tv CNN Newsroom CNN October 27, 2020 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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young people in the last days. the crucial seven days, the voters, black men and young people and young people are overwhelmingly democratic progressive and we're seeing evidence that young people are going to vote in higher numbers than 2008. it's unprecedented. so that pressure from aoc and the squad will energize those young voters. >> we're up against the hour. we have to leave it there. see you soon. thank you. thanks to all of you for being with us. we'll see you tomorrow morning i'm poppy harlow. >> i'm jim sciutto. john king is up. hello, everybody. i'm john king in washington. thank you for sharing an important news day with us. an important week out from election day. it's an active day across america. joe biden stops in georgia, a potential josies as a red to
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blue flip. jill biden off to maine. the president hits michigan, wisconsin, and nebraska's second traditional district went red four years ago but lean biden blue right now. the first lady traveling to pennsylvania, another 2016 trump prize at risk of slipping away. today is deadline day in ten states to request ballots. the map says a lot about where the candidates and campaigns think they stand. the president on defense scrambling to rebuild his 2016 path. the george stop plans for iowa ahead tell you that democrat biden is bullish and sees the potential to color states that traditionally break red. the president up against more than just joe biden. the coronavirus is again shattering records and putting the president's mismanagement of the pandemic front and center in the campaign's final week. the map underlines the trouble
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ahead for the country. 37 states right now recording more covid cases this week than last week. only one, washington state, recording fewer cases right now. this is a record setting week of the worst kind, just under 70,000 cases a day is an unwelcome high. 16 states saw their highest average yesterday, monday. the midwest is leading the wrong way trend. the numbers don't lie. the president's tweets they do. we are rounding the turn, 99.9%. in a new closing message campaign ad, joe biden frames the election choice this way. >> who we are, what we stand for, maybe most importantly who we're going to be. it's all at stake. characte character's on the ballot. the character of the country. this is the opportunity to leave the dark, angry politics of the past four years behind us.
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to choose hope over fear, unity over division. science over fiction. >> let's look at the numbers right now. they are not good and worse. if you look right now 37 states, that's the orange and red, trending in the wrong direction. more new covid infections today when you compare the data to a week ago. five of them, 50% more infections this week, 50% or more new infections this week. it's everywhere, it's across the country. 12 states holding stacheady, an one, washington where it began, trending down. makes it hard to believe 99.9% done, the president says, no. 66,000 plus new infections yesterday. friday and saturday both above 80,000. the trend line, daily average higher than it has been. look at this way, just in the
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last month, 19% of the coronavirus infections confirmed in the united states have confirmed in the last month. now 8.7 million. 19% in just the last month. that is taking a turn for the worst, not rounding the final corner. the hospitalizations, trending up, just shy of 43,000 americans hospitalized with covid-19 as of yesterday. that trend line trickling up as well. not as high as the summer surge. can you keep it below? we'll watch that. the positivity rates in many states across the states, highlighted here the states where the leading candidates are, joe biden going to georgia. a 7% positivity rate. if you look everywhere else, that's not bad, experts say get it to 5%. michigan, at 5% right now. wisconsin 28%.
