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tv   New Day  CNN  March 19, 2018 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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us. another explosion in austin, two people hurt this time. people are operating under the session it could be connected to the bombings this month. the latest explosion could have been triggered by a trip wire on the road. >> this after the police made a public appeal to the bomber or bombs are to reveal the reason behind the attacks. ed lavandera is live with those detail. ed? >> a great deal of activity here in this neighborhood in southwest austin. dozens and dozens of fbi and atf agents descending upon this neighborhood, waiting for the sun to come so they can begin looking for clues in this latest
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explosion. two men in their 20s were injured. the previous explosions on the east side of town. this involves what could be a trip wire it detonate this explosive device and that has brought a warning for citizens to be vigilant. >> this could have been activate $ by someone handling or kicking or coming in contact with a trip wire. we now need the community to have an extra level of vigilance, whether it be a pack and, a bag, a bag pack and do not approach it. >> two victims of last night's explosion expected to be okay. authorities are just waiting for the sun to come up so they can
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look for any clues they might be able to found in this neighborhood in southwest as you tn. >> thank you for being there. you and the team please stay safe. joining us, and last fl mud. i've been doing it all morning. we're not hearing the word terror, film. havingors don't know why this was done. so even though it may look like something that terroristic, they need to know more. is that true? >> that's fair. if you're looking to characterize this as an act of terrorism, that would mean you know what the motive is. you have a trip wire. that suggests to me the individual laying the trip wire didn't have a particular individual in mind. obviously they can't guarantee who is going to hit the trip wire. can't call it an act of
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terrorism when you don't know what the target is. >> what we're still looking into or what officials are looking into it is all all of these are connected. as you point out, this is done differently, this is the trip wire. we don't know if it was intended for someone as opposed to packages left before. >> one of the first things i'd ask is whether they have frns iks on this witt, bets that were, o forbes the tregle they may not already if these are connected by looking at the forensics. if they are connected, then you have the againing of clues. forbes, in the area do you have video from places look banks, stores, restaurants where you can look at facial recognition and drm if someone in this area was also in those other areas.
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do you have license plate readers in those areas? my guess is tail be connected and may start to start to cloly come together on who may have done this. >> stay with us. we're going to go to politics. the president has accused partisan. and the white house yet given confirms the president is not considering firing the special counsel. >> joaning us, joshua green and fill mudd both here. josh, what's the political play i hear for the president? is this just haven'ting going on or do you think that this is so many point of momentum? >> this seems like new momentum.
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we have not seen trump until these twitter attacks mention mueller by name. for months and months trump's lawyer have been imploring him not to do this, not to go on twitter and attack the special counsel for whatever reason, maybe it because trump is angry, maybe because mueller has been subpoenaing documents for the trump organization. for whatever reason, he's gone further and attacked mueller in a tweet calling it a witch hunt. >> and maggie haber said the president is feeling more emboldened. >> he's been holding back a lot. part of that coming from even just taking gary cohn as huh
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example. so the president nou feeling more emboldened to throw whatever out there that he's feeling. where does that take us tho? >> essentially he was new to job that he had no preparation for. h.r. mcmaster, filler san. what we've seen is trump bridele at the restrictions they set, whether it was imposing steel and aluminum tariffs or whether it's getting rid of people like secretary of state rex tillerson, who he has not meshed with and said some pretty
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insulting things about him. at some point offer the last few weeks, trump has decided i'm done listening to these senior staffers tell me now, i'm the president, can sao that i've gain you saw the case hae lead out in his sweet about this all being a political stunt from the givening. >> there's a small piece and a big piece, chris. if you're looking at this case, one of the most difficult things to assess is intent. going back to the removal of fbi director james comey last year, the question is was that the intention of shutting down the case? when he tweets, he gives the special counsel indications of entent. he's giving them a gift. at a broader sense, there as
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within this evening nobody is talking about that's my biggest concern in this swirl of activity. he's got a confrontation with sessions. if sessions ever reseening or the president removes sessions and puts in his on man as attorney general. that prn does not have the ability to hear the case. that's a. >> there'ses will the polarization. we're not even at 72 hours yet at this point. 48 and chang. as we look at this and we're hearing a lot on both sides. what is remarkable, though, is we are seeing some republicans come out and saying, okay, look, time to take a step back. does any of that have any impact, though, on the prz? does that actually get through
