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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  August 8, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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good evening. chris cuomo is off tonight. we begin with kamala harris in iowa as are many other candidates. she spoke at length with kim law about the shooting in texas and the president's reaction to them. president trump naming a new acting director of national intelligence. joseph mcguire who currently runs the counter terrorism center. this came shortly after the president tweeted that sue gordon, the number two intelligence official and long time professional would resign. >> this is the first day of your bus tour. i want to get to the news about sue gordon leaving. second in command. what do you think about this resignation? >> i mean, i'm not surprised. i'm on the senate intelligence committee. i meet on a consistent basis with leaders of our intelligence community. they are hard working. they are patriots to their core.
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and i don't know why she's leaving. i think that this president has been less than supportive of our intelligence community and that the importance of their work and the kind of sacrifice that they put into it. so you know, when we have a president who carries the role of commander in chief, but coddles and cuddles up to strong men around the world when the tension community has told us, russia interfered in the election of the president of the united states. but our president prefers to take the word of the russian president over the word of the intelligence community on the issue of, the student who was killed. an american student who was killed. the president prefers to take word of the north korean dictator on the subject of a journalist who was assassinated. a journalist who had american
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credentials. he prefers to take the word of a saudi prince over the american intelligence community. i think the people who do that work do it with great purpose and with a sense of real commitment to our nation's security. if you have ever gone to the buildings where they work, you'll know, you will see stars on a wall with no names because so much of the work they do is work they can't take credit for. so they do it not for any selfish purpose. >> let's talk about the president. he recently visited el paso and today there's video of him talking about the size of the crowds. you heard about what he said. should he have even gone to dayton and el paso?
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>> he's just so -- his pre occupation with size. i'll leave that for someone else to analyze. but i will say that this president has used the platform given to the office of the president of the united states in a way that is about trying to divide our country. he has used language that is born out of hate. and he generally shows no evidence of any natural ability to have empathy. of course the president of the united states should visit and be in a place has experienced such tragedy. i think this president doesn't really have the capacity to have empathy and i just, you know, my heart goes out to not only the families but also the leaders of those communities who are trying
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to pull it together and stand strong. >> do you believe that he is a white supremacist? >> i think you should ask him that question. >> are you willing to say that? >> i think you should ask him that question. i would be interested to see what his answer is. >> joe biden has said faye the president, what he has done, encourages white supremacy. that he doesn't feel there's much of a distinction and what he is doing may be worse. do you could ncur? >> i think that's right. absolutely right. this is a president who has, we don't even need to, the sad thing about this is it is no longer a debatable point. there is just a long list of statements and tweets and behaviors from this president that make it very clear.
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he possesses hate that he was divisive and a racist. >> is it important to call him a white supremacist? >> i think it is important to call it what it is, which is that we have a president of the united states who does not reflect the values of who we are as a people. he is someone who gives, who empowers white supremacists and who condones their behavior and that's not the kind of president that i think most americans can be proud of. much less support. >> senate leader mitch mcconnell has signaled that he will at least talk about background checks. the re flag laws. as a member of the senate body. what do you think about his shift? >> i think he needs to put the bill on the floor and call all of us back to washington, d.c. to vote on it right away. >> he doesn't want to call people that. he said he will make it front and center. >> we have to judge everyone by
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their conduct. not just their words. >> and we can't let this go without talking about where we are. >> we're on the bus. >> tell me with what this is. we are on the bus. >> we're right now in sioux city, iowa. and we are for the next five days going to be on this bus traveling throughout iowa from river to river. talking about our 3:00 a.m. agenda. the issues that wake people up in the middle of the night and how we'll solve those problems i do believe strongly that the american people want a problem solving president. that's the kind of president i intend to be. >> do you feel that the problem solving that you're focusing on, not looking at, i think you've said, you don't want to talk about the structural change or be too ideological. you want to solve the kitchen table issues. >> i want to solve the things that wake people up in the middle of the night. about herring consideration they keep a job or get a job? can they faye bills by the end
