tv New Day CNN August 19, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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donald trump poses a serious threat to clinton. the new numbers show the donald is within striking distance of the democratic front-runner. cnn's senior washington correspondent jeff zeleny is here to break it down for us. >> reporter: good morning, alisyn, within striking distance indeed. they have been watching trump surge with a smile. there's reason to take his candidacy more seriously. clinton is leading trump by only six points. this is a dramatic setting. republican leading independents and white voters. among democrats, clinton is still driving the race, leading bernie sanders by 18 points. our poll shows reverse trend lines for clinton and sanders.
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clin ton fell fine points. the sanders surge is real. now the idea of vice president joe biden jump sboing into the campaign is real for democrats. 53% said biden should launch a presidency. 45% say no. he is strongly considering it. i'm told by aides will make his decision next month. clinton supporters want biden in, a sign they are hungry for a competitive race. positive impressions of clinton continue to fade. the poll shows 44% polled a favorable view of her. 53% have an unfavorable one. this is reversed since she announced her candidacy in march, which explains why they have a new ad this morning in
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new hampshire and iowa. she's talking of reshuffling the debt for every day americans. she's talking about her childhood, showing black and white pictures and the desire to build an economy so the middle class means something. reintroduction of voters and focusing on her message. this campaign is becoming increasingly competitive again. chris? >> thanks for breaking that out for us. there's more in that poll. stay with us. let's bring in mark preston. let's go back to the number jeff showed us of the favorable/unfavorable flipping since the announcement in march. that's the biggest one that is going to get wide eyes from the clinton folk this is morning. what do you think is going to be the play on that, preston? >> listen, chris, you expect her to drop in the polls. she's a politician. she's no longer a non-partisan secretary of state.
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clearly, the controversies she's gone over are weighing on her. bernie sanders is traveling the country and getting crowds upwards of 10,000 people. this is troubling. let's talk about six months from now, if this continues, she could be in trouble. >> look at the poll. the one that shows now versus july, last month, and how sanders has gained. he's at 29%. a month ago, 19%. hillary clinton's numbers have gone down by almost as much. she was 56%, now 47%. how big of a threat is bernie sanders? >> he is definitely a threat among liberal democrats. he's going out there as mark said, doing the rallies across the country and talking about the traditional values. it says bernie sander's strategy to have the rallies is helping
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his numbers across the country in national polls here. he is taking some out of her hide, no question about that. she is still in a comfortable position, 18 points. any republican, i can tell you, alisyn, would take that in a heart beat. it's important to keep it in perspective here. they have reverse trend points. she fell ten points and he climbed ten points. >> they usually go together. they are comfortable with her numbers. she probably agrees with a lot of what she says but it's the practicality of getting those things done that is going to be a prohibition on bernie sander's ability to move forward. then look at how she's doing against the gop rivals. that tells the story of the e-mail, how people are reading, how she deals with it, the trustworthy number. what does it mean they are closing the gap?
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>> it says something about donald trump and for all the gaffes he's made haven't hurt him. he's increased on the republican side. for hillary clinton, we saw this last night in las vegas, she doesn't seem to be handling the e-mail situation all too well. she seems agitated when she has to answer questions. to the american people, it's not so much that she used the private e-mail, it's how they are handling it now and she's frustrated and agitated instead of being contrite about it. >> let's listen to a moment about this where she was asked by a reporter about the server that she handed over and how she makes light of it. >> my personal e-mails are my personal business, right? >> you didn't have to wipe it. >> i have no idea. that's why we turned it over. >> you were in charge.
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did you wipe the server? >> with a cloth or something? >> i don't know how it works. >> i don't know how it works digitally at all. >> jeff, what was that response? >> i think that was very honest and genuine response. it's clear she's not very savvy. we have seen a lot of those e-mails where she's unable to use her fax machine and things. she's saying she's wiping the server. this is a part of their strategy to show, look, this is not a huge deal, we have this, don't worry about this, democrats. this is part of the same partisan game. this poll shows even democrats are concerned about this and worried about this. mark is right, the private server aside, just the fact it's come out in a drip, drip, drip fashion. she said she wouldn't turn over the private server, then five months later she did. the challenge is, now we have multiple investigations, congressional hearings unfolding at the time of the campaign.
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it's hard to imagine that things will get much better for her. still, important to keep in mind, she is in the drivers seat of this race. she's beating all the republicans. this is going to be a tight election. she's ahead of jeb bush by nine points. >> here is a telling piece of the poll, i think. that's how democrats view this whole e-mail scandal versus republicans. was clinton wrong to use personal e-mail? 82% of republicans say yes. 58% of independents say yes. only 31% of democrats, mark. in other words, it's not as big a deal to the people she needs in the primary. >> right. i think jeff is correct hen he cease saying she's up 18 points over bernie sanders and is in the drivers seat. the sense that it's not going to be that much of an issue in the primary. we continue to see bernie
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sanders continue to climb a little bit. in the end, hillary clinton is the odds to win the democratic primary. it's the drip, drip, nibble, nibble, that's going to hurt her. in august this time next year, that's when it counts. >> to use your metaphor, the nibble, nibble, drip, drip, that's the media's feelings about this in light of the investigation. i don't think that's the right metaphor for the numbers. right now, there are at least two, if not three other shows on television treating this like they caught her with bags of cocaine in her house. that's the way they are looking at this investigation. they are using the word criminal loosely. the campaign hasn't been good or quick to dispel what is criminal about it, what isn't. they are using it to show that clinton sense of entitlement. this situation is being used, mark, as a metaphor on what's wrong with her above and beyond what the potential facts are of the situation. how do you handle that part of
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it? right now, that's happening on tv in other places. oh, donald trump is saying this is criminal. chris christie said i would have had a criminal investigation in no time. that's the risk. >> right. there's no doubt there's political agendas out there in the media certainly when you look at hillary clinton or donald trump but i think we can't discount the fact the department of justice decided to look into this and we have congressional hearings that will continue for months and months and months and months. whether anything comes of that, who knows. >> on a lighter note, jeff, at a campaign stop, it appears there was a little girl who took a page from our agenda of asking the candidates about equal pay and where they stand on that. here is hillary clinton's response. >> do you think when you are president you will be paid as much as if you were a male? [ cheers and applause ]
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>> oh, my goodness. well, this is one of the jobs where they have to pay you the same. >> it's so cute that a little girl is interested in gender equity as well. >> sometimes the best questions at campaign rallies or most memorable ones come from young voters. that was a great moment yesterday in nevada. it allowed the secretary to pivot to her message for a pay equality and gender equity. that was a very, very, very funny moment. when you run for president, you want to campaign with people. it puts the e-mail questions aside and gets good, real, moments like that. >> it's a good distinction. if it stays true, hillary said i'm only hearing from you guys. if that stays true, then it will change the discourse, jeff, in
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terms of what the media asks. >> that's not entirely true. i talked to voters. we sent our producer outside the line before that event and talked to several voters. several democratic voters who went to see her said they do, in fact, have questions about this and they hoped she would bring it up. i was at the iowa state fair at a democratic event as well. democrats are curious about this. perhaps not as hungry and ravenous as conservatives are, but they want to know if there's worry in the future. should they worry about her viability? she's not completely right about that. voter after voter bringing it up wondering if there's anything out there. >> thanks for that good scoop. thanks so much. >> a battle for the middle third. a third of the people will not vote. a third will do it. 58% of independents were worried. that's the number they have to
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touch. later this morning, i'm going to sit down with a man known as donald trump. you may know him as the republican front-runner. we're going to have a wide ranging interview. he's got proposals on the table. he's got plans he wants to discuss and he has a tape on why this campaign is going the way it is and what it will mean for him personally. >> fascinating. >> he's got to adjust now. for all his confidence, this is real. maybe he, even donald trump didn't anticipate. tonight, 9:00 p.m. eastern. it's a cnn report named "the donald trump interview." >> creative. >> it's subtle. some of the tasty bits we will hold for you on thursday morning here on "new day." >> we look forward to that very much. this morning another top democrat saying they will vote against the iran deal. bob menendez is the latest to
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speak out about the agreement. this, while mitch mcconnell concedes it will survive congress despite growing opposition. athena jones is live in washington with st latest. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, menendez is the second democrat to come out against the deal, this is after new york senator, chuck schumer announced his opposition earlier this month. schumer did it in an article online. menendez is the first to do so in a big speech. listen to what he had to say in new jersey yesterday. >> i have looked into my own soul and my devotion to principle led me to an unpopular course. if iran is to acquire a nuclear bomb, it will not have my name on it. >> reporter: it will not have my name on it. strong words in the senator's lengthy speech. he was vocally opposed to the deal. it's not unexpected.
