tv New Day CNN September 15, 2016 3:00am-4:01am PDT
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higher. 54 days until election day. eight 11 days until the major moment of this race, the first debate. we have it all covered. let's begin with cnn washington correspondent joe johns. >> good morning, chris. being described as hillary clinton's doctor's note. the note from hillary clinton's physician essentially described the treatment she received for what the doctor characterized as noncontagious bacterial pneumonia and it described the times the doctor examined mrs. clinton a couple weeks ago on september 2nd when she was first put on a short course of antibiotics. and then again on september 9th when the democratic nominee was diagnosed pneumonia. on that day put on a ten-day course of antibiotics. she has remained healthy and has not developed new medical conditions this year other than
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the pneumonia and a sinus and ear infection and, "she continue t to remain healthy and fit to serve as president of the united states." this is the information that was promised a couple days ago by hillary clinton's campaign not long after she stumbled getting into a van following her departure from a 9/11 memorial ceremony in new york. that moment caught on camera helped to increase concerns about the former secretary of state's health and sort of fueled internet rumors and conspiracy theories about her also creating concerns about the candidate's transparency and openness. the campaign has admitted it could have done a better job in handling the release of information about the situation and is hoping this letter puts the controversy behind mrs. clinton, although she has lost some days from the campaign trail while recuperating. back to you. >> joe, part of the intrigue here is that politically donald trump had an opportunity to play this to advantage. hillary clinton seemed infirm
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and he wanted to say how look how robust i am. the way he's doing it is raising questions. he went on daytime talk show dr. oz and talked to the host about his health. the interview is set to air today. we already do know one point. trump used that same controversial doctor, dr. bornsteen to report his findings. the primary question, how healthy is the 70-year-old republican nominee? for that sarah marie is live in new york where trump is scheduled to speak later today. what do we know? >> well, good morning, chris. look, we know that donald trump doesn't exercise all that much. we know he wants to lose about 15 pounds. but we don't know a whole lot of details and that's largely because even though he released the results of his recent physical, he hasn't made them public. he did rely on a little reality television flare in terms of revealing on television.
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>> why not share your medical records? >> i really have no problem in doing it. i have it right here. should i do it? i don't care. it's two letters. one is the report and the other is from lennox hill hospital. >> may i see them? >> yeah, sure. >> now, of course, all of this comes as there is a much bigger focus on transparency in terms of the health of both of those candidates and while donald trump has been taking a respectful tone when it comes to navigating hillary clinton's health issues at the 9/11 service, he couldn't avoid getting in a dig when he was campaigning in ohio last night taking a swipe at hillary clinton's stamina. >> you think this is so easy. in this beautiful room that is 122 degrees. i don't know, folks, do you think hillary would be able is to stand up here for an hour and
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do it? i don't think so. >> still going to be relatively limited information, not a complete medical history like we've seen previous nominees provide. they don't feel the need to release much more beyond that. trump switching gears entirely and here at the wardolf historia. how he is going to pay for the many plans he ruposproposed. >> thanks for that reporting. let's discuss everything we learned with mark preston, "washington post" political reporter and dr. sanjay gupta. great to have all of you here. there is politics and health. let me start with you, sanjay, about her health. two-page letter that hillary clinton's doctor released. filled with lab results and the vitamins she's on and what she's not deficient in. what did you see in reading this letter? >> first of all, it's a letter. it's not medical records.
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all this talk whether medical records are going to be released. neither one had medical records released. the bigger thing was a description of what happened to the recent health episode. the pneumonia. she got a c.a.t. scan to diagnose that and put on antibiotics. ten days of an antibiotic known as leviquin. throughout the year she had several scans. ct scan of her sinuses and brain and ct scan of her lungs. >> because she has seasonal allergies and signsinusitis. sometimes you'll do that and the brain showed no abnormalities which is important because going back to 2012 there was all these questions was there some sort of injury to the brain. the ct has reported no evidence of abnormalities. >> you're satisfied with this letter? >> we're reading a summary of someone's interpretation of all the medical records.
