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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  January 22, 2018 12:00am-1:00am PST

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it would be my intention to resolve these issues as quickly as possible. it would be my intention to proceed to legislation that would address daca. >> the senate majority leader intends to address immigration reform. but is that enough for democrats to back a spending plan to reopen the government? signs are mixed. we'll find out at noon today. entering day three of a government shutdown. good morning, everyone. welcome to "early start." i'm christine romance. >> january 22nd, 3:00 a.m. in
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the east. super bowl is set. we'll get into that shortly i do hope. we'll talk some football. we'll start with the government shutdown entering day three. as christine said, at noon today in the senate, a key vote on a measure to reopen the federal government through february 8th. new to this deal last night, republican leader mitch mcconnell's intention to take up a bill that extends protection for dreamers. republicans hope mcconnell's promise will lure enough democrats to turn the government's lights back on. >> but overnight two democratic sources told cnn they expect today's vote to fall short. a top aide said mcconnell's commitments are just not firm enough. and a republican source tells cnn they made no promises the house will take up whatever the senate passes. still, there is some optimism in the gop that john cornyn says it is better to have a successful vote today than a failed vote
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overnight. >> senior republican aide says they think leaders have enough a shot at picking up enough votes to move forward. let's bring in ryan nobles with the latest from capitol hill. >> reporter: good morninging from capitol hill. it turned out to be a much earlier night but that wasn't because a grand bargain was struck between republicans and democrats. . no they just extended this debate for a little longer, hoping that noon today eastern time will be the opportunity for a great breakthrough. and that the government will finally be open. this is what senate majority leader mitch mcconnell said on the floor late last night. >> it would be my intention to resolve these issues as quickly as possible so that we can move on to other business that is important to our country. assuming that the government remains open. it would be my intention to proceed to legislation that would address dhaka, border security, and related issues.
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>> reporter: but mcconnell's olive branch not quite enough for democrats last night as they decided not to vote on that measure, and instead give their members some time to sleep on the issue. there appears to be an issue of trust right now between republicans and democrats. democrats are insistent that a vote on immigration and in particular protection for the dreamers comes up before the next continuing resolution zedd line which is now set at february 8th. regardless of the back and forth between republicans and democrats here on capitol hill, there is a stark reality for the hundreds and thousands of federal workers across the country. they don't have to go into work today. that means that they will lose a paycheck for today because the government remains shut down. many of them waiting on edge to see whether or not mitch mcconnell and chuck schumer can set aside their differences and cast a vote that can reopen the federal government. we'll see what happens later today. back to you. >> now sate regular work day. a regular workweek begins for the government workers.
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now it will start to be evident what is happening here for real people. two republican senators who broke from their party friday night are now back in the fold. arizona's jeff flake and lindsey graham of south carolina agreeing to vote yes on the continuing resolution. flake and graham have been key participants in negotiations with democrats. and they believe the white house has not done enough to strike a deal. >> do you really think you can come up with an agreement by the 8th? >> i don't know. i hope we can. but i'm doubting it. because that relies on the white house to actually work with us on this. and we haven't seen that yet. >> the white house staff i think is making it very difficult. i've talked with the president. his heart is right on this issue. i think he has a good understanding of what will set. it's only yanked back by staff members. as long as stephen miller is in charge of shaping immigration,
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we're going nowhere. >> pointed words there. the white house using the senator's own words to defend miller and attack graham, saying, quote, as long as senator graham uses it to support legislation that sides with people in this country illegally, we're going nowhere. >> overnight the white house kept the pressure off. quote, democrats can't shut down the booming trump economy. so they shut down the government instead. the president's position is clear. we will not negotiate on the status of unlawful immigrants while the democrats hold our government and our military hostage. >> earlier president trump tweeted, quote, if stalemate continue, republicans should go to 51%. changing to a simple majority vote known as the nuclear option. we've heard this from trump before. majority leader mitch mcconnell says the conference does not support changing the 60-vote threshold to end the filibuster. we've heard that before from mitch mcconnell. we're not changing the senate
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rules. that's who we are as a body. he has said it repeatedly. >> hepping us to break down the shutdown, philip wegman. good morning, bright and early. now we're heading into day three of a government shutdown you. heard that lindsey graham sound bite. i thought that was fascinating how he said listen, the president is surrounded by ideologues who couldn't get 60 votes whom. have outlier positions that couldn't get 60 votes. that the problem that the president is signalling to lindsey graham and others that he wants a bill of hearts or a bill of love as we heard just a couple of weeks ago, but the people close to him who helped him get elected on restrictionist immigration policies have his ear. >> i think what we're seeing right snow you have lindsey graham who is on one side of the water and the president who is appealing to the base that got him into the white house. lindsey graham is asking him to do something that is more extreme of a concession than
