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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  September 13, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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held row low and a very warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i'm becky anderson and i'll be covering all the very latest developments as the world continues to mourn queen elizabeth ii. >> i'm rosemary church. i'll have details on all of our other top stories. big games against russian soldiers on the battlefield.
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well, it's tuesday, september 13th. it is 9 a.m. here in london where in just a matter of hours the late queen elizabeth ii will make her final trip back here to buckingham palace being honored in what was an emotional farewell in scotland. in london the queen's coffin will remain at buckingham palace behind me here before it is moved to westminster hall on wednesday and there she will lie in state until her funeral next monday. well, ahead of that, preparations have been underway overnight. soldiers here seen rehearsing for the queen's funeral procession. correspondents are fanned out.
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isa soares standing by outside saint charles cathedral. we are joined here outside buckingham palace. to both of you, thank you very much, indeed, for joining us. let me start with you, isa. and it has been certainly a long day in scotland yesterday and a long evening as people cued to pay their last respect to the queen whose body lies in a casket at saint charles cathedral. what have people been telling you about how they feel? >> reporter: good morning, becky. that's right. we have seen -- continued to see, i may add, an outpouring of love and respect for mourners who have been lining the streets of he hedinborough and also tho who have been lining the streets
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overnight. there were many waiting for seven to eight hours. according to one police officer who was here overnight with the lines stretching several kilometers i've been told. goes to parking down princess street, down the road and past the meadows. it snakes there and beyond. people saying to me, what is six, seven hours, even eight hours of patience, waiting patiently for 70 years of service. that's what people are prepared to do, the sacrifice they are prepared to make. i want to bring in shawn here and the 19-month-old son. it was very quick this morning. >> it probably took us about 45 minutes from when we got our wrist band. >> that was pretty speedy. you were expecting longer lines? >> i've been looking online last night, 12-hour wait. i kept my eye on it this morning
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when they said it was about an hour we popped in and came down. about 45 minutes. >> what did this moment mean to you, why was it so important for you to be here and pay your respects? >> i mean, i just think the queen was incredible and we used to live in london. we would go to buckingham palace, westminster and pay my respects. i think having it here, i have to come and see. my heart breaks, it's a moment in history for him and something i can tell him about. >> thank you very much, shawna. blaire had his breakfast and left the cathedral. people preparing to make the sacrifices. one couple said we had to make the decision between lining up and getting across the cathedral, paying their respects. very solemn, of course, procession last night when he saw the king walking lock step with his siblings behind their
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mother's hearse. paying their final respects. the final farewell, of course, for so many scots, an opportunity they thought they wouldn't be able to take nart in this voyage, let's say, becky. >> that's the story in scotland. in edinborough. let's get you to scott mcclain just on the south bank overlooking the houses of parliament. it is at westminster hall where the queen's casket will be taken and where the queen will lie in state from tomorrow and, scott, you are there with some early risers this morning. those who are already cuing to pay their last respects. just explain where you are and
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why that's significant. >> reporter: it's pretty remarkable, becky, considering, look, the queen's body will not arrive in london until later on today. obviously it's still where isa is in scotland. even then it will be at buckingham palace until tomorrow afternoon. it won't be at westminster hall, right across the river here, until about 5:00 local time tomorrow. it's 9:00 local time on tuesday. we have well over 24 hours, 30 hours left to go. this is the lineup we imagine will stretch along the river, across the bridge here to where we are. this is where the line is starting at the moment. this is where they're telling people to cue. so there is eight people in the lineup right now. the women who are at the front of the line. they got here yesterday at 11:30 in the morning. almost 24 hours ago and i just met the newest people who joined the line about half an hour ago.
