tv New Day CNN November 11, 2016 3:00am-4:01am PST
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let's begin our coverage with cnn jason carroll, he has the latest. jasen? >> reporter: president edect donald trump calling tweeting overnight they are professional protesters incited by the media. this as largely peaceful protesters across the street take to the second night in a r. the stark protest to the pageantry at the white house earlier in the day. trump speaking with president obama for an hour and a half inside the oval office. >> we talked about foreign policy. we talked about domestic policy. and, as i said last night, my number one priority in the coming two months is to try to facilitate a transition that ensures our president-elect is successful. >> reporter: the pair striking a
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conciliatory tone. >> we discussed a lot of different situations. some wonderful and some difficulties. i very much look forward to dealing with the president in the future, including council. mr. president, it was a great honor being with you and i look forward being with you many more times in the future. >> reporter: kind words shared years of vitriol the birther conspiracy throughout the presidency and vowing to rip apart obama's legacy while out on the campaign trail. >> immediately repealing and replacing obama care! >> reporter: obama, in turn, rebuking trump's run. >> he is temperamentally unfit to be commander in chief. >> reporter: thursday was all about respect. first lady michelle obama meeting with melania trump over tea. president-elect ending his world war ii meeting with two men he
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had been at odds with at the capitol. >> we had a fantastic meeting and going to work for the american people. donald trump had one of the most impressive victories we've ever seen. >> i think we're going to do some absolutely spectacular things for the american people. we look forward to starting. in fact, we can't get started fast enough. we're going to lower taxes, as you know. we're going to fix health care and make it more affordable and better. we're going to do a real job to the public and that's what we want to do. >> reporter: pausing to take in the view from where he will be sworn in 70 days from now. >> okay, we have a lot to talk about. let's bring in our cnn panel. political anchor of time warner cable news errol louis, philip bump and jackie kucinich.
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errol, about a 30-hour period through his sit down with president obama, which seemed totally subdued and conciliatory where democrats were hopeful, maybe he is a different donald trump. >> but then it didn't last. >> the pivot and then the tweet about the media, about the protests being unfair. ducking and dodging the press pool and it seemed like campaign trump was back. where are you on all this? >> listen, something that shouldn't need to be said but it ought to be said is that the way the president-elect acts is by definition presidential, since he's going to inherent the job. he's going to redefine some parts of it. that's not going to go over easy with a lot of people. i will remind everybody of what happened when ronald reagan took
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office. you couldn't possibly have the inauguration on the western side of the capital. well, that's what he did and every president since then has done the same. you couldn't name al hague and remember these names from the past. all these people were part of watergate and going to start a nuclear war. this can't happen. it can happen. and this is what people, 59, 60 million people decided was going to happen. >> can he do away with the press pool that has traditionally been following a president for decades? >> look, i think he's going to find everyone would find is that you have to be able to communicate. for better or worse, thanks to the first amendment and thanks to the long traditions of this country, you have to work with the press or it's just not going to be worth it. >> but he can, he can ditch the pool, if he wants. >> he can ditch the pool, if he wants. there will be a consequence to that. they'll discover over time it's not worth the negative feedback you're going to get.
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look, the whole exchange about twitter. hey, the press is inciting these people out on the streets. well, that's a sign that you have to get your communications and messaging under control. low and behold, here is this big press pool that is here to help you do that. >> but people actually agree with him. a perception among his followers that he beat the media. i don't think it's a coincidence that he put it that in his tweet. the tweets we're talking about, one just came out from president-elect trump. now professional protesters incited by the media are protesting. unfair. we can't let this happen. we should march on washington and stop this travesty. our nation is totally divided. philip bump, what do you see? >> i would say consistency has not been the hallmark of president-electness so far.
