tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN March 9, 2021 4:00pm-5:00pm PST
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may they rest in piece and may their memories be a blessing. thank you for watching. you can follow me on twitter and instagram. erin burnett "out front" starts right now. >> a major victory for joe biden all but set in a matter of hours. do their complaints add up. a troubling surge at the border. the uncanny similarities between princess diana's bombshell interview and meghan's. biden's big win. a monumental piece of legislation about to pass and be signed into legislation.
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not just when it comes tos it price tag but ambition and impacts. democrats are united in their support. >> this is the most significant legislation for working people that has been passed in decades. tremendous piece of legislation. it will create a lot of employment all across the country. >> getting both senator sandgren and manchin, the two poles of the democratic party on board is no easy feat. but they are united. >> socialist wish list. >> a left of lenin. >> this is a left wing giveaway. >> no republican getting behind
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the bill, not a single one. 62% of voters support it. no surprise given it includes the biggest stimulus checks so far during covid. phil, president biden is now getting ready to sell this bill to the american people in a big way, and doing kind of a blitz the likes of which we have not seen from him. >> yeah. that is exactly right. there is a recognition while the popularity ratings for the bill remained stable over the course of the president's first 49 kay days of office, they need to keep pushing. the expectation is that the house will pass the bill tomorrow and after that he will hit the road. president obama passing a $787 billion stimulus back then.
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that will be the purpose of president biden and his team. there is a recognition that the bill is very, very popular. $1,400 checks. treasury department and irs are working together to get the checks out as fast as possible. i am told the timeline that the checks should get out the door, particularly to individuals that have their bank account information on file with the treasury department and the irs over the course of the next couple of weeks. president biden's name will not be on them.
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president biden, according to his press secretary, it wasn't a priority for him. while he wanted his name on a big fat stimulus check, president biden wants to get them out the door. >> i want to go to katie porter of california. looks like democrats are united in support of the bill. do you know of any, of a single republican in the house that will support it? >> at this time, i do not know of any. but i certainly hope that they will. i think the right way to think about that is that we historically had bipartisan agreement about providing disaster relief. that has been one of the most bipartisan aspects. covid-19. the pandemic has been a disaster. the america rescue plan is
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disaster relief. i hope we will see republicans stepping up to support it. >> it is the biggest stimulus package related to covid that we had so far. some argue the package is too big for the time. you know the former treasure secretary, larry summers wrote the bill could set off inflationary pressures of the kind we have not seen in a generation with consequences for the value of the dollar. it is five to six times it needs to be to replace lost income from covid. do you have any concern the bill could be damage to america's future, even if it feels good right now? >> listen he is opposing something that every democratic member of congress has supported. second here is the cost of
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inaction. we have people of color and women of color who exited the workforce and are unable to return. our state and our local governments need help balancing their budgets. there is a real danger here of going to small out of not doing enough. when you look at what we have done here in the united states. given how severe our covid-19 outbreak has been. >> let me ask to this point of the timing. when the first upon stimulus checks went out in 2000, unemployment was 14.7% now it is 6.2%. the savings rate has surged. yet these are the biggest checks of any stimulus thus far. so, just so we understand, why now do they need to be the biggest when unemployment has plunged?
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>> some of the remaining un. the is instructal and it will be difficult to meet. people who can work remotely and get a laptop. what is remaining is people that are going to have a difficult time returning to their jobs because of the type of work they are in or because of their life circumstances. by the way, while it may be true about the unemployment figure, there are other parts of the economy in even worse shape. our city-states, cities, counties stretched their budgets to the breaking point, and they desperately need the funding or they are going to face making massive layoffs that could double or triple their unemployment rates quickly. you happen to be a single
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mother. you were outspoken about how the bill penalizes single parents because those that make as much as married parents may not qualify for the same child tax credits. tell me how it could happen. why this is not fair across the board? >> well, our country had a long-standing tradition of kind of lining up different types of families. single people. people who file head of household, very often single parents and married couples and giving them different types of tax relief. when we focus on the child tax credit it should be on the child, not on the parent's marital status. we want every child in the country to have adequate nutritious food and to have safe housing and to have been able to get quality child care. so, to do that we need to give the same child tax benefit regardless of the parent's marriage status.