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it's significant fwauz white house has to hold on to enough democrats to keep the republicans in congress from blocking the deal. the administration thinks they can still do that. white house spokesman, eric schultz saying we remain confident democrats in the house and senate will support the deal. alisyn? >> thanks so much, athena, for that. overnight, thai police confirming the suspect who carried out monday's bombing in bankok did not act alone. they release add sketch for the suspect and award leading to his capture. cnn correspond is live with the latest. >> reporter: the man in that yellow shirt identified. he left a backpack underneath a
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bench. police will issue an arrest warrant. they don't have a name or identification. arrest warrant for premeditated murder and attempt to kill. they are on the hunt for this man and asking people to submit photographs, videos they have throughout the day and during that time when the bomb went off. this is what the police in the boston bombing did. the thai police are using that model to piece together more about this man and his possible accomplice. people have been trying to identify him, offering 1 million, just over $30,000 for information that may lead to his arrest. today, the shrine has opened. this morning, some family members of those killed and injured arrived, lighting incense and leaving flowers. the united states embassy coming
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here, leaving flowers as well, paying his res spects, saying a prayer and saying the united states sands side by side in their togetherness. chris? >> very difficult situation. you have thailand wanting to move forward. for the families, this difficult time is only beginning. we want to tell you about tough testimony that happened from a student who claimed she was raped. the teenager is expected back on the witness stand. we have boris sanchez following every development. what do we know? >> the allegations are eye opening. the testimony is difficult to listen to. both sides going back and forth in detail over what happened between the two students and more testimony is expected before the trial wraps up. just a few miles from the elite st. paul's high school,
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19-year-old owen labri ervegs sat listening as a classmate gave testimony. i thought his intentions were really wrong. they argued tuesday, when he contacted the 15-year-old schoolmate, he did so with one intention. >> to solicit, lure or entice her to meet him with a plan to have sex with her. >> he's pleading not guilty that he raped her at the elite prep school, denying they had sex days before his graduation last year. >> this was not a consensual act. >> a nurse observed an abrasion on the genital area, which are consistent with a sexual assault. the encounter occurred as part of a tradition at st. paul known as a senior salute, male seniors
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trying to racket up sexual encounters with female students. not all were sexual, reading messages in court to illustrate the accuser willingly participated. only if it's our secret. labrie replied, not a soul needs to know. they published a statement saying allegations about our culture are not emblemmatic of our school, values, our rules or the people that represent our student body, alumni, faculty and staff. >> this is not a good look for st. paul's. six congressmen, ambassadors and secretary of state, john kerry all went there. this is a highly esteemed institution. >> thanks so much. breaking overnight, a blast so large it caused a portion of a washington state motel to
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collapse. officials say the explosion was caused by a gas leak at a motel 6 outside seattle. firefighters were blown back 20 feet in the blast. a gas worker checking on the leak was sent to the hospital with second and third degree burns. luckily, the motel was evacuated moments before the explosion. in syria, isis executing a prominent similar in the ancient city. the man says he was beheaded tuesday in the public square. they gained control in may and got scored of artifacts throughout the city. hackers released the private information of customers of ashley madison. 32 million users names, log ins, e-mails as well as what they are looking for in a cheating partner, now available. it's available on the dark web.
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you can't just google it. they say questionable morals in what they call the fraudulent business practices are the motive. now, i can't go see the information, per se, but other people who have these dark web browser capabilities can get it to do whatever they want. >> terrorists. that's the only time i have heard of the dark web being used. >> i think there's a 12-year-old in my house with the capability. >> i really hope not. >> that's probably true. >> meanwhile, hillary clinton got testy when a reporter pushed her on her e-mail server. we'll show you that exchange. stick around. ght in some protein to get us moving. i'm new ensure active high protein. i help you recharge with nutritious energy and strength. i'll take that. yeeeeeah! new ensure active high protein. 16 grams of protein and 23 vitamins and minerals. ensure. take life in. but your stellar notebook gives hanyou the gumptionlc.
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my personal e-mails are my personal business, right? that's all i can say. i have no idea, that's why we turned it over. >> you were in charge, did you wipe the server? >> like with a cloth of something? >> no, did you try to wipe the server? >> i don't know how it works digitally as all. >> she fielded questions of her server while secretary of state. the poll shows clinton's
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favoribility ratings hitting a 14-year low. here so discuss it is richard, he's a senior adviser to president bill clinton. is that the right tone she's using? what, did i wipe it with a cloth. she says i prefer snap chat, it vanishes right away. is that the way to go? >> i don't think she's making light of it. you saw in that answer, a very genuine response. >> meaning she really doesn't know how e-mail works? >> i think people know she's not a technical whiz. she's from that generation before there was e-mail, before there were iphones. i think that's an honest, genuine report. obviously, the reporter is coming at her a bit. i think she's handled it well. she's answered the questions and taken it seriously. she said in retrospect, it's not
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the right thing to do. the american people would like to hear about the issues. she's doing what she can to be responsive to the questions. >> it's not going away. it's getting messy. the secretary general said the information was classified at the time she sent it. she says no. there's still a discrepancy. >> the state department says no. there's a dispute between the inspector general and the state department says there's no classified information. they have to get to the bottom of it. >> there's a dispute between two branches of the government. >> there's a new wrinkle, her lawyer had the thumb drives with thousands of e-mails on them. he said he should not have had access to this. here is why it's important. let me show you what is happening on the polls about whether or not registered voters believe she improperly used
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e-mail. let's put it on the screen for you. in march, 51% thought yes. now it's 56%. no, it was 47%, now it's 39%. it's going in the wrong direction. >> i think they are agreeing with what she said. in retrospect, she shouldn't have done this. the other numbers from the poll this morning, the cnn poll shows as jeff said, to quote your own commentator, hillary clinton is in the driver's seat. despite the attacks she's had to answer, despite all the republicans ganging up against her, despite the inaccurate reports of some of the media about this, that she is 18% ahead in the primary. she's beating the republican front-runner by 6%. i mean, it's -- in my view, the poll numbers are encouraging for her this morning. >> let's look at the poll
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numbers. i understand what you are sighing, she is far ahead of bernie sanders, but he's gaining on her. it is up from a month ago when he had 19%. he's jumped 10%. she fell from a month ago. >> she's still winning by 18%. i mean, look, race is -- i think everybody knows, races get competitive especially once you are in the throws of a political campaign. she said this race will be competitive. bernie sanders is raising a lot of important issues. a lot of democrats like what he's saying. i think hillary clinton like what is he's saying and would probably enact and will enact, as president, things bernie sanders is advocating for. the fact remains, she is very much ahead in the democratic primary. she is beating all the republican opponents. yes, her favoribility ratings have gone down a bit. compare the favoribility ratings this morning to the favoribility
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ratings to all republican opponents and most importantly, the republicans, she way out in front. in an election, it's not like yes or no. an election is, you vote for one person or the other person. i think she is still doing well. >> however, bernie sanders is attracting huge crowds. he attracted a crowd of 28,000 people this week in portland. he's exceeding the crowds of hillary by far as well as those of donald trump. look at this. look at the crowds he's attracting. what should her strategy be around bernie sanders? >> to continue to talk about the issues that are important to the american people, like the economy, college affordability, immigration, criminal justice reform, all the important issues she's been talking about so far. i think she's got a great campaign and team trying to stay focused despite the attacks
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around e-mail and everything else. i mean those of us who worked with hillary and bill clinton before have seen this playbook. they get everything thrown out at them. >> you think it's politic, not a real issue? >> it's a combination of being in the throws of a campaign. this is an issue the media loves. the media loves a contest. everybody likes a contest. the media is focused on the e-mails. the american people are not interested in e-mails. >> thanks so much for your perspective on this. let's go to michaela. a green light for the little pink pill. the fda approved the so-called female viagra. but, a black box warning. all you need to know, coming up ahead. pubut to get from theand yoold way to the new,d. you'll need the right it infrastructure.
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lingering questions about hillary clinton's e-mail scandal weighing on her presidential ambition new poll numbers show she is below 50% for the first time but still has a sizable lead over sanders and biden. donald trump breathing down her neck, posing a serious challenge for the first time. thai police saying the bangkok bomber did not act alone. yesterday, police released this surveillance showing the main suspect leaving a backpack at the site. police say it is likely a thai native helped plot the attack. the shrine has since reopened to the public. women may be able to become navy s.e.a.l.s soon. as long as they can pass the rigorous training, they should have the opportunity to join the
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team. two women are about to graduate from the rigorous rangers school. a relieved rosie o'donnell says her daughter has been found. the 17-year-old was safe with police on the jersey shore. her daughter hadn't been seen for a week. according to a statement, she stopped taking medication for a mental illness and was in need of medical attention. people breathed a sigh of relief. that is a situation where you are so distraught for a parent. the worst nightmare. >> still a lot of questions. i'm interested in what the mental illness is. since rosie raised it. she wasn't abducted, she left on her own. >> i don't know how much personal information i'm interested in about rosie and her life.
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how difficult it is when you have someone in your family dealing with mental illness, how difficult it is to get treatment, keep them on it and what happened once they are off their medication. >> they are good conversations. >> everybody. once they are over 18, you can do nothing to make them take their medication. >> floods and power outages and worse. at wrigley field, the storm forced a long rain delay. meanwhile, tropical storm danny, becoming the first potential hurricane of the season. let's get to meteorologist chad myers live with more, one of the few men excited about a hurricane. >> not too excited. if it stays in the water, it's okay. when it hits land, we get worried. right now, here back to the midwest, show you where the radar is, where the rain is, where the rain is going to be later on this afternoon. i'm going to move you ahead to 7:00 later on tonight, showers
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and storms across the southeast. could slow down an airplane or two. cooler air is coming in. it will make a very nice weekend for all the big cities from boston, new york, atlanta, parts of florida. we go from 82, which isn't bad today to the upper 70s from friday to saturday in new york and cooler to the midwest. you talked about danny. this is the satellite presentation. not that impressive, yet. it's getting there. it will be the biggest storm of the year. hre it is, wide open ocean, thousands of miles away. the storm is forecast to get stronger. see the two there? that means category 2 hurricane, 105 miles per hour before it heads to st. croix, st. thomas and other islands. we are talking five days away, before we get to any island out there. it could turn left or right.
