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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  September 12, 2022 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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>> well, oh and welcome to our viewers all around the world. i'm becky anderson at buckingham palace, and right now thousands of people are lined up in scotland to pay their respects to queen elizabeth before her coffin leaves for london later today. >> i'm john vause here in atlanta, in just four days a lightning-fast ukrainian counteroffensive is said to have reversed four months of gains by the russian military. but what is next? >> well in the coming hours
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here in london, queen elizabeth the second it will make her final journey back to buckingham palace after an emotional farewell in scotland. the late monarch is not lying at rest at st. charles the jewel in edinburgh where thousands of people filed past her coffin to pay their respects. is it a stream of mourners continuing through the night, after the queen's coffin is flown to london later today, it will remain at buckingham palace before being moved to westminster hall on wednesday. there she will lie and stay until her funeral next monday. cnn correspondents are covering all of the developments, you saw suarez is standing by outside st. charles cathedral in edinburgh. nina dos santos joins me here in london outside whacking him palace. let me start with you, isa, the royal -- the last royal journey as it
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were, the royal mile to st. charles cathedral, the very somber occasion and now an opportunity for those who are gathered to pay their respects. you have been speaking to people who are there, what are they telling you? >> well, the day like you said, becky, great solemnity is today, along the royal mile. really, an outpouring, an outpouring of love and respect before the late queen now as you can see behind me, there has been a steady stream of people, mourners making their way inside st. charles cathedral to pay their respects to the queen. the numbers are -- between 60 and 70,000 people last night. now, it is actually moving quite quickly, the sun is rising, it is going to get warmer, i think we see that line really filling up in the next few hours. it is a very smooth security
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operation, people get their wristbands, they go in line, they don't check through security operational like you see an airport, check through bags, they go in and come out. some people have done quite a few rounds actually to be honest with you. so incredibly moving for people having the opportunity to pay their respects to the queen. i'm joined here by -- former army staff sergeant and you have just come out in the last few minutes, how long were you lining up for? >> from security to actually getting in, only about 15 minutes. >> so quite a smooth operation. you got up early in the morning. >> yeah i got up early this morning. >> talk to us and explain to our viewers what that moment felt like for you. >> very moving. but, you have so little time to get -- when she has given so much time herself and, only giving her
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seconds, and you know, memory. starting, there saluting, and saying -- >> important moment for you to, travel for you to get up, here and to say thank you is a service to your mom -- >> i know what i was in the army and and, i suppose i'm representing the core in that way. >> thank you very much, bruce. a poignant moment of course, not just abuse, becky, but for so many other scotts who said they's -- queen passed in scotland, we know how dear it was scotland to the queen, and an opportunity for them to pay
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their respects as the queen now begins when king charles how quick last rooney becky. uses suarez isn't ended bergh. isa, nina dos santos with me here. the head of the metropolitan police force, newly installed in the drop themself has described the preparations for the queens lying in state as a massive challenge. but one that the tens of thousands of offices that will be on duty in london will rise to. >> yes, this is an unprecedentedly significant event for generations. and it's going to attract authorities, we are expecting somewhat of 60 to 70, 000, essentially up to 2 million people to the british capital as of tomorrow when the queen's coffin remains in westminster hall. people are expected to q and lined the streets for hours at a time i was told 30 hours. >> yes, perhaps.
