tv New Day CNN March 23, 2018 5:00am-6:00am PDT
5:00 am
why didn't he call me for help on the drug crisis? >> take us down the road. i don't care what she's doing. she's not in charge of keeping my family safe. you are. you're in power. >> that's why we now have funding for the wall, for the military, for school safety, for opiods, for so many of the president's priorities. this president was mocking the wall two years ago and now they're funding it. that's this president. >> i don't know where this president was two years ago when these guys made it up. >> the president just rolled two pages, everybody should read it. a very significant drug policy, then yesterday, he took action against china because the ustr said that we were losing innovation in the future and there ee's intellectual propert theft. and he took action.
5:01 am
>> but was it the right action. >> you don't want to talk about tax cuts. the bonuses and the capital investment they have devoted to their communities here. >> a lot of companies like the fact that you gave them more money. what they do with that money, we will see. >> you've seen e-you've seen what they have done with that money, people's paychecks are fatter. >> you have seen what some have done with some of the money. people are getting more money in their paychecks, but we also know that it's very unequally distributed. and the top does a lot better than the middle class that were told that this tax cut is about them. >> you may call it crumbs. i don't. >> let's not get too far off point. i brought you on here because of this initiative. >> it does matter and it great that congress has met the call with funding and let me just
5:02 am
give a shout out to something, in january, the president was flanked by republicans and democrats in the house and the senate in the oval office. they provided $9 million for customs and border patrol for fentanyl control and analysis. we can do this together. i hope the people who are constantly trying to throw logs in the path of this president in a town at least very used to stage stages and they're not used to disruption and progress. i hope they will come together in that kind of bipartisan fashion in the future. there's a bunch of legislation that's working its way through congress, you pass that, you're doing what's right for the people in your communities. >> the president should talk to his own party and find a way to get things done. it's all on you. >> isis is on the run, almost all but gone, that's why we're more secure, we're not
5:03 am
prosperous and we're more accountable. but i can tell you somebody who's been working every day since day one -- >> you're one of the few, my friend. you are a veritable unicorn in that house. >> allow me to be an illustration as to why there's such a great benefit in serving, because we can all be dozens of other places. and we are trying every single day the best we can, beginning with the president and the vice president who actually were elected to something to put that agenda forth. he's keeping his promises and people should not be surprised when he puts tariffs, but he listens to congress, he listens to other experts. when he goes ahead and he has the most massive tax cut, that your network said it can't pass, it won't pass, and if it does, it only benefits the wealthy and
5:04 am
the well connected. look at the to stock market, lo at the confidence numbers, look at the great achievements, the regulatory reform. isis is all but gone. >> every decision should be looked at in terms of its conceptual base and in terms of its impact. they don't like it on wall street at all when it comes to tariffs. >> thank you, christopher, and good luck on your new show as well. >> you're always welcome on my show. >> don't tell people that there are issues of public service. >> don't tell people that things aren't true. >> i only said that the tax cuts did pass, we're going to talk about that all year. president trump shaking up his administration again, naming his third national security adviser in just 14 months.
5:05 am
h.r. mcmaster is out, we told you this was going to happen, it is not new, it was weeks in the making, it was denied by the white house, they said it was fake news, they were lying to you, it was real then and it just happened today. former u.n. ambassador john bolton is in, that could mean very real changes to how the white house deals with north korea, iran and russia. >> and a shake up in the president's legal team, the presidents insists he still wants to talk to mueller's investigators. and in france, the french president calling this a terrorist act. we'll bring you a live report on that in just minutes. we have cnn political analyst and senior editor for the thick ron brownstein and chief political correspondent dana bash. this was an example of the ugly
5:06 am
side of the white house when it comes to messaging and it's media relationship. even kellyanne, i didn't want to get into it too much, because the opepiod crisis is a real problem. >> we reported it was going to happen, we knew it was going to happen, the question was when was it going to happen? meaning when would h.r. mcmaster finally leave? our understanding of part of the question was because he was and is active duty military, would he go somewhere to get his fourth star, barbara starr, our pentagon correspondent was saying that's probably unlikely. now we're seeing he's going to retire from the military. but more important, the president is still from his perspective getting his sea legs, getting his mojo. because he was not comfortable with h.r. mcmaster. h.r. mcmaster, remember, came in
5:07 am