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nebraska 42%. 31% wyoming, 36% idaho. 19% utah, 19% nevada. high positivity rate today tells you more infections today, the likelihood more people get infected tomorrow, impacts hospitalizations. we've been through this for months now. the coronavirus is front and center not just in what the candidates say about what they would do about the pandemic and where we stand in the fight against the pandemic but in how they campaign. >> he travelled from delaware to a little tiny corner of pennsylvania like right next to delaware and he made a speech. and he said he doesn't do these kind of rallies because of covid, you know. he doesn't do that because nobody shows up, that's why. >> the big difference between us and the reason why it looks like we're not traveling, we're not putting on superspraeaders. we are doing what we're doing
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here. everyone is wearing a mask, trying as best we can dob socially distant. >> abby, it is a striking contrast, just as the coronavirus itself sending a late campaign message, the spike going up at this moment, the president trying to say tough it out we're okay. all is well. and joe biden bringing the leadership contrast that he believes, even though it's less energies, he believes the voters will reward him a week from today. >> this is the contrast the president chose going into election day. he chose to double down on one of his weakest hands going into this election. we know that a majority of americans believe he's handled the coronavirus poorly. and that the federal government has handled the coronavirus poorly. so it's an interesting choice on president trump's part rather than try to narrow the differences over this virus with joe biden and focus on other things where he's stronger, like the economy, he's leaned into
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this idea that he's going to open the economy at all costs. the problem with that is that that is happening at the exact same time as you just showed the virus is surging. people are seeing the consequences of reopening at all costs and that does not seem to be going in the president's favor. these are communities where they're seeing their hospitals being overrun and it's getting worse going into election day. >> it's getting worse as he travels he's seeing this on the front pages everywhere he goes. it's a major story in all these states. jeff, to abby's point, let's go through the final day contrast. this is president on the road yesterday. his advisers wish he would spend more time about the economy. when he does, he talks about joe biden and makes it sound like if you elect joe biden we'll have an apocalypse. >> it's the difference between a trump recovery and a biden
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depression. we understand the disease, we have to take care of our older, wonderful people. our elderly. especially if they have heart problems, diabetes problem in particular. different problems. and we do that. but look, i mean, i got it and i'm here, right. >> in contrast, listen to joe biden. the president said i got it and i'm here, tough it out. joe biden says, no, mr. president, wrong call. >> 200,000 could die between now and the end of the year and he said we're not going to control it. not going to control it. the bottom line is, donald trump is the worst possible president, the worst possible person to try to lead us through this pandemic. >> you think in the final days of a campaign how are we going to be surprised? what new issue is going to jump up? it is in the president's words, covid, covid, covid.
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>> it is the headline news on the local newspapers, the beginning, middle and end of local newscasts. it's the hospitalizations going up, the cases going up. here in nebraska where the president is holding a rally this evening, he is chasing single electoral votes here. but the state of nebraska has seen record number of cases each week for the last four weeks. regardless of the state he goes to, red state, blue state, this is central to this message. so it is -- the president is clearly on a base strategy here, trying to turn out his base everywhere he goes. he's also coming to reach the republican areas of the western iowa, he needs those votes as well. yes, he's turning out his base but some republicans worry he's turning out democrats and independents. if there's anyone who possibly had not made their mind up by this, still waiting for a little bit more information, the virus
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and seeing how it's handled is politically not wise. no one has the same type of treatment the president has. so for him to say that at a rally that does not comport with what anyone sees in their lives or who they know who has the virus. the president has tried many times to change the subject. the subject is locked in now for this final week of this race. it's not good for him, which is why he's traveling to so many places. he has such a narrow path. >> they're getting overwhelmed in early voting and they're trying to make sure people turn out late. abby phillip, a little bit of deja vu in the sense the final week four years ago, hillary clinton went to arizona. democrats thinking we're going to flip a red state blue. this week senator kamala harris is off to texas. joe biden is not going to texas himself, it's not on the schedule yet at least but he did a local tv interview where he thinks the state of texas, traditionally red, maybe it's in
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play. sorry i have to read that one. kamala will be back later this week, i think friday. we have a number of surrogates in there across if country. we're devoting a lot of money to texas. i think not only we have a shot. i think democrats are going to win back the house and we have good candidates running as well. i feel good about texas. a poll has joe biden down four points in texas. that means it's in play. do the democrats think they're t t able to swing texas or are they trying to make local democrats happy? >> that would not necessarily be a bad rational for joe biden to go to texas, even if they don't think they can flip it at the presidential level. there is a desire among democrats in texas and frankly across the country for there to be more focus on the local races, picking up some of these