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i am alarmed by this, quite frankly. i think that donald trump has an opportunity now. he's already won. this is a moment of graciousness. this is a moment when you as a winner build a new relationship with people who voted against you and that's what thought that tweet does. it continues to put a wall between the free press that exists in the united states and trump supporters. it continues to reinforce that divide. and that is not helpful to donald trump as president and very much not helpful to the united states of america. what we're going to see here is that donald trump has consistently fall against the press. he has beaten the press instead of even being gracious with the press, he has take an new drexz. see riots literally outside your door at trump tower in manhattan. that said, it is his responsibility to make the case for why he will not pea the president that those people are afraid of. and it is not professional attitude, it is young people and people of color who are freaked
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out by president-elect trump. >> it is called leadership to try to quell the anxiety that people are feeling or frustration. >> it's a first amendment right and it could be helpful to the president-elect. let the protests happen and show that you can be graceful about it and the biggest man in the room and that you rise above and let time pass. that's leadership. >> yesterday, donald trump and president obama sat down together at the white house. it was this sort of jaw dropping image for lot of people, possibly even president obama, but president obama said very encouraging things. he said they had an excellent conversation and donald trump changed his tune radically about president obama. let's watch this moment. >> we now are going to want to do everything we can to help you succeed because if you succeed, then the country succeed. >> i very much look forward to dealing with the president in the future, including council.
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explained some of the difficulties, some of the high-flying assets and some of the really great things that have bipartisan achieved. so, mr. president, it was a great honor being with you, and i look forward to being with you many, many more times in the future. >> thank you. >> it was a great honor being with you. >> but that's what we should be seeing right now. that right there. >> but his followers might say, jackie, that's bs. he doesn't believe that. obama doesn't like him. he doesn't like obama. >> they're entitled to that opinion. but donald trump said on election night, he is the president for everyone. and that shows that he's willing to do that. shaking hands with the president. saying he's a good man. that actually is normal. that looked like a normal transition of power and i think that's what settles nerves. that's what makes people who didn't vote for donald trump,
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who might be protesting in the streets and are scared. they need to see that trump be a little bit more consistent to know it's going to be okay. so, when he tweets later on that the media is insigciting professional protesters, that is very dissident to that. that doesn't help the situation right now. the country is very divided and it is his job to bring people together. >> how do you make sense of it, errol? journalists have a hard time with discrepancies like that. we point that out. that's how we do for our professional living. so, after all the things, the hateful things that about president obama and president obama returning some of the tone, what was that moment yesterday? >> well, i think, look, we normally see hard-fought, bitter campaigns. let's think back to 1988 and think back to 1992. this was a lot of rough words get said and then you sort of bring it together and you get
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the signs and symbols of unity that we saw yesterday. this went a little further outside the bounds. quite a bit further outside the bounds that we're used to seeing and we're in the oval office in the heart of the american power doing the things even with sort of a grimace on their face shows that the public is going to endure. that's a reassuring sign, a good first step. obviously, when it comes to the policies and the personnel and the relationship with congress, there are a lot of open questions that i think the press should focus on rather than getting hung up by a tweet that i think most people think are ridiculous. the media in seattle and denver and atlanta and new york all conspire to put thousands of people -- >> that part. i hear you. the substance is ridiculous. you're not worried that that is something bad is going to happen. >> this notion of a media empire. a lot of times it was reported,
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if he loses he'll start a media empire. if you look at what was really being put out there is that he's going to form his own sort of channel in the event that he wins. so, he's trying to figure out his communication strategy. we know it will involve social media in a way that was never really possible before. we know it will involve, possibly, this trump tv thing and it's going to also involve the politics of him being in an antagonistic relationship with the main stream press because that is part of his politics. his supporters love it. we all know, has a different kind of relationship. he he sort of has some understanding of the inner workings and played that to his advantage. it's going to be a sorting oout period. >> are you worried? >> less so. i think that what's being described there, part of the challenge we've seen over the course of this election cycle is that there is misinformation out there. things that are false or outright lies or misleading.
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that have been embraced by alternative media sites and kids in macedonia making stuff up. there's all this nonsense out there. the media exists to provide accuracy and facts to the people and donald trump recognizes. we saw starting in 2012 social media provided to step around the media. as president, that's hugely problematic. >> panel, thank you very much. stick around. >> stick around. remarkable display of unity. it hasn't all been bad. president obama making nice with the man that once was dismantling his presidency, the birther movement. also dead set on getting rid of president obama's signature achievement, the aca. what does president trump mean for president obama's legacy? next. what makes this simple salad the best simple salad ever? heart healthy california walnuts. the best simple veggie dish ever?