because the guy he really wanted over the objections of many people he trusted, michael flynn the first national security advisor was there for a minute, and we all know why. he brought in h.r. mcmaster, who has unkreebelievable credenticr the president never liked the way h.r. mcmaster briefed and he didn't sort of like his style. and now he's picked somebody who i am told has had -- they have had several meetings, they get along personally, they do mesh in terms of their personalities. the thing that is so stunning is how different they are when it comes to their world views, which you would think would matter more than anything for somebody who was the national security adviser to be as hawkish as john bolton is when you have a president who ran on the opposite platform. and to your point too, not only so opposite, but based on everything we have seen and
5:08 am
heard, the -- part of his conversations that were happening over the last number of days, weeks, whatever it may have been, was the fact that, look, you were going to go along with the president, and it's very clear the president is the decider here and part of what may not have worked for hr mcmaster, here are some suggestions, you may not like them, but here's what i'm thinking and here's some of my advice. it's been very clear that john bolton is going to be very much a yes man for the president and it's so off of what we know in terms of where he stands. >> it re-enforces what we have seen, in that this is an administration that the policy process, and you have to put that in quotes, that this is very different than any other administration in that there is no other systematic way for the opposing viewpoints to feel as though they were ultimately being heard and given a fair hearing and that historically is
5:09 am
why i think you see so many leaks, whether it was the tariff decision or whether it was the president's mood and mind can change from hour to hour and no one is sure how to get how these outcomes are being generated. this is also a reminder how much by historical standards, how much tum multiwe have been seeing. it's not unusual for it to be a kind of two-year tenure. but the national security adviser has been much more stable. barack obama had two in his first term, had bun one in his second. bush had one in each term. clinton had one in eight years. we're on the third one now in 14 months and i don't think anybody thinks this is probably the last that we're going to -- the last one that we're going to see, it's just a reminder, i think,
5:10 am
for republicans on capitol hill, that they have tied themselves to a tornado here in the donald trump presidency and they're likely to get more unpredictable outcomes rather than less unpredictable outcomes as they go forward. >> one of those key presidents who had more predictability particularly in the selection of their staff. they didn't have national security experience, but they had experience with building a government staff. and donald trump doesn't, and we start of forget, and it's an important reminder here. the notion of a chief of staff, which he doesn't even like in general, in his comfort zone, building a regular staff to do things, to execute things, but the concept of a national security staff is brand new to him. >> right, look, anybody whoever went into the trump administration would realize immediately this man has never run a big team of any sort, and
5:11 am
we have to remember was part of the cell was, no, no, no, he doesn't know how to do a lot of this stuff, but he'll surround himself with the best, that has proven to be anything but true. we're having this battle over facts and feelings and fiction. okay? and we're living through a really important demonstration of this and we have to call it out. this is not new information that mcmaster is on his way out. that dowd, the lawyer was on his way out, that hthey wanted bolton, we were reporting these things, and it was slapped back by this white house, being accused of palace intrigue, and the president said it last friday. >> you took to twitter last night, to ensure that h.r. mcmaster's job was safe, but as the president spoken to
5:12 am
mcmaster, and others to tell them that their job was safe. >> i spoke directly to the president last night. he asked me to pass that message along to general mcmaster. >> if it wasn't true, ron. and we got once pillarried for being fake news and it was just not true. and it has to be called out, does it not? >> let me give you something that came up with cannes ckelly conway. you can talk about adding $2 billion for opiod funding, but medicaid funds most of the opiod treatment. and the administration's -- to cut medicate funding and to unroll expansion of medicaid, that brought in a lot of people, working poor adults that are
5:13 am
dealing with opiod addiction. buy backs, you mentioned and she mentioned the bonuses that are being given to workers by companies that receive benefits in the tax bill. cnn reported a few weeks ago on a private consultant -- there is a consistent pattern in the administration, every administration kind of puts things in the most positive light. and you have an administration that's been less tethered to facts and that's why people are saying consistently in polls that president trump is not honest and trust worthy. >> when you heard what sarah sanders said, she said i asked the president and the president told me to say it's fine. it's coming from the president and part of the reason they're not telling the truth is they have a very impulsive boss and
5:14 am
what's true now could not be true a minute in now because he's so changeable. >> ron brownstein as always. we have been following breaking news on and off for the last hour or so, because there is a deadly hostage stand offat a supermarket in southwest france, france's prime minister calling it a terrorist act. we have cnn international continue jim bitterman, he's live with the breaking details. jim, what do we know? >> reporter: it started off with a police officer out jogging in southern france when someone came up and opened fire on them. one of the officers was hit, he was taken to the hospital, he's not in serious condition, but he was injured.