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barack obama would have made to ted cruz in 2013. so the idea that somehow the president is being, you know, off base here is i think frankly ridiculous and should be dismissed out of hand here. i think what's happening instead is you see republicans thinking to themselves wait a minute, we were ready to do a continuing resolution. the democrats didn't oppose anything of assistance within and now at the last minute they're asking for daca. so it's going to be very confusing. we're going into the third day. we're going see how this ends up here in nine hours. >> but really, it's kind of day one for a lot of americans. >> right. >> it's the weekend. everybody is out with their families doing stuff. now it feels real. the pain starts to be real. things start to close down. how is this playing do you think publicly for democrats who have this march 5th deadline for dreamers. they are shutting the government down whether you like it or not. how it is playing for them? >> i'm starting to wonder what nancy pelosi ever did to chuck
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schumer. late last night there was that cnn poll that showed on the generic congressional ballot democrats lost their lead and now they're up to a 5% lead against republicans going into 2018. so this is definitely not trending in the direction democrats want it to go. and the longer the government stays shut down, i think that the worst that is for some of these democrats that are hoping to retake the house and hold on to their seats in the senate. >> you know, it's so interesting. all weekend, it was all about the blame, the blame, the blame, the blame. i think david is right. this is the first day that people will feel the effects of a shutdown. and i don't know if that blame message, whose fault it is going to resonate as much as just do your job. it is the number one job of congress to have the government open and rung. >> we're not even talking about a long-term funding deal. that's not even on the table here. >> right, right. it's sort of ridiculous at its base. >> we're talking about weeks.
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this is not long-term like you mentioned. everyone else who doesn't get a government paycheck, they are showing up to work today. why can't congress get this right. you are correct when you say all of the pointing fingers. that's been going on over the weekend. and now the rubber finally meets the road because people aren't going to be going to work today if they're federal employees. and the branding battle, whether this is the schumer shutdown or the trump shutdown, whoever wins this, whoever finally hammers out a deal and turns the government back on, i think that they're going to be able to say authoritatively that they're the adults in the room. >> literally, we're battling over hash tags, though. >> right. >> they're counting the number of tweets and suggesting public sentiment is either on or against them. >> just wait until thousands, hundreds of thousands of americans are calling the irs to try to figure out something about their w-2s or taxes or something. >> right. >> we're at the moment of implementing the president's big tax win.
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the irs is closed except for essential services. >> you mentioned the president. what is the president's role in all this? this is clearly a choice the democrats have made. but this president was elected on draining the swamp, on cutting deals. he is doing neither. what has his role been here? the president has been all over the place, frankly. we saw some of these tweets where he is talking about using the nuclear option, returning the senate to a simple majority rather than the 60-vote threshold than it's always had. that's very unhelpful for two reasons. the first is that that is not what is being debated currently. and every time he talks about parliamentary reform, something that everybody is super excited about, he takes interest away from the actual topic at hand. and second, what goes around, comes around for crying out loud. if the president does away with the nuclear option, if he forces mitch mcconnell into making that decision, well, come 2018, if
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sore some reason republicans don't hold on to the majority, he is going to have a really tough time when democrats are in control. so this is unhelpful. the president needs to get on message. >> all right. philip wegman, "the washington examiner." we'll talk to you again in about 30 minutes. perhaps a breakthrough in the next 30 minutes. >> don'tfold hold your breath. >> thank you. the government shutdown would inflict a lot of point. if it lingers. some of the operations to help victims of hurricanes, wildfires, mud slides, that will all be put on hold. nasa estimate morse than 17,000 employees will be furloughed. those working on experiments will have to abandon them after the government reopens. in many cases that means starting over. >> the united states air force academy in colorado springs, colorado announced the cancellation of all sporting events. the centers for disease control expected to furlough 61% of its staff in the midst of a deadly influenza outbreak across the united states. the cdc says it plans to
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continue its immediate response to urgent disease outbreaks. >> states are doing what they can to deal with the shutdown. officials in new york announcing ellis island and the statue of liberty will stay open on the state's dime under an agreement with the interior department. also, the state of arizona stepping in to keep the grand canyon open as well. >> you know, you have to get tickets for the statue of liberty crown sometimes in months. people who have planned on that. >> and travel heard for that. >> also in terms of military in terms of rrvegs anybody who does training for the reserves, those will have to be canceled. the longer it last, the more profound the effect. a short shutdown isn't the end of the world. more than a few day, one thing right that was get the air force network, armed forces network back on so they could see football that was a big deal for troops. huge deal. >> speaking of football. this is the best three hours of my day yesterday. super bowl lii is set.
