tv New Day CNN November 8, 2017 2:59am-4:00am PST
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before eventually launching nationwide. >> would you? >> i don't know. i think i would pay close attention. i'm not sure i would read a book. >> i'm a late adopter of technology. i let all the glitches come out and adopt in a few years. >> thanks for joining us. >> "new day" starts right now. we'll see you tomorrow. >> announcer: this is cnn twoeubg our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "new day", wednesday november 8th, 6:00 in new york. we begin with democrats scoring sweeping victory across the country. the proof is in the performance. one year after president trump's historic win, those rebuking hum sending awe clear message ahead of next year's midterm elections. the crowning achievement is the swing state of virginia. a true purple state. lieutenant governor ralph northam crushing ed gillespie.
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scorched earth, heavily divisive campaign in the final weeks. it did not work. the president quick to distance himself saying gillespie never embraced him or what he stands for. >> in new jersey, fill murphy easily defeating guadadlno. the president issued a stark warning telling kim jong-un, do not try us. we are live in richmond, virginia. ryan? >> reporter: al sin, good morning. last night's election results is anything more than a repudiation of donald trump and his administration. nowhere was this more evident than here in virginia.
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it was a race that was supposed to be close and was anything but. >> the democratic party is back, my friends! >> reporter: a big democrat you can sweep, including the hotly contested race. ralph northam crushing ed gillespie by nine points in a race that was expected to be close. >> virginia has told us to end the divisiveness we will not condone hatred and bigotry and to end the politics that have torn this country apart. >> reporter: president trump said he has not embraced him and what he stands for. they came out to oppose the president instead of support him. >> you have sent a message across the globe to south korea.
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donald trump, you don't stand for our values. >> gillespie did not campaign with the president but through his support on twitter. in the final stretch of the campaign, gillespie rallied around the culture wars touting his support for confederate. >> ralph northam's policies are dangerous. >> reporter: it led to northam flip-flopping on his support for sanctuary cities but failed to win. democrats making significant gains in virginia's house of delegates could shift the house for the first time in 30 years. >> steve bannon holding hostage, it will never matter more. >> reporte
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>> reporter: hotly contested may oral racing also breaking in democrats's favor. a number of social and cultural issues as well. the first openly transgender person defeating a social conservative that sponsored a bill on which bathroom she could use. >> every person who has ever been singled out, who has ever needed someone to stand up for them when they didn't have a voice of their own, this one's for you. >> and first time politician hurst also elected in virginia upsetting a three-time republican incumbent backed by the nra. as for the president's spin that
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ed gillespie didn't do enough to embrace him in virginia, i've been talking to republicans who didn't even want to discuss this topic. last night across the board every single one of them told me this loss is squarely on the president and his administration. one republican congressman from virginia tell me it is hard to view the results of last night's election as anything other than a response to donald trump. alysin and chris. >> to hear the congressman from virginia say, yeah, this is on trump, unusual and awe reflection of what's happening in that party, as are these results. let's discuss with gregory and ron brownstein. boy, did you get a lot to chew on last night. >> yes, i did. >> what did you see that confirm said and raise said questions about how the electorate is responding? >> mostly confirmed.
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the fundamental things apply. a lot of republicans, we were talking about this yesterday, were hoping that voters who were unhappy with him would be less likely to take it out on them. in fact, we saw the opposite. voters unhappy with president trump voted in big margins and more important in big turnout for democrats. about 85% of the voters who tkus appro disapproved of president trump voted democratic. it is in line with what we have seen since 1994 in house races. that is ominous nor republicans. and the white collar suburbs. they want college educated white voters in both states they won. from 2012 to 2016, college whites in virginia was between 42% and 45%. that was the total difference. northam got over 50%.
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that is a big shift for republicans in white collar districts. the most affluent county, ralph northam won by double the number of votes. he won by more than barack obama did in the 2012 presidential race. they will held their vote with rural whites. that is less concern of republicans in 2018. anyone around a population center, this is a fire bell in the night as thomas jefferson of virginia once said. >> go ahead, david. >> we have to pull back and realize that as we look at this election in virginia and think about the potential of 2018,
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midterm elections tend to reflect the last big thing that happened. trump is the last big thing. democrats voted scared. there was a fear among the top democrats in the country that this would be waterloo for the democrats. if they didn't turn out and send a strong message and beat he ed gillespie. they did turn out. northam is not the model ofr progre of progress if's in the bernie sanders mode that a lot of people are turning to. he's much more centrist and unorthodox in terms of what we expect in 2018 or even potentially taking on trump in 2020.
