tv Wolf CNN June 27, 2016 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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it was a very special moment. >> the fact that you are sharing it with us now and the raw emotion. the picture we have put up on the screen. you have helped a lot of people more than in that room. you are a very brave and courageous and respectable woman. i can't thank you enough for doing that. i hope you will continue to talk to us as we navigate through this really ugly national issue. thank you so much. >> it is good to see you again. it won't be the last. brenda tracy joining us after a really remarkable meeting. >> brianna keilar is going to sit in for wolf blitzer. she starts right now. hi, there. i'm brianna keilar in for wolf blitzer. we are following several breaking stories this hour. shortly, we expect to hear from hillary clinton, the presumptive democratic presidential nominee
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in chicago right now. earlier today, she appeared with popular democratic senator, elizabeth warren, as they both spoke about economic issues during a stop in cincinnati. >> did the trump calls african-americans thugs, muslims terrorists, latinos, rapists and criminals and women, bimbos. hillary clinton believes that racism, hatred, injustice and bigotry have no place in our country. big news from the supreme court, a ruling on a major abortion case in section texas that placed serious restrictions on who could perform the procedures. the court voted 5-3 to overturn that law. president obama releasing a statement that he is pleased at the court's ruling. we are following the fall out from the brexit vote.
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outgoing british prime minister, david cameron, addressed members of parliament today. it was his first appearance since the vote to leave the european union. the british people voted to leave the european union t was not the result i wanted nor the outcome that i believe is best for the country i love. there can be no doubt about the result. i know from all that happened in the campaign is this is not about britain with raug from the world or playing less of a role in the world. cameron said there are no plans for a second referendum. his party set the timetable for naming his replacement with a decision expected by september 2nd. i want to start here in the u.s. in the race for the white house where massachusetts senator elizabeth warren campaigned hand in hand with hillary clinton in ohio, fueling those vp rumors and why she is an effective
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attack dog against donald trump. >> what kind of a man roots for people to lose their jobs, their homes, their life savings. i'll tell you what kind of a man, a small, insecure money grubber who fights for no one but himself. >> what kind of main? eye nasty man who will never become president of the united states. he i must say i do just love to see how she gets underdonald trump's thin skin. we are on the trail with clinton. you were at this event, jeff. did this change the mood of clinton rallies? there is generally a certain kind of mood at a clinton rally.
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it seems like there was a lot of red meat and enthusiasm at this one. >> there sure was, brianna. it changed the energy incredibly. you have covered as many of these as i have. it was a different sense in the room. people were excited to see elizabeth warren. i was struck by their embrace and how she completed hillary clinton's sentence ns some respects. it also seemed to make hillary clinton sharper as well about her argument about why she is fighting for the little guy. take a listen. >> i got into this race because i wanted to even the odds for people who have the odds stacked against them. we need to take the from us strax, fe
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frustration, fear and anxiety and work together. >> reporter: this was about judging the chemistry between the two. it looks very good. talking to voters, they like what they saw. it was about making sure the progressive wing of the party, bernie sanders and others are on board with the clinton campaign, which is why it was being done here in battleground ohio. >> jeff, before this rally started, donald trump weighed in on it. he tweeted, quote, crooked hillary is wheeling out one of the lease productive senators in the u.s. senate, goofy elizabeth warren who lied on her heritage. moments ago, he called warren a sellout and a turn coat in a press release. >> reporter: not a surprise to have these insults back and forth. elizabeth warren responded with strength. she said, who is goofy. he is the one that wears the hat "make america great again."