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>> what do we usually get? what are we comparing this to as a standard? >> this is typically what we get. in 2008 john mccain released his medical records about 1,000 pages and i got a chance to look at those, but, typically, it's a letter like this and some type of summary by a physician who has been treating the person for a long time. >> how is this playing politically in terms of who looks kn in this and who doesn't? >> sort of hard to say. i like to look at the poll numbers and there really isn't polling on this yet. how much information we expect from our candidates. one thing that we're seeing or being reinforced here is a partisan interpretation to that. people who like donald trump think he has given enough information on his taxes and enough information in general and people feel the same way about hillary clinton. the question that is really interesting undercutting all this is what is the standard? should we give thousands of pages or is a letter of a
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summary enough? whether such a letter is enough, particularly when there is an acute incident that happens. but, i think that mostly voters are going to look at this through the lens at which they look at the candidates, either positively or negatively. >> hillary has this doctor who, by all accounts, is a real doctor. trump goes on dr. oz and, once again, uses his dr. borstein. he is controversial by any measure and he wrote a letter that was ridiculous the first time putting out his findings. so, they did it in different ways. does any of that matter? >> honestly, i don't really think so. if you ask someone who is a fervent trump supporter how they feel about the letter, they would disagree with your assessment. a lot of opraises in there. >> that ends the analysis of the letter. doctors don't write hyperbolic letters that are filled with crazy assessments of what
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somebody's supreme health is. >> sure. >> doesn't matter how you feel about it. that doesn't matter what dr. sanjay gupta does in a real letter about anything. am i wrong about this? >> lacked in objective data, as well. it didn't have some simple objective data that you would look at for someone's risk of heart disease and different things. >> dr. trump's health and it was not a real disclosure of his medical records. he had in his pocket one-page letter that he revealed on dr. oz and dr. oz got to take a look at. so, does that politically answer any lingering questions? >> no. look, philip is right. what a made for tv moment when he sits down and tells dr. o z, we're not going to discuss specifics or specifics about it and sits down and pulls out the piece -- look what i have in my
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hand here. >> it's good tv. >> let's talk about politics. the politics of it, though, he is trying to reach a constituency that he's not doing great with now. that is women. he's doing well with married women, but not doing well with single women. so, when he goes on dr. oz, you're talking about a constituency of viewership that is largely comprised of women. that's why he did that. and, guess what, we're going to be talking about it all day today, as well. to his point, he thinks that he is not only hitting that constituency, but hitting the main stream media. it is worth noting, this isn't the first time that we've had a politician go on a program that is not main stream media necessarily, right? we've seen the obamas do it all through -- >> clinton just went on kimmel you know in this first brush about health and she was joking about it. >> there's a lot of different venues, but clearly a stunt. >> here is a moment from dr. oz and donald trump's exchange. watch this.
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>> let's talk about stamina. you use that word a lot. you made it an issue in this campaign. you argue that a president has to have a tremendous amount of stamina. if elected at age 70 you will be the oldest person to ever enter the oval office. why do you think you have the stamina for the job? >> just about the same age as ronald reagan and hillary is a year behind me. just based on my life, i actually, i don't know if this makes sense, i feel as good today as i did when i was 30. >> sanjay, what else was revealed on the show about donald trump's health? >> first, i wish i felt as good as i did when i was 30. we're going to, obviously, see the full show when he has the results released later today. i talked to dr. oz yesterday and asked about this. one thing he zeroed in on was heart. dr. oz is a heart surgeon. he had a ct of his heart looking for calcium. that looked good.