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>> 20 4:30 hours, somehow, already there despite the fact that authorities have said, please do not coming out because the queen's coffin obviously is still in scotland at the moment. but, this is not just a non-president security challenge. it is also logistical challenge well one that authorities have been paying for for sometime. as you pointed, out 10,000 officers will be participating in crowd control and policing the event for the state funeral next week. but also 1500 members of the army as well will be drafted in and we'll talk about the helicopters. the only thing that the uk had to police in similar circumstances of this order of magnitude was the olympic games about a decade or so ago. and state funerals, remember the last time we saw wanted this country was 1965 from winston churchill died but obviously that was a different time. there were different security challenges and obviously not everybody would have had the means to arrive here in london and try to pay their respects. >> let's just remind our viewers what happens then over
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the coming days. the coffin will stay in scotland until when? >> until this evening it is expected to then be transported from saint gels to an aircraft. it will be waiting to be transported to edinburgh to -- which is the royal air force just off the northwest of london. princess, and the queen's only daughter, will be traveling with her mother's coffin and then it will be taken off the plane and it will arrive here at buckingham palace where members of the royal family will expect king charles iii another members of the royal family to have already been here, to receive the coffin. it will then lay in the bowl room for a night. it will be watched over by chaplains, four of, course tomorrow. as to when it will be moved in big ceremony to westminster. >> and they've been doing rehearsals for that overnight here as nina pointed out the logistics. imagination of getting this
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right over the next seven days or so. it might seem quite overwhelming, but as, we said the nearly -- they are ready to rise to the challenge. nina, thank you very much indeed. king charles the third, wife camilla, now queen concert is now -- controversy fall under for decades. but that hasn't stopped her from supporting her husband. as well as various -- cnn's randi kaye has their story. >> i know that she will bring to the demands of her new role the steadfast devotion to duty on which i had come to rely so much. >> king charles the third is talking about his wife, camilla parker bowls, the queen consort. she first met the future king when they were in their twenties. reportedly, at a polo match. growing up in the english countryside, camilla had developed a passion for horses. it was the early 1970s and charles had joined the royal navy. in his absence, camilla married
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cavalry officer andrew parker bowls. the couple had two children. in 1980, one charles married diana spencer. but years later, admitted he'd been having an affair. both couples divorced. and camilla was vilified by the public. after day in this death in 1997, the royal family tried to help camilla's image, including carefully orchestrating appearances with charles. in 2000 and, five charles and camilla were married in a civil ceremony at windsor gills hall, later that year, despite her fear of flying, kamala made her first official visit to the united states as the duchess of cornwall. over their 70 year marriage, camilla has emerged as charles 's greatest confidant and love if it's life. >> they love each other. she is a source of great support and comfort and love. they share the same sense of humor. they just blend together beautifully. >> charles and camilla have traveled the world together. and, are often seen joking and
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laughing. >> -- as somebody who feels that you want to understand and encourage as a royal, camilla has championed causes such as children literacy. and raising awareness about osteoporosis, a disease that affected both her mother and grandmother. she is also work to support victims of domestic violence. >> so all of these very brave ladies tell me that it is seeing is believing, hearing is believing. >> utter jubilee, in february this, year the queen cemented camilla's future. announcing when charles becomes king, camilla will be known as queen consort as she continues her own loyal service. this summer, camilla marked her 75th birthday by guest editing the july issue of the british magazine, hungry. life she chose kate, the duchess of cornwall, to take her duchess photo. >> it was all very casual. you, know there wasn't much
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hair and makeup. >> and now, as kamala steps into her most important role as queen consort, many are thrilled she's taken her place in history. >> she is so great for charles. she is so great. and, she loves her. randi kaye, cnn. >> becky anderson, outside of buckingham palace for. you my colleague, john vause picks up after the break with the latest on the war in ukraine. coming, up an exclusive report. watch as a cnn crew comes under fire as ukraine fights to hold on to liberating newly-liberated territory. that, is after this.
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and spend your life living. ♪ welcome back everyone, i'm john vause, you're watching cnn newsroom. counteroffensive rolls on an eastern your crane as russian military retreats, and ukrainian forces pushed on past the kharkiv region. claiming to have taken territory deep inside the donetsk area. images released by the ukrainian show what appears the evidence of a hasty disorganized retreat of abandoned military equipment left outside, what appears to be a ministerial church. for weeks, ukraine hinted about to counter offensive in the
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south. but it appears that the russians are being duped by -- with a major push in the northeast. here's the ukrainian president speaking on monday. >> [speaking non-english] [interpreter] since the start of september, our soldiers have already liberated 6000 square kilometers of ukrainian territory in the east and south. we are moving further. [end of translation] >> ukrainian greens have been so significant, even the russians have to own their losses of what was a major retreat. cnn's melissa bell and her crew gave access to a newly-liberated area in the northeast, and report the battle in part is ongoing. she felt the exclusive report, and warning parts of reporting are graphic. >> the tanks spoke to a hasty russian retreat. as ukrainian forces swept eastward over the weekend. triumphantly raising the flag on saturday. local police forces providing cnn with exclusive access to a key town. now meant to be under ukrainian control.
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>> we still feel uneasy because we have been bombed for four days in a row says vassal. nothing certain yet. which only became clear as we headed further in. [speaking non-english] first artillery strike, too close for comfort. then a second, much closer. that was the sound of artillery learning just next to our car, armored car. we've come hoping to get to the flag to see where it had been. but as you can see, sunday afternoon, still the scene of some figures fighting. we've been hearing the sound of outgoing artillery fire. that was the sound of incoming. >> the policeman tells us that our car was deliberately targeted. time for us to head back to those parts of kharkiv region.
