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tv   Don Lemon Tonight  CNN  September 12, 2022 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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royal salutes and gunfire. one minute from the city's iconic castle. insides angels, members of the royal family and household as well as scottish politicians are representative of the military and scottish civil society they pay tribute and remember the queen's love of scotland. so we gather to bid scotland farewell to our late monarch. whose life of service to the nation and the world, we celebrate. and whose love for scotland was legendary. >> the late monex casket, draped with the royal standard of scotland. and the nations crowd. that she received here in 1953.
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austin awful of scottish symbolism. and her son, taking his first steps, scotland's going. just shortly after, charles the third meeting scotland's first minister, nicholas sturgeon. the leader of arguably the most rebellious of his nation's. sturgeon wants to eventually secure another referendum on scottish independence. challenging the unity of the kingdom. but in her address to the king, at the scottish parliament. she pledged her loyalty. >> your majesty we stand ready to support you, as you continue your own life of service. and as you build on the extraordinary legacy of your beloved mother. our queen. queen elizabeth ii, queen of the scots. >> the encounter with the scottish leader came after an event in westminster where the king and queen consort received a letter of condolence from both houses of parliament. there, charles a third reiterated his loyalty to britain's democratic values.
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>> her late majesty pleasure stuff to serve her country and her people. and to maintain a precious principle. of constitutional government, which ally at the hearts of our nation. this vow, she kept. with an surpassed devotion. she set an example of selfless duty. which, with god's help, and your councils. i am resolved, faithfully, to follow. >> monday was scotland state to express their condolences. on tuesday, the king heads to northern ireland and he visits whales on friday. the unifying bid before the final farewell to the late queen. and the state funeral on monday. max foster, cnn, buckingham palace, london. >> max, thank you very much for that.
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cnn's bianca nobilo and royal historian, kate williams are here with me outside of buckingham palace. hello to both of, you thank you so much for joining us. listen. a lot of people, bianca, are coming. a lot of people. by the technical term. to pay their respects to the queen. this is a huge security undertaking. what are you hearing? >> our gargantuan one. earlier today spoke to a counterterrorism chief for the metropolitan police. he was saying that the scale of this is like nothing that we've seen before. that is because, not only are we expecting over 1 million people to visit for this funeral. and the paramount importance of actually protecting the security of the choreography of the day itself. and making sure that goes to plan. but there are heads of state, and royals, and dignitaries. traveling from all over the world to be here. in one little area of london. that is such a precarious undertaking for them. he said their biggest concern is the crowds that the people are going to be here. because obviously, the security
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sort of firepower is going to be concentrated in the areas around where the events are actually taking place. and where the heads of state, like president joe biden, and royals from georgia or spain and the nolan's will be. so, that is the main concern. so far, it's been going to plan. there are about 10,000 police officers every day in london, at the moment. which is far greater than any other typical event that you would see. >> we could see that she's laying out rest there. laying instate hair. or lying in state, i should say. like at risk there. what are you hearing about in terms of preparations for that and westminster? . yes, these preparations for the queen lying in state, as we are core saying they're going to be hard when. when the king, the queen's father was lying at fated westminster hall. the queues stretched back six miles. and i think they're going to be much much bigger. because i do think the estimate that 1 million people are going to come and see the queen is perhaps, conservative. we think about the millions
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that we've seen, don. coming into gruene park. there's been so many people just come to the palace, every day. and that it has a working population of about 11 million people. on a working day. so i think we are possibly going to see huge amounts. millions of millions. coming to pay their respects to the queen. it's going to be 22.5 hours. the queens could go right back into east london. i think so many people are here because they want to pay their respects. and also, because of this great historic moment. we will never see a rain like this again. we will never see a funeral, a state funeral like this ever again. >> we look at the picture's just a moment ago. i mean, today was landing. they're standing in everything has been really, just flawless. so far. so the queen, was involved in every single event she prepared for this. she signed off on every single detail. this is exactly what she wanted. >> yes, it has been beautiful. operation unicorn, which is what would happen if the queen with the pass in scotland.
