tv Countdown to Election Day CNN November 2, 2020 7:00am-8:00am PST
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well, a very good monday morning to you, it is a day till election day, i'm jim sciutto. >> we're almost there, folks i'm poppy harlow. glad you're here. a high stakes final push, both campaigns hitting key battleground states. both headed to pennsylvania to make their final pitches. this state could be the game changer tomorrow. >> here's the other big story of this. you can see the numbers there. early mail-in voting records have been shattered as the nation grapples in the midst of this with a growing pandemic. more than 95 million americans have cast their ballots before election day, that is 70% of the total number of americans who voted in 2016. remarkable. we're live across the country as only cnn can be. let's begin with jeff zeleny he's in cleveland, ohio where joe biden starts his day. another battleground state, a
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state the president won handily in 2016. >> reporter: good morning, jim and poppy. it's not a presidential election if you're not in battleground ohio before the end of the race. this is a stop for joe biden, but he is focussing on pennsylvania, no question about it. but he decided to take a last minute detour here to cleveland, ohio to try and drum up the democratic vote here. this is a place where hillary clinton defeated president trump in 2016 by some 30 percentage points but a place there are a lot of democratic votes. i'm told by a top ohio democrat that it's too close not to try. that's why they're coming to ohio, the form former vice president, to make his case to voters. there are tens of millions of americans who have not yet voted. early voting still open in many states across the country. but at this point the biden
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campaign is focussing on those who have not voted. they're chasing absentee ballots, getting people to the polls tomorrow. that's why joe biden is visiting cuyahoga county, just west of pennsylvania. but it is entirely focused on pennsylvania, that is where we are going to see the bulk of the activity. of course, the president is campaigning in joe biden's hometown. but joe biden will be hitting all four corners of the state ending with a rally tonight in pittsburgh. jim and poppy. >> jeff, thank you. let's go to susan she's in fayetteville, north carolina. the president beginning his four-state tour there today. >> if you assault a police officer -- >> reporter: this is where he's kicking it off. he wants to make sure he can gin up his base, the stops here in north carolina, fayetteville, gastonia, greenville, and hickory, trying to emphasize to the rural communities, areas,
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christiane conservatives, evangelicals, those who are in his corner to come out and vote tomorrow and during the election. the early turnout has been absolutely extraordinary, shattering all previous records. there is some sense perhaps that benefits joe biden and the democrats. but to give you a sense of the numbers there. talking about 4.5 million who voted early. that's 62% of those registered voters in north carolina. 95% of those who voted back in 2016. and so those -- that's the kind of enthusiasm that is here in north carolina. you may recall it was back in 2016 trump won the state but 173,000 votes, but this was also the state that gave barack obama his victory in 2008 by 14,000 votes. so still the polls showing this is going to be a very, very close, tight race here in north carolina. poppy, jim. >> thank you for being there for us. we appreciate it.
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michigan's secretary of state tells cnn that absentee ballots will be counted tomorrow morning starting around 7:00 in the morning, and there are expected to be 3 million, which means it could not be done tomorrow. >> this is important because as some states begin counting the ballots in the morning, some wait until later. battleground pennsylvania could see a lengthy process of counting. the governor, tom wolf, is releasing a new ad urging patience with the results. let's go to kristen holmes. the president has been focused on pennsylvania but in particular attacking what are valid ballots, those postmarked by election day but arrive up to three days after. >> reporter: attacking ballots, the process itself saying we need results on election night. we need to point out that what he said last night is not entirely true.