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now fully under ukrainian control, after six long months. >> generally people are happy. there cheering, they are celebrating. feel like redemption. eager to advance. >> but these villages, ukrainian investigators know all too well what they will find after russian control for only a month. >> yes, according to our information, we are recording war crimes in almost every village she says. this, the body of one of two civilians killed in late february. an early victim of the invasion. evidence now of what six months of russian occupation have cost. melissa bell, cnn, kharkiv region.
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winter is coming. and the calendar cannot be altered. and even with the warmer temperatures on average, it's still going to get pretty cold in ukraine. especially that part of ukraine that is being contested right now. so, the ukrainians have to really decide whether or not they have the logistical where to get into the areas that the russians have occupied and if they think that they can remove them. they probably should do so fairly quickly. they cannot lose the momentum that they have right now, a momentum us kind of a force, especially military operation. , and if they continue to do
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this by beginning to be able to at least get to a point where they have achieved defensible lines. usually a -- or some kind of other national barrier on the, line and that is something that they should report. and it gives them some kind of tactical and strategic advantage. that is what i think they should be doing next. >> and the russians right now are trying to spew all of this is some kind of strategic withdrawal in oddly numbered. if it was so well-planned why did the russians leave behind so many weaponry, which is now ukraine's biggest weapon supply. >> yes, exactly. this was an orderly. this wasn't preplanned, john. this was something that caught the russians by surprise. in fact, they were caught so by surprise that many of the troops fled in civilian clothes. they still bicycles to get out of town. and they made a beeline to the russian border. so, this is indicative of as many of the things that the russians have told their own
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soldiers and their own people. and, they, in essence, for them lines. >> colonel, let's go to london, all cnn clare sebastian following us in ukraine. so, establishing this very public criticism of this, you know, opinion on the battlefield, coming from inside of russia and from elected officials. and, by this, 0.6 months into the war, putin has silenced or jailed most of his critics. so, to have any been any criticism seems to have significance. >> yes, absolutely, john this is noteworthy. in a climate we're even calling the war could frankly land you -- in as you, said we have seen no public protests of any significant, skills and it's the first few weeks of the, war type control is a key pillar, frankly of this conflict of russia and that is why we have seen, deputies lawmakers, from 18 districts in russia come forward and sign a peace -- petition, essentially calling for putin's ouster. this is what they say in the position they say, we, the municipal deputies of russia believe that the actions of russian vladimir putin are
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detrimental to russia and its to distance future. we demand that putin's resignation from the post a president of the russian federation. now, these are not top lawmakers in moscow, these are sort of local lawmakers. it's still a very brief. move and, particularly brave because we know lawmakers from st. petersburg district last week called for treason charges. putin, now according to a twitter post, they are now facing charges for discrediting the army. we are also seeing on state television, debate around the validity of this war when moscow lawmakers questioned whether putin was given the right information. and whether they should actually now move to peace talks because of the strategy isn't working. i think in context, this is clearly not yet sort of wholesale collapse of the propaganda machine. we are now looking down the bear of some kind of coup. russia still has a very tight control over information in the country. but it's significant because clearly, they didn't bargain for this on the battlefield. and, they are now having to
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reckon with the potential impact, as they, say the pillar of the, ward the tight control of public opinion. >> clear, thank you. i just want to ask very quickly, was this a simple as the uk talking about a counter offensive in the south and then the russians following for? >> i mean, i think what happened was the ukrainians are also conducting a counter offensive in the south. but they spotted an opening up in the northeast where russia sort of drawn some of their troop movements away. and it seems to have gone extremely quickly there. i think that that was a key part of, this john. that they controlled the information around the counter offensive very tightly, indeed. and that did lead to the outcome that we're seeing now. but the key thing now is that they do have to hold on to these gains. don't forget, russia is already carrying out air strikes over some areas. >> making the gains, one thing holding. us completely a different story. clare, thank, you play sebastian live for us in london. vladimir zelenskyy has paid his respects to the queen on monday, signing -- at the british and busted or residents in. keep you left a note inside of
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that. book laid flowers at the residence. and, our coverage of the new royal era continues in just a moment with my colleague, becky anderson at buckingham palace in london. when we come back, beyond the academic countries of the commonwealth they're debating whether to keep the british monarch us head of state. now, new zealand's prime minister weighing in on the country future. secret had ph balancing minerals; anand it helps eliminate odor, instead of just masking it.. so pull it i in close. secret works.
