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tv   New Day Sunday  CNN  December 9, 2018 4:00am-5:00am PST

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there was no collusion whatsoever. >> sir, did you direct michael cohen to commit any violations of the law? >> no. no. >> the house will have no choice the way this is going other than to start impeachment proceedings. >> a closed door interview with fired fbi director james comey. >> james comey fired back on this claim that he was best friends with robert mueller
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saying, quote, i have never hugged or kissed the man. >> john kelly will be leaving the end of the year, and i appreciate his service very much. >> that's how awful it is to work in the trump white house, by the way. john kelly spent 40 years in the marines. he did three tours in iraq. and he couldn't finish one tour with donald trump. >> good morning, i'm victor blackwell. >> good morning. i'm jessica dean in for kristi paul this morning. deny and distract. that's the president's playbook this weekend as he tries to shrug off the very real threat posed to his administration by the russia investigation. >> federal prosecutors accused the president of breaking election finance law by instructing his personal attorney, michael cohen, to pay hush money to two women he allegedly had affairs with. the president vehemently denied
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that. he had tweets to james comey and nato and robert blumenthal. >> and to the announcement that john kelly would announce his retirement from the white house on monday, the president chose to do it today. the two reportedly have not spoken in days. >> we knew there would be changes right after the midterms. but the timing of this weekend's rollout some people are questioning. >> reporter: good morning. especially questionable when john kelly was going to announce his stepping down on monday. he was asked point blank if he directed michael cohen to conduct violations by paying two
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women who allegedly had affairs with him. he said no. then he said they were having discussions with senior administration officials during an indictment. he ignored that question and started talking about his chief of staff john kelly. with apparent remarks on the russia investigation, listen to what he said. >> with the mueller situation, we're very happy with what we're reading because there was no collusion whatsoever, there never has been. the last thing i want is help from russia on a campaign. very one-sided situation but i think it's all turning around very nicely. but as far as the report that we see, according to everybody i've spoken to, i have not read it, there's absolutely no collusion which is very important. >> two quick points there. you just heard the president say
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that he didn't read those sentencing documents that were filed against paul manafort and michael cohen. the president hearing from others that it essentially clears him, though it does not. it implicates the president potentially in campaign finance violations and raises all sorts of questions about his involvement in russian meddling during the 2016 election. the president there clearly hearing from aides who have a very sunny perspective of those sentencing documents. the second point i want to make is sources at the white house indicate that the president is set to tap nick ayres, the vice president chief of staff, to replace john kelly. ayres is an established republican. he's worked with the republican government's association as well as other prominent politicians, including governor sonny perdue. he told the president he's thinking of returning to his home state of georgia to spend more time with his family, so he may not want to spend the whole
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two years that the president has asked him for. >> boris sanchez, thank you. how far does the president want to go to distract from the mueller probe? joining me now, political anchor from spectrum news and host of reliable sources. good morning, you guys. >> good morning. >> thanks for being with us. brian, let's start with you. we just went through some of the twitter tirades we've seen this weekend. james comey, the french president, a u.s. senator. we could go on and on. this is a pattern with president trump. did this surprise you at all in the wake of what came on friday, to see what happened over the weekend? >> yeah, the nicknames get nasina nastier over time. when we see the president shift from one topic to another, he's
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really shifting the subject from one bad story about him to another bad story about him. i don't know how effective it is. when he was answering a question about kelly, that's not a good story for him, having to replace your chief of staff for the second time in two years, not a positive story for the president. of course, he criticized then-president barack obama for going through three chiefs of staff in three years, now president trump will be through two chiefs of staff in two years. he may be trying to divert the mueller probe, but it's another bad story for him. talk about so many shake-ups in the white house. by the way, there is really fundamentally no way to move attention away from the mueller probe. they want to get to the bottom of these crimes that were committed, and no amount of insults or nicknames or tweets is going to change that. >> to that point, i want to now listen to this interview with john dean. take a listen to this. >> the house is going to have little choice the way this is
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going other than to start impeachment proceedings. >> so, of course, that's the former nixon lawyer john dean. errol, listen, how this all lays out in terms of criminal implications for the president we're going to see. but now we're going to have a new house coming in in january. where do you think this goes as he's trying to distract, as brian was explaining to us, the probe continues, and now congress could get in on it. >> look, the underlying facts of the russia probe and its impact are really going to overwhelm everything in washington. so the president can win a new cycle here and there, and he can throw out some nasty remarks about rex tillerson or anybody else, but in the end, and very much against their will in some cases, i might add, the leadership of the 168th congress, the democratic leadership of the house in particular, they're going to be forced to do something about this because the public is not going to stand for them sitting on their hands or standing by.
