tv New Day Sunday CNN March 19, 2017 3:00am-4:01am PDT
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plan passed. >> he had told the guard he had a bomb in his vehicle. >> chuck berry was one of the pioneers of rock 'n' roll. ♪ ♪ ♪ good morning to you. we're so glad to have your company this morning. i am christi paul. >> i am martin savidge. and a critical week for president trump. >> congress will finally hear the fbi direct's answer to the claim the president obama had trump tower wiretapped during the campaign. and a showdown as gorsuch
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takes the seat. and then house speaker, paul ryan, says it's now or never. >> to add what has already been a tense week, another intruder made it on to the property. >> security is back to normal after a car drove up to a white house checkpoint late last night, and the driver claimed to have a bomb. that checkpoint is still blocked and authorities searched the automobile for more than four hours but found nothing. >> they removed the man from the car and placed him under arrest, and we have watched as they have gone in and very methodically taken everything out of the vehicle very cautiously. they had a robot at one point go up to the vehicle in its trunk, pulling material out of the
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vehicle. then we saw a bomb squad technician dressed in full gear come out and also take materials from outside of that vehicle and sift through those materials. >> this is the latest, of course, in a string of reseptember white house intrusion. earlier yesterday another person was arrested after jumping over a bike rack of the white house, and he said he had a document he wanted to deliver, and then another man was found from the main door to the mansion carrying mace. we look ahead, let's talk to our panel, nick paton walsh, and cnn international correspondent, nic, good could have you with us. and donald trump's relationship with vladimir putin going to be
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scrutinized. trump has not once criticized putin, we should point out. he describes him as a leader and characterizing his relationship. >> don't know him, but certainly he is a tough cookie and i don't now he's doing for russia, we will find out one day, i guess. >> that directly contradicts a november 2015 interview where candidate interview said i got to know him well, because we were on "60 minutes" and we were stable mates and did fine. is there a sign between president trump's relationship now with putin? >> i think without doubt, obviously, trump may have been wishing he tush a slighter position with russia, and it has
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been a complicated place because the volume of scrutiny over collusion is at the heart at the discussion right now, and that level of scrutiny will be unleashed all over again, and that statement about putin being a tough cookie is like health care being complicated is a blinding statement of the obvious, especially if you consider trump's background, born into a wealthy family, and then seeing him now where rose up through the ranks of the kgb and has been a long-term leader, one of the toughest leaders, and the two men from extraordinary different back grounds, and
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donald trump is in charge of the largest military in the world, and he should be coming at this position of the relationship as a position of power, and he has set in the past he doesn't know if the two men will get along well, and asked for a broader deal for russia, and it has been the suggestion that putin has been digging so far into the u.s. election campaign, and it would be hard because of the animosity towards russia and the alleged interference you see from the washington, d.c. establishment at this point. >> tom, i want to ask you, to his point, if there's evidence revealed tomorrow that does show russian interference, what is the next step for the president? >> well, he really needs to knock this down in the hearing somehow. the best they can hope
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jim comey, the fbi director. it's not clear there has been anything to support that yet. and that really hope that the white house, you know, they can knock down some of the collusion talk that has been out there. that's really the best they can hope for from jim comey at this point. >> you are having a bit of a bbc moment, tom, and i hope everything's okay. live tv. that's how it goes. and sarah, i want to run more sound. when it comes to the wiretapping issue, bidthat was set to our w blitzer.
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>> either he knows it's wrong and he's lying about a national security issue in which case et cetera going to be hard to trust him while we are going forward, he can't tell the difference between truth and fiction. >> what is your reaction to that? >> i think that the democrats on the committee are going to go into the committee with this, and republicans are going to go into the same hearing with a different goal, which is to have the fbi director explain the lack of evidence to substantiate allegations between collusion between the trump campaign and the russians, because to date everybody that has reviewed the evidence so far said it has come up short and there is not a lot of evidence to substantiate that these contacts between the trump
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associat associates and the russia. it has been very politicized on the house intelligence committee. >> thank you all so much. we appreciate you being here. health and human services, guest"state of the union" this morning. and then north korea with another rocket test. plus, he was one of the first to write rock 'n' roll songs about cars, girls and parties, and now rock pioneer chuck berry has died, and we'll take a look at his far-reaching influence on the world. ♪ (vo) this is not a video game.
