tv New Day CNN July 13, 2015 3:00am-4:01am PDT
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leaders have an greet agreed to a bailout. this will have impact on global financial markets, but one last piece to the bailout >> the greek parliament has to approve it. world leaders now weighing in. senior international correspondent fred joins us live with the latest. good morning, fred. >> reporter: yeah good morning, alisyn. the germans are the reason this deal came through and why it is so tough for the greeks. the germans said look we have been going through it five years. they have not gotten further to save themselves. there are going to be tough conditions to that. they want reforms. also the greeks are going to have to put together a fund with some $70 billion worth in assets that are going to be outside of greece which is like collateral for the germans and other nations as well. the germans said a lot of trust
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was destroyed in the negotiations going forward. they want the trust to be rebuilt. right now, you are right, right now, everybody is looking at wednesday to see whether or not the greek parliament is going to wave these proposals through and only then would a new bailout be able to happen. chris? >> all right, fred we will be watching. thanks for checking in with us. the iran deal. will it get done. only the fine print stands in the way. what does that mean? we have team coverage beginning with nic robertson. your task is to read between the lines of what you are hearing. how close do you think we are? >> reporter: chris, we are close, but not there, yet. a spokesman for the iranian prime minister said there are still issues that require political will to resolve. that's clearly pointed at the united states. they said however, no one is looking at an extension.
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the issues that have separated them on this iran demanding a lift to a u.n. arms embargo. they have had very strong concerns about how an inspection system would work to verify their compliance on any agreement they sign up for. there are other issues. the music over the music has been set so that it is close. there are only a couple other issues outstanding. just in the last couple of hours here they started a meeting, a p p5 plus one with the russian and chinese foreign ministers, the eu foreign policy chief there. everyone looking very very steady faced. the chinese foreign minister going into the meeting today said any future negotiations cannot and should not be prolonged. that is a headline because we haven't heard anyone telling us yet, at the foreign minister
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level there are going to be future negotiations after this. so at the moment will something be signed today? if it is it seems parts are going to be left out. alisyn? >> nic, if anything happens, send up a flare and we will come right to you. meanwhile, if a deal is announced, president obama and john kerry will have to sell the deal to a skeptical congress. michelle is live with that part of the story. what are they saying? >> if the deal is reached, big accomplishment for all parties involved but it won't quite be over yet. remember congress has a say according to this bill that was passed into law back in may, and many in congress especially senate republicans have been extremely vocal about not even liking the framework of this deal. among other things, it doesn't dismantle iran's nuclear program. according to the law, congress has 60 days to look over the
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deal. during that time the administration has certain obligations to report to congress. they can't wave the sanctions that congress imposed against iran. if congress votes to approve or disapprove the deal which is not technically an up or down vote but a vote on whether or not to remove the sanctions that congress imposed, then the white house could veto that to override a veto it takes a two-thirds majority. if that were to happen you can see, even though this is not technically an up or down vote on the deal and just looking at sanctions, it could have the effect of killing the deal. what to do with the sanctions is a key part of this. iran is demanding all sanctions, at least be agreed to be eventually removed. chris? >> if he does veto what happens? we are going to have a lot to follow threw here other than what is inked in vienna. now, to the massive manhunt
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in mexico and the drug lord known as el chapo, the stocky one. he broke out of a prison through a mile long tunnel that was built for him, apparently. american officials are wondering if there was inside help. palo sandoval is live outside the prison in mexico with the latest. polo? >> reporter: this morning, a partial perimeter sed up. it's about an hour's drive from the company's capital of mexico city. the center seems to be the facility behind me. guzman escapeing 24 hours ago, now law enforcement is under a manhunt. one of the world east most powerful and deadly drug trafficking kingpins.