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republicans essentially came home. i had many conversations with professional brownstein about this. he is outlining some of the core of the republican base. college educated white voters in places like in and around richmond. they rejected trumpism. they rejected even a mainstream like gillespie in virginia. >> so the whole point is about projections. the professor started with the fundamentals things with reference to as time goes by. so stick with your own theme. what does this mean in terms of seeing this presidency is and the challenge going into the midterms. is being anti-trump enough? >> i think it's a part of the piece, a large piece of the puzzle for them, yes. the attitude toward the president has been since the 1990s the biggest factor some midterm elections.
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i think you can see an important divergence. the news for the ominous signal, you look at the big population centers, you saw not only enormous margins by more than hillary clinton did, but by such enormous turnout. democrats based on this could make big begins beating some of the white collar republicans in suburbs outside the major metropolitan areas but could face difficult going in more rural blue collar areas.
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gillespie won 70% over noncollege whites. and further partition america into red and blue and further widen the distance between the parties better. clearly in some of these more coastal, well educated states, that is a trade that republicans can survive. >> if you look at the demographic map, this was all a set piece that was supposed to come through for hillary clinton. it's a reminder when we project forward, as chris said, into a presidential race, it is not as much a referendum on the incumbent that there is a choice involved. that is important to move forward with a scattered field. in 2018, maybe it's more of a factor to be anti-trump and it depends where things stand with trump and this presidency, on the economy, with a potential conflict with north korea and on
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and on that affect attitudes of voters. but i do think this split among republicans, within a republican party there are enough republicans who say i may not like democrats but i can't stomach this. that's different than what happened to elect trump president. >> real quick, it goes to the point we talked about before, trump may be holding 80% of republicans, but you can't win with just self-identified republicans. you have to win with leaning republicans. chesterfield county, as well as in new jersey. to say he's holding his base really doesn't apply after yesterday. because you saw the independent part of the base and the people voting for him not only in the governor's race where they made the biggest counts in 1989.
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>> the republican race in virginia ran from the trump playbook. he talked about the nfl players taking a knee and they shouldn't be. he talked about how he would keep up confederate statutes. it didn't work. trump tweeted ed gillespie did not embrace me or what i stand for. this is still the tension of what he had to do. somebody who was much closer to a trump clone to win the primary. then we saw what the results are. >> that is an important
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distinction you're make. >> the president's reference to four for four is not last night. it was about the special elections. it was an intensity that felt like a primary. it is is important distinction, david. >> ron, david, thank you. ahead on "new day", we will talk about governor-elect phil murphy about his sweeping victory and what he thinks it means. and president trump's first major speech in asia told the north never underestimate the power and do not test us. >> reporter: yeah, that's right, alyson. we saw the president strike a
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much different tone in south korea. instead of promising to rain fire and fury on little rock et man, he decided to compare and contrast life in south korea than that of north korea. he had harsh language for north korea. listen. >> i hope i speak not only for our countries but for all civilized nations when i say to the north, do not underestimate us. and do not try us. every step you take down this dark path increases the peril you face. north korea is not the paradise your grandfather envisioned. it is a hell that no person deserves. >> now, the president did not say during that speech whether
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he is going to redesignate north korea as a state sponsored terrorism. the white house says that decision will come by the end of his trip. however, it was clear that his audience was not just north korea but also china, russia and the rest of the world. just hours before he arrived here in beijing, he called out china by name saying they need to sever all trade ties with north korea. and he said to stop any trade for countries that continue to do business with north korea. the president does plan to bring it up with president xi when he meets him face-to-face here in beijing. chris? >> thank you for the reporting. it will be very interesting to see how the president changes and adjusts from each audience. china and north korea and russia
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as well. they believe the risk of war with the u.s. has never been higher. they're downplaying president trump's warnings referring to him as a mad dog. cnn is the only american network in north korea. will ripley on his 17th visit there and joins us from pyongyang. so take us inside that headline. >> reporter: well, if president trump wants diplomacy with north korea, he certainly won't get it with the insults he was hurling at this country and the system. attacking their ideology and calling it a living hell, something they would strongly deny saying they have collected a safe society. they published an article today in their leading newspaper which dredges up an argument that's been thrown back at me when i asked about human rights abuses, allegations here in north korea. it says the u.s. should not style itself as a human rights
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judge but mind its own poor human rights records in this land where racial discrimination, gun-related crimes and all other social crimes prevail. they say that is the u.s. is interior. we know political dissent is not permitted by this regime. we spoke to officials before and after the speech and they said we don't care what the mad dog may utter because we have heard enough. they feel completely justified in whatever military steps they plan to take. the time and place we still don't know. >> great to have you on the ground in pyongyang. thank you very much for your reporting. >> so you heard the president
