tv Don Lemon Tonight CNN July 18, 2022 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
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thanks for watching everyone. i'll be back tomorrow night. don lemon tonight starts right now. he doeleman. >> how are you doing a laura, great show -- >> i always call you buy your first and last name i just don't know what's about, it but don lemon has asian. >> don't upfront me, you know i don't speak french, out there you? >> i, pretend i'm from louisiana, so i pretend. but you, know people do that a lot, it's always hageman, hey don lemon very few people just call me don, so, you know. >> now you do. all right, laura coates, i'll see you tomorrow. >> that i get it right? >> over. >> she, never mind. by. >> by. this is don lemon tonight. benny thompson is the committee chair. he tells cnn that the january six committee hasn't decided whether to subpoena mike pence or try to call donald trump to
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testify. watch this. >> i think we would benefit from that testimony. they both have, i would think, significant knowledge about what goes on. but we have a committee, and will work through the process. >> plus, next on cnn, multiple sources say at former trump national security coucil offcial will now testify publicly in thursday's primetime hearing. matthew pottinger resigned on january 6th after trump's tweet slamming his own vice president for refusing to overturn the election. >> one of my staff brought me a printed out of a tweet by the president. the tweets that something to the fact that mice presence, vice president, didn't have the courage to do what should've been done. i read that tweet. i made a decision at that moment to resign. that's where i knew that i was leaving that they, once i read that tweet. >> interesting, interesting, interesting. more on that straight ahead on this program. but this could be the week where it all comes together. the committee promising to lay
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out what then president did and didn't you during 187 minutes when he could've stopped the riot at the capitol. think about that, 187 minutes. i want you to think about how long that is. 187 minutes from the time to build trump demanded supporters marched to the capitol >> we're going to walk down pennsylvania avenue -- i love pennsylvania avenue. and we're going to the capitol, and we're going to try and give -- democrats are helpless, they never vote for anything. not even one vote. but we're going to try and give our republicans, the weak ones, because the strong ones don't need any of our help -- we're going to try and give them the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country. so let's walk down pennsylvania avenue.
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>> upright and boldness. 187 minutes. the president of the united states did absolutely nothing. nothing to stop the violence unleashed by his own supporters, smashing windows there, hunting lawmakers in the halls of congress, this wasn't antifa as they'd like you to believe. it's not, wasn't. putting up gallows, and chanting to hang his own vice president! >> hang mike pence! hang mike pence! hang mike pence! hang mike pence! hang mike pence! hang mike pence!
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>> it is a shameful, embarrassing day for the country. the former president was the only one who could've stopped them, and it took 187 minutes to finally tell them to go home. >> go home. we love you, you're very special, you've seen what happens, you see the way others are treated that are so bad and so evil. i know how you feel. but go home, and go home in peace. >> oh. we love you. you're very special. i know how you feel. i mean, imagine saying that to traitors. rioters, insurrectionists. that's when he said to that mob trying to overturn our free and fair election.