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there has been progress. we've seen president-elect donald trump and house speaker paul ryan meeting, talking about priorities and putting the people first. putting the politics behind them for the first 100 days in office. so, what are those ideas? what might we see? let's discuss with a good group
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of reporters. errol louis, philip bump, jackie kucinich. what do you think we see out of the box before policy. how about on the political side? is this real, do you think they're having that meeting of the mind to put others before their own politics? >> i think that we have not seen donald trump taking an active interest in the details of policy at any time over the course of this campaign. mcconnell are excited to have a republican president that doesn't come in with a lot of predisposed notions about what he wants to have done. paul ryan has a lot of plans of what he would like to see. i think that we are for democrats who are already freaked out about president trump. you know, the republicans have carte blanche to do what they want to do on capitol hill and i don't know that donald trump is going to put a lot of barriers in their way. >> a new tweet from donald trump that we're told is more positive about the media. we're just reading it now.
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love the fact that the small groups of protesters last night have passion for our great country. we will all come together and be proud. positive about the protesters. there you go. that's the message that you were hoping in the last segment. >> he's watching you, again, errol. >> truly, i wasn't hoping for anything. in all seriousness, i think we'll all be in a lot of trouble if the media worries constantly about what the president-elect is going to do and worried hess about what we are going to do. we have a huge amount of work in front of us with the 75 lawsuits against the president-elect. what's going to happen to those. with the implementation of that first 100 days and day number one, matter of fact, on the issues which are fairly complex with capitol hill. where paul ryan and mcconnell, they have to sort of figure out how they're going to work with this president-elect and get some of this legislation moved. >> you mean our jobs as journalists we have to go deeper and be more ininvestigative and more thorough and not just
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follow every tweet. >> exactly. you know, it's bait. right? it's bait. and it worked all throughout the campaign that the right wing finally get to the bottom of something important and you could have a candidate or even a president-elect who throw something out there and we all go scrambling after it. all these big, important questions, these structural questions and the stuff that ware supposed to be focused on gets swept aside. >> jackae both things can be true. both things can be true because anybody can say whatever they want. the truth is, the country is divided. and it's provable. and it's not just about the protests. it goes way beyond it. this helps. when the president is conciliatory and people are afraid he is the one pushing the division, it helps. we're both true. you have to check what president-elect trump says and you have to dig on what he does. >> i mean, that doesn't erase the last one.
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but, again, yes. we have a very big job ahead of us. but i think that you can do both. you can cover who is putting in government. you can cover his relationship with paul ryan and mitch mcconnell and cover how democrats are frankly trying to put themselves back together at this point. figure out who is leading their party for goodness sake. i think we can do all these things at the same time and we're just not going to get a lot of sleep. >> in the interest of giving him a clean slate, he doesn't double down. >> no, he didn't. >> ordinarily when we talk about something on the show that is outrageous, we double down. he didn't. good for him. >> let's talk about whose cabinet and some of the names who have been floated and what they mean. rudy giuliani. chris talked to him yesterday about attorney general. >> he was certainly talking that way. >> yeah, so, here are some of the names, chris christie, newt gingrich, reince priebus.
