tv CNN Newsroom CNN October 29, 2020 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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down seven departments. it says if they don't get more help, they'll have to turn away patients by monday or tuesday. even more than the space, hospitals are lacking in staff. to fill in gaps, many are recruiting volunteers, some medical students, others have no medical experience at all. at one hospital not far from here they are putting high school students, teenagers to work caring for covid patients. hello to viewers in the united states and around the world. i am john king in washington. thank you for sharing your day with us. a crowded campaign trail today. we hear from the president in florida this hour. five days left until american voters pick their president. 79 million ballots have been cast already. that's an enormous number. democrats believe the higher turnout, the better their chances. yet they have final days anxieties about making sure more
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mail in ballots are delivered on time, not to mention democrats have a fair amount of 2016 ptsd makes many of them afraid to trust what their eyes are seeing. the polls, however, are crystal clear. the president is losing and little evidence of momentum as he tries to rally his way to another dramatic come back. this as the pandemic and referendum on the incumbent. he tells us everyday his coronavirus strategy is working and that we are rounding the turn towards normalcy. case numbers may claim, though, that that is a lie. no states are pushing down coronavirus numbers. 41 of 50 states. you see them in red and orange recording more cases this week compared to last week. 41. the united states added just under 79,000 new cases wednesday. that ranks as the third worst day of the entire pandemic in terms of cases. look at the list. four of the most painful coronavirus days have come just in the last week.
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one expert says get ready, bets 100,000 cases per day by december. another says we could pass 100,000 in a single day this week. the president tells every rally not to worry. experts tell us the opposite. >> if things do not change, shep, if they continue on the course we're on, there's going to be a whole lot of pain, we'll be inch worse shape a month from now. >> you hear dr. fauci there. we are five days from the election. we fill it in with red and blue. take a look. this is a different way to look at the election because this is the pandemic campaign. this is the covid impact on the united states of america. the red, deeper the color, the higher covid cases, higher rate of covid cases per 100,000 residents. look at the red, deep orange. it is everywhere. nowhere in america has been spared. some places hit more than
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others. it is noteworthy to note the president campaigns in florida today. a lot of red and coronavirus pain. he was in arizona the other day. there's a lot of red and coronavirus pain. he moves out of north carolina. not quite as bad, more pink than red. still a lot of coronavirus pain. up in the midwest, wisconsin, michigan, iowa, places the president needs to get back his way. he is losing, needs to shift them back. many of them dealing with the coronavirus surge, wisconsin in particular hard hit. this is the pandemic campaign. we look at maps quite differently. because of the pain on this map, this map is very different in this campaign. there's no disconnecting the two. there are other factors without a doubt. in the pandemic campaign, there's a reason the map is tilted in joe biden's favor, five days out, 290 electoral votes in the outbreak for joe biden, more than enough to win the presidency. those are dark blue states, solid biden, light blue lean biden. texas only leans trump five days
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out from election day, tells you what you need to know about the national climate. it is a pro-biden climate, the president trying to rally his way back, florida and north carolina today. biden in florida as well. you see toss up states. guess what, you can find polling that shows joe biden leading in all those. joe biden leading in all those. he doesn't need them but is leading in all of them or tied perhaps in ohio. again, the president needs this without a doubt. he needs this without a doubt. even though biden leads, he needs this without a doubt. he needs this and he needs this. what does this map tell you? even if he won all of those, it is not enough. he has to turn something big. he has to turn something in there, pennsylvania, michigan, or wisconsin. he was in arizona because he would like to turn that back. the president is losing at the moment, and yet democrats remember four years ago at this point most people thought hillary clinton was in a cake walk to victory. one of the states they thought she was going to win was
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michigan. she lost by about that much. congresswoman there who four years ago said we're in trouble, pay attention to me says democrats better not get complacent this time. >> it is tight here in michigan. so many auto workers who thought were going to joe biden were clear with me, they were voting for president trump. we had 90,000 voters that didn't even vote in the presidential election last time. we have to make sure people vote in the presidential and the senate race. i'm not, you know, sounding the alarm bells like i was four years ago. but it is competitive, tight. >> joining the conversation to begin the hour, margaret to your and jeff zeleny. you're in iowa in the midwest. you heard the voice of debbie dingell. says she is not on fire like four years ago, she's still telling democrats be careful when it comes to blue collar union workers.