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shameful. trying to stop the peaceful transfer of power on a day when our democracy itself was in peril. and what was he doing for those 187 minutes? we know he tried to force his security team to take him to the capital. >> the president said something to the effect of, i'm the effing president, take me up to the capitol now. >> we know his staff, his allies, his own family were begging him to stop the mob. we know it was his duty to stop it. he swore an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the constitution. and what did he do? >> the president didn't do much, but gleefully watched television during this timeframe. we're gonna present a lot more than that. >> and that's not all. the committee expecting to get the secret service text messages from january 5th and
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sixth sometime tomorrow, after issuing a subpoena last week. and, oh, right, this to. steve bannon. the man who said last night, before january 6th, the night before january 6th, all is going to break loose tomorrow. >> just understand this. all is going to break loose tomorrow. >> before january 6th. not last night. my bad. he goes on trial this week for defying the committee's subpoena. so stay tuned for that. we'll have a full report. i want to get right to what is coming from the january six committee this week. they did discuss, alyssa farah griffin, former white house director of strategic operations, and john dean, who was nixon white house counsel. i'm gonna start with you, because it was more than three hours -- andra seven minutes --
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more than three hours. what president trump was doing or not doing what the capitol was under assault is gonna be hugely significant. do you think americans need to brace for what we may hear? >> well, i don't know. but i certainly know the committee has a pattern of increasing the focus of their investigation and sharing it with the american people with each hearing. so it's, in my mind, it's likely they will have a very real portrait of a man who has a deep responsibility to the country, and was in full dereliction of history. i think that's their task, and i expect they'll accomplish it. >> so, alyssa, you know the players, you worked in the white house. what are you learning tonight -- that one key person who will testify as matthew pottinger who sat on trump's security council. also, sarah matthews, she resigned from her post on january 6th. she's expected to testify. what do you think we may hear from them? >> yeah, so don, thanks for
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having me. these are two individuals, both of extraordinary tech ready, but it important players for a number of reasons. so matt process -- was the beijing bureau chief for the wall street journal before he pivoted into the match's national security. he was reminded in the clip you played -- i traveled to southeast asia with him and mike pence on a number of occasions. on the flip side, you have sarah matthews, who i worked closely with. she's a tried and true republican. worked on capitol hill for republican members of congress, worked for the trump campaign, was personally recruited by kayleigh mack into the white house. you have these people who are there to serve, and they left because they were so horrified by what they saw on january 6th, and they're gonna be able to give a tiktok of what happened in the west wing that day. the resistance of the president
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to address the violence -- i think this is gonna be remarkable testimony. >> how so? >> i think it's the tiktok of the time, but as you alluded to, 187 minutes, just allowing that to drag on, and seeing that everyone around, so many people around the former president, were telling him he needed to act, and he was refusing to. i talked to sarah matthews on january 6th as she was talking me through her resignation and her statement, and i remember just to her and her voice over what she saw. she had friends working at capitol hill. these were people who, i believe, came forward additionally after hearing cassidy hutchinson's testimony. so i think there's more people who want to come forward and tell the truth about what they saw. >> john, you know, those deleted six messages from secret services that -- we're hearing that the committee is expected to get those deleted secret service
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text messages uncanny raise six. what might these reveal, you think? >> well, it's hard to tell. i understand the secret service uses its texting for rather informal communication amongst the agents. i often talk about their loved life on the texting. the solid maybe a big disappointment as far as figuring out the activities of the president and what happened on that historic day. we'll have to find out. but i think it's important that they have preserved that, and they put it out there that they certainly have with the committee has requested. now, they have to produce. and so, we'll see on tuesday if they do that. >> there could be a -- would you believe if this happened in those text messages, if they're talking personally and candidly, correct? >> yes, they certainly could be. as we all text, we text our friends, it's more like a conversation than -- not quite as formal as a male. so, that could be very revel atari as to what's on those machines if they have preserved the record. i understand they don't constantly upload the texting as they do the emails and other things. so, it maybe whatever is made its way to the cloud, and
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they're able to extract it and bring it back down. >> right. on solace, let's go back to those 187 minutes. because during those 187 minutes, right after trump finished his rally at the ellipse, -- demanding to be taken to the capital, attacking a secret service agent, when he didn't get his way. those text could shed light on critical moments during the crisis, or a critical moment during the crisis, if they're indeed -- uploaded as john just alluded to. >> well, absolutely. and it's remarkable that it's the fifth and the sixth that are the dates that these text messages are missing for. you don't have to be conspiracy there is to say this looks bad. so, i think it can show
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anything from, yes, that widely spread rumors that was going around that that incident took place that is now been confirmed by other secret service agents. and also, i think, exposes -- and look, someone who worked closely with secret service and has tremendous expect -- respect for that organization, but they haven't come out looking shining in this investigation. we haven't heard from tony ornato, who claims that cassidy hutchinson's was untrue, we've still not heard from undergrowth. so i'm very eager to see what's secret service produces. and if, in fact, they were essentially covering for the former president. >> john, there's another key moment -- trump's tweet at 12:24, where he slams pence for refusing to implement his illegal scheme to overturn the election. that tweet was after rioters had iud breached the capitol. and tonight, benny thompson tells our manu raju that the committee has not make a decision -- called trump to testify.