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of the month? those bread and butter issues that literally wake people up in the middle of the night because they're worried about whether they will see a week through, much laes month through. those are my priorities. >> sometimes the people who won regularly, trump with make america great again. they are a bit more sweeping. a larger vision. you've taken a different route. do you sense voters are looking for this? >> i think that americans want in a leader someone who actually sees their life and is interested in solving the problems people face every day. i think people don't, you know, they don't want in their leader someone who can give a beautiful speech and grand gestures. they want actions. actions about solving the problems they face every day. those are my priorities. because look. when it comes down to it, if people can't get through end of the month, if we can't solve the
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issues that they deal with every day, what else matters? >> did you happen to see the video of the children crying when they were taken away? >> i have not seen the video. i know about it. and bing the work of i.c.e. under this administration. and it is immoral. it is human rights abuses being committed by the united states government. i serve on the senate homeland security committee. from the first day i arrived there, two years ago, i've been taking dhs to task and i.c.e. to task. i think i was the first person in the united states senate to ask about this child separation policy. and it is clear to me that this administration has been not only irresponsible but has literally committed human rights abuses. these most recent raids, hundreds of people who are now
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separated from their families for at least 24 hours, and causing people in our country to be in fear, particularly the latino community. people are in fear all over the country. when you combine those raids with what just happened in el paso, do you think this administration and this president might step back and say, wait a minute. after what just happened in el paso, when it was motivated by hate against immigrants, and latino immigrants, do you think that a responsible leader would have said, don't do those raids. it shows a level of ins sensitivity and callousness that should not be traits of the president of the united states. >> you brought up el paso. cnn has reporting out today
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about the last 24 hours that shows the white house rebuffed efforts to focus on domestic terrorism. >> i gave a speech about thatle many months ago. i've been talking about it for months. they've shut down the enforcement and the investigations of domestic terrorism. meanwhile we have a president of the united states who is constantly creating terror in the people of our country. again. donald trump is ill equipped to be president of the united states on so many levels. including the fact that he creates fear in the people of his own country. >> kamala harris. some new polling out today. you heard senator harris there weighing in on the shootings.
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how if at all do you think those tragedies have changed the race? do you think they have? >> yeah, something is pretty clear. a week ago we were leaving detroit after a series of debates that was making the democratic party a little uncomfortable. it was sort of democrats going against democrats on some issues and there were concerns for many in the party that there wasn't a focus on donald trump enough. well, problem solved here. this week. through the tragedy and through donald trump's response to it, he has unified democratic party. i heard it from kamala harris, joe biden at the state fair here in iowa today. this is recentering the conversation in the democratic nomination race on president trump as the main focus and critical mission, to oust him rather than intraparty squabbles which will no doubt return
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between now and the caucus uses in february. >> we often quote these national polls. at this point, an iowa poll, the early states are critical. can you walk us through what the new iowa poll shows? >> yeah. monmouth university has a new poll out in iowa and it shows joe biden holding his lead. he's at 28%. and it shows elizabeth warren really surging into a strong second position in this race at 19%. kamala harris, the only other person in double digits, 11%. and really interesting, you see bernie sanders who gave hillary clinton such a run for her money in this state four years ago, you see him in single digits at 9%. this is just a snap in time. this is now an organizing game for the next several months in iowa that is somewhat a part from that national narrative we talk about all the time.
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you see a surging elizabeth warren, kamala harris and joe biden holding on to the lead. >> and every candidate, they'll all pass through that state fair in iowa over the next few days. >> yeah. one of the great traditions of presidential politics. eating a pork chop on a stick and giving a sort of short stump speech. a pitch to voters here. it is a testing ground, to take the questions on the fly and see how they can handle a not very controlled atmosphere for the candidates. >> i didn't hear anything you said after pork chop on a stick. i didn't have lunch today. that's all i can think about right now. yum! >> i'll bring one back for you. >> the white house strategy against domestic terror and one of the top ranking democrats say the administration downplayed the violence. also, later i'll speak with the democratic senator about the
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justice defense over the way it's handled massive immigration raids in mississippi. children pleading for their parents to come home after nearly 700 adults were apprehended. can my side be firm? and my side super soft? with the sleep number 360 smart bed you can both... adjust your comfort with your sleep number setting. so, can it help us fall asleep faster? yes, by gently warming your feet. but can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both effortlessly comfortable. will it help me keep up with him? yup.