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how each team punched their ticket, next. my name is jeff sheldon,
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all right. 3:16 eastern time. hubs more of the text messages that republicans say prove the mueller probe is tainted now in
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the hands of lawmakers. nearly 400 pages of texts between two top fbi officials delivered to capitol hill on friday. white house allies say the messages show that some fbi staffers working on the russia investigation are biased against the president. >> in one exchange from february 2016, lisa calls it unbelievable trump would win the nomination. peter strzok who led the clinton e-mail responds now the pressure really starts to finish the clinton probe. the first batch of texts include insults targeting both democrats and republicans. house conservatives demanding the release of a classified memo spearheaded by devin nunes that's critical of the fbi's conduct during the 2016 election. the memo can now be viewed by all house members. alleged missteps by the fbi and
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justice department in their use of feiss salt. >> democrats claim it present askewed version of events insisting it is an attempt to torpedo robert mueller's russia investigation. house members who have viewed the report say they believe it contains evidence of widespread fbi abuse. 12 days after a deadly mudslide shut it down, highway 101 in santa barbara county, california, of course, reopened. traffic starting to flow shortly after noon on sunday. at least 21 people were killed with hundreds of homes destroyed or damaged in the mud slides that followed the deadly wildfires. the body of the latest victim was discovered just two days ago. dozens of women's marches taking place in cities around the nation. the scenes playing out would from the west coast to the east. demonstrators urging people to vote in this year's midterm elections. sunday was the official anniversary of l.a. year's women's march in washington. that's when hundreds of thousands of women wearing pink
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hats flooded the streets of washington in a remarkable display of resistance to president trump. huge numbers of activists also gathered in cities across europe, including london and rome. women taking center stage at this year's screen actors guild award. the show featuring nearly all female presenters. kristen bell became the first person, man or woman to host the s.a.g. awards in the ceremony's 24-year unhosted history. as for the winner, the dark comedy, three billboards outside missouri taking home three trophies, including the top prize. >> the hbo limited series "big little lies" a couple of wins for nicole kidman and alexander skarsgard. vip took home best cast in a comediment one sterling k brown became the first african american actor win for male actor in a drama. and julia louis-dreyfus broke
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the record for the most sag honors for a single actor. she now has nine. she wasn't there last night. she was home in her pjs because she is recovering from breast cancer treatment. >> that's right. we saw that wonderful video of her kids singing to her on instagram. >> lip-synching to beat it. to sports. the philadelphia eagles punching their ticket to super bowl fi5l. they'll face the new england patriots. the eagles defense making a statement early, tying the score at 7-7 on a 50-yard interception return for a touchdown by patrick robinson. and check out this return. and that block. the key right there shifting the momentum in the eagles' favor. their offense steamrolling the top ranked vikings defense, lifting philly to the third super bowl in franchise history. the eagles have never won, though, the big game.
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legarrette blount plowing through there. earlier sunday, it was vintage tom brady and the new england patriots. the quarterback unfazed by a stitched up throwing hand. throwing two touchdown passes to danny amendola. a comeback win over the jags. the eighth super bowl appearance for brady and belichick who have teamed up to win five times. look at that grab by danny amendola. you just had a sense in this game that no matter how much jacksonville controlled it, you just knew brady would do this. >> i didn't know. i was really nervous for him. >> were you? >> yeah. that quarterback for jacksonville was so good. >> blake bortles was fantastic. >> i felt so bad for him at the end of the game. because he and tom brady were just great quarterbacks of the game. he just fell slightly short. >> i feel so happy to layer you watching an entire football. >> it didn't start until 7:30 at
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night soy could do it. all right. a live missile drill in the heart of japan. how did it play out in realtime? cnn's will ripley live in tokyo with a report next on "early start."