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this is steven and monica. i wonder, guys, why was it so important for you to be here? >> this is history. we want to be part of history and we want to respect -- to pay our last respect to the queen because she was a very hard-working woman. she had integrity, dignity and she was a role model for the british nations. >> steven, i wonder, are you prepared to be here for the next 30 plus hours? >> yes, absolutely. we brought -- 100%. >> can you show us? >> this is 100% plastic recycled bottles. >> you have a duvet? >> yes, we have a friend coming over later. between the three of us, if we needed to have a rest or to use the bathroom or something, we can -- so we don't lose our
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place because there are not tickets here. i'm number 7, this lady is number 8. >> can you show us what you have for supplies? >> i have this. it was really nice when i left home. i have filipino chocolates and i have water in my bag and so i'm not worried because i had a big breakfast. i had pasta and chicken for my breakfast. >> hopefully you eat something else as well. >> monica, we were talking earlier, when you get to the front of the line tomorrow at around 5:00, you'll be able to file past the coffin for maybe 30 seconds, a minute. is it worth it for that amount of time? >> it is worth it. even if they would let me stay for five seconds, that's it. i will just say my silent prayers to the queen and that's all i can offer. >> i'm sure our viewers are wondering if you're cold because it's really not warm right now. you do have a jacket, right? >> i have a jacket.
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i have a jacket. i'm warm. i have lived in england for 36 years so i am used to the british weather. very hardy. >> yes. >> nice and warm. >> the latest people to join the cue here. as we get closer to 5:00 tomorrow when the body will be lying in state, that is when officials expect there to be a lot more people cuing to see it. >> if she can do it without a jacket, you can do it without a jacket, scott mcclain. >> i'm not that tough, becky. i'm not that tough. >> you haven't lived in this country for 36 years. wonderful to hear from those folks. >> clearly. >> i'm really getting a sense of the occasion of what it feels like for them to be part of this moment in history. scott mcclain is in central london. nina do dos santos here with me
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buckingham palace. the logistics to go into what will be the next six days leading up to the queen's funeral on monday are quite remarkable. i mean, this is an event that has been in the planning for years, but the head of the force here in london has said this is a massive challenge but one that his force will rise to. >> yeah, that's right. we've had a remarkable time here. new parliament last week. new sovereign. a new person at the helm of the largest police force in the country that has oversight of huge operations like this and issues like terrorism have been an issue during the queen's monarchy. >> they're expecting between 750,000 people perhaps up to 2 million people, becky, to converge on the british capitol
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to pay their respects and then the funeral itself will be a huge logistical challenge. they have to police people. they have foreign dignitaries, foreign royals, even the u.s. president, joe biden. they'll probably have 3 helicopters in the air, 10,000 officers, 1/2 members of the army involved in this. it is something the country hasn't seen on this scale, not even since the last big state funeral which was winston church kril in the 1960s. the queen mother died in 1962. these numbers are likely to eclipse that. you can see the pictures in our screen, the preparations. you and i were here at 4:30 in the morning. these pictures were taking place just behind us we saw all of
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these officers with full trumpets and everything first thing in the morning, practicing. body doubles of royal mourners. this is the type of preparation going into this. if i may i would like to go into what will happen wednesday. the keep's coffin is going to be conveyed at 6 p.m. it will be northwest of the capitol. from there the queen's color guard will convey her to state. that's when we'll see the early procession of the queen returning to buckingham pail lace. she'll go through various streets and many landmarks. for instance past four star parade. she'll head down the 15 mile gourny through motor ways until she comes to horse guard's
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parade. not far from westminster and then her hearse will come here and it will be accompanied by princess ann who will be on the same plane as that coffin. when it arrives here at buckingham pail lace, king charles iii and all will be there to fwgreet it. >> i remember being on that road f which is about a 45 minute journey at normal speed when princess diana's body was returned in 1997. it takes me back 25 years ago. it is a memory i will never forget. thank you. an awful lot going on here. scott mcclain is out and about. isa soares is out and about. nina here with me.