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also an ecocardiogram of his heart and various lab tests. how dr. oz sort of summarized it for me is he said those tests all look good for a man of his age. >> his weight was a question. >> his weight is a question because we're not exactly sure what his weight is i heard 236 and i heard 267 and audience members heard that and he is 6'3" in height. >> that would be overweight. if it were 267 and he's 6'2" or 6'3", he would be oobese. >> bmi of anything over 30 is considered obese. if he was 236 he would be overweight. >> now, we all respect the medical profession very much, but these numbers that we're getting from them, we don't know for sure that these are the numbers, right? because we're not getting any raw material. how much skepticism do you feel comfortable putting into this? this isn't an accounting firm
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that has forensically gone over data. doctors who sanjay has said in the past, a culiege e coliegeal. how much backup should we ask for when we have not gotten backup before except for mccain? >> i think the question here is a fundamental question of both trust of the candidate to, you know, a secondary degree trust to the people they're hiring to provide the information. that is the fundamental question. if you think donald trump is someone who says he weighs 236 pounds instead of 267. he could stand on a scale -- >> that is a different show. that is "the biggest loser" show. >> he would never be on that show. just the title alone. >> so many questions in this campaign where we have to take the candidates on trust. more of an issue this year than we have seen in past campaigns
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because so much of this campaign has questioned the extent to which we can trust candidates in general, much less these two candidates. >> he's playing to an advantage here any way you look at it. hillary clinton had the episode where she fainted and fell on to that van. she had the 2012 episode and not him. never a check on his health. he eats mcdonald's and runs around like a machine. >> they both run around like a machine in terms of their stamina. i'm not sure how much voters want to hear about colonoscopy results. >> all day. >> i look at those in my free time. forget about work time. donald trump is now on top in several battleground state polls. what is working for the campaign? what does hillary clinton face as the biggest challenge to his momentum? next.
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hillary failed on the economy just like she has failed on foreign policy. everything she touched didn't work out. nothing. now hillary clinton -- >> mr. trump, i invited you here to thank us for -- >> oi i invited you here -- >> okay. during his visit to the city wednesday. this as trump is gaining ground in several new battleground state polls. let's take a look at those polls with mark preston and philip bump and bring in cnn political analyst david gregory. good to see you. let's put the polls up. we have ohio. these are our numbers. cnn polls. trump 46, clinton 41, gary johnson and stein to about 10%. florida 47, 44, 6 and 1.
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david, you're new to the panel. the reasons why we hear profe professor ron brownstein, saying i told you. trump is moving up with college educated white men. >> this has been a area of concern that that area of strength college educated white voters were generally trending away from trump. that, of course, is republican stronghold. even as he does well with those without a college degree that he was losing that other key group. so, we see a change there. we've seen a change in the national picture for sure. and here trump, if you look at states like ohio, like florida where he's doing better. one in florida where he has got a home there and has a base of support and won so handily in the primaries and in ohio where the rust belt part of the country where his message is
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likely to resonate more. certainly according to his campaign. >> what is trump doing that is now attracting college-educated white men? >> well, a couple things that are going on right now. first of all, we're actually seeing a coming together of a republican party that has been ultimately fractured. just really unbelievably fractured over this past year and taken this long for it to come together. that is part of what is happening with these numbers. also seeing hillary clinton have a terrible month of august. questions about her honesty and trustworthy and i know her supporters hate when we say that because they say donald trump is not honest and trustworthy and the e-mail server didn't hurt. what is also interesting in those numbers where we're seeing a deficit for her is that we're seeing that younger voters. now, if you look at the state of ohio, that, voters under the age of 45 do, you know, tend to go democrat. it's now a wash in ohio, which is amazing. down in florida, she's only up six. this was a major part of the obama coalition that not only
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helped make history in '08 but get him re-elected in 2012. >> it's an instruction. we said when he was going to flint, michigan, yesterday. he has to be careful in places like flint, michigan, where they have a population, largely a minority population that doesn't want to hear what is wrong, but how you're going to fix it. what is the lesson for trump in that about how you have to tweak message to your audience? >> the broader lesson of these polls is his transnition to a more traditional style of candidate has been successful. that he's brought in this new team. that he has changed his message. i think part of what we're seeing with these white college educated voters is they are specifically trying to reach out to them by saying we're going to reach out to the african-american community and soften our position on immigration. that was targeting the white college educated voters and it looks successful. one thing i would add to younger