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talking about why the attorney general has not uttered a word about the threat. jake tapper reported that the department of homeland security tried for more than a year to make combatting domestic terror a greater priority for the administration. ultimately, all the administration did was include a single paragraph in the national counter terrorism strategy. a senior source tells tapper it was a throw away line. i spoke about all this earlier with senator durbin. >> you've actually been sounding the alarm for a while. >> i have the only bill in the senate. there will probably be more in the future. it came to our attention. when you look at domestic crimes and homicides, when it comes to domestic terrorism, it is white nationalism and white supremacy. when i asked the fbi director wray several weeks ago this question, he admitted, it's a problem. it continues to be the biggest threat in domestic terrorism. and then they turn around and
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the department of justice and change the definition so they're not focusing on white nationalism and white supremacy. it makes no sense. i wrote a letter to attorney general barr and said explain why you're doing this. this is a danger we should be very aware of. >> have they given you any explanation about why the white house would be resistant to that? >> three months, no reply to the letter. that may change with the tragedies in el paso and dayton. i think we'll return in september and focus this as we should. i think we ought to do what my bill calls for. call on the department of justice, homeland security, make sure that at the end of the day, we have a response every single year. the progress being made to stop these groups. they're growing in size and intensity and danger west certainly realize that after el paso. it is time this administration takes it seriously. >> one of the things the democratic candidates running for president have called for is basically making domestic terrorism a crime in the way
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that international terrorism is. currently there isn't that, that in and of itself is not a crime. it is usual lay weapons charge or a hate crimes charge. is that something you support? others have appointed out, i had a conversation the other daflt people can be a slippery slope when you start labeling ideas of american citizens a domestic terror threat as a crime. that people may not understand where that could go. >> i agree with you. there is a real constitutional challenge to wording this properly so that those who want to disent from popular views and express themselves are not impeded. but when you cross that line into inciting violence or violent conduct, we definitely want to make sure that we can prosecute those crimes. they tell me now, there are existing laws to do it. they're not explicit as in domestic terrorism. i want to look at this carefully. after what we've seen and this
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resurgence of white nationalism in the country, we have to make sure that we give the tools to prosecutors to protect us. >> how much of a difference would it make if the white house was fully on board with this and behind this idea? making white nationalism, white supremacy something the president spoke out against. not just saying i'm against that, all forms of supremacy or racism but actually, you know, from an institutional standpoint, making it a priority rather than just the fbi on their own doing what they can do. how much of a difference would that make? >> well, i know there is a big national debate on the cable channels about this. when the president sends out these ambiguous signals after charlottesville as to who are the bad guys and who there good guys, is it any wonder the bad guys think they have a permission slip to be even bolder in their conduct some and believe that somehow the president might recognize what we say is true. that's what happens when you're
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not clear in your statements to stop this kind of hatred. this kind of violent extremism that we're seeing coming out of the white nationalist groups. would it help a lot. if there was clarity from the beginning on this issue. >> i want to ask but comments from elizabeth warren, also beto o'rourke. they have said the president is a white supremacist. i'm wondering if you agree with them. is the president a white supremacist? a white nationalist? >> i'm not going to that conclusion. i think some of the things that em, and failed to say, has aided and abetted those who are looking for any excuse in the world to sow their visions of hatred across america and ultimately to resort to violent conduct. it is a country where we have free speech. but we try to draw a reasonable line in this open culture and say that if you are inciting people to violence and you're hurting innocent people, you've crossed the line. no questions asked. the notion that we would somehow
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condone white racism or supremacy as part of america is ant athletic cal to who we are as a nation. >> you've been out front on this issue. thank you. >> thanks, anderson. >> coming up next, more breaking news. another incident at a walmart. a strange one. involving an armed man. thankfully nothing worse. we'll have the latest on what happened and how it ended. also a conversation about mental illness and gun violence, especially in light of the president's remarks on the subject. we'll talk about the facts and the myths surrounding the issue.
