy. they voted against change. they did give a big win to the scottish nationalists.
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the scottish nationalists say they don't want another remp dumb. and to be very frank experts say having lost the referendum in september they don't want to have another one because they would probably lose it again. some say the people went for the scottish national party in such droves because they knew they didn't risk another referendum. they knew they wouldn't risk breaking up britain and they voted their heart. so that's for that. as for europe it is generally considered that even though cameron under pressure from his right flank did go for this referendum in-out but he would be able to do enough houdini work with the eu to make sure britain stays inside the eu. now we have to see whether cameron can actually make britain stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the united states again and really make britain still remain a world leader. because whether it's cameron or miliband there has been a retreat from the world stage. chris. >> so what does this resurgence of authority for cameron mean in
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terms of his ability to shore up the u.s. relationship and share these goals in the war on terrorism in the battle for what the global economic mandate is? >> reporter: well the goals are shared there's no doubt about it. the question is how much heft does britain put into the fight. for instance yes, it is in the air fight against isis but no it isn't with a huge number of aircraft. for instance in the russia-ukraine crisis where was david cameron? obviously where was president obama as well? the people who we saw front and center negotiating with putin were merkel and hollande. what does britain do about its defense budget which is way below the basic minimum of 2% that's required as a nato force or as a nato partner and therefore as a force in the world. all these things have to be looked at and people have said britain has to have a long hard look at itself and decide whether it wants to remain a world leader.
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but for the economy britain stands out in europe as having a strong resurgence. well a decent recovery let's say, from the crash stronger than any other economy in terms of growth in europe employment at highest in europe and the kind of capitalism people have described as compassion in the united states. all of that makes britain a top prospect in the world and i think this continuity is not going to reassure just markets but allies and people around the nation as well. >> he went from seeming to be pushed out mr. cameron to now almost ruling alone. and in combination with his promise not to run the next time this gives him power and freedom, christiane. what do you think he's going to do with this? >> reporter: well it does give him power and freedom. people criticized him a lot for saying in an interview before the election that actually i won't stand for a third term if i win. i think what he says he wants to
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do is continue austerity to an extent although a lot of unfunded promises were thrown around in the last desperate few days of the campaign. but continued get what he says the economy back on a really solid level footing. plus he has acknowledged that there was a problem with scotland. and that is in part because britain, all its major parties did not follow through again with all these promises they threw around to the scots in order to try to keep them from voting for independence which they successfully did. they kept the union whole, but they haven't delivered so-called devo max, devolving power to scotland. that's what the scots say they want. we're going to use our power to make sure britain keeps the promises they made to keep us in the union. again, as i said britain has to figure out how much of a role it's going to play going forward in foreign policy. because as we'd like to say it is always punched above its way
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but recently it's been punching below its weight. and many around the world who are allies want to see britain as a real world power and a force for good and for positive change in the world. >> aft metaphor there christiane. for those in the u.s. waking up this morning saying oh the uk elections, what does this mean for me? you cannot underestimate the need the u.s. has for the uk in the war on terror. thank you so much for breaking it all down for us this morning. appreciate it mik. a chilling warning from the fbi director thousands of americans are in direct contact with isis right now. they're either being recruited or ordered to attack america. the terror group steadily gaining influence here in the united states with a rapidly growing number of online followers. let's bring in our pentagon correspondent barbara starr. what's being done about this? >> good morning, michaela. grim situation indeed. a lot of people are looking at that attack in garland, texas, as a real barometer of this. in fact law enforcement officials telling cnn elton simpson, one of the men killed
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in that attack was in touch with known jihadists overseas who were encouraging him to launch attacks. it gets to this question are these attacks, are these plots inspired by isis or directed by isis in a very direct fashion? it may no longer matter. that's what the fbi is saying. that now that line is being blurred. fbi director james comey meeting with reporters. i want you to just hear what he had to say about all of this. let me quote directly comey saying and i quote, i know there are other elton simpsons out there. it's almost as if there is a devil sitting on the shoulder saying kill kill kill kill all day long. they are recruiting and tasking at the same time. hundreds of people in the u.s. perhaps in touch with isis a very difficult problem for the law enforcement community to approach. in fact later today there will be a classified phone call if
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you will with the fbi, federal authorities and state and local officials. a routine regular call but you can assume all of this is going to be a subject of conversation. alisyn. >> absolutely. we're going to be talking about it a lot on "new day" as well. barbara, thanks so much for that. also new this morning, a federal appeals court ruling on the side of privacy saying the nsa collection of americans phone records is illegal. pressure now building on congress and president obama to either end the nsa program or to change it somehow. cnn's white house correspondent jim acosta joins us live. what has the reaction been there, jim? >> reporter: alisyn the white house is still reviewing this appeals court decision that ruled that the nsa's bulk phone data collection is illegal. while the court did not say the program is unconstitutional these judges did say that the collection of bulk phone data at the nsa exceeds what was authorized by congress and the patriot act. now, this mass collection of u.s. phone records started after 9/11. it's routinely authorized in secret by the federal
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surveillance court, but the disclosure of this program from nsa leaker edward snowden sparked an outcry among republicans and democrats and the new attorney general loretta lynch told lawmakers on capitol hill looking forward to seeing legislation addressing what is called this 215 program as it's known here in washington. here's what she had to say. >> given the time issues involving the expiration of it we are also and have been working with this body and others to look for ways to reauthorize section 215 in a way that does preserve its efficacy and protect privacy. >> reporter: now, there is a bipartisan effort in the house to reform the program under that proposal. the phone companies would store the data instead of the nsa. problem is senate majority leader mitch mcconnell doesn't like that idea much and time is running out on this controversial program. it expires on june 1st. but the debate over this
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practice has made for some strange bedfellows in the white house. >> the key is the debate over the priorities and that means working together down in d.c. we know how that's been going. jim, thank you very much. >> reporter: okay. we do have breaking news. a pakistani military helicopter carrying foreign diplomats and their families crashing into a school in northern pakistan bursting into flames. six confirmed deaths including the two pilots and two ambassadors. there were 16 people onboard. why this happened in dispute. the taliban claims it shot the chopper down. pakistani military says technical issues caused the crash. more breaking news for you this morning. another suspected boko haram attack in nigeria. the associated press is reporting a business school in northeastern nigeria was the target this time. gunfire critically wounding at least five students. a suicide bomber detonateing and killing only himself. a second bomb reportedly went off in a college dorm but we are hearing that students were already in class at that time.
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we'll update you when we can. new england patriots quarterback tom brady breaking his silence on deflategate speaking before a friendly crowd on salem. he didn't go into detail but said he's had to fight controversy before. >> i think also as a public figure you learn there's not everyone's going to like you either. so good bad, indifferent there's a lot of people that don't like tom brady. and i'm okay with that. >> brady also says the controversy in no way tarnishing the patriots super bowl victory. >> is this a like thing? >> i didn't think so. >> i thought cheating didn't have anything to do with liking. >> right. >> well it comes down to how you're prioritizing this particular grade of cheating. >> i think you're right. there's a scale, right? >> there's stuff that goes on in that league whether it's dirty hits what guys do with equipment, what they do off the field, there's so many bad thicks going on and all of a sudden this is the biggest sin in the world. >> should raise some of the
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other things up to improve the integrity of the game. >> there's that but he's also suggesting there's hater out there. but it's more than that. >> i don't know. it goes to how you want to prioritize this. we'll see what action they actually take against him, what they do in other cases. you know you got to remember the nfl now yesterday christine brennan was saying this is the new nfl. they suspended hardy for the whole season. we'll see. >> is it the new nfl? >> we'll talk a lot about this during the program. we'd love to hear your thoughts as well. how well do you know your neighbors? a warning from the head of the fbi about home grown terrorists. he says thousands of americans are communicating with isis. we'll talk about that. take a look at this. a passenger captures smoke filling a delta flight from florida to new york. what went wrong? how did it turn out? answers ahead. right now, verizon is offering unlimited talk. and text. plus 10 gigs of shareable data. yeah, 10 gigantic gigs. for $80 a month. and $15 per line. more data than ever. for more of what you want.
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on the network that's #1 in speed. call. data. and reliability. so you never have to settle. $80 a month. for 10 gigs. and $15 per line. stop by or visit us online. and save without settling. only on verizon. doug, we have the results, but first, we have a very special guest. come on out, flo! [house band playing] you have anything to say to flo? nah, i'll just let the results do the talking. [crowd booing] well, he can do that. we show our progressive direct rate and the rates of our competitors even if progressive isn't the lowest. it looks like progressive is not the lowest! ohhhh! when we return we'll find out whether doug is the father. wait, what? the volkswagen golf was just named motor trend's 2015 car of the year. so was the 100% electric e-golf. and the 45 highway mpg tdi clean diesel. and last but not least the high performance gti.
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a chilling warning from the fbi director. thousands of americans are in direct contact with isis right now. they're either being recruited or ordered to attack america. the terror group steadily gaining influence here in the u.s. with a rapidly growing number of online followers. let's turn to phil mudd to help understand all this. he's our cnn counterterrorism analyst and former cia counterterrorism official. phil great to see you this morning. >> good morning. >> it was the number that the fbi director said that took everybody aback. he said thousands of americans are in contact online with isis. did that surprise you? >> that's right. no it doesn't. it's a simple explanation for
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how far this war has come. when we face the al qaeda adversary, we thought of them as a small group of people who staged a horrific attack. their goal though was to create a revolutionary movement not a group, a movement that went out to places like the philippines, indonesia. that happened in years like 2003 2004 2005. what we are now seeing is that revolutionary movement is reaching american shores. and the whole concept of terrorism is changing. not tight, secret groups compartmented cells, sleeper cells, but instead a group like isis that says we don't have to be compartmentalized, we're going to be on youtube and twitter saying hey, all you thousands of people that want to join this revolution that was started 15 20 years ago, go out and do your thing. and that's what we saw in texas. >> so phil you were the fbi's senior intelligence adviser for years. >> yep. >> so today how would you advise the fbi to begin to deal with those thousands of people?
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>> you got to break them down into baskets. the easiest basket to deal with is the known bad guys. that is if you've identified someone who's interested in committing an act of violence obviously you're going to go up and look at their social media. let's go to the other end of the spectrum. and what i think is a ticking time bomb because americans do not understand this. americans believe that the government is scraping a bunch of data from facebook and twitter and filtering out that data to say, hey, who are the bad guys. is alisyn up talking about garland, texas in a way that makes us uncomfortable. that is thousands of tweets per second that is protected data against americans living in american states. i don't think there's an easy solution to determining how you boil down the ocean of social media data. we didn't even have that ten years ago. and to finding the right people the answer i believe is twofold. one, talk to the companys that are doing this instead of just serving them legal papers for data talk to them about what the future looks like.
