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tv   Wolf  CNN  November 6, 2018 10:00am-11:00am PST

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at booking.com, we can't guarantee you'll good at that water jet thingy... but we can guarantee the best price on this hotel. or any accommodation, from homes to yurts. booking.com booking.yeah >>lets 1:00 here in washington and up first, election day in america. voters are heading to the polls and the high stakes, high energy, high tension mid-term elections expected to be the most significant in years. even though his name is not on the ballot, many see it as a
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reverend of the first two years of the donald trump presidency. also on two americans. more evangelical, john college educated white voters. 35 senate seats and all 435 house seats up for grabs today. democrats hoping they regain control of the house. republicans aiming to hold on to the senate. the outcome is far from certain. the battle between democratic candidate andrew gillum and ron desantis among the high profile races to watch along with the florida senate race. the race between stacey abrams and brian kemp promising to be a nail biter.
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let's begin with gary tuckman at a polling place in powder springs, georgia. are you seeing long lines? >> reporter: jim, we robbery here now for six hours and for the first time, we have seen it slow down a little bit, but it has been very crowded all day. up until now, the minimum wait is a half hour and up to 90 minutes. the polls here in georgia are open from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. when the doors open, more than 100 people streamed in right away. that was notable because it was rapii raining outside. people want to vote for or against president trump and that made people enthusiastic about voting. we are in cobb county. this was the home of the former speaker of the house, newt gingrich. it always has been a republican county, about you it changed over the years. the most recent election,
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hillary clinton defeated donald trump by less than 2%, but she won and it's a battle ground county. we have been talking to people all day. lots of people are voting for the republican, kemp. lots of people are voting for the democrat, abrams. the race may not come to an end. can't wait until tuesday is over so we know the results. it may not end. in georgia, a few states have a run off. if one doesn't get 50% plus one vote, there is a run off. because there is a libertarian candidate in the race. he is not going to with in or do well at all, but he may get enough votes to stop from getting 50% and the race will go to overtime on december 4th. >> and we will be back at it. we are watching two key races. the governor's race and the race for the senate. from a polling site in miami, florida, rosa, a highly
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contested race in florida. set the scene for us today. >> reporter:breckle. the line started forming at 6:30 a.m. i want to take you to a drone shot we have. this is as close as we can get to theactual polling place. there is a line that form and from talking to the organizers inside, they said that this line has been here since 6:30 this morning. it has been steady and lots of people in the area voted. as you mentioned, florida has nail biting races. this is no exception. the latest numbers that we have gotten from the secretary of state show 39% of registered
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voters have cast their ballot. if you look at that break down by party, it is nail biting. more than five million total registered voters have voted. 41% are registered republicans and 40.5 percent per are democrats and the rest are no party affiliation or other. when you look at the races, the governor's race between andrew gillum and ron desantis, we know that it is in a dead heat. all of these folks who are voting out here, their vote will definitely count. their ballots will count. we will learn who will take this state. i talked to a voter who told me this is miami, it's a democrat stronghold. some people are hoping that indeed florida goes blue. we will see. >> it's another one of the east coast races that may give us an indication of how the broader
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playing field will look. thanks very much. virginia with a couple of interesting races to watch in the white house and the senate. on the house side, barbara com stocks squares off with jennifer wexton. dave bratt faces a tough challenge. on the senate side in virginia, kim kaine hoping to hold on to his senate seat against cory stewart. brian todd is in sterling, virginia. turn out heavy there? >> reporter: turn out very steady and strong. it is very heavy. we talked to an election official not long ago and he said turn out is popping, way above the levels of the midterm elections in 2014. we had an influxion casting their ballots and they left. this is where they are checking in voting over here and they enter the tabulations about here
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in this machine. what we can tell you is we mentioned the races. tim kaine running for reelection to hold his senate seat. dave bratt fighting for his seat. the race here that everybody is talking about is that tenth district race between barbara comstock and jennifer wexton. a lot of democratic investment in this race. wexton has really challenged comstock. this seat has been held by a republican for almost 40 years and comstock is in danger of losing it. >> we lost brian's signal. hard to keep the signals up with all of them. a big challenge there and as the polls close this evening. today, 10s it of millions of americans are expected to cast ballots. we have more than 30 million americans who voted early. in a matter of hours, we will have the first results.