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warn north korea that further provocation would be a fatal miscalculation. what's the effect of that language? we discuss next. s, it's time to wake up to keurig. wakey! wakey! rise and shine! oh my gosh! how are you? well watch this. i pop that in there. press brew. that's it. so rich. i love it. that's why you should be a keurig man! full-bodied. are you sure you're describing the coffee and not me? full-bodied. a trip back to the dthe doctor's office, mean just for a shot. but why go back there, when you can stay home... ...with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. neulasta helps reduce infection risk by boosting your white blood cell count, which strengthens your immune system. in a key study, neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%... ...a 94% decrease. applied the day of chemo, neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the next day. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to neulasta or neupogen (filgrastim). ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems,
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>> that's president trump issuing a direct warning to north korean dictator kim jong-un right at his doorstep. columnist for "the daily beast" and author of "nuclear showdown," north korea takes on the world. gordon, let me start with you. when you think about president trump's languages, he said north korea is not the paradise your grandfather envisioned, it is a hell that no person deserves. what is the strategy behind language like that that is so personal. >> we are trying to delegitimize the regime. this is really going after it. the other threat which was not obvious but is even more important is trump talked about the take of the pueblo and the
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shooting down a year later killing 31 americans. the biggest loss of lives in the cold war. trump was saying do not kill any americans. that was the threat in the speech. >> you have two layers of test there. one is geo-political challenge. the second was how does he perform as the president, which is an acute on test for this particular president. how did he do? >> well, on that latter point, i have been impressed that president trump has seemed more presidential and has been much more careful and scripted while in asia. he's tried not to be too provocative in his language. he's being more measured. even in a hardline speech like last night talking in terms of an off-ramp for the kim regime
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to find. at the same time i thought it was important he is saying, look, this is what the peril is. uncomfortable as i am going toe to toe with an unstable north korean dictator and making it this kind of contest, he's trying to rally the soerbg oh, ans behind him so the north doesn't seep any daylight between the united states and south korea and japan and making a case to china as well. we all have to work together to stop this because none of us come out well, particularly if the north does something particularly stupid, which is to specifically provoke the united states by launching a missile into our territory. nobody wants what would come from any of that. that tees up what the president is doing in china. if anything is going to change about the relationship the last
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25 years, china takes a harder line stopping north korea were. >> back to my question, has this been effective? what do you think the upshot this is on this trip? >> i think the trip has been effective. basically you have the tokyo portion and in the seoul portion, the united states standing close to allies. japan portion was baked in. shinzo abe very close to the united states. in south korea, that's not the case. the president there is more pro north korea than any other south korean president. this was a difficult time for trump. but to arrange president trump and president moon to stand together, which was defeated by mother nature. >> they couldn't get there because of fog, a metaphor. they had to turn around. but just because they had agreed to the photo-op.
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>> it is progress because it says to the united states that the united states and south korea are standing together. there was, before this, president moon giving secret a shurpss about ballistic missile defense, china trying to divide south korea from the united states. this was important for trump to arrange. it says you can't cut us off from south korea. that will make trump's discussions in beijing a lot easier. they will see south korea and the u.s. are standing together. >> let's test that idea. it is is one thing to talk talk about north korea. the president couldn't have more moral authority. it is is laughable, absurd is for them to try to compare rights in the united states with north korea. this will be how he can appeal to their own interests.
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how big a challenge is this? what is the leverage? >> the chinese have historically been afraid of a regime because of refugees. they don't want all the north koreans coming into china. they like things the way they are if they can keep in tempest in the bottle. the president may say, as he did last night, that we want to denuclearize the korean peninsula. but if the north would simply stop testing, would put a freeze on testing, i imagine they can work something out. and i wonder how china helps along that line. >> all right. gordon, david, thank you very much for that perspective. the texas church massacre certainly very much in focus. we are learning more about this killer. and it's important, this isn't just about his pwaou gravbiogra.
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far from it. under what conditions was he in a mental health hospital. did he escape? if he did, what was the system supposed to do? a live report, new information, next. how much money do you think you'll need in retirement? then we found out how many years that money would last them. how long do you think we'll keep -- oooooohhh! you stopped! you're gonna leave me back here at year 9? how did this happen? it turned out, a lot of people fell short, of even the average length of retirement. we have to think about not when we expect to live to, but when we could live to. let's plan for income that lasts all our years in retirement. prudential. bring your challenges. and her new mobile wedding business.tte at first, getting paid was tough...