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the reality is elizabeth warren has her position set to be this liberty democratic attack dog. will she be doing it alone as a free agent or as part of this democratic ticket? far too early to know that. there is no doubt she is being vetted seriously. she is not the only one on this list. we are about three weeks away from knowing who else is on this ticket. >> what does this debut mean for the presidential race moving forward? let's bring in cnn senior political reporter, knee ahenderson and david chalion and ryan lizza, washington correspondent for "the new yorker." i want to push this out for you. you watched this appearance. what did you think about elizabeth warren and whether this was effective? if we think we are going to see
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a lot more of this? >> i think we are. i think elizabeth warren clearly relishes this role. it surprises me how whole hog she has jumped into this task. i don't think she will be the one that ends up on the ticket as hillary clinton as vp. she can do this without being the vp nominee. she is very effective out there. she cuts through the media noise. hillary clinton clearly enjoyed campaigning with her today. that wassest as well. to have her on board with the team in a full way is a benefit to hillary clinton. >> it was sort of like, where's bernie? is bernie going to come on board? when is he going to endorse? p is he going to bring his supporters along with him? you saw elizabeth warren tapping into this aspirational populism. she is a better messenger for
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hillary clinton and better for bernie sanders. she has very savvily boxed him out. whether she will bring on all of those supporters, who knows. maybe you don't need p bernie sanders. >> i had the same thought. before bern was hot on the left t was elizabeth warren. a lot of the supporters p supported elizabeth warren. all of that energy and enthusiasm went to bernie. as we sort of wait for sanders to get what he is going to get out of the clinton campaign policywise on the democratic platform, i think the clinton campaign says, wait a second. we have the person hoist hot one on the left before you ever were, bernie.
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>> as jeff pointed out, some of the clinton rallies are not the most exciting in the world. there is a joke, you are settling for hillary clinton and she obviously generates an enormous amount of enthusiasm as a powerful surrogate. there was that overshadowing effect. you could hear in the crowd. not that they were so psyched to hear elizabeth warren. she created an energy. hillary clinton brought it down. these guys have real differences. a few years ago, they were dismissive of people like elizabeth warren and she didn't understand the establishment democratic politics and the economic agenda of the democratic party.
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>> she has also shown them perhaps they didn't understand the heart and soul of democratic vo voters out there. donald trump has been calling elizabeth warren poke ka poke ka tas repeatedly. this is the mature version of the nonfifth grade version of pocohontas, what some think is an insult. he is talking about policy and saying she is a sellout to the cause. what happened to the liberal elizabeth warren? i do think we are seeing a slow maturation of donald trump.
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we typically don't talk about people's ethnic backgrounds. this is where he is. >> he personally when he tweets, it is usually sort of a schoolyard taunt. if you look at the stuff they are sending out in press releases that is done by the campaign, it is a little bit more of a targeted, the way to get it, elizabeth warren, is to argue she is selling out her principles by endorsing clinton. it had a lot of more factual basis. polls showing hillary clinton versus donald trump. she is ahead by five points in the nbc poll m it seems to be indicating she is in the lead right now. we put up the cnn poll of polls on the screens and averages the last coming up with a 7 point lead and that's probably in the
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target of where the race is right now. advantage, hillary clinton chlth that's where the state of the race is right now. we see it closer in these battleground states than we do overall. donald trump's to-do list comes very clear. if two-thirds of the country don't think you are qualified for the job or clearly the clinton campaign argument that he doesn't have the temperament for the job is starting to have rest sons to a large part of the country. >> he is not doing well with the voters he needs to do well, starting with the white voters. let alone the african-americans and latinos. mitt romney won by 20 points. donald trump is winning by 13
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breaking news. a major decision on abortion and major victory for supporters of abortion rights. the u.s. supreme court today struck down a texas law that added restrictions for both doctors an clinics. it required they have admitting privileges. the most significant abortion case to go before the high court in two decades. i want to bring in jeffrey toobin and dana bash. this was a 5-3 decision.