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el chapo and a supplier of heroin and marijuana in the united states escaped from this prison. it's the second escape. this time he busted out of a maximum security federal prison west of mexico city. they said guards at the federal prison performs a routine check and noticed guzman was missing. at 5'6" they think el chapo fit through a hole located near the shower of his cell. beyond that a vertical passage with stairs leading to a tunnel stretching a mile. the escape infuriated law enforcement officials who pushed for his extradition to the united states. they questioned the ability of mexican officials to keep him behind bars. >> he may have murdered or ordered the murders of 10,000 people. this is not somebody that is playing around with prison
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officials. he controls what he wants to do and they go along with it. they look the other way to keep their families alive. >> reporter: guzman got out by an elaborate underground escape route with lighting ventilation. investigators swarmed a house at the other end, but guzman was nowhere in sight. the two-time escapee broke out of prison in a laundry court in 200 1. a break in that case came in 2013 when they discovered houses in mexico and a secret web of passageways. this morning, the concern is that guzman may have already slipped away. there's real concern here on the ground that he may have made it to his native home state, a
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mountainous region where many people would welcome him with open arms. he is seen as more or less a robin hood figure. at daybreak, we will show you an aerial view of this area. the escape is raising so many questions. >> okay, poplo we will check back in with you. let's get to tom. nice to see both of you this morning. tom, i want to start with you. you have worked with the mexican government on fighting crime. what do we need to know about this guy, guzman and how he operates? >> we need to know alisyn he is a complete savage. what they do and how they do business is based on terror in the communities or the entire region in mexico. these are people that they
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killed journalists politicians, police officers corrections officers and not just that person but every member of their family parents, cousins, children and oftentimes horrific deaths. i mean dipping their bodies in acid peeling their skin dismembering them. horrible horrible torture. isis could take a play out of his book on how to do terrorism. >> it's gruesome tom, the way his history is and the way you describe it. annmarie annmarie can we say the prison guards feared him and maybe knew he was trying to escape? >> it could be fear. they could have been brought up. not only the prison guards but he had to have access to the prison layout. he had to have access to the video feed. we have to remind your audience
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when he broke out, he broke out exactly at a point where the video feed could not see. they don't have a video of him going through this hole. it's one particular hole in the bathroom where they couldn't see him. he had to have access to a lot of information that prison guards don't necessarily have. this could go much higher. >> tom, once again, we just have come off, here in this country, this brazen prison escape through a tunnel system and this is what happened here. the tunnel system through which he escaped was a mile long very sophisticated in construction. it was built tall enough so he could stand-up. he's 5'8" i believe. he's known at shorty. so what does -- yet, you say, what we saw in mexico is quite different than what we saw in clinton in new york. >> exactly. in clinton, we are looking at a couple guys with help from a few people within prison to hacksaw
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through pipes and concrete and find their way out through a manhole. this guy didn't break out of that prison he cruised out. they had a motoried vehicle in the tunnel. this tunnel was built by a professional construction firm professional engineers, which he employed at the border and he invented the tunnel building under the u.s. and mexican border to bring drugs into the united states. for him to have a company come down to mexico city or nearby to the prison and build a tunnel you know build a tremendous tunnel for a mile in length to come up under the prison and into his room or his cell i mean that was nothing for him to do that. he's also he's on forbes list as one of the wealthiest people in the world. he's probably one of the single wealthiest criminals in the world with a net worth of $1 billion. >> oh my gosh $1 billion for drug trafficking. this is a huge embarrassment for
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the president of mexico. this is the world's most wanted after osama bin laden. you believe his escape may go higher than prison officials. what does that mean into the government? >> well we have to see. it's hard to imagine him having access to all this information that allows him to build this tunnel without having information that you only can get by either those who do consulting for the government or who work or outsource work by government or government officials. it wouldn't surprise me or other analysts. i'm sure tom wouldn't be surprised. i think the most frightening aspect of this besides he broke out of the most prison in mexico. we are going to have a spike of violence in mexico. he has presence in ten countries