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and does he care what those people have to say? >> if you look at the republicans who came out on the sunday show yesterday and criticized this, the two that stood out to me are jeff flake, trey gowdy. both of republicans that are leaving. one is retiring to be a judge, flake decided no to run for reelection. what you heard from the republican leadership was nothing at all, contributes. other than left-hand say gram, i didn't hear raspberry yesterday who are going to be around as members of congress come out and say, no, you can't do this sort of thing. paul ryan had his press wing put out a statement. trump is going no real pshback
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from the leaders of his happy. they like what they're getting done. they're ge willitting their jud they're get their pet projects taken care of. phil, answer your own question. he wants to get rid of sessions. they put in somebody else. they're not recused so they say this is over. how is that good for trump? right now trump folks believe he had nothing to do with this. but he's got to grow to win, phil. if this special counsel is gone, how did can ever believe that trump and himself people are clean if they don't get the answers from this probe? >> i'm suggesting that's
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something the president might do. i'm not suggesting it's going to work. i don't think it will. y remicrosoft tomey, you hammer be rb the other thing of course is anybody who nominates is going to go in couldn't of a confirmation hearing where there will be one question, will you or will you not allow the investigation continue? and they'll have one answer, they're boxed in. >> that's a strange point. i'll let you have that within. >> hoose a giver that contract. >> the white house denies president trump is considering or discussing firing robert mueller. should we believe that when the
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saying he is not considering or discussing firing mueller. can that be believed given the tweets? joining us is michael caputo. thank you for joining us this morning. >> do you share of words of lindsey graham who said this? >> the only reason mr. mueller could ever be dismissed is for cause. i see no cause when it comes to mr. mueller. he needs to be able to do his job. pledged to the american people as a republican to make sure mr. mueller can continue to do his job without any interference. >> are you worried that the president is preparing to fire robert mueller? it looks though from his tweets. >> as i said, if he does, it will be beginning of the end of his presidency. >> do you agree?
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>> yes, you do. i don't think the president is really considering firing mr. mueller. this is the president trying to defiend the terms of the conversation surrounding this investigation and if you think about it, it's also the president trying to devise the parameters of the interview that the director seems to be looking for. >> do you think the president is going to sit down with bob mueller? >> i wouldn't advise it. i hope he doesn't. but i think he looks like he wants to. that's going to be a situation fraught with peril but one the president believes he's ready for. >> why? >> i think anybody sitting in front of a special prosecutor stands -- like unintentionally lying. >> you must intend to lie. >> people like myself as a
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witness in this very long would lawyer up, even if they've done nothing wrong to be straight with investigators. that's us what frustrate with per -- it's only fraught with peril if you can't go in and tell the truth. it doesn't give a lot of weight as to whether the president can tell the truth. why can't the president do that if he has nothing to hide? >> i didn't want bill clinton to sit down. >> you didn't want bill clinton to sit down? >> no. >> this thing working right. hold on. you thought that bill clinton
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sitting down and being in front of that grand jury was a bad thing? >> i thought it was a mistake for the president, absolutely. it would be a mistake for anybody. >> you said you downwaidn't wan to do it. i will buy you whatever you want, wherever you want if you can show me one piece of proof. why am i making this point? it's all about political motivation. the people on the right don't want him to sit down because you think he's going to get tripped up. you say it's a perjury trap. the special counsel offers up a list of questions saying these are the things we want to discuss. that's playing pretty straight. wouldn't you acknowledge that, michael? >> i may disagree with some of my colleaguings, i think mueller has played this straight from the beginning. that's why i don't think the president should fire him. at the end of all of this the president and the rest of his
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aides will prove there was no collusion. i don't think the president should sit down with him. i don't see how he can really avoid it at this point now. >> well, they can avoid it. they say we're going to subpoena you and he comes and sits down and says i'm going to plead the fifth. now unless they immunize him, he has the ability to speak. so i think politically he'll have his cover. but here's a political question i don't know the answer to. help me with this. he said this probe stinks. it's got to go away, got to end. why? he stands to benefit the most. if what he believes is true, the only way he can grow his base on this issue is by mueller completing, not being hindered,
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concluding ves vision, trump had nothing to do with these efforts. that's it. democrats bring up they think they're questions about trump. he can trn and said say that's not what your man bob mueller says. why doesn't he want that closure? >> and i know his legal team is counseling him in that direction. i'd say the same thing. i i think we have a lot of supportive members of congress counseling him in that direction as well. think this is going to play out the way we expect it to play out. i think director mueller will complete his investigation and we'll move on. the president and all of us around him are exhausted of this investigation. it's been well over that year. >> that's not that long for a federal investigation. they go on for years.
