tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN June 26, 2020 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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4 a.m. here in atlanta, georgia, thank you so much for joining us. our top story, the surging number of covid-19 cases in the united states has now hit 40,000 people in a single day. that is the highest ever. on top of that, dr. robert redfield, the head of the u.s. centers for disease control and prevention says the real number is likely ten times higher. >> this virus causes so much asymptomatic infection, we've probably recognized 10% of the outbreak. that means some 24 million americans, many of them with no symptoms, are probably spreading the virus and don't know it. infections are climbing in more than 30 u.s. states with record spikes in california, texas, and florida. some governors are hitting the
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brakes on reopening any further. all of this will hang over the white house coronavirus task force on friday. it will be the group's first public briefing in two months. the cdc's head stressed social distancing is the most powerful tool to stop spreading the virus. the exact opposite of this crowded beach here in southern england. local officials declared a major incident and begged everyone to leave. as u.s. cases surge to alarming levels, the push to reopen is getting pushed back from some state governors. cnn's erica hill has the latest for us. >> reporter: in the nation's three most populus states, california, florida, and texas, things are going from bad to worse. >> i think history's going to look back for givingly upon united states and americans who are going down this road. >> reporter: los angeles county now has more confirmed cases than any other county in the country. >> we are still in the first
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wave of this pandemic. >> reporter: texas pausing its reopening to, quote, corral the spread of covid-19, also restricting elective surgeries in four counties. >> we're running out of that time. >> reporter: texas medical center now using nearly all its regular capacity icu beds in the greater houston area. hospitals also a concern in florida, which just added 5,000 new cases. governor desantis resisting the call for a statewide mask mandate. >> i think it's incredibly unfortunate that this is so political. >> reporter: in miami, the mayor is considering a fine for anyone who ignores his order. >> if we don't want to go backwards, the only option we have right now is to order masks in public. >> reporter: the cdc confirming more young people are contracting the virus. in ohio where cases have jumped in the last 24 hours, nearly 60% of the state's cases are people
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between the ages of 20 and 49. we have increased testing, but no analyst that i have talked to believes that the total increase is due to that at all. >> reporter: hospitalizations and icu admissions also up, especially in the cincinnati area. across the country, for every person diagnosed, ten more were likely infected. as many as 20 million people according to new findings from the cdc. >> it's about ten times more people have antibodies. >> reporter: there is new concern for pregnant women. they may be at higher risk for severe covid-19. disneyland's delay. >> the data is telling us yes. >> reporter: while in new york city plans are underway for phase 3 bringing back indoor dining, sports, and dog runs on july 5th.
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cdc director dr. robert redfield stressing on thursday this pandemic is not over. he says the best tool, the best weapon to fight it is social distancing and stresses when you can't maintain the six feet of distance and when you're outside in public, you should always be wearing a face covering as well. back to you. >> joining me now in los angeles is dr. anish haja. thank you so much for joining us. 15 counties there in california are seeing increases in covid cases. how might this affect hospitals and capacity if this trend continues? what is the situation there where you are? >> well, we are certainly seeing an increase in hospitalizations in many of the counties in california. as you know, we are seeing increases in cases and usually when you have increases in cases, five to ten days
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afterwards you start to see increases in hospitalizations. this is happening all across california and it is very concerning. >> the governor is resisting easing up on restrictions and also not mandating masks. we are seeing that in some other states, big issues. do you agree with these decisions? is now the time to get more aggressive? >> well, we know masks save lives in covid-19. there was a recent study out of texas a&m and a few other universities that have now definitively shown that wearing a mask protects others around you but also actually protects you if you are uninfected from contracting the virus. so masks are a must but not enough. we have seen reopening occurring all across the united states and one of the metrics that has to be followed when you're reopening is the number of cases you're having and the number of hospitalizations you're seeing from those cases.