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what is the difference between these two. steve bannon, let's start with him were the chief of staff in the white house. >> i don't think anyone knows what that would look like. steve bannon is a very, very, very controversial character for a lot of reasons. the last segment that we were talking about. you know, i mean, i thepg ink hs embraced the all right and provided a platform for it at breitbart to the point of why people are concerned about president trump. putting it into the white house that is disconcerting to people and starkly contrasted with reince priebus who is an establishment figure and calm people's concerns. >> what does donald trump do? does he please ryan and mcconnell and give them the aca repeal and replace, even though
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it can't be done right away. it has to take at least a year by the contracts filled out under law. or does he go for a quick score that is achievable, like rudy giuliani suggested here yesterday. taxes. >> i heard rudy giuliani's statement almost as replays of his days in new york. he got the business community on his side by doing tax reform and trying to implement tax cuts. that's basic. that's republican politics 101. realistically, though, in what has been reported is that on day one, president-elect trump, after he's sworn in, president trump will spend hours issuing executive orders to undo a lot of what was done by president obama. and this is an easy, very quick way to score some political points. symbolically, one or two executive orders that hinder or hamper obama care are as good as it gets for a president on day
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one. the legislative part which folks on capitol hill is going to tell me it will take realistically about 18 months to undo it. that happens later. on day one, lots and lots of ord oe orders to change immigration policy and order the border closed or whatever he is going to do and to scuttle the iran nuclear deal and get obama care on its way to being repealed. >> panel, thanks so much for the great conversation. have a nice weekend. coming up in our next hour, we will hear from billionaire warren buffett about the election results. he sat down with our own poppy h harlow. you've seen the protests and you know why they are there. donald trump's election has created concern. but some of these protests are actually crimes. violence, riots in portland, oregon. who is behind this? we'll tell you, next.
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time now for the five things to know for your new day. president obama and president-elect trump striking a cordial tone after their first-ever meeting at the white house. working together to ensure a smooth transition until trump's swearing in 70 days from now. thousands of anti-trump demonstrators and some vandals staging riots on the streets of portland. police said protesters turned in to criminals, vandalizing
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buildings and even cars. some knocked out power to the city. mr. trump's attorneys spe s seeking to delay the fraud trial until after he is sworn in as president. the judge once criticized by trump based on his mexican herita heritage, you'll remember, is expected to decide by monday, decided by monday trump's lawyers are also not ruling out the possibility of an eventual settlement. a senior isis commander has been killed by a coalition air strike in mosul. once a top officer in saddam hussein's intelligence network. singer/songwriter cohen has died. he was best known for the beautiful song "alleluia." listen to this. but his career and influence spanned decades for the 1960s right up until today.
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leonard cohen was 82 years old. >> he could make you feel and, boy, that is a precious commodity. there are your five things. you want to know more about them, go to cnn.com/newday for the latest. president-elect donald trump. what will happen to the people already covered by the president's signature health care law? we ask one of the people behind the affordable care act, next. e second we're born. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier we're here to make healthier happen.
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one of president-elect trump's signature campaign promises was to repeal and replace obama care. so, how would that affect the millions of people who are covered by obama care? dr. manuel is one of the architects of the act and chair of the medical ethics at the university of pennsylvania and a former adviser of health policy a the director of officer of management and budget. nice to is you here. >> nice to be here. >> for the 20 million people that are covered by so-called obama care, what happens if it is repealed am.
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>> if it is repealed, they will lose their coverage. the big question is, what will you replace it with? for six years republicans have been trying to come up with a replacement bill. they've never actually been able to put a replacement bill out there. they never introduced a replacement bill that is coherent. they had a lots of ideas, but those ideas don't get you what they want. everyone with a pre-existing condition can get an affordable, health insurance package and you get coverage for everyone. >> they will keep that element of obama care. >> here's the irony, you can't keep that element. getting people with conditions insurance that they're guaranteed an affordable price without a mandate. and they don't like the mandate. >> why? ezek, remember, it is everybody's premiums are going up, you can't keep your doctor, we are do better. you're saying there is a big hole in the second part of that statement.
