tv New Day CNN June 30, 2015 5:00am-6:01am PDT
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offensive and derogatory language to describe mexicans that come to this country. >> maybe i'll be suing nbc too. >> this is "new day" with chris cuomo alisyn and michaela pereira. >> alisyn is off today. we have new information for you. david sweat the escaped convict is coming clean to investigators revealing details of the escape plan. richard matt now dead. secrets coming to light on where they planned to go and why they had to improvise. >> all of this as the fbi launches an investigation into possible drug trafficking in the prison that they broke out of. >> reporter: good morning. for three weeks while these guys were on the run, authorities really wondered, did they really plan to run off with that prison
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seamstress, joyce mitchell? was she part of their plan? now that david sweat has been captured and is talking, we're learning that yes she really was their plan a. they planned to run off with her to mexico. but when she got cold feet and didn't show up they were forced to improvise. investigators hoping convicted killer david sweat continues to talk this morning. the former fugitive's condition improving after being shot twice in the torso sunday. >> he's going to be brought back to the department of corrections when he's cleared medically. >> reporter: investigators want to show how richard matt and david sweat planned their escape from the maximum security prison. he and matt initially planned to run away to mexico with former prison worker joyce mitchell. >> they could kill mitchell's husband and get in the car and drive to mexico. >> reporter: when mitchell didn't show up the duo headed to
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canada instead. but 18 days after their escape they separated, sweat telling investigators 49-year-old matt was slowing him down. there was evidence matt was sick. an examination of his body found blisters of his feet and mayinor cuts. both men were found dressed for the woods. inside sweat's bag there were tools, bug spray, maps and pop tarts. authorities say matt's body reeked of alcohol. the dna initially found in this cabin along with an open bottle of grape gin. >> there was cooking gear barbecue, beds. it looked pretty well equipped for a place that far out in the woods. >> reporter: now sweat remains here in albany at the medical
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center in critical condition. he is under heavy security and is expected to be here for a few more days. the clinton county district attorney saying he does plan to charge sweat with escape with burglary, with any other crimes he may have committed while on the run. when he goes back to the department of corrections, he will be under 24/7 solitary confinement confinement. president obama proposing changes to overtime pay. he says this is going to help 5 million american workers. it comes after a series of wins for the administration finds the obvious, the president's approval rating is up. in fact it's hit a two-year high. what is the good word? >> reporter: chris, they feel like they had a good week here at the white house and they're trying to keep those good times rolling. they are trying to set new
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overtime rules that will raise the pay of americans. in this country, a hard day's work deserves a fair day's pay. you've heard those talking points again. here's what it means to you. onto the old overtime rules that extra pay of time and a half topped at $23,660. that threshold will be bumped up to people making just over $50,000 a year. the president receiving higher marks for the way he's handling his job. the president's approval numbers are on the rise. approve 57%. obviously the public is warming up to the job he is doing. one reason is who you he is handling race relations in america. that was a big issue in this country since the charleston
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church massacre. the president is up the five points from last month. people are also generally feeling better about race relations in america under this president. 20% say they are better. that's up five points since february. getting back to these overtime rules that's another big reason for the upward swing in the poll. as you can see he's up six points on the economy from last month. the president had a big week last week. that is clearly showing up in these approval numbers this morning. >> thank you so much for that from the white house. donald trump out at nbc. the network is cutting ties with the real estate mogul turned candidate after his remarks at mexicans. now the donald is venting his rage. he's venting it in the form of a potential lawsuit, right? >> reporter: that's right. he says he's sueing univision.