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welcome back, i'm becky anderson outside of buckingham palace in london, where the time is just before half past seven in the morning. we are continuing coverage of
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the death of queen elizabeth the second. even before her death, there were rumblings in the commonwealth that once she was gone, more countries may start peeling away from the british monarchy. new zealand, at this, point is not one of them. no >> i do believe that it is weird new zealand will heed in time. i believe it's likely to occur in my lifetime. but i don't see it as a short term knee -- that is anything on the agenda in time soon. >> prime minister just and arden made her respects and admiration for queen elizabeth clear. she said new zealand will observe a public holiday on september the 26. new zealand is one of 14 british colonies where the british monarch remains ahead of state. well, joining me now from new zealand is the country's former prime minister, helen clark. it is good to have you. you met queen elizabeth a
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number of times during your time in government. just reflect on some of those times for, us if you will. >> yes, i hosted her majesty the queen in 2002 in new zealand. that was the tenth president in the last time when she came. i last had a proper meeting with her after the wonderful service she hosted at st. georges chapel in windsor once or -- when the order of the got there was returned, my husband and i had lunch with the queen at the castle after than. but there were a number of occasions like that over my nine years as prime minister. and earlier when i was a deputy prime minister as well. >> can we discuss these comments from descended harden today she sees new zealand eventually moving away from the commonwealth. which we should note is a ceremonial roll across the
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globe now but doesn't see any urgency for it she also said that it is a time for reflection but it is a mixed legacy isn't it particularly a months the indigenous people can you explain the complexity of this relationship for new zealand the complexity lies in the fact that the foundation documented on modern new zealand is seen as the treaty which was hinted into the queen victoria's representative throughout new zealand in 1840, so indigenous people while having many well justified grievances from the time of colonization also were very respectful of this historic relationship with the british monarchy and of course queen elizabeth had a direct descendant of queen victoria
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that had a special place in it. and it was always treated with great ceremony and protocol by which he came to new zealand. now, complexity for new zealand were to embark down a path of reconsidering its state as a constitutional monarchy would be how to incorporate their founding documents into a constitution. that is not a simple discussion, and not one that would be hit in a hurry. >> you could argue that one of the queens successes over her reign was making republicanism redundant as a political issue in the uk, at least. that is clearly not the case elsewhere across the commonwealth. how strongly do people feel? do they feel strongly enough to break with the monarchy at some point? is this something that is just as easily kept on the backburner? >> actually something that is
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rather easily kept on the backburner. because, in all tencent purposes for new zealand, a representative of the, queen the government, general who performs all the tasks associated and worth a constitutional monarch and represented is now, on, average about once every five years the queen came to new zealand. perhaps on, average king charles will come at that kind of interval. but otherwise, new zealand's head on with their lives. let me, say there is great respect for the queen regardless of where the people for pro republic or pro monarchy. but, at this time i do not see much political appetite for raising the issues of constitutional status. >> fascinating. >> king charles the third will now be leading this role of course. you have met with him. how do you expect him to conduct himself?
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>> do you see him treating this role very differently than his mother did? >> he's a different personality, and he has taken up a different set of issues. i personally admire the fact that now, king, charles prince of, welsh took ambition of sustainability, climate action and biodiversity and i think that that will play quite well in new zealand. i think when he makes his tour, and hopefully there will be a coronation tour around the commonwealth and particularly where he is the former head of state. i think people will look to hear reassurance from him about his concern for those issues. so he will be but i think he will also be seen like the queen to be paving above politics and trying to bring people together around the public interest it is good to
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have you thank you very much indeed for joining us the former prime minister of new zealand helen clark well king charles in the queen concert will soon leave edinburgh for northern island they will meet with government leaders their attend the press service and possibly greet nick robertson reports that many in belfast are remembering the queen in the region heal after some of its darkest days >> in belfast, tributes to the late queen elizabeth pile up. flowers laid on a mural of the much loved monarch. notes of condolences, thank her for her service. but this is a pro british neighborhood. and like many things in northern ireland.