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voters we saw this national poll that shows among in a four-way race younger voters people aged 18 to 34, if i remember correctly, hillary clinton leads gary johnson by only two points. >> you know, we have the national poll that you're referring to, but not just among the younger voters. the four-way race. let's look at this. clinton gets 41%. trump gets 39%. gary johnson gets 13%. jill stein gets 4%. david gregory, that 13% has become significant. >> yes, i continue to be impressed by that number both nationally and then i think it was the florida number you showed where if you combine the two, that's double digits. that is a real factor. we go back and look at these races whether you go all the way back to 1992 with that 7% in florida. >> ohio is where it comes to 10, david. >> and even ralph nader, of course, in 2000 having an impact. so, i continue to look at that johnson number as potentially
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really disruptive where the combination is really disruptive. the larger point here as we see the larger numbers is that not only you've seen a bad month or a bad several weeks for hillary clinton, but you've also seen something we haven't seen from donald trump. new discipline and new leadership. but the fact that he went to flint michigan in the first place shows that he is going to try. he is going to try to change his tone. for a disruptive moment we played at the top of the segment, i thought he played that off incredibly well by saying we're not going to do that. we'll go back and talk about flint. i thought that was very well handled on his part and shows his maturity as a candidate. there is a different tone and the way he's speaking to women. they're being very disciplined about how they're trying to help him rebilitate himself among key voting groups. >> it also seems that people have a short memory. the concern would be he can change now. he can bring in other people, but what about all the other
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things he's said and done. >> or maybe just plugged in now after labor day. >> but you're still going to know about what has been said. i think people probably have been a little bit more engaged than usual in this campaign. but what is your take on that? >> to your point, we saw this happen last night at a rally where donald trump has been incredibly disciplined and hasn't been attacking a hillary clinton personally. hasn't been calling her crooked hillary too much. but last night hillary clinton has this medical episode or whatever we want to call it where it looks like she collapses and donald trump goes radio silent on it until last night where he then kind of takes a jab at her and says, listen, i'm up here in this room and it's 128 degrees. can hillary do it? he fell back into the trap of donald trump kind of being the bully in the room. >> she did faint and fall into a van. >> not a question about -- >> they say her campaign says she is only trying -- >> that's their job. we don't know what happened.
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they probably don't know either. who knows what in terms of the hillary campaign. >> last night it was about tone. >> he said stamina. in the past they might have said, who knows what he might have said. but, again, philip bump, maybe alyison is right. >> i think that's the case. i think the problem that trump had had for so long he kept stepping on his own message. he'd come out and seem like the right way to go and the next day say something that is off the wall. i think it's true. people are paying attention. everyone in this country you ask what donald trump's main policy is and they'd say build the wall. they suggest they still see donald trump. at no point in time donald trump had fewer than 56% of the country thought that donald trump was unqualified to be president. those are huge numbers, right, that he has not been able to have come down. quick programming note, be
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sure to join us tomorrow. clinton's former rival senator bernie sanders will be back on "new day" tomorrow. also to tell you about a deadly typhoon tearing through china packing winds of more than 100 miles per hour. millions flooded and without power this morning. the latest on the devastation there when "new day" returns. with hyaluronic acid it plumps skin cells with intense hydration and locks it in. for supple, hydrated skin. hydro boost. from neutrogena
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time now for the five things to know for your new day. number one, hillary clinton returns campaigning today as her doctor gives more details about her pneumonia. a two-page letter put out that says clinton is fit for office. donald trump talks about his weight and cholesterol on today's "dr. oz show." hillary clinton has events in north carolina and d.c. donald trump will speak about the economy at waldorf. endorsing gary johnson for president. it is the first time in 100 years that the paper hasn't backed a republican. the publisher calling donald trump a liar. now to a serious story.