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until i raised the issue a lot of people had not thought about. >> i don't think they had and i think it is important you are pointing it out. it has a simple solution. focus on the child opposed to the parent's marital status. thank you very much. i appreciate the time. >> thank you. >> i want to go now to michael smerconish. in that you take calls from people. you talk to voters. obviously this bill is extremely popular, right. it has the biggest checks of all of the bills so far. what does it mean? the g.o.p. is united in coming out -- >> erin, i think what they are making right now is -- the book spoke of voters willing to vote against their own economic
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interest in cases where there were cultural issues at play. the republican party in the last -- isn't this going to jeopardize the standing as we approach the election. i think the calculus is to say they don't run that risk. his take was this. smart people are out there. i think they need to learn what i started learning. more people will remember seuss than the covid plan. >> it is a great example of what i was making reference to. as to the economic argument, you heard because you rolled some of the sound there in your lead in. the argument you make is so much of this, in fact "the wall
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street journal" editorial board says that $825 billion of the stimulus is not related to covid at all. that is a part of what they are saying. it is a progressive grab bag. >> right. there are real questions. time will tell. as to sending out the biggest checks at this point in the crisis, that is not what you would expect. that is what is happening. let me ask you about one other thing. this is pertaining to the former president who passed two of these, right. election records show he has requested a mail-in ballot for a local election. trump, we all know how he feels about mail-in ballots. he said it would result in the greatest fraud and him really losing but he wouldn't lose and all of that business. he voted by mail before. here he is again, the irony. >> the interesting part about this, i think the palm beach rules specify that he is too late to return it by mail so he
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will have to entrust a third party with the delivery. erin, you know that there is a name that republicans use for that. ballot harvesting. he is on the side of ballot harvesting with regard to his own ballot being returned in palm beach. >> site of mail-in ballots and ballot harvesting. the site of all of those things that he was not before. thanks so much michael. >> thanks, erin. >> next, an influx of migrants at the southern border. more than 100,000 migrants arrested. what is biden's plan? and the judge in the george floyd case ruling the jury could not be told want officer could be fired for putting his knee on george floyd's neck for about nine minutes. princess diana and meghan and eerie similarities in their stories.
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>> the white house saying the situation at the u.s./mexico border is not a crisis yet but does come as a record number of migrant children are in custody at the southern border and those arrested in the recent weeks is at a five-year high. whatever you want to call it, it is a dramatic surge. >> reporter: in a tent city near the u.s./mexico border this woman waits with her two
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children. she left honduras to seek asylum in the united states. she jumped the border two times illegally because of desperation to find work and both times sent back to mexico. now she is as she will wait for a legal way to cross. the anticipation speaks to the hope these migrants have that the biden administration will be more receptive she said they left the endless crisis of violence in honduras to seek asylum and hopes president biden will open the door to the border because we need a better future for our children. the surge of migrants on the border is reaching emergency level. u.s. authorities arrested and encountered more than 100,000 in the four weeks before march 3rd,
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the highest levels for the same time period in at least five years. and new data reviewed by cnn shows that there are more than 3,400 unaccompanied children. federal immigration officials are scrambling to make room. opened just over a month ago. republicans and democrats say the biden administration is not moving fast enough to keep the migration crisis under control. >> they are completely unprepared and going to be more unprepared for what will be happening in the coming months. >> reporter: the majority of migrants are turned away at the border and refuse to describe the situation as a crisis. >> i don't think we need to put
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new labels on what we conveyed is challenging and is a top priority for the president. we met jose at a church shelter. he left honduras with his son three months ago. >> did you see a lot of children traveling by themselves? he saw many children along the way begging or cleaning windows for money and says that not all of them will be lucky enough to make it. >> it is amaze to see what is happening right now, and let's just start with this disturbing reality. a record number of unaccompanied migrant children arrested at the border. they are there. what do you do with them or send
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them. what is the biden administration going to do about this? >> these are serious pressing questions. the biden administration, they are arguing that they are trying to implement a more humanitarian immigration policy compared to the trump administration. you had 25,000 migrants sitting in border towns, waiting for permission to enter the u.s. and title 42. to block a lot of people from entering the u.s. to seek asylum the administration says that it needs time to work through the problems and implement what they describe as a more humanitarian approach.
