tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN November 11, 2020 1:00am-2:00am PST
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hello and welcome to you, our viewers joining us here in the united states, canada, and all around the world. you're watching "cnn newsroom" and i'm kim brunhuber. just ahead, president donald trump is still clinging to the notion that he hasn't lost the election and is encouraging his top ranking officials to do the same. president-elect joe biden didn't hold back on that saying the president's refusal to concede is an embarrassment and more americans are hospitalized with covid-19 than at any other point in this pandemic. some hospitals say they're at their breaking point.
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it's been eight days since the election here in the u.s. and president donald trump still not willing to publicly accept his defeat by joe biden. mr. trump and his allies continue to undermine the legitimacy of the election and delay the transition of power. u.s. secretary of state mike pompeo is among the high profile leaders not to accept the win. >> are they currently ready to engage and if not when does it pose a risk to national security? >> there will be a smooth transition to a second trump administration. >> president trump is still mounting legal challenges to the 2020 election results and his administration has even carried
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out sweeping changes to the pentagon removing several of its most senior leaders. president-elect biden is taking a calm and measured tone in the face of republican resistance. he's pressing ahead with his transition to the white house. as cnn's boris sanchez reports, bi biden's late biden's-president trump's moves show he is not going to concede easily. he's put out the word that he does not want any federal agency cooperating with the biden transition team and further that he doesn't want any government agency doing anything that would imply that biden won the elects. the president clearly not complying with the idea of a smooth transition. we're also learning that the white house has started to press these agencies to come out with a budget for next year as if
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there will be no change at the white house. one official actually telling cnn that the white house is, quote, going forward assuming a win. the president here clearly in denial, angry about the loss. we should point out it has been several days since we actually heard from the president in an official capacity. he hasn't donnie events since last thursday when he stood at the white house podium and espoused conspiracy theories and quite frankly how the election was stolen from him. we should also say he has been emboldened because people have remained quiet or encouraged him. >> while the president digs in his heels over the election results, joe biden said the trump administration's refusal to start the official transition process isn't preventing him from moving forward. cnn's jeff zeleny reports.
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>> reporter: president-elect joe biden moving forward to build his new administration even as president trump and republicans try complicating his transition to power. >> i just think it's an embarrassment, quite frankly. how can i say this tactfully? i think it will not help the president's legacy. >> reporter: reality is setting in as biden sees new roadblocks. biden also taking pains to cool the temperature saying he could still begin forming a government without access to federal funding or intelligence briefings. he downplayed the possibility of taking legal action. >> we can get through without the funding. we're in a position that we feel
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very good about efforts to put things together. >> reporter: biden playfully smiled at the republican resistance. >> have you spoken to your long-time friend in the senate, mr. mcconnell, and what do you make of his specific comments over the last 24 hours? >> i haven't had a chance to speak to mitch. my expectation is that i will do that in the not too distant future. i think that the whole republican party has been put in a position, with a few notable exceptions, of being mildly intimidated by the sitting president. >> yet world leaders are moving on. british prime minister boris johnson offering his congratulations in a call to biden as did french president emmanuel macron and angela merkel. >> i'm letting them know america
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is going to be back, back in the game. >> reporter: biden sought to keep the spotlight on policy. >> we're going to fight for your family's health coverage the same way we fight for our own family's health coverage. >> reporter: the turmoil is even more compelling. it was four yves r years ago. by den insists he can unite the country. >> i'm not a pessimist. >> biden had this to say. >> they will. they will. >> reporter: mr. biden is clearly trying to intentionally play this cool. you can see it from the smile on his face right there. even as his legal team is calling the trump lawsuits noise not law and political theater. unclear when all of these tensions will end, but republicans, mr. biden believes, will eventually come around to working with him.