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competitive seats. texas is a state where we may not know until election day what is going on there. one of the things that's been intriguing to democrats are these voting numbers. the early vote has been through the roof in texas in the biggest cities in that state. what will that mean for election day? it's hard to say right now. but from the biden perspective, they can send the vice president down there, invest money in that state. many democratic outside groups are doing the same thing. if they lift some local races, if they lift some congressional candidates that might be money well spent for a cycle down the road where perhaps in p four years, eight years it's truly in play at the presidential level. >> we'll watch that trend. this is week we look at the map, where you are is very important. the president is going to michigan, wisconsin and the second congressional district today, 16 votes in michigan, 10 in wisconsin and one in the
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congressional district that helped trump to the upset four years ago. it's all leaning blue right now. where you are is just one, but the president is on defense, trying to figure out can i find a way to 270? >> no doubt, john. it's exactly to a 270. it is a narrow needle he's trying to thread, which is why he's here in nebraska. in 2008 barack obama won the single electoral vote here nebraska so that gave democrats hope. hillary clinton lost it in 2016, though. but this time there's a congressional race and the suburbs are changing and turning against this president because of coronavirus and other matters. so the same thing is happening here as well. the president also is still chasing iowa. he won iowa by nine points four years ago but now it is close. iowa just across the missouri
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river from here, he will be addressing that audience as well. joe biden coming back to iowa on friday. democrats wondering is it really in play? could he win that state? we'll see the mood on election day next week. no question the president is threading a narrow needle here. he was in maine on sunday, the other state that splits their votes. so for all this talk about the electoral college we're getting a look at what it looks like in nebraska and maine, a small sense, and his map is precarious. that's why he's coming here tonight. >> and biden is pushing to expand the map even after the experience of four years ago, tells you they are confident in their numbers because they don't want to repeat the mistake from four years ago. we'll see. up next for us a new study that suggests that coronavirus antibodies may not last long.
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chief justice john roberts swearing in amy coney barrett. you see the picture there. the supreme court now back to nine. when i was in high school, this was the theater i came to quite often. ♪ the support we've had over the last few months has been amazing. i have a soft spot for local places. it's not just a work environment. everyone here is family. gonna go ahead and support him, get my hair cut, leave a big tip. if we focus on our local communities, we can find a way to get through this together. thank you. ♪ if you are ready to open your heart and your home, check us out. get out and about and support our local community. we thought for sure that we were done. and this town said: not today.
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a huge british study out today shows evidence that immunity from the coronavirus lessens over time. they sent tests to 360,000 randomly selected people and found the following, a 26% decline of antibodies over three months. the decline was greatest in people 75 and older compared to young people. it was across all ages and regions but not health care
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workers. the results confirm earlier studies that asymptomatic patients lose antibodies faster than those with severe sickness. dr. wen, what's the take away from this? give it a few months and you could be vulnerable again if you have coronavirus? >> i don't know that we can draw too many conclusions from this one study alone, john. it's still an open question we have of how long does immunity last. if you have covid-19 how long and how well are you protected? this study suggests that the antibodies you develop after getting covid-19 they wain over time but there are other ways for people to get protection as well. maybe your body produces new antibodies if you had the infection once and produces them quickly. there's also t cell immunity, another type of protection you can have against the virus as well. but overall it's still an open
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question. based on the fact this is a coronavirus, and other coronaviruses you can get year after year. probably we will not have the ability to protect against covid-19 for more than a year. which is another reason why herd immunity, the concept of letting everyone get covid-19 and see what happens, why that is a concept that will lead to a lot of preventable deaths. >> so let's get a sense of where are we? which is a question i've been asking for months. where are we now? we look at the seven day average of new cases, we're averaging 70,000 new covid infections a day right now. you see the trend line there going up. it's everywhere, 37 states trending in the wrong direction. this is a poll today, people were asked, have you socially distanced in the last week, right now seven in ten americans say yes. in april, it was 92%. have you visited friends or relatives in the last week, half of americans, 49% say yes, i
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visited friends or relatives, back in april only 19% said that. people are visiting friends and relatives, they're not socially distancing as much and we have a record high of covid infections. any doubt? >> we are in the middle of a major covid storm. every indicator, every metric that we have is trending in the wrong direction. but we're not seeing behaviors change. back in march/april we did see behavior change that's why we were able to avoid catastrophe or more catastrophe in the northeast. back in june, july, august we were able to avoid catastrophe in the sun belt. now we're in the surge across the country. because of lack of federal guidance we know it's time for individuals to do their part. we should all be wearing masks.