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do you think they should? >> you know, it's a tough question, because -- i can't imagine either of those principles coming in honoring the subpoena. they're gonna fight. so it just takes us down inside red that may or may not be necessary at this point. i think pence's staff have been cooperative. they've been open about when he was doing. but they knew of his thinking. obviously, he could add a lot more. trump, i have trouble believing anything the man says. i really do, don. so he's up there and arrive, i don't know that we get anything other than campaign kind of top. so i'm not sure that's worth it. >> so you're saying he has trouble with the truth? >> he has deep trouble with the truth. he doesn't know the truth. [laughs] >> thank you john, thank you melissa. i appreciate it. so average in texas.
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giving parents, kids and community members deal demanding action -- 19 little kids and two of their teachers or shot to death. >> there's an anxious menace and my heart that is only worsened by the fear my children have. i think no one person here today can deny that was a massive failure on may 24th. where these failures lie is the question. pliers, and a phone open to libertymutual.com they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need... and a blowtorch. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ age-related macular degeneration may lead to severe vision loss. and if you're taking a multivitamin alone, you may be missing a critical piece. preservision. preservision areds 2 contains the only clinically proven nutrient formula recommended by the national eye institute to help reduce the risk of moderate to advanced amd progression. "preservision is backed by 20 years of clinical studies"
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outrage in uvalde tonight. families calling out officials following a damning 77-page report. detailing on forsman's failed response to that horrific mass shooting at robb elementary school. many are now calling for uvalde school district chief pete arredondo to be fired. >> why the heck does he still have a job with y'all? are you going to fire him? >> you want to add more securities -- but the current staff is incompetent. and they're liable for the massive failure. you need to clean house. you need to start from zero. higher experienced, trained
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officers who are prepared to take on the responsibility to protect our children. >> does that call to fire a donda calls after cnn shows him pleading with the shooter to stand down. here it is. listen. >> sir, if you can hear me, please put your firearm down, sir. we don't want anyone else hurt. i know. i know. we're trying to get him out. break the window. sir, if you can hear, me please put your gun down. we don't want anyone else hurt. >> for more on all of this, i want to bring in texas state senator, senator, thanks for joining us. >> thank, you don't. >> there's a lot of anger out there, i know, at today's school board meeting. families are calling on air down to be fired. he still on administrative leave as uvalde school district
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police chief there. does he need to go? >> i think it is pretty obvious, don. i work with ist, but it certainly are down to here just failed. he failed these kids. so did all of the other officers that were there. i'm not suggesting that all of the need to go, that certainly people as supervisory all level need to go. -- they sat there and did nothing. there is a texas state ranger who is walking around for 20 minutes. he's on the phone, don, with someone. i want to know who he is talking to, which supervisor in the chain of command in the texas rangers is telling him to do absolutely nothing. what we saw on this video is nothing short of disgusting and disturbing. i cannot bear to think that when he is talking to this guy about children are dying and that we are doing nothing. >> the report is detailed. it makes it very clear that the failures were systemic and the body cam shows how chaotic the police response was and the non response was. let's play it a little. here it is.
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>> jeep is making contact with him, right? >> now. no one is making contact. >> when we're doing here? >> do we have anyone who's here on the side? any kids or anyone head? >> we don't know anything about that. >> nearly 400 officers, senator, brown that scene. who else needs to be held responsible? >> well, don, you have arredondo. you have a police chief. you have a sheriff. you have a department of public safety that has been spreading lies and false narratives for the last 60 days in just this week, they finally decided they are going to do an internal investigation as to what they did wrong. they sat there. they did nothing. 91 of border operation lone star. federal officers that also did nothing. yes, it is great.