5:15 am
apparently the same gunman went to a supermarket in a rural town which is nein southern france, well known for its tourism and tourist areas. and he took hostages, a number of hostages, we don't know how many people are inside the building, but according to the police, he shouted allah akbar as he went in, he identified himself as being a supporter of isis and at least two people were injured and there may have been two people killed as well. we don't know, because doctors have not been able to check out the state of those people because it's still ongoing, the sw s.w.a.t. teams are on their way to the location. >> jim, thank you for the o fol. former playboy model karen mcdougal talking exclusively
5:16 am
with cnn about her alleged affair with the president. >> if melania trump was watching this, what would you want her to know? >> that's a tough one. >> that answer next. but it gets pret ntense. -ahh. -the new guy. -whoa, he looks -- -he looks exactly like me. -no. -separated at birth much? we should switch name tags, and no one would know who was who. jamie, you seriously think you look like him? uh, i'm pretty good with comparisons. like how progressive helps people save money by comparing rates, even if we're not the lowest. even if we're not the lowest. whoa! wow. i mean, the outfit helps, but pretty great. look at us.
5:18 am
wow. i mean, the outfit helps, but pretty great. i don't want to lie down. i refuse to lie down. why suffer? stand up to chronic migraine with botox®. botox® is the only treatment for chronic migraine shown to actually prevent headaches and migraines before they even start. botox® is for adults with chronic migraine, 15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more. it's injected by a doctor once every 12 weeks.
5:19 am
and is covered by most insurance. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be signs of a life -threatening condition. side effects may include allergic reactions, neck and injection site pain, fatigue, and headache. don't take botox® if there's a skin infection. tell your doctor your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications, including botulinum toxins, as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. with the botox® savings program, most people with commercial insurance pay nothing out-of-pocket. talk to your doctor and visit botox®cmsavings.com to enroll. . all right, so for the first time, former playboy model karen mcdougal is speaking out, and she's doing it exclusively to anderson cooper about her alleged affair with donald trump
5:20 am
before he was president. mcdougal even gives details about the first time she actually met trump's wife. here's what she told anderson cooper. >> where is this picture from? >> that picture is from the apprentice release party they had at the trump mansion. and then they had the release party before it actually aired. >> and that's when you met melania? >> and i tried to keep my distance. i tried to go as far away as i could just because i felt guilty. >> do you think she knew? >> you know, maybe, maybe, i don't know. you know, it was told to me that they were arguing that night and i said why? and somebody had said probably because of you. but i don't know if that's a fact or not, so don't quote me on that one. >> but some people seeing this
5:21 am
are not going to believe that you had a relationship. hope hicks has stayed categorically that you did not have a relationship, there's no truth to this. when you heard that denial, what did you think? >> well, i think someone's lying and i can tell you it's not me. it's a little hurtful. but at the same time, i have to understand that if he were to have told hope hicks he didn't do it, i understand, because he's trying to protect his family and his image, but it's definitely, like, wow, you're going to lie about that? okay. >> do you have any text messages, photographs, videos, anything that would dispute the hope mhicks statement that neve happened? >> i still have this journal that i keep, and i still keep to
5:22 am
this day. the purpose of that was not to get anybody in trouble. but those are my notes, those are for me. when you care about someone, you don't try to set them up in any way, shape or form, that's my opinion. >> the thought of telling your story to ami, some people hearing that are going to think, a, you wanted money, and b, you wanted to damage the president. >> i voted for the president. i voted for donald. why would i want to damage him? that's my party, the republican party, that's my president. i didn't want to damage him in any way, shape or form. >> if donald trump hadn't been running for president, do you believe this deal would have been made with ami? knowing what you know now? >> probably not. >> you're convinced now, this was an effort to do a favor for donald trump in the last few months of the presidential race? >> unfortunately, yes. >> when you heard the access hollywood tape come out, just on a personal level, i'm wondering what you felt.