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a 13-year-old boy shot and killed by columbus police overnight. he was shot multiple times but his weapon turned out to be a bb gun. one person dead, dozens more hurt after typhoon miranti walloped eastern china. heavy rain cut power to nearly 2 million homes and dumped more than 20 inches of rain in taiwan' of course, extensive flooding. >> look at those winds. well, for more on the five things to know, you can go to newdaycnn.com for all the latest. hillary clinton and donald trump are struggling with issues of transparency. how much the voters deserve to know. will either play to advantage here? will either do something different? we're going to debate it next on "new day." afoot and light-hearted i take to the open road. healthy, free, the world before me,
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giving records or medical records. on the other side, you have hillary clinton who didn't want to disclose her pneumonia. who is more transparent and are both candidates held tathe same standard? let's debate this. we have to discuss cnn commentator mary katherine and "usa today" columnist kristen. mary katherine, are voters entitled to see explicit medical records from the candidates? >> yes. >> there's no law. >> no, i think they are some of the older candidates we've had and perfect reason to ask for these things. precedent with mccain having to do it in the past and i would like them to is go full mccain and have information for folks. because they have a pattern of sort of hiding things and evading leads people to think, well, what is there here? i think hillary on the health question more than trump because he hasn't had public episodes that we've seen. >> she has disclosed more. if you consider these two pages
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of fairly specific details about blood pressure and cholesterol and lab results. do you think they're both as opaque or is she more transparent than he? >> i think she's released more but it's less risky for him to ask for hers because she had a history with the blood condition and the clot and the brain injury. people have questions with her. with him, although some of his stats don't look super great, there hasn't been some glaring event. so, politically, less risky for him than it is for her. >> kristen, do you want to see more from them in terms of medical records? >> look, what needs to happen is what happened with john mccain. you have journalists that can come in and look at the medical records. do they have to release them out so we can all pore over them? i don't think so. medical journalists look at them and analyze the records, not rely on it as sanjay gupta has talked a lotthies doctors who
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are chummy with these candidates. you need to have some sort of outside independent source to look at them. they are older. frankly, even if they were young, i think they should do it. because of their ages, i think they both should let their medical records be pored over by at least a handful of medical journalists. >> on the flip side, this is a new demand from journalists and voters, mary katherine. yes, john mccain broke the mold when he released 1,700 pages of his medical records but also in recent history, we didn't know a lot about presidents' health, even when they were in the white house. famously jfk and fdr, when i look at these letters and i read about a breast exam and an ultrasound. >> are you telling me you don't want to know about trump's colonoscopy? >> are we going a little bit overboard here, ladies? >> i actually don't think we are. i think we should have known more in the past and if we
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don't, then the voters actually need to know this information to make a decision about who's going to run the free world for possibly eight years. it's a long period of time. >> kirsten, do you see them as equally transparent or equally untransparent? >> well, at this point, i would say they're not equally transparent. i mean, clearly, if you look at the taxes, you know, she's released almost 40 years of taxes and he's released none. so, right there we can see that one person is being a lot more transparent with something that i think is very important and trump keeps saying the stuff about how, you know, he can't release them because the audit, but he's not under audit for the last 40 years. which is about what she's released. so, he could release other taxes so we could look at at least that, assuming that he's -- he's allowed to release them under audit but he doesn't want to. >> to interrupt you for one second as we pointed out on the
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show. we don't have proof that he's under audit. we're taking his word for it. we haven't seen the irs letter. >> which brings me to the next point. they are taking a very hostile attitude about anyone who asks them questions. the campaign with other people accusing people of badgering them for asking for basic information. this is a real problem. so they also said this with "washington post" when they asked them questions about the foundation. now an offense against the trump campaign to ask them questions. when people have a right to know some basic facts, i mean, why can't they just release the letter from his accountant saying he's under audit? they want us to not badger him, but we're supposed to be badgering hillary clinton about everything. we're supposed to ask questions. >> at least information. what we want is the letter from the irs. but furthermore, as you point out -- >> that's what i meant, the irs. >> the irs said we have no problem with seeing the taxes
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publicly while under audit. so, he is clearly less transparent than she on tax records. >> certainly on the tax. >> do we have a right to see his tax records? >> i think that's obvious. they're plenty brickly about people asking questions about anything. hillary clinton is running into what all the republican candidates ran into. this guy is so unconventional and so different that many journalists and the whole political apparatus doesn't know how to treat him in getting him to the point ask asking him for the same things is just a struggle. there is no basic campaign surrounding him in the same way we have known in the past. you don't know who to go to and who to get answers from and who his communication people are and who might respond. very frustrating for people who go up against him, as we saw in the primaries. >> mary katherine, kirsten, thank you very much. chris? you ready for some twitter football? the jets and bills set to kick off week two with a first for the nfl.