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joe biden thinks that's his wheel house. she says he better pay more attention. >> no doubt about it. this is something that is, the democrats we talked to, former governors, current governors in these states, other elected officials believe that joe biden is in command of this race. there are no polls that show that president trump is leading in many states. all of them show joe biden is narrowly leading. it is within the margin of error. at this point, let's forget the polls. focus on who is turning out the vote. coronavirus cases, john, it is as we said yesterday the sound track of the campaign, also the statistic of the campaign. today, just a short time ago in iowa they passed 30,000 mark of n new cases this month. 2500 cases in the last 24 hours alone. this is something driving the campaign. we should be clear. republicans, people that support the president are not going to turn against him because of this, but it is voters in the middle, in the suburbs, independents, a third of voters
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in this state and most others are not registered with any specific party, not affiliated with a specific party. as the president travels the country, without a question he is firing up and reminding voters on the other side not that it is his fault but his empathy f coronavirus. i talked to a republican that generally supports his policies, not necessarily his conduct. they want to hear the president talk about the economy and b, a bit f empathy of coronavirus cases. most everyone knows someone sick or dying. the president essentially laughs it off, says it cured him, he was cured. why can't others be cured as well. that's what republicans are looking for from their president in the final days, john. >> margaret, to that point, it is fascinating. again, if you're one of the people that subscribe to the theory the president is a narcissist, only cares about himself, self interested. if that's true, i haven't been able to figure out why he hasn't changed course on the coronavirus because of overwhelming evidence that what he is doing now is hurting him.
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many in trump states, when he talks about it at rallies, he says we're turning the corner, vaccine will be here in minutes or days, and is mocking joe biden in a way that's not accurate. listen. >> if you vote for biden, it means no kids in school, no graduations, no weddings, no thanksgiving, no christmas. and no fourth of july together. other than that, you have a wonderful life. >> it is not funny. he is trying to make light, make a joke about coronavirus, and sorry, it is not funny. >> it is not funny, but the president has dug into a strategy. you can see it play out in terms of the fact that he is having these rallies with thousands of people in the closing days of the race, bringing people together for events that have
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potential to be super spreader events. it is because he is at this point fully committed to strategy where he will show he is leaving nothing, leaving it on the field, holding nothing back, and yet there is evidence that the rallies in and of themselves are turning some people off. he doesn't really have another choice at this point and if we weren't in the middle of a pandemic and it was a normal year, you would say the president is pulling out the stops, seems like he wants it more than biden. i'm not sure that messaging works, setting aside the real public health concerns. we had this polling earlier in the week that with polling partners on the pandemic which underscored the idea that it is front and center issue people are thinking about and that since march to now, the public thinks that every other institution from state and local government to their own employers to area businesses,
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even the cdc is moving in the right direction in terms of getting a handle on how to deal with the virus, but that the federal government, in other words, president trump and his political team are not, that they are in fact handling it worse than they were back in the spring. 20 point deficit is what the surveys showed. >> when you put the numbers on the screen, important to note, businesses in the area, plus 27, people think they're handling it better. cdc, plus 10%. they're doing better now, the federal government. minus. it is just the idea that the performance is simply not there. so then you look at the other numbers, amy walter makes an important point. i went through some numbers in the last hour. joe biden is above 50, 52% in the national poll, above 50 in a lot of battleground states. she says that's well and fine, but she makes an important point. he is an incumbent president. feel like broken record, stop