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you talk about president trump saying his campaign is going to send lawyers in to challenge the expediency of the vote count in pennsylvania. the reason it's going to take longer is because these pennsylvanians are following the law. we need to keep that in focus here. the reason there might be a delay is because there have been more than 2.2 million absentee ballots cast in pennsylvania. a state in which the republican legislature ruled no one could do anything with those ballots until 7:00 a.m. on election day. that's likely what's going to cause some sort of delay. we should note the pennsylvania secretary of state did talk about those ballots arriving after election day, from 8:00 p.m. on election day through november 6th at 5:00 p.m. she said to counties, count them. we know the supreme court said you can count them but you need to segregate them. her decision to say to counties to count them now drawing fire from the campaign, which is
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setting up what legal experts are telling us is likely going to be a lot of litigation post election. >> we're preparing for that. i think there's no question that's going to come. before you go, can you explain what happened over the weekend with minnesota? because the secretary of state there is now explaining why he did not challenge, did not take up to the supreme court, the appeals court decision over the weekend, basically saying you thought you had seven more days for ballots to get in and be counted after election day, minnesota no longer do you have that window. why did they not take it to the supreme court? >> according to the secretary of state they weighed their options looked at the makeup of the supreme court and thought it wasn't worth it. saying they would rather put the state's efforts into fighting a post election battle should the ballots come into question if they're needed to get results of the election. now this is his reasoning for not wanting to go up to the
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supreme court. >> we had to ask ourselves, is there any downside risk to doing so. a risk beyond just losing. could we end up worse than we were? worse than simply losing. and let me just say, looking at the makeup of the court, we concluded that yes, there was a downside risk. better to live to fight another day after the election. >> reporter: so looking at the makeup of the supreme court, as we know, newly installed justice amy coney barrett likely to see more of these cases skewing to the conservative side, which is not the side of the voter advocacy groups, not the side that would encourage these kind of deadlines. >> understood. kristen thank you for the reporting. let's go to north carolina where the state's election board said 97% of votes will be counted by election night. good morning, mr. attorney general, thank you for being here. you're on the ballot, you're up for re-election as well.
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>> i am as well, yes. >> we'll get to what happened in graham, north carolina over the weekend in a minute. the fact that you're going to know a lot by the end of election night in your state, how important is that given the divisiveness, the environment particularly around this election? >> well, it depends on how close the elections are, even among those 97%. if we remember in 2016, our governor's race was within a tenth of a percentage point on election night. we waited. we counted all the provisional ballots, mail-in ballots that came in after election day and after about 10, 12 days we finalized the count, governor cooper won the election. that's how democracy works. so sometimes if the race is a point or two points on election night. we know who wins, because those extra ballots are not enough to tip the balance. but if it is close on election night, we exhibit patience. we have experience doing that in north carolina.
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and all americans need to know we may know who the winner is on election night but we may not and we need to be patient and let all the votes count. >> as my mother told me, patience is a vir which you. >> it is. >> we're all going to need a lot of that come tomorrow night. >> let's talk about graham, north carolina. for those that didn't see it, here's video of the protests on saturday and confrontation with police. this was notably the last day of early voting in the state and police used pepper spray to break up the march to the polling place. here's how they defended this after saying a police officer was assaulted. >> at that point we deemed it was an unsafe event and deemed it was unlawful and we went ahead and disbursed the crowd. we used a pepper fogger that was never directed at any person. >> that's what he said, but look at this video.
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this is video of at least one man right there being sprayed in the face. the organizer of the protest, here's what he said. >> there are people that did not vote today. because the police released tear gas and pepper spray. >> his point is he says, mr. attorney general, this stopped some people from voting. the north carolina board of election said they don't have any evidence it did stop people from voting. what do you know? did this stop some people from voting saturday? >> i will say, obviously what happened in graham was troubling. i talked to many of the people who have been involved frankly from the organizer perspective and from law enforcement. the key is, in north carolina, it is against the law to obstruct, harass or intimidate any voter. so if anybody was denied their right to vote, they need to let the state board of elections know that and we'll get to the bottom of what happened in
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graham. what i want the voters of north carolina to know, going into tuesday where we expect another 3, 4, 500,000 north carolinans to vote, if you go to the poll and someone gets in your way, tries to obstruct your participation, let the local precinct official know so that person can be held legally accountable. >> listen to this from vice presidential candidate kamala harris in north carolina yesterday. >> here in north carolina you know more than most that there have been active people trying to suppress the vote. i don't have to tell you what the court appeal here in north carolina said, which is that that one law was written with, quote, surgical precision to make it difficult to vote. >> there is an ongoing fight