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political analyst mark preston joins me now. mark, east coast time. you have a lot of key races and regions here. what are the early indicators as the first polls close on the east coast? give us a sense of where this is turning. >> let's take a look at the 6:00 hour when polls will be closing in indiana and of course we are looking at an important race where it has to do with the house of representatives. in indiana, we have a senate race that is very much under the gun. a lot of people are watching to see whether the democrat can pull that out. we jump to 7:00, south carolina, georgia, florida, they all start to close their polls and of course we will start to see results coming in. some of these races are very, very important and we talk about approximate them in georgia and in florida. of course by 7:30, ohio & west virginia. the last polls close in alaska at 1:00 a.m.
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we will be here talking about that and doing all the results through the night. >> democrats hoping for early pick ups in the northeast in the state of pennsylvania where there is redistricting. we will have early indicators. walk us through each party's agenda and priorities, if they win or maintain control. >> let's focus on the house of representatives. assume the republicans maintain control. immigration and the border wall, two big issues that president trump spent his first two years talking about and certainly the last two weeks of this election. middle class tax cuts is something that surprised us when president trump said he would guarantee a middle class tax cut of 10% to the middle class. many thought it was an election ploy and it was. they will continue to try to repeal obamacare. if democrats take it back, this is what we could see. this is a different agenda. voter protection and the trump
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investigation and the inf infrastructure bill. adam schiff, he has said that this will be front and center for him looking into his collusion with russia. we have been talking about that throughout the day. democrats believe there needs to be done more to protect voters and the last one. infrastructure may be something that democrats and republicans can agree on. something that president trump can get behind. something i think if we are going to see anything done in the new congress, it could be infrastructure. >> the committee chairmanships matter. if they get control. mark preston, thanks very much. we will say something you don't hear often. the president expressing regrets. what trump wishes he had done differently in his first two years in office. fox news is responding to criticism over its host appearing on the campaign stage with the president during an election. and the president's closing message for the mid-terms.
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was it enough to drive republicans to a victory tonight? we will discuss all of that coming up next. whoa! (phone rings) daddy, mommy's on the phone! hi! how are you guys? at&t proudly offers wireless and tv discounts to military, veterans, first responders and their families. visit att.com/hero.
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♪ are you 100% sure? >> yes, i am. we are going to win based on data. >> a lot of confidence. she is hoping to reprise her role as house speaker if democrats capture the house. senior political analyst, april ryan and white house correspondent for urban radio networks and "washington post" reporter and political analyst. david, 100% confidence from
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democrats. even republicans have been saying they expect it. reasonable confidence? >> if you are democrats looking at the house, there is 25 congressional seats that are held by republicans that hillary clinton won in 2016. republicans are playing defense and we see from looking at the polling that president trump has shrunk the battle ground of the electorate. he has a lower rating and for the incumbent party. he has college educated voters and women and minorities and younger people who trended against him tremendously. we know how much of this is really riding on him. he said so. we know that's true historically. there is a lot riding against republicans. they did have more momentum. they were slumbering and woke up in the aftermath of the kavanaugh confirmation hearing,
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but some of that energy has waned at a time when he was able to unite the entire party. now you see the president closing on a dark hard line message of immigration that has a narrower focus. >> he double and quadrupled down on the message of fear. i suppose we shouldn't be surprised. he has been consistent with that. let's hear what he said in the last 24 hours. i want to see what you think of this comment. >> is there anything as you look back at your first almost two years that you regret and wish on you that you could take back and redo? >> there would be certain things. i'm not sure i want to reveal all of them. i would say tone and i would like to have a much softer tone. i feel like i have no choice, but maybe i do and maybe i could have been softer from that standpoint. >> sincere regret? >> sincere, i don't know, but
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there are regrets? you know why? polls are showing the people are not happy with him right now. you have independents are very upset with the harsh tone with this bombasticness and fear mongering and racial overtones. sarah huckabee sanders, his mouth piece is an extension of him in the briefing room and the way she has come after jim acosta and me and so many people. it's not just the president having regrets, it's about how his administration has treated people and has dealt with the issues. this is kind of late. just before the wave or the waves are coming in, i wonder especially as it's raining in many states, we don't know what's going to happen. >> help me understand something. republicans have said this, too. he has strong numbers there. what is the why?