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around the world, especially latin america. there could be a gang battle for the turf that he may have lost while he was in jail. so there's also a lot of concern there could be a spike of violence because of this. >> tom, are americans more in danger with this guy on the loose? >> it's hard to say if we could be more in danger we already were in danger by his huge operation. it's pretty much continued with him running it from prison. he would have had no trouble maintaining control. the way these cartels operate is their young thugs, if you will, are allowed to freelance between the trafficking deals. one of the biggest crime waves in mexico is when americans go to visit relatives in mexico they are often kidnapped for ransom. when we were discussing a couple months about the hostage policy around the world, more people more americans have been held
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hostage in mexico by these crime groups than the middle east or other places we suspect. the fbi works all those cases. there's hundreds of those cases. afternoon times the family pays. the fbi helps, whatever family help is and they kill the people often. half the time they let them go and half the time they kill them anyway. when the family raises money, they gamble that it is successful. it is successful occasionally. >> the last time he escaped, he was on the loose for 13 years. we'll see what happens. thanks for all the information. let's get over to chris. >> we are breaking news in france. 18 people evacuated after being held hostage in paris. this happened inside a clothing store at a mall. it started as a robbery. several gunmen were involved and may have escaped. it is unclear if hostages remain. we are on the story and will keep you updated. 25 dead and ten wounded in
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an attack at a u.s. base in afghanistan. the bomber was in a car that blew up at a check point near camp chapman. it's not clear who is responsible for the attack. u.s. officials say no american personnel were hurt. camp chapman is where seven cia employees were killed in 2009. wisconsin governor scott walker makes it official. walker will be the 15th republican to enter the 2016 race. he's planning to tour the early voting states after the announcement including a three-day tour in iowa in an rv. his numbers are slipping in wisconsin. we'll tell you how he adds to the race. the midwest is under threat of torrential rain from ohio to kentucky. water is knee high. cars are stranded some submerged. it is not over yet. let's get to cnn meteorologist
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chad myers. what are you seeing? >> 16 million people under the gun for severe weather including milwaukee and chicago. it was a violent sunday as well. tornado sirens sounding in minneapolis. severe weather pummels parts of the midwest overnight. damaging winds, large hail and thunderstorms ripping through minnesota to illinois into this morning. drivers scouring to find safety under a bridge as southern minnesota gets slammed with winds up to 80 miles per hour. in kentucky firefighters rescue stranded drivers in louisville. up to five inches of rain triggers massive flash flooding over the weekend. cars submerged under water in ohio. the severe weather is not over. tornadoes, damaging winds and large hail expected throughout the midwest and severe storms moving into the south by tuesday.
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>> the big map from chicago to chicagoland all the way south into parts of the ohio valley it's where the weather is going to be bad today. we have tornadoes on the ground today along the frontal system. this is the battleground from chicago down to cincinnati later on tonight. it is going to be a violent afternoon. i know we expect these things in the spring don't typically expect them in the summertime. we have a big front out there today and severe weather possible. for you guys though 80s, 70s, nice in the northeast. no big weather for you. >> keep an eye on the midwest for us. thanks so much. nuclear negotiations for iran and six world powers are, quote, almost there. what is standing between this and a landmark agreement? we'll look at that. donald trump. you have two things. one is him saying he is the future of the gop and people on the other side one, a
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this perspective iran deal is all about questions, will it get done today? that's the obvious one. if it does will congress approve it? if not, then what happens. hillary, the co-author of "going to tehran" negotiated with the state department for two administrations. good to have you both. the politics the law surrounding this is very fuzzy. it's not a treaty. it's kind of a deal. congress gets a say because they have the pursestrings with the sanctions. how do you see this going forward, assuming let's assume a deal gets done. >> they blew past the 30-day deadline that was july 9th chris. this means congress has 60 days to review the deal. basically, the administration said that they think a deal would stand 30 days or 60 days.