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that was an active. it was all planned that she would transfer from ball mauro, to edinburg, and as you say don. it's been such a beautiful ceremony it's been so dignified. and you are covering this morning, with cnn. it was just such a dignified, and really was so beautiful. and everything's been planned for monday. of course, the thing is. the last eight funeral for winston churchill, in 1965. so very few people in the united kingdom can remember a state funeral. but if you can remember the funeral the king. then so hardly anyone have seen this happen before. it is a whole new world. it is been planned, as you say. to the end degree. because the whole world is watching. there could be three, four billion people watching. >> just a quick mention here. people tried to compare it to diana. but diana wasn't really a state funeral. it was something they came up with, right? >> dan it was a ceremonial funeral because she wasn't a senior royal. the bra the queen mother's plan because diana was so young there is no plan for her. initially it wasn't going to be the case that she would get a proper royal funeral, anyway.
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because it was a private citizen. and has been a lot of conversation before it was really thought that the public expected this as a mother of the future calling for santa to be on and that way. >> talk to me about the significance of king charles and his siblings, and the children have princess elizabeth being there. that was a significant moment. >> it was. it was deeply moving. for all of the complaints the people do have about the monarchy, which often sent around the privilege that they have. the impulse that they have. and how it can be in a gala therrien. it does just put in sharp relief this very peculiar social contract. they might have all this privilege, but they are expected to, in the moments of their sharpest personal grief, present themselves publicly to whoever is there in that cathedral. or where they were today. and public at large. televised. we saw this with prince harry and william in the aftermath of princess diana's death as well. it was a very popular thing. it is such a private moment for
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a family that is typically quite stoic. to share with the world. so, i think it is always moving. obviously, the family has had his trials and tribulations recently. i think that is why seeing, the prince and princess of whales. and the duke and duchess of such acts out together in windsor was also very heartening for the public. that was all intentional. >> part of that was she mentioned, the trials and tribulations of andrew. and a traditional morning suit, rather than a military uniform. like his siblings. it gives perspective, at least noticed, to the strain that is happening in the royal family. or some of the turmoil. >> yes, the turmoil. those decide then and she was no longer gonna be a working royal over the scandal of jeffrey epstein. and he actually had covid over the past probably. so we've been seeing for the platinum jubilee, which i think was rather a blessing on the royal family and their effort to separate. of course, he's the queen son.
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he has a right to be there. i think what is going to happen isn't andrews position will really get lesser and lesser now that charles is in power. >> we saw nicholas know john -- but she was pushing for independence. >> -- she was speaking at the ceremony. >> they said thanksgiving for the life of the queen. >> yes, and king charles addressed the scottish parliament. nicholas sturgeon is synonymous with the cause of scottish independence here. in the british isles. she's been pushing for it, she is still pushing for it again. the right to hold referendum on scottish independence has been denied by the lash british prime minister. so they're in a little bit of a holding pattern. i think what we're seeing at the moment is a demonstration of people in scotland. and their sense of loyalty, fealty, and admiration for queen elizabeth ii. it is obviously not tied, and any kind of perfectly correlated way to a desire for
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independence. because roughly just under half of the country, according to poll's support independents in scotland. now, that may well change with king charles iii. because there was some things about elizabeth the second that transcended the structures of the monarchy. and a lot of the frustrations or complaints that people would have had about having such an anachronistic in the gabba tear instructors to existing. in modern life. >> he doesn't have much leverage. he's gotta be careful about the way he presents it and that he relates with sturgeon, but you think? >> yes, i think so. there probably will be another independence referendum at some point, in his reign. that, charles, has to stay out of the country's sight from the public. he really has to make it clear that it is for the people to decide. and he will not meddle and interfere. even though he may wish scotland to stay. obviously, if scotland was to leave the uk, it would be
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cataclysmic for the uk, probably start independents referendums and the north ireland, and wales. so it would be a huge moment for the uk. and not one that charles would wish to preside over. but that is what the people want. he must accepted with dignity and grace. . this is urgent has said that if scotland was independent, they would keep them on excited state. this is because in the 16th century there were two different countries, with two different monarchs than the monarch of england with dye and the people desperately first. so james, the scotland, became james the first about. two independent countries had the same monarch. it could be possible, but i think of scotland was to carry on with the monarch, eventually, they might ask the queen to open to the public. that's interesting, we have seen camilla, the queen concert by the king side. but we haven't heard much from her. what do you think she brings to this new role, briefly? >> i think that, and obviously
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kate you would know much about this as well, it's interesting that the queen gave her full blessing to the queen consort, camilla. and it was very important to her i think to show the country that the queen concert has her stamp of approval. because there has been a dramatic history for king charles throughout the year. and the british public have definitely been quite look warm at that point. so i think that seeing her in such a prominent role is prominent to king charles. and we saw that demonstrated so clearly behind us when he came out of the car for the first time and greeted the british public. and that was the first moment that we saw him, since his mother's death. i think she's going to be a very important partner tim. and, as well as being a shoulder to cry on and an important figure. i think she adds a, lot and people feel like she's got the common touch. she's quite relate-able. >> yes, bianca, i agree. there has been that -- about her title. and -- the princess consort, and as clearly, as you say the queen,
