tv Declassified CNN June 24, 2016 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT
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tiggers is that tiggers are wonderful things. seems like it is time to the cut seems like it is time to the cut to commercial. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com good evening, john berman in for anderson and we begin with the brutal wakeup call that many americans got, and is simply put the retirement savings and even their jobs may depend on the historic choice that the britons made to leave the european union. for britain, it is a new prime minister and the end of the united kingdom as we know and decades of unification after the world war ii could be fracturing and the measure of turmoil and chaos 24 hours ago, there was a p prediktable set of rules and now everyone is in unchartered waters and this has not happened before and not even close, and we will hit all of the angles tonight, but first, the bottom
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line here. it is an ugly bottom line. the stocks took a pounding with the dow down 600 points and american markets lost more than $800 billion of value in a single day, and the volatility index of the jiters is through the roof. and veteran analyst ali velshi is a great guy to turn to in these times. and so the market threw up a crooked number to use baseball terms, and this evening americans and their 401(k), what do you say? >> don't worry about it too much, and there was a time that i would worry about the numbers like that, but a 3 and change in the percent. and anybody who is 20 or more years old have seen swings like this in the market. and this is because of yesterday, we had a predictable set of rules to play by and this is that nobody knows what the rule are, and most people said,
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let me take my money out, and i will get back in when people tell me that i can, and veteran investors were piling in through the course of the day, which is why the dow swinging from 600 to 300 to back to the 600. and it closed on the high velocity, and downward direction and at the low point in the market which indicates more is happening monday, and so you will see a little bit of the unsettlement, and ultimately when the people do the math, it is not all that influential for the u.s. stocks and investment. >> it is uncomfortable time, and weekend, but we can ur is vooif. >> yes. >> and now sh, connect the dots because in britain, serious dot, and they have tough economy, and the resession there, and what it could do to the e e can conmy here? >> well, we are on the knife's edge, because the fed is wanting to raise interest rates and they have only done it once in many years, because they are thinking that the economy is now strong enough to stand on its own, and they were ogoing the raise it four times this years, and then
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the fed has hinted that it is maybe just the once, and now you are talking about britain, maybe, maybe turning into a recession. well, that means that the fed not going to be thinking that the u.s. economy is strong enough, and for the people to wait for the interest rates to go up, it is not going to be happening probably, and will it trigger a recession, and there is a chance that the u.s. could go into a recession in the next 18 months, but this is probably not the triggering event. the trade with, u.s. trade with the eu is good, and the u.s. trade with the uk on its own is not that good. it is a serious political issue, and very, very serious with the uk and serious for europe and less so for america. >> and less so when it goes to the soup that you are looking t at. >> yes. >> and now, ali, stick around and much more the talk to you about the global aftershock, but let's get to the epicenter of the whole thing as clarissa ward reports from london. >> reporter: it is the biggest shock in the history of modern british politic, and possibly
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one of the greatest political miscalculations ever made. >> the slototal votes were 16,141,241. the total number of votes cast in favor of leave was 17,410,742. this means that the uk has voted to leave the european union. [ applause ] >> reporter: hours u later the prime minister announced he would resign. >> i think that the country requires fresh leadership to take it in this direction. >> reporter: the people who m masterminded the leave campaign were quick to praise the prime minister, but convinced that their approach is the correct one, including the former london mayor boris johnson. >> there is no need in the 21st century to be part of the f federal system of government to be based in brus sells that is imitated nowhere else on earth.
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it was a noble idea for the time, but it is no longer right for this country. >> some londoners did not appear to welcome johnson's role in the campaign, and yet there is much speculation that he could become the next prime minister. while some celebrated the way the counts unfolded the results were widespread concern about the it is the of the economy, and general confusion about what the future holds. president obama an early supporter of remaining in the eu said in a statement that the people have spoken. >> while the uk's relationship with the eu will change, one thing that will not change is the special relationship that exists between our two nations. that will endure. the eu will remain one of our indispensable partners. >> reporter: the vote divided britain and people in scotland, northern ireland and london wanted in, and everybody else wanted out. immigration was the primary issue on the campaign.