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as of now republicans still control the u.s. senate. jeff zeleny, cnn, wilmington, delaware. >> the affordable care act may live to see another day. on tuesday the u.s. supreme court hinted that it's not likely to void the entire 900 page act much to the chagrin of republicans who fought it for the last ten years. cnn's jessica snider reports. >> reporter: the justices signaling that they will once again step in to save the affordable care act. all it takes is one of the president's picks. justice kneel gorsuch, amy coney barrett or justice kavanaugh. he seemed to side with the democrats. even if it's declared unconstitutional, that would not mean that the entire aca should be invalidated. it all comes down to sever
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ability. kavanaugh weighed in. >> it's hard for me to argue that congress intended for the entire law to fall down when they didn't try to repeal the rest of the act. i think, frankly, that they wanted the court to do that, but that's not our job. congress knows how to write a new severability clause and that is not the language that they chose here. >> reporter: now this all comes down to the decision that congress made in 2017 to put the f penalty at zero dollars. that doesn't make it a tax.
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s she continues to keep people guessing. this affects millions of americans, whether it's the 20 million that have gained coverage through obamacare or those who have benefitted because they have pre-existing conditions, are still on their parents' insurance until age 26. a lot at stake and the supreme court likely won't issue a decision in this case until the spring or summer. jessica snider, cnn, washington. while the political fight rages on, so does the covid-19 pandemic. new data now shows that more americans are currently hospitalized with covid-19 than ever before. on tuesday nearly 62,000 people with coronavirus were in hospital in the u.s. that's according to the covid tracking project. on average more than 1600 people with covid are admitted to hospitals each day. despite those numbers there are concerns that some may avoid getting a vac seen.
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dr. fauci says this could be widely available by april. he said sticking to social distancing measures will be crucial. cnn's athena jones has the latest. >> help is coming and it's coming soon. >> reporter: dr. anthony fauci hailing the progress pfizer has made on a coronavirus vaccine but warning just because a vaccine is on the way, that doesn't mean americans can relax when it comes to masks and social distancing. >> we likely will be able to start dispensing vaccines in december and then progressively over the next few months, but in that interim we could get into a lot of difficulty if we don't adhere to the public health measures. >> reporter: those measures are more important than ever. coronavirus infections rising in 44 states and new daily cases topping 100,000 every day for the last few weeks.
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illinois, infections have been climbing faster than any other state in the last week. the governor announcing new restrictions in some areas. experts warn it could get a lot worse. >> we really have to keep up our guard because we're looking at another season at least or multiple seasons but certainly this season where we are on track of having maybe 2,000 deaths a day or 200,000 infections just this winter. >> that's 200,000 new infections a day. cases mean more hospitalizations. 17 states reporting record hospitalizations including nebraska where new restrictions including new rules on masks take effect wednesday in idaho. >> the numbers continue to be very high. we continue to have 50 plus patients with covid in the hospital and just for a reference point back in september we were having maybe ten or even less sometimes patients in the hospital with covid. >> as more people are hospitalized with severe illness, the number of deaths
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also rises. in el paso texas hospital morgues have reached their brink. the county judge now likely to extend a two-week lockdown. >> reporter: to give you a sense of just how much and how quickly cases are rising nearly everywhere, if you look at the five states with the lowest covid positivity rates, on friday all five were under 2% positivity. today four out of the five surpassed that 2% positivity number. it's something that's raising a lot of concerns here in new york city where the positivity number stands at 2.8%. if the 7 day rolling average hits 3% school will go to all remote learning and the kinds of restrictions we saw in the spring will return. while the news of a potential vaccine has offered a surge of hope this week, dr. anthony fauci said it's not a
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reason to stop. it all needs to continue. >> the news of the vaccine should not get people to say that we don't need to continue to do the public health measures because i look at the vaccine is that help is coming and it's coming soon. >> and we'll have more on the response to the pandemic ahead this hour. meanwhile, right now funeral services are underway for saab erikat. what you're seeing are live images of the funeral procession. his remains are expected to arrive at the presidential compound from traveling from ramallah to jericho. he was a fixture since the 1990s. he was an outspoken critic of
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benjamin netanyahu and president trump's involvement in middle east politics. stay with cnn as we continue to follow this story. still ahead, the race for a vaccine. pfizer says they have one but once it's approved, how will it be distributed? european companies are already putting in huge orders. we'll go live to berlin next. when i started cobra kai, the lack of control over my business made me a little intense. but now quickbooks helps me get paid, manage cash flow, and run payroll. and now i'm back on top... with koala kai. save over 30 hours a month with intuit quickbooks.