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on the anniversary of her [inaudible] , during february this, year camilla would be queen. and charles will be taking her everywhere. she's always by sign. and he refers to her us darling, -- which really suggest to, me that he is hoping for in the coronation. which, we won't know, when perhaps an six month time, she will be crowned with, him as so much would be the case for queen consort. i think that's what we're going to see. i think that's what he. wants so let's see if it happens. >> well, we will see, we appreciate it very much, thank you. >> we've got more to come from here in london tonight on the new royal air with the passing of queen elizabeth and her son charles taking the throne. plus, at home, sources telling cnn, the justice department has subpoenaed more than 30 people on team trump as the january six committee is meeting in a murder of hours to request the former president and his vice president mike pence to appear. answer a few questions and our techno wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds
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new tonight, sources telling cnn the justice department has subpoenaed more than 30 people and in former president trump's orbit as part of the january six criminal investigation. including, former white house, political director, brian jack, former deputy chief of staff dan scavino, and former trump campaign manager bill stepien. joining me now, the former deputy assistant attorney general, harry lippman. and cnn political analyst, jonathan. jonathan is also the author of, this will not pass, trump, biden and the battle for america's future. i'm so grateful to both of you gentlemen on. good evening. harry, 30 people, that's a lot of names at one time. this is quite an escalation from the doj after getting criticism for not making moves. >> yes, it really is.
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i think that talking point is maybe dead by now. but, you know, an individual subpoena, don it's a little bit of a shot in the dock where they're going. 30, if you're sort of tried it out and do the lines. he would have the bull's-eye, the very bull's-eye being donald trump. it is clear that that is the common feature here. and it's people who were around him. not people who genuinely couldn't go with any kind of privilege, and people who heard him say things, saw him do things, very much the kind of people who could really sort of bury him potentially for his conduct and actions on and around january six. >> mr. martin, trump's former campaign manager, his former deputy chief of staff, these are insiders. >> yeah. >> -- getting hit with very broad subpoenas. legal troubles are just part of the hit when it comes to being on team trump. >> yes, and, look, i think the board of viewers should know, don that's bill stepien was
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obviously the head of the campaign in 2020. he was constantly in touch with the former president during the campaign. and, importantly, in the weeks following the campaign. it's also important for viewers to know that dan scavino, who is, not you know the most well known trump name out there, but is a really important figure in trump world. he is a former caddie who's been around trump for years. and who often, when trump was still on twitter, was test with drafting the -- themselves. as you can imagine, was a very important role for somebody with a tweeting habit that the former president once had. >> so, harry, the subpoenas are looking for information on the fake elector scheme, the trump rally on january, six communications with people who work to overturn election results, fund raising. what does this tell you about what they are zoning in on? >> well, it really tells me
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that they are zoning out. so, it's not just january six. and i'll add one more thing. which is the phony foundation he set up to get people and fall in -- small investors so that he didn't spend any of. and the very kind of charges that are just ensnared with steve bannon. so i think that they are casting a wide net. and, you know, leaving no stone unturned. >> jonathan, you're giving us a yes on that. >> yes, i think clearly this is an investigation that is widening not narrowly. and it is pretty obvious that they are looking for trump's conduct, i think, not just narrowing on the issue of january six but i think in the weeks leading up to and immediately after the election. this is the inner circle, what people who are with trump, you
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know, in and around the election. and you, know there is also reports that other folks are having their phone seized, who are also close to trump. so, look, i think that it's uncertain yet where this is going. but when you see this many subpoenas, and subpoenas this deep in the inner circle, it obviously tells you that this is an investigation that is full steam ahead. >> harry, there is movement on the special master review of those mar-a-lago documents. as well the justice department on team trump actually agreeing on one of the trump topics, senior judge remain directly. what do you know about him? >> yes, imagine that. he's a very solid judge, great repetition in the court. he's a robot -- ronald reagan appointee which would make him -- and he is, okay even for trump in terms of calling strikes on attorney client privilege. what neither he or any special
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master is trying to call, whatever they would call it that is the big issue she still has the country front, and she probably has until thursday, because that is when the doj said they're going to the 11th circuit if they haven't heard from her. >> harry, jonathan, thank you gentlemen, appreciate it, we'll see you soon. >> thank. you >> the january six committee planning to meet tomorrow and they have a big question on their hands. should they ask trump and pence to appear? we discover is accepted at 99% of places in the u.s. ["only wananna be with you" by hootie & the blowfish]
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i just want to be transparent