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it's the simple interventions that can save lives we should be following these recommendations that we've been talking about all along, wear masks, stay socially distanced, avoid crowds and indoor gatherings, including with family and friends. >> dr. wen, appreciate your insights as always. up next back to the campaign one week out, there is record early voting, the group seeing huge increases in turn out from just four years ago. new projects means new project managers.
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ready. set. woah. universal orlando resort. stay at a universal hotel starting from $79 a night plus tax. restrictions apply. a new supreme court ruling in a case out of wisconsin is drawing fire from progressives. the rulings that mail-in ballots must be received by election to be counted. the vote was 5- 3 with the three liberal justices dissenting. justice kavanaugh says keeping the election day deadline makes sense because, quote, those
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states want to avoid the chaos and suspicions of impropriety that ensue if thousands of ballots flow in after election day and flip the election. in a dissent, they argued more leeway is needed this year because of the pandemic writing quote, during covid the state's ballot receipt deadline, disenfranchise citizens by depriving them of their right to vote. she wrote the court has failed to adequately protect the nation's voters. early voting is shattering records and keeping voters busy. we're one week from election day and look at that number, more than 65 million ballots already cast. that's according to a survey of election officials. with me is the ceo of catalyst, a data company that provides services to democrats, academics
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and nonprofit advocacy groups. i want to walk through these numbers to get your expertise on what they mean. the early voting is eye popping. let's look at younger voters. in 2016, 1.2 million younger voters voted early, look at this, 5.3 million, up 42%. black younger voters, hispanic, white younger voters. what does that tell you? >> that tells us the young voters are engaged. it's ironic if you think about it, this is the oldest presidential ticket we've had to vote for with presidential donald trump and vice president joe biden and the young voters are ushering in the future generation. these are the voters we'll be turning to i heard some of your guests earlier talk about it that we're going to counting on in 2022 and 2024. so it's encouraging that young
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voters are taking their mark. >> a potential swing vote, many states, is hispanic, latino voters. you have numbers that show us in georgia, early voting up 188%, from 24 to 70,000. in florida up 51%. in arizona up 48%. the question here, do we know, is this -- there's a pandemic, i'm going to vote early or is it i just have a lot more intensity to vote, therefore i'm going to cast my ballot as soon as i can or a combination of the two? >> i think we're seeing a combination of the two. i think the thing interesting to us is historically voting by mail is something that our parents did or senior citizens did. what we're seeing now is the combination of the pandemic and the combination of being extra motivated to get involved and engaged. you have kids in parkland reacting to the gun violence, young people -- daca dreamers
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reacting to the president, so you're seeing young people pick a faster, more secure option to vote. >> as you know, not all early voters are created equal. if you are a 100% committed voter and show up on election day, didn't have the option day, it's great to have your vote in the bank but it doesn't count as somebody who has two jobs, irregul irregular hours, lives in a senior center may used to go to the lobby and vote, but that option is not available because of covid. you have the numbers here of early voters who did not vote in 2016, the percentage, 32% in nevada didn't vote four years ago. 28%, arizona, 27% texas. 26% georgia. a consistent number across those states. what does that tell you and do we know anything about these people? the trump campaign said in pennsylvania and other states we registered more people for this
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cycle we think they're going to show up. do we know who these people are? >> we do. the thing that you're messing with people that are voting in an election and were eligible and didn't vote in the 2016 election. is they're extra motivated to get out. those numbers are encouraging for democrats. i would say, we talked about it a little bit, the turn out among white voters is increasing. the positive sign for the biden campaign is the percent of those folks supporting democrats has increased from 2016. we know a little bit about them but what we know is that these young voters that are driving these numbers are predominantly supporting democrats over the republicans. >> so in the final week of a campaign, i've been doing this a long time, when i started covering politics there was no such thing as big data, a touch screen, the internet was sort of a baby at the time. now the campaigns have this information. they know who has voted because
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it's a public record. they can find out in every state who has voted. so in the final week, the challenge is we're missing these guys or these people did vote, let's get new people. walk us through because of the information now and the data, campaigns today are like they have never been before because of the access. >> you and i both got started in an era this data wasn't available. really simply, campaigns set out at the beginning of their organization, they're a set of voters, as you mentioned, that want to -- that are going to be supportive. you just need to get them to go vote. then there are other voters that the campaigns are targeting and need to communicate with that are persuadable targets. one week to election day, they know who's with them. so now it's a battle of efficiency. so every day they get a list and they're not looking at the big numbers being reported through cnn and other outlets. they're looking at their