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and second jointly with those companies go to the congress and say this is not an intelligence problem. this is a problem of american culture. do you want to be secure? in which case we collect a lot of information about americans. or do you want to be living free or dying? and that is letting people do what they want to do online unless we get a clear indication that they'll commit an act of violence. basic question. >> so you think that the decision yesterday by the federal court to stop the nsa program of collecting the metadata is illegal. you think that will hamstring law enforcement. >> i do. but let me not go too far here. look this is the way people like me use that data. somebody walks into the office at our 7:00 a.m. threat briefing at the fbi and says chris cuomo just cropped up as a terrorist, which is not an outlandish proposition in my world. my first question is going to be obviously who is he and who does he talk to? 50 years ago you might have had
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to say i've got to put foot surveillance on chris cuomo, people on the ground to say what's his network of activity who are his potential coconspirators very easy question today. if i want to draw a web of understanding around a human being, i want to see who they're contacting by instant messaging, who they're contacting on e-mail who they're contacting on phone. that is digital data that's available. what the court is saying is you can't collect that just in the event it will be useful over time. i understand the legal decision. i think the question is much bigger. and it's a question for the president, the congress and the american people. do you want the government to be understanding what's going on twitter or what's going on e-mail messages so that you can stay safe or not? the court decision is a much smaller piece of that. >> it is such a complicated equation for everyone to figure out in congress and the president. >> it is. >> but let me read to you an ominous quote from the fbi director james comey yesterday. he said i know that there are other elton simpsons out there. it's almost as if a devil is
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sitting on the shoulder saying kill kill kill all day long. they are recruiting and tasking at the same time. so again, for the fbi how can they ever figure out who exactly is sitting in their basement sitting and stewing and who's actually plotting? >> they can and they can't. the first thing you want to do in a case like simpson is you have somebody who's already got a known history. that to me is an easy one. that's what we call in the intelligence business a known. the guy's already indicated he's thinking about an act of violence. what you worry about in my business is the unknown. who is out there who has not cropped up on the radar that is among the tens of thousands looking at isis information or communicating via twitter who should crop up on the radar? here's what will happen i believe. there will be an event in this country where dozens or more die and we will find a long social media trail about someone who was otherwise what we call a clean skin. that is who is otherwise not cropped up on the federal
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government's radar. and the american people are going to step back and say, whoa we thought you were looking at all this stuff. and my answer is let me tell you something, people in the government despite what you think are very nervous about looking at stuff like twitter without a reason to do so. and that reason can't simply be somebody's interested in isis and they're communicating with them on twitter, they're looking at a website. that is not enough information to say i really want to investigate john doe. >> well we sure hope all these conversations and decisions can happen without an attack having to happen. phil mudd thanks so much for the insight. >> thank you. >> let's get to michaela. five minutes of fear on a flight from florida to new york. smoke starts filling the cabin, passengers ordered to put their heads between their knees. what went wrong? out of 42 vehicles based on 6 different criteria, why did a panel of 11 automotive experts name the volkswagen golf motor trend's 2015 car of the year?
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wait, what is that? a new outdoor cleaner from scotts - it's powered by oxiclean and it's chlorine bleach-free so it's safe to use around grass and plants. get scotts new outdoor cleaner plus oxiclean. clean your outdoor space. clean it. well here we go. you know it was going to happen. we have the first named storm of the season. it's going to batter parts of the southeast. in the midwest by the way millions are still threatened by
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tornadoes. let's get right to meteorologist chad myers. chad this is an el nino year. i thought that meant we were supposed to get kind of a pass on the hurricane side. >> it doesn't mean pass just means maybe a lesser season than normal. here's ana, she just can't get her stuff together. but it's still going to have a 45-mile-an-hour storm, it is still a tropical like wind 45 miles per hour but it doesn't have the characteristics. it's not going to get an eye. it's not going to become a tropical storm or hurricane before it makes landfall later on this week. but if you're on the beach you'll see some waves, rip currents and the like. back to the west here's the bigger story, especially for tomorrow and today. there will be significant severe weather this afternoon in parts of oklahoma and texas. same story tomorrow. popping up through oklahoma city moore, norman places that don't need more severe weather. it's already had enough this week already. here we go oklahoma city wichita, down to dallas where severe weather pops up this week. for tomorrow this is the big
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day. in fact our jennifer gray is on her way out here to the midwest because there will be a lot of tornadoes on the ground. she will be there covering for you and i will be here as well. michaela back to you. we're so glad for that. thanks chad. looking alt news overseas conservatives defying the polls and running away with big election wins in the united kingdom. prime minister david cameron all but guaranteed to keep his job. conservatives appear to have enough seats to govern outright. tough night for the labor party which saw some key leaders defeated. the scottish national party also posting big games likely setting the table for another push to leave the uk. the house expects to take up the measure next week. now, president obama says he will sign the bill provided it doesn't change dramatically before it gets to his desk. the key, however, will be can he get consensus with congress on whatever final deal emerges? >> the justice department launching a full scale civil rights investigation into
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baltimore's police department following the death of freddie gray. the action requested by the city's mayor federal investigators already looking into whether gray's civil rights were violated when he was taken into police custody. some tense moments for delta passengers. smoke filled the cabin of their flight from ft. lauderdale to new york. one passenger grabbed his cell phone to record what it was like onboard. you can hear the smoke alarm sounding off inside delta flight 2028 the cabin filling with smoke so fast. >> i was so scared. i started to scream. >> reporter: the faa says more than an hour after takeoff from fortt. lauderdale the crew reported smoke in the cockpit and a problem with one of the jet's two engines. >> i started noticing at a certain point a mist coming through. then i realized the mist coming through the cabin was smoke. i could smell the smoke. then i looked back toward the rear of the plane and it was dark. >> reporter: all 89 passengers were told to put their heads between their legs to limit the
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amount of smoke they inhaled. >> we'll have to take something and go like this. >> people were coughing some people were crying. >> reporter: the flight to new york immediately diverted to charleston. the pilot telling passengers what went wrong. >> apparently there was a malfunction in the engine and had something to do with oil being burned. and they were deciding to turn one of the engines off to avoid the extra smoke. >> reporter: the smoke clearing in five minutes and all the passengers are now back in new york safe and sound this morning. >> i'm not religious, but i clenched my fist and i said okay god, i'm with you now. get us down please. and i promise to be a good boy. >> all of them there. apparently some of the passengers were holding hands and crying as they finally touched down safe and sound. we're told they got pizza and drinks afterwards. i'm betting it was probably a good stiff drink after that. >> right. mid flight conversions we see that sometimes. >> the crew was calm throughout
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which again just stellar how they're trained. i always look to them if they're calm i'll stay calm. >> but to your point why didn't the oxygen masks drop? >> well it's a fire hazard if there's fire on board if there's smoke there's usually fire so there's a concern that could have further ignited. >> you also don't know whether or not the crew was as alarmed as the passengers. seems like there was a little communication disconnect there also. but thank god it ended okay. all right. you know what it is now. it's time for cnn money now. chief business correspondent christine romans in the money center. what's going on with stocks? is it always like this? >> higher around the world right now. they're cheering the surprise election win for the uk prime minister david cameron. in london stocks up 1.8% as well. the pound is up as well. why the strong reaction? as you know markets hate uncertainty. the prospect of a clear outcome instead of days or weeks of confusion is a win for investors. cameron's victory also quashes the labor party plans to raise taxes on the rich and increase regulations for some businesses.
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bank stocks are surging with relief. voters seem to give cameron also some credit for britain's recovery. the uk had strongest growth of any major developed economy last year. unemployment has fallen rapidly there. clearly that win something markets are relieved to see, alisyn this morning. christine, thanks so much for that. the state department refusing to investigate donations to the clinton foundation while hillary clinton was in charge even though foundation officials promised to reveal them all. will this issue dog clinton for the rest of her campaign? we take a closer look with michael smir connish ahead. meet the world's newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more
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on the network that's #1 in speed. call. data. and reliability. so you never have to settle. $80 a month. for 10 gigs. and $15 per line. stop by or visit us online. and save without settling. only on verizon. clinton news. the state department says it will not review previous undisclosed donations to the clinton foundation despite an earlier agreement that the charity would make its backers public. how much could this hurt hillary on the campaign trail, or help? let's bring in the host of cnn's smerconish and cnn political commentator michael smerconish.
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good to have you with us my friend. even the way that was written makes everything about this seem like it was a negative. and yet where is the proof? i know the perception is so tantalizing to us and certainly to the right. you read the book. do you believe the case can be made that there were bribes involved? >> i don't think that the book is a hit job. i think the book is pretty well researched. and i think that it raises legitimate questions. but to your point, chris, there are no smoking guns in this book of any quid pro quo. so unless there's more information, more evidence forthcoming of a deal having been part and parcel of these financial transactions the donations to the clinton foundation the engagement of former president clinton to speak, unless there's more that is coming forward then i don't think it will move the needle. i think the clinton partisans, those who respect, admire and want to vote for hillary clinton, like david brock, will continue to say it's a put-up job. and those like mitt romney will continue to refer to it as something that looks like
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bribery. there's something in it for everybody. one last thought. it requires an attention span to get involved in this book and try to sort it out. the tom brady issue, we all get it. did they underinflate the balls or not? the clinton issue you're going to have to pay attention. >> here's the thing, you have to pay attention. but both things are not equal propositions. it's not equal that they're tough questions and they're going to have to find some there-there. or there is no proof and you can't draw the connections or you may have the proof and it's opposite reaction. at what point you make the case or it goes away? >> hey, at a minimum i think that the book raises questions about pretty amazing coincidences of foreign investors, men, trying to put together a variety of business transactions who are prohibited from making donations to american domestic political candidates suddenly making contributions to the clinton foundation and suddenly engaging
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former president clinton to speak at fee levels that he had not previously seen. it's pretty interesting. >> but you know it's interesting, you talk about this both of you but perception matters. i'm curious. even if there's no there there, is there damage that is done? is this going to cast hillary as untrustworthy? is the perception out there to voters that she isn't? >> the polls have gone down. >> well to those who are predisposed not to like her, you know they're getting out of this story exactly what they want to get out of this story. the early polling -- that's a great question. the early polling data suggests thus far it hasn't harmed her. and even though the book only came out on tuesday, discussion of the book has been ongoing for about ten days. and the early signs are that at this stage it has not harmed her. it's not going to help her obviously but that it hasn't harmed her. >> what about the undecideds? >> we don't know. here's the question -- >> they're undecided. that's the problem with them.