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over voter id. it's been going on for years in your state. i wonder if we could end on this. your message to anyone watching who may be confused about the north carolina court of appeals decision in september and what they need or do not need to cast their vote tomorrow? >> one does not need a voter id in order to cast the vote. you don't need a voter id, excuse me. here's the thing. there's so much noise, confusion, intentional misinformation, to try to deprive you of your power, the voters of north carolina, american, you have the power, you will determine who our next president is, no politician will make that decision. it's going to be the people's decision. >> attorney general, josh stein, thank you for your time this morning. i know it's an incredibly busy few weeks for you. >> thank you, poppy. >> of course. a fierce battle in
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pennsylvania we'll take you there next. >> and coronavirus infections are surging across the country. now the president is suggesting he could fire the nation's top infectious disease expert, dr. anthony fauci. though we should note he does not have the power to do that. we all have our own journey ahead of us. our own hopes and dreams. we'll pass many milestones. moments that define you. and drive you. to achieve even more. so, celebrate every one. because success isn't just about where you want to get to. it's also about how you get there the all new 2021 cadillac escalade. never stop arriving. it's also about how you get there keeping your oysters busihas you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo
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welcome back. it is, of course, election eve. and the candidates, as you expect, are acting like it. both campaigns hitting key battleground states today. >> ryan young joins us from wisconsin, what are you hearing? >> reporter: there's a blistering pace being kept up across the election zone. people want the battleground state. president is coming back to kenosha today. he was here friday as well so
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was joe biden and then the first lady was here saturday and sunday, ivanka trump was here as well. you have to remember that president trump won the state by less than 1% in 2016. so when you turn on the television, listen to the radio, it's all political ads but both of you guys know this. this has to be framed around the coronavirus when people are talking about what happens next in the state of wisconsin. we're at a testing site. mondays are difficult. you can see the lines behind us as people are showing up to get tested. on friday alone, over 5,000 positive tests on sunday over 3,000 positive tests. this area is being hit hard. as we talked to voters of the weekend, that was one of the number one subjects they talked, education, the coronavirus, who's going to lead for it. there is an expectation for people to get out, turn out the vote. this is a state that already 60% of the voters have already voted in person. think about this, more than 2 million people have already voted in person. this is going to be interesting to see how this ties up in the
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last coming moments with all these folks energized about the election. jim and poppy? >> that is a big story this election. millions of americans clearly energized. just follow the numbers on the right hand of our screen. ryan young, thanks. let's go to ed lavandera. he's in harris county, texas, the center of many of these vote battles around the country. a challenge on the valid of the 120,000 votes cast via drive-through. that decision set to take place. what do we know about when we'll hear? >> reporter: good morning. in a little bit more than an hour there will be an emergency court hearing inside the federal courthouse here in downtown houston where the judge will hear the arguments coming from the republican group that is trying to essentially invalidate about 127,000 votes cast during
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the three-week early voting here in houston. you can see a number of protesters out here trying to urge this judge to count every vote. harris county election officials say the push to invalidate these votes is preposterous, the votes were cast in a legal, safe and secure way. but this republican group, which has already been shot down twice in the texas supreme court. the texas supreme court ruled yesterday, all republicans by the way, that this election drive through voting they would not listen to the petition from this republican group. but now this judge here in harris county will be listening to it in a little more than an hour. atle some point we expect some sort of decision on what's going to happen with the votes. jim and poppy? >> more than 120,000 of them it's really consequential. thanks for being there, ed. it is largely about the state of pennsylvania this time around. alexander fields joining us in
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pittsburgh with more. good morning, alex. >> reporter: good morning, it could be tight in pittsburgh. it may come down to turnouts. you're seeing both campaigns making a major push to people with mail-in ballots to get their ballots in that's what they're doing behind me in pittsburgh. everyone who didn't apply for a mail-in ballot they're encouraging them to get to the polls tomorrow. you can see the level of commitment from both campaigns, president trump holding a series of rallies over the weekend. he is on a multi-state tour today with a stop in scranton, pennsylvania. vice president mike pence campaigning in pennsylvania also. and former vice president joe biden will be in pittsburgh today with layda gaga and kamala harris will be with john legend. right now they've honed in on a singular message they hope appeals to a wide swath of voters including voters who went for trump in 2016. biden's message he's the better
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leader to get the country and the commonwealth through covid times. this is a state trump won by just 44,000 votes back in 2016. it is a high stakes prize with 20 electoral votes, both campaigns want it. but the truth is, jim and poppy, it might take a few days before we know who wins it all. that's because there's some 3 million mail-in ballots that have been applied for. some counties are saying they won't start to count those ballots until the day after the election. doesn't mean anything has gone wrong, just means we all need to wait this one out. >> it's a good point. don't listen to what you hear from some corners, right. by law those votes are valid if they arrive up to three days by election day. that's been backed by the courts. after the crowd chanted fire fauci at a trump campaign rally, trump suggested he may do that after the election. here's the thing, and facts matter, the president doesn't have the power to do that. ltaren