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>> let june 23rd go down in history as our independence day! >> reporter: how these differences are reconciled and what role britain will have on the world stage are issue s ts will likely take years to resolve. >> are all right. charissa ward joining us, and i also want to bring in richard quest and christiane amanpour, and you guys have been working really hard frankly, because this is beyond unusual. yes, there was a vote and we all knew that it could go either way, but cristiano, over the past 24 hours the dominos falling are simply shocking. >> yes, they are. and look, this is the first time that any country has left the eu voluntarily, and you heard nigel farage talk about independence day as if britain was not a free and sovereign and democratic country and on the other side, it is things like self-inflicted
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wound and economic suicide and i have been talking to the foreign leaders and the british foreign secretary, an all are convinced that it is bad for britain no matter how bad they want to stave the situation, but the voice is going to be less strong and no question about it, and britain will take a serious economic hit as all of the economists have said and they will find it difficult to negotiate the divorce from europe, but a whole slew of trade agreements for the future, and the germans told me that today because they don't want to see the conta the jun, but the saddest, saddest commentary today was for the young people who voted overwhelmingly to remain and according to the projections they will have 69 years to live with the decision, and while the oldies who voted overwhelmingly to leave will only have 16 years to live with the situation, and young people are very angry and we are hearing it with the young who are very, very angry about what has happen and the gamble being
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taken with their future. >> and all of this, and david cameron, the british prime minister, clarissa, one of the most prominent leaders in the world up and quit. he said he would be quitting in the fall because of the vote after after one of the worst political bets or the biggest failures of the political bets of all time. >> good morning, even. >> that is right, john. what everybody is struggling with or just trying to get to grips with essentially is how shocking it was even though the polls had said over and over again, it was neck and neck, and it could go either way. certainly, the reaction this morning are fromb ing from brit sides using words like shocking and astonishing and it really took waking up this morning in the new britain the depths of the decision, and the ramifications for the future,
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and while the conservative party mps had come out before and said that david cameron we support him, and he should continue in the role as prime minister, behind closed doors there was the realization no way he could stay on in the face of having catastrophically lost such a big gamble. >> at one brit who expressed a great deal of shock overnight was richard quest. i was watching you last night and you called it the vote of your lifetime, and you looked frankly just very surprised. you know, at 24 hours in, you know, what is your feeling? >> still surprised. still shocked. when we started covering it last night, look, i traveled britain all of the last couple of weeks. i knew by the time that brexit was probably going to win, and then you had the murder of jo cox, and i thought that it would tip it maybe in the opposite direction, and when we started last night, john, it really did, and it is obviously going to be 48-50 one way or another, but
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which way? it went backwards and forwards until the first results came in, and then we realized that leave was winning by two or three percentage points more than expected, and where remain won, they were winning by two or three percentage points less than expected. and the majesty of an election night is as the process goes on, you realize that the result that is going to be coming out, and it becomes mathematically imposs possible tr other side to win. that happened about 6:00, 5:00 or 6:00 in the morning. it was startling, amazing, shocking, wonderful, you know, all of these adjectives could be thrown up, simply because the british people rightly or wrongly as christiane points out, the british people spoke last night. >> and that is just unknown or uncertain what is going to happen next. christiane, as you are looking
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at this, how much of the vote can be attributed to the issue of immigration, and this idea of the securing the borders that we heard so much about in the months before the election? >> well, it turns out that it was about immigration, and of course, here is where the fault was, because this is a referendum of staying in and out of the eu and not a referendum on the immigration policy, and so those who voted to get out and hoped to see a wholesale change in the immigration policy a are going to find that it is not like that, and there are all sorts of other issues involved here, and including that more than half of britain's immigration comes from outside of the eu so that all of the issues and plus as you know the nigel farage group which is anti-immigrant group and valed d bigotry posters and in the tactics of fear and hate, and
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that is what played out, because, yes, people are concerned about the immigration, but this according to the rest of the experts was not going to be the way to control the immigration, and plus the idea of take back our country, and take back the control, and these are the slogans that the leave campaign used that meant nothing, because it is a sovereign country great britain, but really resonated, and britain unlike any other european kcountry is not in connected, because you have to show passports and now it may not have easy access to the warrants, and easy to get criminaling back and forth in terrorists cases like they worked so hard to get, and this is a leap into the dark of the unknown and the leave camp cannot tell us exactly what the future is going to be look like. and we asked over and over and over again, and ever since the referendum date was set in february and no specifics are from the leave camp. >> and largely, because it is