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>> here's the question this is what i would ask about the undecideds relative to secretary clinton. how many are there really? we are about to spend millions potentially in excess of $1 billion on this election. i happen to believe that we could run this race tomorrow, saturday morning. and if her name is on the ballot we could probably get the same result that we will get in november of 2016. >> without spending all that money. >> that's incredible michael. i mean that's radical. right? because they say this is going to be the most expensive one ever. but also to his point if she's already the nominee, why do we need to spend a billion dollars? >> i hear you. >> so michael, is anybody listening? >> what the brits just did. >> all right. >> got a bit of a delay there. >> we do have a delay. i want to move onto another question. you said chris christie's toast. >> oh did we lose him -- >> if you look at the internals of that "new york times"/cbs
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survey released this week 42% of a certain category of voters say they will not consider voting for chris christie. do you know what that category is? republican voters. 42% of the gop are saying we won't even take seriously his candidacy. i don't know how he overcomes that particularly given the problems that he's having in new jersey from a fiscal standpoint and of course the bridge situation. >> who will they vote for? you have more and more people getting in this race. >> it's crowded. >> you could wind up with like eight at some point. do you really look at any of them and say, oh this guy could actually be president. i see him winning over a majority of the country. >> if that's the case if they don't believe they can, why are they doing it again? seems like a lesson in fuel tillty. >> there's no such thing as a loser. if you get into this scrum and put on a respectable face at the end of the rainbow even if you don't win the nomination what's waiting for you? a gig at fox, a talk radio
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program, a book deal and speaking fees. it's all good if you get out there and can get on that stage. >> i love that we discuss -- it's almost like we look at uncle smerconish and say fix this for us. i love these conversations with you. >> and you disappoint us every time. >> oh he does not. >> by dangling these things that could be solutions and making us think they may happen. >> and yanking them away. all right. >> so we'll be watching as always. smerconish saturdays at 9:00 a.m. eastern on cnn. and of course you can hear him weekdays on sirius xm also at 9:00 a.m. eastern. thank you mr. smerconish. teeing up tom brady, he talked about it right there. tom brady speaks. in a matter of speaking what the patriots quarterback did or didn't say about that report implicating him in deflategate. could the way he's handling this report or not handling this report, backfire?
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been better than my academic career. >> tom brady making some jokes there to a friendly crowd at a sold out event at salem state making his first public comment since the release of the nfl's damning deflategate report explaining he hasn't had time to digest the report's claims. earlier in the day though his agent staunchly defended the quarterback issuing a scathing statement saying the report is quote, flawed. here to discuss about whether or not this could backfire is cnn sports analyst christine brennan and coy wire. and they are back, ladies and gentlemen, round two. i love this conversation with you guys. ret me read more of the statement to the two of you. for reasons unknown omitted most of tom's testimony, most of which was critical because it would have provided this report with context that it lacks. it's common knowledge in the industry that reports like this are generally written for the benefit of the purchaser, that's don yee.
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christine, we've seen these kind of tactics before a strong defense is a strong offense. is it going to be effective here at least in changing the public opinion on this? >> no no michaela not at all. i think this is a big mistake by brady and his agent. and of course brady saying i'm not going to say anything i haven't seen it yet, his agent of course has a bazooka out and blasted away a few hours earlier. bottom line is the nfl is going to be making decisions. and as the nfl looks at this and a man who is not contrite and an agent who is picking fights that is really bad if you want to have brady back on the field and not be suspended for a couple -- you know more than two games. the notion that you're picking fights with the people who are going to make the decision seems to be the best thing to do would be say thank you very much for the information and let me know what my suspension and fine will be and not continue to fight it. at least that's my point of
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view. >> coy, i know you've spoken to former and current players. what do they think about brady and his lawyer's response? >> well first of all the players are kind of worried for tom brady. i told one guy, i took a screen shot of the correspondence between john mccain jamstreki and the locker assistant and they said quote, he's screwed. based on reports it's probable to have happened but probably happened is probably enough for goodell to bring down punishment. i'm with christine on this. look, what if goodell doesn't punish them? what if he doesn't fine them or suspend brady but you're coming out and taking jabs at the nfl and at goodell when maybe you don't even have to. i think it's a little premature. you showed that quote there, why don yee thought that this report lacked context, the omission of brady's statements. he also said in that report i was physically present for my client's interview, i have
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verbatim notes. so if you have notes that exonerate your client from admonishment and castigation, what don't you show them? where are the notes? let us see the notes and what tom brady said. >> well, he doesn't want to expose him to more liability. that's his point about why he didn't turn over his phone, e-mails and stuff like that. your don't want to give access to all your stuff to somebody who's looking to find a way to come after you. that's simple lawyering. what i want to figure out here is why is there such a disconnect between christine where your head is on this and what you hear from so many sports fan who is are like this is about deflating the balls. you got guys punching women in the face and being involved in violent crimes and you drag your feet but now all the sudden this is like this is the new standard of zero tolerance. it just seems hypocritical. >> well chris, i would disagree in the sense i think nfl is doing more on domestic violence now certainly than any other league in the country, maybe in the world. >> yeah but it doesn't mean the past doesn't exist, christine. you don't get judged just by what you do right now. it's a reflection of what you've
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done before. and nobody has the record that the nfl has in terms of turning a blind eye to things they should have seen nice and clear, true? >> absolutely chris. and i have been as critical of the nfl and roger goodell as anybody back in september, october, whatever. >> yes. >> but i will say for the record they certainly have changed since then and they've learned the lessons that for example u.s. soccer never learned with hope solo. there are examples there. but i think in terms of why, you know why throw the book at brady? well i think he deserves it first of all. it's to the integrity of the game as we've talked about before. it's a buzz word. maybe that falls flat. but if you look at the media out there and if you look at every city by boston even i understand in boston the fan polls whatever those mean maybe 30% of fans are saying that brady should be punished. and that's in boston or new england, those numbers i'm sure fluctuate and i'm not going to base a lot on that. but the reality is that around
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the country brady's image has taken a huge hit. i don't think people will ever look at him the same way. and, again, i think it's if you don't participate in the actual investigation, you keep your texts, you keep your e-mails, you will not give those to the nfl and then you come out and bash the nfl that doesn't make sense to me. >> it's interesting we just had a conversation about hillary clinton the cgi funding and some of the controversy there and michael smerconish was talking about the fact if you're pro hillary you won't see it as a big deal if you aren't you'll find reason to be critical. i wonder if it's going to be the same thing here coy. if you're a patriots fan, he's our boy, it's all good it's not a big deal and other people saying it's cheating. >> there's no question about it. cheating is cheating right? there's a reason that the deflation of the football is a rule. there's a reason to the quarter of an inch that the cleats are a rule. you can't put slippery substances if you're an offensive lineman on your jersey. there's a reason your toe can't be on the line it has to be behind the line on kickoffs. there's all these minute details
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there for each and every rule. a sin is a sin, is it not? cheating is cheating is it not? look at what the patriots did with spygate, they broke a rule no videotaping allowed of your opponents. they did. goodell did not take that lightly. $500,000 fine for belichick, $250,000 fine for the organization and loss of a first round draft pick cheating is cheating. doesn't matter if it's seemingly insignificant. there's a reason rules are in place, there's a reason those footballs can't be underinflated. >> let's see what the nfl, what the commissioner decides. we'll be waiting with baited breath. christine and coy also a pleasure. you at home what's your take? use # to tweet us or get on facebook.com/newday. this one keeps percolating but there's a lot of news out there. so let's get to it. proof the polls can be very wrong. >> an absolute political earthquake. >> there's only one opinion poll that counts and that's the one on election day.
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>> the chilling warning. thousands of americans are in direct contact with isis right now. >> they are recruiting and tasking at the same time. >> should baltimore's mayor be held responsible for the destruction during the riots? >> i assure you senators that i am listening to all voices. >> i'm asking the department of justice to investigate. >> we earned and achieved everything that we got this year as a team. >> i was a little surprised of him saying he hadn't read the report yet. this is "new day" with chris cuomo, alisyn camerota and michaela pereira. and good morning everyone. welcome back to your "new day." we do have breaking news this morning. an election stunner across the atlantic. conservatives and the scottish national party winning big in the united kingdom despite projections of a close race with the labor party and liberal democrats whose leader has already this morning stepped aside. >> big questions, why were the polls so off? and what does this mean this
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big win, for british prime minister david cameron in helping the u.s. more on terror? now, though he was voted in by the people he must go before the queen. and that happens within the hour. so cnn has this story covered the way only we can. and we begin with richard quest live on the streets of london. richard. >> sort of. >> you okay up there? >> reporter: on the top of big red bus, # bigredbus. we're moving across westminster bridge. and any second in a minute big ben will chime noon. but the political graveyard today is littered with the careers of politicians. at the front of our bus here he is david cameron. he has the best seat in the house for one simple reason chris. he is the one who will be returning to westminster. he'll be returning to downing street as the chief minister. a complete and utter landslide.
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and behind just look at the remnants and wreckage of other careers. they're all left behind. party leaders, ed miliband all expected to -- they either have resigned or they're expected to resign chris, in the next couple of hours. an absolute stunning outcome in the british general election. and it's just coming up to 12:00 midday. chris. >> richard, you gave me a lot to digest there, my brother. let me ask you this. what is being said this morning about why the polls were so off? what was this disconnect between the perception and the reality on election day? >> it was 1992 all over again. they didn't want to admit that they were going to vote for david cameron. big ben chiming. it's not every network that will give you that.