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my abwill i have pain andating made daibloating today?ing game. my doctor recommended ibgard to manage my ibs. take control. ask your doctor about nonprescription ibgard. the vice president set to travel to texas today. we are learning more about the gunman and not just the novelty of who he was. that's irrelevant. but the record of what he has done and that matters. police reported this man escaped from a mental health facility in 2012. diane gallagher live in sutherland springs, texas with more. if he escaped, that does mean that he was involuntarily
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committed? was he there voluntarily? the difference becomes important not just in terms of fact but in terms of what the system is supposed to do about it. what do we know so far, diana? >> reporter: chris, we were told that he was in that mental health facility a couple months after those domestic violence charges that we know now. the assault charges against his now ex-wife and stepson at that time. this is another case that we are learning that is starting to develop a pattern about this shooter. domestic abuse charges, animal cruelty, weapons charges. people are wondering how the dots were never connected and why something wasn't done, why he wasn't on somebody's radar. months before pleading guilty to assaulting his ex-wife and infant stepson in 2012, texas
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church killer escaped is from this mental health facility. while stationed at the air force base, he was institutionalized for attempting to carry out death threats on commanding officers and had been trying to sneak guns onto the base. officers searching for kelley said he suffered from mental disorders. >> he did not want him at his church. >> why not? >> he said because he just thought he was not a good person to be around. >> reporter: authorities say he was familiar with the first baptist trump and attended activities there before carrying out the largest mass shooting in texas history. >> the wilson county sheriff's office arrived in four minutes. i can tell you four minutes is ah long time during an active shooter situation. >> reporter: investigators now
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hitting a roadblock, telling reporters they have been unable to access his cell phone. his online presence. people saying kelley had gone after them in recent months. >> taking on other students. picked on me for losing weight. anti-god, his beliefs of atheism. >> everybody is going to [ bleep ] die. that's what he said. the bullets passing me like that. i could see it on the carpet. i said if i move from here, i'm going to die. >> reporter: she took cover under a church pew. >> what did you see when you got up? >> blood.
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dead people. dead bodies. dead children all over the place. outside people screaming, looking for each other. just terrible. >> reporter: the pain is still raw. you heard ms. solis there. governor mike pence will be making a visit at the hospital with some of the victims of the shooting who are still there. he will then meet with law enforcement who have been working around the clock since sunday. and he will deliver remarks at a vigil at a local hospital tonight. >> die that, thank you very much for update. did he meet with a conspiracy theorist who believes the dnc hacking job was a hacking job? the details next. lower back pain has met its match.
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peyo met with employees who say russia middled in the election. that meeting happened at the urging of president trump. michelle kaczynski is live with more. >> reporter: this meeting happened two weeks ago, october 24th, according to multiple intelligence agencies. he believes, as you said, it was an inside job done by a dnc employee even though the u.s. intelligence community concluded it was russia. so this person is named benny. used to be with the nsa. he said the meeting lasted an hour. it was started by saying the president wanted me to talk to you. he also says that pompeo told
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him that he wants benny to meet with people at the fbi and the nsa. the white house hasn't responded. the cia said pompeo stands by and always has stood by the 2017 intelligence community assessment. how much this russia issue still bothers the president and how they are looking for other theories out there. >> pompeo is trump's guy. he's also been well received at the cia, as you know, and well reported in the past. what does this nine is the question? thank you for reporting, my friend. good to see you. joining us is contributor to the enter is september. he wrote the story that william benny met with pompeo. good to have you, sir. >> good morning. >> one of the reasons for
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intrigue here is this is somewhat unusual for the director to take the step of meeting on his own. this is in the wake of the director putting the task force looking into these allegations and of course his statement that the russian interference hadn't effected the election. >> when i first heard this i said really? this is going to happen? the president, the cia director,
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this is going to happen? so i kept my cynicism well in play until the day of the meeting, confirmed it was going to happen. and i was able then to speak to mr. benny shortly after he had come out and seen the director. he gave me his immediate recollection of what had been said. >> and which was what? >> that the president wanted mr. benny to advise the agencies and perhaps the director on where to find evidence and stolen material that would show that the hacks had not originated and been directed from russia and were in some way domestic activity on u.s. territory. that was the theory that mr. benny and others have put their name to back in july and somehow or another clearly caught the
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president's attention. >> mr. benny has become a controversial figure in and of himself. he is either a truth teller whistle-blower or a conspiracy theorist. how does he size up in your estimation? >> on this side of the atlantic and polarization in u.s. politics on this issue, things can be perhaps more nuanced. i have respect for mr. benniment he was not a whistle-blower for many years after he took a stance to leave his employer. and with his enormous experiment in seniority and carefully considered criticisms he made an important contribution to the debate. this summer i think there has been nine months of noise and attempts to push this theory or