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now we are seeing cases go up, we're seeing the hospitalizations going up, which means that the epidemic and the virus is out of control again. and so we have to not only pause reopening, we need our leadership to say to themselves and to the public, maybe we might even need to roll back some of the opening because the cost in lives is too much even when our hospitals have the capacity to take on more covid patients. we in the health care system know that some 30 to 50% of patients who end up on a ventilator from covid die. we have to ask, is this worth it? >> it's not just california, it is texas. where one infectious disease expert said this is leading to apocalyptic surges. the u.s. broke the record for the most cases reported
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thursday. the question is can we get a handle on this, doctor? and we also know that a lot of these cases we are seeing are younger people. >> right. you know, i think we all hoped collectively that the summer heat would slow this virus down, that we wouldn't see as much transmission. we also hoped that as we reopened, if people did wear their masks and did appropriately social distance even while resuming their lives that we wouldn't see as much transmission, but the numbers don't lie. look at what's happening all across the united states. we are seeing cases rise and rise and so at this point we have to ask ourselves, what are we going to do about it? we really have to take a hard look at really wearing these masks, being careful, rolling back the reopenings so we can get a handle on it. >> one doctor in florida says
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not wearing a mask is like driving on a highway drunk without a seat belt. what do you say about not doing these two things, social distancing and wearing a mass snk we know from the very top with the u.s. president, he doesn't wear a mask and even sometimes makes fun of it. >> well, i think it's a great metaphor that not wearing a mask is like driving drunk. when you drive drunk, you're risking other people's lives and your own. we know masks work to protect others and to protect yourself and really we have a number of young people now in the united states who resume their lives who may have covid and are not going to get sick from it. we know they can transmit it. we need our young people to wear the masks so they don't get the virus when they're out and about and not give the virus to their loved ones who may be
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susceptible to bad outcomes if they get covid. leadership is the most important. we need the president, all of our leaders to speak in one voice and say masks are essential. say we have to be careful how we reopen, say that we have to have appropriate testing supplies and contact tracing if we're going to get a handle on it. >> that's it. this is the moment. you have the european union questioning whether they'll allow americans or people in the u.s. to travel to europe because it's so bad here. did you ever imagine that the united states could have it this bad? how did we get this so wrong, doctor? >> yes. it is really shocking for all of us, and we should have done better. and we went wrong probably right from the beginning when in the
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beginning we had the cdc brigham young -- bungle the rollout. we never caught up. part of not catching up is leadership saying at the highest levels saying to all of our governors, all of our jurisdictions, let's have a national strategy for testing. let's have a national strategy tor:con tact tracing and isolating people when they're infected, let's have a national strategy on reopening. on each of these things, unfortunately we did not come together as a nation, whereas, we see other nations like taiwan, new zealand, many other examples where they did just that and they don't have as big a problem as we do. >> right. look where we are. doctor, we really appreciate your expertise and your time. thank you very much and we wish you the best. >> thank you.
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next here on "cnn newsroom," u.s. president trump facing several crises while asking the nation to give him a second term. meantime, his expected challenger joe biden enjoying a sizeable lead according to a slate of recent opinion polls. more about it next. indicators of brain performanc: memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try our new gummies for 30 days and see the difference. i got this mountain bike for only $11. dealdash.com, the fair and honest bidding site. an ipad worth $505, was sold for less than $24; a playstation 4 for less than $16; and a schultz 4k television for less than $2. i won these bluetooth headphones for $20. i got these three suitcases for less than $40. and shipping is always free. go to dealdash.com right now and see
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so we have more cases because we do the greatest testing. if we didn't do testing we'd have no cases. other countries they don't test millions. up to almost 30 million tests. when you do 30 million, you will have a kid with the sniffles and they'll call it coronavirus. >> u.s. president trump speaking with john hannity saying the u.s. has more coronavirus cases because it does more tests. mr. trump faces a major health crisis and a civic crisis caused by ongoing protests calling for racial justice in this country. both are confounding his re-election efforts. for more about it, here's cnn chief white house correspondent jim acosta. >> reporter: with coronavirus cases spiking and his poll
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numbers tanking, he's saying it's because the numbers of tests. the president is signaling the number of dead could continue to soar by the tens of thousands. >> could have been stopped in china but we could have lost anywhere from 2 to 4 million people as opposed to where it is now, which is probably 115, but it could get a little bit higher than that. could get up to 150, could go beyond that. >> that's roughly 100,000 more deaths than mr. trump predicted in april. >> now we're going toward 50 i'm hearing or 60,000 people. one is too many. i always say it, one is too many, but we're going towards 50 or 60,000 people. >> reporter: the president is still bristling at questions over wearing masks. >> then why aren't you further away and why aren't you wearing a mask? >> i can take a step back.