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very busy day once again for the royal family and for those who are involved in security and logistics here. we will, of course, be here to cover it all on cnn's special continuing coverage of queen elizabeth's final journey, the memorial plans and the new royal era. all of that coming up later this hour. i'll be back with that. let's get you to my colleague rosemary church at the cnn center in atlanta for some other news for you. ros rosemary. >> thank you so much, becky. appreciate it. as a counter offensive dislodges troops in eastern ukraine, ukrainian forces are being welcomed as heroes. she is saying glory to ukraine and a soldier says, thank you. in addition to moments like that
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captured on social media, we're seeing this. signs of a disorganized and humiliating retreat. here's how it happened. ukraine had been signaling for weeks about a counter offensive in the south but the southern attack may have been a decoy and instead a major push in the northeast began. volodymyr zelenskyy say they have retaken 6,000 square kilometers this month. that is more than 2300 square miles. for the latest in ukraine melissa bell joins us from kharkiv. fred pleitgen is tracking russia's reaction from berlin. great to see you both. melissa, let's start with you. we're seeing these stunning advances being made by ukrainian troops in the northeast. how were they able to achieve this? could it perhaps represent a significant turning point in
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this war? >> reporter: well, as you rosemary, there was a clever communication on the 29th of august. and a week ago the beginning of that eastern counter offensive in kharkiv that appears to have wrong footed russian forces. there is also, we've seen evidence of this on the ground when we've been able to go further in to some of those liberated parts in kharkiv, the other successful element of the ukrainian strategy, not just the determination of the soldiers determined to recapture the lands but the use of the nato provided represent ponce. in particular the long range artillery. ahead of the counter offensives have allowed them to take out the key infrastructure that had been allowing russian forces to resupply their positions.
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we've heard about the bridge over the dnip and the ability to resupply. we've seen evidence here in the kharkiv region, that is one of the towns that was described as key because it is on the russian supply routes. we saw the russian railways that had allowed russia from the base on the other side of the border to supply weapons. that clearly is what's been happening here. over the course of the summer those weapons provided by the united states bububuotnato allies as well used to take out that long range artillery, some of that infrastructure ahead of the determined push by the men and women themselves over the course of the last couple of weeks. so a very well-thought through
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strategy. we've been learning over the last couple of weeks, prepared with allies. more gains with the help of washington, prepared for and it turns out i think far more successful, rosemary, than even the ukrainians could have dared imagine. >> it has been stunning. fred, what's been the reaction in the northeast and this humiliating defeat for russia's troops? >> i think the russian's are also saying it's more successful than they would have imagined. you can feel how the russian state and state media are trying to find their footing. you have a lot of the state tv channels that are clearly saying these are the toughest hours as they put it for the russian military inside ukraine. a lot of acknowledging what russia calls the special military operation. they continue to deny that they're in a war. they called a special military operation which many of the state tv pundits had said would
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end in a couple of days and now we're going on 7 months with this going on and the russian army going on. these are very tough times for the russian military. some are saying they don't believe ukraine could be defeated militarily at all. it's a big point of contention in russia. what you're also seeing is some public criticism and some public dissent of the authorities which is something you don't necessarily or don't see much of at all in russia these days. a lot of the opposition has been side lined, exiled or is in jail. and you have a close ally of vladimir putin, he's the strong man in chechnya. he said mistakes were made. he would take it up with the russian military. if he doesn't see anything fruitful, he will take it up with the leadership of russia, obviously meaning vladimir putin. the big question i think right
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now, rosemary, what's the reaction of vladimir putin going to do. are they going to try to find some way to further escalate things or are they going to try to move more troops in, open different front lines or find some other way out. sergei lavrov, he said that russia was still open to negotiations with the ukrainians, but he said those negotiations have to happen very quickly. then you have that one incident or the incidents that we've been talking about a little bit on the air over the past 24 hours. it's 18 local deputies who signed a petition for vladimir putin to step down from office. it's one of those things where that is definitely noteworthy but these are very low level local officials and also people who it's not very many of them at this point who are signing a petition like that. but, still, something that is noteworthy and shows that the russians realize they are in a lot of trouble in ukraine,
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rosemary. >> see if that gains momentum. fred pleitgen, melissa bell, thank you. the house committee investigating the u.s. capitol insurrection is meeting today. plus, a flurry of new subpoenas for dozens of former advisers to donald trump. why are they coming out now? we're back with that and more in just a moment.