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it's forecast to get stronger from here. >> keep an eye on it for us, chad. thanks so much. after rejecting it twice, the fda approved the use of so-called female viagra. the pink pill has big, red flags. what you need to know, next. there are two cages in this room. the one on your right is made out of high strength steel and the other is made of aluminum. now i'm gonna release a 700 pound grizzly bear into the room so you better pick a cage and get in it. this is crazy. oh my goodness. why did you pick the steel cage? harder for the bear to get into steel. you want to see something else made with high strength steel? that's the chevy silverado. made with high strength steel for high strength dependability. beautiful. this is highly irregular. i brto get us moving.tein i'm new ensure active high protein. i help you recharge with nutritious energy and strength. i'll take that. yeeeeeah! new ensure active high protein. 16 grams of protein and 23 vitamins and minerals. ensure. take life in.
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welcome back to "new day." for men, there's the little blue pill, now for women, the little pink pill. the fda approvered the first ever drug for women. it's female viagra. it's with a controversy including a list of side effects. we are going to speak with a family physician. good morning doctor. >> good morning, michaela, how are you? >> good. chris has been teasing alisyn and i about this female viagra. it has the attention, at least of the female population. help us understand how we are all familiar with viagra and its effects. how is this pill different and what does it do? >> first of all, let me start by
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saying, this is not the female version of viagra. viagra is a different pill we use for men. this is a medication for women that helps improve sexual desire in women. it's different in that this particular pill works in the brain. >> ahh. >> it works on neurotransmitters and chemicals in the brain. that's how it improves sexual desire in women and the stress that comes with that. >> we know sexual desire in women can decline after menopause, after we get older. what population are we talking about? what are the numbers? how many people are suffering? >> there are many, many women suffering from sexual dysfunction. there's a whole range of sexual disorders and functions. we talk hypoactive sexual desire. one important thing about this
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conversation we are having, about this pink pill we keep calling it is it is going to allow women to talk with their doctors about how they are feeling, something that doesn't always happen. >> the big thing is there's debate, controversy, the fda failed to pass this, legalize it or approve the drug just in june, it was turned down because of risk factors. this is what is the controversy around it. what are the risk factors and how serious are they, doctor? >> right. that's a really good point. this drug was denied twice in the past by the fda. the fda, those different times said there were problems with how effective the drug was. there were questions about that and the side effects. the drug has been approved. what is different? there have been more studies and two major caveats placed. first, a black box warning about
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the side effects. the side effects you ask, what are they? first, one of the major side effects is low blood pressure. hypotension. the second side effect is passing out. they can be dangerous and worse if a woman were to drink alcohol while taking the medication or if she were on other medications taking the pill. they are important things to keep in mind. they are so serious and the fda is so worried about them, not only do they have a black box warning, but physicians have to undergo a training course and become certified to prescribe it for these reasons. these are important pros and cons we need to think about. >> an important point to point out, you don't take one if you want to get in the mood, you have to take it every night, thus the concern of drinking alcohol. that would mean not drinking
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alcohol in the course of the time you are taking it. where do you stand on it? do you think this is the end of gender bias in treating sexual dysfunction? >> you know, look, i hope we are seeing the epd of gender bias, whether we have this pill or not. i hope that's the direction we are going in in general. as a physician, when i get in the office today, i'm going to have a lot of questions about this medication. a lot of good things are going to happen. they are going to talk about sexual function, desire and sexuality. on the other side, we have to look at the risks and the potential risks of this medication. there's a lot of controversy. you mix the components in the pot and there's lots of pros and lots of cons. this is where i say that conversation with your doctor is important. >> love it. you are our doctor. good to have you with us today. >> good to see you. >> did you get answers to your
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questions, chris? >> it's not about me. as long as you have the satisfaction of what's going on tharks's good enough for me. jurors will hear more testimony from an alleged rape trial. was an alleged assault part of a school tradition? where is the consent in this situation? we have a legal panel weighing in, major ramifications. when you're not confident you have complete visibility into your business, it can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help. at&t's innovative solutions connect machines and people... to keep your internet of things in-sync, in real-time. leaving you free to focus on what matters most.
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trial of oen labrie. he's charged with sexually assaulting a girl on campus as part of a competition known as senior salute. what is on trial here, just this man or is this about the school? let's bring in cnn commentator mel robins and legal defense attorney joey jackson. joey, you understand why i'm teeing it up that way. the school ut up a statement we should put up as well. current allegations about our culture are not emblemmatic of our school. it's not true. >> here is the point. good morning, mel. good morning, chris. it's an interesting dynamic. the school is not on trial, an individual within that school is on trial. certainly, clearly, if you are
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the defense, it's individual conduct about my client but they have to tow another line because even if the defense establishes there was consensual sexual activity. still a crime. >> statutory? >> exactly because she is 15. >> he's within the limitation. it's four years or less. the reality is, you know, it's not because of the four year or less. the fact he was 18 and she was 15 makes no exception, it's a misdemeanor. if you can establish it was a no means no. >> romeo and juliet situations are between people whose ages qualify them. mel, let's go to consent. that's what this becomes about. we hear about the messages before we hear about the messages after. we hear about what happened during, at least from her
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perspective so far. what do you make of it? >> well, you know, good morning, guys. i think this is a really tough tight rope walk that jay carney is going to try to make. he's the defense attorney. by the way, there are only two celebrity defense attorneys in boston. one is jay carney. he is the best of the best. they are arguing there wasn't sex that was consummated that night. if there was no sex, then this is just a hook up and you win the case and he's acquitted. if you get into whether or not there was actual sex that was happening, i don't want to get too graphic because it's almost 7:00 in the morning, then we go to consensual. i think those messages beforehand were incredibly important. if they are acting playful. if she's showing up willingly and if the testimony is compelling about the actual moment when the act was happening, he actually could get
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acquitted. there's a difference between rape and regret. i think that's the line that jay carney is going to try to tow as he defends his client in the case, chris. >> make sense of this message. joey and mel, weigh in as well. the two were chatting within hours of the encounter. this time, when she, supposedly the victim in this. asked labrie used a condom, he put one on in the middle. two things bothered me. one, what was going on in the scenario where she would not have been aware of whether or not there was a condom put on? why? that speaks to whether or not she was in control of the situation. and it speaks to the nature of the activity itself. >> it does. importantly, you can't cherry pick evidence. it has to be evaluated as a
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whole. >> this is evidence. he does respond to it. not like, why would i have had a condom on, it was only a hook up. >> true. you have to look at everything not in isolation, but all together. the defense will say there were romantic messages prior to, leading to the conclusion that it was a consensual hook up, not sexual. she meant to get together with him, she did get together with him. it was a badge of pride for her in honor, then speaks of it being a sexual encounter. >> mel, joey is sweet talking me around what i'm suggesting here. she asks about him putting on a condom. he says i put it on half way through. >> look, that kind of blows the defense out of the water saying there's no sexual act that occurred. half way through the hook up or half way through sex? you know, i don't know that they
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are going to change the theory of the case but if it's consensual, it's consensual. acquaintance rape allegations, do you believe him or do you believe her? if the jury walks away from this, chris and joey, and feels like it was somewhere in the middle, half way through, as a 15-year-old in her first sexual encounter, realized she was in way over her head. did she consent? it's a question for the jury. >> the question is, even if there's consensual activity, it's a crime. much lesser, but a crime nonetheless. they have the physical from the laceration that could be made from a number of factors. >> from consensual sex in. >> once it all comes in, we will have a fuller picture of this.
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z mel, thank you very much. joey as well. >> pleasure. >> we will stay on this story for you. a lot of news is coming out of the political world as well this morning. let's get to it. hillary clinton is still the candidate to beat. >> the standard search is real. the controversy is weighing on her. >> trump leading the republican pack. >> trump out front by double digits. the others struggle against them. >> they need to figure out how they are going to sell their message and stand out. the bomb claiming 20 lives and injuring over 100. they believe this was a deliberate act of terror. thai officials are on the hunt for this man. >> hackers released the private information of customers of ashley madison. 3200 user names all available. announcer: this is "new day" with chris cuomo, alisyn camerota and michaela pereira. >> welcome back to "new day." hillary clinton is still the candidate to beat.
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her support is eroding. for the first time in the race, the democratic front-runners approval numbers are below 50%. questions about her e-mail use and her trust worthiness having an impact. >> now, clinton's republican rival, donald trump is posing serious threat. the new numbers showing the donald in striking range of clinton. is her bid for the white house in trouble? how much of a fight does she have on her hands. jeff is live in washington breaking it down for us. jeff, what do you see in the numbers. >> good morning, chris. for weeks, democrats have been smiling as trump surged. the new poll showed a reason for democrats to take trump's candidacy more seriously. let's take a look at the numbers. clinton is leading trump by six pont points. this is a dramatic tightening since july. in june, the spread was 24 points. his standing increased among
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republicans and white voters. on jeb push, she leads him by nine points in a head-to-head match up. clinton is still driving the race. she's leading bernie sanders by 18 points. there's a reverse of fortunes for clinton and sanders. the surge is real, climbing from 19 points in july to 29 points now. now, the idea of vice president joe biden jumping into the presidential campaign is a good one in the minds of democrats. 53% of democrats say biden should launch a presidential candidacy. 45% say no. even clinton supporters say they want biden in, a sign they are hungry for a competitive race. this comes as positive impressions of clinton fade. 44% have a favorable view of her. 53 have an unfavorable one.