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but, i anticipate congress approving the deal. there will be a lot of talk a lot of debate and criticism on both sides, i think. in the end, i think, at this point, congress probably will accept a deal even though this deal is only as good as this administration president obama. a lot of political candidates for 2016 on the republican side said they would possibly overturn the deal. i think the goal is to get a deal in place and the hope is if iran will begin to implement it that could go a long way toward it being implemented in the future. >> often times, a deal is only as good as the next deal you know what i mean? that's one reality they have to deal with. one other question for you, procedurely. congress says no we don't like the deal. they don't give them the vote. they vote it down. the president can veto it. they say we don't care this
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isn't legislation. we are not giving money for the sanctions. >> there are certain sanctions president obama can wave in terms of executive authority. >> not all of them. >> but a lot of them are u.n. security council resolutions and they will be lifted under those measures. the problem is if the u.s. does not make good under their commitments under this agreement, then the whole sanctions regime of the international community falls apart. >> there's that i get that. but here doe mesically, that's congress' leverage on how this plays out. on the other side okay do you believe that you can have a deal where iran will really allow the kinds of inspections that seem so important to members of congress here? >> the iranians will call what we will call inspections, the iranians call managed access. if you look at their record in
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terms of the nuclear issue allowing managed access to the atomic agency it's been good. more impressive is their record with the chemical records treaty where they have allowed quite extensive managed access international inspectors going into military sites. if you look at the record soberly without the demonization their record is good. there's a lot of reason to believe an international agency can carry this out. they have done it in the chemical weapons field. they have been in iran now for more than ten years on the nuclear issues. >> hillary, people are thinking of iran and we usually skip over what you said. the demonization that usually goes along with iran. is that wrong? the perspective here is why do we need the deal? they will create a nuclear weapon and try to kill people with it maybe us. you need a deal because they are
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running in other situations to the detriment of u.s. policy. you do not accept that. what's the other side? >> yeah for two reasons. i look at the united states and china. we came to accept the people's republic of china that was demonized in the united states. you could only refer to it as red china. we came to terms with them not because they are a great country with a great record and american beliefs, we needed the deal for ourselves to get out of vietnam and never ending military operations in asia. we need a deal with iran for the same reasons in the middle east. we are on the trajectory of never winning unwinnable wars there. like china, the system that they have built in iran is born from a revolution. a revolution to give that country and its people real independence. foreign policy independence especially. it's their system.
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they are going to morph it as they choose. we have every interest to align with it. it is today, the one stable political order in the middle east and a strong one at that. >> what an irony here. iran being the strong shoulder in the reason. one quick button here. assuming something gets done and it's about time they have 60 days. we are expecting a vote quickly. what do you think will be the major dynamic of opposition about that deal in congress? >> well i think the thing is that the deal is only as good as the dealess when you look at the breakout time president obama said after this deal is done iran's breakout time is almost zero zero. i think they want to make sure there's a quick snap back of sanctions if iran violates but those are things that are going to be tricky. once this train gets going, chris, it's going to be hard to put the sanctions back in place,
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who determines what a violation is. i think the critics of the deal want to make sure there's more permanent curves not temporary ones. >> stand by. as we get word of a deal we want to come back to figure out what it means. alisyn? >> senator lindsey graham calling donald trump a wrecking ball saying he threatens the future of the republican party. we discuss that, next. we all eat foods that are acidic... most of the time people are shocked when we show them where they're getting the acid and what those acids can do to the enamel. there's only so much enamel on a tooth, and everybody needs to do something about it now if they want to preserve their teeth. i recommend pronamel because it helps strengthen the tooth and makes it more resistant to acid breakdown. we want to be healthy and strong through the course of our life and by using pronamel every day, just simply using it as your toothpaste, you know you will have that peace of mind.
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greece in the news about to be bailed out for the third time in five years. euro zone leaders reaching a unanimous agreement to fix the debt crisis there. it's said to include quote serious reform and aid. it means greece will not be forced out of the euro zone. we are looking at a vote as early as tomorrow. the talks dragged on for almost 17 hours. mexico's president vowing to
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recapture el chapo after his escape from a maximum security break this weekend. he broke out through a mile long tunnel from a shower stall. guzman was captured in 2014 after ten years on the run following his first prison escape. >> sad news out of chicago's brookfield zoo. 54 sting rays are dead after something went wrong with the oxygen system. in 2008 a problem with the heating and cooling system left 16 sting rays dead. donald trumps antics have david letterman rethinking retirement. he appeared with steve martin and martin short. he said the end may have come too soon. >> i was complacent i was satisfied, i was content, then a
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couple days ago, donald trump said he was running for president. [ laughter ] >> i have made the biggest mistake of my life. >> letterman also presented a top ten list of interesting facts about trump and the highlights include number one, during sex donald trump calls out his own name. donald trump weighs 240 pounds, 250 with cologne. >> should have been hairspray. >> right. oh you'll like the next one. number whatever trump would like all americans to know that thing on his head is free range. >> that's good. that's good. that's good. >> free range. oh my -- >> it's coming. >> we do miss david letterman. >> we do. we miss the social critique.