5:23 am
>> you know what? i was disgusted, i had not seen that in him at all, like when our relationship was going on. i didn't see that in him at all. like i said he was very respectful, he was a gentleman. i even had friends go, wow, he's really respectful to you when you're out in public, his hand is always on your back or your shoulder, and he introduces you. th >> why did you file a lawsuit? >> why did i file a lawsuit? i want my rights back. you know, it's been -- yeah, i want my life rights back, i feel like the contract is illegal, i feel like i wasn't presented correctly, i was lied to and everybody involved in this deal, i want the rights back and i want to share my truth because everyone else is talking about my truth, which i need to share
5:24 am
my story. >> do you have any regrets about the relationship that you say you had with him? >> back then? >> yeah. >> the only regret i have about the relationship that i had with donald was the fact that he was married. >> if melania trump was watching this, what would you want her to know? >> that's a tough one. >>or s oor say to her? >> what can you say to her, except i'm sorry. i'm sorry. i wouldn't want it done to me. i'm sorry. >> karen mcdougal claims she spoke with michael cohen, so if donald trump's long time lawyer is in fact involves. we'll discuss next. if i call out with a migraine, that's one less ambulance to serve a community. i just don't want to let these people down.
5:25 am
excedrin migraine. relief that works as hard as you do. at crowne plaza, we know business travel isn't just business. there's this. a bit of this. why not? your hotel should make it easy to do all the things you do. which is what we do. crowne plaza. we're all business, mostly. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis,laza. little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ... with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop.
5:26 am
some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ♪ otezla. show more of you. ♪ ♪ the fastest samsung ever demands t-mobile, the fastest network ever. because fast should be fast. ♪ right now get the new samsung galaxy s9 for half off. ♪ whoamike and jen doyle?than i thought. yeah. time for medicare, huh. i have no idea how we're going to get through this. follow me. choosing a plan can be super-complicated.
5:27 am
5:29 am
he argues that he doesn't need a special counsel. t we have cnn chief legal analyst jeffrey toobin and harvard emeritus professor, allen dershowitz. professor, you're being pumped out by president trump as proof there should be no special counsel. you made a strong argument in the hill where you suggested there was no crime so there needed to be no special counsel. let's start the debate there with this question to you, you know better than i for sure, that the language establishing this special counsel wasn't just about looking for crimes, certainly specific to the int interference and what arises out of it.
5:30 am
and also to coordination of those efforts, so the standard of looking for probable cause of a crime was not part of the purview of this special counsel. why are you so adamantly oppose to its existence? >> i've been opposed to the special counsel from the beginning, along with many judges, the advice of the special counsel is they have better come up with proof of a crime, otherwise they have wasted the public's money. in terms of coordination, it's not a crime to coordinate with russia, you have to find criminal conduct. >> but he's not charged with just finding criminal conduct. to assume that someone like bob mueller is going to find crimes or feel like he's wasting people's time isn't fair to him, is it? >> it's very fair do him. he's a guy who allowed people to remain in jail when they had put in jail because whitey bulger
5:31 am
was being prosecuted. prosecutors are not supposed to investigate not criminal conduct. they don't have a roving commission to see where the political sins have occurred. they're not supposed to look into whether with there was improper political activities, they're supposed to look only for crime and the problem, and i said this when the special counsel was appointed for clinton and jeffrey toobin approved it when i said it then. i have been principled and consistent from the beginning, i always place principal over partisanship and civil lib beb tearians nightmare. it shouldn't change because the object is donald trump rather than hillary clintonor bill clinton. hillary clinton had been g if -
5:32 am
president and everyone was yelling lock her up. i think trump's biggest vulnerability are these women, because they are going to establish a perjury trap. and that's how bill clinton got impeached. and bob bennett is on the list of people, that donald trump foolishly thought about appointing his lawyer, bob b bennett who got bill clinton to testify. >> let's just talk about the special counsel. this is an absolutely textbook situation of why you want to appoint a special counsel. allan, you keep saying there was no criminal conduct here, there have already been guilty pleas, so we know there was criminal conduct here. >> low level.
5:33 am
>> the national security adviser, you think that's a low level person? michael flynn admitted to lying to the fbi and that is -- imagine what credibility this investigation would have had if jeff sessions was in charge of investigating michael flynn. they were in the same campaign. this is why there was an indelible political -- indelible conflict of interest that couldn't be dealt with except by the appointment of a special prosecutor. let me finish allan. robert mueller is not investigating political crimes. he is investigating violations of the criminal code. he has found several. he has found 13 russians who violated -- you keep saying clug collusion is not a crime. collusion may well be a crime. >> no, it's not. >> in violation of the campaign finance laws. >> that's a crime. >> and that's potentially what collusion is.