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here's to all of you early risers, what's up man? go-getters, and should-be sleepers. from all of us at delta, because the ones who truly change the world, are the ones who can't wait to get out in it. i trained as hard as i could because the ones who truly change the world, to stay alive. i have more than 30 pieces of shrapnel still in my leg. but i still push myself to the limit. if it weren't for my tempur-pedic, i wouldn't be able to sleep on my left side at all. my unit put in a special request to get one and i realized that tempur-pedic was exponentially better than anything else. it gave me a huge performance advantage, it still does. tempur-pedic.
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this sleep is power. china's foreign minister says the u.s. should take a, quote, cool-headed approach, when it comes to north korea. >> and that is when the north korea state media reported a new test. joining us live from beijing with more on the test is cnn international correspondent, will ripley. what is this all about as far as this new engine? >> hi, martin. we believe this announcement may have been in done to coincide with tillerson and chinese, and it shows the nation keeps moving closer to their ultimate goal of
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a tip that can reach the united states, and if you look at the range right now they have a long range, up to more than 6,200 miles, and what north korea is doing is they are perfecting this technology because they are moving from liquid fuel to solid fuel which allows these things to be rolled out and launch with little notice, which is why the united states is in the process of bringing components into south korea of the system where you have the launcher on the ground to shoot missiles out of the sky, and the system can be overcome by multiple ballistic missiles launch at once, and kim jong-un ordered four launched simultaneously recently, so this
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is the main topic of conversation between secretary tillerson and not only the chinese president and two top diploma diplomats. he's on his way back to the united states, and he said during this asia trip that the north korean nuclear threat is what is facing the world because north korean weapons are ranging outward, and the threat expands as well, and china thinks the united states is at fault for the escalating tension because of the ongoing military exercises happening between u.s. troops and south korean forces, and the united states thinks that china needs to do more to reign in north korea by
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sanctioning companies, and there's a lot to talk about, donald trump and the chinese president are due to be meeting in the united states early next month, and no official date has been set, martin. >> some say this is the biggest threat the united states face as of yet. and trump administration says they are confident the health care bill will pass this thursday, and is vice president pence the key to swaying them. and then an intense week of confirmation hearings, and the implications of what his confirmation could mean for years to come. that's ahead.
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it a crucial step towards fulfilling our promise to repeal and replace obamacare with something that actually works. >> vice president pence there hitting the road ahead of thursday's vote, and the vice president said republican leaders are listening to concerns about the bill and making changes to the bill such as medicaid funding. >> and right now more than two dozen house republicans say they are either voting no or leaning in that direction. we have got more in the way we can discuss this is by talking to tom and sarah, white house correspondent for the examiner. the changes made by the republicans here, is it going to be enough to get the house passed in the house? >> it's a start. you heard a lot of republicans,
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conservative republicans, members of the republican study committee which was a broader group of conservatives say, yeah, this is helping them. this is getting them to yes. but that's not who you need to worry about. you need to focus on the house freedom caucus, and it's smaller but in this case an incredibly significant group of more hard-core conservatives, and this is the group that helped to remove john boehner a year and a half ago and got paul ryan in place, and you can see the irony here that they helped to get paul ryan put in place as speaker and now he's having to lean to them again. basically you are taking this bill and pushing it further to the right to get it out of the house, and ae tpereffectively w they will have to do is move closer to the center, closer to the more moderate centers to win
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there. and nothing is href ndefinite a point, and at this point it's pretty optimistic. >> we will pay sound from the speaker in a minute, and first we will play something for sarah from the vice president speaking last night, and we have to remember there are 20 republicans saying, hey, i'm not so sure on this but first here's the president. >> while we are having a vigorous debate, the good news is is that the republicans are in complete agreement and have complete consensus that obamacare must go. >> the vice president is leading the charge, the cheer on this, but is there a disconnect that he's not playing close enough attention to the divide in his own party? >> there are, like you said, two dozen lawmakers that are opposed
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to the bill or have serious concerns about it, but a lot of the conserbtive lawmakers have not walked away from the negotiating table yet so there's time to shape the bill into something they can say yes on, and they are trying to convince the unilateral spraupprongs, an of the prongs is something what price can do on his own and the trump administration told skeptical lawmakers just wait and the things you want that are not included in the first bill will be done through regulatory changes, and one thing the trump administration can do is go ahead and roll out the other two stages this week or as close to the third vote as possible and have the lawmakers see all the cards on the table and know this obamacare-lite bill they oppose is not everything that is going to be done to obamacare.