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>> you're not social distancing based on the question. >> but hold on, in ohio vice president mike pence was wearing a mask. in texas where gop governor greg abbott is pausing the state's reopening, he said in a statement, i ask all texans to do their part to spread covid-19 when by wearing a mask, washing their hands and social distancing. >> masks work. they reduce infections by up to 50%. it's not a big deal. >> reporter: ever since the president's disappointing weekend rally in tulsa where thousands of empty seats were on display, dozens of secret service agents have now been forced into quarantine as that agency is asking them to go on testing and quarantine. 1.5 billion new initial unemployment claims since last week and 47 million since mid
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march, president trump is trailing in ohio. >> it's like a child who can't believe this has happened to him. all his whining and self-pity. this pandemic didn't happen to him, it happened to all of us. his job is to whine about it? his job is to do something about it. >> reporter: the president is banking on district shuns to bail him out. as mr. trump is deploying u.s. marshals to protect these historic sites. >> they're looking at george washington, they're looking at abraham lincoln, thomas jefferson. not going to happen. not going to happen. not as long as i'm here. >> reporter: ex-aides like john bolton say the president simply hasn't focused enough on the virus. >> and he didn't want to hear about the potential impact of a pandemic on the american economy and its effect on his
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re-election. turning a blind eye to all of these early signs. >> and we are learning the president is walg himself off from bad polling telling advisers he does not believe the latest poll saying he is trailing joe biden and he's pushing off dr. anthony fauci who has not spoken to mr. trump in three weeks. aides are not hopeful the president will ever warm up to wearing a mask. one official told us, quote, he will never change on the mask. jim acosta, cnn, the white house. several recent polls show mr. trump's likely democratic challenger with a sizeable lead. one example here, a survey from "the new york times" and sienna college has joe biden ahead of mr. trump by 10 points. let's get a look from natasha. >> thanks for having me. >> polls ended up being wrong in
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2016 when mr. trump beat hillary clinton, but these numbers are certainly looking promising for joe biden. what's your reaction to them? >> they are really significant. this poll gets a very, very strong rating and so it's considered to be a very accurate poll, but the other big thing is that this is by a much wider margin than any that clinton had in 2016. we need to look at the results from some of the swing states like michigan, like pennsylvania, like wisconsin. at this point clinton had a very narrow lead in these states and trump won these states by a very narrow margin. in this case trump is doing much, much worse than biden. biden has a ten plus point lead in these states and we should also compare this to 2016 where clinton never had over 50%
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threshold in these states. we also see a big lead for biden in states like florida with six points, seven points in arizona and ten points in north carolina. the poll revealed other demographics that weren't looking good for president trump. the only category doing a little bit better by three points is in the age group of 45-year-olds to 64-year-olds. in every other age group he's losing by wide margins. we're seeing those over 65, it's a 17-point drop from where he was in 2016. we see that among white voters. this normally is his biggest support base. we see his support is dwindling there, too. >> let's talk about what is going wrong for this president. certainly he has been widely criticized for his nonhandling of the pandemic which is spiraling out of control. that coupled with the protests and of course prior to that there was just a strong anybody but trump movement.