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unknown, and it has not happened before. and clarissa ward, it is seen over here as largely anti-elite vote. obviously, something that the people think that can happen or has happened in the primaries in the united states as well, and how much of this to do you see as being anti-elitism? >> that is definitely a component here, and i think that there is a very real sense on the ground as everybody is trying to get their arms around this, there is a lot of soul r searching that needs to be done, and how was it that as donald trump himself put it that the prime minister so misread the mood of the country? how was that it the people dids a sum that somehow, the establishment would prevail? and when you look at the geographical maps and you see the breakdown, and the demographics of the vote, and you can see with the exception of scotland and northern ireland and london that essential i will most of the country voted overwhelmingly to leave the eu, you realize that there is a sense here in the uk as you have seen as well in the u.s. that
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perhaps the establishment, the so-called elites are not fully in touch and understanding and feeling the mood on the streets and other parts of the country. >> all right. standby, because we have a lot more the talk about ahead and including that. donald trump's reaction are from his golf course in scotland and the credit that he claim and the blamed that he leveled on president obama, and the controversy he caused both there and here, and all of it. and later, breaking news out of west virginia, fire, flooding, 20 lives lost so far, and we will bring you an update on what tomorrow could bring. ♪
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whatever you think of brexit, donald trump was making the case of what he has been saying all along but with an english accent. he drew explicit parallels off what britain did last night to the what americans will do this fall. that remains to be seen. but in scotland he stirred up controversy there and back here. more on that is jim acosta. >> don't look now, trumpism just crossed the atlantic. that's how he sees the brexit from the european union, drawing parallel to his own race. >> people want to take their country back, want to have independence in a sense, want to be able to have a country again. i think you'll see this more and more, and i believe it is happening in the united states. >> reporter: at the grand opening of turnberry golf course in scotland, trump hailed it as a vindication against a push against what he believes to
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be a scourge of the open borders. the presumptive gop nominee shrugged off the panic in global markets as business opportunity for britain and himself. >> when the pound goes down, more people are coming to turnberry, frankly. >> reporter: ignoring a protester holding up golf balls with swastikas, he welcomed the fallout in london where david cameron announced he is stepping down. the two tangled over trump's proposal to ban muslims entering the u.s. and chose opposing sides on brexit. >> he was wrong, didn't get the mood of his country right. >> reporter: trump misread it, tweeting that scotland was going wild over to the vote, but the return showed that scotland decided to remain in the eu, but it was a victory lap for trump as he slammed president obama and hillary clinton for wadinging into the british politics ahead of brexit. >> i thought it was appropriate and she doubled down, did the same thing. obviously for the 219th time, they were wrong. >> reporter: clinton responded saying this time of uncertainty underscores the need for calm, steady, experienced leadership
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in the white house. her campaign savaged the reaction of trump as frighten i ing. >> he is not concerned with the american people or their retirement accounts or security, and he is concerned with himself and that's it. # >> reporter: trump says his skills as a businessman the country needs. >> people say the country is not a golf course. >> no, it is not, but you would be amazed how similar it is. it is called a place that has to be fixed, and there's nobody knows how to fix things like me. >> reporter: as for trump properties, the real estate tycoon said he would continue to hold campaign events as venues have his name. >> my properties, number one, i have the best properties. >> reporter: trump is
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>> and what can you say about it? >> well, he said that it could be beneficial to the economy and his golf course here in turnberry and he is fund-raising off of the brexit results and to e-mail supporters he said with your help we will do the exact same thing on election day 2016 here in the united states of america. and tomorrow, john, he is going to be visiting another one of his golf courses in aberdeen where some critics have raised mexican flags in opposition. he will have one more place to tee off. >> and now, welcome in tara set myer, and trump supporter
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jeffrey lord, and you are not here, so you will get the first question, and the british pound falling could be good for turnberry where he gave his decision to cheer on british voters and that as the stock market here in the u.s. dropped some 600 points. dangerous for him to be cheering like that? >> no. john, this is capitalism. you know, i think that one of the things that we have gotten too used to in america and britain is what margaret thatcher used the call the socialist ratchet, and the conservative parties kept moving the country left to slower degrees and the fact that donald trump is there to celebrate the golf course is a capitalist institution and it is good and we need more of it and not bad >> and notable that you are on a first name basis with margaret thatcher. >> and jeffrey -- >> not on the first-name basis. >> and still an official, and donald trump is claiming that he is tapping into the same sentiment here that exists in britain, do you think that is true?