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>> tom, referencing that mention that you made of paul ryan earlier, he did say earlier in the week this is a now or never moment when it comes to health care replacement. why is it that rush and that timeline? >> it's campaigns. we all cynically kind of laugh about campaigns never ending, but in a lot of ways that is true, and it's particularly true of the house, the house is up every two years so the closer these gaze get to november of 2018, the closer they get to having these town halls erupt in their districts, and they start to get more skittish. when you have been re-elected already, you have time to work with, and it's easier to take tough votes. in the senate, not as big of a problem because you have six
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years to do this, and in the house they have to do it fast if they want to get it done, and the politics of it are incredibly perilous. >> if they don't have the votes come thursday, do they vote thursday or do they wait? >> i would imagine they would do something to postpone the vote. i think the trump administration views this as a high stakes situation, and if they fail in this one that will have implications for everything they want to do, tax reform, and the trade policies, and if they can't achieve this, which is supposed to be the thing that republicans agree on more than anything, which repealing and replacing obamacare is something they have run on for seven years, then they are going to have some real trouble getting through things that they don't agree on. >> yeah, it would be a real embarrassment. thank you very much. >> thank you. >> thank you. president trump's pick for supreme court justice, kneneil
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gorsuch will be tapped to replace scalia, and his confirmation would be a big win for the white house after a list of frustrations and setback since president trump took office. and joey jackson joining us now. have to belief that president's travel ban executive order undoubtedly will be a key issue that is raised in these hearings. we know gorsuch defended religious rights for christians and muslims, and what do you expect to hear in that regard tomorrow? >> good morning. i expect a side step is what i expect, and here's why. this is a case that may very well be before the supreme court and it's not there yet and it's not in the variation in terms of the form is not there yet so he will have a patten answer, and in the event a case comes before we dealing with the travel ban i
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will give it all judicial deference and be true to the law and true to the issues of the constitution, but i do not expect him to give any answer particularly because it may be a case that comes up before him, so i would look for a side step in that regard that would reaffirm his assessment as a jurist that all cases should be handled in an be ative and open-minded way. >> he has no judicial record on abortion, and he attends a church that is openly pro gay and muslim, and some are concerns he could be a closet liberal. >> i expect him well prepared in this regard, and if you look at his opinions, his opinions would suggest he is protective of religious freedom, so i believe he will respond in kind, and regardless of his individual views, which he is allowed to have as a person who not only is
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a judge but is an individual and family man and a member of society, he will apply principles of law to issues dealing with religion and he will respect religion and whatever his own religious faith is or he likes it to be should remain exactly that. i expect a side step and a pattened answer to that question, and as frustrating as it s. that's what i think is what we are going to hear during the confirmation process. >> i know you are doing the best you can, joey. it's all good. republicans never voted on president obama's vote, merrick garland, and might democrats oppose that because of the sting they felt before? >> i think so. we should keep in mind that the fact is that it has been 30 years since any nominee has been defeated. you might remember bourque back
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in 1987 who was appointed by reagan, he had some problems. that's the only nomination really in sometime that it has been defeated, so i expect the democrats would be concerned about what happens to garlands, and i expect they will be ready, and i think it something that we certainly could expect come tomorrow. >> democrats have voiced concerns about gorsuch in the sense that they say he can't be trusted when it comes to reigning in executive power, that he has a mind-set that is slanted towards business interests. do they have a valid argument there? >> i think they could have a valid argument, but the issue is one of are you qualified to serve. here's the bottom line. this guy appears to be gorsuch, the real deal. he is educated at harvard and
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has an oxford doctorate, so i don't fight to be on grounds with respect to his qualifications, and i expect it could be on the question you raise on ideology grounds, and they will pain the him as somebody that can't be trusted, and i think at the end of the day it's not about somebody's particular ideology until, of course, that ideology is so far removed democrats have a point to appoint democratic jurist, and republicans have a right to appoint republican jurist, and could you be true to the law regardless of whether you have leanings one way or the other and i suspect that that's how that question will be resolved and answers. >> all right, and thank you for getting up so early for us this morning. >> thank you. >> sure. coming up, we will talk about the president's unfounded wiretapping claims. they are stretching far and wide. now the british intel agency
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accused of wiretapping president trump responds, and the nsa covering it as well. and then chuck berry the first artist unducted into the rock 'n' roll hall of game. (vo) maybe it was here, when you hit 300,000 miles. or here, when you walked away without a scratch. maybe it was the day your baby came home. or maybe the day you realized your baby was not a baby anymore. every subaru is built to earn your trust.