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this is reversed since she announced her cant si in march. 56% say she was wrong to use personal e-mail as secretary of state. 39% say she was not. in is a topic of a heated exchange with reporters in nevada yesterday after she has a town hall meeting with voters. let's take a listen. >> my personal e-mails are my personal business, right? i don't -- i have no idea. that's why we turned it over. >> you were the official in charge. did you wipe the server? >> like with a cloth of something? >> i don't know. i don't know how it works. >> i don't know how it works digitally as well. >> a moment from secretary clinton saying she wiped it digitally. the fbi and department of justice will answer these questions. they are looking at the private e-mail server now. the big take away from this, she
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is driving the race, no question. but still so many people wondering about this e-mail server and donald trump head-to-head, almost tied with her, six points back from her. very, very interesting findings this morning. >> okay, jeff, so much to talk about. joining us is time political reporter, zeke miller and political reporter, errol lewis. thank you for being here. how do you interpret that tone that hillary clinton used with the reporter. was that flippancy or is she clueless you can wife a server? >> clearly wanting to change the subject, i think there was a little bit of a political gloss on it. oh, gee, i don't know. the reality is most people who have heard that don't know what you can and can't do. what stuff is retrievable. >> it's not that she's not taking it seriously?
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>> she and her camp know, they can read the polls like we have been talking about. they know they have an issue. they know it's not going to go away. they know, however, something that the opponents are going to go crazy over. people get distracted. there's a lot of stuff going on out there. climate change, sex scandals. all kind of things are going to move it off the main agenda. that's why the questioning has been so aggressive. give us an answer, give us an answer. >> scandal sells. you know this very, very well. you are one of the masters of when people stay on point and when they don't from your zoe, new york one. ze zeke, that goes to hillary. do you hear the tone of that reporter, how he's coming after me. is that a fair appraisal of the situation? >> it certainly isn't. we heard from hillary clinton at the iowa wing ding, she made the joke about snap chat. if only my e-mails deleted
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themselves after 24 hours. that is an interesting tone. we saw her shift to an offensive posture, going after the reporter, going after the partisan investigation. it's a mood she is taking out of defense and trying to rally supporters around them. >> in terms of whether or not voters care, the latest cnn poll shows in march, the question was, was clinton wrong to use personal e-mail? in march, 51% of us thought yes. now it's 56%. back then, 47% felt no, now it's 39%. errol, maybe it will go away. at the moment, voters seem to be more engaged. >> clearly her opponents had to work really, really hard for the five percentage points. swh >> what is the answer to the question, legally? >> i don't know.
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tough parse the words. when she says do you wipe it with a cloth? i don't think anybody thinks she sat there and keyed in the key strokes to make the e-mail go away, not go away, get purged. now you have to talk about a quote, unquote, conspiracy. what did she say, when did she say it? who did she tell? it eats complicated. that's when the public drifts away and says i think there's something wrong here. i don't want to hear the details. >> why is there not a criminal investigation, there's plenty of investigations going on. why isn't there a criminal investigation into the actions of hillary clinton if using the server was wrong? >> well, using the server itself wasn't quote unquote wrong. the question is did she turn over all the federal records after she left. she claims she did. now that the fbi has the server, they are talking about going back and trying to investigate and try to recover some of the
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e-mails. that's never a good position to be in. >> is there suggestion any of the e-mails she sent had classified information in them when she sent them, which is very important. >> so far, it's not what she said. there's two e-mails she received that should have been marked that contained information that should have been marked classified at the time. you are talking bureaucratic disputes. they like to overclassify everything. they are on the record saying there's no such thing as overclassification. they take a different tone to that and look at things differently. >> i can't believe we have gone this wrong without talking about donald trump. that's a record. let's fix that. a poll that shows hillary clinton is now -- okay, this is choice for president in 2016. if it were clinton/trump. okay, in june, you sea she was leading by a substantial amount. he's up ten she's down eight.
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now it's 51-45. she's up six points. what do you make, errol? >> this is like fantasy baseball, clinton versus trump come 2016. i don't think that's going to happen. the poles are, i mean, we know because we know how it looked in 2008 and 2004. what you are doing a year and a half out is dpoung to change dramatically. we don't know if trump is going to make it. >> this isn't possible. >> not that it's impossible. >> errol is throwing water on counting him out from the beginning. >> never count him out. he's going to stay until it's clear who the winner is going to be. you treat him like any ore candidate. he's got no reason to walk away or change what he's doing. he has lot of upside to this.
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>> what about one reason to change? 58% of his party is saying they are better off without him, okay? when you aggregate the people before everybody else, he's got a lot of work to do. how does donald trump get to 58%? >> he doesn't. when you want to talk about the end game, nobody thinks he will be the republican nominee. talk to every republican consultant. how does he get out of the race. right now, they are not sure. he's at 25% roughly, looking to iowa and new hampshire. how does he become the majority candidate for the gop? >> he can't. >> why can't he? >> he is so well defined now. what he did is solidified himself. you know, jumping against hillary clinton at the time he jumped among republicans as well in the primary. instead of him picking ul a few republicans toward him. he has 99%, almost 100% name id.
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everybody knows him. the minute he stops, you know, he tones down the rhetoric is when he loses support that got him this far. >> is biden going to get into this raise? >> he has every reason to take it seriously. supporters have been talking about it for months. it's not just finding its way into news reports, but no reason to discount it. hillary clinton is under 50%, a key marker. all the money in the world, all the experience in the world and still not a majority of democratic voters ready to commit. it is time for other candidates to consider jumping in. >> thanks guys. >> appreciate it. later this morning, we will sit down with trump for a wide range interview. he wants to talk about his plans for immigration, job growth. he wants to get into it. is he taking himself seriously about what it means and did he think he would be in this position. we are going to do it today and
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you are going to see him tonight. here is the title, request t the donald trump interview. >> doesn't get better than that. >> we are going to save some of it for you and play it thursday morning, tomorrow morning on "new day." >> it's still -- >> working title. thanks, chris. another key democrat saying he will vote against the iran deal. bob menendez is the latest to slam the pack and the president. the deal will likely pass congress despite growing opposition. our chief white house correspond jim acosta is live in martha's vineyard with the president is vacationing. jim? >> reporter: good morning, the list of democrats coming out against the iran deal is growing. the senate foreign relations committee announced his opposition joining chuck schumer who sided against the deal. menendez did not pull punches
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when he announced his opposition. >> i have looked into my own soul and my devotion to principle may lead me to an unpopular course. if iran is to acquire a nuclear bomb, it will not have my name on it. >> reporter: now, menendez is hardly the biggest set back of the week for the white house. that goes to republican senator jeff blake who ended white house hopes for bipartisan support for the deal. the president is engaged on the issue. he's here on vacation in martha's vineyard adding we remain confident that ultimately a majority of democrats in the house and senate support this deal. that is critical. republicans face an up hill battle needing 11 more to block it and join gop efforts to override a presidential veto, a veto that would come, as expected from the white house to try to knock down a republican
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attempt to stop this deal from happening. that's not to mention what the republicans are seeking in the house. yesterday, mitch mcdonnell was reported as saying the president has a great likelihood of success. the white house feels the number haves not changed, they are still in their favor. >> thank you for breaking that out for us. >> jared fog el is expected to plead guilty in court in a child pornography case. ryan young is outside the courthouse in indianapolis. ryan? >> reporter: alisyn, this is a case that shocked many people. a lot of people know jared from the subway ads throughout the years. he lost over 245 pounds from eating subway sandwiches. no one is thinking about that right now. they are thinking of the rape that happened and fbi investigators are dpoung through
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homes. they used specialized dogs. now we know the awe dishas been done and he will face charges. there will be a news conference this afternoon and you will learn more about how fbi investigators have found. this is all on the heels of russell tailor, who was in charge of jared's childhood obesity foundation after tapes were found inside the home. now this case is out of control and jared will face charges. in a tweet, subway said we no longer have a relationship with jared and no further comment. a lot of people are shocked in the community about that. we'll find out more information this afternoon. chris? >> thank you for staying on it. a manhunt under way in thailand. could a man seen in this brand-new police sketch. investigators say he placed a bomb at a popular shrine that killed 20 people. officials, and here is the new
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information, do not believe he acted alone. reuters reporting this morning, police are looking for two other men seen in that surveillance video. more to come. it appears bad things happen when nfl teams hold joint practices in the preseason. >> key point. getting after each other. all heck breaks loose. punches flying. in fact, the brawl nearly spilled into the area where fans were watching the practice. they had to end the practice and left executives scratching their heads about what to do. they like to see fight, right? in terms of the fight to get up and win, but that kind of fight in the preseason? >> looks like a hockey game. >> they don't fight as well as hockey players. you see the fans, how they were egging them on and loving it? this dynamic of violence. >> i know. >> if there's a reason it
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jeb bush appears to be having a hard time breaking through the phenomenon of donald trump. bush's strategy seems to be slow and steady. he's referred to himself as the joyful tortoise. we have the former executive editor for the miami herald. tom, great to see you. >> likewise. >> thanks for being here on "new day." you have covering every presidential campaign from 1972 to 1996 and covered jeb when he was governor of florida. are you surprises, tom, that he seems to be slow in gathering steam? >> well, this is somewhat new
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for him in that when he ran in the past, he always ran from the front. he was the front-runner when he ran for governor both times. there's no question about that. but i do think he really does see himself more as the long distance runner. he's, to use that expression, he is much more of the workhorse than the show horse. he's much more comfortable doing this. he's now embraced the idea of the tortoise or he likes it way that story ends. >> yeah, he does. a joyful tortoise. i like it. it's a funny expression. is now the time for the joyful tortoise with donald trump. maybe that's what wins the show nowadays. >> i don't know that obviously but what we are seeing is this is the way that summer sensations work.