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a lot of these candidates campaigned on the notion that they were going to try and clean up ethical problems in washington. this is going to be the mother of all ethics issues when that mueller investigation ripens, when the report comes out, when more and more indictments, convictions, more revelations sort of take control and start to seep in to the general pub c public. the democrats in washington will have no choice but to move forward, and keep in mind, they don't necessarily want to do that. they want to work on their own election. they don't necessarily want to stir up a trump issue. >> obviously president trump is in charge of his own message, there's no question about that. but as this does start to change the landscape once we get to january, how do they begin to
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attack that? >> i think we're going to see probably more departures and more turnover in staffing in various departments. there have been reports about changes in the press shop and other parts of the white house. so john kelly is sort of the tip of that iceberg. there is a lot going on underneath the surface and we'll see more changes there. i think the message that was attempted on friday night when these filings came out, sarah sanders tried to say, there is nothing new here, this is not a big deal, and the people involved are liars. that was the attempt at the message. but i do think most people see through that. if you are a big supporter of the president, you can choose not to pay attention to what's this these filings, but for the most part, i think the news coverage of this has been really clear about just how damaging it has been for the president in the past two days. so the message saying it's old news, there's nothing there, that's contradicted by what's actually in the filings. >> brian, errol, we're going to leave it there.
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thank you so much for joining us. there are new details this morning about fired fbi director james comey's testimony. the government seems to confirm that mueller is investigating a possible obstruction of justice. we'll have more on that. plus, two women who worked at trump's bedminster golf resort saying the president is a hypocrite. despite his claim for no tolerance of illegal immigrants, he obviously hired illegal immigrants. look at this across the southeast. it's pretty, but wait until you have to go out into it. there is a major storm bearing down. we'll tell you about who is getting all of this. to defeat your toughest cold and flu symptoms fast. new theraflu powerpods. press. sip. relief.
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we're learning new details about fired fbi director james comey's closed door interview
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friday with house republicans. >> transcripts seem to give us confirmation the special counsel is investigating an obstruction of justice case. when answering a question during that hearing, the lawyer for the fbi lawyer said in part, quote, to the extent that again goes to the special counsel's investigation into obstruction. cnn justice correspondent laura jarrett has more. >> in over six hours of testimony, the former fbi director went over familiar territory about the beginnings of the fbi's investigation into russian interference in the 2016 election, saying he bet his life the special counsel robert mueller is handling it the right way and suggesting you would have to almost fire everyone in the fbi and the justice department to derail the relevant investigations at this point. but comey also fact-checked the president on this claim that he somehow is best friends with robert mueller saying, quote, i have never hugged or kissed the man, and quote, i admire the heck out of the man but i don't know his phone number, i've
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never been to his house, i don't know his children's names. while comey's testimony did not shed new light on his views about whether the president obstructed justice in his firing last year, the testimony from another senior official at the fbi, former counsel james baker, described how those at the highest level of the fbi were seriously concerned about comey's firing. finally comey was asked to weigh in on bill barr, president trump's pick for the next attorney general, and he said he thinks very highly of him, joking that, quote, i probably just damned him by saying he's a friend of mine. but i respect him and i think he's certainly fit to be attorney general. laura jarrett, cnn, washington. >> president trump's signature stance since the first moment of his campaign has been a zero tolerance policy against undocumented immigrants. >> but a story reported by the "new york times" is now raising questions of hypocrishypocrisy. as originally brought to our
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attention by the times, they found undocumented immigrants that he allegedly hired. >> reporter: sandra diaz and vi cto rena morales are the first to report that they worked for donald trump as undocumented employees. they worked for his golf club in bedminster. morales says she worked there in 2013 and diaz has worked there from 2010 to 2013. both managers of the trump organization knowingly hired them as undocumented workers. diaz tells me her decision to go public was made in part by what she calls a high level of