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polling, that dr. anthony fauci is the most trusted voice in this country on the covid pandemic. so why would the president say this as cases are surging. listen. >> don't tell anybody, but let me wait till a little bit after the election. i appreciate the advice. >> fact is, he does not have the power to do that. regardless, dr. fauci was unusually unrestrained this weekend over the u.s. response to the virus saying, you could not possibly be positioned more poorly. just remarkable. joining us is expert dr. amesh adaljia. a senior scholar at johns hopkins. doctor, good to have you this morning. i guess, we should grow used to now the president attacking the experts, particularly in the
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midst of a pandemic here. so let's focus on the facts, if we can. we had dr. reiner on last hour and he said in terms of what can people like you and me and our communities do to respond to the facts here, which is a growing pandemic. he said masks. if we all wear masks enough we can avoid the more draconian shutdowns. is that true in your view? >> i think it's true. this is a simple common sense measure that allows people to move about without the fear of the virus. we've developed a lot of data over the pandemic showing there are people out there who don't have symptoms and can spread it to other individuals. a face covering prevents you from infecting others and if you do get infected you probably get infected with less severe cases. i think we have to embrace it. this is the way to save our economy and move through the pandemic. >> look at these shots, if we could. i bring it up to you because
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it's where you're from. these are images of the crowd at the president's rally saturday in butler, pennsylvania. tightly packed, few masks, despite the campaign saying we hand out masks. but they're not mandating it. 50,000 americans in the hospital this morning with covid and you look at these images where you are from. if the president wins a second term and does not do an about face on large gatherings and masks, where will we be headed with covid? >> we're going to be headed to a dark place. my parents live a quarter mile from where that rally occurred and i could hear the roar outside from stepping out my parents' door, this is something we're worried about. there's a small community hospital in the area and they're already getting more cases so we're worried about what's going to happen to my hometown in the next 10 or 14 days. this was an irresponsible rally, something i didn't want to see in my hometown.
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that has hit me personally because i know these people, some of my friends are going to get infected and get sick from the rally. >> regardless of the outcome tomorrow. the pandemic is going to stay with us. that's a fact. if you had five minutes with either the new president or the re-elected president trump what recommendations would you make and say this has to be done now to save lives? >> the first thing that needs to be done is the cdc needs to be restored to the driver's seat. they need to speak to the american public every day and not be handcuffed by any unreality that the president is living in. we have to get the president to face the facts and realize he cannot wish them away, whether it's president trump or president biden. and we have to do testing, tracing, isolating. we need to test much, get people to be contact traced and get people to take the common sense precautions we've taken earlier. wearing masks and cease attacks
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on experts. these attacks on dr. fauci are really beyond the pail. >> we appreciate you, doctor, being here very much. i'm sad to hear you think because of that rally, relatives and friends in your hometown are going to contract covid. i wish there was much broader mask wearing at these events and less people packed in so tight. thank you for being with us this morning. >> thank you. the final push in the final hours, who is going where, and will it be enough to secure the white house? we'll talk about that next. lactaid is 100% real milk, just without the lactose. so you can enjoy it even if you're sensitive. yet some say it isn't real milk. i guess those cows must actually be big dogs.
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don't forget the senate race. crucial senate races would determine the balance of power. >> harry hinton is back with us. good to have you back, harry. right now, where does the senate look like it's headed? >> i mean, at this point it does look like democrats are likely to gain control of the senate. of course, they have 47 seats at this point. looking at the forecast, it looks like thaw eel get up to 51 but i cannot emphasize this enough. but this race remains within the margin of error. it would not be surprising to me if the republicans maintain control of the senate out of the house and senate, the senate is the one most up for grabs. >> walk us through the best chances for pick up for each party in the senate. >> essentially the democrats' path to get to the 50 seats they need if joe biden wins the presidency and harris breaks the tie. is the following states. it looks like the democrats are
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going to win in arizona. colorado, nine, main five, north carolina three. and it looks like the republicans will pick up alabama, doesn't look like michigan. if the republicans pick up alabama then democrats probably need to sweep all four of those. although there's other potentials but north carolina is the most important seat at this hour with the democrats holding a slight but still a lead at 3 points, kyle cunningham. >> what do your odds tell you about democrats' chances of picking up more than a bare majority? >> this is the key and why the forecast at this point is for them to get to 51 seats. there is a slew of seats out there where democrats are either tied or close. it starts in iowa, where they're tied in the polls right now, joni ernst and theresa greenfield and look at georgia, looks like that's going to a runoff in january, and osoff and
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purdue, that's tied. and south carolina at the very edge. basically there's this long tail where democrats could potentially pick up many more seats than the 50 but at this point it looks like democrats will barely get to the majority but there is the potential for a lot more for them. >> harry thank you. let's talk about this and all that lies ahead in the next 24, 48, 72 hours. jeff mason is here, and brittney shepperd. an exciting week, a consequential week. let's start with something that i think is really interesting and that is that rnc chair, rona mcdaniel not just in charge of getting the president re-elected but for republicans to hang onto the senate. here's what she said about voter turnout. listen. >> if your voters are so excited about president trump, why haven't they shown up yet?