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>> i get that. this one is especially vitriolic. the president wants to move forward with his plans and he's really ham strung in many ways. >> but it's a little bit of his own undoing. he's the one that obsesses about this. nobody told him to tweet about this all five million times and malign the effort. he he brings that on himself. >> i think that's him prying to ignore the investigation. he can just significant nor it. >> that's not the kind of president we have when we've got it on cnn 24/7, every single day. >> most of the time -- >> all across the country, all around the world. >> fundamental, it matters. russia interfered, we need to know why. woo have a white house that ignored that largely, which makes us feel like it happened given. >> that would be the second white house in a row to ignore
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it. >> and baobama and that administration made a mistake, made a political calculation and it was a wrong one. but they didn't know what we know now in terms of the breadth and depth of what it was. they geoff netly have is. we'll see what it does if. >> no reason tweeting about this, michael. you be well. i'll see you again soon, i'm sure. >> will congress take action to protect robert mueller's investigation? we'll speak with a senator behind a bipartisan bill next to shield mueller next.
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president trump ramping up his attacks against the mueller investigation. and comments from his lawyer fueling the fire the president will fire mule are. >> if you have an innocent
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client, mr. dowd, act like it. >> the only reason mr. mueller could ever be dismissed is for cause. i see no cause when it comes to mr. mueller. >> once he goes after mueller, then we'll take action. i think people see that as a massive red line that can't be crossed. >> joining us now, the offer of a bipartisan bill to protect special counsel mueller, democratic senator. you issued a statement which read in part the comments by the president's lawyer are unacceptable noting any attempt by the president to obstruct or remove the special counsel would create a constitutional crisis, that nobody, including the president of the united states is against the law. his attorney said, look, we're not trying to fire the president. is that enough for you?
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>> he makes statement and then he issues a retraction. it's hard to know what direction the president is taking. you just played a number of senior republican leaders in the house and the senate saying obstruction of mueller's investigation would be a red line, would create a constitutional yie aal crisis, show we're not a country that operates by rule of law. i think this is time when all of us, republicans and democrats, need to stand up and make it clear that we're committed to the rule of law and for the president or his lawyer to even in jest talk about firing mueller or ending his investigation is unacceptable. >> in january we saw senator
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tillis said his office still supporting it. those are both on essentially a holding pattern. what would it take to move that forward? >> after the statements by the president on twitter this weekend, i think every republican senator should be on within one of these two bills. there is a consensus draft we'd like to move forward with. but if senator grassley means what he said, the best way to ensure the rule of law and protect this particular special counsel and future special counsels would be for senators of both parties to join these bills. >> senator graham calling on the senate judiciary to hold public hearings for the sake of transparency into the firing of andrew mccabe. do you agree with that is it. >> i do o. the firing is very suspect, just
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a day before he could get his full retirement benefits after 20 years with the fbi. but there is a report and we don't know the contents of it. >> is it also possible that in this hyper charged political climate, even a report from the inspector general there, even a report from the fbi in terms of ethically what happened, the lack of candor, as they said with andrew mccabe, that no matter when it came, it could look as if it's being politicized? >> that's part of the challenge. with the repeated attacks against the fbi, we face a long-term degradation of confidence. the fbi has enjoyed a long-term history of being professional, nonpartisan, independent. this current fact pattern where
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you have the president going after senior leaders of the fbi eat or theedly and is undermining our confidence that this sup holds the rule of law. >> there is a confidence when it comes to the american people and lawmakers, as you know and i point to recent investigations. so the house has been much more politically charged in terms of its investigation into russia than we've seen in the senate. that being said, even if there were to be an investigation into the senate into the firing of andrew mccabe, do you believe it will be received in a piept mbin mann manner? >> the judiciary committee has been able to work well together on issues in the past. i do think the way that our own investigation into obstruction on the judiciary committee has ground to a halt does raise those concerns. >> there are also concerns about funding the government past this
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week. i mean, is that going to happen? is there anything that could hold it up that you're holding out for? >> as an operatateor are i'm optimistic we'll wrap up this omnibus bill by the end of the week. there are dozen of so-called rieders to come over to the house that we have not been able to get agreement to clear. because we're not legislating as often as we should, try to stick big issues into these ryders. >> a lot of concern over what facebook knew when it knew it in terms of this issue with cambridge analytica. should mark zuckerberg testify? >> absolutely. we need to know how cambridge n
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time now for the five things to know for your new day. number one, another explosion rocked austin, texas. two people hurt this time. police believe it could be connected to this string of deadly bombings that have been going on this month. authorities say the latest explosive may have been different because it could have been triggered by a trip wire. >> president trump lashing out at the special counsel's russia investigation, attacking robert mueller by name for the first time in a weekend tweet storm. key republicans now warning the president against firing robert mueller. >> president trump heads to new hampshire today for the roll out of a plan to tackle the