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hypocrisy. the president launches such hard line immigration rhetoric, says diaz, yet his organization is doing the complete opposite. diaz's former colleague says she has additional reasons for speaking out. the undocumented gauatemalguates she was subject to harassment. she describes being threatened of deportation repeatedly. there are also allegations of illegal hiring practices. diaz claims management at the property went so far as to arrange for fraudulent documents to keep them employed. morales tells me she was taken to an off-site location after being hired away from the club. she says it was there that she was provided with a bogus social security card and identification. the woman's attorney says they are prepared to provide proof to
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authorities if an investigation into the trump organization's hiring practices is launched. >> absolutely. we have documentary evidence, we have the testimony of workers, we have the fraudulent documents. all of this could be provided to federal authorities and/or state authorities. both of my clients are willing to cooperate with federal and state authorities. >> reporter: in response to the claims, trump organization spokeswoman amanda miller said in the statement, we have tens of thousands of employees across our properties and have very strict hiring practices. if any employee sent in false documentation in an attempt to circumvent the law, they will be terminated immediately. no public criminal or civil actions have been filed against the trump organization regarding the allegations from morales, diaz and two other women mentioned by the "new york times." morales and diaz said they do not believe donald trump was actually aware of the alleged illegal hiring practices. they even have fond memories of
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their early years working at the trump property. i was very proud to say that i worked there, says diaz. still ahead, "saturday night live" brings back robert demirror oe deniro as robert mueller appearing at trump's bedside. >> it was clear early on that you don't know anything. >> no. >> i wish i could say the same for some of your dad's friends. >> like mr. pillowfort? >> manafort. yes. feel fuller longer. benefiber® healthy shape. this i can do!
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welcome back. i'm victor blackwell. >> i'm jessica dean in for kristi paul. robert mueller's team says president trump directed his personal attorney to break finance law. president trump is now spinning it saying this filing, or all the filings, clear him and calls the investigation a waste of money. >> he is also taking aim at a number of seemingly random targets, the unrest in paris, nato and senator richard blumenthal. all of this as mueller and his team move forward with their investigation. meantime, robert deniro returned as special counsel robert mueller on "saturday night live," playing the boogeyman at eric trump's bedside in trump tower.
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>> there's something in my closet. >> that's just the cheap steel dad uses to build his towers. they're just blowing in the wind. look, buddy, nothing in the closet. >> mr. mueller, people say you're the worst thing to ever happen to my dad. >> no, eric, getting elected president was the worst thing that ever happened to your dad. >> all right, let's talk. joining us now, michael moore, former u.s. attorney for the middle district of georgia, and ryan riley, justice reporter for huffpost. welcome back, both of you. michael, let me start with you and i want you to listen to john dickson and his white house counsel and his suggestion to the democratic house. >> the house is going to have little choice the way this is going other than to start
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impeachment proceedings. >> what's your take on that, little choice? >> it's a big day any time there is a federal prosecutor that says the president is involved in a federal crime. you're hearing the death rattle of the presidency of this administration. i think it's certainly time to pick out the cemetary and we're at a point where we're starting to see panic in the white house. we're seeing some moves, too. let me tell you why i say that. i'm particularly interested in the whole nick ayres transition. president trump moving him in, there's something else afoot there. you can't read the reports, you can't read about the congressional testimony, problems with the testimony, and not expect that we will see little don trump indicted for also giving false testimony, and i think the president and his team knows that's coming down the road. >> so you think there is something more to replacing john kelly than just the end of, i
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guess, the line for these two because they're not on speaking terms. >> yeah, i think kelly probably knows that the end is near. we can start to see that the noose is tightening around this administration, and kelly knows that. there's no other reason for him to want to leave, and who would not want to leave the madness that goes on in the administration? i think you just take all these things in particular, you take the very idea that there seems to be more information coming down both about the business transactions that don trump -- little don trump was involved in, the congressional testimony stuff, and we think the president has been getting some inside information from cooperators' lawyers during the investigation. you piece all that stuff together and i think you start to see clear panic with no real end game for the administration. >> ryan, let's talk about impeachment here, and i want you to listen to california democrat john geramende and what he told wolf blitzer. >> where is this going to go?