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>> yes, i do. largely the brexit was motivated by a couple of issues, economy and trade and immigration, and who has been talk about that? the democrats are going to be a little concerned with a guy with a big flowing blond head of hair convinced the brits that perhaps being united in the globalistic economy is not the right thing the to do, and the most interesting take away for the democrats i believe is to look at the labor party led by jeremy corbyn was unable to work their white middle-class voters and the base of the party. they got the activists to vote for remain. but they lost the white middle-class voters who went with the notion that this system is not working, and now you hillary clinton out there saying we were wrong and trust the establishment, and are trust the establishment, and it is the wrong message. >> and tara does what happens in the uk stay in the uk or reverberations here? >> well, as long as we continue the draw that parallel, people will hear and say, yeah, that is what is happening here like joe just did, but i think that, yeah, i mean, i actually don't have a problem with the brexit
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vote, and a lot of the issue was sovereignty and what has gone on and the disaster that the eu has been and i get it for them, but more importantly what we should be upset about or concerned about is that donald trump, the fact that he had no idea anything about the brexit, and what the implications were, and he didn't know that scotland voted for it, and it is not until the hollywood reporter a couple of weeks ago they said what is it, and they explained it to him, and he said, oh, yeah, that is something they should get out. and so that is malpractice for the president candidate, and is so it is a campaign paying for the business trip to show that he is learned on the ish ssues takes some interest in them, and he admitted that he did not pay attention and why not? britain is the greatest ally, and why not? for seven weeks he is the presumptive nominee, and what has he been doing instead? insulting the american judges and worried ablawsuits for his
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businesses that is what is concerning republicans like myself for the readiness of presidency, and trump golf courses that are losing money by the way and he is reviled in scotland >> and had he spoken to the foreign policy advisers and brought them along the consul, because what is happening there is huge consequences and he said, yeah, we talk ted to them but what is there to discuss, it is not that much. >> and obviously, this is a action going to have implications for the u.s. and the rest of the world, but the most important voice in terms of advancing free enterprise within the eu was the uk, and with them not being part of that, it is going to be bad news for american businesses, and telecoms and bad news for the financial sectors where the uk was consistently a voice for the more moderate regulation, and the better understanding of the markets and if you are look at the implications for the u.s., and the people of the uk and the people of the eu, and we are
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going to be affected by this as well. and i think that what he missed was the opportunity to show some nuance, and yes, you could argue it is a reflection of the sub par economy and people are lo looking for better jobs and economic uncertainty, and yes, concerns about immigrations and other forces that are seeming to affect workers in the uk like the u.s. and so you can draw some of the parallel, but he needed to show that he understood what the implications of an exit were for the world, and for the eu, and for the u.s. alliances and for the u.s. itself. >> we will get to that on the other side of the braeblg, and we have more the discuss, including the political impact of the brexit vote here in the united states and just ahead the impact of the split decision of the supreme court had on immigration policy could have big impact on 5 million people here and we will tell you what it means through the eyes of one young woman. rosa's story when 360 continues.
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♪ "dinner!" "may i be excused?" get the new xfinity tv app and for the first time ever stream live tv, watch on demand, and download your dvr shows anywhere. >> president obama spoke by phone this morning with david cameron are britain's outgoing prime minister and reassuring him that the special white house and british relationship is a
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vital part of the u.s. policy and he spoke with angela merkel, the german chancellor, and both regretting regret about the vote, and both weighed in for the cameras as they see why they voted the way they the did. >> i believe that we are better off in a world in which we are trading and networking and communicating and sharing ideas. but that also means that cultures are colliding and sometimes it is disruptive and people get worried. >> that kind of disruption seems a feature of a lot of places on the planet tonight, whether it is at home with immigration, and assimilation, and mistrust of the government and the experts and all britain and the netherlands and france and in the united states, and donald trump said as much today, and he blamed president obama for a good deal of it, and including the outcome of the vote in
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britain last night. back with the panel, and basal, if hillary clinton knows foreign policy to well, and secretary of state for four years, and served in the senate, why so wrong on the vote? does he have a point? >> no. he proved in one moment that he is a deplorable leader and unfit to be the president of the united states. and let me go back a little bit. when you are looking at the vote, it is led by a very bombastic leader in boris johnson and also with bright blond hair, also, i might add, and bombastic leader in boris johnson and fueled by right wing groups popping up all offeurope, and the austerity budgets in greece are part of the story, and immigration is another part of the story, but the common thread there is fear. what i think that donald trump has done to sort of to bring the two together, and what he has done is to campaign on fear, and he has stoked the fear.
