tv CNN Newsroom CNN November 25, 2020 9:00am-10:00am PST
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suffer in silence with miskarchs or infertility. thank you for bringing it. thank you so much for joining us this hour. nia-malika henderson picks up the coverage right now. hello to the viewers in the united states and around the world. a new reminder that the coronavirus is a constant threat, the president scrapping his first planned trip since election day, a gop election dispute event, with rudy giuliani in pennsylvania after the president's personal lawyer was exposed to a second coronavirus case. president-elect joe biden delivers a thanksgiving address this afternoon, a appeal for unity saying the republicans who are on his short list for his cabinet that immigration is a first hundred days priority and
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an international reset is already under way. >> america's back. we're at the head of the table once again. i have spoken with over 20 world leaders and they are all literally really pleased and somewhat excited america will reassert the role in the world and be a coalition builder. >> but president-elect's plan message today that americans must share the sacrifice of staying home to get through this crisis moment. and going somewhere is something that the cdc advises americans against this holiday. a new study says the vast majority of americans remain susceptible to the virus so every second spent in an airport or a gathering of ten or more people is a second to put yourself and your family at risk. the numbers today are just plain awful. another 172,000 new infections.
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on tuesday. another 2,000 american deaths and 88,000 americans are in hospitals. remember, most people have still not gotten this virus which is why dr. fauci cautions a post-holiday covid surge might be even worse. >> the one thing we do not want is if we get a surge now, george, over thanksgiving we'll have that slope up plateau and then slope up again that we'll see in three weeks which is a reason we're trying so hard to get the message for people to be careful over this thanksgiving holiday. >> the cdc wants you to stay home. but there is little indication today that americans with travel plans actually plan to listen to that advice. the tsa says air travel this week will stay strong despite the pandemic. and data does not show widespread cancelations in
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recent days. we're going to go straight to cnn's rosa flores at the miami international airport. rosa, we know that the coronavirus has made 2020 a very different year for everyone. but there in that airport does it look like any other regular thanksgiving travel day that we might see in thanksgivings past in. >> reporter: you know, right now the crowd has thinned out but earlier today the pictures reminiscent of pre-pandemic times. i want to show you around to tell you the story here. you can see that there is still a line today here at miami international airport. on the floor you will see that there are tape marks to allow for social distancing. some of these people are not social distancing as you're watching these live photographs. that of course is against what the cdc is recommending and also
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not recommending people to travel but millions of americans plan to travel this holiday season. officials here tell us that they're expecting 621,000 air travelers to crisscross this airport throughout a 12-day period that they call their thanksgiving day holiday travel period. that's a decrease of 59% from last year. but that is still a huge increase. i have been talking to passengers who are either departing from miami international or arriving and i can tell you that the stories vary. so people going to see the families. others believe it or not are flying to miami to vacation. they're flying to florida, not just to miami but then traveling, driving to key west. that's the case of a group of college students. i asked them that very question -- why? why did you think it was a good idea to fly during thanksgiving? take a listen. >> i know the highest number of
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covid cases so we were definitely worried about that. we are just a bunch of people going -- who came here from college. we thought we need to blow off some steam before the final exams. >> reporter: and it is really is a range of emotions here at this airport. like that college student said, they want to blow off some steam and then met a woman that's not seen her parents in two years and hoping to see them because she in her words said she didn't know if she'd ever be able to see them because of covid-19. >> listen. rosa, we hope the folks are as safe as possible and thank you for that report from miami. the virus is a reason for a very different, very distant thanksgiving. that is the message this week from president-elect joe biden coupled with an appeal to honor the holiday and come together as a country. president trump is focusing on
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something far different. joining our conversation we have katelyn collins and cnn's jeff zeleny. thanks to you both for being here with us today. katelyn, i'm going to start with you first. the president, he is nixing his trip to pennsylvania over covid concerns. what more can you tells about what's going on? >> reporter: this is a scheduled trip the president had, the white house hadn't confirmed, we did hear that the president was goe going to go to gettysburg to appear at a hotel with rudy giuliani and republican state lawmakers as they were going to hold a hearing on election fraud but there's been no widespread evidence of fraud but this is the president's -- this quest he has been on to overturn the results of the election even as his administration is moving forward with the transition plans to the biden administration. but we are told that because an adviser on the legal team now tested positive this trip has been canceled so it is not really clear what exactly this
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event is going to look like, whether or not rudy giuliani is still going to be there but we do know president trump is no longer expected to attend and some people in the president's inner circle questioning whether or not this is wise for the president to go to this but as we have been reporting he is listening more and more to people like rudy giuliani who are telling him things that he wants to hear about the election and so of course the results are not changing. the biden administration is going to happen. it is still moving forward and granted things like getting the president's daily brief to the biden team and we are still seeing the president maintain this mindset at least publicly to sow doubt about the outcome of the results and look at the twitter feed. talking about potential trump run in 2024 and the president is saying 2020 is a long way from over. maybe it is in his mind but, of course, it is not in the mind of everyone else.