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many critics say that the administration is not acting fast enough. >> you talk about a record number of children. 100,000 people turned away. what is the most pressing issue they face right now? >> i think that you hit it off of the top. the unaccompanied minors who spent the last month traveling towards the u.s. border. many children by themselves making the journey to the southern border. that is a pressing concern. this kind of situation, you can see how it can escalate into a crisis. it is a very delicate situation. that does not appear to be
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happening as fast as it should. >> thank you very much ed, appreciate it. next, the trial of the officer charged in george floyd's death begins, floyd's brother says that it should be a open and shut case. >> the video is enough. there is nothing else to talk about. >> floyd's brother joins me next, and the cdc still advising people that have been fully vaccinated to not travel. but could that change?
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>> new tonight, the first three jurors have been selected in former minneapolis police officer derek chauvin's trial for the death of george floyd. chauvin sitting there on the right. this, as the judge ruled the jury cannot be told chauvin was fired over his actions. >> juror number two is a chemist, the first person chosen to serve on the jury of former minneapolis police officer derek chauvin who stands accused of killing george floyd. finding impartial jurors is a major challenge that could take weeks. the video of chauvin kneeling on floyd's neck was seen all over the world. in minneapolis some of the protests turned violent. the destruction left behind
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still visible today. floyd's family argues the treatment of is all you need to see. chauvin showed you he was the judge, jury and executioner all at once. >> that is not how the defense sees it. chauvin pleaded in the. there are hundreds of potential witnesses that could be called. >> roughly 400. >> reporter: because of the publicity nobody expects to find jurors who have not heard of the case but it does expect jurors to base their decision on the evidence they see in court and not what they learned elsewhere. >> the judge ruled that detail was prsk. >> cameras are being allowed in incredible court to film the
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trial. she is in court to show them -- >> he took a great man, a great father, a great brother, a great uncle. he loved his family and daughter. we will never get that back. i want you to continue to pray for our family because we need it. we need it. >> what the floyd family does not want is to see violence erupt in the city in george floyd's name. many here are already worried about the outcome of the trial. >> my concern is that it will always be.
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a cop being found in the. >> we heard from another demonstrator who said if it does happen, there could be hell to pay. it looks like the green zone in baghdad. they have to open the gate. you have huge trucks, armored vehicles and these really big concrete barricades. they have it set up because they are concerned about security. they are trying to make sure that the trial goes on without a hitch. the judge has been serious and honest making sure the jurors understand what they are up against and how long it might
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last. they have three jurors in one day. if they go through, they need 12 jurors and two alternates. today, 12 jurors and two alternates. >> thank you very much, sarah. i want to go to george floyd's brother and the floyd family attorney. let me start with you bep, the judge says that the jury cannot be told that chauvin was fired over his actions in george floyd's death. they can only know the dates of the employment and not know he was fired. the judge says that telling the jury that would cause them to view this with prejudice. is the judge right?
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i know it is important for the fact finders to decide the contact. i think they give more preference to police officer. i think that is going to be the issue here. derek chauvin is on trial for killing george floyd. but if they do what they always do, they are going to try to put george floyd on trial and assassinate his character to try to distract from the fact that chauvin kept his knee on his neck for 8:46 and tortured him to death. >> you know, i saw you nodding a moment ago.
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it is ten months since you lost your brother. when you hear ben say this what he worries will be on trial is george floyd's character. how do you feel on day one? >> they are going to try to assassinate his character. when you have facts, facts bring out the truth. every day, anybody that has eyes, and a blind man that can hear, anything he heard in the video, they know it was wrong. somebody who was sworn to protect us, he killed my brother. he tortured him to death. he had a smirk on his face. and he had his knee on his neck.
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i had no idea that a human being could do something that was that hurtful. i am talking about the graphic content everybody had to view across america. we have to get a conviction. if you can get away with that in america, then you can get away with anything. because we need justice. because the things that my family are going through, nobody else will go through in life. we are torn and broken down right now. >> you admit history is not on your side in convicting a police officer for the death of a black man. why you need a fair jury that is also diverse. you have more to pick. you have three so far chosen. we appear to have two white men
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and a woman of color in her 30s. how do you feel about that? >> well, obviously we want a diverse jury and somebody that can respect the life, background and culture of george floyd. oftentimes they can't appreciate the culture of minorities. if the roles were reversed and george floyd would have done to derek chauvin what he did to george, nobody would say that it is a tough case.