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how you view the monarchy depends largely on whether you are a pro british unionists, most often protestant or a pro irish nationalist. mostly catholic. for almost half of queen elizabeth 70-year reign, the two sides loyalists and republican ford truck over their competing views for more than 3000 people killed. when it came to piece, almost 25 years ago, it was the queen who would later help to heal some of the divisions, by reaching out to anti-british, pro irish former paramilitaries turned politicians. now, it is charles turn. he inherits a politically broken northern ireland. it's power sharing government paralyzed by pro british politicians who refused to join a government with a pro irish feign. who for the first time in northern ireland's 100-year history won more seats than any other party during an election in may. charles's own history with sinn féin hit a low point in 1979 after the murder of his mentor, his father's uncle. lord louis. bat and by the group's paramilitary ring the ira. but, sinn féin has long since renounced violence.
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and after its election win, it is already pushing for a vote to help unite island. but, despite their differences with the monarchy, its leaders offered words of praise for the late queen after her passing. >> queen elizabeth herself had a very significant role in terms of sending a very strong message that we have a feeling to do as a people. between our two islands, between the people that live on this island. and a similar message of respect and gratitude from pro british unionists. >> her majesty lead by example in northern ireland. i reached out to help with the reconciliation process. we are actually bound to build on those foundations. but brexit is reviving old tensions. pro british unionists fear that it has led to increasing isolation from mainland uk can
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blame the eu. to put pressure on the uk government to get a better deal from the eu. they are refusing to join northern islands power sharing government. leaving schools, hospitals, road repairs, and municipal officers in much else in limbo. it is yet another testing time in northern ireland. the violence is not imminent and would be highly unlikely to reach the scale of the past. >> my lords, members of the house of commons. >> but as king charles, the new symbol of british rule steps into his mother's role, there can be only hope that he helps soothe frayed relations as his mother wants to. nick robertson, cnn, belfast northern ireland. i am becky anderson outside a buckingham palace in london.
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john vause picks up our coverage of the day's other news right after this short break. including a look at dozens of -- four allies of donald trump in the january six investigation. stay with us for that. (vo) at viking, we are proud to have been named the world's number one for both rivers and oceans
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or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reaction may occur. best move i've ever made. ask your dermatologist it's just 43 minutes past the hour welcome back. appeared to be an agreement on a special master to review material seized by the fbi during a search of donald trump's mar-a-lago home the justice department says that it is open to appointing federal judge raymond dearie, who was chosen by trump. he served for 25 years after being appointed by ronald reagan. trump's attorney rejected both candidates put forward by the doj. in the meantime, the federal investigation into january six appears to be in -- doesn't mid level staffers in a few big names from the trump white house and trump campaign have been subpoenaed by federal
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investigators. cnn sarah murray has the details. cnn is learning from sources that the justice department has subpoenaed more than 30 people in former president donald trump's orbit as part of an investigation into efforts to subvert the result of the 2020 election. now, these include a number of big names, people like bill stepien, who is the former trump campaign director. people like dan scavino, trump's former deputy chief of staff and brian jack, a former white house political director. now, this appears to be an effort by the justice department to sort of stuck up and gather as much information as possible while on the cusp of this quiet period, a period that has not taken any overt investigative action at the scene of influencing the outcome or the potential outcome of an election. and, we know, from talking to sources that the subpoenas are very broad. some of them are seeking information for the fake
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electors plot. some of them are seeking information related to the save america, pat a political and fundraising vehicle for the former president. others are asking for any documents people may have handed over to the january 6th elect committee, some are seeking just documents. some are seeking documents and testimonies. this is a wide and aggressive effort by the justice department. and the indication that that investigation is intensifying. sarah murray, cnn, washington. -- david snyder is a national political -- political correspondent with politico. thank, you will come back to the show. >> thank you for having. me >> the subpoenas, they focus on the save america pack which is warm up to the 2020 election. so far, it's raise more than $100 million. they have been just shy of $36 million. all that money came from trump supporters, who thought, that they were aiming to fund and challenge the election results. the general six committee has leveled it as a scare. there seems to be another significant new area of an already sprawling investigation. so how significant is it? where does this leave america pat fit into the wider picture? >> well, i think you're right because it's significant, there is a new term in the investigation, right? so it's broadening the scope,
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and as you pointed out with those, figures this is not just some normal pack. this is a juggernaut in american politics. and really, a major vehicle for small dollar fund raising on the republican side. so, i do think that it is significant because of that. >>, and the primacy to which was illegal, fund which would ultimately help donald trump challenge the 2020 results and be returning to the presidency with the bases on. >> that's, right and the idea is, that you know, it least the claims, the allegation from people on the january six committee is that this is some kind of misleading of donors that this money was not necessarily used for those purposes. i think, politically, i'm not sure any of that ends up being what resonates here. i think it's more of this drip on trump where you see this problem for him coming from all sides. and that, i think it's politically what's making the most significant thing about that.