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for a moment, what you're hearing behind us and what you're seeing is the queen returning here to buckingham palace tomorrow and later in the week as she will lie in state in westminster. but you may hear a ban behind, me just so you know what's going on. let's move on and speak about the january six committee set to meet in person tomorrow. they're expected to discuss whether they should ask former president donald, trump and former president mike pence to testify. for more, i want to bring in senior legal analyst, -- , and julia cayenne. good evening to both of you. so, jennifer, they're going to debate whether they should ask trump and pence to testify. do you really think either of them would? or is this just so they could get on the record that they asked? >> certainly trump will not, he has criminal exposure. we know that he's [inaudible] so he would not appear. if he did, he would plead the fifth. so that's more of a political thing. pence, they have a legitimate
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reason to ask for. and i think that he will delay also. i don't think he'll want to appear. he made that pretty clear. but he has actual legitimate testimony that he ought to give. so that, i think is a request that the committee ought to me. >> yes, julia, some members say that it's all about putting the invitation on the record and they're still debating whether to criminally referred him to the -- at the end of this. it will be important to ask him to speak it if they do aim to do that. >> yes, and i agree with jennifer that i think that there would be reasons to ask them both to testify. but, really the only person who would have the motivation at this stage is pence. his language lately and some of his speeches have gotten a little bit more conciliatory towards the january six. he's still defending trump. but he has made some motions that he listens to what they are saying, that there shouldn't be violence. that what happened on january six was in fact not an insurrection but it was in fact
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a threat to the peaceful transition of power. and i think that he is different than trump. but i think what's interesting now is just tie up the january six committee. as if you look at the -- from day, won the first committee hearing to what they are contemplating later on this month, we are really looking at a, starting with the violence on january six, expanding to those who supported and met with the oath keepers and others. and, now to the larger picture, what was the strategy? what was the purpose of that? it wasn't violence for violent sake. it was so that there would not be certification that day. everybody would go off running or something would've happened to pence. and, then the fake elector, scheme the one that would've come into play in the days following. so i think that it's a really important narrative for them to lay out for the american public. >> do you think that the signals that they're more open
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to criminal referral? >> that's me? >> julia, julia. >> yes, i think it is. i think it's hard to read the team leads of what the criminal referrals, and what they're doing. and also differ members have been seeing somewhat different things, which is okay because they will speak in one voice on the criminal referral. we have to remember, as we heard in just a previous segment with harry. the expansion of the criminal case is such broad now to getting to the fake elector scheme as well as the violence and according to the insurrection, that while a criminal referral from the january six committee might be important, what is also important coming out of them is of course an accounting of what in fact happened and i [inaudible] really did to not direct accordion aided attempt to undermine the election through violence but also other means. >> yes, again, they are
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rehearsing behind me for what will take place tomorrow and also later in the week. so, there you go, just full transparency here. we are here covering the queen's funeral. >> so listen, jennifer, the committee is also dealing with five gop lawmakers who refused to cooperate. did they have any leverage in considering that they want to get to, you know, a report out by the end of this year? should they spend time on them? >> you don't really have any leverage, don. they would've had to go to court to try and litigate this. at this, point a long time ago, if they wanted to get through on bases. so, there's really not much that they could do at this. point i think that they should just focus on putting together on -- it still is a really powerful and compelling case. i've been so impressed by the information that they were able to gather, even though there were these folks who refused to come forward and testify. so, i think that they should just focus on the report if doj wants to speak with them in connection with the criminal investigation, of course, they
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have many more tools to make that happen, judicial oversight means you can blow off against a precip into like. that, so if the gop folks are wanted for the criminal, case doj will get them. >> julia, the committee is also debating whether to subpoena thomas's wife, ginni thomas. i, mean they asked her to talk, that was back in june and so far no luck with that. the committee has emails between her and trump's election attorney, john eastman. and techs between her and mark meadows where she urges him to continue fighting to overturn the election again. we are talking about the wife of supreme court justice. how do you navigate this? >> i mean, i think if you are the committee, you simply don't worry about who he's married to. the question, was the she help coordinate sort of the fake electors scheme and use her authority, whether that came from simply her marriage, or simply because she is so high
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up within the gop and within the sort of mega wind of the gop. did she utilize that authority to try and convince state electors? that, to me, is a relevant on sort of who her spouse is. she is an independent woman who was doing what she was clearly on lawful to anyone who looked at. it and, clearly undermined the peaceful transition of power. so, who someone spouses, i would, hope for the january six committee would actually be irrelevant. she was using her own personal authority to do this. >> thank you juliette, thank you jennifer, appreciate it. >> queen elizabeth coffin set to flow to london in the next few hours. phil king charles be able to keep the monarchy to what it was under the queen?