5:34 am
he hasn't charged anyone with -- any americans with that yet. but i think what mueller is doing is what prosecutors do, investigating violations of the criminal code, he has found several. several people have been accused, several people have pleaded guilty. that's what prosecutors do and that's entirely appropriate in this circumstance. >> and that should have been done by career staff prosecutors in the justice department. there are staff people, you have career people, career people aren't paid to try to target particular individuals in a particular situation. i'm not here with that kind of talk, allan. >> i think by firing jim comey, he created the need. >> i agree with you, i think he made a terrible mistake firing comey, and i think that's what led to the appointment of the special counsel. i think it was a mistake to do
5:35 am
it. they should have appointed a nonpartisan investigatory commission, the kind they have in many countries in the world to look into the systemic problem of russian influence on american election and if they then found evidence of crime, it could go to ordinary prosecutors. we're the only western democracy that needs to use special counsel. in any other country, you have career prosecutors that are juice the political realm. y special counsel are a serious violation of civil remedies, but i want to focus more on what the president's vulnerabilities are. >> you talk about these women in a perjury trap, people should know to the point of the nonpartisan nature of the criticism that's coming out of the professor. he doesn't think that bill clinton committed perjury
5:36 am
because what he said about monica lewinsky was perjury. but how do you think these women set up a perjury trap, how will the special counsel get to them? >> remember, bill clinton was impeached largely because of a civil lawsuit that bob bennett didn't settle and didn't question fault. the first rule when you're representing the president is you do not allow him to testify about his sex life, that is an absolute perjury trap. and the idea that president trump thought about hiring bob bennett, the man who put president clinton into that perjury trap -- >> so you're not saying the special counsel is going to look at these women. >> he may, you never know he may. >> i don't know how we get there, that would be an interesting path that he would find his way there. but jeffrey, give us the last word on the idea that even if the special counsel never asks about any of these women, if he gets question posdeposed and se
5:37 am
these suits, he could be setting himself up like bill clinton did. >> i don't think bob mueller has anything to do with these women. there are now three pending civil lawsuits against the president, relating to sexual misconduct and he might be deposed in some or all of them and that present a serious problem. >> you say that special counsel doesn't have any interest in this, but the special counsel who was investigating clinton on white water didn't have any interest, but he expanded his investigation. and the special counsel here could expand his investigation. >> professor dershowitz, thank you for coming in and laying out your case. two florida massacre survivors marching in washington tomorrow, what do they want law mi makers and the president to do about gun violence, we'll ask them next. first we have a preview of
5:38 am
"american dynasty: the kennedys" here's a taste. >> you know their name, you don't know their whole story. >> an historic palace, a state dinner claims mr. and mrs. kennedy and mr. and mrs. khrushchev together. >> away from the banquets and the cameras, jack has a serious mission in vienna, both sides have enough missiles to destroy the entire world. kennedy intends to make a deal on nuclear disarmament, but the soviet leader makes an impossible demand. he wants kennedy to surrender the western sector of berlin. despite his best efforts, jack is humiliatehumiliated. he leaves the summit having achieved nothing. >> i will tell you now it was a very sober two days. >> jfk learns winning power is one thing.
5:39 am
wielding is another. american dynasties, the kennedys, a new episode sunday at 9:00 on cnn. if you've been diagnosed with cancer, searching for answers may feel overwhelming. so start your search with our teams of specialists at cancer treatment centers of america. the evolution of cancer care is here. learn more at cancercenter.com/experts [girl 1] perfect! you can send a digital payment. [man] uhh, i don't have one of those payment apps. [girl 2] perfect! you have a us-based bank account, right?
5:40 am
[man] i have wells fargo. [girl 3] perfect! then you should have zelle! [man] perfect. [girls] perfect! [vo] the number one mobile banking app just got better. [man] does your coach use zelle, too? [boy] of course! [vo] another way we're building better every day. wi'm really grateful that usaaq. was able to take care of my family while i was overseas serving. it was my very first car accident. we were hit from behind. i called usaa and the first thing they asked was 'are you ok?' they always thank you for your service, which is nice because as a spouse you serve too. we're the hayles and we're usaa members for life. see how much you could save with usaa by bundling your auto and home insurance. get a quote today.