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john oliver making a push at taking over. >> the top ten list is priceless. >> what will trump say in response? this man suffers no indignity like that. >> a tweet will be happening in three, two, one. >> it's going to be the most vicious stuff we have seen. >> governor scott walker does he have something to add to the stew? more than you think. we'll tell you what, next. the signs are everywhere. the lincoln summer invitation is on. get exceptional offers on the compact utility mkc, mkz sedan... the iconic navigator. and get a first look at the entirely new 2016 mid-size utility lincoln mkx. lease the 2015 mkc for $369 a month with $0 down, $0 first month's payment and $0 cash due at signing. ♪ i built my business with passion.
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wisconsin governor scott walker, has just become the 15th republican candidate to jump into the presidential race. scott walker's announcement drown out by donald trump. >> let's discuss. we have sara in wisconsin braving the storms political and otherwise with the walker announcement and cnn washington correspondent, jeff. sara i'll start with you because you are braving the elements. what does walker's anoupsnouncement
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add to the field? >> he brings an interesting midwest governor into the race. he's very conservative so different from jeb bush. he's not going to try to run a sen tryst campaign. he's going to cast himself as a fighter, he's won three elections in four years. he says look other guys have won elections but haven't fought the big fight. i think we can expect to hear about his record in wisconsin today as well. >> is he putting all his eggs in the iowa basket and sort of creating his positions based on winning iowa? >> good question. he's putting most of them in the iowa basket. a lot of people in a corner of iowa are very familiar with his record. it fits him well. he has one foot in the evangelical camp and one in the tea party camp. he juggles that better than
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most. can he distinguish himself from the other people who claim the same turf? the more conservative branch of that and how does he do that? >> i think he can do that because of what sara said. he's a key dividing line in this big, big, field. he says i have done this in wisconsin. you can look down the list of what he's done. controversial or not, he signed a budget in. he has done it not just talked about it like rand paul ted cruz and marco rubio. >> you have written a great and comprehensive piece about how walker has done shape shifting in terms of positions and moved to the right. which ones has he flipped on? >> yeah, shape shifting is a good way to have putting it. we have seen him change his tone and in some cases his policies on issues ranging from same-sex marriage to abortion and immigration. in some ways this is what you
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expect to see on the road to des moines. his advisers said look we need to win iowa. we cast him as fighter, a guy that can win elections. you can't show up and come in second. to do that, scott walker wants to make sure he has social conservatives on board. that's why we are seeing him tweak his positions on a lot of issue that is are important to social conservatives. >> you have the second aspect you are seeing with governor jindal. how does he deal with the trouble he's had at home. you look at three elections two ways he can win, but he's under constant assault and numbers are dropping. >> the reason he's had three elections is they try to recall him. he won that effort. he's been very very conservative. he has, without a doubt, created positions for this presidential campaign. it's not been all that well received in wisconsin. overall in this conservative
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republican field, he can point to a list of things he's done. not unlike jeb bush. he's been a governor in this time not hey, i did it ten years ago. >> jeff, i want to stick with you. another big thing is happening. hillary clinton is giving what is her first policy speech of her campaign. what are we expecting today. >> she's talking the economy and how to build the middle class. this is about bernie sanders. she's not going to mention him, but it's a left leaning policy speech. i am a fighter for the middle class. she's going to call on companies to expand profit sharing for employees. i'm told she's going to call specifically on companies to expand the wealth. share their vast profits with employees. not sure how you legislate that. that is her central message here. her first of many policy speeches. >> calling on companies to do profit sharing is that.