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what is the basis behind this ruling? >> in the ruling you referred to from 1992, the court said that states could not impose an undue burden. that was the phrase. an undue burden on women's rights to choose abortion. what steven briar's opinion for the court said these restrictions on doctors and clinics which in effect forced many of them to close in texas representing an undue burden on women's rights and unconstitutional. safe abortion should be a right not just on paper but in reality. her campaign went on to issue a statement highlighting donald trump and his position on abortion, how he once said that women should be punished for having abortions and he also pledged to defund planned
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parenthood and to appoint supreme court justices that would overturn roe v. wade. does this have an impact? >> i think it will have an impact because abortion is front and center in voters minds. this has not been an issue in a significant way in a couple of decades, basically a generation. hillary clinton is obviously arguing what she should be arguing as a politician running for president on the democratic side that donald trump is going to appoint supreme court justices as he has promised to who are conservative. he hasn't said this but effectively, scalialike and he has named names, which kind of back that up. i tend to think that at least in the short-term, this will probably be more of a rallying cries for the republicans. this was a ruling in favor of a position that most democrats have. republicans will be able to say,
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see, see, you have to get out to the polls. i am already getting e-mails in that vain coming across now saying to the republican base, which is really fractured still, you have got to get behind our republican nominee. he is promising to put justices on the supreme court who will not decide the way they did today. >> it is very significant. many states, specially those where the republicans took over after the big landslides of 2010, passed laws that were very similar to mississippi, louisiana in particular. you can be sure that abortion rights supporters will be going into court waving the new supreme court opinion saying you can't do what you tried to do. so i think this could have the potential for a significant rollback of these restrictions
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in quite a few states. >> there was another decision today. this was pretty interesting, having to do with with someone we thought might be running for president. the former senator, bob mcdonald. he says, i express my heartfelt gratitude to the justices for the united states supreme court for the time and attention they have given to my case. they vacated my convictions and it is a day in which my family and i can rejoice and give thanks. >> you have people out there going to rallies on the democratic side, the republican side saying, we are sick of institutions not working for us. the idea of corruption, whether it is overt or whether it is just kind of because of how the system works. here, you have the court unanimously effectively saying
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that the law does not go far enough in protecting from corruption. the things that he did which were untoward. >> he should have known better. >> but at least the courts in virginia say were illegal is not so. >> chief justice roberts referred to the facts of the case as distasteful, which was an understatement. what people may not remember. he and his wife were given gifts of over $150,000, watches, cars, trips. the governor got to drive around in this fellow's ferrari. the court said he didn't do anything official for the johnny williams, the person who provided all these gifts. he just introduced him at meetings and chief justice said in order for this to be bribery, you have to have an official
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decision, not just meetings that were set up here. the court was unanimous. i don't know if the public will be unanimous in supporting this decision. >> we will see jeff, dana, thank you so much. the fallout of the brexit vote as prime minister, david cameron, addresses parliament. his country is dealing with the uncertainty this vote has brought as he fights off calls for a do-over. we are going to take a closer look at what comes next. you both have a
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negative effect on world markets again today. a short time ago, outgoing prime minister, david cameron, spoke to parliament about the vote and what comes next. >> britain is leaving the europe union. we must not turn our back on europe or the rest of the world. the nature of the relationship we secure with the eu will be determined by the next government. i think everyone has agreed we will want the strongest possible economic links with our european neighbors and our close friends in north america, the commonwealth and important partners like india and china. i believe we should hold fast to a vision of britain that wants to to be respected abroad, tolerant at home and advance the prosperity of our country for generations to come. >> joining me is becky anderson and cnn senior correspondent, clarissa ward. the prime minister in his remarks, a couple of things we
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noticed today, one, even though this isn't technically binding, he said, you should respect the will of the people. certainly, he doesn't agree with what the people decided. he said this needs to be respected. the other thing we noticed is promises broken. some of the mps who supported the leave campaign backing away from some of these promises they made. >> you are absolutely right. let's deal with that first. many on the leave campaign trail as it were. a number of issues why they should vote to get out of the eu. some $500 million a week, 350 million quid that would normally go to the eu in fees and dues, as it were, could be spent on
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the national health service and suggesting that the borders would be closed, backing away from that idea. it has become abundantly clear if they want to play a part in the market of the european union, that means the free movement of goods, services and people. it is becoming abundantly clear to those on the leave side it will be very difficult to negotiate a deal that doesn't allow for the free movement of people as well as goods and services. the economy will take a wobble in the short-term but going forward, things will be okay. and the leave campaign, very much accusing those who wanted to stay of what any called project fear when the chancellor, the finance minister, george osborn, some 10 or 15 days ago suggested there would be a $42 billion haul in