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i don't care what he thinks about hillary clinton's role in this. what i believe is that he is stoking the fear makes him unfit to lead. >> well, you are saying that you are explaining why britain voted the way it did. they did in a ma jjority, and me than 1 million people voted on that side than the other side and whether you agree ott not, they did, and if donald trump can stoke the same fear here, ali. >> right. i have been getting in the twitter battle to say, what do you to be critical about, because the people have spoken and two things. one, there is no reason for the vote to happen. there is no grassroots movement for getting out of the eu, and there are little movements all through europe, and david cameron was getting pressure from the right side of the caucus, and the europe skeptics who don't like that, and so to placate them, he said let's have a referendum, and he miscal crew lated and you can be mad at the leave exam pain, because they led a campaign that is emotional and fear-based and zene phobe uk
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and talking about immigration, and as christiane pointed out wisely, you go to the shangzen system, you can run around unmolested but not in uk, you have to show your passport every time you go in and leave. so those who voted in favor of leaving answered a question that was not being asked and some of them just believe in not liking the eu, but a lot of them were voting -- >> and isn't that the question that was asked of david cameron and as political professionals all of you get the willies that he called for the referendum without knowing the outcome. >> don't ask for it if you don't know the outcome. >> and north of 80% of voters are white, and some think it is 90% of the people who showed up to vote in the uk are white and how far are the similarities there and here, because in the u.s., and the national election, it is nowhere near that number. >> well, i don't profess to
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understand the racial politics of great britain other than there is an issue of immigration that is somewhat similar to the here that they perceive that people are coming in to take jobs and that is what drove this, and i am not sure that you can draw a parallel other than the fact that people are perceiving a problem. barack obama, himself, talked about the problem of illegal immigration in his book "audacity of hope" in 2004 and he mentioned that how people come from the outside to compete for the jobs. >> and congressman, the last word here, and 45 seconds left, and a lot has happened this week, and speeches back and forth from donald trump and hillary clinton, and what a brexit vote, and where are we in this election, is donald trump better off than the beginning of the week or not? >> he has had three disastrous weeks in a row, and he has not helped himself with this, but one thing to keep in mind though is that the fear in the uk was not created by boris johnson and
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in the u.s. not created by donald trump, and 2/3 of the americans think that we are on the wrong track, and there is an enormous amount of economic insecurity and the candidate that can effectively speak to that and trump has yet to hit the sweet spot can win the election. >> but he is trying to. >> and he has to narrative and depth and policy proscription to address the issues affecting the economy. >> that is cogent, and it is not -- and as a minority in the republican party who has been watching it for many, many years going on, the way that donald trump is doing this, he is placating a part of the republican party that is not a good one and it is fear and it is not going to be the big result that we are trying for years to accomplish with the reps when you go after people based on the ethnicity and it has to be an economic message and he has yet to do thatt yet. >> and now, we will talk to the am b ambassador to the u.s. and what
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he has to say about this, and how it is felt in countries that you would not imagine and how complica complicated global affairs could be because of this. me. well somewhere along the way, emily went right on living. but you see, with the help of her raymond james financial advisor, she had planned for every eventuality. ...which meant she continued to have the means to live on... ...even at the ripe old age of 187. life well planned. see what a raymond james advisor can do for you.