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but the reality show star and presidential candidate had already planned to give up his hit show on nbc the apprentice because he's running. on monday the network made it official, they are keeping the show without him and using his famous line "you're fired." in front of a packed house in chicago monday trump stood by the comments he made about mexican immigrants during his campaign announcement two years ago. >> they're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime. they're rapist. and some i assume are good people. they think it's like mother theresa is coming across the border, okay? this one says 80% of central american women and raped crossing into the united
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states. well, i said drug dealers, killers and i said rapists. >> asked if he would apologize, donald trump said -- >> what i said is right. >> reporter: uni vision also dumped the event. >> i'll be using univision. maybe i'll be suing nbc too. >> reporter: more than 200,000 people signing a petition. trump has been surging in polls up to second place in new hampshire. he touted the latest cnn poll. >> there's a cnn poll that just came out. and they have interesting categories. who's the best on terrorism? trump right at the top.
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who's the best on handling international trade? not even close. trump is almost double anybody else, right? that's incredible. >> reporter: now it's unclear where if anywhere the miss usa pageant will be televised. those contestants have been preparing for this annual event for months. trump has issued a statement slamming nbc. he said they'll stand behind lying brian williams but won't stand behind someone who tells it like it is. another big story this morning. greece is preparing to go into default. they owe money and are about 1.7 billion short. they will not be able to pay their interest that they owe.
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we have richard quest live in athens. the last time i saw you there there was someone on the street taking out their anger on you. what is the mood this morning? >> reporter: the mood continues to be one of quiet, determined resignation. they see the prime minister here as having put the g back in greece, the dignity they see is back. but they are also suffering from the capital control. they can't get the money out of the bank. and they know that whatever happens, and this is crucial, whether they stay in the euro or they leave the euro that the economic situation is going to get worse in greece. and that's the dilemma. that's what they have to decide. we understand talks are taking place today between greece and the european partners. frankly as the american saying goes it's a day late and a dollar short and no one's expecting a deal by tonight.
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>> i love your use of american coloek -- amid all of this greek crisis, should we be worried. we turn to christine romans. >> let's take a look at greece here. greece is a small economy, right? it's a little bigger than alabama and a little smaller than oregon. so why did it cause this? down 350 points for the dow. greece has too much debt. and paying off that debt is a real problem. look, there are these other countries that have a lot of debt as well. they've already at their bail-outs. there's worry if greece gets out it could mean those other countries will try to get out. or it could destabilize the eu.
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it matters for the american economy and the rest of the financial system. paris down just a little bit. frankfurt up. you've seen a recovery amid all these rumors that something must be amis. they must be able to get something resolved. at least they're talking right now. dow futures are up. you could see a little bit of a bounce back this morning. we're hoping at least that you're not going to see a resumption of the big selling we saw yesterday. a little economy with a very very very big out sized effect on global markets. >> and regardless the realty of what could happen all gains of a year wiped in and out a day. the death toll is rising again in the last hour in that military plane crash in indonesia. now at least 53 people confirmed lost. this after the jet crashed in
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the city of madon. the plane took off from sumatr arktssumatra. right now it's not clear how many people were on board when the plane crashed. and the cause is you should investigation. police have arrested a new jersey man for plotting to provide material support to isis. this man planned to join the terrorists in iraq and in syria. just two weeks ago another new jersey man was arrested on similar charges. this month alone nine people have been arrested across the u.s. on terrorism related charges. a man goes to the local store to buy lottery tickets. one problem. he didn't wear his glasses. without his glasses on he accidentally bought a $30 ticket instead of the $20 ticket he intended to buy. when he got home he raeltdsed the 30 -- realized the $30
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scratch off was worth $30,000. the fbi launching a probe into interruption and drug trafficking at the clinton correctional facility siting evidence uncovered during the investigation into the escape of richard matt and david sweat. what's going to happen? how unusual is this? ed gaffen is the former deputy warden. >> in new york city they charged a female correction officer for bringing in cocaine and marijuana to inmates in manhattan. people compromise their integrity they violate their oath of office. it's that simple. >> they always say everybody knows everything that happens
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inside the walls. if i'm selling drugs to inmates,down if we work together? >> not necessarily. >> so you may not know. it's not necessarily a huge conspiracy conspiracy. >> no. it's a handful of bad apples. >> what do you make of the idea that you have to let this stuff go on. it's a way of keeping the inmates calm and that's why this stuff happens. do you buy it? >> not at all. >> why not? >> because correction officers are officers of the law. their job is to enhance the safety and security of the institution, not bring in drugs to inmates and make them potentially more violent, maybe make them crazy, causing them to aktd out act out. >> as we learn these things about what was going on inside this prison does it make it more clear to you why these two men were able to escape?