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public finances which would possib possibly. it is clear there will be problems in public finances going forward. what sort of deal can the u.s. negotiate with europe. what you heard from the prm when he addressed british lawmakers about an hour and a half ago was this idea that he was not going to be rushed. this, of course, is all going to happen under the stewardship of a new prime minister. david cameron has re-signed pending new leadership. nothing will happen until september 2nd and this article 50 of the lisbon treaty, which starts the proceedings, a two-year process of exiting the
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u uk. nothing will happen until that is triggered. there are a lot of grumblings about this political process. they were sold down the suwanee. >> i want to ask you about something secretary of state john kerry said. he was in brussels and london and pledged u.s. assistance during this transition. here is what he said. >> there is some uncertainty in the air inevitably. leaders have the ability, individual people have the ability and the responsibility to restore certainty by making wise choices in the days ahead. that means choices that to every degree possible are not aimed at
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retribution, not aimed at anger but rather are thought through in a way that brings people together. >> what is the u.s. role in all of that? >> i think what john kerry is trying to project here is an image of steadying the ship essentially. we know we are entering into uncharted waters. they are murky waters. the uk is working so closely with the u.s. on the fight with libya and efforts to invigorate nato, a big meeting planned next month. we are dealing with an increasingly assertive russia. all of these issues are issues the uk and the u.s. work really closely on. when the u.s. is dealing with europe, the uk is the first port of call. it is the most important relationship. the concern is secretary kerry wants to say to people, don't
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panic. this isn't going to affect the relationship. he is talking to all the european allies. he says, don't worry, we will navigate the ship through these choppy waters. there are still a lot of questions about how the relationship will be impacted if, indeed, britain's image does suffer and its position on the world stage. you heard, there is a political vacuum and an economic crisis. there are a lot, a lot of questions as to how this will play out. >> and how the u.s. relationship with europe is going to suffer now that the u.s. is not going to be in the u.s. clarissa ward, thank you so much. becky anderson, thank you so much for being with us as well. coming up, the olympic games are right aroun the corner. with the threat of zika as well as civil unrest that's looming large, some of the world's most famous athletes continue to bow out of rio. we'll have details. megared krill oil. unlike fish oil, megared is easily absorbed
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the olympic trials are underway and opening ceremony in rio less than six weeks. brazil has been plagued with a series of issues that could threaten the games. cnn international correspondent, nick paton walsh, is live in rio. we have heard some major once, zika and security, that are dominating the conversations surrounding the olympics. what can you tell us about this? >> reporter: it is remarkable at this stage to have so many issues mounting and questions unanswered. let me try and pick through some of them for you. first of all, the most recent shock we have had that one of the key elements behind ensuring a clean game, free of doping, the brazil anti-doping, will be
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testing the athletes throughout. they had their certification taken away just before this weekend. real doubt. they may be ready to function in the olympics. what does that mean for doping? that's one detail. a broader concern over the pace of which infrastructure is being completed. one ckey subway is supposed to cut the visitors through the traffic. that will only be ready four days ahead. there is the broader back drop of security. athletes here who are training having been mugged in some of the most busy tourists areas, one at gunpoint. the board of security for visitors. they promised a lot on the street. maybe 100,000. there is another issue that may impact the government's ability to deliver on that. that's the financing of the state itself. they suddenly had to declare a state of emergency because of what they called a financial
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calamity. they got an emergency bailout. there are concerns about what that is doing. the ability for rio, which should be providing a sort of relaxed, wonderful atmosphere it is famous for for those athletes coming to the game. it is going to be the back drop. the games are going to happen. is everything going to be in place in the way that everybody had hoped. brianna. >> nick, payton walsh, thank you so much for that overview. for more on the games and the controversies surrounding them, i'm joined by sydney levee. he is the chief executive officer of the 2016 games in rio. there has been a series of problems. nick paton walsh said an athlete was mugged in broad daylight in a very touristy area. you would expect that may not happen. perhaps a sign that security is very much a challenge. one of the hospitals, which is one of the five where athletes could be treated was actually stormed by armed gunmen about a
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week ago. that's a big challenge. how do you make sure thati athletes and spectators are safe. >> it's our job to protect the athletes and the people. we bring 85,000 people were the federal police, from the army to take over reyo and protect everybody. we did that for the world cup. there was hundreds of thousands of people. we did that when the pope visited. there were 2 million people in rio in the streets and nobody got mugged. we are going to do it again. it is our job to protect everybody. >> do you think people are making too much of these concerns? do you think that they should not be as concerned as they are or are you really taking these concerns at face value? >> of course, we do extreme measures for games. it is not normal measures. the games are an extraordinary event and we do extraordinary measures. that's what you do. >> i want to ask you. there were some pictures we were showing there of polluted water.