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what's that first? we'll tell you next. go jets. this is the rx, elevated. this is the pursuit of perfection. yeah. well, we gotta hand it thto fedex. glasses. they've helped make our e-commerce so easy, and now we're getting all kinds of new customers. i know. can you believe we're getting orders from canada, ireland... this one's going to new zealand. new zealand?
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[phone buzzing] some things are simply impossible to ignore. the strikingly designed lexus nx turbo and hybrid. the suv that dares to go beyond utility. this is the pursuit of perfection. broncos linebacker brandon marshall lost two endorsement deals whi s for kneeling during national anthem. we have the news for you this morning with andy sholes. >> brandon marshall says he's going to donate $300 for every tacket he makes to organizations in the denver community.
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now, this comes after he lost those two endorsements for joining his college teammate colin kaepernick during his protest of kneeling during the nation al anthem. marshall said his intent was to simply raise awareness and create some dialogue towards affecting positive change in our communities and earlier this week he met with denver police chief to discuss his protest. >> i grasp, you know, more understanding of what they go through and, you know, the different trials and test that it is to be a police officer and he kind of got my side of the spiel, as well. and how some people are feeling, as well. i think it was a good meeting. >> all right, the jets and bills will hit the field tonight and the first ever thursday night game streamed live on twitter. and you don't even have to have a twitter account to watch the game on the site or app. just download the app and you're all set or watch the game by going to tnf.twitter.com on your
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desktop, computer or ipad. when you're in your jammies tonight going to bed you can watch the game on your phone and tweet about it at the exact same time. >> the jets are going to win, right, andy? >> they're a point and a half favorite. >> when did you become a politician. >> thanks, andy. the 2016 campaign forcing fact checkers to work overtime. what are the five biggest falsehoods in this race so far? politifact is here next with their list. thisthe only pick-up50. with a high strength, military-grade, aluminum-alloy body. of all the full-size, half ton pickups, it's got the highest gas mileage, best payload, and 12,200 pounds of towing power. plus, no body rust. and this is the safest f-150 ever built.
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did you know people can save over $500 when they switch to progressive? did you brush your hair today? yes, mom. why? hmm. no reason. transparency, accountability, testing. that's what you should be asking for from the media. and an easy way for you to ask that is, hey, what they say true? is what they say true? that's hard for us, but that's the job. so, when you look at this campaign and both candidates, what have been the five things
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that show really glaring errors when it comes to having a relationship with the truth? we've got answers for you. joining us right now to geover what the candidates are saying and what's true? politifact editor angie. so, you've given us your top five and you could have top 55, but let's do 5 and we'll start with donald trump and mexico. donald trump says the mexican government, they send the bad ones over. that's what he says. that claim, how did you judge it? >> we rated this one pants on fire. that means, inaccurate and ridiculous. there's no evidence to support this. most of the people who have come over from mexico are looking for jobs and work. and that's why we saw illegal immigration drop precipitously during the recession. so, we talked to a lot of experts who study the border and
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migration patterns and criminal justice and they said this is a myth. so, pants on fire. >> also ignores the context that many of the people who are here illegally overstay visas after flown to the country. not all running across this border that allegedly needs a wall. so, now, hillary clinton. fbi director comey called her comments about e-mail truthful. >> comey was careful to steer away from any endorsement like that. he said her actions were careless. so, this one, not true. we rated it pants on fire. >> now, the confusion we get into and i'm sure you do, too. she did something illegal. it was illegal. she broke the law. how do you handle that claim? >> you know, she has not been -- the fbi declined to bring any case against her. so, as far as the legal system goes, that's not, that's not right now. and, you know, there's some
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other sense that the experts we talked to said this was bad for archiving purposes. it was bad for transparency purposes. but illegal, the government prosecutors didn't make that case. >> all right, back to donald trump. trump says he opposed the iraq war. as you know, this has been a big one on this show. i offer people a "new day" mug which is a coveted item, if they can show us any proof that trump was against the war before it actually was well under way. how do you rate it? >> we rated this false. it's not accurate. he keeps saying it. we've been fact checking this one along with all the other fact checkers for months. he points to an "esquire" article that was published well after the war started. so, this one is just wrong, too. >> he has that transcript that his supporters refer to that does not help his cause. so, hillary clinton said she never sent or received