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>> because they really want to vote in person. >> why? >> it's been interesting this year as we've surveyed our voters a vast majority of them want to vote in person. they want to make sure their vote counts. >> she also, jeff, told "the washington journal" in that profile over the weekend we know suburban women who were with the president in 2016 may have faded away. we call them waivering voters and we know they're the easiest to bring back. those seem like two big gambles. that many people are waiting to vote until election day and it's easy to get the suburban women back. >> yes, indeed. i think they're seeing some data or some evidence that that's what they're going to see. you do also hear the president at his rallies sort of flagging that as well, saying how many of you have voted already? i know you well enough, you're all going to show up on election day. that's either an expectation or encouragement on his part for people to do that.
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they are certainly counting on that and hoping in the final states, particularly pennsylvania, florida, the ones that are close, that he really needs, that they're going to have a really big turnout. >> one lesson, of course, is never listen to partisans for their hot takes, you know, going into election day. because it's always seeded with some self-interest. that goes for both parties. but brittney, watching the tally on the right side of the screen go up, 95.5 million americans have already voted. and you have two full days in effect for people to still vote. what is the biggest takeaway from that? in terms of interest but also party advantage. >> well, i think anecdotally what i'm hearing is that a lot of democrats have been pushing early voting from the beginning. as we know, voting has become so politicized and many young democrats have been enraged and
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moved to action from the social unrest that happened over the summer and, of course, the coronavirus pandemic. you look at the numbers, they're eclipsing or meeting 2016 totals and we're not at election day yet. when i talked to voters on the road over the weekend, a lot of them feel like they have too much to lose, even the apathetic voters or the voters that last time thought it wasn't worth going to the polls. of course, a lot can change in 24 hours but it's basically what joe biden and his campaign is banking on, that they see enough of a wave to rebuild the blue wall that donald trump kind of barricaded through last time. i think they're counting on a lot of that vote to come from suburban counties, folks fed up with trump. >> you spent the last few days traveling with the biden
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campaign. so i want your take on what bloomberg reported that there's internal fighting within the campaign because there's worries among some in the campaign about black and latino turnout. and listen to this when senator harris was asked yesterday if the campaign has done enough to reach black voters. >> i think we always can do more. no question about that. >> we can always do more. no question. is that a concern within the camp right now? >> ablusolutely. especially with latino voters. i was with the campaign in florida a couple weeks ago and it was not the turn out i saw in the midwest and rust belt states for biden. democrats for a long time have taken those two groups for granted. you have to look at black voters more specifically, black women vote democrat, 90% or something like that. it's the black men, old and
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young, that have been unreliable democratic voters and only in the last month or so, has the campaign and democrats funded into that arena. i have to see if that's enough, do those people think they've been spoken to. and the trump campaign's messaging about joe biden and kamala harris being a socialist is resonating especially with the southern latino groups. the biden campaign said when we're asked about this, they can only invest so much at reliable voters, but at what cost? turn out is the most important thing here. if the black voting percent goes up one or two percent it might be all moot. >> jeff mason, we have a big issue on election day that hasn't started on election day, and that is the president, a concerted attack on valid mail-in ballots. allowed by law, no evidence of widespread fraud. but the president has been messaging about this for month and setting up legal challenges
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in a host of battleground states. the courts have actually pushed back, a lot of losses for republicans in the courts trying to challenge some of these things. what happens if the president pursues this on election day? will republicans stand in the way of for instance him calling the election early in his favor? or claiming to call it early. who's going to stand in the way of him doing that? >> that's a great, question, jim. i don't think we know the answer. if we look back at the history of republican support for the president they have stood by him for different things and institutions that he has barricaded through. so whether he does that again on this particular issue we'll have to wait and see on election night. to go back to the early part of the discussion, republicans whether you can take it serio seriously or not, they are
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partisan, as are democrats. so they'll see if they can pull it off. but you know based on everything he has flagged for months or longer now that he will fight it. the question you ask in terms of how his party will stand by him will depend largely on how close the race is, and largely how legitimate the concerns that he and his campaign officials raise turn out to be. >> we'll be watching closely. thanks to both of you. our special election coverage, special election night coverage starts at 4:00 eastern time tomorrow, only here on cnn. italy is joining several european nations in tightening their covid restrictions due to spiking ininfections. we'll have more next. and when you get a big deal... ♪ ...you feel like a big deal. ♪ priceline. every trip is a big deal.