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it seems like since the protests and this pandemic has gotten worse and worse, that he has gotten worse and worse in these polls. >> right. so i think the pandemic wasn't helping matters and he wasn't gaining any support due to the way he was handling the pandemic. in fact, a majority of the public didn't think he was handling it well and in the polls it shows the swing states didn't show he was handling it well. where the turning point is the protests, the way he handled the protests and the way the public perceives his ability to handle race relations. he only has 30% approval ratings. we can see a big jump from may 25th, around the time that the protests took place until now, a month later. biden gained three points extra just in that one month. now of course anything can change, but the way he's managed
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this, whether it be using the military on his own protesters or the ridiculous photo op he is hae with the bible, he's not viewed as someone who can unite the country. >> right. again and again, he now has a forum, he's doing his rallies to say something different, to come out with something that americans can cling to that he is the leader that they can count on during a very tumultuous time. so the question is, you mentioned it, what can he do at this point to turn this around because he's not seeming like he's putting in that effort. >> right. i mean, i think the number one thing he should do is focus on the economic argument for him. so if you were to look at the -- some of the individuals that were polled and they were asked are you going to vote for trump again? some of them said they might vote for trump again. in many cases it was for economic reasons. for example, an owner of a small
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business said he would vote for trump again even though he wasn't that pleased with him because he believes in low taxes and that the government needs to stay out of regulating business. if i were the trump campaign, i would focus on taxes, that he would be the president to lower taxes and try to appeal to voters in that way. the poll revealed it was only the economy that he had an approval rating above 50%. >> natasha, we appreciate your insights. thank you again. >> thanks for having me. nascar has released a photo of the noose found in the garage assigned to bubba wallace, the only african-american drive in the stock car racing association. nascar's president says he was concerned for wallace and the photo shows the noose was real. the fbi determined no hate crime had been committed because the rope had been there since last year. nascar says all other garages
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were checked and found a noose only in wallace's garage. the association was not able to determine who put it there or why it wasn't reported earlier. next here on "cnn newsroom," coronavirus has reached a crisis level in texas. why officials there are having to backtrack on reopening and how far they may have to go. i didn't realize how special it would be for me to discover all of these things that i found through ancestry. i discovered my great aunt ruth signed up as a nursing cadet for world war ii. you see this scanned-in, handwritten document. the most striking detail is her age. she was only 17. knowing that she saw this thing happening and was brave enough to get involved and do something- that was eye opening. find an honor your ancestors who served in world war ii. their stories live on at ancestry.
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reported its highest single day rise in coronavirus cases. more than 30 u.s. states are seeing their numbers go up now. california, texas, and florida are all having record spikes. several governors have now hit the brakes on reopening any further. and the actual number of cases in the u.s. is ten times higher than the official figure. health experts say testing has missed 90% of infected people. texas is reporting a record number of new coronavirus cases. 6,000 new infections on thursday alone. the former acting director and cdc says it is a warning shot for states not taking precautions seriously enough. lucy cavanaugh reports who's at risk. >> reporter: the coronavirus nearly killed christopher
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marshall. >> i got so sick that it was acute respiratory distress syndrome with septic shock. >> reporter: the 37-year-old university of north texas graduate student spent weeks at dallas hospitals. >> do you think you would have died? >> i definitely would have died. it got that serious. i'm going home. >> reporter: though doctors saved him, marshall worries about getting sick again due to surges across texas. he's rarely leaving home struggling with survivor's guilt. >> the hardest part for me, initially waking up and seeing how many people died from covid-19 because it was like why did i live and everybody else died? >> reporter: texas, one of the first states to push an aggressive reopening is seeing new hospitalization rates reaching record highs. >> there is a massive outbreak of covid-19 across texas.
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>> so many getting sick that in houston the texas hospital is now admitting adult patients. >> our numbers seem to be rising very quickly and some of the models are on the verge of being apocalyptic. >> reporter: minority communities are bearing the brunt of the pandemic. in dallas hispanics account for more than 60% of the cases. among them is dallas isd president in the hospital for 82 days. >> it's serious. wish i never caught it. wish i never heard of it, but i tell everybody else, take it seriously. >> the father of six was on a ventilator for more than a month. his brother said he barely survived. >> i was worried about him passing away. >> bishop greg kelly worries about undocumented patients, many of whom are essential workers. >> they don't have any access to any kind of support, any kind of stimulus support.
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they have to work. >> reporter: it's not just latinos. increasing number of infections are among young people like chris marshall. >> stop thinking that you're so invincible, that you're young, that this cannot happen to you. it can happen. i'm -- i'm 37. it happened. >> reporter: meanwhile, the governor announcing that texas is going to hit pause on any further reopening of the economy for now. this, an attempt to slow down the spread of this virus. cnn, dallas. so that is texas, and now california. an alarming surge in cases this week is worrying health officials in this state, america's most populus state boasts new case numbers on several cases this week. in the past two weeks its hospitalizations are up 30%. cnn's kyung lah has more about
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it. >> i have three lanes waiting. >> reporter: if you thought the covid crisis was over, it's not even close say the people living the impact at this los angeles food bank. >> i feel like openings are making people feel like it's safe to be out, but in reality it's not. >> reporter: what do you say to people in california who think that this problem is over? >> stay home. >> reporter: the numbers paint a stark picture in california. after weeks of keeping the spread largely in check, new infections have shot up shattering records on multiple days. los angeles county now has the most infections of any county in the country. california's democratic governor, gavin newsom, says closing the state a second time is on the table. >> buy don't intend to do that, we don't want to do that, but i want to make this clear, we are prepared to do that if we must. >> reporter: how did this happen? california was the first state to shut down.