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top of the hour. chris, the public simply didn't want to tell that they were going to vote for cameron, that actually they believed the torre torres had done a good job. in scotland labor was wiped out and the coalition partner, the liberal democrats, they took all the bells. ask for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for the lib dems today. >> that is so good. >> did he -- i don't understand how he could have planned that. he did that. so genius. >> i want to figure out how he got a bus all to himself. >> the foot bridges there. >> keep ahold of yourself. we'll be back to you in a bit. cnn international correspondent nic robertson is live outside downing street. we're waiting of the ceremony of him going to the queen, but this is a surprising day on many levels yes? >> reporter: oh absolutely it is. david cameron now appears to have the numbers that he needs
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to form the government. the bells, if there are any chiming inside downing street are ones in absolute celebration right now. david cameron in a few minutes will come out of that door, he'll go to buckingham palace. the queen had been in her castle at windsor. we learned the royal was flying again at buckingham palace which means the queen is in residence. that means david cameron can drive the few minutes around here and tell the queen he is going to form the next government in this country. he'll be able to give the queen an idea of what shape it may take, the policies it will pursue and then drive back here to downing street. and that's when we're expecting here that david cameron will come out, tell the hundreds of waiting journalists here precisely or at least some of the precise details of what he plans over the next five years. michaela. >> all right. we'll be watching. thanks so much for that. fbi director james comey delivering chilling news that thousands of americans are in contact with isis as we speak. best case scenario they're
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being recruited. worst case scenario they're receiving orders to attack the united states. cnn's barbara starr live from the pentagon. neither sound at all what we want to hear. >> reporter: good morning, michaela. very grim prospect indeed. and a lot of focus now on the recent attack in garland, texas. elton simpson, one of the men killed there by a police officer, one of the alleged perpetrators now federal law enforcement officials are telling reporters that he elton simpson, was in contact with known jihadists overseas who were encouraging him to launch attacks. so are these attacks that we see inspired by isis or directed by isis? the point is it may no longer make a difference because this activity is happening, it is happening on the internet it is happening in communications. and fbi director james comey telling reporters quite an astounding assessment. i want to quote it directly so everybody can see it. comey saying and i quote, "i
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know there are other elton simpsons out there. it's almost as if there is a devil sitting on the shoulder saying kill kill kill kill all day long. they are recruiting and tasking at the same time." this now the challenge for federal law enforcement and for the intelligence community. what americans are in contact with isis or extremist elements overseas what are those communications what are they being inspired or directed to do. the garland, texas, incident may only be one of many potential plots that the fbi and other federal agencies are trying to track down. later today there is going to be a phone call with local and state authorities with federal law enforcement. it's called a routine phone call. but you can bet this entire topic is going to come up. alisyn. >> okay barbara, thanks so much for that. so just as the fbi chief warned thursday that isis may have thousands of online followers in
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the u.s. a senate homeland security panel was debating how to combat isis online. and daveed testified before that committee. he's a senior fellow for the foundation of defense of democracies. da daveed, give us a taste of what you said in your testimony before congress. >> i talked about a few things. the primary thing the united states has been losing to isis for a long time for one particular reason isis is very nimble. it's able to push its message to media and push its message directly to its followers. it's a winners message. so often the u.s.'s message and isis's have been identical. the u.s. will emphasize its brutality and isis will also emphasize its brutality. brutality works for so long as they're winning. diffuse the perception this is a winning organization and we need to be much more nimble. isis competes at the speed of global media.
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and government hard pressed to compete at the speed of the guttenberg bible. >> you point out isis has some vulnerables. >> as i said a winners messaging and the fact it's been losing ground significantly in iraq since august. it hasn't gained and held new ground. recently it has some offensives in anbar but hasn't been able to hold new ground since october. it's lost tikrit of course. and increasingly there's pressure on mosul which is the defactor capital of its holdings in iraq. the way they've tried to disguise this is moving into africa they picked up a couple more major affiliates. we need to understand what their message and understand how to counter it. this view that they're still a winner even if they're losing ground in iraq. >> daveed that was what was so stunning about what the fbi director said yesterday is we had heard about these military losses they suffered yet somehow
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they're gaining in thousands devotees here in the u.s. >> right. this is the difference between the old kind of recruiting and the new kind. social media is really a game changer in terms of the ability of a group like isis which has mastered the medium to inspire people to its cause because social media is a very warm medium. it's different than sitting here and consuming cnn or any other television show where you can yell at the television but the television's not going to talk back to you. whereas in social media there's this perception of intimacy. someone can be half a world away someone can be a fighter in iraq or syria or somalia and you really feel like you know them. furthermore, communities of interest in social media are able to converge over ideas that are extreme ideas. just 15 years ago if you were a jihadist and you were living in peoria illinois you might never run into another jihadist in your life. whereas now you can hop online and right away be in contact with somebody. this is something that moving forward is going to create much more extreme communities. communities that converge around
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certain ideas that may inspire them to violence. and it's much easier to have these group on social media harden people's extremism and spur them onto action and not allow them to back out. >> i want to show you what barbara starr was just reporting about the chilling message the head of the fbi said yesterday. he said i know there are other elton simpsons out there, referring to the texas gunman. it's almost as if there's a devil sitting on their shoulder saying kill kill kill all day long. they are recruiting and tasking at the same time. what did you tell congress about how to fix that problem? >> what i told congress is we need to really look at the institutions of government that are trying to beat isis' message. i compare the u.s. government to legacy industry. if you look at the way the entire industry in america is changing there have been entire industries that have been disrupted. look at the taxi cab industry and uber. and u.s. government operates in a way as tho it has a monopoly
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type situation. accountability is not expected. you have people tasked with orders expected to completely fail or not live up at all to the money you're pouring into them. in government you basically need the equivalent to start-up initiatives. things that are smaller, less bur oktized and particularly in a situation like this. one thing i could say that was very encouraging, i think this was the most receptive panel that i've ever testified before. in fact senator johnson who was chairing the panel, his staff had put together some draft legislation right away which was trying to directly address this problem. it's one of those rare hearings that actually gives me somewhat more faith rather than less in the u.s. government. >> oh daveed that is so heartening to hear. that they were sitting up and taking notice of all of the advice that you were giving them. that's great. thanks so much for sharing it with us today on "new day." great to see you. >> great to see you. >> over to michaela. all right, alisyn the department of justice launching a full scale probe into the
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baltimore police department. the action coming just a day after the city's mayor made that request. cnn's suzanne malveaux live with the latest for us. good morning. >> reporter: hey, good morning, michaela. well attorney general loretta lynch is going to be conducting this full out investigation of the entire baltimore police department. and they're really looking into a history or a pattern of practice of excessive force, random stops, false arrests and other misconduct. we have seen these kinds overthings happen before with cities in albuquerque, cleveland as well as most recently ferguson. but i want to tell you what makes this case different, a little bit of background here. this was something that was asked for by the mayor. the mayor of baltimore, stephanie rawlings-blake to the attorney general. she's really been pushing this thing. the second thing that makes this different here is this is investigation number two from doj. it was back in october the mayor realized there was a problem here in baltimore because there was a report that came out from the baltimore sun that said $5.7
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million the city had been spending on settling 102 cases of alleged misconduct. they've been spending a lot of money on this. she realized it's a big problem. she asked doj to participate in a voluntary and collaborative review. this one is different. it is much broader, it is much bigger and it will actually have some teeth to change this department and potentially get some things done. so we've seen the mayor on the street addressing this. we've also seen some high leaders, high profile leaders, in maryland senator barbara ma cull ski as recently as yesterday went before a senate hearing asking the attorney general please do something about this. we need federal help. >> in communities primarily that have significant populations of color there has been now a tattered worn and even broken trust between the community and the police department. we've got to restore that trust.
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we need the police department. >> reporter: so don't expect this review to happen any time soon or be completed. we think it's going to take at least more than a year. remember ferguson took at least eight months. baltimore a much bigger more complex situation, a much bigger city. but in the meantime we are still waiting that deadline two and a half weeks away to see if there are any indictments against those six officers charged in the death of freddie gray. chris. >> all right, suzanne, thank you very much. another headline this morning, a top terrorist commander killed in a u.s. drone strike in yemen according to an online video by the aqap terrorist organization. that's al qaeda the arabian peninsula. the man is nasur bin al-ansi. he matters because he claimed -- an official confirms he is dead but did not say if he was killed by a drone. a natural gas well on fire in denton texas. police believe a lightning
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strike caused this explosion as severe storms moved through the area thursday night. no injuries reported. it appears that firefighters are letting this blaze burn itself out. all right. as we just heard from suzanne, baltimore's mayor has made this big request, come justice department do a full-scale investigation into police practices just like ferguson. not a collaborative review. our next guest is calling out the mayor. this guest says she's part of the problem in baltimore. we test the case. hey pal? you ready? can you pick me up at 6:30? ah... (boy) i'm here! i'm here! (cop) too late. i was gone for five minutes! ugh! move it. you're killing me. you know what, dad? i'm good. (dad) it may be quite a while before he's ready, but our subaru legacy will be waiting for him. (vo) the longest-lasting midsize sedan in its class. the twenty-fifteen subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan. it's a subaru.
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good to have you back here with us on "new day" on this friday. in the aftermath of freddie gray's death the mayor has requested a full-scale investigation into the pattern and practices of the baltimore police department. is the investigation necessary? here to weigh-in harry houck and cnn political commentator, i had my wheaties so i'm ready to intervene intervene. we know you're often on different sides but i think it makes for a really robust conversation. first of all, marc let's start with you. this is what the community and activists and leaders in baltimore have been asking for. you think it's justified? >> i think it's absolutely justified. even before this incident happened there was ample evidence to suggest that we needed some sort of investigation. when you talk to people on the dwround that's what we hear. when we look at the amount of money doled out for police cases. when we look at just the tensions between community.
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all of these things suggest something needs to be done. this is one way to do it. this isn't a quick fix. this is a 9 to 12 maybe 14-month investigation. this is not a quick media fix. this is something substantive to fix the community, i think it's a great thing. >> harry, if there are a lot of people saying hey, the unjust and excessive practices of a department need to be examined it's worth taking at least a look at is it not? >> sure but we're going to have another one-sided report like we did in ferguson. >> why do you say that? >> i read the ferguson report all right. and i went through it line by line. it was completely one-sided. officers weren't interviewed. they didn't check out the people they spoke to see if their stories were true. you can sit there and read it and you can see it was completely one-sided. >> you think thousands of people can be wrong if they felt they have been unfairly treated? >> first of all i don't think it was thousands of people. >> in baltimore it is. >> i mean i know they -- well you know you're allowed to go ahead and you are allowed to demonstrate, but not riot. all right. the fact here is with the, i
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believe, the mayor is responsible. >> why? >> first of all it's her leadership all right, her direction where police officers went out and they allowed rioters to destroy property correct? we have the video of her doing that. then we also have the video showing the police officers were inaction. it was under her leadership and direction that police officers went out without helmets. >> marc. >> let's assume everything you said is true and i believe everything you said is not true. but let's concede for a moment they were. if you have so little faith in her leadership isn't that why the federal government should step in and do an ngs investigation? >> you think the federal government's going to come in and point the finger at her? i don't think so. not a liberal administration going to come in and point at the liberal mayor in baltimore. the fact is i'm tired and tired of hearing that the big problem with baltimore is the police department. and it's not. >> well it's not the only problem. there are lots of problems. >> but everything is directed towards the police department.