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that theory just to explain it wasn't the russians. most of those attempts from what i have seen actually failed. but it was continuous. and eventually the dam broke and some of the people who had properly criticized the agencies for the iraq invasion fiasco came out and put their names to a memorandum, essentially taking the president's decision. >> duncan, appreciate the reporting. very helpful in framing the perspective of this ongoing intrigue in america with russian interference. that you can, sir. good to have you on the show. >> chris, startling new allegations against harvey waou weinstein. now there is kabg saeugzs that he acquisitions that he hired spies to get dirt on actors. ooo. looking for a hotel that fits... ...your budget? tripadvisor now searches over... ...200 sites to find you the... ...hotel you want at the lowest
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protecting your family's financial future now, at lincolnfinancial.com. multiple reports that there is a new case against harvey weinstein. there is accusations he enlisted spies to get dirt on his accusers. ronan, great to see you. >> good to be here, always. >> what do you know about what the manhattan d.a. is up to. >> we have ongoing reporting on that. i will say this. there are law enforcement officers who feel the ball was
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dropped in the past and now are working very, very hard to try to put harvey weinstein behind bars. >> okay. so let's talk about what your reporting has revealed. the extent that he went to to try to shut down these women and to try to shut down reporting. he learned somehow that you were preparing an investigative piece for "the new yorker". he learned that the "new york times" was similarly preparing a piece about him. he went to extraordinary measures to try to shut that down and try to sully the accusers. >> i think most of us wouldn't have thought possible. this is what the most powerful people in america can do when they are bent on suppressing allegations against them. that included started in the fall of last year, hiring private spies from one staff of the massad, israel's intelligence service to use, for instance, fake identities, fake
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front companies and insinuate themselves into the lives of reporters and women with allegations. >> one of the most intriguing characters in this very murky spy tale who uses the name ana and inserted the lives into the women, rose mcgowan, befriended her thinking she was a human rights advocate but she was just gathering information. >> ben wallace, wonderful reporter at "new york" magazine, he began to find you suspicious. she met with rose mcgowan four times and secretly was recording their conversations and transmitting them through black cube back to harvey weinstein. rose thought this was a friend. she was posing as a wealth investor, offering to put money
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into her company and involve her in a women's rights campaign. it turns out she was an elite operative for this israeli intelligence firm. >> this is important on many levels. this is so telling. when women like rose mcgowan say they are trying to silence me, listen to me, people. this is bigger than we think. they're cast as they're getting hysterical. look at them. look what's happening. there is this big plot of spider webs and rose mcgowan was right. >> it is stranger than fiction. and it's all true. it's not a spy novel. these women were called crazy relentlessly. they were going, as rose put, gas lit. this was like being in that film. it was like living in a world of funhouse mirrors. >> it turns out weinstein was terrified the stories were going to come out. he didn't like any sort of
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negative press. when he felt the walls closing in, because of your reporting and others, he started really kind of unraffling. >> the kragts lay out the goals of these operations specifically. a contract was signed by his powerful lawyer david boyes with black cube that specifically tells them to kill stories and investigate the women and to try to find dirt on them. harvey weinstein's web was extending out to women speaking out, reporters, anyone in position to air the story, television executives, anyone he could pressure. >> why this time didn't it work? he famously squashed stories for years. why did this time did all of these extraordinary measures not work? >> that is done to the bravery of the women speaking out. there is a change in the culture that happened over the last several years. bill cosby, roger ailes, they set a precedent.
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it's going to be tough, but i can speak. for the first time you saw the dam breaking. >> and the tenacious work of journalists like yourself. >> thank you. in the words of ben wallace, month met with a fake source, fake identity trying to throw him off the trail, this created more static than i was ever familiar with. but, yes, it's true, good journalism was necessary for breaking this open. >> ronan, thank you. it's been extraordinary to watch it all. >> thank you for all the coverage you have been watching. watch my cnn townhall, tipping point, sexual harassment is america. tomorrow night at 9:00 p.m. we'll continue this conversation. last night was a huge measure of this presidency. democrats got their first major victim is list of the trump era. even within the gop you are
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let's send a message across the globe. donald trump, you don't stand for our values! >> you have a woefully unpopular american president and you're having an effect on that. >> this is a litmus test. >> they better start passing stuff and working like a government. >> i say to the north do not underestimate us. >> north koreans are accusing president trump of trying to ignite another war. >> the prospect of the north koreans actually denuclearizing is probably near zero. >> the weapons you're acquiring by putting your regime in grave danger. >> this is "new day" with chris cuomo and alysi
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