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it's the reason hollywood doesn't put out serious films in the summertime. people like the blockbuster, the slam bang, that type of thing. trump is giving everybody that. as time goes on, and jeb bush is aware of this, people become more reflective and will listen to those voices, either their personal friends or the people they follow in the media, people they have respect for. when they weigh in on the race and people realize that there's something more at stake here than just maybe a quick opinion in the summer and a public opinion poll. i think at that point, you will see donald trump fade. you will see jeb bush and perhaps some of the others who are what i think of as more reflective, they will start to emerge. i think jeb sees that and he's very comfortable where he is. >> reflective is one word for it. there's a great piece on cnn.com
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about bush's personality traits and they may be getting in his way. he's referred to as bookish, awkward and those things seem to be getting in his way a bit on the trail. have you seen, when he was running ahead, for governor, was he exhibiting the same things or has he lost his footing this time around? >> well, he may be a little rusty and he is working on that. no, this is very characteristic. you ask jeb bush his opinion on something and he doesn't give you something that fits on a bumper strip. he gives you a chapter in a book. he thinks in very nuanced ways. it takes time for people to digest that. one of the results of that is he's a fairly pedestrian campaigner. he also doesn't frighten people. he's everybody's favorite number two. i think that's what he's looking at here as others start to fall
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out. it's unlikely they will go to donald trump. i think jeb bush wants to be there to pick up those people. >> let's look at the latest cnn poll. it shows trump in the lead. he's at 24%. bush is number two at 13%. what's interesting is a month ago, he was at 15%. donald trump was at 18%. it's going in the wrong direction. a lot of people referred to trump as a summer fling. it's persistent into late ag and the trend lines going in the wrong direction. tonight, jeb and trump have competing town halls in new hampshire. they are just 20 miles apart. how do you think that's going to go? >> well, my guess is the media will find that donald trump's town hall meeting will be the much more interesting of the two. again, i don't see that's going to be something that will worry jeb too much. he is quite content at this point to let donald trump go out
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there. he's like the meteor. as things fade, i think jeb will be there. you know, he's like the only parallel we have is teddy kennedy, being the third member of that famous family. jeb bush doesn't need to do anything to raise his profile. he just needs to be there, be steady and be the safe fallback. i suspect that's where his strategy is. >> dean thomas, thanks for being on "new day." >> it's a pleasure, alisyn. >> a second obama ally pulling his support from the iran deal. they say it's not enough to derail the plan. israel remains outspoken against it. that country's ambassador will join "new day" next. ook gives you the gumption to reach for the sky. that's that new gear feeling. this week, these office depot brand notebooks just one cent.
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difficult to block the deal, even if congress votes against it. many are influenced by israel's staunch opposition to the plan. ron is joining us, the ak ba ambassador to the united states. why is this not the right deal for this time? >> because this is a deal that doesn't block iran's path to a weapon, it paves the path. that's if iran complies to the deal. we're not sure if that's the case. what you have here, at best, in the second decade, they could have an entire nuclear arsenal. it's a heavy price to pay. if it were a deal you were blocking it and dealing with the sponsor, that would be one thing. here you are not blocking the path to the weapon. you are going to give them hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade, which they are going to use to fund terrorism and they are saying they are going to continue their
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policies. they are getting no change in iran, no change in behavior. the same regime and leaving them with a nuclear capability they are going to use. >> how can the allies, who were at the table, specifically secretary kerry have it so wrong? they say iran has the capabilities right now. it was never about if, it was when. this was the best way to check their capabilities, put in place a process that did not exist. we now get to see what's going on on some level and there is a snapback provision which people put a lot of priority on as to why they sat at the table. >> the policy of the united states is not if, when. they have accepted that. that's not what the president is saying. he is saying our policy is to prevent iran from developing a nuclear weapon. israel is so opposed to the deal because you just made an
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agreement with a regime calling for israel's destruction. by the way, america's destruction. you haven't gotten rid of their nuclear weapons program. iran came into the negotiations wanting to remove the sanctions. the price for removing them should have been to take away. >> they say they have done that. for this period, they won't be able to do it or check if they try to. >> the price you are paying to invest, if iran does not violate this deal, at best, you are delaying it for a few years. the price for delaying it is to legitimize iran as a weapons state. that's a bad deal. >> what was the better deal? >> to hold firm. keep crippling sanctions on iran. >> the allies didn't want the sanctions a few years ago. if you listen to the speech yesterday, he will tell you the administration opposed the
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sanctions that brought them to the table. they went to senator menendez and said don't put these sanctions on. i's going to make it more difficult with our allies. they were wrong then and are wrong now. you can get a better deal. this deal is unacceptable. >> why wouldn't they do a better deal if it was so readily available? >> they wanted a deal so badly. understand, the iranians need the deal. they are under pressure. there's no reason for the united states to accept a deal that was put forward. they should have held firm. they can still, if con rejects it. everyone is not going to run away. the only alternative is not the deal. go back, start again and get to a good deal that actually prevents iran from developing a nuclear weather. don't give the greatest
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terrorist that ability. >> if they didn't have to take this deal, if iran were desperate for a deal, why would they accept this deal if they could have gotten a better deal? >> you have to ask the administrati administration. >> i'm just saying. did they want a deal? yes. but, why take this on if they knew it was a bad deal. the president and secretary are saying the opposite. >> i'm not questioning the sincerity of the president of the united states. he believes this deal is good for america and israel. we just disagree. israel is shared across the political spectrum and the security officials and israelis and arabs. >> what do you think about the poll, though. you have support among american jews. obviously, a strong affinity to israel. support, 47.5% opposed 27.5%, don't know, 24.5.
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a strong in favor of. will the deal make the middle east safe? will it make them more stable? these are american -- >> that poll was taken about a month ago. public opinion shifted because they are learning more and more about the deal. they understand this deal doesn't block iran's path to a weapon. >> do you think there was a better way? >> there's no question there's a better way. >> there's no reason to go soft on iran. one thing to sell is iran is bad. nobody has a hard time sell thag proposition. maybe it's too easy. but, the sanctions, we keep being told by the foreign bodies as well, these sanctions, there's a lot of trade to be had here. there's a lot of softening of the support of them. you are saying that's not true? >> it's not true. it was based on two things. you had a credible military
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threat. you made it clear they are not going to erase their weapon. for a lot of countries, they are of more concern of a military confrontation with iran than a nuclear armed iran. the first is military threat. the second is financial sanctions. you force countries to choose z. >> can you force them? >> of course. do business with a $400 million iranian economy or the american economy. business that accounts for one tenth of global capital. which german bank is going to cut themselves off from the american financial system? the whole sanction the regime will unravel. >> china wanted to do a deal. >> look at the argument that is were made three years ago opposing the sanctions passed in the senate. the tough financial senate.
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this was going to undermine the efforts to confront iran. the truth is, this is a very bad deal. if it's scrapped, the sanctions will hold. >> what happens if it goes through? the. >> if this deal goes through, you are stuck with a dangerous deal that is bad for israel and america's national security. we have to figure out what to do then. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. >> this mattered enough to have this conversation all the time. i know you respect having the proposition tested. that's how we help the audience. >> absolutely. thank you. >> thank you, sir. now you got to hear from the ambassador about why israel has reservations about this. what do you think? tweet us, #cnnnewday. alisyn? >> hackers making good on their promise to release private information stolen from the website ashley madison. wait until you hear how many
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scandal weighing on her presidential ambitions. new cnn poll numbers show she is below 50% for the first time. within her party, she has a sizable lead over bernie sanders and vice president joe biden. now, republican donald trump is closing in. he's posing a serious challenge for the first time. in thailand, a police sketch. they believe he is a foreigner. he placed a bomb at a popular shrine kill 20g people. thai police saying he did not act alone. detectives are looking for two other men spotted on surveillance video at the blast site. a first for president obama. he hired a transgender policy adviser.
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a spokesperson say she is knows the kind of leadership the administration champions and has done work to better the lives of the lgbt community. >> they have done it. hackers made good on their threat to release users private information all stolen from the cheating website ashleymadison.com. lori is here with this. you had to dig deep on this one. >> very, very alarming. we are talking 10 gigabytes worth of data. 30 million accounts leaked. 36 million e-mail addresses. take it with a grain of salt. a lot of people put fake user names and e-mails. they have real names and addresses to pay. internal corporate data. lots and lots of internal corporate data. the hackers essentially own ashley madison.