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i know there are some areas where there is even sewage. that was supposed to be taken care of. now, there is investigations into whether money was sort of siphoned off, wasn't used to clean up the areas where there will be sailing events. what can you tell us about that? >> we ran two tests in '14 and '15 and it was very good. there was not a single athlete sick or anything. we will do that again. we have five competitions tracking them every day. it is our job to protect the health of the athletes. we are pretty comfortable we can do that. >> speaking of the health of athletes. zika is a major concern. you have some athletes, like golfer, rory mcilroy, he has pulled out of competing because he worries about zika. what measures do you take to make sure athletes and spectators are aware of this
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problem and what they can do to try to avoid the risks? >> moss kikquitoes die in the w. we are now going into the winter. it is proved that the number of attacks by mosquitoes during those months drop dramatically. the chance to get zika during the games is 1 to 1 million. we are pretty sure it is not going to be a threat. >> some of these problems i've described have detoured people from saying, i am going to rio. it is a beautiful place, a huge tourist destination. some people have said, i don't think i am going to these olympic games. you have seen ticket sales depressed. is there a strategy to try to boost that before the games get going? >> the olympics is just a wonderful movement where israelis and palestinians have breakfast at the same table. israel is a wonderful city where
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everybody should come. you have to come. you cannot wait. >> you do have a tough job, sir. sydn sydney levy with the rio olympics russian diplomates intimidating diplomates by entering their homes and rearranging their furniture. next. honey, we need to talk. we do? i took the trash out. i know. and thank you so much for that. i think we should get a medicare supplement insurance plan. right now? [ male announcer ] whether you're new to medicare or not, you may know it only covers about 80%
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russian intelligence officers are breaking into homes of u.s. diplomats, harassing their children and in one case even killing a family pet. these are the bizarre and scary claims outlined by the "washington post." we have cnn political analyst and "washington post" reporter josh rogin. he broke this story. this is a list of things you detail in this very interesting column. what else are staff members reporting? >> over the last two years russian intelligence and security services have been harassing diplomats not just in moscow but in europe. some of the things are silly like rearranging all your
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furniture. >> like a fraternity prank. but a lot is serious. >> they followed ambassador michael mcfall's children to school so closely that the children were aware of it. in the first term of the obama administration they went into the house of the u.s. defense attache and killed his dog. these incidents have been going on for a while but since the 2014 invasion of ukraine and the u.s. sanctions that followed the russian fsb has been increasing its harassment to unprecedented levels. >> it's not like the russian government is trying to keep this a secret. they're out there about this. >> it's kind of crazy. john kerry raised i want with vladimir putin directly in his trip to moscow in march. i asked the russian embassy about it. they didn't deny it. they said the u.s. caused the downturn in relations and that these sanctions have consequences. they call it reciprocity. but u.s. intelligence and diplomatic officials assured me what they're doing to us is more serious and dangerous than what we're doing to them. >> what is their aim with this?