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they finally went in. at the end of the day, they sat there, as well, doing nothing. all of the chaos with no coordination. sitting there for 60 days, we didn't need a report to tell us it was systemic failure. >> senator, can you respond? what is response? cnn has reached out to ask whether there could be criminal charges against anyone in the enforcement. what do you think the consequences should be? >> certainly, these families deserve to have their civil grievances be heard at court. those will be difficult. certainly, i think there might be some kind of unity and that level, although i'm sure they have civil lawyers practicing for them in that area. we've been hearing about child endangerment charges, endangering a child, that is certainly possible. i think when you go down that road, as a prosecutor, vortexes parties, you have to be regime to prosecute all of those officers. >> also want to get your response to this. you are the one who told cnn. you said governor abbott hasn't been to uvalde since the friday after the shooting.
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we got this response from the governor's office. it's, as governor abbott has been to the community multiple times since that tragic day. joining his fellow texas to grieve and worship at events into june. his government and office remain in contact with the mayor mclaughlin and you've all the leaders, speaking on an almost daily basis to ensure the uvalde community is receiving the support of all available resources to heal. now, we asked the governor's office to provide us with the information but have not gotten a response. last night, evil dinner said he hadn't spoken to the governor for weeks. what do you say to governor abbott's response? >> this governor has been mishit missing in action when it comes to uvalde. the governor, the mayor, i have sent a letter to him to take the district attorney away for disbursement of trauma relief. the county was able to move that to san antonio. listen, this governor hasn't
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been around. the last time he was here was this morning. that's a friday. it was sunday when the president made announcement, may 29th, five days afterwards. that is how long it has been that he hasn't been to uvalde. he didn't go to anything else because he doesn't care about those people. i know that sounds very, very harsh. at the end of the day, this community has been asking this governor for help on the radios for the past seven years. we had errors, we had communication errors. we had human failures. all of this goes back to tremendous story and history of negligence in texas by this governor. >> senator gutierrez, appreciate you joining us. thank you. >> thank you, john. >> we know what was done. but how does law enforcement get back? we'll speak with former top fbi supervisors right after this.
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and once in a lifetime moments. two tickets to nascar! yes! find rewards like these and so many more in the xfinity app. >> breakdowns in communication, lack of effective command -- those are just part of the findings from a scathing report by the texas house blasting the police response to the massacre in uvalde, texas. so, what's they have done differently there? what you've been done? and how can everyone make sure that nothing like this never happens again? john mina, cnn law enforcement analyst, and former -- also, retired police captain ron johnson. thank you both for joining me.
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run, i'm gonna start with you. we saw the video of chief arredondo trying to talk to the shooter, calling him share -- sir. does this fly in the face of how police are expected to handle any active shooter? >> well, an active shooter, initially, you have to respond as quickly as you can. those first officers on the scene, should rally up in the different partners are required to this and they go towards the danger. towards the incident in the room. so they should've responded towards the roman towards what's going on. there and i was surprised that the chief negotiating with the suspect, when he should've been a trade negotiator. but really, at that point, negotiations weren't what should've been taking place. it should've been action towards the danger in the room. >> breakdowns in communication
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>> peter, i saw you shaking your head in agreement with what captain johnson was saying. you are with the bomb squad during your time in the fbi. tell me about a team leader supposed to do during a situation like this. why didn't anyone else step up? >> that's a good question, don. his role was not exactly what he was doing. if you look at the videotape, he had his weapon drawn. he's on the phone, trying to talk at the same time. there's actually one point where he's the individual trying to fumble with the keys to get into one of those classrooms until he gives them to another officer. that is not the responsive or -- responsibility of the unseen commander. jansen commanded's job is to direct the traffic in and out and to give commands an artist based on the information that they're receiving, or here she is receiving, from the individuals that are basically on the acts. he failed to do that. >> so, the captain also said that he was surprised to hear the chief actually doing the
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negotiating. can other officers -- can they force the issue here, people in the higher chain of command, aren't really commanding? >> they should. but we don't know what kind of department that is. officers should've stepped up and said, boss, chief, i've got this. you should be outside this facility. you need to direct traffic from outside. we've got it inside. >> so it's a very simple question, but everyone's like, everyone i speak to wants to know, what happened there? what happened, they're peter? what happened? >> you know, i'm a subject matter expert. that's when i'm here for, for law enforcement, so as captain johnson. any blame in that scene in that video knows what's going wrong. you don't need me to say what went wrong. but what i can call back to is its training, its training, its training. >> you rely on your training.
