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hello and welcome to you, our viewers joining us here in the united states, canada, and all around the world. i'm kim brunhuber and you're watching "cnn newsroom." just ahead, with six days left to vote in the u.s. election, donald trump and joe biden make their closing pitches in some surprising places, but record numbers of americans have already made up their minds. preelection voting makes up more than half of the voting. and the white house claims it's ended the pandemic despite cases reaching new heights.
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reality check on that ahead in this hour. all right. we're in the last final stretch of the u.s. presidential election so let's take a look at the state of the race six days out from november 3rd. more than 68 million ballots have already been cast according to a survey by cnn edson research and catalyst. that's more than half the turnout from the 2016 election. it's not over yet, of course. the candidates are still campaigning. president donald trump did a swing through three states he carried in 2016, michigan, wisconsin and nebraska. joe biden visited georgia, a state his party hasn't won since 1992. trump has a busy wednesday planned in arizona and thursday he traveled to north carolina. biden has scheduled a quiet day
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in delaware wednesday but he's hitting the important swing state in florida thursday. now of course the coronavirus pandemic is the key issue of this election. that's because data shows it's getting worse. right now an average of 800 americans are dying per day. jim acosta has more on how the facts are impacting the last week of the race. >> i've got to say, i'm working my ass off here. >> reporter: president trump is in a race against time and the coronavirus staging multiple potential super spreader rallies on a daily basis even as he defends his covid-19 response. >> covid, covid, covid. covid, covid, covid. on november 4th you won't be hearing so much about it. >> reporter: democrat joe biden is accusing president trump of incompetence. >> the president keeps telling us not to worry. he keeps telling us, we're turning the corners, that's his
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quote. it's as removed from reality and is offensive. >> reporter: pressed by cnn on whether he blew it on the virus, the president said he'd welcome the judgment of the voters. >> shouldn't the voters judge you on covid and did you blow it? >> voters are judging me on a lot of things. one of the things we've done a really good job of is covid. now we're doing vaccines, we're doing therapeutics and we're doing a great job. people are starting to see. >> reporter: still, the president is sounding angry. the election may hinge on the pandemic. all the media wants to talk about is covid, covid, covid. >> his closing argument, that people are too focused on covid. he said this at one of his rallies. covid, covid, covid he's complaining. he's jealous of covid's media coverage. >> reporter: mr. trump is also furious at fox news for airing
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obama speeches. >> i always saw him on fox. fox puts him on all the time. this would not have happened with roger ales, i can tell you that. >> reporter: the president has bigger election problems like the way he's turned off women voters making offensive comments. >> your husbands, they want to get back to work. we're getting your husbands back to work and everybody wants it. >> reporter: after putting justice amy coney barrett on the court, the president is seeking her assistance as ballots are being counted. the states want to avoid the chaos and suspicions of impropriety that can potentially flip the results of an election and those states want to be able to definitively announce the results of the election on election night or as soon as
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possible thereafter. >> it would be very, very proper and very nice if a winner were declared on november 3rd instead of counting ballots for two weeks, which is totally inappropriate and i don't believe that's by our laws. i don't believe that. >> reporter: but that's not true. the results don't always come in on election night, just ask mr. trump who declared victory the morning after blurring her role as a government spokesperson maintains the president is cruising to victory, even as the lights went off during the interview. >> you feel you've got the momentum here with just a week to go? >> there's no doubt about it, stu. we have a tailwind behind us, the lights just went off, they're back on, but we have a tailwind behind us. both candidates are looking for past the 270 electoral votes by winning electoral states.