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why? >> first of all, they have never given a proposal that has done better. here's the issue, if only sick people get insurance, right, then the prices go up as we've seen. >> that's more expensive to treat those people. >> that's what we've seen. you have to get everyone in. now, to get everyone in, healthy people, young people, 25 year olds. we saw this with obama care. that's part of the issue going forward. you have to force them to get in. it's called a mandate. you have to say you have to have health health insurance. if you don't have coverage for everyone in the country, you can't guarantee everyone with pre-existing conditions and their coverage at an affordable price. their proposal which is high-risk pools, super concentrate the people with sick conditions and give them incentives to buy insurance or subsidies to buy insurance. that is a very inefficient disaster. for 3 million people it costs $25 billion, that is not a good deal. so, they have a contradiction. that contradiction in their
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proposal has never been able to yield a coherent alternative. that's the replace. so, if you don't have a replace, you just repeal. 20 million people will lose their insurance. i don't othink ththink they actt that headline. some people are going to be harmed by it and then you know what is going to happen. you had people who had coverage under obama care and lost it. >> obama care was one of the things that animated the anti, well, anybody who was against president obama. they felt like it was being shoved down their throats. they never believed his promises that if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor. your premiums are going to go down and, in fact, it did not live up to some of its original promises. i know that you were one of the architects of it. but you have to admit, it did not deliver on all the things that the president said it would. >> i disagree with that. let's dissect, too. first of all, no doubt that the pr around the affordable care act was not good. the administration did not do a
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good job of selling it to the public. that's separate from the has the affordable care act done a good job for the country. the fact is, if you look at the data and you compare the increase of health care premiums under george bush to those to barack obama, he has slowed the rate of growth tremendously saving people thousands of dollars. >> but, ezek -- >> not as much as you're saying. >> that's hard for people to understand. >> here's why it is hard for them to understand. sticker shock. arizona 116% increases, alabama 58% premium increases -- >> sir, 12 states, including big states like california, new jersey, michigan are actually under 10%. some states are even cutting their premiums, massachusetts had a decrease in the premiums. you didn't cite that, interestingly enough. we can both cherry pick. >> why are they so much higher there? >> that's a one-year increase and they're higher for the
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reasons we just said. we have a difficulty of getting young people to buy. penalties weren't high enough. you didn't really have people. and the ratio between what young people pay and old people pay was too narrow at 3-1. should have been broader to lower the premiums for younger people who we needed to get in. those are the two problems. but that's a one-year adjustment. remember, the exchanges open with premiums much lower than anyone expected. they're coming back to what people expected. they're not going super high. >> your dream is that it be fixed. these things be fixed, but not, obviously, repealed. >> over the previous months i have been writing of the kinds of three, four, five things you can do to fix it. no one when we passed the bill thought it was a perfect bill. we knew we'd have to fix it. this is democracy. you're fought going to get a perfect bill on the first time. plus, over six years, we've seen
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other problems. that doesn't mean that overall the bill hasn't been a big su. drugs are going way too high and we have to fix that. but the overall system is actually getting better. we're actually improving substantially. we had 20 million people getting coverage. the rate of cost increase has come down. that's -- and quality, by the way, has gone up. infection rate in hospital and other things have gone down. the irony is the public doesn't see it and think it's a bad bill. >> reality is perception and the way it got passed by forcing it down the throat of the republicans. >> i reject to that. >> engender an animosity. >> we had meetings all through 2009 with republicans. the gang of six, the gang of four and we were negotiating with grasso and a lot of other
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people. they never came to the table with an alternative plan. >> and they're trying to take it away from you. >> there are many reasons and the publicity around it was a mistake, but that doesn't mean that the bill has not been a very big success and improvement on the american health care system. again, let me just put it out there, the republicans have never had a credible alternative that they have been able to pass. it's easy to repeal this bill and not easy to find a credible alte alternative. the idea that we'll solve everything by having insurance sell across state lines, that's not a health care plan that addresses the issue that most people want, which is the pre-existing conditions and the moderating. >> it will take bipartisan support in order to get the fixes that zek and authors are talking about. >> thank you for being here. >> well argued, doc, appreciate it. >> that's my job. explain the affordable care act and the complex health care system to the public because it is complex.