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>>, and the new york times has published a new book on trump's. and she reveals this one detail has been. big i'm just not going to, leave trump told one. aid we are never leaving, he said to another. how do you leave when you've won an election? this is all around the time of the january six. and that brought this reaction from the republican and critic, liz cheney. here she is. >> when you hear something like that, i think you have to recognize that we were in no man's land. and a territory that we've never been in before as a nation. i, think again, it just confirms the reality of the danger. so, it's affirming the cheney the danger of trump's determination hold on power. but this is the revelation actually changed anything here and now? >> yes, i think that it's significant. and we shouldn't downplayed the significance just because we won't see a drop off in support for trump because of that tape. >> i mean, not a tape, the reporting.
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how many times have we had a reporting on the president, dating all the way back to the access hollywood tape, where you would say that is stunning. you would say there's no precedent for. that this will change the course of things. and then, of course, it didn't. but i do think, and i mentioned earlier, this drug. i do think that there is some weariness among republicans who were rank and file voters -- and this is the reason you see somebody like desantis rising in primary polls. it is not because they disagree with the former president or the wooden rally around him as they did clearly after the search of his mar-a-lago estate, but it is that there is some weariness talking about 2020 and the desire to push forward with something more informative for their case than re-litigating the pass election. >> some republicans have told me that desantis is like trump without the drama. that was his appeal there. and speaking of drama, lead on tuesday, we've been told the january six committee is set to meet as they consider whether to invite trump and pence to appear. it, seems incredibly unlikely that either will do so voluntarily.
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will they be compelled to attend? >> i think it's unlikely that we'll actually see them to appear. but i do think that the important thing, maybe is extending the invitation. we should, say my colleagues, and the other outlets -- so i don't think that that's entirely off the table. >> okay, david, as always, thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you. >> still to come here on cnn, a big night in the start of the -- making history, the 74th emmy awards and the highlights when we come back.
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we were told, super young, that you have to be tough, you have to be macho in a male perspective. you feel like, you know, you're not able to open up and, you know, be vulnerable with your elings, you know what i mean. you have this idea of this machismo, right? like th you have to always be the toughest, the strongest. for me as a man, it's about opening up. not feeling too macho to tell someone how you're feeling when you're feeling down. opening up your heart and sharing with other people the way that you're feeling. i have a twin sister who, when i'm sad, i call her and talk to her and we normally have the same feelings. i face time, my grandchildren. that always seems to kind of give me a boost, even when you're having your darkest moments. kicking the stigma means talking about it. it's something that a lot of people go through. it's normal. nothing's wrong with you. and in fact, come join us because we all feel this way. it's okay to feel not okay. kicking the stigma.
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just the socialist private space company have suffered their first major setback with the phil launched on monday. just over a minute after lift, off the new rocket appeared to burst into flames. the official word is there was a mishap. which the system allowed to
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capture -- and parachute back to earth. the rocket was carrying 36 pay, loads 18 belonging to nasa. according to blue origin the booster crash back to ground with no force or injury. there are breathtaking new images from now before seen look of stars and planets are born the images was taken by the james telescope they showed the arriving 3000 light years away from plan earth before now this was the only type that we had of the nebula it was taken away the hubble telescope which is now able to see through but using in far-right the wind telescope can peered through the lasers revealing intricate details near the harbor nebula web also picked up a bonus image of the arrived nebula if you look closely you can see a frog like structure shined intergalactic space frog the 74th emmy aired on monday they were a day late because of the american football. they showed a feature of historic win notable for.
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squid game's actor, lee jung-jae became the first south korean performer to win outstanding lead actor. it shows also the first non-english series to get a nomination in the category. , surely he to calm the world supporting actress in the comedy she is only the second black woman to win the award after jackie here. thank you for watching, i'm john, false please stay with, us becky anderson and rosemary church take up after the break with a lot more cnn newsroom, see you tomorrow. we're carvana the company who invented car vending machines and buying a car 100 percent online now we've created a brand new way for you to sell your car
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