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>> i disagree. i think there have been entire studies done there's been lots of media coverage prior to this there's even a show you may have heard of called the wire that looked at all sorts of dimensions. let's investigate at the same time we try to do other things. i agree with you it's a complicated problem, but it pre precedes the mayor. there have been police problems in baltimore before she was in office. >> and there have been baltimore -- baltimore has been under a democratic rule for almost 50 years. so why -- >> you think this is a political battle? >> this is all politics. are you kidding me? it's all about politics and money. how come they haven't taken care of that part of the city? why are the youth centers closed there? who closed those? >> that's not the argument for doing a doj investigation. that's an argument for doing and opening community centers. we can do both of those things. we can walk we can chew gum, we can do all of that. >> exactly. >> you started this by saying you don't want to do a doj investigation. >> no i didn't say i didn't want it. what i said was --
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>> you're okay with doing one. >> just as long as it's not one-sided and we're going to see it. the ferguson case was completely one-sided. you've got to do your due diligence. when you interview somebody you got to find out if somebody's telling you the truth. they didn't do that in that report. >> who would you like to see come in and do an investigation? the fact is if the police do an investigation it's going to seem one-sided from the black community. >> i understand. but when i read the report, i want to be able to read that report and say, listen okay this is not a one-sided report. >> so for example in ferguson -- >> there are problems within the police department. >> i'm trying to understand what you're saying. in the case of racist e-mails they say there's a pattern of racist attitudes among police. when they put up the e-mail hey, did you really mean to be racist here? >> you have a couple e-mails that a couple crazy cops sent out doesn't make the whole police department -- >> there was only like 12 cops in mayberry in ferguson here. >> i brought up the report.
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>> so am i. i'm responding to you bringing up the report. >> another thing i don't like is the fact that police officers all right, are used as pawns in this political game. >> so let's time out for a second. so what about the idea of everyone owning their part of the problem? we will all agree that there is a problem in baltimore, part of it stems from -- >> i would love to see that. you think the mayor's going to come out and say i'm part of the problem? >> maybe she will. >> nobody -- >> i'd love to see that. >> an outside doj investigation. because now they can look and say, hey, what's coming down top down. >> i got no problem with that just as long as i can read the report and say, listen this is a fair report. >> okay. >> that's all i'm barely interested in. if you read that ferguson report it's not a fair report. >> okay. we're back to ferguson now. but again -- >> the report. >> right. if we're talking about the report in ferguson i think there were a few problems with the ferguson report in terms of the number of police that are there. >> thank you, sir.
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>> but i never disputed. when we go back to baltimore there's a much more complicated web of things to deal with that's why the report will take much longer. i agree we need a lot of information from a lot of people. i think we all agree with that. >> that's a premise we can at least agree on. thank you so much for your passionate arguments. if you'd like to get in on the conversation use hash tag on twitter newday or facebook.com/cnn. we're also dealing with the policing issue and also dealing with a bigger problem of terror. now we have this new troubling question. isis people here sympathizers how many are there? are they just sympathizers or are they planning? do we know how to track it? wait until you hear the number that the government believes that they're dealing with. and we're going to bring in the white house to figure out what do we do to fight terror better. yoplait greek 100. the protein-packed need something filling, taste bud loving, deliciously fruity, grab-and-go, take on the world with 100 calories, snack. yoplait greek 100. there are hundreds of reasons to snack on it.
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he was supposed to lose according to exit polls, because there was supposed to be this big change in power. that didn't happen. so that's mr. cameron going to see the queen. he posted big gains in fact. and the question now becomes what does this mean for the relationship with the u.s.? will he be able to get the uk more involved in the war on terror? the labour party and liberal democrats took big losses so big the leaders of both those parties have already resigned. >> well the influence of isis growing here in the u.s. fbi director james comey warning that thousands of americans are being poisoned by the terror group. comey says the fbi's conducting hundreds of investigations into potential home grown terrorists. a follow-up to a story we told you about on thursday. the mother of a baby found in a nebraska dumpster was found murdered. an amber alert now is issued for her other son, a 5-year-old
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little boy. he was last spotted at a day care wednesday. police say they have located a silver jeep cherokee in connection with the case but that little 5-year-old remains missing. so far no suspects have been made. tense moments aboard a delta flight for some passengers. the smoke filled the cabin of their flight from ft. lauderdale to new york. a passenger grabbed his cell phone to record what it was like onboard. take a look. you can hear the smoke alarms sounding off inside delta flight 2028, the cabin filling with smoke so fast. >> i was so scared. i started to scream. >> reporter: the faa says more than an hour after takeoff the crew reported smoke in the cockpit and a problem with one of the jet's two engines. >> i started noticing at a certain point a mist coming through. then i realized the mist coming through the cabin was smoke. i could smell the smoke. then i looked back toward the rear of the plane and it was
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dark. >> all 89 passengers were told to put their heads between their legs to limit the amount of smoke they inhaled. >> we'll have to take something and go like this. >> people were coughing. some people were crying. >> reporter: the flight to new york immediately diverted to charleston. the pilot telling passengers what went wrong. >> apparently there was a malfunction in the engine and had something to do with oil being burned. and they were deciding to turn one of the engines off to avoid the extra smoke. >> the smoke clearing in five minutes and all the passengers are now back in new york safe and sound this morning. >> i'm not religious, but i clenched my fist and i said okay god, i'm with you now. get us down please. and i promise to be a good boy. >> all right. we'll see if he keeps that promise. >> we'll follow him. speaking of broken promises that sounds like politics. let's get to inside politics on "new day" with mr. john king.
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>> wow, what a great segue to me. thanks very much. >> happy friday. >> happy friday and all that. it's a great day to go inside politics. with me this morning to share reporting and insights tamra, lisa, let's start with the chris christie comeback trail. it begins and some people think it ends in new jersey. he's trying to prove to people this will not deter me i did nothing wrong, the facts will support me. he decides yesterday one of the things is to go after hillary clinton. you were just in nevada. hillary clinton made a bold statement on immigration going to the left of president obama saying there should be a full and relatively quick path to citizenship. not legal status citizenship for the 11 million or so undocumented in the united states. chris christie says wrong. >> i think the path to citizenship issue is a problem. you know for folks who have been waiting the appropriate wait. >> right. >> so i think we have to have a
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much broader situation than just pandering. we should not just be pandering. >> chris christie there if you can't hear him saying she's pandering, she's pandering in that circle there. number one, he's drawn a sharp line with her, all republicans are. this issue guaranteed to be front and center. when it comes to chris christie's calculations putting a conservative flag down here. >> yes, even though he in theory is trying to run in the moderate lane. and there's this theory that hillary clinton went to nevada and set a trap for the republicans. she went to nevada and talked about immigration, went to the left of president obama and was essentially saying i dare you to say something that will make latino voters not like you. and chris christie seems to in some way be taking the bait. he's at least taking the same conservative position that basically the rest of the gop fields has taken on this issue. >> and it is interesting setting a trap in the sense that you know her priority clearly is keep the obama coalition. and more than two-thirds of latinos in two consecutive presidential elections look at
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nevada new mexico colorado, look at florida, even a state like virginia the latino population is growing. is it that clear cut for the clinton campaign? do they feel on such safe ground here to number one put her on the left and number two throw a log on this republican fire? >> oh yeah. i had a democrat once several years ago explain to me why democrats feel immigration is such a great issue for their party. it's not only because of the latino vote and winning huge margins there. it's also because there's an idea in the democratic party that the right wing of the republican party can't help but take the bait. so it falls, you know and people like steve king or other sort of outspoken anti-immigration advocates say comments that maybe come off as a little bit racist or a little intolerant and that paints the entire party with that stereotype and that helps democrats. so it's not just about immigration, latinos and that policy. it's about for democrats and i think for the hillary clinton campaign tagging the whole party with this intolerant past backwards looking label. >> hillary thinks it helps her
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when she looks at the path to 270, the national electoral college map. the poll in new hampshire shows hillary clinton six points behind jeb bush five points behind marco rubio right now. four points behind rand paul right now. tie there with scott walker. and plus one over ted cruz. so struggling in a state that has traditionally been a swing state but has been in the last several presidential elections more blue. more democratic. now, democrats up there say it's just cause she hasn't been there that much. this will be fine. is it? >> new hampshire is hillary clinton territory. if there's a state that is a hillary clinton state, it's new hampshire. i think it's kind of hard to get animated about a poll 18 months out. >> what are we going to do every day? >> i'm sorry. but it is 18 months out. and this poll has proven to be relatively volatile in the past. >> it is 18 months out. you're exactly right. but we also talk about in national polls a lot how, yes, it's 18 monthings out but she starts nationally seems in a commanding position she's ahead
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at least several points. this one here i think a little bit of a flashing light saying we've got some work to do. >> and itd also comes after, you know a tough couple of weeks for hillary clinton. there's been a lot of questions about the foundation a lot of questions about her and her husband's paid speeches. are a people not to tout the home team but we had a poll last week that found more than six out of ten voters thought that the word honest didn't really accurately describe hillary clinton. that's the kind of thing if you're seeing that pop up in polls now when the narrative gets set, that's the kind of thing that starts to concern campaign strategists. >> so what do we make of this one? a private meeting in new york yesterday jeb bush meeting with fundraisers said his top adviser when it comes to the middle east is his brother, george w. bush. some people in the room say they understood he meant israel not the broader middle east. if he's the nominee or maybe even some republican will bring that up given the unpopularity of the iraq war, is that what he wants to be saying? >> well he did say it behind closed doors so maybe he thought he was safe.
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nothing is safe behind closed doors. i think what he was doing in theory was he was responding to a flap earlier about one of his advisers not being in the right place on israel. and so he was trying to say, but look my brother is really great on israel so i'm with my brother on that. those words i take advice from my brother on the middle east is not good for him. >> he was at a fundraiser being hosted by paul singer a major republican donor hawkish on israel. i think this is a good teachable moment for governor bush which is that nothing you say to donors is ever closed doors. he's lucky there wasn't a recording device in there but i'm sure maybe somebody has the tape on cell phone and that can pop back up as mitt romney you pointed out, certainly learned in last time around. >> also a bit of a rorschach test where some conservatives might say great president bush's policies were strong but middle electorate say this is him trying to get away from the jim baker comments that angered a lot of conservatives.