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you made that very clear. you are lying you training. but is it that people in law enforcement, maybe some members, don't think that will ever happen in their community? maybe they don't take it as seriously as they can? i don't know. and it seems like they weren't trained. they hadn't been trained. >> they had been trained. how much dedication that they put into that training? how much did they pay attention? how many resources did they put into it? but to your point, sir, absolutely. -- it's not the bad guy with the gun, it's complacency. so to your point, that's not what's gonna happen here, or close community, this will never happen here, so let's not put the resources we need to into making sure we're prepared when it happens. >> but listen, i can, we weren't there, but if you look at the reports, it appears that, obviously, there was a huge break down not only in communication, but in response. ron, the report also says the
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school had recurring problems with doors and locks, including the door to this classroom. i mean, or issues like that not taken seriously enough? >> i think not, and i think that's part of the chief and the police department there, it's their responsibility to make sure that the policy is being followed, but the teachers and everybody in the school understand the procedures that need to be taken, and it is about training. we have to make sure we train, we train together, but it's also about leadership. we saw 300 officers there. so leadership, somebody asked to step up and be the leader, and lead in that moment, i think there was an opportunity, and when we see those first officers on the scene -- leading in training go together, they separate, but they have to go together. and we see when they didn't come together what is happening. >> i mean, there are 400 officers there on the scene and, you know, you said when the first officers -- but there are a lot of officers. compare that, peter, eovaldi tragedy to another shooting where many people were that. this was an indiana this week. -- stop the gunman earlier in his rampage. police found more than 100 rounds on the gunman. so it could've been a lot
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worse. give us your reaction to that, what happened over the weekend. >> what happened over the weekend was textbook, and away. you know, you had an incident, it was resolved fairly quickly based on an innocent bystander. and again, we've talked about it before, don, another segments. it's about the public stepping up, and the public reacting to incidents. and the police handled it well and addition to this individual. now, thankfully, we didn't have to see what would've happened if there wasn't that innocent -- you know, the bystander that actually took direct action. we didn't get a chance to see the law enforcement reaction. thankfully, we didn't. thankfully, not more people died because of this incident. but, again, the public needs to step up. not talking about with firearms, but speaking up. reporting the things that seem suspicious. if you see something, say something.
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this individual, -- should have been called out long ago about his extraordinary purchasing of weapons and ammunition. that's the part that was wrong. >> correct me if i'm wrong -- police departments around the country, captain ron johnson, they are probably looking at what happened in uvalde and saying, we're gonna make sure this never happens to us. and everyone, i'm sure, is being trained or retrained, and taking their training more seriously than they had before. >> and they are. there's a lot of training going on in the country, and i'd like to tell everybody in america that we have confidence that our brave men and women in law enforcement throughout this country, we've heard from law enforcement officers throughout the country that have said that something else should've been done, and this doesn't go in with the training we've had, and we've said we should go to that danger immediately. so we're hearing from law enforcement all around saying -- giving answers to make us feel good, but being honest and saying there were some failures here, and it has to be dealt
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with. >> ron, peter, thank you so much. appreciate it. photos telling cnn the state of the country is bad. the economy is bad, president biden, well, most on approve of the job he's doing. governor john kasich is here, he's gonna talk about that and why he thinks the january six hearing is breaking through for republicans. he's next. only in theaters.