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25 minutes past the hour. government officials in tokyo conducting the first missile evacuation drill to counter the threat from north korea. hundreds of volunteers rushing for cover inside buildings and underground after a siren signaled an approaching simulated ballistic missile. the drill taking place in the heart of the city. will ripley live from tokyo with details.
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even a run-through shows how terrifying and real the possibility of a conflict. >> it really is the nightmare scenario for japan, christine, to have a north korean missile, an armed missile approaching a metropolitan area like tokyo. 35 million people live in the greater tokyo area. and there have been so many missile drills in japan over the last year. they've actually been much more common than this rare snow than we're see hearing in the japanese capital. however, this is the first time they have done it in a large city like tokoyo. they also did one in the japanese city of if you can oak with fukuo fukuoka. people got these messages on their phones called j alerts telling them they needed to take cover. we saw people basically running into subway stations or moving to more secure areas of concrete buildings. this is a country that endures many kinds of natural disastes.s they're used to earthquake
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drills and tsunami drills. but since world war ii, more than 70 years ago have japanese citizens had to prepare for the possibility of being bombed. and north korea at the center of all of this. they have a team on the ground in south korea led by the way by the lead singer of north korea's version of the spice girls, the moranbong band. they're going to be inspecting the concert venues for the winter olympics, those inspections happening tomorrow. christine? >> all right. beautiful snowy evening in tokyo. thank you so much for that, will. >> pyeongchang needs some of that snow for the winter olympics. the senate republican leader says his intention is to take up immigration if the democrats help reopen the government. that enough, though, to sway the skeptical democrats? a key vote later today. we'll discuss. we do whatever it takes to fight cancer.
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like the new $1 stacker. the dollar gets you more at taco bell. are all these layers of beef and cheese reserved for a secret society? or just anyone with a dollar? the answer is yes. (bong) it would be my intention to resolve these issues as quickly
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as possible. it would be my intention to proceed to legislation that would address daca. >> senate majority leader intends to address immigration reform. but is that enough for democrats to back his spending plan to reopen the government? signs are mixed. we'll find out at noon today. welcome back to "early start" on a shutdown monday. i'm griggs. >> i'm christine romance. it's 30 past the hour. the government shutdown now. first working day of the week. noon today in the senate, a key vote on a measure to reopen the government. mitch mcconnell's intention to take up bill that would extend protection for dreamers, immigrants brought to the u.s. illegally as children hoping it will be enough to turn the lights back on. >> two sources say they expect the effort to fall short.
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saying commitments are just not firm enough. a republican source said mitch mcconnell made no promise the house will take up whatever the senate passes. still, there some optimism in the gop. the number two senate republican john cornyn says it is better to have a successful vote today than failed vote overnight. >> a senior republican aide says leaders think they have a shot at picking off enough democrats to move forward. the aide says this is their offramp. let's bring in ryan nobles. he has the very latest from capitol hill. >> david, christine, form from chill clil where it turned out to be a much earlier night than anyone expected that wasn't because a grand bargain was struck between republicans and democrats. no. instead they decided yet again to delay this process, extending just little bit longer until noon eastern time on monday. that's what senate majority leader mitch mcconnell said on the floor late last night. >> it would my intention to
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resolve these issues as quickly as possible so we can move on the other business that is important to our country, assuming that the government remains open, it would be my intention to proceed to legislation that would address daca, border security, and related issues. >> reporter: but mcconnell's olive branch not quite enough for democrats last night as they decided not to vote on that measure and instead give their members some time to sleep on the issue there appears to be an issue of trust right now between republicans and democrats. democrats are insisting that a vote on immigration and in particular protection for the dreamers comes up before the next continuing resolution deadline, which is now set at february 8th. but regardless of the back and forth between republicans and democrats here on capitol hill, there is a stark reality from the hundreds and thousands of federal workers across the country. they don't have to go into work today. that means that they will lose a paycheck for today because the government remains shut down.