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did the president look at numbers and figure out that's not driving people to the polls and i have to go this path on immigration? why not hold up placards of economic growth. >> he's not a placards kind of guy, is it he? steve bannon in an interview laid it out saying look, fear and anger is what motivates people to the polls and the president followed that. >> i think this is that tension. he's a bannonite, fully. a lot of republicans are anguished. the jobs numbers that came out read like a press release. this is excellent job numbers and he could make a credible case, but he is playing to his base, hoping that fear and anger motivate people to the polls. that is his world and shocking people to the polls in 16. this is not about that. this is swing districts. it's not about the house districts that hillary clinton
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won. he is really in a lot of trouble with low approval numbers and only 28% approval with independent women. that requires reaching out. that is specifically what he is not. >> it's too late. >> could this be -- i don't want to say the right strategy, but the smart strategy for this election in that the house doesn't look good for the republicans and the president is focused on the senate races and made a judgment that on the races in contention, this message is most likely to save those seats or win them? >> i think that the fact that he has been focusing on the senate in the final days indicate that is the president agrees with nancy pelosi. odds are the house goes to the democrats and he has to shore up resources where he can. as we have seen, things that go through the senate are extremely high. judges. if you don't keep the senate, you don't have the ability to get the judges through. >> and the tax plan.
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>> that are has been the main thing. the main fight or the last main fight that we saw heading into the election and has been mitch mcconnell said it's the number one to get that done. you wouldn't get veto-proof majorities, but enough agreement that you have enough agreement among democrats and a few republicans to cause problems. he would be a veto holder the whole second half of the term. let's just see the polls indicating here. there is enormous potential for surprises. if it plays out the way both parties see this, republicans are getting a seat or two.
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how different does washington look in that environment? trump is going to get judges through. unless he has a few senators that walk away on the republican side. how different would it look? >> i don't think conditions are right for democrat and the president to work together. i thought there was a moment whether it was around immigration and infrastructure and he had those streaks of independence, but he didn't do that. i think democrats are so focused on today and into 2020 to getting him out of power. i think he is always going to be in a fight. if the democrats take the house, there is the potential to end a lot of energy to bring impea impeachment to him.
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for democrats, they are going to look to see how and two african-american progressives running in the south. they say this is how he takes it. >> it might create a national star or so. this is the first black governor. rock effort mueller is the oultimate black box, but a report could come out in the house. you would have democrats holding chairmanships and we will have a political judgment to make as to
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whether they impeach. the house impeaches and the senate convicts. they may not convict, but they will impeach. >> what's going on is this back and forth with democrats. if we do control the houseme. with impeachment or do we wait for the mueller report. it could happen soon. >> of course many democrats think it's going to damage them. >> they are trying and they know they have to do this methodically and the right way. if not, there will be backlash. at the same time, this is the piece that a lot of people don't understand. just because the house may begin impeachment and if the senate is not democratic, you don't have a conviction, meaning removal. many people say impeachment, but the removal is what people want. >> people mistake impeachment for removal. it's like an indictment. >> jumping the gun on that house
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standpoint will be a mistake. the republicans have been running on the threat more than democrats have been running on the proposal to impeach. it comes down to what do they deliver. democrats will be in a position by the house ways and means to release the president's taxes. that's a big deal with following the money and getting to it. >> they have to be strategic because if bannon is right and anger motivates, if they do too much, they risk fueling that. >> there will be anger on either side. >> but you have to be judicious about it. >> one fact is interesting and you see a lot of these tight districts, polling is behind the approval. that means they have radio am to grow if trump approvers show up
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and vote. i think a lot of strategy is running on the economy is great, but does it motivate people as much as being afraid and angry. that's one reason you went with a hard line. if the people don't show up tonight and that contributes to a big night for democrats. >> it will be consequential either way. you are looking at live pictures in miami. a line outside the polling site. a lot of lines, it's good to see. this is america. you have a right to vote. use it. this is texas. see those signs? beto. i think he is challenging ted cruz. we will see what happens there. one of the most high profile and the most expensive senate race in u.s. history. lining the border as the
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president ramps up fears over the migrant caravan. he had a lot of soldiers there, too. what's behind this? we'll be right back. i've been looking all over for our big idaho potato truck. of
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. as the democrats try to regain control of the house, there are key senate races we are watching including in missouri and nevada.