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>> jeff, of course, the president-elect is moving on as he should. he has been elected. he plans to deliver a thanksgiving appeal to unity today and we have gotten up dates on the transition process. >> reporter: the contrast could not be more stark. president-elect joe biden is going to be delivering a thanksgiving address here this amp talking about the economic pain people are under, talking about the sacrifice that is the families are making and president trump we see what his -- he's doing but advisers to the biden transition saying that everyone in the world acknowledged the election is over including the chinese president jinping. so this clearly is moving on. but the contrast clearly is a stark one but we are getting a sense of what mr. biden was thinking in the waning days, the 16 days or so as he decided to
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set up the government. take a listen to this from the interview with nbc. >> after 30 lawsuits were thrown out in rapid succession, i was convinced it was just a matter of time and that's why i've decided to move on as if imp w the nominee and do the business within my power from the day the election occurred. >> so act like you own it? >> yeah. >> reporter: so occupying the space is what he did and one of the reasons that they're forming the government as quickly as they are doing. as for that presidential daily brief, we are being told that president-elect biden and vice president-elect harris will get the briefing on monday and he received this more than eight years and first time on monday as president-elect and the compilation of threats facing the united states compiled by
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the intelligence community. >> he'll give the address later today and will bring that to you live: we thank you for that reporting. up next, the mother of all superspreader events, u.s. health officials warn that's what thanksgiving could become as millions of americans ignore travel warnings. honey? yeah? i respect that. but that cough looks pretty bad... try this new robitussin honey severe. the real honey you love... plus, the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? new robitussin honey severe. strong relief for your severe symptoms.
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if we can just hang in there a bit longer and continue to do the simple mitigation thing that is we're talking about all the time the masks, the distancing, the avoiding crowds, particularly indoor, if we do those things we'll get through it. that's my final plea before the lol day. >> dr. fauci is among the officials and elected officials urging americans not to travel.
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15th straight day of record high hospitalizations with 88,000 people being treated for coronavirus in a hospital setting. here to discuss is dr. wolinski, chief of infectious diseases at massachusetts general hospital and a cnn medical andist. doctor, thank you so much for joining us today. i wanted you take a listen to what fda commissioner hahn told senator scott just yesterday. >> we are seeing a tremendous stress on the health care system because hospitalizations are increasing as people get sick from covid-19. as the weather turned cold, as we get to the holiday season, it's not so much big crowds outside anymore. what it is it is indoor and it is indoor in our homes. >> tremendous stress on the hospital system, that's 15 straight days of record high
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hospitalizations. talk about what you are seeing on the ground at your hospital. >> good afternoon. yeah. our peak now of about 88,000 people hospitalized is 50% higher than any any prior peak in this pandemic. i'm in massachusetts. we certainly are not one of the places that has the hottest place on the map but we feel the challenges. we have tried hard to try to maintain a normal operations, to make sure elected procedures happen and that's increasingly a challenge. we are seeing more and more cases coming into the hospital. and our beds are full. a lot of these coronavirus patients will stay longer than your average patients. we are hopeful that with fewer elective procedures over the holiday maybe things thin out a bit but we are back in the incident command to try to work
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toward a reasonable capacity. >> despite the cdc's guidance, almost 5 million people have boarded airplanes since the cdc recommended last week that people shouldn't travel. some people think that guidance may have come too late. here's what trump testing czar admiral brett giroir had to say about those who think they're not a risk. >> a test that's negative today done me doesn't mean you're negative tomorrow. we have ten people in the kitchen cooking for 12 hours. you have to stop doing that. whether the test is negative or not. that negative test is not a free pass to do risky behaviors. >> doctor, what's your message to people who think you've got this negative test, i'm clear to go home, hang out with grandma and grandpa and not risk those folks? >> it's really important question.