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looking at the margin and focus on trump vote share, in wisconsin and pennsylvania he is stuck at 45, 44% for months. that's the issue. it is the issue, especially because third party candidates are not running as strong in this cycle. donald trump's vote share tends to match his approval rating which tends to be in the low to mid 40s. you can't win there, especially this year. >> no doubt about it. that's why president trump is going to deep red areas to try to mind more votes. they know they need to turn out republicans that may be sort of sitting on their hands, thinking about voting for joe biden or someone else. that's why the vice president is coming to iowa this afternoon while the president is going to schedule another visit to iowa over the weekend where he won by 9 percentage points four years ago. joe biden also coming here to iowa tomorrow really to try and jump start democrats and independents. i think the question is, is this more a 2016 map or going to revert back to more of what it
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was four years ago. if you look at the late investments made in the campaign, bloomberg super pac, for example, deciding to invest in texas. week ago said they weren't doing that. investing in ohio, week ago said they weren't doing that. there are a lot of balls on the table. democratic worries are that they keep their eye on the ball on states they can in wiwin. john, i am struck by every time the president talks about how they turn the corner, won't be christmas under joe biden, there are touchstone moments that have gone by in everyone's lives, state fairs, a big deal in iowa, minnesota, wisconsin, all cancelled because of covid. football games being cancelled because of covid. president trump took credit for the big ten bringing it back. this weekend, the home opener in nebraska, wisconsin playing them, not happening because of covid. too many players tested positive in wisconsin. despite what the president says, the reality on the ground is the reality and it is that covid is not being taken seriously, not
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being handled appropriately in the views of the majority of people. >> can't talk and tweet this away. it is too personal to everybody, every day, every hour of their lives. grateful for the reporting and insights. up next, more congressional races appear to be shifting in favor of the democrats. yet the president is not doing any favors for republicans in tight races. listen. >> come on, quick. you have one minute. one minute. they don't want to hear this, martha, let's go. quick quick quick. let's go. >> i'm coming. apps are used everywhere... except work. why is that? is it because people love filling out forms? maybe they like checking with their supervisor to see how much vacation time they have.
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or sending corporate their expense reports. i'll let you in on a little secret. they don't. by empowering employees to manage their own tasks, paycom frees you to focus on the business of business. to learn more, visit paycom.com will be to get control the of the virus will take that has ruined so many lives. what would joe biden do to beat covid? double testing sites so we can safely reopen, manufacture ppe here in america, restore the white house pandemic office, save the affordable care act and protections for pre-existing conditions. this is not a partisan moment. this must be american moment. ff pac is responsible for the content of this ad. some things are good to know. like where to find the cheapest gas in town and which supermarket gives you the most bang for your buck. something
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the president struggles at the top of the ticket are contributing to problems down ballot. his inability to match in key states widened the senate battlefield, giving democrats multiple path to the majority. still cast a shadow over any political projections, not reason enough to shun data driven analysis, even if polls are a little off, democrats are poised to have a good set for the election. joining us, editor of inside elections. i want to spend more time on the senate. i want to start with two house races you tilted. they tell us about the presidential dynamic, the mood in the country now. first, we can show a map of the projection of house districts. pelosi has the house majority, you believe she will grow it, perhaps by double digits. two house races you shifted, colorado is third from leaned republican to tilt republican, and virginia's fifth from tilt republican to toss up. these seats are moving toward the democrats, if you will.