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this is a big deal. the people behind it, we don't know a lot about. they call themselves the impact team. they say find yourself in here? learn your lesson and make amends. embarrassing now, but you'll get over it. they are hacking for what they say are moral reasons. guys, i will say this. this information available in the dark right now. people are beginning to take this in the dark web and put them on the open web. they are categorizing it by .gov. can't confirm they are real. a lot of folks are nervous now. >> matter of time before people are googling that information. >> absolutely. >> a big hypocrisy. the hackers are stealing information, putting it out there, compromising people's lives saying they are doing it because they have moral high ground. >> shaky.
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target is still paying for the huge data breach back in 2013. time for cnn money now christine romans in the money center. they tallied it all up? >> they have. target will fork over $67 million to visa because of the huge data breach. the money goes to banks that issued visa cards to cover expens expenses. how many of you got new cards, remember? higher interest rates, folks are coming. you have heard it a million times. they are coming at a time the housing market is showing signs of strength. single family home construction is booming. all cash sales in the housing market are falling. that means first time home buyers are getting chance in this housing market now. home depot says it housing boom is boosting its sales. higher interest rates are coming at a time the housing market is solid. chris? >> keep saying the rates are going to go up.
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listen to this interesting tidbit. hillary clinton and donald trump, as you know are at odds on the campaign trail, but that does not mean that their children have to be. in fact, chelsea clinton and ivanka trump have been close friends for years. whether they'll stay that way throughout the presidential race is a different story. what do we know about this friendship? >> reporter: they have been friends for quite a while. for this next generation of trumps and clintons, things are a little different. >> it's pretty pathetic that hillary clinton just blamed me for the horrendous attack that took place in south carolina.
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>> reporter: as their parents sling insults at each other on the campaign trail -- >> i have just one word for mr. trump, basta, enough! >> reporter: after once being close friends themselves, hillary clinton attending donald trump's wedding, trump making donations in the past to the clintons and their foundation. they are now rivals. >> i think the guy went way over board, offensive, outrageous, pick your adjective. >> reporter: but ivanka and chelsea have a private relationship. the two women, both in their 30s, new moms living in manhattan. their unconventional upbringing in the spotlight. their career path from high
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profile tv gigs to big roles now in their respective family businesses. and their family ties, both marrying men of the jewish faith. they both seem to be president of the other's fan club. i fusive in their praise on facebook. chelsea telling vogue magazine there's nothing skin deep about ivanka, saying she's always aware of everyone around her. it's an awareness in this some ways remind me of my dad. both are fiercely loyal to their family and big boosters of each of their parents' presidential bid. >> i can tell you that there's no better person than my father to have in your corner when you're facing tough opponents or
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making tough decisions. he is battle tested. >> reporter: both ivanka and chelsea are seen as having a huge potential to help humanize both of their parents. >> always a dicey proposition to get the kids involved, even in their 30s now that they're adults and all that. always a dicey proposition to reveal them to the poisons of politics. >> sounds like you know something about that. >> yes, i do. so late night hosts getting huge laughs at donald trump's expense last night. here's a little bit of what you hissed. >> speaking of trump, experts are saying during the debate he actually spoke at a fourth grade reading level. it seemed like the longer trump is in the race the more he seems to be dumbing it down. >> you know, i know the smartest
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negotiators in the world. i never took any of your money, you have no control, bye-bye. bing bing bong bong bing bing. >> bing bing bong bong bing bing bong bong bing bing. >> donald trump said this weekend that while he doesn't think workers should be fired for being gay he still does not support marriage equality. he believes that marriage should be between a man and a woman and then a younger woman and then an even younger woman. >> my guys are loves this, though. it's perfect. the writers must be so happy. >> they are. they hope he stays in the race all the way. >> they're not alone. look at the polls. hillary clinton, not as much of a sure thing as she once was. new poll numbers shows the democratic front runner's support is eroding. we will show you all the new
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>> she's struggling to fend off a campaign controversy. >> did you wipe the server? >> what, like with a cloth or something? >> bernie sanders is definitely a threat. >> this agreement of war, is that the choice? >> president obama is losing more democratic support? >> if iran is to acquire a nuclear bomb, it will not have my name on it. >> 19-year-old owen labrie pleading in to allegations of rape. >> this is "new day" with chris cuomo, alisyn camerota and michaela pereira. >> good morning. tw welcome to your "new day." hillary clinton has strong poll numbers but not as strong as they once were. for the first time support falling below 50% in a brand new cnn o.r.c. poll. favorability numbers also
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flipping. a reflection of the e-mail driven trust issue she's weathering. >> the new numbers show the donald within striking distance of the democrat front-runner. jeb zeleny is live in washington to break down all the new polls for us. >> reporter: for weeks now democrats have been smiling as donald trump has surged. our new poll shows a new reason for democrats to take trump's candidacy a bit more seriously. donald trump is now leading by six points. the reason is this, his standing is up among republicans, some independents and white voters. now, among democrats clinton is still driving this race. she's leading bernie sanders by 18 points. but our poll shows a reverse of fortunes for clinton and sanders. since july clinton has fallen
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nine points while sanders has climbed ten points. should joe biden run for president? a majority of democrats in our poll say yes, 53% want him to jump into this campaign while 45% say no. now, all this comes as positive impressions of clinton continue to slip a bit. 44% have a favorable view of her while 53% have an unfavorable one. this is a reversal since her campaign began in march. all these questions about her private e-mail server, 56% say she was wrong to use personal e-mail as secretary of state. 39% say she was not. now, that was a topic of a heated exchange with reporters in nevada yesterday after a campaign town hall meeting. >> my personal e-mails are my personal business, right? that's all i can say.
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>> did you try to wipe the whole server? >> i have no idea. that's why we turned it over. >> you were in charge of it. did you wipe the server? >> what, like with a cloth or something? >> i don't know. you know how it works digitally. >> i don't know how it works digitally at all. >> she may not know how things work digitally but she's about to find out. fbi and justice department is look into that server to see whether it had the security for the type of messages she received as secretary of state. >> stay with us. let's bring in mark preston. mark, let's look within the numbers. still strong for hillary, no question about it. this flip in favorability, that speaks to how she's handling this campaign in general, whether you want to point to how she's dealing with the media, how she's dealing with the e-mail, et cetera, what does it speak to in your opinion? >> no doubt exchanges like we saw in nevada yesterday are not
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good for hillary clinton. she comes off very defensive. she's no longer the nonpartisan secretary of state who had high approval numbers. she's now a partisan democrat. that is going to drop her down. when you look at the last six months in how she's handled this e-mail situation the controversy has not been good for her. >> it does seem to be divided among party lines at the moment. let's look at this about who believes how she used her e-mail was wrong. 82% of republicans think she has been very wrong. 58% of independents. only 31% of democrats. that suggests at least for the primary this won't be as big an issue. >> no question, for the primary it will not be as big an issue. it's probably the reason she has
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slid some and sanders has climbed. independents, 58%, the general election is what's on the minds and the worry of some democrats here, not the primary election. she is driving this democratic primary campaign right now at lea least. has a little bit of pressure from bernie sanders on her left flank. she's over 50% in all the head to head matchups with all the potential opponents. the clinton campaign is happy about that, but we don't know where this is going. the uncertainty of the investigation is hanging out there. the numbers are good for now but it's wait and see. >> the problem with investigations they don't end at any particular time. especially on the federal level they can just keep them open . when you look at hillary versus trump, hillary versus jeb, the numbers are almost exactly the
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same, yet trump is squashing jeb in the gop polls. what do you make of that? >> when you look at the head to ma head matchup i think it has to do with donald trump himself and the support he's getting from republicans for a head to head matchup against hillary clinton. trump has certainly said a lot of things in the past couple of weeks that would probably sink any other candidacy. but it seems to only give him more fuel to drive his message forward. when you compare jeb to donald trump, donald trump is more forcef forceful. he's reaching out and really tapping into an anger i think in the electorate. jeb bush is more muted and quiet. that's why you see the differentiation. >> bernie sanders is gaining on hillary clinton. if you look at just last month, well, bernie sanders is now at 29%.
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obviously she has a big lead. but he's gone up by 10%. what calculus are his advisors looking at to see whether or not he gets in? >> one of the things he's looking at is is she vulnerable in a primary campaign. she is. her numbers have gone down ten points in the last month. bernie sanders' have gone up. in the middle of all this sits vice president biden's decision. what is he going to do? it's one part of this calculus to see if there is an opening but not the entire part. i'm told by his advisors he's going to make a gut decision about whether this -- one number that popped outsanders
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supporters are more enthusiastic. we'll have to wait and see over the next six months. >> we and a lot of the media were encouraging of bernie sanders get into the race because he does provoke a lot of passion. >> it's fun to have a lot of people in the race for the media to cover. >> i also think it makes it better for people to have choices. he says you know you see one stock going up, one stock going down. however, it's why one stock is going up and one stock is going down. is this about more in the marketplace or about there being a weakness in hillary clinton? a lot of biden's people are worried that he has a ceiling on him. he's at 14 or 15% right now but
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he may only get to 25% and that's part of their calculus. >> when you look at joe biden i don't think dlthere's a yearnin for a joe biden presidency necessarily. hillary clinton still has the majority of the democratic party behind her. the viable option a lot of people think, certainly when you look at the more centrist part of the democrat party, is joe biden. what made president obama so strong is the race between biden and hillary clinton that didn't get over until july of that year. i do think there is something to be said about the bernie sanders candidacy and that is he is reaching and electrifying a certain part of the base that doesn't think the obama administration has been liberal enough. and hillary clinton is going to have to follow bernie sanders down that path on some issues.