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i want to convey the millions of travelers, i'm less worried about masked in the airports than what will happen when they're unmasked at the dinner table, the people they put at risk by potentially being asymptomatic. these are the loved ones. we don't want to put each other in harm's way but we potentially are doing so. a negative test -- or a test is helpful prior to travel or seeing your family. however it is not fail safe so a test today will tell you about your exposures perhaps last wednesday, thursday, friday. but nothing about the exposures in between so what i worry about is a test today is helpful, certainly if it's positive you shouldn't be traveling but if it's negative i worry if you were exposed saturday, sunday monday of this week that you might be shedding a maximum
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amount of virus on friday or saturday. >> doctor, we thank you so much for your hard work and for joining us today. still ahead, democrats hope that flipping georgia blue will lead to a voter turnout boost for the senate runoff races this january. when i was in high school, this was the theater i came to quite often. the support we've had over the last few months has been amazing. it's not just a work environment. everyone here is family. if you are ready to open your heart and your home, check us out. we thought for sure that we were done. and this town said: not today. ♪ for next year's coverage?s about medicare options and this town said: not today. of course you do. we all do. i'm meredith vieira and i'm in the same camp. the medicare annual election deadline is just ahead
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the control of the senate will come down to two georgia runoff races in january. democrats are hoping that turning georgia blue in the presidential race will help drive turnout for their side and one of the democrats to helped to deliver georgia for joe biden, stacey abrams who ran for governor in 2018. "the new york times" has been doing fantastic interviews, joining me now. you interviewed stacey abrams about flipping georgia and the senate races and she told you looking at the difference between 2016 and 2018 and the voter suppression that happened as she said in 2016 and she said what we were able to identify in the concrete ways in 2018 we were able then to mitigate heading into 2020. i think you see the combination of increased voter engagement
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but you also had the removal and mitigation of a number of barriers that blocked access to the polls. how confident is she now that this miracle that democrats had been hoping for for decades turning georgia blue, the presidential level, how confident is she that she can keep it blue going forward not only in the senate race but beyond? >> yeah. thank you for having me. what she lays out is a more nuanced picture than folks talk about with georgia. not just demographic changes happening. registered voters and now the state is democratic. she said it was a careful building arc that not only meant to introduce new voters to the system and democrats have to be proactive of blocking what she described as tactics that we have seen in states particularly like georgia and they identified communities with restrictive
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polling access or broken machines or long wait times and the like and the virus this year gave democrats an opportunity to work with republicans to kind of rethink access to ballot systems, access to the polls and that is combination of these things fueled the opportunity to vote but the thing is that's not a certainly for the future. future elections going forward and what she was saying is that it has to be a two-pronged view of what democrats do to be successful in georgia, registering people and the reactive measure to make sure voter suppression don't manifest in the state. >> you asked her about how to drive turnout without trump on the ballot and she said this coalition existed in 2018 in my election. this is a coalition that we have been building together for the last decade.
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this is a group that didn't just come together out of a convenience. we were working together in coalition and that's why i think we can sustain it. how big of a test will this senate runoff be for that coalition which is a multi-racial coalition, increasing numbers of african-americans and latino americans participating and white voters, as well. >> that's what democrats have to do. republicans feel confident for the runoffs because they have been lower turnout and we know that georgia remains a place republicans are motivated where you have white conservatives who have been typically what makes georgia a conservative and republican state. what democrats are trying to do is match that base motivation in atlanta and regions around it and that's not just through black voters or the white
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college educated suburbs but the new populations coming the south and help transform georgia boo the most diverse battleground, latino voters and so that is what the challenge facing ossoff and warnock is. for these folks just mote vatded by the ability to get trump out of office but that's the work that abrams and the organizations have been trying to do is create a practice of voting among these populations so it's not just dependent on whether trump is or isn't on the ballot. >> not just dependent on a candidate of biden that attracted many more white voters of democrats than in the past. stan, thank you so much for your reporting and doing a fantastic job in this cycle. >> thank you. joining me to talk about the
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upcoming senate runoffs in georgia, latasha brown. thanks so much for being here. we had a cnn piece to frame the january 5th races this way, a victory for democrats could hinge on the same black women who helped flip the state blue in the presidential election. black female leaders and organizers say years of drives and knocking on doors in black and latino neighborhoods paid off when biden and vice president-elect kamala harris won georgia and they believe they can do it again. so, you are one of those black female leaders in georgia. what is your plan for getting the black elect rat to turn out again on january 5th? >> i do think that -- thank you for having me. black women have been key and critical. my partner is also the co-founder of black voter
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banners and we have been seeing that energy and leadership. what i think is important is seeing with black women a lot of times the conversation has been talked about black women as voters and not necessarily as strategists, leaders, organizers and seeing in georgia result of that, that over time doing work but there are women in positions of leadership, looking at who leads the democratic party, newly congresswoman williams who leads the democratic party, people like stacey abrams who's diligent about building an infrastructure in the state, leading groups on the ground from the new georgia project, the peoples agenda, what we're seeing is black women have been stepping up in leadership and various roles in the campaign on the partisan side, the nonpartisan side, political strategy and leadership and that is going to make a difference.