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>> no shaming them into it but not signing a law. >> sara on the donald trump front, no less than rupert murdock tweets that donald trump was wrong about what he said specifically with mexicans. impact? >> well i don't think that donald trump is going to listen to anyone including rupert murdock. i will say, he took an interesting position on this. he is a long time supporter on immigration reform. we see it with a lot of prominent businessmen. it's surprising to see donald trump with the tone he is taking today. a lot of things are things donald trump, the businessman would support. donald trump, the politician however, is a different story and he's bound to hammer on illegal immigration and mexicans coming across the border are not the cream of the crop is working for him. i doubt a tweet from rupert murdock is going to inspire sour
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searching for donald trump. >> in his tweet, he said imgranltim immigrants have a lower crime rate than native born americans. lindsey graham spoke out about donald trump's role. >> i think he's hijacked the debate. he's a wrecking ball and we need to push back. >> a wrecking ball hijacking the debate. they are the strongest words we have heard. >> he's fine with being a wrecking ball. i'm more intrigued by what rupert murdock was saying. if he keeps going down the line it's not going to stop donald trump. that's an interesting voice. more powerful than lindsey graham. rupert likes trump. he's on fox all the time. secondly it shows a reality about donald trump. he is not a businessman.
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he is a wealthy person because of marketing strategies but he doesn't run a big corporation. he had all these people working for him. he doesn't run a business like murdock. >> the trump organization he's not running that? >> they are marketing things. it's not like he has apple under his belt where he's actually running the business and thinking about how to grow these things. he's a one man name machine. it's an interesting thing you will see between legit business people and he who is feeding every anger appetite he can find. >> on that note thank you for your time. for all your political news go to cnnpolitics.com. >> how about this one? add kus finch. the man who used the law to upset the racial morets and how to kill a mockingbird. the new information that gives
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from the book written by lee. now, all of a sudden this twist. the image of him as this honorable crusader being turned on its head thanks to a new novel from harper lee. "go set a watchman" depicting atticus as a racist later in life. what does it mean outside the literature to what atticus finch meant to our society. let's bring in angela to discuss. so here is my first thing. what do you think would knit these two images of this man together in a way that makes sense? >> time. first of all, i'm so excited. as a writer and lover of literature i cannot wait until tomorrow when the book comes out. what we see is what happens between the '30s and the '60s and really brown. the case of brown and desegregation. what really happens and this
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idea of morality versus rights for real. so i think that the civil rights ignited a different kind of thing in the deep south. "to kill a mockingbird" at the time we needed atticus finch. we needed someone that made us feel like we have humanity. there is someone who is good and right. >> does it upset you now that there's this character that is not as perfect a moral pillar and he's more complicated and racist? >> it excites me. it excites me because now, in the time of ferguson and charleston and looking at voting rights, a more complex conversation about race and structural races inherited by white supremacy. this is kind of a new context in which we are looking at moving forward as a country. this book i think, in this time brings up the kind of conversations that we are having
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now about structural racism and preserving supremacy and white, southern southerners that we saw with the confederate flag story. >> this book was written first. that means lee designed him as not a noble hero but an older guy reflective of the problems at that time not someone able to overcome them. she did that before? >> i think it's exciting. the idea that the publisher wanted her to put it through the child's eyes. that is interesting to think that this idea that children probably think the best of us right? children probably see us as noble first. now that scout has grown up and things have changed, we are looking at it in a more realistic way. that's where we have to be as a country, look at it as complex. you can be a loving single dad
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and a bigette. what does that say? >> what about the notion we have heard that says this tanks "to kill a mockingbird." it will be stricken from the syllabus of every english class because he was not a pure soul. >> poppycock. now, we can have another kind of conversation. i think, if anyone thinks one novel can, you know undo another is silly. >> he's not a man. >> right. >> it's a fiction. >> there's that part. >> he's what harper lee made him. i think this is interesting on two levels. you can use him as a metaphor and we should because of what he means. one, we are dealing with that actively in american civilization and culture and what the law allows versus what you like. that's coming up more and more. and that is set up here.