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universe of voters and are they moving them to vote early. importantly, i think you just mentioned this at the top of the hour. you have wisconsin, you still have fluctuations in what's permissible or not. the component we added this year is providing campaigns what ballots are being rejected and which of those are curable. which can the campaign or organizations working on the ground in the states can go and contact those voters and say you had a problem with your ballot, can we help you correct that to make sure your vote was counted? that's the wrinkle this year as opposed to previous years where it was purely an efficiency exercise. >> i it's a fascinating exercise. michael, grateful for your time and insights to keep track of it. a federal judge overruling
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the doj's efforts to intervene in a lawsuit brought against donald trump. this paves the way for the case to move forward with the president as the defendant. a big loss for the justice department and the president. >> that's right it is. the department of justice sought to intervene in the case and substitute itself as the defendant in the place of the president. the doj said he was acting in official duties when he denied rapining gene carol in the 1980. the judge here in new york rejected that position saying if the president were to comment official government acts but if he's commenting on sexual assault allegations it's not. it would mean a president is free to defame anyone who criticizes his conduct or impugns his character without adverse consequences to that
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president or what injury he inflicts on the person defamed. she responded saying as to whether the president raped me is at the heart of the lawsuit we can answer that question and get the truth out. they want to get a sample of the president's dna she wants to compare it to a dress she said she wore when the attack happened. she said there's genetic male material on the dress. it remains to be seen if the doj is going to appeal this ruling. >> this day a setback for the justice department and the president. when we come back we check back in with a school to see how it's operating amid a coronavirus spike in its community. water? why?! ahhhh! incoming! ahhhahh! i'm saved!
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to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer. because our customers love it. see for yourself, at carvana.com. governor jp pritzker said there's a storm on the rise and he's warning residents they need to prepare. cases, hospitalizations and deaths rising in illinois and starting tomorrow, new restrictions go into place in six regions. the surge adds to the covid challenges at schools.
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joining me is the principal of damon elementary school in quincy, illinois. good to see you again as i say every time you come back you are doing the most important work in the country right now. >> thank you. >> we have the surging cases all around the country and including in your state. you had three cases among those in the in-person learning and one person in remote learning. how are you doing and how do you handle this? as the numbers go up around you, are you doing anything different or just staying the course? >> you know, i think we're refining our practices. really ensuring additional cleaning, ensuring, you know, those temperatures are being taken as students enter the building. our students wear masks and just so we're like refining those practices and ensuring additional protocols are being taken to -- you know, to really keep our students and our staff
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safe. >> so you have, in the community, your county, 12% is the 7 day positivity rate. >> correct. >> hospitalization bed availability is 22%, so you don't want that number to go any lower than that. in the case of students coming to school. these are numbers and statistics. i suspect as the case count goes up, it's more in the news, as people know or hear about people with the issue, there's some anxiety to this. how do you deal with that, in addition to the safety issues and the cane sighties of young kids? >> i think young children play off of what adults -- their own anxiety. so i think that's really important that parents and staff are assuring students we're doing everything possible to keep them safe. but i will say that anxiety of teachers and staff that are working in wor working in buildings is something we all need to think about. this is a stressful time for
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them. they have their own families to be concerned about as well. but they feel the weight on their shoulders that they only have the kids for nine months and all of the learning that needs to happen. we've never taught in a pandemic and we're learning quickly that you have to stay on top of things. and that you, you know, all of our protocols and practices have to be looked at on a regular basis. >> grateful for your time. we'll keep checking in to see how the school year goes. >> that sounds good. >> thank you, mr. king. >> no, thank you. when we come back, people vote for people at the top of the tickets but the vice presidential candidates skipping around the country, how much does that matter? only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ it was 1961 when nellie young lost her devoted husband.