5:41 am
5:42 am
we run about 2,500/2,800 fire calls a year and on almost every one of those calls pg&e is responding to that call as well. and so when we show up to a fire and pg&e shows up with us it makes a tremendous team during a moment of crisis. i rely on them, the firefighters in this department rely on them, and so we have to practice safety everyday. utilizing pg&e's talent and expertise in that area trains our firefighters on the gas or electric aspect of a fire and when we have an emergency situation we are going to be much more skilled and prepared to mitigate that emergency for all concerned. the things we do every single day that puts ourselves in harm's way, and to have a partner that is so skilled at what they do is indispensable, and i couldn't ask for a better partner.
5:43 am
survivors of last month's high school massacre in florida taking their fight for gun control and their conversation to washington for a march for our lives rally. hundreds of other demonstrations will be taking place not only aound the country but around the globe. joining me two of the parkland survivors, julia cordoba who is also the class president there. julia, what is the message for tomorrow? >> tomorrow we hope to feel the unity of all the students and parents that have had this shame on gun violence and we hope that the voices and the noise that we create tomorrow will create change. >> you have both spoken up, you have spoken to the president. when you have those conversations, based on where we stand now, how are you feeling about where things go moving forward? >> well, this was trump's chance
5:44 am
to change his legacy and after all this, i think his legacy will be what's left over of the russia investigation. and we're fighting for our inalienable rights, my class rates, friends, teachers had inalienable rights to live happy, healthy full lives and i think those rights are more important than to have an assault weapon. >> and you have brought up wanting to see a ban on assault weapons with the president. there was some movement last night, we can't deny that, some extra money that was put in for school safety, strengthening the background check system. julia, what would you like to see? >> our next step after this march is to see the young adults and the future of the children to get out there and cast your vote. because we need our future generations to make a change. >> we heart from david hogg one
5:45 am
of your fellow students yesterday, saying this is not about taking away people's guns, this is not about taking away the second amendment. sam, do you want to have that conversation with the nra, and if so, what do you want it to be about? >> it's not about taking away the second amendment. the second amendment was for a well regulated militia, not for 300 million unaccounted for guns in america. i don't think that people should have no guns. but there are certain guns killing machines that civilians should not have access to. >> do you think you can have that conversation with the national rifle association? >> i mean, i guess we'll have to see. i don't think they're going to listen to anyone -- it's their business to support rifles and put them on the streets, but it's our politicians' job to turn away blood money for the sake of our country, the sake of
5:46 am
people's lives. >> there's been a lot of talk about school safety in the wake of always of this, obviously we saw legislation passed in florida, we saw the funding bill last night. but then we also learned of new security measures at your high school. that backpacks will need been clear, you will hear land yards at all time. what does that change for you on a daily basis, and is it enough? do you feel safe? >> so i think that it's great that they're trying to create all these protocols and implement all these safety measures but i do not think that will cause or save any lives. we need gun control, we need tangible legislation passed for our students so we feel safe in our safe haven in our schools and i do not feel safe and i don't feel clear backpack or
5:47 am
la lanyards will make us any safer. >> where do you go moving forward? >> we go and speak to adults, students, sharing our cries and trying to show people this isn't right and we can't let this be our new normal and from there, we will make our way to registering students to vote, like i am doing at my school the past couple of days and just trying to make a difference as much as we can as students. >> julia and sam, i appreciate you both joining us, thank you. >> the key change will be who votes and for what. we'll see what happens in these midterms. john albert inspired to help other families after his wife jill died of cancer. so what did he do? he created a nonprofit to give children who will lose their mom or dad to cancer, a time-out. and it is a moment to create unforgettable memories as a family. >> the cruelest part of late
5:48 am
stage cancer is the emotion. guilt that you're leaving behind your children, and dread that you're going to miss their file stones. we give these families a chance to have fun. have positive memories. >> sweet. >> we are trying to give each family their own unique treasured time together. >> boy, oh, boy, what a gift to these families and especially in that moment. all right, to find out more about john's organization and to nominate someone that you think this person, they could be a cnn hero. go to cnn heroes.com. opening statements in a high stakes antitrust battle. what the government and at&t are saying about a proposed megamerger, next.