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about two months of closures crater the economy but stabilized infections. then the state moved forward in phases to restart the economy even as testing lagged. >> each day we're getting a little smarter but each day the threat is still there. >> reporter: los angeles just announced an additional 6,000 tests to keep up with the demand. the epidemiologists say testing is still a struggle. >> they need it to scale up quickly. we're always going to be chasing behind this virus instead of in front of it. >> reporter: meanwhile, infections in nursing homes and prisons never stopped. >> george floyd. >> reporter: then came days of protests over george floyd where we saw masks but little social distancing. the governor and county health officials say this may be a factor in surging covid cases. >> is there a lesson to be learned from what we're seeing now in california?
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>> just because we had flattened the curve here in california early on does not mean we are out of the woods. >> the coronavirus resurgence in the u.s. has economists worried. the u.s. labor department reports 1.5 million americans filed new claims last week. that brings the total to 47 million since the pandemic began. still, investors on wall street weren't phased. the dow finished up thursday almost 300 points and the nasdaq and s&p each gained more than 1%. let's talk about it with cnn's john defterios live in abu dhabi. good morning, john. good to see you. >> good morning. >> that rate seems persistent and stubbornly high, but wall street unphased by it all.
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how so? >> reporter: yeah. two parallel worlds, if you will, natalie. that is a very high number at 1.5 million or just under that. it's six times the norm pre-covid-19 and there's little doubt now that we'll top 50 million which is a major milestone. they'll cross it likely in july. we had a rally on wall street because of the easing of banking rules to allow more liquidity into the system. this did transfer over to asia. there was a report after the closing bell from s&p, the ratings agency, saying this covid-19, get this number, will cost that region $3 trillion in gdp and that is counting the recovery in 2021. u.s. futures are at their lows so far 20rks to 230 point drop for the opening of the dow
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industrials. there's still a lot of churning going on in industry and layoffs to the point that we were talking about there, natalie. we had macy's pointing to 4,000 layoffs. it is alarming. but the central theme, what we were just reporting on in the field, texas and california, growth, florida added to that list. you would expect a snap back will hold back the recovery in the second half that the trump administration was looking for here depending how deep it goes. it looks alarming at this stage, that's for sure. >> let's talk about the airlines sector which remains in turmoil, not only here in the u.s. but around the world. what are we expecting today? >> yeah, this is another front line sector if you will, right, natalie? the airline sector all around the world getting hit very hard.
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five airline ceos will be at the white house meeting with mike pence and perhaps donald trump. they've fapd $5 billion more? we're not happy about the situation in the european union restricting am travel by americans. also they need to come up with a common policy for testing people before they board a plane. and the unions are asking for another 34 348d f$34 million fo workers which extends until the end of 2021. the german carrier, lufthansa, they got a $10 billion bailout. they said we cannot survive without it. there was a lot of push back in brussels but there seems to be a need just like the american
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carriers. >> something to watch. we always appreciate it. john defterios for us in abu dhabi. >> thanks. you're watching "cnn newsroom." take a look at this picture. thousands of britts hit the beaches despite social distancing rules and officials declared a major incident because of this. we'll tell you about it. also, a worrisome outbreak of coronavirus cases in victoria state. we'll tell you how the government is responding there. so, no more night sweats. no more nocturnal baking, or polar ice cap air-conditioner mode. because the tempur-pedic breeze° delivers superior cooling from cover to core. helping you sleep cool, all night long. during the tempur-pedic summer of sleep, save $500 on all tempur-breeze mattresses... and experience your coolest sleep this summer, on our best breeze savings of the year.