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>> yes. i believe that the facility's superintendent wasn't on top of his game. there's a directive in place called 49.10, the control and search for contraband. it mandates that correctional staff conduct at the minimum weekly inspections of the cells and housing areas. and those reports were supposed to be submitted weekly to the superintendent. were they submitted? i doubt it. >> the one guard they have in custody and they're talking about putting on trial, the hacksaws in the frozen meat could he have clean hand and passed something. does he necessarily have to have dirty hand? >> not necessarily. but i question his motivations. why did he allow himself to become so close to these two inmates? i'm sure that ticked off a lot of the other inmates on the
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honor block. because he was probably giving them special privileges that he wasn't giving to the other inmates. that's a recipe for disaster. >> when we think of prison we think of wardens. the system here is a little different, but there is someone in charge at the end of the day, right? >> in new york the superintendent is the warden. it's just a different title. >> is that person in charge of just this facility or do they have regional supervision? >> the superintendent is in charge of the clinton correctional facility. and he reports directly to central office to the deputy commissioner for security. >> where is that person? how come we're not hearing from them? >> your guess is as good as mine. >> that's who's got to have the answers, right? just to go to the guards they're not overseeing themselves. it's about the superintendent, right? doesn't the accountability lie
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there at the end of the day. >> with the superintendent and the deputy superintendent for security. and the tour commanders and the sergeants. it runs downhill. these people should have been doing their job. in following that directive that i spoke about earlier, that's correction 101. if that was followed even if one correction officer who cycled into the honor block in the last 12 weeks did his or her job, if one of them on the midnight tour went by the cells and checked for lines of life to check to see if those inmates were there, this probably would have been foiled. it's a total breakdown. >> do you think it's going to wind up being the case that there are a number of employees there that helped these guys or do you think it's going to be about the environment of laxity that was in there in terms of how strict it was that enabled these guys to get out? >> let's talk about the laxity for a minute. let's go back to 2013.
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let's go back to joyce mitchell those allegations of undue familiarity. i want to know who hired joyce mitchell. was she hired off the civil service list or was she a provisional employee? maybe that's why they didn't come down on her. at the very least, i want to know who was the person who made the complaint against joyce mitchell. was it an inmate a civilian employee, an officer, a sergeant? how come the inspector general didn't deem that allegation credible? at the very at least i would have transferred both of those inmates to different facilities just to avoid it. >> thank you so much for the insight. i want to turn to weather. thousands have been forced to knee as flee as a massive wildfire in washington state.