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leaned republican to tilt republican. most of the focus last couple of years is on suburban districts that made pelosi speaker that trended away from the president. these are different which would be a bigger warning sign for republicans. >> i think these are microcosm of the republican challenges across the country. first of all, these are both seats in which the incumbent member of congress lost in the primary or invention in the case of the virginia seat and so you have two sort of new candidates who were underfunded, struggled to gain footing financially and on the ground after knocking off members of congress. these are also districts that the president carried by more than ten points in 2016. i think when we look at 2018, when democrats came roaring into the majority, and republicans, there was an expectation that was the high water mark for the democratic party and it couldn't get worse because trump was going to be on the ballot in
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2020 and was going to do at least as well if not better than he did four years ago, and that's simply not the case. he is struggling to win the districts and that's making it, means there are fewer crossover voters necessary for the democrats to win. as you point out, districts in orange county, california, not northern virginia, these are more rural districts that republicans are struggling to hold. >> it makes the year fascinating. let's move to the senate, help set the table with words of the majority leader, mitch mcconnell, who may lose his job here. >> 50/50 proposition. we have a lot of exposure. this is a huge republican class, the majority in 2014, a lot of people -- dog fights all over the country. >> there are dog fights all over the country. again, what is remarkable is where some of those dog fights
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are that are starting to lean more toward the democrats. you moved three races, alaska. we think of that as a ruby red state. senate race there, from likely republican to lean republican. cnn not taking it away, more dicey. georgia, david purdue, tilt republican to toss up. let's focus on georgia. having a conversation in a presidential election year about the democrats having a possibility of picking up maybe one, maybe two seats in georgia. what does that tell us, is that quality of the candidates or climate or both? >> i think it is a combination of a lot of different factors. maybe most of all that the president's inability, if the president were winning georgia by five, six points, similar to four years ago, i don't think we would be having the same conversation. where we are today is that joe biden is at worst running even with president trump. he might even be a few points ahead of trump.
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we moved it at the presidential level to tilting democratic in the state of georgia and that's boosting democratic chances. democrats were laughing at john osoff, he lost that expensive special election, think he is too young, he has a chance of winning the race without a runoff. those of you that have normal jobs and are watching, both georgia races if no candidate gets to 50%, they move to january 5th runoffs and if control of the senate hinges on one seat or two, we may not know who controls the senate until beginning of january. >> we may not. the other race is kelly loeffler. listen yesterday, she said something that i simply can't believe. listen. >> still not disagreeing with president trump's statements
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about personally sexually assaulting women. >> i am not familiar with that. this president is fighting for america. >> she is not aware of the access hollywood tape. you have to be in osama's cave for a couple years to not be aware of that. not believable, is it? >> loeffler has a couple of challenges on her plate, first of all because all of the candidates are running together, she has to be sure she finishes ahead of republican congressman doug collins to get a top spot to get to runoff. if she chooses that moment to criticize the president or get sideways with the president, she risks not making the top two. if she makes the runoff, it is a different calculation where she will face warnok, and those comments or lack of comment come back to bite her in a general election runoff situation. >> appreciate your time. it is not just a presidential race, a fascinating year at every level. nathan gonzales, appreciate it
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very much. changed the rating of new jersey to a toss up. remember, congressman pledged his undying support to the president last december. he was one of two house democrats that voted against both articles of impeachment earlier. pluses or minuses now on the campaign trail. rebecca buck has more. >> reporter: it was a shocking political gamble from the congressman representi congressman representing atlantic city. aligning himself with president trump. >> you have my undying support. >> thank you. >> that was in december. now he faces the ultimate test of this decision with voters in new jersey's second district, one of the hottest house races this year. if trump's shadow looms large in down ballot races across the country, it is especially true here. some candidates are distancing themselves from the president, he isn't one of them.
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>> i don't want to -- i don't think whether you're a democrat or republican whether you agree with the president or not you betray him, walk away. i don't think that's the right thing to do. >> reporter: democratic voters believe that's what van drew did to them. >> i wasn't happy. i felt betrayed actually that he would do something like that. seemed like he wasn't thinking about me, he was thinking about remaining in office. >> reporter: he cast his ballot for democrat amy kennedy. former school teacher and member of i marriage of the kennedy dynasty that felt betrayed when van drew pledged undying support to president trump. that's when she decided to run. >> when i saw him do that, it felt like another redo of what we're seeing from the president in me first and putting themselves and their priorities above what would be best for our
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area and for the country. >> reporter: the moment has become an inescapable symbol in the race, used in ads supporting van drew. >> president trump endorsed jeff van drew because he needs a conservative fighter in congress. >> reporter: and attacking him. >> he will say anything to help himself. >> you have my undying support. >> thank you. >> jeff van drew won't do anything for you. >> reporter: van drew has been richly rewarded by the gop with a trump rally in january and speaking slot at the republican national convention over the summer. the gop's bear hug may have a down side though, chipping away at van drew's long cultivated brand as an independent minded politician. with election day approaching, they're aiming to reclaim the mantle again, seeking to clarify his memorable words to the president in the oval office. >> the words didn't explain as well what i exactly felt. what i mean by that, it is not
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undying support that whatever you say i'm going to do or undying support i agree with everything you say, it was undying support for the presidency, for the idea of greatness of america, for friendship, but not necessarily that i'm going to agree with everything. >> do you think voters understand what you meant versus what you said? >> i think voters understand that when you're in the oval office and you're having a very exciting day and you're making a little piece of history that sometimes we all say things. >> reporter: amy kennedy, jeff van drew's opponent told us she doesn't believe voters will be quick to dismiss his party switch or what he told the president in the oval office. she says voters in new jersey second district are looking for an independent voice in congress and van drew abandoned that position when he went all in for president trump. john? >> rebecca buck, thank you. another fun race to watch.