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there's more breaking news. word of an armed individual at a walmart, this time in springfield, missouri. our reporter joins with us the very latest. explain what happened here. >> there was a scary call that came out. police responded within three minutes of reports of potentially another active shooter at a walmart. this one in springfield, missouri. happening in the afternoon, around 4:00. i want to show you his picture. this is why people were so concerned. he walked into this walmart. he was doning a weapon.
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you see the type of clothes he was wearing at the time. tactical gear is how police described it. as he was going through, police said he was talking into his cell phone. the store manager pulled the fire alarm to get people out of that building. just unsure of what this person would do next. he then left through emergency exit of this walmart where he was forcefully detained as we understand by an offduty firefighter who held him until police were able to arrive. this is just five days after those horrible attacks we saw unfold in the el paso walmart. here we are, some of these people really reliving some of the horrors that the people in texas felt. >> two questions. is missouri an open carry state? can he just wander into walmart with a long rifle and tactical gear? and the guy who apprehended him, i think you said he was an offduty firefighter. i read that he had a concealed carry permit. is that correct? that's one of the ways he was
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able to stop this guy. >> that's correct. so first for starters, missouri is an open carry state. now, excuse me. what makes the difference there on that front is when it is being wielded in the presence and potentially a dangerous man or in front of people. that would certainly apply the this. you walk into the middle of a crowded walmart in this case. and also the type of weapon makes a difference. a handgun or what we can see here as a long gun as well. for the firefighter, as we understand, he did hold this gunman up, this potential gunman at gunpoint as he exited that emergency exit until police arrived. so quick thinking, right place, right time. almost like what we saw in times square when people ran from the back fire motorcycle. i think what happened this past weekend is still very fresh in the minds of many people. >> thank you. now prevention. what president trump should focus mental health, at least as he defines it.
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you'll recall in dayton and el paso. he said mental illness and hatred pulls the trigger. he said we should reform mental health laws to identify mentally disturbed individuals who may commit acts of violence. when necessary, involuntary confinement. it sounds like to a lot of people, simple common sense. however, there are a lot of issues involved. it is based on assumptions. it may not be justified. joining me now, pete earl. he wrote, no, mr. president, hate is not a mental illness. it was set up by congress to set up the issue. in addition he is the author of crazy, a father's search through america's mental health madness. you take specific issue with something president trump said when talking about the shooting sthat mental i haveness and hatred pulled the trigger. not the gun. you said he has it half right.
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>> everybody wants to demonize people with mental ill know because it is an rent behavior. towed look at the motivation. research shows only one out of five people have been diagnosed with mental ill knness. why would you look at 20% versus 80%? what you discover is that 54% of those shooters are white males who are if i have with hatred, prejudice, they feel like their entitlement is taken away and they're lashing out. you can argue that all of those might have some kind of mental illness come possibly to it. what we do is we focus on the mentally ill. we say we have to lock them up. make sure they don't get guns. and we're demonizing 46 million americans who have a mental illness. to make a point. if mental illness was always the cause of these shootings, we
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know that mental illness, schizophrenia, 3% worldwide. 6% for bipolar, 16% of all mental illnesses. why is our country the one that has over 200 mass shootings a year? why are not these happening in every country? so it is more than mental ill know. it is hatred and obviously easy access to weapons. >> so the notions of this red flag legislation, you're concerned that, a, it is demonizing people unfair reply have some kind of mental illness. that the vast majority are not violent individuals. >> right. >> but it is also interesting with these red flag blogs, it is exactly, if you're talking about stopping future crime and you're focusing on people with mental illness, and i think it was you maybe who wrote about this, police officers or firefighters who have ptsd from 9/11 or
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something else, should they then be branded and never be allowed to carry a firearm later in life? i think, i'm not sure people have thought through the implications of all of it. if you go to a therapist, are you on a list as a suspected danger? >> thank you for bringing that up. look, voices in people's heads aren't causing the mass shootings. when you construct a red flag law, you're ignoring a basic fact about mental illness. most people get better. my son, it took six years, five hospitalizations. today he's going to graduate school. he works in the mental field. he lives independently. he pays taxes and complains about it. when you put a tag on someone like that, that further prejudices them and builds into the myth if you have a mental illness, you're dangerous and you'll never get better.