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they are watching for which states we should watch for on the final stretch. >> one week from tonight we count the votes. still on this map we find out who will be the next president of the united states. in the final days, follow the candidates. let's use the 2016 map as a guide to today. where was the incumbent, the republican? president donald trump? michigan, wisconsin. two states, you see them in red absolutely critical. two states now where he is losing and losing badly. look at the early voting, joe biden has a healthy lead. donald trump using his rallies to try to bring voters out of the woodwork, try to have a surge in the final days right up until election day to repeat the miracle in 2016. many skeptics. where was joe biden? in the state of florida, in the south. trying to stretch the map. you have to go all the way back to 1992. you have to go back 28 years. then governor of arkansas, bill
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clinton on his way to the presidency carried georgia. 28 years since he carried georgia in a presidential election. joe biden thinks this will be the kind of year, map changing election. we look at why joe biden might be able to be confident in that. 290 electoral votes, takes 270 to win. dark red, solid trump, light red leans trump. this is a map leaning biden's way. even if the president won all the yellow, it's still a tossup. that's why the president is trying to get back michigan, wisconsin. what do you look for in the final days? donald trump was trailing four years ago. donald trump came roaring back. you're looking for evidence of momentum. for example, if you go back and look at 2016, there was some evidence in the national polls it was tweeting tighter. that's why it was such a surprise. hillary clinton up four,
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stretched it to five. the national polls were not wrong and they showed trump momentum at the end. what are we doing in 2020? looking for the states every day. looking for the surge trump had in 2016. you can't find it. keep looking, there are new polls every day. at the moment it's a remarkably stable race leaning in biden's favor. take nevada. was a republican state, now purple and tends to be leaning blue. "new york times" cnn poll, biden plus four, beginning of october, plus six, end of october, biden plus six. stability. we lean biden's way. we look for any signs of volatility, momentum. a week to go, at the moment though, we don't see it. advantage biden without a doubt. >> the trump campaign website seems to be back up and running after a hack. this page was posted on donald j. trump.com saying the world
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had had enough of the fake news spread by the president. whoever was behind it claimed they had dirt on the president. it's working, law enforcement, to investigate. the u.s. is on track to reach 100,000 new covid-19 infections every day. the u.s. health expert says it's because of a lack of federal policy, but that hasn't stopped the white house from adding a new achievement to their record. they claimed the trump administration ended the covid-19 pandemic but nothing of course could be farther from the truth with u.s. infections at an all-time high. cnn's nick watt has the details. >> north dakota leads the nation with an alarming rate of new infections. why? >> this is the least use of masks that we have seen in retail establishments of any place we have been. >> reporter: south dakota, stunning 40% of tests now coming
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back positive. anything over 5% is a worry. >> 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. >> reporter: this country is now averaging nearly 70,000 new infections every day. highest ever nine months in, but the president and some americans appear to be giving up. >> if we took some aggressive targeted steps right now, we could potentially forestall the worst of it. we're not going to do that. we're right at the cusp of what's going to be exponential spread in parts of the country. >> reporter: this is the problem, according to a new study, down on average 26% in three months dropping fastest in the asymptomatic and over 75s. 11 states already reporting
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record numbers in the hospital. desperate measures in el paso, texas. >> we just got a surge that i'm not sure where it's coming from. we have four pressurized tents sell the set up as hospitals. >> our knowledge of what works in the battle against this virus has grown significantly since the spring, but the virus isn't going away and it's constantly looking for new hosts. >> reporter: the president loves to push this fantasy. >> you know why we have cases so much? because that's all we do is test. >> reporter: a myth just busted by his own testing czar. >> testing may be identifying some more cases. i think that's clearly true, but what we're seeing is a real increase in the numbers. >> reporter: and here in the u.s. more than 60 million.
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we heard from the mayor of el paso, he's not quite where it's coming from but because this is mired in washington, he said people are testing positive and going to work anyway because they need the paycheck. nick watt, cnn, los angeles. europe is also dealing with a massive surge of coronavirus cases and governments on the continent are expected to put strict new measures in place to slow the spread. we'll have live reports coming up this hour. protests have erupted for a second night in philadelphia as outrage grows over the fatal shooting of a black man. they demanded justice for 27-year-old walter wallace jr. the protests were seen peaceful and local crowds were looting a
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business. cell phone video shows what happened. just a warning, it's disturbing to watch. >> yeo [ bleep ] crazy. >> get on the ground! move. move. move. >> [ bleep ]. >> oh! oh! >> his father speaking with cnn's chris cuomo says violence and looting isn't the right way to demand justice. >> i want people to know i don't want all of this violence and looting. i don't want to leave a bad scar on my family with this looting, chaos and things, with the violence. even with the police department, looting stores, burning it. i mean, this where we live and
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that's the only be community resource we have. we take all the resource and burn it down, we don't have anything. >> the district attorney's office and the police are investigating. they say neither officer had a taser. neither department should be vilified. both officers involved have been put on desk duty. still ahead, the latest on an election already in full swing. record number of americans have cast their ballots early. details on drop boxes are coming up. plus -- >> people are really starting to recognize just all of the different chaos within the political climate right now, that voting is the only real say that we can have. republicans and democrats scramble to turn out the youth vote. why that demographic could make all of decisions. robinhood believes now is the time to do money.