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thank you very much. up next, why the former fda commissioner says right now is the hardest point of the pandemic. first, another one of the campaign trail flashbacks. this, final days of my first campaign, 1988. >> this republican campaign is probably the most cynical and most hypocritical i've seen in my entire political career, full of lies, distortions and a lot of garbage. >> if you can't stand the heat, get the hell out of the kitchen. . you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a short list of quality candidates from our resume database so you can start hiring right away. claim your seventy five dollar credit, when you post your first job at indeed.com/home.
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want to show you trend lines in the united states now. in a word, they're bad. this is the coronavirus state by state trend lines. 41 states. 41 of 50 staltes trending the wrong direction. 50% more covid infections this week compared to a week ago. 50% higher than a week ago. the rest of orange is more new infections, between 10 and 50% more. more new infections than a week ago. 41 states trending up, the other nine holding steady. zero states going in the right direction, trending down. this is a horrific map of more cases building up. if you look at the time line, you can see the red line, trajectory pointing almost straight up. slow climb, slow climb, now going straight up. 79,000 cases yesterday, the new
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average up above 70,000. four of the most painful days in the pandemic this past week. this is why. high positivity rate. people getting coronavirus tests, high positivity rate means more infections today, also means likelihood of more spread tomorrow. deeper the color, higher the rate. 28% alabama, 28% wisconsin, 29% iowa. 46% south dakota, 36% in idaho. top five states there. 55% in wyoming. 28% kansas. 22% in nebraska. it is everywhere. double digits. arkansas, missouri, everywhere across the country now. with more cases, inevitably comes hospitalization trends going back up. slow climate first, now back above 40,000. more than 40,000 americans hospitalized with coronavirus. with the case count going up so fast, hospitalization will follow as well. if there's any good news in this, there's better news from time to time, it is the ratio of people hospitalized. when you look at cases, ratios
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of daily hospitalizations has increased since april as doctors, others in the medical community know more about coronavirus as some treatments have been found. it is the case, better news, not good news, fewer people that get coronavirus are now hospitalized. that's some progress. again, state trends are bad. most public health experts say the worst days are just ahead of us, next several weeks, next couple of months. even a doctor that says that, dr. scott gottlieb, former fda commissioner says yes, the next stretch is tough but he is optimistic by next year, the second half of next year, things will get back to a better place. >> this is really sort of the last stage of the acute phase of this. 2021 will start to look a lot better. i think we'll be celebrating 2021, thanksgiving. we need to get through the next couple of months. this is the hardest point in the pandemic now, the next two months. we've done a good job sheltering a lot of people, keeping people
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safe. can't give up our guard right now. >> continue the conversation with a senior scholar of johns hopkins center for health security. it is good to see you. when you look at what's happened in the past week plus, four of the worst five days of the pandemic in terms of new infections and daily rate in the last week, when you're projecting out what worries you most? >> the hospitals that we're hearing about worried about capacity, worried about icu beds, thinking about how they're going to continue other operations. that's what flattening the curve is about, trying to preserve hospital capacity. hearing about el paso, utah, dakotas and wisconsin getting in trouble again the way new york did in march, that's what we're trying to avoid. we were unable to avoid it. it has to do with the fact the virus has never been controlled, we don't have a testing strategy and public infrastructure to deal with this. >> dr. anthony fauci would
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prefer a national mask mandate, but is skeptical it would ever happen. listen here. >> we lean on you for advice. do we need a national mandate or not? >> yes. well, we do. if we don't get one, i would hope the governors and mayors do it locally if it is not done nationally. i haven't spoken to the president in quite awhile about the situation with regard to the outbreak. obviously we have had a dispar at response. i have been saying that, shep, for months now. >> interesting there on several fronts, including it would be nice to have a national mask mandate but we won't have one so governors should do it. look what's happening with case counts, infections, hospitalizations. top infectious disease expert on the government payroll hasn't spoken to the president in quite some time. >> this is very concerning. dr. fauci is the voice of reason, he is somebody who's hand guided this response, whatever good happened has largely been his and other