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we're told the flamed are 10% contained. we want to turn to chad meyers with a look at the conditions and what they can expect today. >> if 99 is better than 105, yes. but 99 is still hot for a firefighter battling a blaze standing next to a fire. the heat index that those firefighters are under standing next to something so scorchingly hot. they had 400th of an inch of rain yesterday. that didn't help much. and no rain in the forecast. >> appreciate it very much. overnight more than a thousand residents freeing their homes as firefighters battle catastrophic wildfires in central and washington state showing no signs of slowing. >> they opened the door and said
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get out get out. just go. >> a lot of friends' houses burn down. that was hard. >> it happened so fast. it doesn't look like there's anything left. >> plumes of black smoke visible for miles away. >> it's devastating. it's been burning like this for hours. >> the sleepily hollow fire swallowing now 4,000 acres. >> the flames looked evil. it was scary. >> sweltering heat gusty winds, coupled with little rain making it that much harder to slow this fire which officials estimate is only 10% contained. >> it most likely will pick up in some manner. how far and fast it goes, it's just unpredictable. >> the wind are going to be 25 to 30 miles per hour. nothing the firefighters can do
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other than get out of the way at times. we have new poll numbers for you this morning. they show the president's approval on the rise. what's behind the sudden spike? go roam sleep in sleep out star gaze dream big wander more care less beat sunrise chase sunset do it all. on us. get your first month's payment plus five years wear and tear coverage. make the most of summer... with volvo. you're driving along, having a perfectly nice day, when out of nowhere a pick-up truck slams into your brand new car. one second it wasn't there and the next second... boom! you've had your first accident. now you have to make your first claim. so you talk to your insurance company and... boom! you're blindsided for a second time. they won't give you enough money to replace your brand new car. don't
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threshold for the first time in two years. what's behind the spike? put that question to cnn's political commentator paul begala. so i think we should ask you both to react. your reaction to the approval rate of the president at 50%? >> i'm not surprised that the president would see a bump after a week of what's been categorized as wins for obama. >> were they wins? >> is it a win for obama? is it a win for the country. people are looking at the scotus rulings as a win for the administration. you're inupdated with headlines edd
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edd edd with the president's wins. the average of seven major polls, that has the president's approval at 46.1 and disapproval at 49.9. and that's an average over the last two weeks of seven major polls. that's a more accurate portrayal than one poll. >> she's poking holes in our poll. i don't know about that. what are your thoughts? >> i think she makes a very good point about the week this remarkable and heartbreaking week as we saw the president eulogizing ref rende inging reverend and senator pinckney. there were also fundamentals, though. and whether it's 46 or 50 they're helping the president as well. finally the middle class is getting a pay rise.
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he is at 50% now. that's by the way exactly where ronald reagan was at this stage of his presidency. bush was at 32 at this stage of his presidency. the middle class income is going up. health care cost increases, the lowest rate of -- the fundamentals are good for him too. >> defend two of the big moves he did. some are alling ingcalling it over reach. one, painting the white house in the colors of the rainbow, seen as some by owning an advocacy position that maybe the white house should not have done. number two, the proposal to pay more for overtime. the business community pushing back and saying you shouldn't be
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setting wages, we should. >> the president took a step -- before he reelection he endorsed same-sex marriage. he owns some large piece of that victory. and i just thought it was wonderful and inclusive for the white house to be bathed in those rainbow colors. it was a very moving and beautiful thing. i'm so glad he did it. and paying overtime money for overtime work has been the law of the land for decade. staying on the merits of the issue, which is if you work overtime, you ought to get paid overtime. and they're updating those rules. of course special interest lobbyists don't like it. they don't want any minimum wage either. but i think the president is on the side of the working people on this. >> new names that are going to
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be making announcements in the next little while. one for sure chris christie is set to make an announcement that he is putting his name on. in terms of all the controversy that has been around him, how much do you think that's going to get in the way? and how much do you think he can stand out from the rest? that will make it 14. >> it's amazing the difference a year and a half or so can make. chris christie was a front runner not that long ago, prior to bridgegate. >> do you think it's bridgegate? >> i think that was the beginning of the avalanche. and there were a couple of public spats with folks. >> do you think he's not right enough for this primary season? >> not necessarily. look at jeb bush. jeb bush is pretty moderate on a lot of things. there are oh peoplether people in
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this race. >>. >> i think cassick is a straight talker kind of a guy. and he talks in colloquial language. i think people will be interested to hear what he has to say. for chris christie coming into the race now, jeb bush really sucked the oxygen out of the donor pool that chris christie would have had access too. i think at this point chris christie is going to have difficulty getting the money he needs to get himself back into a competitive position. anything can happen. this is such a wide open race. it can take one or two good debate performances and boom he's right back on the top tier. >> he's got no shot. he ain't going to be president anymore than i am.
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but he is a superior debater. but he's in a field with really talented people. i never said this the last cycle. you're my witness. i never said the republican field in 2012 was talented because they weren't. this field is enormously talented. chris christie will be debating with ted cruz who was a national debater in challenge. >> we're going to have plenty of time to debate. you know why? we've got 496, 16 28, 47. those are your win four numbers for the day. a lot can happen. that's why we need good folks like you to do the analysis for us. tara, paul, thank you very much. we'll talk more about the donald. nbc pulling the plug after donald trump's comments about mexican grants.