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it's going to go, it seems to me, with the president being indicted or at least up to that point, and it's going to go to congress taking on a very serious and is very, very appropriate investigation, and you might call it the opening days of an impeachment. we're getting to that point now. >> how many of his democratic house colleagues believe that they're getting to that point? is this a prevalent perspective? >> i think it's sort of a process that's unveiling because i think they don't want to make it seem like it's this preordained outcome, that they were going to impeach him from the start. voters may turn on him if voters start thinking, oh, they're jumping to conclusions here, so they'll want to folsom sort of process. the problem is the justice department, the overwhelming belief there is that the president can't be indicted. so there will be a tricky situation where they're going to have to figure out what steps they'll have to take and make sure they lay out clearly to the american people why the
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president should be indicted before they actually go back taking that step. >> michael, the president tweeted out again that -- he called it the witch hunt, but the mueller probe should end. do you believe this investigation is in any more jeopardy today than it was before the release of the cohen and manafort filings? >> i don't know that we're in more jeopardy with the investigation. i think you can tell that the investigation is going on because of some of the redactions in the pleadings that were filed. that tells us that mueller is not ready to reveal everything, to tell us who all the defendants might be or who all the cooperaters have been. those are black lines even more than the underlying facts that are marked out. >> do you think mueller is in any more jeopardy, then? >> i don't think so at this point. i think he's done a masterful job at telling his story in public court filings. he's let information come out. even if they try to can the report, if they try to conceal
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it from the american people and hopefully trump's counsel would not do that. if that were to happened or if they tried to fire mueller, i think he's told us enough of the story to give democrats enough to do something with. however, if they continue the power drive, let mueller do his work and he's going to get this thing wrapped up, it looks like, in relatively short order. he's made great progress as you can see from the dimindictments already. >> there is a piece out from philip rucker, and there is a person who he speaks with that is a friend of the president and they ask about gearing up a war room, potentially. and this person says to the reporter, a war room? you serious? they've never had one, will never have one, they don't know how to do one. white house counsel pat sipaloni starts on monday. how much work is still to be done to staff up this white house for all the investigations
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that are happening and coming with this democratic congress? >> right. i think that there is not really a concrete plan. the president's attorney rudy giuliani told my colleague earlier this week that they were sort of preparing this report that the president mentioned to combat this mueller report. he said it's going to be a lot of things they've heard about on fox news. it's ain't really solid strategy to combat the charges that are being laid out. i think mueller has everything well organized, and he's sort of leaving these bread crumbs around to tell us what's going on, and i think that reporting is likely going to be damning against the president and will cobble together these conspiracy theories that you hear about on fox news won't necessarily be the best way to respond to the allegations. >> thanks. still to come, a major winter system that's being called a once in a generation storm is bringing heavy snow, sleet and a lot of ice to parts
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of the southeast. we're going to track it. that's next. plus a new hbo documentary reveals brand new details about the life and death of 28-year-old sandra bland. three years ago she was pulled over and then found dead in a texas jail cell days later. her family with many unanswered questions. one of her sisters joins us next. >> it is going to focus directly on my white people. what i want you to understand is that being a black person in america is very, very hard. it makes any house a coffee house. rinsky's coffee house is open! pop that in for a coffee or brew a shot and froth fresh milk for a latte or cappuccino. easy peasy. now she's a barista! we've got the best coffee in the world being made by an under-skilled staff! excellent. it's so frothy. a little piece of heaven. thank you. but how's the coffee? latte for no one!? nelson. sorry?
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wow, look at those live pictures coming in. that's durham, north carolina.