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and that in itself is a false flag that is being used to ignore the real issues which is hate, prejudice, and access to weapons. >> quickly, too. it prevents people in need from actually reaching out for help because of fear. >> i really appreciate your writings. we'll talk again. coming up next, a major crackdown leads the a different family separation. ♪
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trying to down play a series of raids in mississippi that the local u.s. attorney boasted as historic because federal authorities are facing fierce criticism about it. they say enforcement was not their main goal but they picked up nearly 700 undocumented immigrants working at food plants. for some that meant kids came home from their first day of school without their parents waiting for them wednesday. that is leading to some raw emotions. what you're about to see is not easy to watch but we think it is important to know the impact on the children. here's a girl waiting for her mom. >> the government, please have a heart. everybody else, please don't leave the child with crying and
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everything. i need my dad. my dad is not a criminal. >> please! >> the girl you saw has since reunited with her mother. i spoke earlier with jeff merkley. he made comments after kids were separated from their parents. i wonder what goes through your minds when you see these images, dealing with the repercussions of this raid. particularly children waiting for parents who are not showing up. >> it just raises for me all the memories of child separation. the administration is conducting its immigration policy in a way that traumatizes children without careful planning. perhaps with a lot of callousness. >> i don't know if they chose to do raids on the first day of school. an i.c.e. official said they did give school administrators a heads up the same day.
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that didn't seem to help the children whose parents never showed up to pick them up. >> can you imagine the terror you have as a child? your parents are suddenly gone and you don't have a place to go home to? what does it mean for your life? it just re-evokes the factors that we saw in spades with the administration down on the border, ripping children out of their parents' arms. it is a different style of doing it. but the same impact on children. the same sense of kind of an evilness at the heart of this policy. if we inflict trauma on children, we'll discourage immigration. if the president wants to take on immigration, why not turn to the bipartisan 2013 bill? why not turn to the bipartisan work on dreamers? and bring the nation together to fix the broken system? >> also, the timing that is so close to the mass shootings over the weekend. you know, i guess this operation must have been in the works for
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months. but i'm not sure, perhaps they could have taken the timing into consideration. >> such a juxtaposition of the president going to dayton, going to el paso, trying to at least say a few words about bringing the nation together. but at the same very moment, launching these raids on immigrants, accentuating their fear and trauma. i think it just goes to the fact that the president, what he talks about bringing the nation together. that's not the real president trump. the real president trump is the one who is, has this underlying strategy of inflicting trauma on refugees, on children to discourage immigration. and that is just a dark and evil policy that we need to change. >> but you know, plenty of people who will see these images and say of course it is sad that a child is upset and crying.