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>> twofold. they want to disrupt u.s. officials doing their jobs in all these countries. if you go out and you're reporting on what they're doing in europe, they want to stop you. and they'll do that by scaring you. two, they want to register their displeasure with u.s. policy. they want to make it clear if we hit them with sanctions, they'll hit us by harassing our democrats. it's a tit for tat game that reminds everybody of the cold war. >> and it comes from the top, right? is that the expectation? >> it's not a coincidence that we sanctioned putin's friends and the businesses that are close to him and then the harassment increases significantly. there is a relationship between what we're doing to putin and his friends and what his services are doing to our diplomats in the field. >> i know the u.s. government is tracking what's going on. what are they doing to make sure these staff members are safer? >> it's interesting. the state department has done a lot. they set up meetings to train all diplomats headed to europe that this is going to happen to them, how to report it, how to respond but in the end they've made a decision and they had a
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debate about it not to do these same things back to the russians. that leads some in congress to say we're not doing enough. that there have been no consequences for russia and i can tell you the u.s. ambassadors to these countries are still complaining, especially to the obama administration, that they want them to do more. >> a fascinating column, josh rogin, thanks so much. just into cnn, house democrats releasing their own version of a probe into the 2012 benghazi terror attack that killed four americans and blasting republicans for embracing "conspiracy theories." we'll have the details next. that's why you drink ensure. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing... ...what you love. ensure. always be you.
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this is no coincident. they beat republicans to the punch. >> that's right. and just the fact that there is a democratic report gives a full indicator of something that we already knew but now it's in black and white of 350 pages which is that this was a highly, highly partisan process, this benghazi commission, special committee to look at benghazi. now the republicans blame the democrats being partisan, that they didn't engage in the way they wanted and democrats say give me a break, republicans iced us out from everything we wanted to do. so that's the background. >> what are the findings here. >> well, one of the things that they are critical of, the democrats, is something that is universally understood, that the security conditions leading up to these deadly attacks, four americans killed, including the ambassador in benghazi in september of 2012, that the
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security conditions were "woefully inadequate." everybody agrees on that pretty much. but then following is where they conclude something that's quite different than what they expect republicans to conclude which is they say that the pentagon could not have done anything at all to prevent these attacks, to get in there and help the americans in distress. it concludes that the secretary herself hillary clinton never personally denied any request for additional security and it goes on to at the end of the report make recommendations, including please, congress, don't apatriot special committees that they believe are truly political. but as i'm talking to you we got a statement from the chairman of this committee trey gowdy and his spokesman going through the fact that they don't believe that the democrats get it or they understand what's going to happen and it specifically says as chairman gowdy has said, this
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is not about one person, the investigation is about four brave americans who lost their lives in libya trying to at least signal that when we do see the republican majority report that it won't be as partisan as the democrats fear. >> it's been a big issue for hillary clinton. obviously republicans will continue to try to make it a big issue. but how is it going to affecter? is it already baked in? is it already done? >> it seems to be. it seems to be. you know, unless we have some real blockbuster piece of information that's specifically about her, it's hard to see that happening given the way that the now sort of famous or infamous depending on which side of the aisle you sit on 11-hour testimony happened. not a lot new came out in that. it seems to be baked in. if you think she's not somebody that should be convicted because of her actions in benghazi.
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>> that's it for me. i'll be back at 5:00 eastern on "the situation room." "newsroom today" with pamela brown starts right now. hello, i'm pamela brown in for brooke baldwin. this is breaking news on the fallout of a seismic decision that sent tremors around the world, the uk's vote to lead the european union rocking britain's economy with news that the s&p has just cut the uk credit rating to aa from aaa. this as three million brits and counting are asking for another shot. they're signing an online petition calling far do-over vote on whether to leave the european union. and regrets over the so-called brexit now have a name, regrexit. they only people in 100,000 names to be brought up in parliament. and world markets are equally queasy. the dow resumed its line at the opening beller
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