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candidate stop is a valuable commodity in the coronavirus campaign season. how each team deploys the vice presidential nominee in the final week is a signal where team biden and team trump think things stand. the vice president's visits include the carolinas, wisconsin, michigan, nevada, iowa. and then traditional red states
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that perhaps will turn blue, arizona and texas. let's discuss the role of the vp candidates. lorraine bowls and former press secretary to the 2012 nominee paul ryan, michael steele. great to see you both. lorraine, people vote for president, not vice president, and that's true, but candidates can help by targeting particular constituency. listen to senator harris. obviously part of the goal for her is to gin up african-american turnout and suburban women. listen to this. >> we have to ask ourselves why are so many powerful people trying to confuse us, trying to make it difficult for us to vote? i think the answer is because they know our power. they know the power of us when we are organized, when we are standing with each other. we make change happen and we
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win. >> lorraine, where do you see harris, did we lose lorraine? that's what happens. michael, you have to fill in until we get her back up here. in terms of deploying like that, put her on with oprah, get an audience, targeting women, african americans, but more broadly women voters in the campaign. are they using her smartly? >> absolutely. there are certain audiences she will be more receptive to her appeals, they're using her in a smart, strategic way to reach those audiences as the former vice president himself remains a low key campaigner, largely work in places like pennsylvania where he has appeal to working class white voters. >> let's flip the scales, listen to mike pence. former governor of indiana and congressman. this is a hard one for the republicans. they sent him to minnesota, a state that's close. you think we'll get it next time. so far it has been unsuccessful
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for republicans. here's his pitch. >> america will never be a socialist country. men and women of the iron range, we have a choice to make. when it comes to this economy. i think it is a choice between a trump recovery and a biden depression. >> he is a midwest senator, evangelical. is that the best place for him, places like that? >> the president has to write off a lot of college educated and older white voters at this point. the only way to makeup ground, tip the balance in their favor is to get more massive overperformance, more massive turnout from rural areas, urban areas, heart of trump country. that's why the vice president is campaigning not just in minnesota, a state that when the rest of the blue wall states fell to president trump, minnesota was one that got away. not just in minnesota but in the
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iron range, that rural area, long way from minneapolis. trying to turn out trump voters in rural areas. >> lorraine bulls is back with us. i have been talking to michael in your absence. welcome to the technical difficulties we deal with in the age of covid. one of the fascinating things for me, you worked for al gore in his campaigns with bill clinton. two southern democrats, two men that had differences, more or less in synch ideologically. michael worked for paul ryan, mitt romney, two traditional chamber of commerce fiscal conservative republicans. similar. in harris and biden, very different. pence and trump, very different. does that make a difference when the vice presidential candidate is ideologically temperamentally different? >> it can make a difference and it can help. one of the things people forget about president clinton and vice president gore, they were similar, but it was the energy.
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that's what the time was calling for, young, new energy. i think now with senator harris, she balances out some of the positions that vice president biden has had during his campaign, but also can appeal to voters that maybe have been nervous about him. >> you dropped on us when i was trying to get to the point, where do you think it is best to use senator harris, where does she complement joe biden and help in a place he is weak. where would that be? >> so i think if i were scheduling senator harris, i think i would have her in suburban ohio with her step daughters and her god daughter, that was one of the most powerful moments of the democratic convention was that video. i also think she can be deployed to places, other places you may not expect her to do so well and she could. des moines, iowa, i think that
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those folks would be really happy to hear from her and i think she would do really well. >> she's working in a little of her own iowa history there. great to see you both in the final week of the campaign. having a lot of fun ahead of us. up next for us, we continue to breakdown the map. how does each candidate see their path to 270. with one week to go, who has the easier way? keeping your oysters business growing
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i'm working to right the wrongs of injustice. ending cash bail. ending the war on drugs. decriminalizing sex work, and passing major sentencing reform legislation. but until we reimagine community safety and end police brutality, we must keep working to reform our racist criminal justice system that's shameful to us all. hello to viewers in the united states and around the world. john king in washington. thank you for sharing a busy day with us. joe biden makes his closing argument in a brand new campaign ad that has character on the ballot, a choice between science and fiction. the president pedaling his own coronavirus reality, insists the country is rounding the turn. that even as the united states breaks pandemic records
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