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as we get back to you in new york one person we thought might run for president, governor rick snyder of michigan says he will not now. we thought he was going to wait until the early summer but he has decided to pull himself out. republican field starting to take shape. >> there you go. thanks so much john. have a great weekend. make sure to watch john king and his inside politics panel break down the best political news of the week every sunday at 8:30 a.m. eastern. meanwhile, thousands of isis followers said to be here in the u.s. we get reaction to the fbi's chilling warning from the white house next. when broker chris hill stays at laquinta and fires up free wi-fi, with a network that's now up to 5 times faster than before you know what he can do? let's see if he's ready. he can swim with the sharks!
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you know what you're seeing right now? david cameron going to meet with queen elizabeth. this is what happened just moments ago. this is a trip david cameron may well thought he would never make again because he was supposed to lose. his party was supposed to take a beating. that's what all the polls said. and it didn't happen. and just like that just like that in one moment there's an entirely different political reality now for the uk. and that means for the u.s.-uk relationship. let's bring in white house press secretary josh earnest joining
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us this morning to discuss this and another big issue with what's going on in texas and what it reveals about our terror strategy. good to have you with us mr. earnest. >> good morning, chris. >> is it true that president obama was taking down all his pictures of him and david cameron because all the polls were suggesting his party was going to go down? how do you think those polls got it so wrong? >> well chris, it's hard to say. i think even pollsters would tell you it's an inexact science and highlights the importance in a competitive democracy of people actually showing up on election day and casting a ballot. >> were you guys surprised? >> i think we were following the elections like everybody else. and we were looking at the polls and watching the news reports. but i think everybody here at the white house particularly those of us who have been with president obama for a while now and been through a couple elections with him understand that the ultimate decision is not made by the pollsters but made by the voters. this is a testament to the strength of a vibrant democracy. obviously our close allies in the uk have exactly that.
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and, look the president is proud of the strong working relationship that he's developed with david cameron over the years. and he's looking forward to continuing to strengthen that personal relationship but also make sure we continue to deepen the relationship between the american people and the british people because the close relationship of our governments has served the citizens of our country very well. >> now you went from one situation where it was going to be the precarious nature of change to now an opportunity. both these men have mandate, obama and cameron. and both know they don't have to face another election because cameron has pledged not to seek the prime minister in the next set of elections. do you think this is an opportunity for the u.s. to ask the uk to step up involvement specifically in the war on terror? >> well chris, we've actually had a very strong partnership with the uk when it comes to the war on terror. and all of the efforts that we have undertaken to combat extremism around the world, particularly in our fight against isil we have relied very heavily on our allies in the uk
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who have committed to assisting u.s. military experts as we train and equip the iraqi security forces they take the fight to isil in their own country. we've worked closely with them in terms of launching military air strikes against extremists in iraq as well. we're pleased with the kind of strong relationship we have with them. we're always interested in what more our allies can do to join us in this effort. >> all right. so now let's talk about two big domestic issues here. texas reveals the new face of the war on terror. and it seems to be one that is a little bit ahead of our ability to stop it. i say that because even the fbi director says these scary new words that came out of his mouth about how the recruiting and the planning and the executing is all going on so much faster now. this all happens in the shadow of this big decision from a federal court of appeals that says the way that the nsa right now is taking data from
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communications of americans is not legal. and they suggest in their decision as you know mr. earnest, that this requires debate and legislation. so where is the white house on the balance of what we need to do to stay safe with what people think they want in terms of freedom and privacy? >> well chris, in the mind of the president this is a debate he kicked off a year and a half ago when he called on congress to put in place reforms to the patriot act and to the 215 program that would allow us to better reflect the need to balance, the need to give our national security officials and experts the tools that they need to keep us safe while also making sure that we're protecting the privacy of the american people. and the president's been calling on these reforms for a year and a half now. >> but the criticism would be that the president is moving it towards privacy when you have people in the intelligence community and now all people witnessing texas saying you need to move the other way. we need to do more about what's going on in social media. we need more information to
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catch these types of people now who aren't connected to bad guys the way they used to be. now it's more subtle. we need to be more invasive not less. >> chris, in the mind of the president what we can do is we can make sure we give our tools -- i'm sorry, we can give our national security professionals the tools that they need to keep us safe. and that's exactly consistent with reform proposal that's finally moving through congress right now. it's got bipartisan support. and it would make sure that our law enforcement and our intel officials have the tools they need to keep us safe while also doing more to protect the privacy of the american people. and we shouldn't have to choose about whether or not between those two things. we should be able to do both. the president's confident that we can do that. and this is something that he's been calling on congress to take action on for a year and a half now and we're pleased to see those steps are moving. we're going to need congress to act before the end of this month. the patriot act does expire at the end of this month. and there are important authorities that are contained in that legislation that allow our law enforcement and our intel officials to take some
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steps to keep us safe. so it's important that congress acts before the end of the month. but that's what they're on track to do. >> all right. so we also know that the president today is going to talk trade agreements and try and do what he can to get more jobs which as we know is pretty much as close to a panacea as you'll find in politics right now. what is he doing today? and what is the objective? >> well chris, what the president's doing is he's traveled to portland oregon. he traveled there last night. and he's going to do an event at the headquarters of nike this morning. and at nike they have made an announcement that if we're able to complete the transpacific partnership agreement that the president's currently negotiating with some countries in the asia pacific region that that will lead nike to create 10,000 jobs right here in america. and that could have a broader economic benefit around their headquarters of up to 40,000 american jobs. this is an indication of what the president's been saying for quite some time. if we can level the playing field, if we can give american businesses access to overseas
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markets, level the playing field in those markets, we're going to expand opportunity for american businesses and give american businesses an opportunity to invest right here in america and create jobs right here in america. so this is a pretty persuasive argument in the mind of the president about why exactly we do need to be engaged in countries around the world, why we do need to be considering agreements like this transpacific partnership agreement that would include enforceable labor protections and environmental standards in a way that will open opportunities for american businesses overseas and lead to job creation and economic growth right here in the united states of america. >> and as you know people are happy to reach out for trade abroad as long as it means cheaper goods back here at home. but they also need jobs here at home as well. mr. earnest, thank you very much as always for joining us on "new day." good weekend to you, sir. >> all right. thank you, chris. you too. >> all right. alisyn. okay chris, patriots quarterback tom brady weighs in on the damning deflategate report. wait until you hear what he has to say. listen up... i'm reworking the menu. veggies you're cool... mayo, corn dogs... you are so out of here! ahh...
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that was the air drum chris plays during the tosses. >> and new england patriots' quarterback weighing in. >> i like the air guitar. >> last night tom brady made his first public comment, and he said he has not had time to digest the deflate gate report. here is what he said. >> it has only been 30 hours, so i have not had time to digest it but when i do i will let you know how i feel about it. >> is the super bowl tainted? >> what do you guys think? neither do i. >> has this however, detracted from your joy of winning the super bowl? >> absolutely not.
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>> brady's agent has had time to digest the report, and he said brady did not have any knowledge of football's being deflated and this called the wells report a terrible disappointment and saying it had tragic flaws. now it's the nfl's move. last night, a-rod looking to pass willie mays on the all-time hit list. and young times it up like a thief in the night. sorry, a-rod. got another chance. bang, zoom you are going to the moon. that moves rodriguez to fourth place on the list. and guys it will be interesting to see if a-rod is still in pinstripes and closing in on babe ruth's record and that's
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interesting. >> thank you very much. everybody is watching. this is scary, but we are now told by the fbi that thousands of americans can be in contact with isis and the question is can we handle it? we have senator john mccain to tell us what is going on with laws that may change and make you less safe. before that, though this sunday on "parts unknown," anthony bourdain. >> the scottish islands, one of the most beautiful places on earth, and you get to shoot animals and drag them back and cook them and eat them. the problem is, there are hills. after that hill there's another one and then another one and then another one and another
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>> this bulletin was prompted by his social media activity. >> thousands of americans are in direct contact with isis right now. >> i don't want to allow this person to take more advantage of my career. >> i want to fight for the rights of my daughters to live. good morning. welcome to your "new day." it's friday, may 8th 8:00 in the east. we do have breaking news out of the uk. an election day that was supposed to be david cameron's death was instead his birth, and the polls were wrong. the scottish national party also posting gains at the expense of the labor party. >> british prime minister david cameron, meeting with queen elizabeth at this hour. are big changes coming for the european union? questions come from richard west
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that we find in motion on top of a double-decker bus in london. richard, give us the latest. >> reporter: i am feeling a little queazy and it's nothing to do with the politics of britain, and what a view whether your politics are to the left or right, it doesn't matter. today there is a government in britain that has an absolute majority. when david cameron returns to downing street and westminster he will have a majority of at least two or three mps, and that makes a different form of govern than he has in the past. he will hold on to power as says the conservative paper puts it. alisyn it was an extraordinary night. when we began, we thought it would be hung parliament and negotiations would be going on for days, and now we know cameron will be the prime minister for the next five
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years. >> richard, what does any of this mean for the possible referendum for britain leaving the eu? >> reporter: oh, hold tight. this is a real bus going through london with real people around us. what does it mean for the referendum? a bit like you saw, jerky, difficult and very difficult to stay upright, because once you negotiate with the europeans, if they negotiate fully, how far will they go and what new powers? this is what washington will be very concerned about. yes, they may like the fact that cameron is back but they are going to be worried, very worried about what this means for the future of britain in europe. i have a little souvenir for all of you, and i know you have little khaufp kaus all over the
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studio. >> yeah we do. >> reporter: here is a little bed russbus. >> somehow it looks nicer when he puts it up next to big ben. >> part of a post election formality in the uk and that's where we find nic robertson outside of the prime minister's office. >> reporter: we want to know what david cameron said to the queen, and what goes on inside buckingham palace stays inside those walls, and he may have wanted to outline his ideas, and the queen will have the state of parliament later this month, and she will announce the policies of david cameron and his party, and we will all get an insight
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into that in a matter of minutes from here, and in a few minutes a podium will be moved out from inside the doors, and they are setting it up behind me and that's the podium being set up there, and once they have done a little audio check, david cameron will be coming out and speaking and no doubt the people of the country will be listening intently to hear what he has to say, and nobody nobody expected him to be delivering this speak so early after the polls closed yesterday, just barely 15 hours ago, chris. >> give us a tap on the shoulder when that happens, and we will listen for the headlines. thank you so much. we want to bring in the arizona republican chairman of the armed services committee, and he is here on the set of "new day." >> how are you? >> were you surprised as everybody else was? >> it's the second election where the pollsters were wrong,