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many of them waiting on edge to see whether or not mitch mcconnell and chuck schumer can set aside their differences and cast a vote that will reopen the federal government. we'll have to see what happens later today. christine and dave, back to you. >> we will indeed. thank you, ryan. two republican senators who broke from their party saturday night back in the field. arizona's jeff flake and lindsey graham of south carolina agreed to vote yes on the stopgap bill. flake and graham had been key participants in negotiations with democrats, and they believed the white house has not done enough to strike a deal here. >> senator, do you really think you can come up with an agreement by the 8th? >> i don't know. i hope we can. but i'm doubting it. i have relied on the white house to actually work with us. we haven't seen that yet. >> the white house staff i think is making it very difficult. i've talked with the president. his heart is right on this issue. i think he's got a good
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understanding of what will sell. and every time we have a proposal, it is only yanked back by staff members. as long as stephen miller is in charge of negotiating immigration, we're going nowhere. he has been@an outlier for years. >> the white house using the senator's own words to defend miller and attack senator graham, saying as long as senator graham chooses to support legislation that sides with people in this country ill little, we're going nowhere. he's been an outlier for years. overnight the white house kept up the pressure on the democrats. quote, democrats can't shut down the booming trump economy. so they shut down the government instead. the president's position is clear. well will not negotiate on the status of unlawful immigrants while the democrts hold our government and our military hostage. >> earlier president trump tweeted if stalemate continues, republicans should go to 51%. changing to a simple majority vote. mitch mcconnell says the
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conference does not support changing the 60-vote threshold to tend filibuster. >> helping us break it down this morning, washington examiner commentary writer philip wagner. thank you for being here. you are not shut down. all right. here we go. noon is the big vote. any sense we're going reopen the government today? >> well, you said a moment ago that i think you're absolutely right. we have lost all track of time. it's not clear whether it's morning or evening or night. because negotiations aren't going anywhere right now. the one thing that i think we need to point out, though, this is an emperor has no clothes situation and the press has no credibility if we don't point out that right now democrats are asking for even more than ted cruz dared for in 2013. so the left of it there asking for a daca deal here, even though republicans made clear they're willing to deal with the issue in march. right now we need to see where the blame is going toned up. >> it has been a weekend of
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blame. in fact when you call the public comment line at the white house, this is what you hear. listen. >> thank you for calling the white house. unfortunately, we cannot answer your call today because congressional democrats are holding government funding, including funding for our troops and other national security priorities hostage to an unrelated immigration debate. due to this obstruction, the government is shut down. >> i guess the jury is out on who will ultimately get the blame, right? in 2013 -- >> that's unusual. that is very unusual that is more like the rnc, though, isn't it, philip? >> like a superpac ad or something. >> that's not something you expect when you call your elected representatives, much less the white house. >> the people's house. >> absolutely. that's an aggressive move. the white house is not pulling any punches here. but we talked about this earlier in the hour. the branding battle, whether it's going to be the trump
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shutdown or the schumer shutdown, the only thing that matters is how this ends. because the person who comes to the table hammers out the deal. they are going to be the ones that voters look to as the adult in the room come the midterm elections. >> and look, democrats are choosing to draw their line in the sand. but there is no trust here. if this is going to be based on trust, we will not have a deal. here is what chuck schumer, the minority leader says about where they are at this point. >> the bottom line is this. it would be hard to imagine a much more reasonable compromise. i was in principle agreeing to help the president to get his signature campaign promise. something democrats and republicans on the hill staunchly oppose in exchange for daca, a group of people the president says he has great love for. i essentially agreed to give the president something he has said he wants in exchange for something we both want. >> he is talking about the border wall, money for the
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border wall. >> gave them the wall. that's what democrats are saying. the president not being clear to either side. his own party has said we have no idea what the president wants to sign. what about that point from chuck schumer? >> well, first of all, that's what senate democrats are saying. if you ask nancy pelosi whether or not she is on board with the daca for wall funding, that $20 billion that was talked about, she responded to reporter others the weekend. and she was completely incredulous. so first of all, there is that. chuck schumer can only speak for himself. second of all, the president definitely needs to figure out what his message is in all of this. over the weekend, he was talking about parliamentary procedure and ending the fill buster in the senate. so the president himself needs to be clear about what his priorities are. because going into the shutdown at noon, battle lines are drawn. but it's still unclear where the white house is. >> if you were a betting man works you say the president goes to davos to rub elbows with the very people who he campaigned