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what we have been seeing and talking to folks is that it's not centered just around the candidates but while trump is not on the ticket but we know that health care is on the ticket and a state with poor leadership with covid-19 and we have been impacted you a, our community. >> listen to the black women on the ground, folks just like you in the state of georgia. >> i was surprised it took so long but i wasn't surprised that it happened. and i won't be surprised if what happens in january. >> this women that are really driving this ground game. >> do you think that black women are the one that is flipped the state of georgia? >> we are the highest demographic in turnout of any other besides white. i would say yes. we do. >> how do you transfer all of
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that excitement that black voters had on election day to turn out this president, president trump to vote for biden, how do you transfer that to a senate race in a january election, not a presidential election? how do you do that? also, how do you make sure it's not black women but a multiracial coalition which pushed biden to win those electoral votes? >> i think it's a couple of things. i want to note from 2017 it was december 2017 when we saw that amassing victory happen in georgia. i moon, alabama. the state next door, sister state, that was even a deeper redder state led by black women. black women assert themselves in places of leadership right now. the voices and the work is rising to the top to make a difference and a new south rising, a multigenerational
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coalition put together and the difference in this election is that we recognize that it's not just about one election. that's a critical part, problem in the political party so think it's about one election but this is a larnger issue around building poyer and many organizations led by black women have been in the long game around how do we build power and part of the way to take some -- whenever you have momentum, we have a wind beneath the wings right now and there's been 27 years since georgia has actually flipped blue. that gives us a running start with a lot of momentum. we have two strong candidates and women organizers and leaders and a new coalition that developed so there's things that are working in our favor to help take the moment that's not transactional but a transform ty moment that what we see is that the south is changing and we are changing it. >> latasha brown, have a great
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thanksgiving tomorrow. >> thank you so much. as we go to break, former president barack obama was on the breakfast club defending the record on helping black americans. >> black poverty dropped faster than everybody else. black incomes went up more than a lot of other folks. the issue is sometimes we didn't go around advertising that because once again the goal here is to build coalitions where everybody is getting something so that they all feel like they have a stake in it. there is no way this eight years to make up for 200 years. good cd everyone loves it. we raised our kids on it. so it stopped the bickering? (mocking tone) "mom, jj's copying me!" grow up. mom! knock it off! try the new subway buffalo chicken or bbq chicken.
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americans are facing devastating economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic. another 778,000 people filed for first-time unemployment claims last week, the second straight weekly increase. in thousands across the country are lining up at food banks this thanksgiving eve. i want to bring in cnn's adrianna brattus from a food bank in chicago. an earliest memory of the pandemic is seeing hundreds and hundreds of women and their children mainly lining up in a food line right as the pandemic was hitting. what are you seeing there on the ground in chicago? >> reporter: nia, the lines we have seen around the country and the line we see here in chicago really tell more about a story
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we already new existed. food insecurity. i spoke with a ceo of lake view pantry earlier today and she said they expect 5,000 people through the doors this week. it is raining here in chicago. normally rain keeps people away but that is not the case here. people are showing up and inside of those boxes they're walking away with food that will help their families survive. the brown boxes you see here have nonperishable items inside and also getting fresh produce and dairy but that's not all the. this thanksgiving every family who shows up here walks away with a turkey. meanwhile, here's something else i want to point out to help drive the message home. before the pandemic, we heard a lot about saving for a rainy day but so many families before the pandemic living paycheck to paycheck and now some work reduced hours or may have lost
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their job because of the virus and all that it's dealt us. those are some of the people showing up in lines here and quite frankly a cross the country. the ceo told me some people walking through the door here at lake view are showing up for the first time and you talked about children showing up. at least 17 million children have been struggling to find food. think about it. before the pandemic a lot of those kids were receiving meals at school. and now we don't have that. back to you. >> thank you so much for that report from chicago. illinois is seeing a surge in hospitalizations after a spike in coronavirus cases. governor j.b. prisker rurges people to make safe choices. >> it may be a matter of months
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not years before it's safe to gather with extended family and friends again. let's keep each other safe until then. it is not too late to change your plans. >> the director of the illinois department of health joins me now. doctor, thanks so much for your time. you see the governor there offered some good news in his briefing yesterday saying it's likely a matter of months before individuals can gather with family and friends. positive developments we have seen with the vaccines and you said last week that you expect to see roughly 400,000 doses when the first vaccine is distributed but yesterday you also said that no -- that might no longer be the case and illinois might actually receive fewer doses than that. why is that the case? >> we have had a readjustment of