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agencies view rt as a source of russian propaganda, disinformation backed by the kremlin. source of that kind of disinformation in the country. in a tweet dr. atlas says he regrets the interview and was unaware that rt was a registered foreign agent. matthew chance is in moscow. i imagine russia saw that interview as something of a victory, matthew? >> reporter: i imagine they did. one of the main reasons that media arm exists of the kremlin that is used to spread propaganda around the world and d disseminate disinformation about covid-19 one of the things it likes to do is highlight differences, highlight the chaos in other parts of the world, specifically in the united states. and you're right, dr. atlas has apologized for this, said he wasn't aware that rt, russia today, was registered as a foreign agent. but he did get 27 minutes of
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unchallenged international air time in which he was able to make various claims like the lockdown in america is killing americans, like the health leadership in the united states have failed in their responsibilities, he dismissed the assessments, the future projections of what the death toll could be if no further action is taken, against the coronavirus. there's too many to list because 27 minutes as you can imagine is a long time to make claim after claim after claim. many of which, most of which, if not all of them, have not been accepted by the main stream medical community in the united states. now for me, watching it oar hhe the irony is actually while they were allowing dr. atlas on russian television in this way, russia is taking strong measures like instituting a national face mask mandate that dr. atlas and people like him are firmly
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against. jim and poppy. >> i remember when you took us inside the russian lab to show us their vaccine trial and then their own approval of a vaccine. i wonder, where does that stand now? are people broadly taking the vaccine across russia now? if they are, is it working? >> reporter: that's a good question because i think there have been some production problems in the vaccine, which was the first of the russian vaccines to get official approval but the authorities say by the end of the year they hope to have mass vaccinations up and running. remember, there are two other vaccines russia has in the pipeline, one of which has been approved for use. russia isn't sitting on its laurels when it comes to fighting the pandemic. >> in some ways taking it more seriously from a government standpoint. let's go to melissa bell on what is a sad but rapid surge of new covid-19 infections across europe.
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>> reporter: jim, the latest is that italy is now announcing fresh restrictions, a tightening of restrictions in those parts of the country hardest hit, limits on travel within the country and this is a country that's already seen protests against the existing restrictions. a reminder that this time around in the words of the commission president that we aren't just battling the virus but also coronavirus fatigue, people resisting the lockdowns we have in place here in france, germany and belgium, with governments resisting until the last minute to bring in the moves. here in france the positivity rate of 20%, a thousand people a week entering icu. in belgium, the number of people in the hospital more than the first wave. in germany the number of people in icu has tripled in two weeks. the virus is circulating more quickly and widely than it did the first time. >> thank you for being there.
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it is sad news we appreciate you bringing it to us, though. thanks very much. and thank you for joining us this monday morning. we'll maybe take a nap and be back with you at 2:00 a.m. tonight. i'm poppy harlow. >> i'm jim sciutto. folks you have another day to vote. take advantage. "newsroom" with john king starts after a quick break. water? why?! ahhhh! incoming! ahhhahh! i'm saved! water tastes like, water. so we fixed it. mio.
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woman: after covid, my hours got so we can't pay our bills. and now our family budget is gonna be hit hard with prop 15. the yes on 15 ads say it only raises taxes on big corporations. that's not true - we're all going to pay. $11 billion in new property taxes will get passed on to small businesses and farms. they'll raise prices... ...higher gas, health care, food...even day care. we can't make ends meet now. families can't afford 15. no on prop 15. the unfair money bail system. he, accused of rape. while he, accused of stealing $5. the stanford rapist could afford bail; got out the same day. the senior citizen could not;
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forced to wait in jail nearly a year. voting yes on prop 25 ends this failed system, replacing it with one based on public safety. because the size of your wallet shouldn't determine whether or not you're in jail. vote yes on prop 25 to end money bail. hello, everybody, i'm john king in washington. thank you for sharing your day with us. one more day of campaigning, tomorrow america picks its president. the consequences are enormous and obvious. a choice between two fundamentally different men. different roots, world views, and takes on a pandemic that is just about surging everywhere. the monday map is lit up with
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