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they are not being honest with themselves. we have to say that black lives matter and george floyd's life matters. when our reporter spoke to a man on the ground there, let me play it for you. >> i think history will repeat itself. you know, it is not just him. there have been riots and many other situations, not just george floyd. and it comes from a place of the being tired and fed up with the same outcome over and over again.
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>> while you are broken, you want peace. i know you are worried about how things might go in this trial. if they don't go your way, are you concerned about the hurt and the anger that so many people feel could lead to more unrest? >> i have confidence. right now, i have faith we will get justice and get a conviction. footage of that video, it tells you everything. it is nothing that you can see that the jurors won't see. people who are watching the video, if you do not think he is guilty by what he did, you have a problem. people out there, they seen it. you got to make the right decision. you have to put guilty.
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he killed that man. him and those other three officers, they helped. nobody tried to render aid. my brother was in the morgue and chauvin was at home that night. i want the same respect that you give everybody else. shouldn't be about white and black america. it should be one. we are one. we need to stick together. when this court appearance comes up. when everything is in there to make their difficult decision. the video has all of the proof. there is nothing you can't see in the video. >> thank you very much for being with me. ben, thank you very much. >> thank you. >> and next, west virginia has one of the highest percentages
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of people vaccinated. success story. how are they doing it? i will talk to one man who is making it happen and queen elizabeth is saddened by the troubling revelations from harry and meghan's interview what does she plan to do about it? combination of advil plus acetaminophen. advil targets pain. acetaminophen blocks it. advil dual action. fast pain relief that lasts 8 hours.
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might update travel guidelines for those fully vaccinated once the science is clear. nearly 1 in 10 in america are fully vaccinated. director of pharmacy operations, a local family-owned chain who has been traveling around to add minister vaccines. it is wonderful to be able to highlight a story of success and something going right in this. the governor of west virginia, you know, opted out of a federal program that uses big pharmacies to vaccinate those in nursing homes. said that i don't want the federal help and chose to have pharmacies like yours go out and vaccinate the populations instead. tell me why it has worked. >> i will tell you. number one, thank you for having me on. i am proud west virginia led the
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world out of the gate for the covid vaccinations. when you look at the state of west virginia, we have a very older population for a state. >> yeah. >> he decided up front we needed to take care of the older population and our frontline workers and our first responders. independent pharmacies, we have been boots on the ground since day one. by the end of the day it is to get shots in arms. >> you point out, your state is older than many states in terms of population. a lot of rural communities. what is a typical day like for
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you? >> i don't have a typical day myself. one day i might be out in rural west virginia. it is back and forth from the small to the big clinics. this morning i did a small clinic. took care of people at nursing homes and resident care facilities. tomorrow, one of the counties. next day will be a bigger clinic as well. tomorrow after i get done i have 23 people i am going to see at their homes, people that are home bound and can't get out. the here is amount of, you know, i would like to say joy. people are just relieved and elated to get the shots. when you go out to someone that can't get to a store or regular clinic, the amount of appreciation they give is unbelievable.
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>> to see you are seeing so many people in a day. let me ask you, because politics played a role in this. your state was a trump state. in a new poll about the vaccine, 83% of democrats say they will get the vaccine or likely will. your state is doing so well. are you not seeing any of the politics when it comes to driving up to someone saying here is the shot? >> honestly, i think that a lot of people -- and it is everywhere across the country. people are just tired of the lockdown and want to get back to normalcy in their life. when you get the immunizations they work. in west virginia, people like me, pharmacists have been one of the most trusted professions. they trust our opinion when we
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talk about things. when you talk to somebody that knows your medications and family. when i worked in the store, i knew where people went on vacation with their kids. they take your advice and they take it to heart. you always have people that are not going to get the shot. the people that get it and those on the fence are those that we need to take care of and convince the other ones where we can. >> i really appreciate your time. i know that everyone watching does too. one person with determination every day going and doing it and making such a difference. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. >> next, two interviews with two women that married into the royal family 26 years apart but there are striking similarities. biden's german shepard going from the white house to the
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tonight the british royal family breaking its silencem. the queen saying the whole family is saddened to hear how challenging the last few years have been for harry and megan. while some recollections may vary, they will be addressed by the family privately. harry and meghan and archie will always be much loved family members. it took 36 hours to respond to the accusations from harry and