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against, the global elite, or do you think he stays home and deals with this? >> well, i think that this is definitely the big obstacle, the big challenge of his presidency so far. i'm not certain whether or not this is going to change travel plans. like you said a second ago, the president campaigned against ruck elbows with global elites like those at davos. so this doesn't look good for the president currently. but at the same time it doesn't look good for democrats because this is hurting house democrats. we saw in a poll they're lagging in the generic down to 5%. so this is going to blow up on one side or the other. we're going to find out today at noon. >> all right. betting man, patriots or eagles? one word. >> i've been a colts fan for too long to root for the patriots. god bless the eagles. hopefully they win. >> "the washington examiner," he is on the record for the underdog. phil, thanks. all right. vice president mike pence also a
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colts man in this morning. but he is being forced to defend comments he made about the government shutdown. here is what the vice president told troops near the syrian border. >> minority in the senate has decided to play politics with military pay. but you deserve better. you and your families shouldn't have to worry for one minute about whether you're going get paid as you serve in the uniform in the united states. >> critics accusing pence of accusing u.s. troops as a prop there. cnn's ian lee live in jerusalem. >> good morning, dave. mike pence isn't backing down from those statements. still putting blame on the democrats for the government shutdown. and that government shutdown has followed him here to jerusalem in the local press. there have been reports saying if the trump administration can't broker a deem with the democrats, how are they going to
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broker a deal for middle east peace? that coming after last december's announcement by the trump administration that jerusalem would be the capital of israel. that was condemned by the palestinians. they aren't going to be meeting with the vice president on this trip. also local church leaders, people that the president was keen to meet that. >> also canceled their meetings with him after that announcement. dave? >> pointed words there indeed. ian lee live in jerusalem, 10:42 a.m. the fisher house is stepping up to make sure families of fallen troops receive survivor benefits during the shutdown. those benefits include funeral and burial reimbursements which will not be paid while the government is shuttered? can you imagine the indignity? as of sunday night, there have been no reported combat deaths two service members were killed in an apache helicopter crash saturday at fort irwin, california. trump and the gop still
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riding the success on the tax bill. the shutdown has crippled the agency that oversees taxes. it's tax season and the irs will furlough most of its workers. if you're waiting on an existing audit or other tax matter you are out of luck. the shutdown could even delay your refund. the 2013 shutdown deferred $4 billion in payments. that's tough on americans who rely on that money to pay off debt or other expenses. that's main street. the s.e.c. may furlough most of the stock, suspending ipos. it worked at full force during previous shutdowns, but most occurred in the fall when the agency still had money from the previous year. speaking of investors, will the shutdown affect stocks and confidence? today's wall street's first chance to response. currently futures are little lower. and i would just say watching the record highs over and over
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again last week in the stock market, investors, wall street was betting there either wouldn't be a shutdown or it would be short and shallow, as they say. but we'll see. >> no major reaction it look likes. >> this will be the first chance to react. okay. super bowl lii all set. patriots, eagles for the lombardi trophy. how each team punched their ticket, next.
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hundreds more of those text messages that republicans say prove the mueller probe is tainted now in the hands of lawmakers. nearly 400 pages of texts between two top fbi officials delivered to capitol hill on friday. white house official says it shows some staffers working on the russian investigation are biased against the president. >> in one exchange fbi lawyer lisa page calls it unbelievable trump would win the nomination. counterintelligence investigator peter strzok. now the pressure really starts to finish the clinton probe. the first batch of texts included insults targeting both democrats and republicans. 48 minutes past the hour. dozens of women's marches
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taking place around the nation. look at these. that's seattle. playing out seattle, miami, phoenix, washington, new york, philadelphia, chicago, denver, los angeles. demonstrators calling for women's rights and equality, urging people to vote in this year's midterm elections. sunday was the official anniversary of last year's women's march in washington. that's when hundreds of thousands of women flooded the streets of d.c. in a remarkable display of resistance to president trump. huge numbers of activists also gathered in europe, in london and in rome protesting the same. and you can see the time's up movement was something that was a common denominate tlemplt. >> women also taking center stage at the screen actors guilt. the show featuring nearly all female presenters. kristen bell became the first man or woman to host in the sag's 24-year unhosted history. three billboards outside missouri taking home three trophies, including the top prize. >> among the major tv
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categories, the big little lies fantastic, that was a great, great show. it notched a couple of wins for nicole kidman and alexander cars guard. vip won and "this is us," outstanding drama. i know you love that one. sterling k. brown became the first african american actor to win for male actor in a drama. he is terrific. and julia louis-dreyfus snagged two wins. he is broke the record for the most sag honors for a single actor. she now has nine. what was she got a loft rewards for? >> seinfeld? >> she was not at the ceremony. she is at home recovering from breast cancer surgery but she tweeted about it saying it was awesome toe watch the win while sitting in your pjs. >> so talented. the eagles punching their ticket to super bowl lii with a 38-7 mauling of the vikings.