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>> berry was the hallmark of what would be the new sound of rock 'n' roll. watch him onstage of the 1950s and you see the beginnings of everything that was to come. ♪ ♪ >> historian, douglas brinkley, was friends with chuck berry, and he helped teach some of your classes, is that right? >> yes, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> losing chuck berry is like losing a national monument of some kind. he's just so important to our culture. back in 1992, i had an onroad class i did at haus trau university, and i wrote an
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article about chuck berry being a poet, and he loved it because he thought of himself as a poet, and his lyrics that we take for granted, and they are decisively about attack the jim crow racism in the south. at any rate, he said when you come to st. louis all your students could be hosted by chuck berry, and so we visited with him with his daughter and him at blue berry hill, and he would talk about the whole history of rock and roll, and we kept doing it and just this past year, just a few months ago, chuck berry and his wife reached
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out to me to write the liner notes for what would be his last cd, and he recorded an album called "chuck" that will be coming out very soon. here's a man that recorded these songs in his late 80s and these are mostly original compositions. when people hear it, their minds will be blown that somebody in their 80s can play with such passion. >> since you did have that relationship, what do you think we would never know about him? >> there are two people, charles berry, and chuck berry, and charles was kind, warm and paw light, and that's who i got to know, and there's also chuck, and chuck berry is somebody that
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got ripped off by so many pwo managers, and if he felt you were trying to pull one over he would turn on you, and as somebody who loves st. louis, more than anybody you could ever meet, and he loved in st. louis, and loved the mississippi river and the st. louis cardinals and would regularly go down to the bar, blueberry hill, on delmar avenue and play whenever he felt like it. he was a blowtorch of a man and had great physical stamina to the end and was smart as a whip. >> when he was inducted into the rock 'n' roll hall of game in new york, and the hall of fame is in cleveland, and he was extremely down-to-earth and
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never a hint of celebrity around him, and he was a regular guy and a great day to talk to, and did he ever tell what you his favorite song was? >> he never told me his favorite song, although the song "promised land" was close to him. talk about down-to-earth, he invited me to a recording studio a few years ago, and there's nobody there, and it was in the outskirts of st. louis and i was there with his sound engineer and himself, and we hopped in his little toyota and we just drove to a wendy's and just had a frosty, fries, and the whole bit, and he would sit there and wear a captain's hat, like a sailor's cap, and i asked him about that, and he said i don't wear baseball caps, and he said chuck berry is not a salesman, and he would not only give somebody an autograph on a menu
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or piece of paper and he would draw a smiley face next to it, and our country treated him badly when he became a hit in the 1950s and early '60s, and he got entangled with the law, and some of them were racists encounters with police where they felt like he was influencing the rock 'n' roll noise to be too high. >> yeah, so many were influenced by chuck berry. >> we appreciate it, doug, thank
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you, and we are sorry for your loss, really, at the end of the day, it has to hit him. still to come, the number two guy at the nsa, and what the implications are now for the future of international relations. plus, northwestern may have lost in the ncaa tournament, but one of their young fans is winning the internet, and we'll explain all that coming up.