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also we have seen this before. abraham lincoln, the great man of the emancipation proclamation says the law is the law. these are human beings. i'm not saying i want them on dating my daughter or in my church which is two things he said. it makes you wonder if harper lee weren't channelling that paradox. >> there's a lot of people that liked negroes in the south in their place. they felt this is how we get along. even today, you hear that rhetoric. we are okay. you like it like this. when you have actual rights and peel away who people are, the culture becomes very complicated and very -- there's an ugliness to it. i think looking at atticus finch in this more complicated, grown up way, also having to have dealt with the civil rights era presented educated blacks
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presented educated politically powerful black people and people who wanted real equal rights not just moral equality. they wanted stuff. they wanted power. they wanted voting rights. they wanted the things we still want today, which is much more complicated than saying you know, feeling good and that i can save the people. these people want their stuff. >> i mean really this is an insight into harper lee, not atticus finch, who is a made up character. when her editor said you need to redo the book from the perspective of the 9-year-old scout. i'm going to make a memorable, heroic figure. >> i'm glad she did at the time. it was a horrible time in america. we need a moral possibility. there is a good white, southern man somewhere. now, we can throw up a little bit and be more realistic and look at our history and look at
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getting to the work of dismantling structural racism in this south and inherent biases. >> wow, they had two different aspects. there's no evidence she wanted this to come out. it's interesting. he's a guy. now that i know more about him, i don't know -- >> tom gets acquitted in the new novel. >> thanks for giving it away. >> spoiler alert. >> thanks so much. great to talk to you. >> my pleasure. >> what is your take on this. post your comment on cnn/new day. we have greece and iran in the news. let's get to it. greece gets a deal after 17 hours of intense talks. >> will the greek parliament approve this agreement? >> thanks to the last minute deal from greece we are watching stocks climbing around the world. the aran deal. will it get done today?
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>> it's almost certain this deal is coming. >> any future negotiations cannot and should not be prolonged. >> the world east most powerful and deadly drug trafficking kingpin has broken out of prison in mexico. >> he showed us he can do it before. it went ignored. sure enough he did it again. >> i have an idea. every time mexico sends people over we charge mexico $100,000 for every person they send. announcer: this is "new day" with chris cuomo, alisyn camerota and michaela pereira. >> good morning, welcome back to "new day." michaela is off today. we have breaking news this morning. greece a huge step closer to a deal for the third bailout. we are already starting to see the ripple effects in financial markets worldwide. eurozone leaders reaching an agreement after 17 hours of talks. the ball is now in greece's
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court to finalize the reforms. >> let's take you live to athens. that's with issa is. issa the latest? >> reporter: good morning, chris. up to 17 hours of marathon talks. the greek prime minister caved in to european creditors. he's been asking for the three-year bailout worth $96 billion. that is roughly 17 billion more than was requested a few days ago. now the hard work begins. this is just the beginning of talks. the money hasn't started to flow into greece. now, alex sis tsipras has until wednesday the 16th to push through the tough measures the measure that is have to be implemented. it will be tough because he knows within his own party, there are huge amounts of decenting voices. we have to do that by wednesday. if he can't do it perhaps they
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have to do a government reshuffle or a broader coalition. now greece is waking up in a state of shock. they want to know what happens to the banks because, as you know banks have been closed for two weeks now. capital controls have been in place. everyone looking at the ecb, the european central bank, whether they will open. time is of the essence. we are not there by any means. now, greece has the hard work to do. alisyn, back to you. >> thank you so much for that background. it is also deadline day, again, to reach a nuclear deal with iran. negotiators say they might make it this morning. reportedly on the verge of sealing a deal after jumping through major hurdles this weekend. they are working to hammer out the fine print. cnns senior national correspondent is live in vienna with the latest. what is happening at this hour nic? >> you know
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