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david sweat planned to flee to mexico but changed course when joyce mitchell never showed up with their get away car. their prison in upstate new york is now under fbi investigation for alleged drug trafficking. greece is set to go into default today. the country's finance minister says it will not pay the 1.7 billion dollar it owes by today. a military plane crashed shortly after take off from sumatra. it is feared as many as 113 could have perished. >> president obama is pledging to make more salaried employees eligible for overtime pay. new jersey governor chris christie officially announcing his plans for a white house run today. he'll be the 14th republican to join the fray.
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as we've been saying donald trump is in the cross hairs of nbc. it seems the man thrives off attention. so what is this going to do? getting canned by nbc for ugly remarks about latinos? is there an argument it could help his campaign? ♪ we'll certainly get around, ohh ♪ ♪ you and me, we could be bare footin' ♪ ♪ our feet can touch the ground ♪ conceal cracks and splinters with the ultimate do-over for wood and concrete. ♪ hey hey hey hey ♪ don't replace, resurface. behr premium deckover. exclusively at the home depot. ♪ ♪ ♪ (vo) making the most out of
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. donald trump is out at nbc, the network pulling the plug on the apprentice along the other trump programming because of the comments he made on illegal immigrants. what does it mean for trump? what does it mean for the 2016 race? so many questions. we turn to bill carter an author and long time reporter for the "new york times." also maria kacardona. do you think uni vision forced nbc's hand here? >> i think nbc was willing to put up with trump's comments
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about the president and his birth certificate and all that in previous controversies. and now it got to the point where they couldn't tolerate it anymore. it gave them much more cover to say we can't put up with this anymore. >> they must have felt the pressure. 54 million latinos in the country. they were very vocal. >> yes. this is clearly an episode where the comments inflamed an already kind of a base inside nbc that was questioning do we want this relationship to go on. and that's a very sizable audience, that hispanic audience. and they don't wandt to offend that audience. >> we heard people plotting boycotts. we heard some of the contestants were concerned about this.
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this wasn't just a little bit of noise from the fringe. this was a loud resounding cry. were you surprised though that some of the presidential contenders on the gop side didn't utter a word? >> yes. the first one was how the latino activism here really pushed the envelope. when you have nearly a quarter of a million latinos turning 18 they're going to make their voices heard. you saw that with the latino community. they pushed univision to do the right thing. the majority of their audiences are of mexican-american decent. then you saw nbc follow suit because latinos also watch english language television. and nbc has some of the highest rated showed for latinos. and on the presidential front,
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it was astonishing to me that not one single presidential candidate stood up to say these comments are completely unacceptable. not one on the republican side. hillary clinton did stand up to say these comments are unacceptable and that other leaders should stand up to these kind of comments. not even jeb bush whose wife is from mexico and whose kids are of mexican-american decentscentdescent. nothing, nada. >> as you mentioned, this is classic donald trump. this is the kind of bluster, this is what he has done. has our stomach for these kind of things and that kind of bluster changed in this country since the last time around? >> i think it has changed. obviously there's much more
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sensitivity out there than there was in the past. i think at some point nbc decide donald being donald doesn't work snim anymore. it's too much. also, it's not as economically important to them. they'll continue with the show. they'll replace him. the beauty packagegeants are not big -- it was important for them to do the right thing. >> we look at the polls from a few weeks ago, and it had donald trump in second place. then you look at what has now happened. i wonder what the polls will reflect now. many people are wondering is this the way a presidential candidate should sound, referring to the electorate in that way? >> no. here's what is so pernicious for
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the republican party moving forward, the fact that they have said nothing about these repulsive comments everything that happened last week the issue about the confederate flag and how so many republicans were late in the game in admitting it was racism that caused the tragedy in charleston, what we saw in terms of the gay marriage supreme court decision, and then the overhang of the immigration debate which has been so detrimental to republicans as a whole in terms of their image. what you're seeing is a cementing of a perception of a party that is not tolerant. that is devicive that is anti-woman, anti-immigrant, anti-latino, anti-progress. for a party that needs to amplify their reach to the new demographics of this country, they're not doing anything that will give them a viable pass to
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reach la casa blanca in 2016 or any time beyond that. >> thank you so much. pernicious is that spanish? the phrase an historic it's odd sounding this phrase, but it's been used a lot in regard to the supreme court especially lately. what really matters to you in all the hype ahead. sleep out star gaze dream big wander more care less beat sunrise chase sunset do it all. on us. get your first month's payment plus five years wear and tear coverage. make the most of summer... with volvo.