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comcast business. powering possibilities. >> president biden is back in the u.s. after his middle east where. the president is facing widespread frustration over's job performance in the state of his country. here it is, folks. cnn's poll find only 38% of american approve of the job biden is doing as president, and eight in ten americans say things are going badly. dig into those numbers. cnn senior commentator john kasich is here. hello, john. >> hello, don. >> the numbers are not good, especially on top issues for voters. -- handling of the economy, and that is gonna be a major issue in both the midterms and 2024. >> yeah.
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the poll about how people think he's doing with the economy is worse than his overall approval. it's in the low 30s. and on, it's always a pocketbook. that's why almost always matters. and in this case, you know, when people are paying for gasoline at the pump, they go to the store in the prices are up, and i think it's particularly hurting people who don't have a lot. these blue-collar folks are having a hard time making ends meet, and they're very unhappy with. one recommendation i would've picked so biden is he needs to take a job there from bill clinton and tell us that he feels our pain. and sometimes he says -- things are going well, they're on the right track, well they're not on the right track, and he needs to get down with everybody else and sit there and say, look, i get it, and we're gonna work hard. we're gonna bring these prices down and all that. we don't hear that from him. and that's when he really needs
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to do. people kind of like him personally, but he's not showing the kind, of compassion about this problem with the economy that he should be. >> when you have -- percent of americans thinking things are going badly, i think that requires a leadership change, as you said. look, i don't know if your answers are right, but how can the country get back on track, do you think? >> well, first of all, let's take energy. he's over there in the middle east, asking the -- these countries to try to produce more oil. well, he ought to be meeting with executives here in trying to open some pipelines, really some regulations, to some drilling. you can't go over there telling them to produce more oil when we've got oil in this country that were not producing. in terms of inflation -- >> while pipelines, more pipelines i'm gonna stop it. >> it's processing -- , it's processing, its pipelines, and it's committing that we're not gonna have such regulatory stranglehold that
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companies are not gonna invest, right? right now, they're sitting on the sidelines. they're like, we don't know what's gonna happen. don, i'm just telling you what i'm hearing out here. and if we have -- they released some oil from that reserve, but markets live on hope. markets respond on hope. and to say that, you know, we're not gonna keep spending all this money, we're gonna try to look for ways to save money, those are the kind of things -- and by the way, i'm gonna go to a story, and we'll meet with some people, and i'm gonna look at these prices, and tell them, i get it, and we're working on. it i think we need more of that. he's gonna salvage himself, but they're gonna get clobbered in the house. sign it's a little different. because senate candidates, a couple of these republican
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candidates for the united states candidates are just not good candidates. they could lose, the democrats could hang on, but in the house. it's gonna be republicans. >> look, when you think the fixes are, i'll grant you back. have a more, you said a more velcro or cast gas flow, open the pipelines. studies show that does not lower the price of oil. laura the price of gas, i should say. gasoline. that's not going to lower the price of gasoline. it's not an energy shores dutch. it's an energy crisis. prices are. hi >> don. don. look, the fact of the matter is they've shut down pipelines. they've harassed processors, they've overregulated. they're not saying we're going to increase domestic supply. >> domestic supplies -- >> john, that's autumn sun. >> don. don. if they don't have the supply, the prices go up. i'm sorry. that is just the fact. it's like saying -- >> people aren't waiting a gas. >> people aren't waiting forever. >> people -- that is the whole point of. it i agree with everything else you said.