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permanently. only pennies on the dollar for the homeless permanently. and with loopholes, the homeless get even less permanently. prop 27. they didn't write it for the homeless. they wrote it for themselves. [noise] [noise] [noise] early morning rehearsals going on outside of buckingham palace for the session from when the queens coffin returns to london. let's see, it is for 39 here in london. so, man, it's really, really early morning. it is the dawn of a new era here in the uk asking charles
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begins to take on the duties of monarch while preparing for queen elizabeth's funeral next monday. her -- coffin will be moved from edding burke, to right here at buckingham palace in the next few hours. i want to bring in, now it, lucy is this ocean editor at financial times. ed, i really appreciating you joining us. you saw the rehearsals there early, early in the morning. they're getting ready, every single detail meticulously thought out. you have called yourself a reluctant monarchist. you said that you are not much of a royalist. but, i know that you are deeply saddened by queen elizabeth's passing. how do all of these feelings come together here? and getting a new king on top of that? >> well, i guess partly to do with the character of elizabeth and my admiration for her but [inaudible] even with their facial gestures not implying in opinions. that kind of duty, day in, day out for 70 years, right up to a
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last day when she received a new prime minister tuesday of last week is something that, you know, i think any human being is going to find pretty hard to imagine doing themselves. but, once somebody is a columnist for a newspaper, they find it completely admirable. this, time last, week boris johnson was prime minister, and queen elizabeth was queen of the monarch. and now we have liz truss and king charles the third. there is a lot of change going on in britain. and the monarchy is supposed to represent continuity. and, yet keep up with the times. i don't envy charles, whose job, he is clearly more opinionated than his mother. on issues, other than sympathizing with to face sympathy global warming, issues like that that are probably more in tune with the younger generation of things that he's going to have to rein in if he's going to beat this a political monarch. so, i am not a natural
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monarchists. i am at the hereditary head of state, and not a good idea. in practice, it's been going pretty well for the last few decades. >> yeah. listen, i'm just hearing you through this little earpiece. i think you said boris johnson, not boris yeltsin. but boris johnson, i'm pretty sure you set. that you said that britain is a better place because of queen elizabeth. is it fair that she has been the glue holding the monarchy together? >> yes. i mean, it is a lottery. when you have a family, you know, hereditary family inheriting the head of state role, it is a lottery who you get. and i think britain was particularly fortunate to get somebody with such a natural touch. and, such a sense of duty and obligation and professionalism. and it, is on average, you are unlikely to get that.
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and british history is a pretty good illustration that you could get some really bad characters. george the third being. one and holding britain together, well, there is a possibility, and maybe a probability with scottish independence referendum. the interesting thing about that though is that they wouldn't become a republic. they would be independent from britain. but they would keep the monarchy. and nicola sturgeon, scotland's first minister was, you, know actually more fulsome in her tribute to the queen after her death, last week then liz truss, britain's prime minister. who many scotts would see now as england's prime minister. so, britain's, in a fragile position. there is no doubt about that. northern island is part of that fragility to. ashley and i think that it is putting a lot of responsibility on the soldiers on an unelected and powerless head of state to fix this.