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and i wish they would have been wrong in my case. >> do we care? >> i think we care both in the israeli election and this election. i am obviously conservative but i think that the cameron government has a stable relationship david cameron and the president have a good relationship but i think this whole issue of the scottish vote is also probably the least told story, and it really was an overwhelming victory for the scottish nationalist party which was totally unexpected at least that's my understanding. there is a fractionalization in politics there as there is ins israel and a number of other countries. we certainly have different wings of both our major problems. >> let's talk about what is going on domestically. on the very same day the fbi
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director came out and issued a chilling warning that there are thousands of americans who he believes are following isis at least online and the federal court says the nsa meta data collection system is illegal. >> yeah, there are other courts that have determined the opposite. this would be a terrible blow. i hope we can get it reversed. >> why? if it were to go away why? >> because i think it's depriving us of one of our tools to try and fight back against this spread, and i do agree with the head of the fbi. i am not saying there is a network here in the united states don't get me wrong, but as long as young men who are unhappy and are being recruited by the radical islam have access to the internet and two people from phoenix, arizona, tried to kill people in texas, as you know. the threat is real. obviously we have to balance personal privacy and privacy
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rights but there is clearly a need for this and congress has acted on it and we need to use whatever tools at our disposal and at the same time we need to have increased court oversight and other capabilities of congress to make sure they don't overstep their bounds. the snowden thing complicated a lot of this. >> there's a different urgency now. it not only compromised intelligence but maybe miscasting the balance that should be struck. one of the things in the recent decision you should like is the court said you can do this, but this is about debate and legislation, not about what you have now in section 215 of the patriot act, so do you think you and congress will be able to make a decision where you are
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better equipped to deal with the threat that we just saw in texas? >> i hope so but there are sharp divisions, as you know within the congress. by the way, there is a cyber act that came out of the intelligence committee that we need to act on cyber security. our chairman of the joint chief of staffs said we have potential over all adversaries except for cyber, and that should give us pause, and that's a new kind of warfare and capability. >> you would be better off if they were part of an identified group you are dealing with and the threat is the fbi gave a warning to the authorities in texas before this happened and they were following him and because they were not able to monitor the social activity the way they might have otherwise, we almost had a catastrophe there. >> and, of course, the ability or capability of information
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spread continues to evolve all the time. ten years ago we would not have been talking about some of the normal channels of communications and recruitment, and motivation that is now being exploited by radical islam. we live in difficult and interesting times, and frankly, members of congress have got to keep up with this. old guys like me i get briefed all the time because of these new and radical changes. every time we turn around there is a new way of communicating, which means isis has a new way of recruiting. these are very interesting times we're in. >> so troubling. let's talk about the gop field. every week -- >> all 50 of them. >> let's talk about those 50. more people jump in every week. you obviously have travelled that road they are on. what do you think of the field? >> i think the field is very large, and i am not sure how quickly it's going to be reduced because the super pack thing where people can get large
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amounts of money. what drives people out of political campaigns, when they run out of money, which means they run out of votes and vice versa. lindsey graham he is my dearest friend, and he understands national security better than anybody. we are seeing national security foreign policy thanks to the beheadings and threats worsening, and it's now probably a larger issue in this primary than anytime since 1980. >> you don't think the others are talking about it? >> i think they are talking about it and are qualified and are good people. we have a range of good leaders. >> do you see a president in the field right now? >> lindsey graham. but i think that campaigns will evolve that. new hampshire matters, you know. doesn't matter how much money you have and in new hampshire there was a joke what do you
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think about udall for president, and he said i don't know i only met him twice. they expect them to be in their living room. iowa is somewhat important, don't get me wrong. new hampshire will be the launching pad for one or two or three of these candidates in my view. >> senator, we want to talk about a new project you are lunching. i noticed there was a similarity between your new logo. what is america's most wasted. >> this is the most drunk members of congress and how did you get this information? >> we have surveillance. tom co-burn, and we are
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focusing -- we will be focusing most of it on defense, because as chairman of the armed services committee, i have access. our new aircraft carrier was supposed to cost $10 million, and it now cost $12 billion. everybody is responsible therefore nobody is responsible. >> you are not spending your own money so you are not as frugal as you should be. >> i can't go back to my taxpayers and say i will sit still for a $2.4 billion costover. it's the first trillion-dollar weapon system in history, and we have to fix that to regain the confidence or keep the confidence of the american people and we are doing what is necessary for defense and not just throwing away billions of dollars. >> we are happy you are taking that up.
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thank you for coming to "new day." >> thank you, and congratulations on your success. that means i watch you all the time. >> we count that as success. >> that was the bar, and now we have to set new goals. >> great to see you. breaking overnight, a pakistani military helicopter carrying foreign diplomats and their families crash into a school and the diplomats were killed as well as two of the pilots. the dutch and polish ambassadors were also among those injured. the pakistani military says it was a technical that caused that crash. more breaking news to tell you about. a dallas ft. worth news crew surveying damage from the weather spotted a train derailment. some injuries were reported.
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flooding and power outages were also reported in the area. we will keep an eye on this for you. tom brady breaking his silence on deflate gate sort of. brady told interviewer, jim gray, he is still digesting the 250-page report and is taking the criticism in stride. >> has this detracted from your joy of winning the super bowl? >> absolutely not. >> why not? >> because we earned and achieved everything we got as a team and i am proud of that and our fans should be too. >> you have to see what happens to the smile on the face, when the league comes down with what action it takes. david cameron pulling off a shocker of a victory, but how does his big win affect the
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u.s.? and hillary clinton dogged by questions about donations. you are probably asking is the proof there? once and for all, we will test this situation with two people who say they know the answers, and the answers are opposite of each other. ster and kills more types of infectious bacteria. when you pick any 3 participating products get a free all better bag. while others go in circles... ...and repeat themselves... ...we choose to carve our own path in the pursuit of exhilaration. the 306 horse power lexus gs. experience the next level of performance... ...and there's no going back. lease the 2015 gs 350 f sport with complimentary navigation system for these terms. see your lexus dealer.
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increased blood pressure, common cold symptoms, urinary tract infection, and headache. take charge by talking to your doctor about your oab symptoms and myrbetriq. find out if you can get your first prescription at no cost by visiting myrbetriq.com david cameron and his party shock the uk with his big win in
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the election, and who benefits and who loses and how does it impact the relationship with the u.s.? here to talk about it is freed saw carra. >> the polling was off. the unusual thing here is you had five parties that seemed to be viable and so you had the scottish nationalist party, and the anti-europe party, and that was surprising. the big story is simple. britain's economy has been improving, and britain has been growing faster than the rest of er europe. >> was he known for spear heading lots of spending cuts? is that what he is credited with for turning around the
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economy? >> that's a very complicated question. he did do some austerity, but what they did is they stopped at some point and the economy recovered. they would argue that by doing the sawausterity, they gave confidence to the markets, and some say the cuts were the wrong thing to do and they stopped them and be that as it may, they are resided over a growing british economy, and confidence in the pound which has risen in value, and so people -- why do people -- mostly people vote on the basis of how many a i doing? ronald reagan's famous question was am i doing better than four years ago? and cameron did well and all of the others did badly. >> how am i doing on election day? that is the calculous that
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matters. how does this affect the uk and u.s.? >> what does it mean in the terms of the sill law kul politics. margaret thatcher and ronald reagan gets elected, and then bill clinton and tony blair, so what does it tell us? it tells us if the economy is doing well the incumbents will do well if i were hillary clinton, i will notice the american economy is doing well and this is not the time to distance yourself from barack obama, and notice her speech on immigration where she promised to continue the policies of the obama administration, and very different from nine months ago when she was explaining to the public her differences with obama on syria and things like
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that. >> that is interesting, it could be a harpenger for what happens here. >> david cameron has been a good and strong ally of the united states and he and obama have a good relationship but the most interesting thing about the election in britain was i think it may be the election at least from the time i have been watching british elections, which is a long time and foreign policy was discussed almost not at all. britain has almost resigned as a world power. this was an election in which nobody wanted to talk about afghanistan or iraq and even isis nothing. >> that's not good for the u.s. and uk relations? >> that's not good for the u.s. because we always relied on the uk as a strong partner with many of the same values and, look it may just be we go through these ourselves, and this is a turn inward and in britain the
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iraq war was deeply unpopular and there is a turn away from that. most importantly, we have to look at what it means for britain's role in europe and u.s. relied on europe for being the voice of the free market and trade. >> is that still true? >> cameron promised a referendum on europe. >> we don't know what their relationship with the eu will be? >> we don't know because they will do a national referendum, and depending how it goes britain may pull out of europe. >> have a great weekend. you heard about so tpaefevere
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here we go with the five things to know today. number one, conservatives carrying a surprising support in the united kingdom, and david cameron holding a referendum. and then the director of the fbi says isis is gaining followers here in america. privacy advocates cheering a federal appeals court ruling that showed collecting phone records is ruled illegal. events are taking place around the world today marking the 70th anniversary of the end of world war ii in europe. secretary of state john kerry joined the ceremony.
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tom brady says the controversy did not tarnish the team's super bowl victory. visit newdaycnn.com for the latest. now for a selfless doctor to tell you about. here is his story in the latest edition of cnn heroes. if you know somebody that is doing something extraordinary, go to cnnheroes.com. street medicine is bringing medical care to the homeless right where they are, under the bridges and along the riverbanks and abandon buildings. i have been walking the streets of pittsburgh for 23 years to treat the homeless. when i started, i was really shocked how ill people were on the street. it was like going to a third
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word country. there were runaway kids and 85-year-olds pregnant women, and they all had their own story. once you get to know the folks out there, i knew i had to keep going. and now we have managed to treat over 10,000 people. for the folks willing to come to us we have a mobile medical van, and then we have drop-in centers. we connect with a person. you have friends and we will be there for you, okay. we advocate to get housing and care. wherever they are, they are always in our circle of love. people on the street are beginning to get a voice in health care. it's something that we should take pride in and we can actually treat people the way we want to be treated. >> there are good people out
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there doing good things and that's why we have heroes and go online and pick your own. are you frustrated by the clinton foundation questions? me too. enough talk already. did they take bribes or not? we have the two sides, and we will test the proof and you decide. go get help, boy. go get help. go get help! right now! if you're a cat, you ignore people. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. it's what you do. go on kitty, kitty...