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infectious disease influence. when his influence wanes, we all suffer. when it comes to masks, data that didn't exist at the beginning of the pandemic is becoming incontrovertible. it decreases force of infection. people need to think of it as the common sense measure to reduce harm from virus. there's mixed messaging, rallies occurring around the country where people are not wearing masks, this is leading to cases. if we're going to get through winter, we need people to follow this simple advice, wear a face covering when you can't social distance. it will go a long way to keeping hospitals out f trouble. >> not only people crowded at rallies, hearing things at rallies that don't comfort wipo science. including this. >> a friend of mine, great senator, somebody that has extraordinary common sense, that's one of the reasons he is a successful man at what he does, senator rand paul.
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>> thank you. here's to immunity. to immune people. >> here's to immunity, to immune people. the president had his covid episode. is that factual or the way you should talk about this in a position of leadership? >> it is absolutely the wrong way. we can't pursue anything looking at herd immunity strategy without killing00s of thousands of people. dr. paul needs to be held to a higher standard, a physician, he knows better. to pander to this nonsensical unreality that some people live in baffles the mind and made it so much harder for those of us in the field to give people proper protective action guidance when you hear the opposite from the president and from a physician that serves in the senate. >> grateful as always for your time and insights. very much appreciate your time. >> thank you. up next, we visit the campaign trail live in three big
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swing states. especially in these times.s off, but some things are too serious to be ignored. if you still have symptoms of crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis even after trying other medications, it may be a sign of damaging inflammation, which left untreated, could get much worse. please make an appointment to see your gastroenterologist right away. or connect with them online. once you do, seeing the doctor is one less thing to worry about. need help finding a doctor? head to crohnsandcolitis.com need help finding a doctor? just it just takes a lothat's happeninof the burdener body, of diabetes management off my shoulders. i can see arrows trending up, trending sideways, trending down and that tells me what kind of care she'd going to need in the next few minutes. when she went to argentina last summer i didn't have to freak out but i did a tiny bit it's really hard for a mom to prick her 2-year-old's finger. so having no fingerpricks makes me a very happy mama.
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itinerary shows how crucial florida is to winning the white house. joe biden is rallying in tampa, hours apart. florida is a battleground state. cnn lucky to have reporters spread across swing states. let's begin withdrew griffin in tallahassee. drew? >> reporter: john, it is a desperate ground game now in final days in florida which is why both of the candidates will be here. first, joe biden going to broward county. that's a democratic rich county. he needs to get every single democrat out to vote to counter the republicans. and both candidates, donald trump and joe biden will be in tampa later today. that's a split county. hundreds of thousands of votes at stake. they need to mind every vote in a state that time and time again has shown every vote counts. the question i have, john, is
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how many voters are still out there waiting to drop. 7.4 million voters voted in florida. that's in excess of half all registered voters. this is going to be tight one in florida. 19 electoral votes at stake. it is why we are here through the duration of the campaign. let's go to miguel marquez, in michigan. >> reporter: indeed. from the sunshine state to great lakes state here in michigan. look, this one is just as hard fought as florida. today alone, you have joe biden in town, eric and tiffany trump, betsy devos in town. the president has been here once this week. the vice president was here yesterday. the president will be back friday, tomorrow. and joe biden and barack obama will hold an event here saturday. the first time they hold an event in michigan together.