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a high profile race in texas where the democrat, beto o'rourke is trying to upset ted cruz in a contentious race there. just outside of dallas, huge amount of campaign money spent by both candidates. a record big early voter turn out. how is it looking? still an uphill battle for beto o'rourke? >> reporter: it is because this is the third most populous county in the state of texas and the last large urban county that voted red. beto o'rourke is trying to change that. president trump won tarrant count i by 9 percentage points, that is the margin by which he won texas. when you look at the big races like this race between ted cruz and beto o'rourke, both sides will be looking at this county. you can hear the beto supporters
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and there have been ted cruz supporters. o'rourke said if he is to win the state of texas and the senate, he has to win tarrant county. we have been talking about early voting numbers and more than 40% have already voted. the balloting tops 465,000. it's much higher than past mid-terms and higher than the early vote totals of 2012, a presidential year according to administrators. the question is where is energy and enthusiasm going? we see a burch of beto supporters, but we have to see how it wraps up when the polls close. >> we will be there for it and staying in texas, immigration is a big voting issue. the pentagon said there are 2600 u.s. troops at the texas border with mexico. president trump ordered them there to guard against an invasion by a group of migrants
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through to the u.s. the migrants are hundreds of miles away. they are playing the support role to the border agents there. this is the scene. you got u.s. soldiers in body armor unspooling what is known as barbed wire and seemingly an immediate threat from the caravan even as it is more than 600 miles away. they happened to lead the first armored division in iraq and was commanding general of the army in europe. 5200 u.s. troops at the border. it's going to rise to 7,000. let's see what the soldiers are doing. they are in body armor and throwing up the wire. we know the fact is they are there to back cvp, customs and border patrol agents. they are in numbers and the
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president's words, it is one of an imminent national security threat. is the caravan a threat that the military should be responding to? >> no indication that it's a national security threat, jim. when you talk about a threat assessment, the military does threat-based operations and say what is the energy and say what kind eves of things are happeni and what do we have to do to prevent bad things from happening. all the threat assessments show it's not a national security threat. there are certain people moving. they don't know completely what that convoy is made up of, but the amount of forces don't seem to be in line with what the threat analysis says, it is straining the tempo of the force. it is degrading readiness from where the soldiers are coming from and it's costly. all of those things make a
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difference. the chairman has to give advice to the president. he gives the best advice to what the president needs when he said i'm the civilian leader and the president doesn't have to take the advice. if he tells the military to execute, they execute. >> they have to listen to what the commander in chief says. listen to how he described the mission. i want to get your response. >> there is no plan for military forces to be denying entry to the united states. there is no plan for soldiers to come in contact with immigrants or reinforce as they conduct their mission. >> that is not what the president has said at his rallies to cheers. he is talking to soldiers defending the u.s. against the invasi invasion. what do you hear in his words? is that a quiet protest?
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construction even. as to what the military's role is? >> i think it's nuance, jim. i heard the chairman yesterday and the other things he said was i'm looking at the legality of this. he is. he has to look at the legality and the course of actions that he gives the president. what he said just now to me as a military guy, he said here is what the forces going to do and i'm going to my subordinate commanders and the joint task force that comes out of northern command led by a-star worker. this is important. you better be obeying all those things. they will not be placed against any kind of immigrant coming in. that is the border patrol's jobs. the x number of troops will support the border patrol, that's their mission accident
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but there is also optics going on. that just amazed me, the number of public affairs soldier that is part of this deployment is way beyond what i had. the task force. >> i'm glad you mentioned that. you had a few public affairs agencies by a long shot. it makes you wonder what the political intention is there. general, thanks very much for taking the time. >> you're welcome. have a good voting day. >> right now, voters casting ballots as scott walker is fighting to keep his job. wisconsin is one of the dead heat races around the country total. which candidates are neck and neck in the governor's races in the final hours? r windshield fi. with safelite, you can see exactly when we'll be there. saving you time for what you love most. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪
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no shortage of tight races today and don't forget the races at the state level. some of the most contentious and closely watched in florida where andrew gillum is trying to flip the race for democrats. there is a close contest in yoermg ja full of controversy as well. in wisconsin, republican scott walker in for the fight of his political career. in waukesha, wisconsin, outside milwaukee, how is it looking for from you are. >> reporter: what a tight race. we are in a purple voting
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district. they are really concerned about taxes and concerned about health care. there is a big conversation here about how people were going to vote. i was talking to voters off to the sidelines and they were saying they didn't want to vote straight party ticket. one lady said i have eight grandkids. i want to keep scott walker in office, but i want a change at the top, especially in washington. how do we have this conversation? some other people are joining in. that back and forth and open dialogue. one of the things they want the change in is the toxic behavior in washington. one young man who was 19 said earlier it was the parkland shooting that motivated him to come out and vote. already more than 500,000 abs t absentee ballots were turned in. despite the conditions here which is rainy, cold, and wet, people have been coming up every half hour or so to put their vote in. even though scott walker is in
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that race, they want to make sure that people in these offices understand they want them serving the people. there has been a conversation about tariffs with people laid off at the harley davidson plant about a half hour outside of milwauk milwaukee. the issues are really affecting the people. >> scott walker thought he was going to be the republican nominee for president. thanks for keeping on top of it. a rare moment of regret. the president said he could have struck a softer tone since he took office. the state of politics according to eric trump and why he said president obama has a personal problem with his father. heyi'm craving somethingkin! we're missing. the ceramides in cerave. they help restore my natural barrier, so i can lock in moisture... and keep us protected. we've got to have each other's backs... and fronts. cerave. what your skin craves.