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meghan, will we hear more from the royal family? >> reporter: you heard it just there from the queen. these matters will be dealt with privately. she wants this to come off the tv screens. they want to deal direct behind the scenes away from the public at this point. they are not making a comment on this. it does feel for now, there is a truce here. perhaps the palace has learned from past experience, particularly with princess diana in the 1990s and there are remarkable parallels between dianna's narrative then and meghan's narrative now. when they joined the ranks of monarchy through their world famous marriages, one was a wide-eyed young british girl of 20 born with a pedigree who barely had worldly experience. the other an american biracial
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woman in her 30s, divorced and had her fair share in the limelight. the journey that led dianna and meghan to give the two most shocking interviews about the royal family are quite different. dianna already separated from her husband prince charles, meghan with her husband prince harry by her side. the sitdowns filmed 26 years apart are huntingly similar describing how their lives changed after becoming part of the firm. both admitting naivety of the lives they have chosen. >> at the age of 19 you always think you're prepared for everything and have the knowledge what is coming ahead. >> i didn't fully understand what the job was. >> reporter: both sharing the weight of being the constant focus of tabloids. >> i seem to be on the front of a newspaper every single day, which is an isolating experience
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where the media puts you is the big of the drop. >> i'm everywhere but i am nowhere. and from that standpoint, i continue to say to people i know there is an obsession how things look but has anyone talked about how it feels because right now i could not feel lonelier. >> reporter: the sense of loneliness and isolation leading to a deterioration of their mental health. diana opening up about bulimia and self-harm and meghan to thoughts of suicide. an overall feeling for both, shame. >> i was ashamed i couldn't cope with the pressures. >> i'm ashamed. i am supposed to be stronger than that. >> reporter: at their darkest moments detailing a lack of support from the firm. >> when nobody is listening to you or feel nobody is listening to you, all sorts of things happen. >> i said i needed to go somewhere to get help. i never felt this way before. i need to go somewhere, and i was told that i couldn't, that it wouldn't be good for the
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institution. >> reporter: both interviews noting a curiously specific similarity that the women's tours of australia led to a rise of jealousy within the royal family and the accusations from both women that the institution was not only not helping but actively working behind the scenes to hurt them. >> do you really believe a campaign was being waged against you? >> yes, i do. absolutely. yeah. >> why? >> i was segregated wife, prince of whales, i was a problem. what do we do with her? >> the narrative of making kate cry was the beginning of a real ch character assassination and knew it wasn't true. i thought if they don't kill things like that, what will we do? >> reporter: yet, both women ending on a note of optimism despite the turmoil. >> i sit here with hope because there is a future ahead, a future for my husband, a future for myself and the monarchy.
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>> we've actually not just survived but are thriving, you know. this, i mean, miracles. >> reporter: harry talked about his fears of history repeating itself. he certainly sees parallels between the two stories. that's why he says he took his family away from the u.k. and relocated in california and he's hoping, i think the palace is hoping they can heal the rift here in a way that dianna was sadly unable to do. erin? >> all right. max, thank you very, very much. next, major has been sent to delaware after biting or they want to say a nip of a soecurit guard. he is not, though, the first presidential pet to act out. "what if i could retire sooner?" and so she'll get some advice from fidelity, and fidelity will help her explore some different scenarios, like saving more every month.
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major problem, president biden's dog major back in delaware after the white house admits he was involved in what was described as an aggressive incident. sources say he nipped a member of the white house security team. major is the only dog from an animal shelter to take up residence in the white house, but he's not the first dog to run into trouble. teddy roosevelt's dog pete was a biter according to the presidential pet museum website. he chased the flirench ambassad up a tree. pete like major was sent away. milli was much loved by president george h.w. bush and first lady barbara and ambushing squirrels was her claim to fame so she had to be contained so she would just sit in the oval
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office during all the morning briefings. president ford's golden retriever liberty had an issue with the carpets. if you know what i'm insinuating here, she preferred them to the yard. but she remained with the family there until her death. harry truman reportedly said if you want a friend in washington, get a dog. by the way, he wasn't a dog fan at all. thanks for joining us. anderson starts now. good evening. in less than 24 hours house democrats and only house democrats are likely to pass the $2 trillion covid re llief bill for those americans struggling to earn a paycheck and pay for health care. the president will not only sign it but begin a sales pitch before the nation this thursday night. a poll released today suggestions americans beyond those who voted for the president may be receptive to his pitch. research found 70% favored the bill which is unlikely to draw single republica
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