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the numbers that were quoted to us and i have talk ds to other state health officials, all the of therm have the proportional decrease in the counts and waiting to understand maybe why that is but it seems that the initial allotment we thought would be ready to go out that decreased so as a result all the states are going to get a smaller amount. >> in 27 states reporting over 1,000 hospitalizations and that's including your state. are you seeing a strain on hospitals across illinois? >> yes, unfortunately we are. we have hospitals reaching out saying that they have large number of staff that are either infected or on quarantine. numbers of individuals in the emergency room waiting to get a bed to be transferred if the
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contin contin continuation of care. we need a break for the workers who did this in the first wave and starting this again. >> based often of coronavirus tracing that you're doing there in the state, the chicago tribune noted today that hot spot exposure locations are the top 30 or the top in the last 30 days ending november 13. based off of these locations what do you expect in terms of cases as we head into this holiday season? and what is your advice to folks who are naf gavigating this hol season? >> i'm making the urgent plea
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imploring people to reconsider the plans. if they plan on mixing households, mixing extended family, we don't want to infect the ones we love. we wanted to protect the ones we love and we can do that by sacrificing the way we do thanksgiving and not kans elting thanksgiving but transform it into something that respects what covid can do and has done and not make this thanksgiving holiday one that we will regret in years to come because of what happened at this day of thanksgiving. >> likely need to rethink what people's plans are for the holidays ahead. christmas and new years, as well. doctor, we thank you so much for joining us. happy thanksgiving to you. >> thank you so much. happy thanksgiving. joe biden lays out his plan to govern while the current president is still disputing the
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president-elect biden and biden said the first 100 days priorities include immigration reform, and undoing some of the trump rollbacks on climate regulations. the president-elect's early cabinet picks worry republicans and democrats that the biden administration will be another obama term. >> this is not a third obama term because we face a totally different world than the obama/biden administration. the president, this president trump changed the landscape. it's become america first which putt america alone and find ourselves in a position where the alliances are frayed. >> joining me now, michael sheer of "the new york times." we are hearing complaints of conservatives of ab seasonses in the picks so far. senator bernie sanders and senator elizabeth warren.
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this is what the president-elect had to say about this last night. >> we already have significant presentation among progressives in the administration and nothing is off the table. something is critical, taking someone out of the senate, out of the house at a particularly very personal consequence is really difficult decision to be made. i have a very ambitious, progressive agenda. and it's going to take really strong leaders in the house and senate to get it done. >> sounds like there isn't going to be a warren or sanders in the biden cabinet. >> probably not. that was always a lodng shot an what defined joe biden for past 30 or 40 years in his life in public service is pragmatism. he understands that as he said that taking folks out of the senate is, when the senate might be in republican control by just
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one member, that's a potential problem. that's a good excuse for him to push back a little bit against a wing of the party that would -- if he did bring them into a cab net push him in ways he doesn't want to be pushed so it's a win/win for him make the argument he needs them on capitol hill and same time prevents his cabinet drifting so far to the left. >> this is a battle to push him, upset him for the picks. thank you so much. happy thanksgiving to you and your family. >> you, too. college basketball starts today but the season already loo looks different this year. but we didn't stop there. we made a cloud flexible enough to adapt to any size business.
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it is here. opening day of the ncaa college basketball season but as with so many things during 2020 not all teams will be playing due to the coronavirus pandemic. sadly, my beloved duke is on the list of high profile college basketball teams that won't be starting its season as planned due to covid-19. we have cnn sports andy scholes with the latest. >> reporter: for the first time seasons march college basketball teams take the floor akosz the country and already many teams
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having to cancel or postpone games. 44 games that were supposed to happen today called off and there are still 212 games today between the men and the women. among the teams not able to play are tennessee and baylor, the vols pausing due to positive test results including from the head coach. tennessee has already canceled the first three games. baylor, their head coach tested positive on sunday and canceled the first three games. the uconn women halting all team activities for 14 days and 4 games for them will need to be pushed back. the majority of games today will be taking place without fans but there are some having fans in the stands and that means today marks the first time that we will have basketball games with fans in an arena since the
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pandemic started back in march. >> thanks for that report. thanks for joining us. brianna keilar picks up our coverage right now. hi there. i'm brianna keilar and want to welcome the viewers here in the united states and around the world. we're in the coronavirus pandemic and the u.s. reported the deadliest day in the last six moths on tuesday. 2,146 people dead in this country. another 172,000 newly infected. hospit hospitalizations have broken records 15 days in a row. 88,000 people are currently hospitalized fighting covid. test positivity is above 10% in more than half the country. just look at the midnight blue on this map and indicates at least 16% of tts
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