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our breaking news tonight, financial and political fallout after the surprise vote of the uk voters to exit the european union. here in the u.s., the dow sank more than 600 points and people are wondering what this vote could mean for the u.s./british relationship, and this afternoon i got some thoughts when i spoke to sir kim davis, the ambassador to the united states. how much harder is your job today than yesterday? >> what struck me since the vote happen and the result is clear is how many people whether it is president obama with my prime min ster today or speaker paul ryan or the secretary of state k kerry have spoken publicly about their continuing support for the special rerelatilationship and e uk and united states' relations will be fine, and we will work
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on the world's trouble spots and the relationship is going to continue to be in great ship. >> joining us from london, richard quest and christiane amanpour, and what about the special relationship with the u.s. and the uk, and less special or different special? >> well, different special, and just as special, but less effective? i spoke to the ambassador's boss as this is becoming clear and he sa said, of course, we will have strong defense and intelligence and security and other cooperation with the united states and a strong bilateral relationship, but we will be diminished in the leverage, and part of the leverage is being part of this big union, the eu, and so certainly, the americans have always looked to britain to kind of add some throw away to increase the leverage the to bring other europeans to doing a lot of the foreign policy goals and aims that the u.s., you know, wants the do, and so he
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said that diminish and people thought it was quite blunt and fr frank to say that kind of thing, but there is no question that for instance, people have said, you know, why should the chinese listen to british as much as they used to when they have less influence on the u.s. because they have less influence with the eu which is the big, big bloc. >> and richard, i was struck by something that we heard from the leaders and president obama, and vice president bide n and jack lew, and the fed, and everybody trying to calm the nerves of the investors to reassure everybody that everything is okay, and these are the same people that 24 hours ago and for the last several months have said that the sky is going to fall if brexit happens, and so doesn't this make the case that leave voters and leave supporters are saying that things are not as bad as everybodyb is painting it to be? >> that is exactly the argument that is being put forward and that having said crisis,
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apocalypse, and calamity and they have to turn around and say, well, it is not adds bad if we do the right things in the right order, and that is the world of the politic, you take the facts as you find them, and other people have spoke n and yu have to live with that. i think that the reality is that the fundamental first goal is to make sure that the global economy which we already know is extremely fragile is not made much worse by this event. it would be very easy, and it is not going to be throwing the u.s. into a recession, and it is not going to cause a massive depression across yurngs but it is certainly could show and balance this very weak apple cart of the global economy that everybody will suffer, and that is why they are flooding the market with liquidity, the fed and the ecb, and the bank of england have all made it quite clear, whatever it takes they will make sure that no bank goes under because of it. >> and richard, looking to europe, who is next? who is the next likely kcountry
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to try this type of thing if any? >> oh, there is plenty of candidates from the dutch to la pen in france to the spanish to, the italians and they have all got right wing or the extremist groups calling for the referendum over the last 24 hours, but the likelihood of anybody getting one off of the ground is remote. and the reason is because in the case of the uk, the fox was well and truly in the cabinet, in the government, and it was the ruling party that was causing the problem. so it is easier to get this thing started, and the rest of them will be noise, and disturbance, and there is going to be sort of a lot of the froth and distress, but very, nobody else has really the capacity at the moment to get something like this off of the ground >> richard quest and christiane amanpour, thank you very much. >> up next, flooding like you have never seen it before. that is a house on fire, and
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being swept down a creek in west virginia. at least 20 deaths reported in that state so far, and we will get the update from the weather center, and plus, deportation fears after the supreme court blocks president obama's plan to give millions of undocumented immigrants a kind of loel status. and you will meet rosa who is worried that she may be forced out of the country. because it's complicated and science-y. but with my nutrition mixes, you don't have to worry about the science. you can just put it in your pie hole. mmm peanuts, pecans, cashews. i'll have another helping of science, please! so whether it's energy or heart health you're after, start optimizing your nutrition with my specially mixed nutrition. planters. nutrition starts with nut. wopen up a lot of dawn. tough on grease...yet gentle. dawn helps open... something even bigger.