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>> thanks for breaking down the numbers for us. if you want to understand why the gop numbers are moving around the way they are, you have to talk to the people behind the numbers. the one at the top of the field right now is donald trump. he has a plan for you on immigration. he has a plan about the economy. now we have to open up the category of education. what are his idea for you? we're going to sit down today and do a very wide ranging interview. you remember the one we did last week here on "new day." this one will be face to face and we will go through his ideas for you so you can best vet him as a choice and not just a pop lair ci -- popularity figure. and next morning we have different parts of the interview thursday for you here on "new day." >> fantastic. >> great conversation to be had. this morning another high
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ranking democrat announcing he will flat outvote against the iran nuclear deal. this while senate majority leader mitch mcconnell concedes that the deal will likely survive congress. jim acosta joining us where the president is vacationing. hi, jim. >> reporter: hi, michaela. you're right. the list of democrats coming out against the iran deal is growing. bob menendez announced his opposition to the agreement. he joined senator chuck schumer, another high profile opponent of this deal. >> i have looked into my own soul. and my devotion to principle may once again lead me to an unpopular course. but if iran is to acquire a nuclear bomb, it will not have my name on it.
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>> reporter: this did not come as a surprise to the white house. this was expected. m jeff lake likely ended all kwhous hopwhite house hopes of any bipartisan support for this deal. president obama added note the new definition of success there. not that they will actually get all republicans and democrats or a majority of those republicans and democrats to vote in favor of this, just a majority of democrats at this point. but that is critical because republicans face an uphill battle. they need 11 more democratic senators to defy the president, vote to block the agreement and avoid any gop efforts to override any presidential vetoes. that is a tall order. that's not to mention the dozens of democrats that republicans would need to defect
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essentially. and all of that explains why the senate majority leader mitch mcconnell was quoted earlier this week as saying the president has a great likelihood of success. there are new developments in the manhunt for the bangkok bomber. thai police issuing an arrest warrant for the man they believed dumped a backpack at a popular shrine before blowing it up monday. investigators think he is a foreigner and they do not believe he acted alone. >> reporter: we have more information coming to us this hour. cnn has spoken to the motorbike taxi driver that took the suspect away from the scene. now, what we understand is that the suspect left the shrine, he walked down the road a couple of hundred meters away to a major hotel outside.
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he queued ed up in a taxi. but he didn't speak to the taxi driver. he handed him a note. on it was written lumpini park, a major park similar to central park, if you like. the taxi driver also told us that during that journey the man was speaking in a language he says is neither thai nor english. it's a language he says he did not recognize. of course police today also releasing a statement at a press conference saying they are offering a 1 million -- that's around $28,000 reward for information leading to this man. they are issuing two arrest
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warrants, one for premeditated murder with intent to kill and secondly for making a bomb. they are asking locals or tourists to offer their photographs and videos to help piece together a better picture of how this man and the accomplice they believe he was working with came into this area to leave the bomb and then left. they are trying to identify both men. this is the way that the police in the yieds identiunited state the boston bombers, you remember. and they're hoping to replicate that here in thailand. routers reporting a shooting outside of an historic palace in istanbul, turkey. it's where the prime minister's office is. two armed men were detained near the scene. so far no reports of casualties. ambulances are on scene and nearby roads sealed off.
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the incident coming after recent attacks in istanbul. our cnn affiliate kiro is reporting that three people are unaccounted for following an explosion at a washington state motel, that blast apparently sparked by a gas leak overnight. and it caused part of the motel six to collapse. a worker was critically injured in the sudden explosion. fire crews are on the scene. we're told some of them were blown back some 20 feet from the blast. the moment was evacuated before the incident but they could not confirm that everyone was able to get out. boris sanchez is following the developments for us. >> the accusations are unsettling, both sides going
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back and forth in court yesterday in explicit detail about what happened between these two students. the testimony is difficult to listen to. just a few miles from the elite st. paul's high school, 19-year-old owen labrie sat in court listening as his former schoolmate gave her testimony accusing him of rape, saying i thought his intentions were really wrong. the prosecutor arguing that when labrie contacted a then 15-year-old schoolmate last year, he did so with one intention. >> to solicit or entice her to meet with him with a man he was going to have sex with her. >> labrie is pleading in to allegations that he rapes her and further denying that they had sex days before his graduation last year. >> this was not a consensual
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act. >> the prosecutor revealing that a nurse observed an abrasion on the accuser's genital area which she says are consistent with an assault. the encount er part of a decade old tradition of seniors trying to wrack up sex encounters with younger female students. only if it's our little secret, she wrote. labrie replied, not a soul need to know. on tuesday st. paul's published a statement on the school's website saying allegations about our alltuculture are not em ble of our school or our values, our rules or the people that represent our student body,
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alumni, faculty and staff. six congressmen, 13 ambassadors and secretary of state john kerry went there. >> a review of this school is almost inevitable. so the words would be mind and blown. what? you'll get it when you see this. ♪ >> he's got some fast fine moves. >> this tape is not sped up. >> i love it. get it, fella. >> people do not understand how supple these big men are. that's washington redskins defensive end. he's bringing back the peanut butter jelly dance. he apparently always breaks it down for fans on the last day of
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training camp. >> can i ask you something? >> yes. >> i feel like you've been trying to tell us something yesterday, today. do you have a dance inside of you that you need to release or something? >> i love seeing a big man dance. i do. >> because you're a big man and you've got a dance in you. >> i am like a toothpick in their teeth compared to the size of these guys. but you see them do this and it blows me away. i love it. >> you deprived of your dance moves. which i hope you'll show us maybe tomorrow. >> be careful what you wish for. >> don't hate. appreciate. donald trump digging in his heels. he ee's calling for an end to citizenship for children --
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if you're born here you're an american, period. period. >> but there are many lawyers, many lawyers are saying that's not the way it is. it's going to have to be tested, but they say it's not going to hold up in court. >> that was donald trump doubling down on getting rid of birthright citizenship. six other gop presidential hopefuls also want to repeal the 14th amendment, right to citizenship that is extended to any baby born on american soil
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regardless of parents' status. is this possible to repeal? let's just start by reading the 14th amendment. let me read what it says. all persons born or naturalized in the united states and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the united states and of the state wherein they reside. is donald trump right that lots of lawyers reject this or at least think it's open to interpretation? >> there's some that have argued that it's open to interpretation because of the jurisdictional reference there. but the vast majority of constitutional scholars view this as set in constitutional amber. you have to change the constitution to change birthright citizenship. it doesn't mean there are no arguments to be made. some scholars have argued that this is an based on an understanding of mutual consent that doesn't apply to so-called
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anchor babies. if you cross the border, have a child, that would automatically bestow citizenship. and that debate as gone on. those go back to decisions from 1898 where the courts seemed accept that even illegal immigrants would be able to benefit from birthright citizenship. >> you talked about anchor babies. that's the term used by people who are generally against people coming here and having babies. let me show you the numbers. it's interesting. about 36,000 birth tourists -- that's another term used in this -- have children in the u.s. and birth tourists means women who come here specifically just to have babies in order to establish citizenship for that baby. then there's about 340,000 babies a year born to undocumented immigrants.
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that's about 9% of the babies born. these are real numbers. this is an issue that needs to be dealt with one way or another. has the supreme court ever ruled on this? >> you know, the supreme court has really danced on the edges here. i mentioned the 1898 case involving chinese illegal immigrants. the court has made a couple of references indicating it views illegal immigrants as falling within these definitions of birthright citizenship. this really came from england. we imported this from our english roots. most countries, however, do not recognize birth right citizenship. they don't recognize citizenship by soil rather than blood as it's sometimes referred to. this is a legitimate debate in the sense of a historical debate. it's one that we're in the minority on. but it's a debate that has powerful arguments on both sides. >> does mexico recognize
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birthright citizenship? >> not quite the same way that we have. canada, on the other side, has a very similar sort of liberal rule to our own. most of the countries do not. although we have seen a loosening of that rule. some countries that don't allow birthright citizenship have, in fact, allowed it over a period of time. if you're in the country for ten years or so, you can get that type of citizenship. so there are variations among the countries. >> it's interesting to go back and read the transcript of the battle they were having in 1866 about this very same topic. and all of the same issues came up. i'm sure you're familiar with this citizenship clause proposal in which one of the senators suggested this will not, of course, include persons born in the unite who are foreignd stat
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foreigners, aliens who belong to the families of ambassadors accredited to the united states. >> that's right. part of that debate has fuelled the argument that that clause subject to the jurisdiction thereof actually has meaning in that it does not allow for the same broad birthright citizenship arguments that we use today. this was primarily the product of the dread scott decision that said a slave could not be considered a citizen for the purposes of the constitution. that had to be corrected and it was corrected in the 14th amendment. many people have continued to debate whether that little clause, subject to the jurisdiction thereof, has a significant meaning in explaining it in a sense. >> we'll see how much traction it gets on the campaign trail.
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let us know what your take is. you can tweet us using the hashtag new day cnn. a new cnn poll showing bernie sanders and donald trump closing in on hillary clinton. will her e-mail scandal ultimately hurt her chances of winning her party's nomination? we'll take a look at that. the challenges of keeping everyone working together can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help. at&t has the tools and the network you need, to make working as one easier than ever. virtually anywhere. leaving you free to focus on what matters most.