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but, charles we'll see it as one of the things that he's going to try to help with. >> he has been. king charles has been outspoken on many issues. but he is always insisting that he intends to follow the kingsley. and he will stop sharing his views in the same way. but, i mean, listen he's passionate about climate change, organic food and other issues. how important is it that he keeps the promise and keeps it the same way that elizabeth did it so to be political? >> i think that it's very important. i mean, the essence of that job is to be above politics. it is not to be polarizing. and it's particularly important, but also difficult in this political period. which i think is more polarized in britain than it ever was in the first 69 or 67 years of elizabeth's reign. it just got so toxic. and, for that very reason, i
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think people will be wanting him to succeed. they are aware that these very opinionated compared to his mother and that, you know, he is gaffe prone compared to his mother. almost anybody is. but, i think that because things are so polarized in britain, and because partisanship has become so bitter, particularly around brexit, people value ahead of state who doesn't embody any of those differences. and, so people will be wanting charles to succeed. they like a politics free head of state symbolizing the better side of the nation. so, i suspect not that many people are going to want to be tripping him up. and, he is going to be acutely aware that if he does get political, he will be punished for it. and so, i don't expect britain to become a republic in the next few years. i think that his thousand-year
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monarchy will go on. >> thank you very much ed, i appreciated, be well. >> thank you. >> prince william, now next in line in the throat as he and kate take on the titles of prince and princess of whales. how will their responsibilities change? unlike pepcid, which stops working afafter 9. 24 hour prprotection. prilosec otc one pill, 24 hours, zero heartburn.
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with charles becoming britain's new monarchy is bestowed his former title, prince of wales, on his eldest son. prince william. and williams wife, kate is a new princess of whales. prince william is now the direct air to the throne. erin vanderhoof is here, she's a staff writer for vanity fair and the co-host of the vanity
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fairs dynasty podcast. listen, this is your time, right now. thanks for joining us. we really appreciate you being with us. we have been talking about prince charles becoming king charles now. but he is not the only one taking on a new role. william and kate are now the princess of rail. a title williams parents once had. the tough thing about the way the whole monarchy works that especially for the prince of wales there is no directing that you have to do but there are lot of expectation that you'll make sure will be useful of your time. the big change for will comes that he is now going to be taking the reins at the duchess of cornwall. which is essentially a real estate trust that has operated for hundreds of years to give the air to the throne and income
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this is one of the things that looking back and charles biography, one of the things that they know is that when he first got out of the military, it was a role he didn't particularly love, and he didn't know he wanted to do. but the first thing he did is he started setting up, a lot of different programs. so, one with [inaudible] princess truss, it started under privileged youth -- actually got funding from charles to go on with some of his first addition. so, he's in an investment fortress. but he started a lot of different programs that really, you, know they promote royal lifestyle an information for
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them in britain. he just did so much to get something from places where he needed. them and, also, he's really passionate about architecture and part of the princess chess they were really focused on traditional architecture. , so essentially there's a lot of projects that make sure to put its stamp on britain. there's a lot of people that could say that he was directed to help me and a lot of people say that this town that i lived in was funded and sort of developed by the architects. so, that i think is one of the under some reasonings as to why he is going to be so prepared to be the monarch. it's because he's doing so much. and, i think at the end of the day, the monarch is a job that requires you to be everywhere and know everything and never stop working. >> [laughs] it's like a journalist.
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like a cable news anchor. thank you very much. i appreciate, it erin. you have a good night. it's good to talk to. you >> you. two >> and thanks for watching everyone. our coverage continues. ["only wanna be with you" by hootie & the blowfish] discover is accepted at 99% of places inhe u.s. ["only wanna be with you" by hootie & the blowfish]
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united states and around the world. a lot of cnn newsroom. in the our head, and for days i lightning-fast ukrainian counter offensive as fatal
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taken four months of gains by the russian military what is next. ? >> i can, rest the body of queen elizabeth with salim edinburgh and her beloved scotland after hundreds of thousands of people lined the city streets to pay their respects. and the 100 million dollar save america back which took money from trump supporters for an election legal challenge that number was. it is now the focus of federal investigators but live from cnn center. this is cnn newsroom. with john vause. as we begin day 202 of biden putin's war of choice ukrainians are pushing on with their two front counteroffensive. which has retaken russian occupied territory at a blistering rate. and parts, ukrainian official claims there forces have almost reached the russian border. in the greater towns and villages. there's evidence, everywhere, of a hasty russian retreat. tankan

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