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if you want to get your vote in, officials say, this is the way to do it. drop off the absentee mail in vote now at a drop box across the state or county clerk. that's the best way to get it in. they expect 5 million to vote in this election. they expect two-thirds of those votes to be in by election day. another hard fought state, wisconsin, where we find our colleague, bill weir. bill? >> reporter: migel, breaking news from wisconsin comes from the republican party who says that someone with knowledge of the campaigns inner workings hacked into the system using a fishing scam, stole $2.3 million. they're working with the fbi, says the statement. both candidates come here tomorrow, a state on fire with covid-19. another 3800 new cases, 45 deaths yesterday. the 27% positivity rate, john,
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puts them on track to overflow the state's intensive care units within the next couple weeks. in polls, joe biden is up by as many as 5 to 17 points, depending which numbers you believe. john? >> bill weir on the ground, remarkable the covid challenge approaching the election. thanks to all our reporters in swing states in the final days. up next, we look at three states leading the charge in the record breaking early voting. insulin injections can make diabetes complicated. meet omnipod -
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there's record breaking early voting across the country. more than a third of all registered voters already cast ballots. over 79 million americans have already voted according to survey of election officials by cnn, edison research and catalyst. kristin holmes joins me, she has been tracking it every day. numbers are wow. take us through the significant pieces of it. >> yeah, john, numbers are wow. this is more than 56% of the entire turnout of 2016. and the numbers tell two different stories. the first is enthusiasm. so many states are on track to not only surpass the 2016 turnout numbers but to blow them out of the water. take texas, for example. 8.4 million people have already voted. we know there's going to be in person turnout.
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that's 94% of who voted in 2016. north carolina, 3.8 million. already at 80% of the total 2016 voter turnout. and you can't deny the enthusiasm. i have spoken to voters waiting in lines across the country that say they'll wait hours or days if they have to. they believe their vote is so critical. that's one part. the other story is something that voting rights advocates have been arguing for some time, if you give people opportunity to vote, they will, in fact, vote. despite the fact that the trump campaign and republicans have tried to limit voter access. all states had to relax some regulations because of the pandemic to make voting more accessible. i want to show you the map. this is three states with the highest percentage of registered voters that cast a ballot. monlz, washington, colorado. what do they have in common? they're all states that do universal mail-in voting. every register voter gets a ballot. goes to show you, if you give
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people opportunity to vote, they'll cast the ballot, john. >> amen. hope they'll keep it up. breaking a record now doesn't mean anything if you don't break it. keep voting, make a plan, get it done. kristin holmes. thanks so much. when we come back, a fun political experiment, words you most associate with two candidates for president. moisture renew blend is different. these beads represent dove moisturizers and work with your skin to produce new moisturizers. unlike others, that don't. proven lasting care for the skin you live in.
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at indeed.com/promo when voters were thinking about president trump last week, coronavirus was top of the list, for joe biden, debate. cnn is partnering with srrs polling firm and university of michigan to track words that break through to voters. take a look. past month's take on president trump. coronavirus topped the list for the president as it has 14 of the last 17 weeks of the polling. you'll also see debate getting a lot of mentions. here are break through words for joe biden. debate gets top billing this past week and other weeks. son was the second most mentioned word, an indication
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that they're hearing president trump's attacks questioning hunter biden's business practices. that's it for us today. thanks for spending time with us. hope to see you here this time tomorrow as the campaign winds down. brianna keilar picks up coverage right now. hello, i am brianna keilar. i want to welcome viewers in the united states and around the world. this hour, politics and the pandemic are colliding with president trump and former vice president joe biden hosting duelling rallies in florida where along with 40 others, they're reporting a surge in infections. as of today, they have just under 800,000 confirmed cases. with only five days to go, keep in mind the voter pool that the two men are fighting for is growing smaller by the day. more than 7 million floridians already cast a ballot, accounting for nearly half all registered voters in the
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