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it is $3 trillion. it's never going to be simple. therefore, i worry the simple solutions are going to replace it without the details, they're going to disappoint a lot of americans. they will not have that pre-existing condition exclusion and i think a lot of people will be very upset with just the repeal. >> as we find out what happens, come back and take us through what works and doesn't work in your opinion. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. what has hillary clinton been up to since conceding the presidential election? we're getting our first look ahead. listerine® kills 99%
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breaking news for you. at least four people killed when a taliban suicide car bomber targeted the german consulate in northern afghanistan. more than 100 others injured. no german diplomats were hurt. this attack happening a week after a joint afghan/u.s. battle against the taliban that killed 30 civilians. that situation is far from over. all right. on a much more peaceful note. are you wondering what hillary clinton has been up to in the past two days? you're looking at the very first picture of hillary clinton since she conceded the race to donald
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trump. she is posing there with margo and her baby. a fellow westchester, new york, resident. bill clinton sflnapped this pho. she was on a hike when she stumbled across the first couple. hillary clinton seemed to be at peace. >> is it true they were collecting mushrooms for a special stew recipe they found? >> a special tea that she'll now be drinking. >> is that true? >> i don't know that to be true. >> we'll find out. team usa plays mexico tonight in what could be one of the most political soccer gamers of the year. we have our man, coy wire on this qualifier for the world cup. but this is about more than the feats, isn't it, my friend? >> this matchup is always tense and intense. tonight's game in columbus, ohio, will be taken to a whole new level. comes just days after the election and president-elect trump's campaign promise that he'd build a wall on the border with mexico.
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players are aware of the potential for heightened tension. team usa captain michael bradley tweeted this before the match "i would hope that every person that comes to the stadium comes ready to enjoy what we all want to be a beautiful game between two sporting rivals that have a lot of respect for each other and hope that it's a special night in every way." the browns thursday night football action. did they do it? nah, they didn't do it. we're starting franchise history. crushed by the ravens last night. 28-7. dropping cleveland to 0-10. since 1944, only four teams have ever gone winless for an entire season. the browns used all three of their quarterbacks in this game. that's the first time that's been done by any team since 2011. alisyn, one other team, the jets -- >> hey, we're trying to be positive here. new start. >> unity.
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>> that's not my shine, that's my aura, cuomo. >> have a nice weekend. president obama and president-elect donald trump praising each other after their meeting yesterday. but what did their body language say? >> tell you what coy wire's body language is saying. when heartburn hits, fight back fast with tums smoothies. it starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue. and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum -tum -tum -tum smoothies! only from tums ♪ ♪ ♪
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president obama calls his meeting with president-elect trump, "excellent." and trump called obama a very fine man. but what did their body language tell us? president of the body language institute janine driver joins us now to explain. these guys gave you a lifetime of material yesterday. let's talk about what you saw. let's put up some pictures of the things that you zeroed in on in terms of what their body language is really saying. here you go. no eye contact at the start of
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their sit down. what does this tell you? >> forget about the start. it takes 1:40 before president obama even looks at trump. so, think about it. if we just meet and i'm introducing you, when people like themselves it's repore. we look at the person and we gestion to the person. wae ju we just met. we don't see any of that here. >> donald trump was holding his hands in a certain way. like this. you call it, it was like this. up like this between like -- >> between his legs. this is called steepling. when we steeple people we intimidate people. this is a go-to move for president-elect trump. we've seen him do this all the way from "the apprentice" day we steeple people and intimidate people and imagine doing this and saying can i talk to you for a second? this is a sense of his power. it can be seen as intimidating. this is his go-to move. the higher the steeple, the more we intimidate people.