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a short time ago the hong kong government disqualified four members of its legislative council. the move came immediately after beijing ruled the city could strip politicians of credentials if they were found to be supporters of hong kong independents. carrie lamb said they cannot perform duties as legislators if they don't accept the sovereignty. there will be a mass resignation later today. in europe countries are rolling out plans to procure and distribute a new pfizer vaccine. that's before it's approved by
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regulators. they will sign a contract for up to $300 million doses. the e.u. commission said it will be deployed across europe once it's available. they are looking to procure 40 million by the end of the year. it was developed in partnership with a german company, biontech. he's confident it will be approved. cnn's fred pleitgen joins me live from berlin. what more can you tell us, fred? >> reporter: hi there, kim. i think one of the things the european union certainly wants to do is they want to make sure this vaccine is available, not just in large countries like, for instance, germany and france, but the smaller european countries and those that don't have the financial means as some of the larger down tris have. that's why they're buying this in bulk as an entire block.
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you can hear after the efficacy was approved, the germans say we need to make a deal with this company to make sure we get the vaccine. there has been a memorandum of understanding for several hundred million doses in place. it took until today for that deal to be authorized. we're hearing what the head of the u.n. commission had to say. >> in the past months the european commission has been working tirelessly to secure doses of potential vaccines. we authorize a contract for up to 300 million doses of the vaccine developed by biontech and pfizer. this is the most promising vaccine so far. once this vaccine becomes available, our plan is to deploy it quickly everywhere in europe. >> reporter: she's saying once that vaccine becomes available.
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what the european union is saying is this vaccine obviously has not been approved yet. it's a bit different in europe than they are in the united states. right now it's involved in a rolling approval process. once they get their own data, they share that with regulators who make the move to give the vaccine the approval. there is no emergency use authorization in europe as there is in the united states. again, the head of biontech said yesterday on a call that we were on as well that he believes it could be by next week. >> is there prioritization as to who gets it? when will sort of ordinary people be able to fett it? >> reporter: that's a really big question, kim. what's going on or what pfizer and buy on tech have said is that they plan to manufacture at least 50 million doses of that vaccine by the end of that year.
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that's not very much because two doses are needed. that would be enough for 25 million people around the world. so first and foremost, there would be vulnerable groups, first responders, emergency medical workers, general medical workers who would get this vaccine as a priority. the german government last year talking about the first quarter of next year for that vaccine to become available. canada, of course, has appealed to biontech and pfizer. the companies say they believe they'll be able to manufacture about 1.3 billion doses by the end of next year and of course one of the things we have to keep in mind is that there are other vaccines that could very well also be available in that time frame as well.
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the ceo of biontech said on that call he believes their vaccine will not be the only one that will be effective. while the world waits for that vaccine to be available, the city of liverpool is starting a new experiment. they're offering testing to all citizens in an attempt to get the virus under control. liverpool a covid hot spot with this innovative program that would have national implications. explain what they're doing. >> reporter: so the prime minister has essentially rolled out the new strategy of regular mass testing. it's available to all free and people could get tested regularly. everyone is waiting for this. this is his answer to spiking
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coronavirus cases. imagine a world with no lockdowns, no social distance, no restrictions. this is the british government's bold new vision and it all starts here in liverpool with a city wide coronavirus testing program. it is a twofold experiment. first, to get as many residents possible tested in a two-week window. >> testing we thought was a good idea. >> and second to tryout a new rapid test. >> i think it's one of the best things for the public. >> the scale is massive. some 2,000 troops are on hand to help administer thousands of tests a day. mayor joe anderson said it's critical as they are hitting a spike. >> my message to everybody in the city is let's show we can do
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this and we can bring the rates of the virus down and stop people dying. >> reporter: liverpool was selected because it has one of the highest rates of coronavirus deaths in england. if this program works, the idea is to roll it out across the country. people could get tested regularly. normal life could resume. here's the tecatch, everyone he is a volunteer. >> what concerns me is that if you go for a test and you test positive, then you potentially have two weeks off work where you're not able to earn anything as a result. >> reporter: those on low income can access a small amount of financial support. this father says even if he qualifies, it's simply not enough. >> it's not a clear-cut black and white scenario. on the one hant you want to do
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what's best for them, make ends meet. >> reporter: to defeat the virus it will require education and even more personal sacrifice. now so far this was rolled out last friday so we've been about five days. so far you've had 23,000 people tested. it's a population of half a million. that is a very far cry from what prime minister boris johnson had. it is not mandatory. this second wave that we are dealing with right now could be even deadlier than the spring. i want to give you an idea of the numbers. a 24 hour period more than 500 people lost their lives due to coronavirus and 20,000 cases were reported. the worst numbers since may 12th. so still a lot of room to go here.