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but we don't have an energy shortage. we have a gas shortage. the prices are high. by increasing -- >> don. gasoline comes from oil. it is refined. >> john -- >> it is not going to trap the price of gasoline. >> let me -- you know why he is over there? you know what he was doing over there in saudi arabia? >> he wants them to drop the price of. well >> no. he wants them to produce more. >> okay. >> he's saying produce more. we have a supply problem, don. that is what we have. we can talk about this all day long. >> let's talk about january six. it's not an energy shortage. what he's saying is not. right okay? >> we just disagree on that. >> what you're saying is not right. we're not an energy shortage. >> don, the saudi arabia -- >> pipelines. lower -- >> don. don. >> this is. not >> don. don. let me tell you. energy companies today are on the sidelines. they are not making the investments and production
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right now. he was in saudi arabia, asking them to increase the amount of supply in the country. that is what he was doing. >> it doesn't have to do with the price of gas today. let me ask you about gender. six the committee is going to be wrapping up here in. scheduled on thursday. >> yes. >> what do you think is going to come out of this? >> when i said a week ago, the trump supporters, many of them, have become mushy. they're not defending him anymore. i think the fact of the matter is, he is like a scrambling man. the almond brothers saying that -- that's why he's talking about announcing. he's talking about announcing for president to try and change a subject because, listen, the trump ship is beginning to head down. it is beginning to go down. i felt it for a while. it's going to continue to go that way. he may be making an announcement that is going to free call the republicans out because it will motivate democrat turnout, which would help the democrats in the senate races across the country. republicans are holding their
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breath that he won't do. and he probably will because everything has to be around donald trump in the, and as you and i have been talking about for four years, right? >> i love our chance. thank you, john. see. later >> all right, don. >> sharks in the water. beaches closed. authorities putting out warnings. what is with the update with sharks? we go to beaches. up to 8 weeks of relief with cytopoint. that's a lot more fun time, right max? yup. it's life-changing time.
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i know there's conflicting information about dupuytren's contracture. i thought i couldn't get treatment yet? well, people may think that their contracture has to be severe to be treated, but it doesn't. if you can't lay your hand flat on the table, talk to a hand specialist. but what if i don't want surgery? well, then you should find a hand specialist certified to offer nonsurgical treatments. what's the next step? visit findahandspecialist.com today to get started.
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an increase in shark sightings on beaches on long island, hunting new york's governor -- including new beach patrols and more lifeguards, as well as using drones and helicopters. pushing the closing up to long island beaches yesterday in one on cape cod and massachusetts. we send it to have been much more to what is making the sharks come closer to shore? >> don, let's start with the most important point. this highly unlikely, you get bitten by a shark or killed by a shark. that was true last summer.
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it's true the summer. there has been an increase in the shark encounters in beaches like this one, here in long island, new york. that has officials nervous. they're adding resources, lifeguards, darting germs, adding patrols to try and spot sharks that they say are increasingly coming closer and closer to shore. i spoke to the mayor of and stat here at the speech that i'm standing on and asked him what he thinks is going on. >> the waters are definitely warmer. as a result, you are now seeing bait fish coming into the area along the coast. that hasn't been normal for decades. >> i want to explain to you what it means when they see the shots are coming in close. behind me, that red ball bobbing back there, that is the line about as far as you can swim from the speech, it's 75 years from the shoreline. sharks have been spotted on beaches like this one much closer in. as cars as 25 yards and even closer. that has officials worry that these sharks are coming in close. humans aren't on the menu, lifeguards say. the fish that those shots like the eat, they are on the menu
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and they are coming in closer, bringing the sharks along with them. so far, officials say it hasn't had a huge impact on tourism. as opposed to one mother here at the beach who said she still coming down here. she is excited to come to the beach. she trusts the lifeguards, but she'd rather not seeing shark. >> we don't want to see sharks in the water. we don't mind seeing them at the aquarium. that's. at my boys love sharks, so they don't to see them. >> officials say, like guards say, it is safe to come to the beach, if you sleep vigilant and listen to the lifeguards, they tell you to get out of the water. don? >> evan. thank you so much. so, they want a secret services text messages and they are getting them. jenner six committee zeroing in on the text of the secret service ones that they reportedly erased. love and liberty mutual customizing your car insurance,
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a former truck national security council official it will now testify publicly thursday alongside sarah matthews, a former trump white house aide. the hearing focusing on what donald trump was doing for 187 minutes when he could have stopped the attack on the capital. we want to bring in cnn's chief legal analyst, and the senior legal analyst, gentlemen, good evening. thank you. jeff, this is a big week for the january 6th investigation primetime hearing, secret service text messages coming, the select committee is promising new information. what do they need to accomplish here? >> they've been going in
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