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if he were to go higher and up on the elbows, i call this the godfather steeple right here or you lean back and put the crown over your head. you know, the higher the steeple, the more you control people. >> good to know, i plan to use that on chris right after this. president obama, you say, you watch him do these long eyelid closes. what's that? >> yeah, he does that. we call this eye blocking. so when president-elect trump is talking we see president obama listening with the long eye. when we don't like what we see or hear what is happening right in front of us. if you listen to not just the body language but the actual language, we hear donald trump say i have a great respect for and he doesn't finish the sentence. these are sentences and we assume he's saying great respect for the president and he doesn't finish the sentence. donald trump says what? he says i look forward to
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dealing with the president. the word dealing in and of itself. if you say, if you're a babysitter and i'm interviewing you to watch my three sons and you say i'm great at dealing with children. you're not getting the job. there's definitely not a love affair happening here for sure. >> so interesting. you say that president obama, after their handshake, put his hand on his hip. what did that tell you? >> listen, let's talk briefly about the handshake. we see president-elect trump on the left of the picture. we literally dub this in my world, left of picture. he has the upper hand because when we see that picture being taken, you'll see donald trump literally has physically the upper hand. at the end of this, though, we see obama wrapping it up. president obama and then does this half superman pose saying this is still my turf for a couple more weeks to go. we saw something very similar with other world leaders in the past, including, including george w. bush when he first welcomed obama. we saw some of these superman
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poses happening. >> so, hand on the hip means this is my territory, basically. >> it's taking up space. think about it like a dog in heat. peas in the perimeter and marks his it territory. when we take our elbows, i know it's a morning show, i hope i didn't lose any viewers. >> i respect you went there. let's talk about the first ladies. we don't have video but still photos of them. what do you see here in this photo? >> this photo was not thrown outto the media. the media him and awed to get a photo. not a lot of body language, from what you could tell. but we see michelle obama sitting the same exact position that we saw her sitting in eight years ago when she met mrs. bush. laura bush. we saw her on the right side of the picture in the same exact pose with her legs to the side. with melania trump, she's a hard read. she has this serious face, but
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they are mirroring their lower halves and we mirror people that we like. the big take away here is that if you look at the upcoming first lady, first laid eelect, you'll see her sitting like this. if you sit like this, palm to palm, what happens is you increase the heat on the palm of your hand and embody cognition. by the upcoming first lady like this she'll actually like mrs. obama, the first lady. it sends a message to our brain when we meet somebody that they're likable and trustworthy and warm. if you put a cup of coffee in somebo somebody's hand. mike bloomberg used to do this and and today he's a billionaire. we see melania doing this and this makes her see everyone warm and likable. instead of folding her hands like this.
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i'm ballotl i'm bottled up and stressed and anxious. it's very likable and polished and professional. >> fascinating to get your take on all this. thanks so much for walking us through it. >> good morning. >> thank you. >> chris? >> would you like some coffee? >> yes, i would. we're following a lot of news. you're scaring me. >> i don't want to lose this deal here. >> i hope you see what i'm doing. >> i'm doing this because i'm really comfortable. let's get right to it. >> mr. president t was a great honor being with you. >> we want to do everything we can to help you succeed. >> we reject the president-elect. >> because if you succeed, then the country succeeds. >> we're going to do some absolutely spectacular things for the american people. >> we are not turning this country over to what donald trump has sold. >> two, four, six, eight --
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>> we can get this country turned around and make america great, again. this is "new day" with chris cuomo and alisyn camerota. welcome to your new day on this veterans day. thank you for the service of past and present veterans and their families. we know the entire family sacrifices for the rest of us. thank you. so, in the name of democracy, there has been protests in cities across the country. however, some protesters became criminals turning violent. creating riot conditions, according to police in portland, oregon. of course, donald trump is the spark for this. the latest election in a tweet, he said these protests are unfair and blamed the media. but then this morning he sent another tweet praising protesters for their passion and saying he will bring people together. >> meanwhile, the trump transition has begun. president obama and president-elect trump meeting
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that white house pledging to work together until trump's swearing in 70 days from now. but there are some signs of campaign trump coming back. so, our coverage begins with cnn's jason carroll live at trump tower here in new york city. good morning, jason. >> good morning to you. in front of trump tower where we've seen a number of protesters showing up over the past few nights. you know, there was talk, as you know, alisyn, that during the last part of the campaign, trump's advisors were trying to encourage him not to tweet so much. very clear that this is a man who likes twitter, likes to tweet. he tweeted about the protests. first blaming it on the media. this morning, trying to strike a different tone. this morning, president-elect donald trump tweeting, love the fact that the small group of protesters last night have passion for our great country. we will all come together and be proud. after calling the protests against his victory unfair, tweeting overnight that they are professional protesters
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