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cast their ballot. the court ruling says abbott's order doesn't disenfranchise anyone. turnout in the u.s. election is on track to be record setting. already more than 68 million people have voted early. 46 million of those votes are mail-in ballots. that's been president trump's focus when he questions the election's integrity. we have the report. >> reporter: as of tonight, for many voters it's too late to use the post office to return absentee ballots. the postal service says today was the last day where you could send them and have them guaranteed to arrive on election day. for those states with strict deadlines, it's now better to use a ballot box or bring the ballot to an election office. >> we are keeping an especially close watch on states where ballots cannot be counted until election day. >> reporter: while many states allow mail-in ballots to be counted days after the election, some states have stricter deadlines and wisconsin, a
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crucial swing state, mail-in ballots must be received by election day to count. the supreme court rejected a democratic attempt to allow mail-in votes postmarked by election day to be counted up to six days after the election there but it's an opinion written by justice brett kavanaugh as, quote, they want to avoid impropriety that can ensue if thousands flow in after election day and potentially flip the results of an election. the language mirrors president trump's rhetoric about calling a winner on election night. >> i want to see the results of the election on november 3rd. >> reporter: while trump's own administration say it's okay for results to take more time. >> on november 3rd we might not know the outcome of our election, and that's okay. >> reporter: the president is taking to twitter to cast doubt on that saying in a tweet that has been labeled as misleading, must have final total on november 3rd.
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so far, millions of mail-in votes give democrats significant leads over republicans in key states, but republicans have made up states like florida, north carolina and they must place their bets on a blockbuster election day turnout. >> i, amy coney barrett -- >> reporter: on the first day of the job, the newly appointed supreme court justice, amy coney barrett, already facing pressure. pennsylvania county asked barrett to recuse herself from a request from state republicans to block mail-in ballots from being counted up to three days after the election. it's one of several challenges to voting rules in key states being considered by the high court. >> reporter: less than a week before election day and rules continue to change like the all important case in michigan. pamela brown, cnn, washington. it seems young americans are
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energized and highly engaged in this election. more than 1 million voters aged 18 to 21 have cast their ballots early according to one data company. cnn's dana bash has more on what's driving these numbers. >> reporter: university sophomore libby clinger is up earl will i -- early on a saturday ready to roll getting people to get out to vote. >> there is a lot of enthusiasm to get out to vote especially in the critical year with everything going on in the pandemic. we are out here canvassing today. >> reporter: they are the diehards. saying everyone they know is voting. >> people are starting to recognize all of the different chaos within the political climate right now. that voting is the only real say that we can have. >> reporter: uva democrats are driving people to the polls. hunter hess waited with mav mave connic to vote. >> we've been doing it with
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first year students who don't know the process well. >> i don't know anyone who hasn't voted. >> reporter: on the lawn, voting is trendy. >> people post this, i voted. >> reporter: so you feel a little bit of pressure to vote? >> yes. >> yes. >> reporter: young voters are a crucial part of the electorate and making up a large share of early voting across 14 key states compared to 2016. in wisconsin, early voting among young people is up from where it was in 2016 and both parties are working it. >> we've seen an increase in the number of people asking questions about how to get registered to vote and trying to get registered to vote. >> reporter: the share of the youth vote is almost double what it was in florida. welcome to the fsu and -- >> reporter: students here largely organize virtually. youth turnout broke records in 2018 and researchers at tish
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college's circle at tufts university say protests across the country help keep the surge going. >> we found that young people marching and demonstrating but were much more likely to be talking to young people or the issues they care about. the biden campaign motto is to reach young people where they are, launching biden/harris designs on animal crossing. alexandria ocasio-cortez gaming on twitch. >> oh, snatch. >> joe biden talking to cardi b and his granddaughters with young influencers. the trump campaign says their best influencers are young people reaching out to friends. >> particularly right now they're online, especially in
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this environment that we're in. weaning it to platforms is the best way to reach young voters. >> i don't know if it's reduced the number of activities that everyone has turned their attention. there's fewer sports to follow. this is the thing everyone is focused on. >> reporter: back on the lawn of uva, some are more passionate for the active voting than candidates. >> are you excited? >> i'm not excited but i like that he focuses on climate policy. >> reporter: some students say the same thing. >> kara organizes phone calls to people in virginia. >> reporter: the evidence he can't win, we didn't have that last time. >> reporter: that was a wake-up call for you? >> yeah. >> that was cnn's da na bash
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reporting. zeta is a category 1 hurricane and it's barrelling towards the u.s. gulf coast. sustaining winds of 120 kilometers per hour. hurricane zeta is expected to hit the u.s. bringing heavy rain and damaging winds. louisiana residents started filling sand bags on tuesday. more than 14 million people are on alert. still to come on "cnn newsroom," u.s. seeing record voting turnout and still six days to go. plus, coronavirus cases climbing across the u.s. and europe too. new infections are expected. stay with us. new neutrogena® rapid tone repair 20 percent pure vitamin c. a serum so powerful dark spots don't stand a chance. see what i mean? neutrogena® we were paying an arm and a leg for postage.