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>> at least they're trying something. thank you very much. ahead on cnn, how conservative media outlets are still carrying president trump's claims on the election being stolen, stay with us. >> my husband fights for our country. he has offered to pay the ultimate sacrifice and i stand beside him. >> voters tell cnn they were fraudulently identified as fraudulent voters in nevada. coming up next. proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try our new gummies for 30 days and see the difference. we were paying an arm and a leg for postage. i remember setting up shipstation. one or two clicks and everything was up and running.
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more than a week after the election and days after the race was called, president trump and his allies and the right wing media still aren't willing to accept the facts that he lost the election. >> many are trying to steal this election from president trump. >> it's election denialism delegitimizing a democratic leader and it's happening everywhere, from fox news to facebook, from talk radio to twitter. on tuesday eight of the ten top performing posts on u.s. facebook pages were from president trump, franklin graham and dan bongino. >> the election odd tis keep adding up. >> reporter: unproven claims and uh-innuendo are fueling right w talkers. >> there are way too many questions here. >> reporter: and he's telling his fans not to give up. >> i'm not going anywhere.
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you're not going anywhere. >> reporter: conspiracy theories about mass voter fraud are spreading widely on mass media. >> trump still has a path to victory. >> reporter: trump's friends are saying democrats are cheaters, big cities are voter fraud factories and trump's lawsuits are serious. >> you have courts defying appellate courts within the state without any consequence. it's outrageous. >> reporter: and this content is racking up big audiences on facebook and twitter. some of it is hard to fact check because it's short on detail, heavy on innuendo, but those toxic claims are misinforming trump and his fan base and garnering retweets. trump dead enders are digging in. >> i've not conceded anything. >> reporter: stoking grievances and swearing that trump could
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still be a winner. >> all of the weirdness went in one direction so i think i have proved that this election is fraudulent. >> that was fox's greg gutfeld. he'll say he was joking. the five stages of grief are evident. i am not seeing the final stage, that would be acceptance. i am not seeing acceptance in pro trump right wing media, at least not yet. back to you. >> despite the trump administration doing its beth to sew doubt about the election, a new reuters ipsos poll tells different. more than half of republicans say joe biden won. 3% said donald trump. 13% said too early to call and
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5% don't know. america's close. >> joe biden, the prekt took calls from the leaders of france, germany, ireland and england. we'll get more from nic robertson. more u.s. foreign allies are congratulating biden than republican senators. that's astounding. quite a list of countries. tell us about that and what it means for u.s. foreign relations going forward. >> reporter: yeah. the people further away from the white house have already accepted that there's going to be a change and the situation, you can get their heads around it. the governments are moving forward and in conversation with team biden, president-elect. interestingly, at a diplomatic
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level it really matters to these countries who he spoke to first and the assessment here in london was that boris johnson got the first call. there is a thorny issue between the two men. they see eye to eye on climate change, rebuilding the economy out of covid, tackling the national pandemic together. joe biden has made it clear to boris johnson. if boris johnson wants to get the biggest thing on his agenda which is a good trade deal with the united states, while he negotiates his way out of the european union, he can't get it by joe biden. he has strong irish roots. both sides when they're reporting out conversations yesterday didn't mention that. i come back to this point, diplomatically kind of important who biden spoke to first.