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we have breaking news. the labor department releasing the april jobs report moments ago. i need good news on this friday. >> march did not feel very good and it looks like things got better in april. in march, 85,000 jobs re-created and 200,000 jobs in april, and that is good. what happened in march, weather and a strong dollar and a lot of things happening in the economy, and for some reason in march businesses were not hiring in business numbers, and we were worried that may show slowing in the economy, and then in april, companies are picking up the slack again and starting to hire. the unemployment rate starting to change at this eight-year low, and 5.4% for the jobless rate. it had been a long time where we were seeing 7, 8, and 9% and
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10% in some points. future stocks higher and they like this number. why am i showing you this crazy chart here? this is the labor force participation rate. you will hear more about this. every month we hear about job numbers strong and consistently strong and this is the percentage of the adult population not looking for a job, and that number is too low. you will hear people say these job numbers are strong but there are not enough people out there in the labor market. this is a political number, and you will hear more about this even as we see strengthening in the numbers. broad base strength not energy companies, not hiring over the last few months but a strong month after a dip in strength on march. >> good for you saying strong is a defining term, and the graph,
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who is still looking for jobs and it explains why we have people desperate for jobs. >> page is up 2.2% and wage is starting to strengthen a little bit. >> thank you, christine. have a good weekend. here is the question nice and simple did the clintons take bribes? for all the "looks like," and troubling coincidences and either they were on the take or is there proof of the opposite. once and for all, let's have it out for people who say they understand their side. hrapby davis, and host of the ben ferguson show. for the purpose of this you are the prosecution, and you are the defense. is there a bribe, where and how do we know? >> if secretary clinton was not secretary of state, would this
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many people have given millions from foreign governments during her time? the answer is no there is no way this many foreign governments would have given money to the clinton foundation and the proof is they were not giving money before she was secretary of state when the foundation was around. we need good relationships with the clinton foundation because that means we have a better relationship with the united states government which she represents and that's why they wrote serious big checks to the clinton foundation. >> mr. davis? >> no jury can accept my facts are i am speculating on motives who might want to do by giving money. so with all due respect to ben, that's not an argument a jury would vote on. i will give you facts and not opinions. let's take the iranian deal. fact.
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the body of people that approved that deal were nine governmental agencies including the defense department and the state department and the treasury department and the secretary of state named jose hernandez said i never heard of hillary clinton, ever. and an independent body approved that transaction. the utah commission approved that transaction. so with all due respect to my friend ben, the prosecutor doesn't state facts. i stated facts that contradict the notion of a bribe. >> i have one question and that is this how is it that when hillary clinton was not at the state department the amount of money coming in from foreign governments was not remotely close to the massive amounts of money that was coming in and you could say first-time donors from foreign governments that never gave money before the clinton foundation and all of a
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sudden she is secretary of state, and they go oh, now i want to give you $1 million? i think the average juror would say that's bribery. >> i think they would show they -- >> they didn't give money before! >> don't interrupt the prosecution. i will finish my point. >> we're not in court. >> you are still interrupting. >> how do you explain the fact they gave all this money? >> two possible explanations. one is they were badly motivated seeking a favor from hillary clinton, and no fact any fever was ever received and another possibility is their grants to do good things which i could prove to you if i had the time every contribution was a direct grant to help feed people in africa and cure aids and other
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things. >> let's spit the baby here for a second. if they gave money with bad intentions and wanted influence, but they wound up not getting any influence certainly that is not bribery, but how is that different than any other political donation scenario where people are giving on the prayer something good happens to them in the future which we are all familiar with how is that different? >> she was secretary of state and she was not running for office and it would have been illegal to give this type of money to her campaign. >> where does this lead? >> i don't think you continue to give money if you are not getting anything in return. here is the thing, and we don't know what happened behind the scenes because we don't have e-mails from hillary clinton, which she wiped from her server about any of the interactions so if you want to know what happened we may never know honestly because we don't know
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what her e-mails said. >> so ben's point is i can't show you proof because you hid all of it? >> thank you, ben -- >> or deleted it. >> let me respond, ben, because i think you raised the question that i was hoping to be my end point here. if jeb bush who i greatly respect and admire is going to be accused by the author of doing the same thing with all the smoke and no facts which he says he will do i will come back on the program and you might be the prosecutor of jeb bush for not revealing his private e-mails, and i will say to you, unless you have facts he has a right to keep private his e-mails, and jeb bush is an honorable man, and you have no quid pro quo, a single act or action by hillary clinton in her tenure as secretary of state that was in return for anything else so your answer as a prosecutor is i don't know and
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no juror is going to vote on an i don't know by a prosecutor when i am giving you the facts that all the good works of the clinton foundation are overlooked while you are raising speculative questions, all spoke and no facts. >> one thing we do know the clinton foundation was not always doing good work. look how few of the dollars that came into their foundation actually went out in donations to people that needed it. there is a lot of money that stayed right there for their means. >> i have to give you facts. for their trips and planes. >> you are making general comments and i will give you facts. how little money? 80 cents out of every dollar if you don't include the hiv programs and 88 cents out of every dollar goes to people in good works. those are facts as opposed to your general characterization. the juror votes for facts and not rhetoric. >> you have not seen their bills just for their own personal
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travel? millions of dollars on private jets and private planes, and cash going to all the family members in the clinton family to pay for their glorious five-star lifestyle? you can't say it's all perfect here. >> ben -- >> it's a fact 88 cents out of every dollar and you didn't dispute my fact. >> ben, let me give you a chance. you can bounce off on the 88 cents the next time we do this but thank you both very much for coming on and testing the situation. >> thank you very much chris. thank you, ben. if you watched "new day" and saw our interview with nick loeb yesterday, you know it raised big questions. does life begin at conception? we will discuss that legal battle ahead.
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fiance of sofia vergara they are relaunching a debate over when life begins and what should happen to embreeyos when couples split up. let's bring in our guests. thank you to both of you for being here. you think this is more than a squabble between two high-profile people. >> i personally don't agree with him that life begins at conception but i find fascinating that in the roles were reversed and this were a young woman and she had the frozen embryos and she wanted to
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bring them to term and turn them into two daughters by using a surrogate or herself, and it were her ex-boyfriend that ran off and got engaged and now suddenly wants to not have that happen i think the public opinion in this case would be very different, we would be sympathetic. a lot of people look at loeb like a dirt back and that's a bias against men in some regard. i think what we are going to find out in this discussion is the law is extremely complicated and it's not clear, and there are only ten states that ruled on the matter so this is not a clear-cut case but i found the sympathies and lack of sympathy for him to be sort of fascinating. >> yeah it's interesting. he does say he is doing it in part to stand up for father's rights. >> do you think he stands a
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chance? >> no chance whatsoever. it's clear that in the ten states that have ruled they never have given custody of embryos to procreate. >> so cancer victims, awarded to two cancer victims where that was their last chance. >> yes, and nick has more sperm. it's a stretch to say they were alive. if they were alive and they accidentally dropped them in the lab, he would be convicted of murder. >> he is not the only person that believes these are lives, and 50% of the country believes life begins at conception. it's not as cut and dry as you make it sound. and i want you to listen to her on howard stern. >> fortunately there is law.
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you sign papers legal papers and if it was so serious for him this issue, and i respect this is serious for somebody and then you should have taken it more serious at the time like i did. >> so there is already a contract? >> yeah there is a contract. it's not like a contract they give you right there at the moment they are going to take my eggs out, and they give it to you in advance and see it and review it. >> should they have gone through an attorney to go through the contract? it was just from a fertility center? >> most people during that emotional time don't really take the time to go to an attorney but i don't really think that's the crux of the issue, because not everything you sign is enforceable. if i were getting married and my fiance gives me a engagement ring and i sign i will marry him and then we went a hall and then
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i decide i don't want to marry him. what he can do is get the money back for the engagement ring and the court is not going to say you signed this piece of paper, you have to marry him. the court is not going to say you signed this piece of paper, you have to have a baby. however, if you want to make more embryos because you need them to have a baby we will give you the money from her. >> it says here check out the screen one person cannot use the preserved material meaning the embro yo to create a child whether or not he or she intends to rear the child without explicit written consent of the other person. is it case closed because of that? >> i think it is case closed because of that and it's case closed because they both agreed
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to language that said the embryos would be destroyed if one of them died. the contract they signed did include these provisions. states will look directly at the contracts or as melissa said they will use a balancing test to figure out if from a fairness standpoint if one of them cannot have a pathway to parenthood whether or not out of fairness they should be able to use them. in this case you have a guy with extraordinary means who certainly has lawyers and signed this paperwork, and he is claiming that he signed it under duress and i doubt he will be able to prove that in court, and the truth is i do think in this particular case it is black and white, and he will not be able to stake a claim to use those embryos, and he will have to move on. >> thank you so much for helping us walk our way through the legality on some of this. what is your take let us know.
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let's go to chris. >> stephen colbert, you know him, comedy superstar, and once he was just a kid in public school. did he forget where he comes from? find out in the good stuff. out of 42 vehicles based on 6 different criteria, why did a panel of 11 automotive experts name the volkswagen golf motor trend's 2015 car of the year? we'll give you four good reasons. the volkswagen golf. starting at $19,295, there's an award-winning golf for everyone. when broker chris hill stays at laquinta and fires up free wi-fi, with a network that's now up to 5 times faster than before you know what he can do? let's see if he's ready. he can swim with the sharks! book your next stay at lq.com! quiet! mom has a headache! had a headache!
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before he came his ultraconservative ultraego he went to a public school, and like most big shots he totally forgot where he came from. no no he didn't. in fact he is giving back in a big way. the need is great in his home state and teachers have had to take it on themselves to raise grant money, and all the grants they put out are getting funded thanks to who? colbert. >> donors choose is going to flash fund all the projects. >> how about that? he sold his set, and then he got a foundation and a company onboard to match the sale of that set.
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800,000 bananas funding 1,000 projects from 800 teachers at nearly 400 schools. >> incredible. >> that's great. >> they will be so grateful. >> they will. happy friday everybody. it's time for "newsroom" with carol costello. >> those are beautiful words. happy friday right back at you. thank you so much and have a great weekend. "newsroom" starts right now. happening now in the news room tom brady dodges on deflate gate. >> i have not had time to digest it fully and when i do i will let you know how i feel about it. >> i wonder if he still stands by these comments. >> i would never do anything to break the rules. >> why is his agent calling it a sting? british prime minister david cameron will stay in
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