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well, there are just six days to go until election day, but a record-breaking number of voters have already had their say. more than 65 million americans voted early so far. that number represents more than half of all ballots cast back in 2016. amid the coronavirus pandemic, many voters taking the opportunity to vote early, either in person or by mail. more than half the votes already cast come from states considered battleground states. president trump held three campaign rallies tuesday and the last one in omaha, nebraska. that's no coincidence. this year's electoral math means trump andfighting for every vote in the state. >> reporter: one week before election day, president trump is threading a narrow needle. >> you have nebraska, too. you have omaha. that's something that a lot of
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republicans don't get. i'd like to get it. >> reporter: never mind the big battle grounds. he's talking about nebraska's second congressional district which most republicans actually do get. he won it four years ago but now is facing a tough fight with joe bid biden. as the president barn storms the country, his path to winning 270 electoral votes is so precarious that he's chasing single electoral votes. in maine sunday. >> you'll be here tonight. >> reporter: these are the only two that split their electoral votes rather than a winner take all but his visits to both of them highlight how his political path is complicated by political math with early voting already breaking records. here's why nebraska's single electoral vote matters. if biden gets it, he could win simply by flipping arizona, wisconsin even if he loses
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pennsylvania and florida. >> how's it going, omaha. >> reporter: barack obama won this omaha area in 2008. his path to the white house hardly depended on it. in the final stretch of the race democrats are playing on trump's area. >> so tell me, bangor, maine, are you ready to go out and vote? >> reporter: her husband in georgia, which hasn't gone democratic in a presidential year since 1992. >> i believe america and american's hope, not fear. unity, not division. love, not hate. >> reporter: the president is on defense working to hold ground he won last time. >> go out -- >> reporter: the latest sign he does not have a single electoral vote to spare. in the final week there is no question he is fighting for every electoral vote even here
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in deep red nebraska. one vote could make a difference in his path to 270. jeff zeleny, cnn, omaha, nebraska. america first, that's been u.s. president donald trump's foreign policy mantra for four years. he's used it to shake up alliances and retreat from global agreements. now joe biden is offering a different view of america's role in the world. >> america first. >> reporter: it's a rallying cry that fires up his base and has transformed the way the united states is seen and treated by the rest of the world. >> america first has made america alone. >> reporter: while joe biden is largely hoping to pick up where president obama left off. but the world has changed. it's left the two candidates on opposite ends of most major issues. on north korea, trump has boasted about his beautiful letters and friendship with dictator kim jong-un. >> we have a very good
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relationship and there's no war. >> reporter: but north korea's nuclear capabilities continue. it gave him what he wanted, an in person meeting. >> it gave him legitimacy. >> reporter: trump has improved the relationship with israel which was deeply strained. he moved the u.s. embassy to jerusalem, and coordinated deals with three countries. it's the rivalry with china that will define u.s. policy. trump started a fierce trade war, repeatedly blasted china for the coronavirus painting himself as the one to confront them. >> we had this horrible plague that came from china and we're not going to forget that it came from china. >> reporter: biden has called trump's approach erratic and promised more consistency with other allies.