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(cheering and applause) and that is all the microphones that i have. (vo) unlimited on verizon. 4 lines, just $45 per line. dearthere's no other way to say this. it's over. i've found a permanent escape from monotony. together, we are perfectly balanced. our senses awake. our hearts racing as one. i know this is sudden, but they say...if you love something set it free. see you around, giulia i did active duty 11 years.my in july of '98. and two in the reserves. our 18 year old was in an accident. when i call usaa it was that voice asking me, "is your daughter ok?" that's where i felt relief. it actually helped to know that somebody else cared and wanted make sure that i was okay. that was really great. we're the rivera family,
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news analyst. >> three intelligence sources informed fox news president obama went outside the chain of command, and he is gchsq, and that's the initialled for the british spying agency. >> here's the problem. we now know that information came from a discredited former cia analyst, larry johnson. get this, he first floated the baseless claim on russia on today and even fox news is not standing by that claim now. >> fox news cannot confirm judge napolitano's commentary, and fox news knows of no kind of the president of the united states was surveilled anytime in any way full stop. >> and let's talk to brian
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stelter about this. good morning. >> good morning. >> let's play sound here. the president addressing this with his meeting with german chancellor, angela merkel. >> we said nothing. all we did was quote a certain, very talented legal mind. i did not make an opinion on it and that was a statement made by a very talented lawyer on fox, so you should not be talking to me you would be talking to fox. >> we just heard from fox. what does it do for the president's credibility? >> he said he is standing by his story. i will have johnson on "reliable sources" today, and he floated this first on russia and then it trickles to fox news, and then makes it to the white house
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press briefing room and all the way to president trump himself when he was asked about it on friday. this is how the unsubstantiated ideas spread through this chain, and i think it's so striking, you see one of the heads of the nsa, one of the deputies of the nsa speaking out and calling it crazy, and it would be epically stupid for the brits to do this for the americans and for the americans to ask the brits to do it, and saying if you believe this theory you have no understanding how intelligence works, and i never see nsa deputies interviews in the first place, and this guy you quoted, he is about to retire, and maybe he is doing cleanup by saying it's a crazy idea and never happened or would happen. >> let's talk about the british spy agency, gchq here, and they have a statement, and recent
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allegations made by the media commentator are utterly ridiculous and should be ignored. a security adviser did offer an apology, and sean spicer denying that, and when we look at the relationship between the u.s. and britain, it's a peuf tivota relationship of allies, what does it do to that? >> and this idea of obama asking the brits to spy on trump, that would have violated the agreement. among many other things, this is an example of the white house trying to find proof of trump's tw two-week-old claim about wiretapping. what was trump doing in the first place? he was trying to push off the russia allegations and try to
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get away from that and say this is obama's fault, and this is going to be curious to see how it's handled by the congress. >> very true. we appreciate you seeing you so early this morning. thank you. you know brian is sticking around that much oday, and he w "reliable sources" today tackling that very issue at 11:00. and then one young fan is winning on the internet, and andy scholes has more. >> there are emotional fans at basketball games and there is this kid. what had him if tears? we'll have that next. your numbers go up, despite your best efforts. but what if you could turn things around? what if you could love your numbers? discover once-daily invokana®. it's the #1 prescribed sglt2 inhibitor that works to lower a1c. invokana® is a pill used along with diet and exercise
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here we go. emotions can change minute to minute, hence the name. >> and one man had all of them on display, and i look at this kid and i think 20 years from now when you look back at this, what are you going to be thinking? >> march madness an emotional time for many, and this kid northern as the northwestern kid taking it to a different level. he was going nuts this whole time. he absolutely loses it when the wildcats were called for a flagrant foul. the wildcats came a heck of a comeback, and as you can see, john happy when they were making the comeback, but this terrible
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call right here really killed northwestern northwestern's momentum, and the coach gets called for a technical foul, and it was a four-point swing in the game, and the refs completely missed the call and it doesn't make the fans feel any better. >> what a good mom, it's okay, it's okay. >> the savvy veterans from wisconsin, and senior nigel hayes coming through with a clutch basket in the final seconds. hayes and fellow starter, bronson, they are hold overs from a few years ago, and head coach telling his team in the locker room, they are not done yet. >> i can't be more proud of a gutty performance, and it was not perfect but you kept finding
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a way, and you keep sticking together, and everybody keeps sticking together and you keep trusted each other and you stay the course and that's the type of stuff that can happen, okay? so proud of you guys. we have more to get to. >> eight more games on the schedule today, and the action tipped off with louisville and michigan, and hopefully more exciting finishes like yesterday. a great day of action. >> no doubt. speaking of exciting finishes. we are done for this hour, but we will pick it up right after and continue with "new day." >> yep. hour two starting now. ♪ ♪ the white house seems to be preparing for this big moment. >> what we are going to hear on monday from director comey is a denial that there's any evidence about this. >> and who knew health care would be so complicated? >> let me
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