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the assessment on downing street, johnson got the first call. it does appear the irish prime minister got the call first. the irish later deleted that tweet. interestingly, the biden camp hasn't cleared that up. they've been asked and we asked him and they haven't said who he called first. >> first international diplomatic incident and he still hasn't taken it. top republicans have seized on claims of alleged voter fraud to push the false narrative of a stolen election. cnn tracked down two people who are identified as fraudulent voters in nevada. >> reporter: when the election results first came in and the race grew tight in nevada, trump
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officials made wild accusations that thousands of people who moved out of the state had fraudulently cast their vote potentially swinging the rice to biden. >> we are also confident that there are thousands of people whose votes have been counted have moved out of clark county during the pandemic. >> reporter: a change of address database that publicly lists zip codes and where 3,000 voters currently and previously live. vote cast record 337 shows a voter who previously lived in henderson, nevada and now lives in california. the problem is, this woman says she's that voter 337. >> when i first saw we were on the list frankly i was very shocked. >> she's far from a fraud due length voter. >> if the trump campaign officials are listening, anything you want to say?
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>> the actions they're taking are harmful to america. these types of accusations made without any basis in fact are shocking and appalling. >> amy rose is a military spouse. her husband is active duty in the air force stationed at travis air force base in california. but under federal and state laws, they're still permanent nevada residents making them eligible to vote in the 2020 election. she says she easily saw herself on the list. >> i saw where we live now and it's one block or so radius and that matched up with where we moved from in nevada. put two and two together and realized it was myself and my husband. >> reporter: even a cursory glance at the list you can see hundreds other entries apo, army post office, afb air force base
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or jb, joint base. >> my home of record is in nevada. i own a house in nevada, my license plates are nevada. i pay property tax. >> stephanie who does not want her name used. she is's in the area. he's a major and pilot. >> my husband offered to serve. now my vote is called into question. >> anything you want to say? >> you guys have got to do better. you've got to do better. >> reporter: now, again, there appear to be hundreds of zip codes on that list that correlate to military basis. other people could be students away at college and eligible to vote in nevada. we got a message saying we have
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referred a list. we have no way to confirm whether they fall under exemption which is why we referred it to authorities. we should point out joe biden's lead in nevada stands at approximately 37,000 votes. this list of 3,000 or so people is a moot point anyway. the fact there are so many military families highlights the you thor recklessness of the allegations. dan simon, cnn, san francisco. u.s. president could be making his final push to kill the affordable care act. signals from supreme court justices could mean for obamacare's future coming up. stay with us. bly fades the dark spots away. 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?
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pfizer's vaccine raised hopes across the country this week, but new statistics show this pandemic, it's far from over. hospitalizations in the u.s. have reached a new high. nearly 62,000 americans are in the hospital with the virus. that's according to the coronavirus tracking project. medical experts including dr. anthony fauci say hopes for a vaccine don't mean we can ease up on public health measures even during the upcoming holidays? >> gatherings are a bad idea. there are some cases where maybe there's no choice. by and large, gatherings don't need to happen. if one thanksgiving out of hundreds of years of them, if one thanksgiving doesn't happen, you will survive, but if you get covid, you may not. so just this one time, maybe this one year, especially if that does pan out, skipping one year of holidays, i know it sucks, but it's better than getting sick and better than infecting others. >> during a pandemic americans
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are understandably concerned about health care coverage and it looks like the affordable care act could survive its latest republican challenge. oral arguments remain before the supreme court. two conservative justices, kavanaugh and roberts signal much of the law could remain intact even if the controversial mandate most americans obtain insurance gets struck down. let's talk about this with jill horowitz. she's a law professor from ucla. thank you so much for joining us. the signals we're getting from some of the justices seem to suggest obamacare might live to see another day. so take us through why democrats have to be perhaps hopeful about what they heard from the court yesterday. >> it was a surprising court argument. the justices did not seem particularly interested in getting to the merits of the
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case. instead they spent a lot of time focusing on whether the patient be before them at all and whether if it should be there and the bad part of the statute could just be cut out and we could all go about our business. >> the doctrine of no severability there. what were they talking about? >> throwing out a big part of it undermines the government it means the court rather than the legislature is deciding what the law is. we have the doctrine of severability, which says if some part is rotten, you don't throw it all out, you cut out the bad part and leave the rest standing. >> they were arguing whether they should do that. many said it doesn't seem we need to throw out the baby with the bath water so to speak. a key part of the argument is always the fact that republicans