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. upholding obama, legalizing gay marriage taking a chang on affirmative action and a step at changing abortion policy. the court did so much. or did it? let's break it down with professor jeffrey tuben. justices reading their dissents. >> unpress katecedented in its vitriol. scalia's level of hostility and ridicule of his colleagues was unlike anything i have seen in 20 years of covering the court
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and really a different level of magnitude in terms of his abuse and contempt for his colleagues. the rest of them basically zan r standard standard operating procedure. >> he stood out also because it was personal. a dissent is to layout a basic framework of how you see the law. this was like i don't like the government telling me how to live my life. it was ridicule. >> one of the things the justices always say, it's really good that we have the summers off because it allows everybody to calm down. and by the time they come back on the first monday in october, things have recovered their equilibrium. will be interesting to see if this sort of animus continues in the fall. >> so the big take aways, gay marriage, how is it really going to change things? >> huge.
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i don't think i am hyping my beat by saying this term was historic because of its impact on people. there were 30 states in the union where same-sex marriage was either going to be legal or illegal based on the court's decision. it's now legal in all 50 states. in addition, it established a framework for equality for gay people that is going to carry over to all sorts of areas. >> the texas ag saying you don't have to follow it. ted cruz saying it's not the real law -- >> i think that will ultimately be seen by people as dead-enders objecting to the tide of history that is rolling over them. the supreme court is final and it's legal in all 50 states and people are going to get married in all 50 states. and everybody's going to get used it. >> obamacare here to stay.
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that was somewhatics icsexpected. the sproutupreme court seems to suggest they're going to hear the case. >> two huge cases coming up next term. abortion and affirmative action. on abortion basically the question is going to be can a state do everything possible to discourage abortion short of banning it? they've never really addressed that question. and what texas and mississippi and several other states have done is really close to banning abortion in terms of making it impossible for abortion clinics to operate. >> they'll say, no no we want to make it as safe as onlypossible if you want to go this route. >> but they create so many obstacles that the number of abortion clinics falls to single digits in a state the size of texas. and in affirmative action they took a stance which really tees
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up whether racial -- you have several justices in the court who are longstanding in their objection to racial preferences. the liberals are going to start at a serious disadvantage. it really could be tend for affirmative action. >> people always say, supreme court -- now you see why you have to pay attention to the court and why this next election is so important. we could have two, maybe three vacancies coming up. so it had been a lot of serious news for you this morning. remember, there is also virtue in the world and that's why we have the good stuff coming up next.
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. starts from bad proposition, the good stuff, which is that the american dream is dead. you keep hearing that right? well, don't tell jamal abdul lahi, okay? here's why. he's a school janitor. he got to that point by escaping life as a teen soldier in ethiopia. he didn't read or write until he was 17. enough of a dream? no? it was never about him. it was about his kids having a
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better life. one of his kids goes to the school he's a janitor in and is graduating valedictorian. now her father says he is living the dream. >> different from my life that i used to lead. not knowing where they go and now here they are achieving. >> that is so magical. i love it. congratulations all of them. >> the dream is alive. >> we turn you over to pamela brown in for carol koscostello today. you're live in the cnn newsroom. happening now in the anymore "newsroom," prison break plans revealed. >> so the plan was to head to
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