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more break news tonight, at least 20 people are dead across west virginia after devastatinging flooding. this is remarkable video here. a house on fire. that is a house moving down a flooded creek in white sulfur springs after heavy rains. wow. many towns are underwater tonight, and 44 counties have declared a statef of emergency and 200 members of the national guard have been immobilized and meteorologist derek van dam is in the weather center, and what is the latest on the flooding? >> john, the national weather service is describing this as a 1,000-year 1,000-year-event. it is the rare event and the deadliest flood event of 2016 and in fact, killed more than
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all tornado events so far this year. and this is a google earth image and we will zoom into the hardest hit areas, and we have been talk about charleston and the elk region there, and you can see that water seeks its own level, and when people build on the steep mountainsides and the banks of the river, eventually, we will have problems, and when we see the rainfall that is continuing to move over the area for a continuous period of time, dumping heavy amounts of rainfall, you will have flash flooding and we had rainfall totals in excess of nine inches in a few locations, and keep in mind that a lot of the rain are fell within a 6 to 12-hour period, and lot of rain in a short period of time, and you can see it in the southeastern sections of west virginia as well as the central sections of the state. now, we have talked a lot about rivers cresting with this flash flooding that took place, and thele elk river which i showed you on the google maps broke 125-year crest record. it is already dropping below
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flood stage which is good news, and the rain, well, it has fortunately subsided for that particular region. here are the latest warnings, southeastern portions of west virginia including the lewisberg section outside of charleston and you can see the water moving away from the state. >> thank you sh, derek van dam. that is good news, thank you so much. >> it is. >> and the uk voters are shock ing the world and leaving the european union, and voting to, and many did so h with the belief that immigration is out of control, and britain as they see it is no longer british, and there are some parallels here, and donald trump made it explicit today talking about britain's borders and our own, and on top of that, the supreme court decision blocking a key part of the president obama's immigration policy put it more squarely in the presidential campaign, campaign, and tonight, the impact of the voters and immigrants, but tonight, the story of one. rosa flores is in chicago tonight with one woman who
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worries that her american dream could be over. >> reporter: what's it like to live in the shadows? >> it is scary, because you don't know if one day you are going to be coming home and you will see your family there or the police. >> reporter: she wants to be known only by her first name, rosa. she says that she has been forced to live a secret life for close to 20 years. she was only 9 months old when her parents carried her across the border to mexico illegally, and they settled in chicago, and she was raised as an american. >> i have been here my whole life. i would say just because i was not born e here, but i went to school here from are kindergarten to high school. college. >> reporter: and being forced to return to a country she does not know is a fear she says that she has lived with for most of her li life. >> i would always like imagine myself growing up here, and living here forever. >> reporter: and her dream
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finally seemed possible when president obama announced the executive action on immigration in june 2012. what was your reaction when president obama issued his ex executive order? >> i knew that i could stay here for at least whatever the permit was, but i could stay here at least living without being scared. >> reporter: rosa had graduated from high school, and attending college when she applied for a work permit. she received it six months later and immediately found a job. but her sense of security was short-lived. it ended thursday after the supreme court's deadlock on the immigration plan. >> i feel kind of scared again, because i know that the permit is only for so long, and i don't know what is going to be happening in the future. >> reporter: what would you tell the critics who say that president obama of stepped the boundary, and he does not have the executive power to allow undocumented people to stay here? >> i feel like people should
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educate themselves more about both of the sides. i know that a lot of people are about probably thinking that one side and thinking, well, i don't see why they should be here because they should haven't been here in the first place. >> reporter: her parents are undocumented and may be forced to leave as well. she says ta her entire future could be in the hands of the next president of the united states. >> reporter: do you have hope that something good will happen? for your family? >> i feel like i have to have hope or i am like kind of doomed, i have doomed myself to be upset the whole time. so i have to have hope. >> rosa flores is going to join us now. what does this family plan to do now? >> you know, john, this family is in a tough situation, because rosa's father is thinking of moving his family to canada or mexico. he puts it like this, he says that, rosa, you know, i would rather move my family away and
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avoid the fear that we have been living with all of these years, and that fear that he is talking about is having immigration agents coming to his home or to his place of employment, and take him away. and so, he thinks that by doing it his way, and by self-deporting then he would have time to sell his property, and move his family with the little dignity. john. >> rosa flores, thank you so much. we will be right back. oh, i don't think that siri can... right now, switch to at&t for an iphone and get one free. wow, is that right? yeah, it's basically... yes. that is the current offer from at&t. okay siri, you don't know everything. well, i know you asked me to call you the at&t hostess with the mostest. okay, shut her down. turn it off. right now, buy an iphone and get another one free when you add a second line.
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that does it for this edition of "360" and thank you for watching. cnn newsroom is next. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com as we continue the groundbreaking decision to the leave the eu. >> and i'm becky anderson, and we will break it down what this means for this hour, and the immediate fallout for the world markets. >> investors around the globe are in a frenzy, but the european council insists that there is no need to panic. >> it is
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