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alliances themselves are in the balance. >> in nato, i said, you've got to pay. $130 billion a year more from me. they didn't do it for 15 years it went down. >> reporter: trump routinely goes after nato and its members and succeeded in getting them to increase their defense spending. biden believes alliances are a pillar of the global order. >> we find ourselves in the position where we're more isolated in the world than we've ever been. >> reporter: the paris climate accord is one of the international agreements biden wants to get back into, tossed out by trump. >> you know about paris. the paris climate accord, one of the great disasters of all time. just call up frans. how's paris doing? >> reporter: one trump relationship biden is hoping to up end is vladimir putin. no one has put it anywhere.
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>> if it were true, i'd be very angry about it. >> reporter: or for attacking the last and the current elections. >> i made it clear that any country, no matter who it is, that interferes with american elections will pay a price. they will pay a price. >> reporter: another critical price is u.s. troops overseas. the sumpt s.u.s. president wants to bring the vast majority home but he doesn't say how many by when. president trump wants to draw down to 2500 troops by next spring. in iraq and syria, both biden and trump are much more vague. poet candidates, both say they want to end these so-called forever wars. that is far easier than done. election day in the u.s. will look very different this year. the u.s. is in the middle of a
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global pandemic and the swell in new infections that was predicted by experts. the white house claims to have ended the pandemic but the numbers tell a very different story with the majority of the country reporting concerning numbers. the state of wisconsin is facing a crisis with 84% of the hospital beds full and nearly 90% of the icu beds full. wisconsin governors warning people to be careful. >> there's no way to sugar coat it. we are facing an urge gent crisis and there is an imminent risk to you, your family members, your friends, your neighbors and the people you care about. >> the world health organization says a record 2.8 million coronavirus cases have been reported worldwide in the past seven days. europe is contributing nearly half of all of these cases and you can see in this graph here the infections are soaring on the seven day average. any countries on the continent
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are worried that they could run out of icu beds in two weeks. italy reported a record number on tuesday as protesters and police clashed in rome and france's president is expected to announce new measures today to fight the spread of the coronavirus after the country sought its highest death toll since april on tuesday. our melissa bell is in paris for us. melissa, some experts in france say the outbreak is out of contr contr control. how bad is it and what are they doing to get it under control? >> reporter: it is a europe wide story, this one, kim, where you look at the countries with the fastest rises in those resurgence in infections. eight of them, the eight top countries are in europe, countries like belgium and the czech republic, hardest hit over the last few weeks as you say with fears in belgium for icus
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going forward but also countries like germany, italy, france seeing very fast rises in their cases. we expect angela merkel to meet later today to meet with representatives of the local state, representatives in order to look at the new restrictions that might come in in germany and france we'll hear from emmanuel macron. lots of speculation he may announce a second lockdown. they're stopping short of that. i think that gives you an idea how bad the figures are. we have had a curfew. what they've explained is by the beginning of this week we should have started to see the effect of those on the daily rises that are announced here in france when that didn't happen, of course, authorities forced to bring in fresh restrictions. this is not where the country wants to be, but in the end the fact of the matter where this has been hit in the greater paris region, you're looking at
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icu capacity really stretched. 72% of the region are occupied and that is not sustainable. >> very scary. thank you so much. melissa bell in paris. russia is implementing new restrictions as cases of coronavirus surge. face covering must be worn in all spaces. let's head to moscow where fred pleitgen is standing by. some top health officials in the u.s. are almost tentatively suggesting a mask mandate. russia a step ahead. what led to this? they've reinstituted it. starting here today on public
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spaces, public transport, inside elevators as well. this comes as russia is generally tightening up the rules to combat the coronavirus pandemic. there's another decree urging nightclubs and bars to close down between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. there are places that can opt out of that if the virus situation allows for it. generally right now in russia you have very, very high numbers of cases. not record setting but still very high, 16,000 for a single day. the thing you have is 346. all of this is despite the fact that russia came out and approved a vaccine for the novel coronavirus. that vaccine is the beginning phases of the main trials to see whether it's both effective and safe and also really hasn't been taken by very many people yet.