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classified info via e-mail. what do you have? >> we rated this one false. there was classified information in her e-mail and some was marked. the clinton team will argue it wasn't marked properly with headers and that is fine. but there was classified information in the e-mail and comey's report said she should have realized this. >> okay. then trump on tax returns. donald trump says his financial disclosures more than make up for lack of releasing tax returns. what do you say? >> totally false. he says he has all this disclosure. actually, the tax returns are huge area where we don't have any transparency. the tax returns would show which of his assets produced income. they would show some of his financial ties. and they would show how much he gives to charity. that's become an issue in recent weeks. about the tax returns are not released so there are all these things that we don't know about donald trump's finances that we
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normally know about the major candidates. >> what is your take on how difficult the climate is right now? you have clinton gives out 40 years of taxes and frump won't give out any because he's under proof of audit. he could go back 30 years in taxes, if he wanted. his opponent went 40. you can't get the information unless he gives it to you. how hard is it to fact check? >> it's challenging, but there is some things we know about trump's financial records. some things we know about his business background and that sort of thing is being revealed. i would expect donald trump to be challenged on this during the debates. the presidential candidates releasing their tax returns. not that they are required to, but they always do. it's like a cultural norm. so, he's breaking with this. now, sometimes the candidates decide to do things differently, the climate changes, but this is a big thing. this is significant information that's not available to the public. >> you know, i don't think this
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should be an issue, about trump's wife. bill clinton was different, he was president of the united states. but she gives her immigration information to immigration lawyer and he puts out a letter vetting it and that is not helpful to us because he can only judge as a lawyer, not as some independent body what he gave her. this has little tricky. >> we always want to verify information and we want to be able to look at it ourselves. our fact-checking reports we list all the sources and if the information is online we link to it. not just journalists, but the public. they don't want to take people's word for it. they want to see the evidence and the documentation for themselves. >> now we have this issue with trump and his business dealings not to suggest that they are bad, but he does so much international business, we should show what it is. that information is largely under his own control. as it becomes public we know you'll be on it and we look
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forward to having you back on the show. if people want to join more of this discussion and learn, go to politifact.com and read for yourself. a lot of news including focus on health of the presidential candidates. new information out there and what does it mean? let's get to it. >> it seems like something from "wizard of oz." >> that's not giving the people the answer they're entitled to. >> why not share your medical records. >> i don't have a problem in doing that. >> the american people deserve to know what he's up to. >> lying in bed getting her better and we want her better and back on the trail. >> america's got a lot of business men and women who succeeded without revealing their tax returns. >> in terms of being transparent, he has very little credibility after everything she did with respect to her e-mails. >> we already met a high standard of transparency.
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this is "new day" with chris cuomo and alyison camerota. a picture of health in the campaign. hillary clinton will get back on the trail today after being sidelined for three days by pneumonia. clinton releasing a letter to the public from her doctor declaring she is "fit to serve as president." donald trump reportedly offering some details about his health on a daytime talk show. trump acknowledging that he is overweight and teasing a full report from his recent physical will come out soon. it's 54 days until the election day. early voting just eight days away and 11 days until the first debate. we have it all covered for you and let's begin with jeff zellany. what's the latest? >> good morning. hillary clinton is heading back to the campaign trail and going to north carolina later today. her first stop since sunday. she, of course, has been sidelines here in chappaqua with that diagnose of pneumonia. she has released new medical
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details and calling on donald trump to do the same as transparency becomes front and center in this presidential campaign. >> secretary clinton, how are you feeling? >> hillary clinton's campaign releasing a two-page letter from her physician, dr. lisa bardack shedding more light on clinton's pneumonia diagnosagnosidiagnosi. clinton continues to improve after collapsing and leaving early from the 9/11 memorial on sunday. dr. bardack said clinton had a chest x-ray last week which revealed a mild, noncontagious form of bacterial pneumonia and she was placed on medication for ten days. her second visit to the doctor in a week. dr. bardack writing, she is recovering well with antibiotics and rest. she continues to remain healthy and fit to serve as president of the united states
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