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but that the parents are undocumented immigrants. that raids are needed to successfully apprehend people. however you do it, there will be unintended consequences. what do you say to that? >> well, what i say is that for many years, we really said to immigrants, we want you here working in our farms. we want you here working in our nurseries. we want you here working in our meat packing plants. and then we changed our approach to that. and instead of working out a comprehensive immigration bill to address it, we've, we're putting families through a terror. democrats and republicans worked together in 2013 to pass by a super majority a strategy to address the fact that we had essentially welcomed workers for years and then said, we don't want you. meanwhile, our businesses were saying, well, we still do need
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you. we still do want you. let's have a process for some legalization so we do right by these families and right by the economy at the same time. that was the foundation for the bipartisan work on immigration. so if we want to fix a broken system, let's fix it. the president is using children as political pawns and that's wrong. >> i appreciate your time. thanks. >> thank you. there have been more abrupt trump administration resignations and more controversy to go along with them. we'll tell you who, why, and the fallout next. and my side super soft? with the sleep number 360 smart bed you can both... adjust your comfort with your sleep number setting. so, can it help us fall asleep faster? yes, by gently warming your feet. but can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both effortlessly comfortable. will it help me keep up with him? yup. so, you can really promise better sleep? not promise... prove.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ as we reported earlier, there is a new acting dni to replace daniel coates. there is also three more resignation. sue gordon is out i know what the top u.s. diplomat who resigned after a reported clash with the white house. plus another state department official who let loose on the president in a no holds barred op ed. cnn national security reporter kiley atwood joins with us all the details. so the secretary left over
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clashes with the president's immigration policies. is that right? >> that's right. that's the premise. this is a story we've heard time and time again during this administration. another administration official leaving. this one being the key, key post for the western hemisphere. that central, south america and mexico. and kim breyer was a key person when it came to dealing with mexico for this administration. when president trump threatened new tariffs on mexico because they weren't doing enough to control those coming into the u.s. across the border. she was the one who met with mexican officials in washington and encouraged them to do more. she really was the one leading those diplomatic efforts. but now that diplomacy is a question mark. who is going to lead that at the state department? pompeo thanked her for her work at the state department and. she was leaving to spend time with her family. but as you said, there were clashes between her and the white house. especially when it came to
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policy. >> and a large part of it had to do with disagreements specific will you with steven miller. >> that's right. the "washington post" is reporting that they had gone back and forth over the asylum case with guatemala. so that is where there was a key sticking point. and she decide that had she no longer could fight that fight and is now leaving the state department. >> and the foreign service officer, chuck park, he laid out an op ed. >> it is a blistering op ed. it cites his frustration with the state department calling at this time complacent state. he says that folks there are no longer standing up at all to the trump administration, and their policies. and it is a pretty moving piece because he said he made this decision after the mass shooting in el paso, a city where his son was born. he recounts his experiences, serving as a diplomat for the u.s. worldwide and standing up for u.s. diplomacy, even when times were rough here in the
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united states, going to black history month celebrations, even as there were calls for those who were shot, but he kept fighting the fight. he no longer could do that anymore. and he put it this way. he described the complacent state this way. "the complacent state sighs when the president blocks travel by muslim immigrants, shakes its head when he defends saudi crown prince mohammed bin salman. then complies with orders. evidence we refuse visas based on administration priorities. we recite administration talking points on border security, immigration and trade. we plan travel itineraries, book meetings and literally hold doors open for the appointees who push trump's toxic agenda around the world."
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now, cnn has reached out to chuck after he wrote this op-ed. he doesn't know what he's going to do next, but he hopes to work for an organization that promotes immigration rights. >> kylie atwood, appreciate it. thank you. we have more ahead. why chicago's mayor isn't at all happy with the president's daughter, ivanka trump. crayon easy. atte goes new super stay ink crayon from maybelline new york. precision tip. up to 8-hour wear. draw on all-day matte intensity. new super stay ink crayon. only from maybelline new york. new super stay ink crayon. [ text notification now that you have] new dr. scholl's massaging gel advanced insoles with softer, bouncier gel waves, you'll move over 10% more than before. dr. scholl's. born to move. woman 1: i had no symptoms of hepatitis c. man 1: mine... man 1: ...caused liver damage. vo: epclusa treats all main types of chronic hep c. vo: whatever your type, ask your doctor if epclusa is your kind of cure.