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. my personal e-mails are my personal business, right? so we went through a painstaking process and turned over 55,000 pages of anything we thought could be work related. under the law that decision is made by the official. i was the official. i made those decisions. >> hillary clinton laying out why legally she did nothing wrong. now, that exchange got heated. it was with ed henry from fox news. he was getting after her about whether she wiped the server. and that's getting some
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blowback. as we see in this cnn o.r.c. poll, clinton's favorability rating hitting a 14-year low. donna brazil, make the case for why -- certainly it's got to be reflected in the numbers. i don't think you're going to dispute that. but make the case for why you don't believe this is as bad as some say it is. >> first of all, let me just say this, it's important in all of this frantic -- and that's the word i have to use. the frantic coverage over the e-mails that we go back to the basic facts that when she was sworn in as secretary of state she followed the examples of the previous secretaries of state and used her own server, okay? now, a year after she left the
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state department new rules were put in place, saying you cannot use your own server. now the technicalities of all of this and 17 intelligent agencies, now they're looking at the e-mails they're trying to decipher this. if you're a member of john and jane q. public you're sitting back and saying, oh my god, if there's smoke, there must be fire. you're seeing that reflected in the polls. focus on the issues at hand. if you want to follow this e-mail controversy, something i did not want to follow -- i'd much rather follow college football right now. but if you want to follow it, try to get the facts. and of course, next in october secretary clinton will go back before the benghazi committee, she will answer any other pertinent questions. we will find out more information and of course we
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will see more of her e-mails. she is going to release more, quote, unquote, secrets than victoria's secret and she's not even at the mall yet. let's calm down. it's going to be over soon. >> nothing to see here. this is all a tempest in a teapot? >> i don't know. is donna telling the fbi to calm down or the state department or the department of justice? these are all the organizations peering into this, because there is something that is questionable about what hillary clinton did. and had she only had some humility in the beginning and not said outright, i did not nothing wrong. she's handled this poorly from the beginning and i mean the beginning choosing to have a private server in the first place and handling the press and the p.r. of this just terribly.
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if she could go back, she would admit she would have done this differently because this has been a huge headache for her. it speaks to her trustworthiness. it speaks to her political judgment. you're right, donna, that there are issues that we should be following. but this is an issue. it's an issue of integrity. >> is it an issue because some in the media are making it an issue and suggesting there may be a perniciousness to it or a nefariousness to it? that's going to be her claim. >> she can claim that all she wants. but it's the fbi investigating this now. the fbi doesn't care -- >> that's about classified information. the intelligence agencies are trying to see what's classified or not. we hear from them, well, there's no proof that what she sent was
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classified. it may have been classified afterward. we want to look at the server and see if we can get this back. >> let me be clear. girlfriend will never tell the fbi or cia to calm down. i'm saying in terms of the media, we're going see much more of this than we even anticipated because it's going to be out there. i agree with you on one point in terms of the politics. if you're going to throw out your baby and the bath water, just throw it out. unfortunately she can't throw it out because now you have all these agencies that want -- this is a turf war. they want to make sure their information is not going to the defense department for example. that's part of the process. >> it didn't have to be part of the process. >> mr. christie used a personal
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server. she has said it. i don't know how much humility you have to give these days, but she said in hindsight she -- >> the obama administration tried to put parameters around hillary clinton multiple times. they tried to do it with her e-mails. they tried to do it with her friend at the state department. his name is -- >> that's right, because you know what? all this is second guessing. >> she consistently skirts these parameters the obama administration tried to put -- >> i just want to get in there for a second. i hear what you're saying. you dismiss this as politics. >> i'm not dismissing it. i'm just explaining it. >> you categorize it as politics. >> yes. >> do you think the slippage we're seeing in the polls is connected to this? >> absolutely. that plus the dog days of august. just because we talk about donald trump and hillary clinton all the time doesn't mean
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there's not a bernie sanders out there. people are feeling the bern. they're excited about this candidate. people listen to martin o'malley, james, w webb. you can talk all you want to about this e-mail fracas and it is political in my judgment. they took away the seriousness of what i believe was the issue that we were talking about, which is how did four americans end up dead in libya. that's serious. that's something that we should get to the bottom of. >> okay. >> you'd rather talk about benghazi? >> and we will be hearing more about that, as donna said, in october. ladies, we're out of time. >> out of time? i can't get any satisfaction. >> always great to see you. >> she'll understand why we're out of time because it's the best day ever here on "new day." are you ready for this?
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warrant and this sketch of the suspected the bangkok bomber. police do not believe he acted alone. two suspects arrested following a shooting outside a historic palace in istanbul, also the prime minister's offices. former subway spokesman jarred fogel struck a deal with prosecutors in indiana. he is expected to plead guilty today to charges related to possession of child pornography. female viagra has been approved by the fda. it claims to boost levels for women with low sex drive passenger. you should think twice before taking another sip of alcohol. a new study says light to moderate drinking poses a threat
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to your health in the form of a cancer risk. researches from harvard university found that women who have just a single drink a day increase their chances of getting breast cancer. men who were smokers had an increased chance of getting colorectal cancer. make sure to get regular checkups from the dancer and be sure to ask for cancer screenings. >> i don't like that. >> point taken. lily tomlin out with a new movie called "grandma." we i'm tuk halk to her about th and a possible reunion with dolly par on the. technology empowers us to achieve more.
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i'm a senior field technician for pg&e here in san jose. pg&e is using new technology to improve our system, replacing pipelines throughout the city of san jose, to provide safe and reliable services. raising a family here in the city of san jose has been a wonderful experience. my oldest son now works for pg&e. when i do get a chance, an opportunity to work with him, it's always a pleasure. i love my job and i care about the work i do. i know how hard our crews work for our customers. i want them to know that they do have a safe and reliable system. together, we're building a better california. why are you selling those books? >> i need some cash. i need $500. >> you must not have a lot of friend. >> and now you need me and i'm
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broke. you need a tattoo? now, that i can do. >> give us the money. >> get out of my home, crazy old -- >> i like your boyfriend. s he's special. >> don't mess with grandma. starring the one and only lily tomlin as a bit of an unconventional grandmother. tomlin is having an excellent year. she received an emmy nomination in the netflix series grace and frankie. i love seeing you in person. it is such a delight. >> thank you. >> things are going well for lily tomlin. >> yeah, this has been a good ye year, no question. >> you've worked with this director before and i understand he saw your work in another film and wanted to work with you again.
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>> well, paul is wonderful. he cast me in admission and we had a good time. i played tina fey's mother. he called me and said do you want to have lunch? i want to talk about stuff. he said he had this idea for a movie and he was going to write it with me in mind. and then a couple of weeks later he handed me the script. >> what was your reaction when you read the script? because it delves into controversy. you know there's going to be some people that -- >> some backlash, sure. overall it's much more a human story about the three generations of women and grandmother, toof course the fos on the grandmother and all her friend and unfriend who have unfriended her. >> and a complicated family. growing up i used to think mine was extra complicated.
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but as an adult i think the true definition of family should say in the dictionary complicated. >> this one definitely should. and then it's just -- and grandma grows too. she teaches her granddaughter to grow a bit. and her daughter grows a bit. and you feel like they're going to come back together and create family in some way. >> let's put it to -- i have to admit i have a bit of a guilty pleasure. i find myself one on one with netflix. and i binge watched grace and frankie, a huge success for you on netflix. you and jane fonda, great back together. >> we wanted to do a show about older women and how discounted they are. netflix was eager for it.
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they knew what they wanted. and they totally endorsed it. and we did 13 episodes right off the bat. and marty kaufman was the coc w cocreator. it was really her idea. she's also a woman who's approaching an age that is oppressed. and so -- and that's what happened. and she wanted jane and me. and that was another bit of inspired casting. it just seemed to catch people's attention. >> it really has. it has caught fire. it has caught attention from people who you might not necessarily think whose attention it would catch. you obviously knew you had something good here. >> well, we did. we thought we had a good idea. we thought we had a good potential. we didn't know how much it was going to land, but it did, even with young people, really across the board. >> totally. and the fact that you got to
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work with jane who you worked with on 9 to 5. you heard word that dolly wants a reunion. >> and we are glad for that. we want her to come into the show if we can find the right place for her. we don't want to heap 9 to 5 on top of grace and frankie. >> find an organic way to do it. >> right. >> for you to see their leading a series on netflix, which again was a new thing for a lot of people, not network tv. netflix. you've got the kennedy honors, an emmy nomination. dare i say you're 75 years old. you're happy married. life is good. did you foresee this would come at this point in your career? >> no. but i had no anticipation it would not come. i'm a known entity. you just meander your way
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through tshow business. >> i'm delighted. >> i'm delighted that you're delighted. >> be sure to catch "grandma" in theaters friday. you can't miss it. it's a great one. >> loved it. great stuff. lily tomlin. news continues with carol costello right after this break. loved it. new ensure active high protein. i help you recharge with nutritious energy and strength. i'll take that. yeeeeeah! new ensure active high protein. 16 grams of protein and 23 vitamins and minerals. ensure. take life in. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping.
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happening now on the "newsroom," hillary clinton respond to reports about wiping her e-mail server with a shrug and a joke. >> like with a cloth or something? no. >> new cnn polls out this morning show she's still the one to beat, but the margin gets smaller. also, a teenage girl takes the stand facing her accused rapist testifying about what happened at an elite private school. se rrena williams gears up f
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