5:49 am
great, another dead end. sarge, i just got a tip that'll crack this case wide open! turns out the prints at the crime scene- awwwww...did mcgruffy wuffy get a tippy wippy? i'm serious! we gotta move fast before- who's a good boy? is him a good boy? erg...i'm just gonna go. oh, you wanna go outside? you gotta go tinky poo-poo? i already went, ok? in the bathroom! as long as people talk baby-talk to dogs, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
5:50 am
doespeninsula trail?he you won't find that on a map. i'll take you there. take this left. if you listen real hard you can hear the whales. oop. you hear that? (vo) our subaru outback lets us see the world. sometimes in ways we never imagined. (avo) get 0% apr financing on all-new 2018 subaru outback models. now through april 2nd.
5:51 am
get half off the galaxy s9 at t-mobile. ♪ a wealth of information. a wealth of perspective. ♪ a wealth of opportunities. that's the clarity you get from fidelity wealth management. straightforward advice, tailored recommendations, tax-efficient investing strategies, and a dedicated advisor to help you grow and protect your wealth. fidelity wealth management.
5:53 am
protests erupting in sacramento, california two days after police gunned down an unarmed black man in his own backyard. demonstrators marching to city hall, demanding the arrest of the officer who shot and killed stefan clark. police say the officers believed that clark has a gun. he did not have a weapon, only a cell phone. the game was played in front of a largely empty arena, crowds disbursing as the night wore on, police so far made no arrests. opening statements in the high stakes antitrust trial between the justice department and at&t, the government wants to block the telecom giant's
5:54 am
merger with cnn. . >> so yet was finally the big day, opening arguments in this huge trial which is really being called the anti trust case of the generation, hundreds of people packed into this courtroom. the big dogs, at and tex trks t time-warner packed into the courtroom. we heard what we know are both sides in this case. the government is arguing that at&t by merging with time-warner is going to take a tool and turn it into a weapon. at&t says that's not true and prices will not necessarily go up, but they have to do this to be more efficient and compete with facebook and google and amazon and netflix and they're quote, chasing taillights when it comes to these companies. and the case is really how they
5:55 am
define the industry. and that's what the uj j is going to have to decide. is att and competing with amazon and netflix? you can't compare at&t and cable with netflix and amazon and hulu. at&t is saying that's what's happening. all right, it's friday, we made ittish. would you like some good stuff? >> i w0ould love some good stuf. >> we will order it right up. ♪ the fastest samsung ever demands t-mobile, the fastest network ever. because fast should be fast. ♪ right now get the new samsung galaxy s9 for half off. ♪
5:56 am
whoamike and jen doyle?than i thought. yeah. time for medicare, huh. i have no idea how we're going to get through this. follow me. choosing a plan can be super-complicated. but it doesn't have to be. unitedhealthcare can guide you through the confusion, with helpful people, tools and plans. including the only plans with the aarp name. well that wasn't so bad at all. that's how we like it. aarp medicare plans, from unitedhealthcare.
5:58 am
we need to be ready for my name's scott strenfel and r i'm a meteorologist at pg&e. we make sure that our crews as well as our customers are prepared to how weather may impact their energy. so every single day we're monitoring the weather, and when storm events arise our forecast get crews out ahead of the storm to minimize any outages. during storm season we want our customers to be ready and stay safe. learn how you can be prepared at pge.com/beprepared. together, we're building a better california. bounty is more absorbent,mom" per roll so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper feel the power of thenew power...smax. ...to fight back theraflu's powerful new formula to defeat 7 cold and flu symptoms...
5:59 am
fast. so you can play on. theraflu expressmax. new power. . rally gets you after a whole week, right? new the good stuff, friday edition. good samaritans rush to help someone in a burning car. you can see here, a group of people joining police officers to flip the suv. some people even grabbed some fire extinguishers, after some tense moments, they finally pull the victim from the vehicle. the police officers thanking the good samaritans for their help. as for the driver, he's actually
6:00 am
expected to be okay. first responders are amazing, they run towards danger, everything in you tells you to run away. but ordinary people can do extraordinary things, that's the good stuff. >> and it's nice of you to point it out. it's been a pleasure, thank you for having me. we have major breaking news out of the white house. there's a ton of stuff going on there with staff shake-ups, the russia investigation, you know, women coming forward with stories, but moments ago, the president did something that i don't anyone saw coming, which he threatened to veto this huge $1.3 trillion spending bill that was finally passed by the senate overnight. it had bipartisan support in both sides of congress thought it had presidential support until moments ago, where out of
112 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on