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unbelievable. right now more than 200,000 people are without power in parts of the southeast due to a massive winter storm that's packing that heavy snow, also sleet and ice. these places just don't get storms like this. >> they rarely get as much snow in such a short period of time. cnn's meteorologist alison chinchar is in the cnn weather center tracking this storm said to be once in a generation. >> yeah, really. again, it's like you said, it's the fact they got it in such a short period of time. take lubbock, texas, for example, they got a year's worth of snow in about 18 hours yesterday. incredible, picking up over 10 and a half inches. they were definitely an overachiever in terms of how much snow they ended up getting. most of the snow is focused off to the east, places like tennessee, north carolina, kentucky and even places like extreme northeast georgia. you can see it's mostly rain down to the south, cities like atlanta and columbia dealing
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with heavy rain at times, and downtown nashville looking at heavy rain. but just to the north of that, it's sleet and heavy rain. those roads are likely impassable because of how slick they're going to be. cities like raleigh and greensboro, you're now getting straight snow and at times it's coming down very heavy. when you talk about charlotte, it depends on where you live. charlotte is in mecklenber county. if you're in the southern part of that county, you're likely getting snow. if you're in the northern part, you're likely getting rain. one of the biggest concerns, however, is ice. because many of those same locations are going to start to see the eyesa cumulate, whether it's in the form of sleet or freezing rain. the problem is for the areas that get, say, a quarter of an inch or maybe as much as half an inch, that's when you begin to
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see power lines and trees begin to come down. not to mention the travel concerns, not just the roadways but runways as well. we've already started to see massive amounts of delays and cancellations at several airports here. but also the snow. again, when you look at some of these amounts, this is additional snow, guys, on top of what's already fallen, and in some cases that's going to be an additional 12, if not even 16 or 18 inches of new snow. >> wow, alison chinchar, thanks so much. a new hbo documentary explores the life and death of 28-year-old sandra bland. three years ago she was pulled over and arrested and later found dead in a texas jail cell. her family still has so many questions about her death. we'll speak to one of her sisters.
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say her name. the life and death of sandra bland. it's a new hbo documentary
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examining what happened when 28-year-old sandra bland was arrest tleed three years ago. this was in a small texas town with a traffic signal failing to show her change lanes. dash cam video, you may remember seeing it, shows her arrest and it went viral, starting protests and demanding accountability. the film shows her family in a search for answers. one of sandra bland's sisters joins us now, amanda cooper. thanks for joining us. let me start now by expressing our condolences. i know it's been three years, but i understand from watching this documentary, i watched it actually this morning, overnight into the morning, that you still feel that loss. so let me start with that. now let's watch a bit of the trailer from the documentary. >> sandra speaks is going to focus directly on my white
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people. what i want you to understand is that being a black person in america is very, very hard. >> get out! now! >> sandy called me, let me know that she had been arrested. >> how do you go from failure to signal a lane change to dead in jail by alleged suicide? >> i believe she said, i'll see you guys in court and i believe they challenged her. >> does jail have anything to do with her death? no. but moral responsibilitywise, absolutely. >> sandra bland! sandra bland! say her name! say her name! say her name! >> if we want change, we can truly make it happen. >> sandy speaks. >> now, sharon, what i found so striking was how much access and how soon after your sister's death that this film crew was
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working with you. how did this start? how did you link up with this team? >> good morning, victor. thanks for having us this morning. we actually partnered with kate davis and david halbrunner, the filmmakers from hbo soon after. our experience is what tends to happen with people who become irreversible hash tags as a result of police brutality, you really don't know what happens to them and their families and also the victims tend to be criticized and have character assassinations lodged against them, so it was really important for us to be able to share with the world our story in terms of our experience with what happened with our loved one, but also an effort to humanize the victim. so many times you just focus on how they died and we don't focus on how they lived. so kate davis and david halbrunner along with hbo gave
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us the opportunity to do that. >> we showed at the top of the trailer "sandy speaks," which was her video blog, and some of those postings were germane to criminal justice, social justice, interaction with law enforcement. what did you think as you started to look through some of those postings preparing to hand them over to the filmmakers? >> you know, honestly, just thinking about how eerily ironic it was that the things she really stood for and was demanding to be noticed for and hurt about is something that impacted and led to her demise in terms of how she ended up dying. so i think that it's also prophetic in a way. like you said, you've watched the documentary and you've seen much of sandy's voice is woven throughout the film and we have this unprecedented access to her to learn about her on her own terms, even, so i think that is
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what is so gripping about the documentary. >> what would she think about her place now in the social justice movement? >> i think that she would be right out there demanding to be seen and to be heard. i think last year's historic women's march, i think she would have been right on the front lines. and i think that she would have been amongst those who are continuing to ask that we hold our law enforcement officials to the same level of accountability that we do everyday citizens. so i think that she would be intrinsically involved, and it's a very really burgeoning area we have in our country right now. >> there's a scene where you and your sister are there in the snow, in the ice, wiping the snow off her headstone, and you're reading to her, reading a letter to her, still speaking to her. >> uh-huh. >> now in 2018, do you still talk to her and what do you say? >> oh, we talk to her all the
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time. we very much feel that sandy is with us no matter where we are. yes, her physical place of rest is in the state of illinois in a cemetary, but her spirit lives on not just through us but through this who are demanding to be seen and heard and we talk to her about the very real change and impact that she has brought to the world despite the fact that she's no longer physically present. >> the documentary is "say her name: the life and death of sandra bland." thank you for spending time with us this morning. >> thank you. president trump lashing out. "state of the union" with jake tapper as senator jerry nadler and marco rubio talk to everything about trump aides and what it all means today at 9:00 only on cnn. army/navy.