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in congress had years to repeal it and they didn't which is why chief justice roberts said i think frankly they wanted the court to do that but that's not our job. roberts was the swing vote last time republicans tried to kill obamacare but now the balance of power is 6-3. so what role might new justice amy coney barrett play given her history of opposition to obamacare? >> the argument that the justices have to throw the whole thing out because that's what congress would have wanted is really ludicrous. had congress wanted the entire affordable care act to be repealed, they would have done it. so we don't have to guess. justice doesn't have to guess. none of the others can guess. they can look at what congress did and conclude that congress meant what it did. >> joe biden says as president he plans to expand the aca. he talked about that today saying the pandemic proves yet
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again how important having health care is. listen to this. >> this doesn't need to be a partisan issue. it's a human issue. it affects every single american family. we can't subvert the growing consensus to the american people based on an argument put forward in the briefs seeking to invalidate the law. >> all right. so he said there it's not a partisan issue which may be wishful thinking. assuming they don't regain the senate, will he be able to do anything to beef it up? >> i think there's a lot he could do in the same -- using some of the same tools that president trump has used over the past four years. so there is a lot of room for action with executive orders, administrative ruling but to fix some of the gaps in the affordable care act and make sure that all-americans have
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access to care, congress is going to have to be active. so we can hope that we'll have a truly bipartisan moment. >> all right. many people won't count on that, but we shall see. thank you so much, professor jill horowitz. appreciate you joining us. >> thank you. >> "cnn newsroom." still to come, it's been a record-setting season for hurricanes. the latest tropical storm is heading for florida with warnings for the state's west coast. we'll have the latest from our weather team. stay with us. listerine® cleans virtually 100%. helping to prevent gum disease and bad breath. never settle for 25%. always go for 100. bring out the bold™ a livcustomizeper iquickbooks for me. okay, you're all set up. thanks! that was my business gi, this one's casual.
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right now tropical storm eta is strengthening as it heads towards florida. the 2020 season has been the most active hurricane season ever with 29 storms so far. we are here with more on eta. what can you tell us? >> reporter: so, kim, i can tell you it's strengthening. it's a 70-mile-an-hour storm. we have hurricane watches up across the west coast of florida because eta is expected to
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become a category 1 hurricane in the next 12 to 24 hours. let's look at the map. see who is under the watches and warnings here. the hurricane watches are in effect from braydenton beach and areas north. that's because the 70 mile per hour storm is going to strengthen as it heads to the north. you can see it becomes a category 1 hurricane once we get to late wednesday afternoon and then models at the moment want too weaken it slightly, but just because models are there, we could see a category 1 storm come ashore. models are in much better agreement on the track of this system. if you remember when we were showing you these spaghetti models over the last week, they have been everywhere across the gulf. no, finally they're tightly
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packed together and they do show a landfall near the big bend of florida. you can see we already have the outer bands of eta come into the southern peninsula of florida. we don't want to see that. we have flood watches up in the peninsula. the totals could lead to flooding. what you're seeing is water vapor imagery. it indicates moist air. a lot of moisture will be pushing up the peninsula. that will lead to heavy rainfall, gusty winds and you can't rule out the possibility of isolated tornadoes. that moisture will get pulled all the way up to new york city. we could see 4 inches of rain from the panhandle of florida all the way up and to the mid atlantic. so many of us will be feeling the impacts, kim, from eta over
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the next several days. >> unbelievable. thank you so much, tyler. appreciate it. >> absolutely. ring is recalling more than 350,000 of its video door bells after reports that some of them caught fire. it impacts door bells bought between june and october in the united states and canada. ring has received 2300 reports of door bells catching fire with 8 reports of minor burns. i do appreciate you watching. i'm kim brunhuber. "early start" is up next. you are watching cnn.
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welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "early start." i'm laura jarrett. >> good morning, laura. i'm christine romans. it is wednesday, november 11th. it is veterans day. ten weeks until joe biden's inauguration. he's forging ahead even as president trump and top republicans withhold cooperation or even acknowledgment that biden won. >> how do you expect to work with republicans ifhe
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