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president trump's agenda in congress could hit a roadblock if democrats do win the house today and a democratic takeover of the house is likely to mean more oversight, more investigation. doris kearns goodwin, i'm happy she's joining us today. results are not baked in. we do not know how people are going to vote today. from a historical perspective, how have presidents fared after losing midterm elections? how have they recovered? >> clinton recovered by moving to the center, talking about crime and reform and a balanced budget and keeping the pocketbook democrats. but most importantly, when the general election comes, usually
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the midterms are a much smaller number of people so you've got that regular base out there in the general election. same thing with president obama, he did so badly in the midterms. by the time the general election came, african-americans came back in much more numbers, hispanics voted in greater numbers and women, his traditional constituency that hadn't been there in the midterms. the only difference in this one, because there's so many people voting now, whatever patterns may be showing up here may be more longstanding when it's mostly people voting discontents against the administration and power. >> i love having you on because you bring such a historical perspective. you made a good point about how these midterms -- keep m miin m there are hundreds running. you might have an unexpected star emerge or victory.
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tell b tell us about that. >> think about lincoln, not well known and engages douglas in debates. or think about teddy roosevelt. he runs in a midterm, 1898 as governor, becomes theodore roosevelt, a president. and fdr in the 1930s in the midterms wins a landslide governor's race and becomes fdr, one of the historic presidents. so there's someone out there who may emerge and that may be regarded as the most important part of the midterms and we don't know it yet. >> you may have heard president trump telling sinclair broadcasting group about one of his regrets so if a in his
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administration. listen. >> is there anything you would want to take back in your first two years and review? >> i'm not going to say all of them. i would say tone, a much soft asofter tone. >> do you believe the president when you hear that? >> there's been glimmers now and then of presumably that softer tone but it never lasts. even at the hundred days, he was self-reflective and say i didn't know health care was going to be so difficult and then he doesn't bring in people who have experience who could have helped him. at the kavanaugh hearings, at first he said christine blasey ford was credible and then he was mocking her. that desire for a softer term is contra dktdicted by the words a
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actions that he uses. you keep hoping but it's hard to imagine that something is going to change that. >> let me ask you this finally because a lot of folks will say they've never seen the country more divided than it is today. but, you know, i imagine you would say, listen, the country's been divided at various points before in time. in your experience and with your knowledge of history, how unusual is the division we see today? >> well, it's certainly unusual in my lifetime. maybe it was worse in the 1850s, but that ends up in the civil war. we don't want to think about that as a model. but something's happened to our culture and our partisanship. teddy roosevelt warned that democracy would founder when people from different regions or parties see each other as the other. i think it's happening in our parties and political systems. it wasn't so long ago when i was not so old that people in washington saw each other as
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human beings, they played poker together and had cocktails together and partisan wasn't as it is today, it's become tribal. it's an example to the country and the country reflects that back to the party. and how we're going to get out of it is very unclear except it's going to take leaders to get us out of it and an awakened citizenry. that's what's always changed things when things get back, thethe citizenry gets involved in slavery, in women's rights , in equal rights, the citizenry has to get involved. >> and the citizenry will do that. >> wolf blitzer will lead the special coverage starting at 5:00 well into the night. as we get into the final hours on the east coast, we'll walk you through the history that
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could be made across america and what you're seeing there as we await history is live pictures from texas. beto o'rourke versus ted cruz. just one of the many we'll be following tonight. stay with us. we're going to be here all night. >> announcer: election day in america is brought to you about i american petroleum institute. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ today's senior living communities have never been better, with amazing amenities like movie theaters, exercise rooms and swimming pools, public cafes, bars and bistros
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drug coverage isn't included. but, with an all-in-one humana medicare advantage plan, you could get all that coverage plus part d prescription drug benefits. you get all this coverage for zero dollar monthly plan premium in most areas. and humana has a large network of doctors and hospitals. so call or go online today. find out if your doctor is part of the humana network and get your free decision guide. discover how an all-in-one medicare advantage plan from humana could save you money. there is no obligation and the book is free. at booking.com, we can't guarantee you'll good at that water jet thingy... but we can guarantee the best price on this hotel. or any accommodation, from homes to yurts. booking.com booking.yeah
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[ neighing ] [ neighing ] [ sigh ] it's bring your own phone, not pony. so i could've taken the bus? yeah. bring your phone. switch your carrier. save hundreds a year with xfinity mobile. call, click or visit a store today.