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itv's juliet brendner. >> reporter: they wanted people to stay away but no one was listening. tens of thousands descended today. it was impossible to keep a safe distance from strangers and there was little or no awareness of any health risks. >> reporter: why did you come today? >> why? i'm enjoying today's really nice weather. >> i'm glad. >> i take advantage of it. by the time the rain goes back and lockdown. >> reporter: with the town overwhelmed and police apparently powerless to intervene, by early afternoon the council declared a major incident. >> what's fairly obvious is that people don't see there's a problem. >> reporter: the m 3 was close to a standstill. they drove from as far away as birmingham, london.
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they said police must be given more powers to deal with the deluge. >> they can't cope with it. if we need messaging or indeed on the n 3, big signs that say this is now closed, there is a major incident in play, please turn around. the police don't have the necessary powers. we should be operating very quickly in westminster to give them the power to deal with it in emergency. >> reporter: the people living close to beauty spots, it feels like an invasion. one trying to turn back vehicles was physically and verbally abused. >> fortunately it landed at my feet. the main problem is that the aggression, people have traveled four, five hours in their car and they're hot, they're grumpy. >> reporter: along the south coast they're attempting to stop
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the crowds and it's a battle they fear they may be losing. right about now european union is set to decide which countries people will be allowed to come in and which won't. included is the united states. the border reopening warns that europe is seeing the cases increase for the first time in months as countries lift restrictions. in australia a flairup of cases in victoria state has caused officials to ramp up cases. how might australia's damaged economy handle a potential second wave? >> reporter: for weeks now life in australia has slowly been returning to normal as coronavirus restrictions ease.
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now that's been put at risk by an outbreak of new cases in the country's second largest city, melbourne. >> we said there would be outbreaks. so the fact that there are outbreaks should not come as a surprise. >> in a bitd to kd to curve the flairup, there are hot spots. >> there are hundreds and hundreds, thousands strong door knockers out there talking to the community, inviting them to come in and get a free test whether they're symptomatic or asymptomatic. >> reporter: the state of emergency in victoria has br been extended until then. they are talking about lockdown conditions. >> i am hopeful that we would be able to control and suppress those cases.
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>> reporter: australia was slow to close the borders and impose travel restrictions. this helped control the spread of the virus keeping the total number of cases to around 7.5,000. but on a country that relies on trade and tourism, it's come at a massive cost. qantis has lost. >> this leaves us with a similar choice. it will take years for business to return to normal but each shot shows increase. sports news coming up. unrestrained joy for liverpool fans as they celebrate the end
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liverpool fans outside their stadium there celebrating becoming english football champs for the first time since 1990. they became the english premier league champions thursday evening without even playing. their rivals manchester city lost their match meaning liverpool couldn't be caught. interesting evening. alex thomas has more about it. he's live in liverpool. people celebrating there. too bad they had to do it during a pandemic. >> reporter: that's right, natalie. the scenes are a little bit uncomfortable for those of us used to social distancing. you have to understand, they've not won for three decades. this is the rebirth of a brand that was the dominant force in english and european football in the 1970s and 1980s. the players were just as happy as the fans.
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we can show you what happened in the game. chelsea taking the lead. u.s.a. star before manchester city made it 1-1. chelsea didn't give up. he was sent off and the resulting spot kick, chels sea' brazilian star and they're at the top of the table. champs again. the last time they did it they were the first division, the premier league was two years away from being born. they took charge five years ago and brought the clup to this point. crucially as you can hear, this was him talking to sky sports. >> it's where you are now. it's incredible.
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stay home, celebrate it. it's all here. it's all here. we do it together in this moment. it's a joy to do it for you, i can tell you. >> a klopp project that started years ago, and now the premier league this season. the first time they've been a champion in the premier league era. the boston red sox have invested in this club and bought it in 2010 when it was in a bit of shambles. the fans are excited. >> very interesting. good for liverpool. alex, thank you so much. good to see you. thank you for watching. i'm natalie allen. i'll see you here this time tomorrow. "early start" is next. when we started our business we were paying an arm and a leg for postage.
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if we don't act agregressivy now and let this go for a little longer, then we can get into that apocalyptic system. >> this is a consequence of our actions and a consequence of not having guidance from the federal government. an invisible enemy with invisible leadership makes a very real resurgence. new coronavirus cases at the highest level the u.s. has seen so far. and in the middle of a public health crisis, the trump administration once again asking the supreme court to strike down obamacare. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "early start.
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