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country's opioid epidemic. the plan includes stiffer penalties for drug traffickers, including the death penalty for some. >> and a poll shows president putin won the russian election. he called for russian unity. >> one of the biggest anti-trust cases in decades is going to trial this week. the federal government suing to stop at&t from merging with time warner, which is of course cnn's parents company. the outcome has enormous implications for the media and tech industries. >> head to cnn/new day for the latest. >> how about a little cnn money now. a new crisis for facebook and its ceceo, mr. mark zuckerberg. serious questions about how the company protects your data. christine romans in the money
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center. what do you got? >> this centers on cambridge analytica. reports claim it gained access on information on 50 million facebook users. the data would be extremely helpful for the presidential campaign. the data was transferred from a professor to cambridge analytica. that transfer violated facebook policies. it ordered the company to delete that data and that never happened. "it's clear these platforms cannot police themselves and call for more transparency and accountability." they say trust us. the stock is down more than 3%
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in premarket trading. >> and they say president trump is untamed now, he's found this new boldness fueling his main attack of bob mueller. up next, we talk to mueller's former chief of staff. i'm just worried about the house and taking care of the boys. zach! talk to me. it's for the house. i got a job. it's okay. dad took care of us. the lsave up to 50 percent onon hundreds of your favorite items. all at the lowest prices of the season.
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it's a longer drive. but just like a john deere, it's worth it. president trump going against the advice of advisers, we believe, and unleashing on special counsel bob mueller by name. why? what is his intention and what is his effect? is he undermining the russia probe? if so, it's obviously on purpose. let's go to national security analyst lisa monaco. bob mueller surrounding himself with democrats and that's what
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this is all about. it's an attack against the president and he is leading it. do you believe there is any proof of that suggestion? >> absolutely not, chris. bob mueller was a life long republican, was appointed by a republican president, president george w. bush and subsequently served under president obama and then importantly, chris, his term was extended for two years in an unprecedented and unanimous vote of the senate just a few years ago. so this is a man who has served his country beginning with his decorated service in vietnam and has served his country as a public servant, as a career prosecutor across multiple administrations and he is anything but political. >> but his probe is lousy with lefties and he, as fbi director, went soft on all of the uranium dealings that tapped into the clinton foundation. are those fair charges?
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>> they're absolutely not fair charges, chris. and what we see here is an effort, i think, to undermine the credibility of the investigation and any results that it brings. and what we've already seen is a methodical investigation by a career prosecutors, many of whom have prosecuted democrats in the past and what we see is the results in court. a number of guilty pleas by senior campaign officials, including the president's first national security adviser and a really jaw dropping indictment of 13 russian individuals and entities just a few weeks ago about effects and efforts to meddle into the election. so the proof here is in the actual results that we're seeing on a regular basis in court and that's where mueller and his prosecutors are doing their work. >> help me understand something else. i had somebody else who worked
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for mule aeller, i asked them h must really be angry at what the president is doing, this must make him want to redouble his efforts, getting called out like this. i was told, nope, you don't know bob mueller, he could care less what donald trump thinks about him or anybody else, when he's in the hunt, he's in the hunt. >> bob mueller is a man who puts his head down and does his job. he's not going to be affected one way or another by what the press says, by what the left says, by what the right says, by what the president says. he is going to follow the facts and the law. that's his training as a prosecutor and what he has spent his career doing. that's how he's going to approach this investigation. >> the idea of if we had collusion, we would have known by now. it's been 14 months, it's been too long and he hasn't come out with anything that's central to this. >> look, that just isn't born out. >> what we see is a methodical
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investigation, including, as i pointed out earlier, guilty pleas and charges against individuals who were at the highest level of the campaign and through the transition and into the early days of the government and this indictment that really is a page turning read of the russian individuals and entities a few weeks ago lays out in stunning, really stunning detail about the efforts to meddle into this election. so, you know, we ought to wait for all the facts to come out for mule aeller and his team to their job and they ought to be able to do so unencouple beku - unencumbered. >> that's a fair point. he could have found willingness of collusion by anybody but it doesn't rise to the level of a crime so we wouldn't have heard on it but could be in his
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report. let me ask you something else. the idea of the president removing jeff sessions and putting in an a.g. who is not recused so they can stop the probe themselves or pushing rod rosenstein to move on mueller, whatever it is. if bob mueller feels he's been removed wrongly, is he the kind of person that might fight back against such a move? >> i think if you were to see the president direct rod rosenstein to fire bob mueller, that would be in effect a gut punch to the rule of law because it would signal to this country and frankly to the world that we are not, in fact, a country that is a rule of law country but one ruled by fiat where the president believes he is above the law. so that would be, i think,
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catastrophic for the rule of law in this country and in terms of fighting back, bob mueller is going to continue to do his work in court methodically, following the fact, following the law and we should let him do that. >> yes, but it will be interesting. if that were to happening, it would be interesting what his move would be because he'd be the only one with standing to do anything legally. thank you very much for your perspective as always. >> nba star dwyane wade opening up about why the florida massacre has had such an impact on him personally and what he's doing to pay trb utiliibute nex.