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one of the folks who is actually self-isolating is the foreign minister, sergei lavrov. he was in contact with someone who has the novel coronavirus but yesterday the folks around lavrov were saying he is for now at least doing fine. kim? >> thank you so much. fred pleitgen in moscow. australia's prime minister is calling it a polling and unacceptable following an incident with women in an airport. stay with us. indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try our new gummies for 30 days and see the difference.
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recruited them for power, profit or sex. sentencing on tuesday, more than a dozen people gave victim impact statements. one woman described the pain of being branded on her skin with his initials unbeknownst to her. he has maintained his innocence. australian prime minister is speaking out against the invasive searches performed on a group of women earlier this month at an airport in dohar. kristie lu stout has the story. tell us about what happened and also the reaction. >> reporter: qatar says that it will investigate these disturbing reports, reports of invasive searches and exams of women at the airport in doha. the women were checked to see whether or not they had recently given birth after a newborn baby was found abandoned in a trash can in the airport on october 2nd. now among the women who were examined in this invasive way were women who were on ten
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separate flights, including 13 australians who were on board a sydney bound flight. reportedly they were removed from their flights, they were detained and they were invasively examined in ambulances that were on the tarmac. cnn spoke to one eye witness, a passenger who was on one of the flights. he described the moment when some of these women were able to leave the ambulance, return to the flight. he said they were shell shocked and he added that one woman was crying. as a result of these reports there is widespread outrage all around the world, but especially in australia. earlier today we heard from the prime minister of australia, scott morrison, who condemned what happened to these women. he condemned it not only as the head of government but also as the father of daughters. take a listen to what scott morrison said today. >> we find this unacceptable. that's been the official message and the investigation, it is unacceptable.
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it was appalling. as the father of daughters, i can only shudder at the thought that any woman, aus strael yeah or otherwise, would be subjected to that. >> reporter: scott morrison said that he has received assurances from the qatar ri government that the results of the investigation will be released soon. qatar said it is committed to the safety and security. as for the baby, the mother is still missing. the newborn baby was left abandoned in the trash can is safe and sound. back to you. >> thank you so much. kristie lu stout in hong kong. for a complete change of pace, just ahead a thrilling finish to a baseball season like no other with the l.a. dodgers looking for the title that's eluded them for 32 years. stay with us.
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remember when the president suggested getting rid of covid-19 by using light or disinif he can tanlt inside the body, take a listen. >> we'll hit the body with tremendous whether it's ultra view lot or tremendous light. i think you said that hasn't been checked but you're going to test it. supposing you brought the light inside the body which you can do either through the skin or in some other way. i think you said you're going to test that, too. sounds interesting. then i see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute. one minute. and is there a way we can to something like that? by injection inside or -- or almost a cleaning? as you see, it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number. it will be interesting to use that so that you're going to have to use medical doctors. it sounds interesting to me. >> well, sarah's turned her
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viral success into a full blown career getting a comedy series on netflix. she spoke to don lemon about the crazy year she's had and why she thinks it's resonated with so many people. >> i think, you know, having his words come out of my mouth and so convincingly come out of my mouth makes you realize how ridiculous he sounds. i don't have people behind me nodding, not wearing a suit, i'm not being called sir. i don't have all of those things that make him look like he's talking about. that's bs. complete bs. i thought it was going to be that one and that one got 25 million views and it was so popular. i didn't think i was going to make anymore. he kept giving me material and i kept making these videos. he said, we have more cases because we test more. i made a clip of me doing that audio. then he's just said that over and over again so it's -- he just kept giving me the material
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and then, you know, i got an agent. i met maya rudolph and made a netflix show. >> plenty of material there. a los angeles sports fan, the l.a. dodgers have won their first world series title in 32 years. they beat the tampa bay rays 3-1 in a game six tuesday night in front of a limited crowd at a stadium in arlington, texas. a thrilling finish. it was pushed back because of the pandemic. the season was shortened 60 games instead of the usual 162. all right. thank you very much for your company. i'm kim brunhuber. "early start" is up next. you are watching cnn. robinhood believes now is the time to do money.
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making the final pitches to voters. joe biden is looking to america's future. donald trump hanging on to his past. as the world waits for a coronavirus vaccine, doctors warn the dangers may not be known until one is already being used. and to los angeles, another major sports title but a cloud hangs over the festivities. a positive covid test on the field. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the field. this is "early start." i'm christine romans. >> i'm laura jarrett. wednesday, october 28
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