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the pageantry was there. coy wire is in philadelphia. coy? >> good morning, jessica. i'm not going to lie. i got a little verklempt yesterday. i'm one with my emotions. i can claim it. what a game it was, coming up on "new day." i've always been amazed by what's next.
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and still going for my best, even though i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib not caused by a heart valve problem. so if there's a better treatment than warfarin... i want that too. eliquis. eliquis is proven to reduce stroke risk better than warfarin. plus has significantly less major bleeding than warfarin. eliquis is fda-approved and has both. what's next? reeling in a nice one. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding.
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while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden sign of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis, the number one cardiologist-prescribed blood thinner. ask your doctor if eliquis is what's next for you. ofor a limited time,ur holidays even better! get a 4-course meal starting at $15.99. treat yourself to the perfect gift today, because the aussie 4-course won't last long! and now, get a $10 gift with every $50 in gift cards. [woman 2] ..this... [man 1] ...this is my body of proof. [man 2] proof of less joint pain... [woman 3] ...and clearer skin. [man 3] proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis... [woman 4] ...with humira. [woman 5] humira targets and blocks a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further irreversible joint damage, and clear skin in many adults.
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whenshe was pregnant,ter failed, in-laws were coming, a little bit of water, it really- it rocked our world. i had no idea the amount of damage that water could do. we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they were on it. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today. army/navy, the 100th playing had pageantry and president trump. >> coy, it gave america something it had never seen before. >> something like this always
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happens. this year, navy was struggling all year. army ranked in the top 25. in this game throw all the odds out the window. anything can happen. this came down to the final minutes, the tradition on full display. i could feel the rumble in my chest with flight-over, chills with the singing of the national anthem. coin toss by president donald trump, the tenth sitting president to attend the game. cheers from his midship and cadets who saluted them. it didn't take the black knights long to remind everybody that army football is back. fourth play in the game. kelvin hopkins shined in this one. field goal would be all that they need. navy did keep it close all game but with about three minutes to go, sacked the quarterback, fumbles it, leading to the
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second touchdown, army beated navy three years in a row. winning that commander in chief trophy back-to-back outright in their history, 17-10 victory. it was sweet. >> we never want to quit. that's a great team over there. they played a great team. that one is for them always, representing the men and women who serve. that's who we're out there -- every time we play. keep doing that work. >> it's my last one. it all kind of hit me. >> look at oklahoma's quarterback, who gets to take home the heisman trophy, best player in college football. he hugs mom and dad on his way up to accept the award. beating out fellow qbs, second straight quarterback to win.
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baker mayfield won it just last year. mercedes-benz in atlanta, largest crowd for a stand-alone game for any type, mls cup champs. atlanta's first pro sports title since the braves took world series in '95. josef martinez, mls cup mvp. the parade is monday, jessica, victor. do you have any plans? it's going to be awesome. >> i have to go back to washington, d.c. >> you're not staying for the parade? >> unacceptable. unacceptable. we're going to show you how we party when we win the title there in that city. >> sounds like fun. >> coy, thank you very much. >> all right. and thank you for starting your morning with us. >> "inside politics" with john king starts right now.
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president in peril. new court documents detail hush money, and even deeper contacts with russia. >> we're very happy with what we are reading. there was no collusion whatsoever. >> a white house shake-up includes a new attorney general. >> one of the most respected jurists in the country. a great man. >> it's unamerican. >> the president must not give saudi arabia a pass for murder. >> mbs, the crown prince, is a wrecking ball. >> "inside politics," the biggest stories

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