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the commute is worth it.me, the more you know you and that john deere tractor... you can keep dreaming up projects all the way home. it's a longer drive. but just like a john deere, it's worth it. dwyane wade pushing for tighter gun laws after the florida high school massacre. >> good morning, guys. dwyane wade has a really unique perspective on all of this. he's a father to three kids in broward county schools but he also grew up surrounded by gun violence in inner city chicago. i talked to him this weekend at a powerful art exhibit called parkland 17.
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dwyane wade is throwing his support and his celebrity behind the students of marjory stoneman douglas, motivated not only by his position as a member of the miami heat but also as a dad. >> how can we go on as parents when we don't know our children are safe in school. i can't imagine what these families are going through. i try to put myself in that situation and the heart ache and the hurt just even trying to imagine it is too much to bear. >> and central to wade's experience, his own upbringing in the inner city of chicago. i don't want this to sound callous, you talk about chicago where you're from, gun deaths every day, did it garner the country's attention that it did happen in an affluent town like
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parkland a parkland, a largely white school, wealthy kids? how did that change the debate? >> 100%. one of the cool things about going to the school and hearing the kids talk, they know it. kids at parkland know it. they understand. and that's why it really made me want to get behind it and support it more. they understand they're the voice for so many. >> wade is putting his money where his mouth is donating $200,000 for the coming rally. >> i think march for our lives is a step in the marathon. the gun laws will change once we vote out the people who don't want to change gun laws. >> they both welcome the action taken by florida lawmakers to raise the age on some firearm purchases, all tthough they opp arming teachers. >> you're saying you're going to
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give these teachers gun and they're going to go out and they're just trained to kill the person. there's people who are trained to do that now who can't do it and won't do it. >> wade is sponsoring this art exhibit honoring the victims of the massacre, including oliver, who is buried in one of wade's jerse jerseys. >> i'm just honoring him and paying respect to a family, i'm paying respect to a young man that i didn't get an opportunity to meet but i feel some kind of connection to. and as i wrote on that board, i will not let them forget. >> what did you see in those students when you visited the high school? >> i seen life in that moment. it was just a moment where i knew the school is dealing with a tragedy that most of us can't even imagine. and when i walked in, it was
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like i didn't expect it to be like that. >> last month fox news host laura ingram said basketball players like wade should stay out of poll tex and just shut up and dribble. you are not going to shut up and dribble. why not? >> because i do more than dribble. it's just not who i am. it's never been who i am. for me it's bigger than basketball. it's bigger than dribbling. i've been given the opportunity to use my voice, to stand for so many that cannot, stand for so many that they will not allow to talk and have a voice and i understand the power. so i will not. >> and pushing this forward, it's not just the march in d.c. saturday but sibling marches in l.a., boston, chicago and as far away as london, madrid, tel aviv, mumbai, hong kong.
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they want their peers to register the vote, just be part of the conversation, don't be quiet. >> that is going to be the key. that is a great piece, very timely. >> they have to register to vote and they have to vote on this issue. >> it's an issue that gun voters have been on the other side of traditionally. >> thank you, my friend. time for "cnn newsroom" with john berman. good morning, everyone. john berman here. the breaking news overnight, a new explosion hitting austin, texas. this one injured two men. this is the fourth bombing in this city just this month. at this moment police are sweeping through the neighborhood where the last happened. officials tell us the bomb might have been set off by a trip

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