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. as the ripple effects from mass shootings in el paso and date played out, president trump's daughter ivanka took time to post her own thoughts on gun violence, especially in the city of chicago. she wrote on twitter. "with seven dead and 52 wounded near a playground in the windy city, little national or media outrage -- those remarks did not set very well with the mayor of chicago lori lightfoot. she called the tweets misleading at a press conference and said it wasn't a playground and it wasn't one single incident as
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the tweet implied. i spoke with mayor lightfoot earlier. >> mayor, when you saw ivanka trump's tweet from a family which is constantly attacking the news media as factually incorrect or fake, the amount of inaccuracies in her one tweet, it was kind of -- it was certainly surprising how inaccurate it was. i'm wondering what exactly it was that you took issue with. >> well, first and foremost, i think if you really want to be helpful, and particularly given the platform you're in, you actually pick up the phone and you call and you talk to us about what actually happened so we could have given her a full rundown of what the facts were, and then we have a communication about what is the best path forward. i understand that she thought she was being helpful, but her failure -- or anybody on her team to just pick up the phone and communicate with us was really disappointing. >> it made it sound as if all of this occurred in one incident,
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in one area in a playground. >> and, look, don't get me wrong, we had a tough weekend, but conflating all of that and getting the facts wrong and getting -- saying the playground, which it wasn't near a playground, and suggesting that children were at risk was dangerous. and unhelpful. >> it does seem like she is in some way making a comparison between the mass shootings that happened last weekend and gun violence that takes place in chicago. i'm wondering, do you see any equivalence between them? >> look, the circumstances of each of these are tragic. that is absolutely a common theme that runs through them. and i don't want people to lose sight about the fact that we are experiencing shootings at a pace that no one finds acceptable, but conflating the hateful rhetoric that i think motivated -- sounds like motivated the shooter in el paso, and we still don't really know what the motivation of the shooter was in dayton, to what we're experiencing i think really does
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a disservice to victims, the cities that are reeling, the families that are suffering from gun violence. they're not an apples to apples comparison. >> i know you met with ivanka trump for your inauguration to talk about some of the challenges facing chicago and some of the short term and long term things that might be done. has she reached out to you at all since then? >> we have had contact at the staff level, but she and i haven't spoken since that meeting in washington. but it doesn't matter. if you want to talk about a city, particularly one as high profile as chicago, and let's face it, we have been the punching bag for the president. the best thing to do, the best thing to do is reach out, have honest dialogue and then try to form a partnership about how we can address these challenges together. you don't govern by tweet. >> as you said, you've said the
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president is using -- has used chicago as a punching bag. certainly he's also taken aim at, you know, new york city, most recently obviously baltimore. do you think the president understands kind of the -- the long-term structural things which might help a city like chicago or baltimore? >> look, i think that this is -- the president's rhetoric is all part of a perpetual re-election strategy where he demonizes and dismisses cities where he's not going to get a substantial vote. let's face it. the cities that he's picked are democratic strongholds. he's not going to get votes here of any magnitude, so it's easy for him given his, you know, diminishing base to demonize us and the challenges that we face in cities and reduce us to a punch line rather than looking at the greatness that's actually happening in each of these
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cities. yes, we have our challenges, but we are a great city and i'm never going to let anybody, including a president, diminish the greatness of chicago. >> mayor lightfoot, i appreciate your time. thank you. >> thank you. >> that's it for us. the news continues. i want to turn things over to don lemon for "cnn tonight." this is "cnn tonight." i'm don lemon. you know, the video doesn't lie. president trump, who is supposed to be showing empathy for the victims of mass shootings, shows that he cares only about himself and it's caught on tape. while the hospital in el paso -- while in the hospital in el paso yesterday, meeting with some shooting victims and first responders, president trump begins by thanking the medical staff and then he brags about the size of the crowd at his political rally in el paso back in february. >> the job you've done is incredible. and they're talking about you all over the world. and the doctor, what