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they face the defending patriots in the super bowl. first quarter, nfc eagles defense stepping up huge. tying this one at seven. interception return for a touchdown by patrick robinson. fueled by that block right there at the 15. philadelphia just took over this football game. nick foles rolling. that is legarrette blount plowing in there. the minnesota defense had no answer here. third super bowl in franchise history. for the eagles. they have never won the big game, thoughment earlier sunday, just vintage classic tom brady. >> the first time he's had a glove. >> a lot of attention on that glove. unfazed by the stitched up throwing hand. two touchdown passes to danny amendola. 24-20, the comeback win over the jaguars. eighth super bowl appearance for
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tom brady and head coach bill belichick. the patriots, it doesn't matter what you do, you take away everything they've got and somebody else beats you. rob gronkowski was lost with the concussion at halftime. it doesn't matter. danny amendola to the rescue. >> one of the best pictures. coach bill belichick the big hug. >> that was the real thing. no man hug there. >> happy guys. a blizzard pummelling the plains with heavy snow. the same set set to bring rain and cold tire the east coast. meteorologist pedram javaheri has our forecast. >> peter, christine, big-time blizzard event across portions of the plain states here. about two million people dealing with this across sioux city, omaha. heavy rainfall and gusty winds making it a treacherous go into the early morning hours on monday. actually into tuesday before everything tapers off. but we're talking upwards of a foot of fresh snow coming down over the next day or so across this region. the southern periphery of the
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front coming in not only on the warm side, but severe weather around portions of arkansas into northern portions of louisiana this morning as the front begins to skirt off towards the east. with doe have warm enough air in place to where the northeast doesn't have to worry about snow this go-round, at least across the major metropolitan cities. and we see cold air come back in behind it on tuesday and wednesday. how about 52 in chicago? over 20 degrees above average for this time of year. in atlanta into the middle 60s. washington at 64 degrees. almost an early hint of spring there in store. but again, it's shorts lived here in washington. you'll notice that eventually drop off to 47. which is closer to what would be normal for this time of year. guys? >> all right. thank you so much. okay. imagine a supermarket with zero checkout lanes. you don't even have to pull out your wallet. amazon opened its first physical cashierless store. details next.
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3:56 eastern time. government officials in tokyo have the first missile evacuation drill to counter the threat from north korea. hundreds rushing for cover after a siren signalled an approaching ballistic missile. it took place in the heart of the city. we will find will ripley in tokyo as the snow pours down there. good morning/good evening, will. >> reporter: dave, there are two things you rarely see in tokyo. one is the snow you can make snowballs like this and the other missile drills. it has never happened in the japanese capital before. the japanese government has hosted hundreds of the simulated drills where people get alerts on the phones and they have to
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seek shelter in a sturdy building or underground. they were not doing these in the big cities for the past years for the logistics. they had to shutdown certain areas to make this happen. the japanese government feels things are quiet because of the inter-korean talks and olympics, they are expecting a quiet period. japanese officials believe there is a good chance after the olympics, the north korean threat will revive itself. they want people to be prepared. there were protesters out accusing the government of hyping up the north korea situation for political gain. meanwhile, in south korea, there is a delegation on the ground which is rare to have north koreans in the south. delegation led by the lead singer of the korean version of the spice girls.
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dave. >> hopefully pyeongchang gets that snowball-like snow for the olympics. will, thank you. global stocks don't seem to care the government is closed. futures are down heading into day three of the government shutdown. wall street is not too concerned. a short impasse will not hurt the economy. in the past, shutdowns have not caused significant selloffs. u.s. stocks hit record highs on friday helped along by corporate profits. expect netflix and verizon and united and ford and caterpillar numbers this week. and the bottom 50% of the population saw no increase in wealth at all from oxfam. that proves the economy is
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favored to the rich. the economic forum is synonymous of the rich and he lead. president trump is scheduled to head there this week but it could change this week with the shutdown. imagine a supermarket with no checkout lane. amazon opened a cashier-less store. you scan the app when you walk in and sensors track your movements and grab a sandwich and ketchup and walk out the door. the seattle store offers groceries and cold drinks. it has no plans to open other locations yesterday. amazon -- locations yet. amazon is known for driving other businesses out of business. >> fascinating development. "early start" continues with the latest on the government shutdown.

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