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the house committee investigating january 6th will meet in person today and one of the most pressing questions remains whether they will invite donald trump and his vice president mike pence to appear. sources tell cnn no one really expects them to testify but invitations should be extended for the record. the committee is also expected to plan the next round of hearings ahead of the final report likely to be released in december. a federal investigation appears to be gaining momentum. prosecutors want to speak to dozens of people close to donald trump including his former
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political director, campaign manager and deputy chief of staff. cnn's sarah murray has more. >> reporter: cnn is learning from sources that the justice department has subpoenaed more than 40 people as part of the investigation into efforts to subvert the results of the 2020 election. these include a number of big names, people like bill step pin and brian jack, a former white house political director. this appears to be an effort to sort of succk up and gather as much information as possible. it tries to take not any overt actions. and we know from talking to sources about these subpoenas, they're very broad. some of them are seeking information related to the fake electors plot, some are seeking information about the save
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america pac. others are asking for any documents people may have handed over to the january 6th electors committee. this is a wide and aggressive effort by the justice department and an indication that that investigation is intensifying. sarah murray, cnn, washington. the u.s. justice department said it's open to one of donald trump's picks for special master. he is raymond deary who has served as a federal judge in new york since he was nominated by then president ronald regan. trump's party has rejected both of the doj's choices. >> the impact is time. donald trump wants to move as slowly as possible. clearly he wants to run out the clock as much as he can.
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it's where trump has been most successful. quite often we see what they've said and we think it doesn't make sense but if you want to slow things down, that does make sense for them. that's where their goal is. so rejecting people made a lot of sense if that's your goal even if you didn't have a reason. we'll see if this now is able to have doj speed things up. we also need to be mindful that judges don't like shenanigans and so if you reject somebody, that's one thing. if you reject them without a reason, that's where judges step in and they start to call bs on this. >> our coverage of the new royal era continues in just a moment with my colleague, becky anderson in london. straight ahead, preparations are underway and seeing the coffin c carrying the late queen elizabeth is arriving at buckingham palace. just ahead, we'll look at elizabeth the mother and her
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom" live from just outside buckingham palace. i'm becky anderson. if you are just joining us, let me bring you back up to date with what we can expect in the hours to come. next hour king charles iii and queen consort camila are expected to depart for bell
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fast. once there, he will hold a private audience with the leader of the democratic unionist party. later a flight carrying queen elizabeth's coffin will leave ed edinborough tomorrow and will arrive by mid afternoon. i want to bring in dame martina milburn. we'll get to the trust in a moment, but i know you've worked very closely with the royal family for years now. how are you feeling as you are watching all of this unfold? >> ip crencredibly emotional. it's taken all of us by
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surprise. i've wept. losing the queen for us brits is part of your dna. and then all of the challenges that the now king is going to face in his new rein. >> whether or not you have met either queen elizabeth ii and former prince charles, now king charles iii, you know them both, don't you? >> i do. i do. in fact, i once got stuck in a lift with the queen and the duke. it's hard to explain. it's just very emotional. >> tackling youth unemployment. tell me about the work that you and his royal highness, now his majesty, have done and continued to do. >> it basically helps young people get a job or set up in self-employment. in the u.k. it's helped over a million young people.
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we're now in 19 countries. our latest country is the united states. we've just set up princess just there helping unemployed people in detroit and new york. so it's become a big force. >> we do know king charles iii has said that he will have to give up his charity work, that he clearly now has a new role and there are calls for him to move away from that work completely or at least keep it at arm's length. how do you see the organization going forward and ensuring the continued commitment to young people now that he has a different role? >> well, we've been planning for this for a long time and actually over the last two years the then prince of wales was taking on more and more official duties. for example, when i started 20 years ago he came to all of our board meetings.
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he hasn't done that for 15 years. so there's been a gradual evolution. so there isn't going to be any sort of sudden parting of ways. we'll continue doing what we do. he has already told me he's going to continue keeping an eye on us. >> keeping an eye on you. who do you know? who will take over? has he nominated a member of the royal family to be more involved? >> no, he's going to continue as our president. our name will continue as the prince's trust. if at some point it goes to the other members of the royal family, that will be decided. for now it's business as usual. >> do you have a presence? >> i think that would be very undiplomatic. >> i'll allow you to get away with that one. i think it was prince philip, king charles's father, who talked to him in his early days about the sort of work that he
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might do with charities. we know that he's been heavily involved in the environment, which has become a lot more fashionable these days with climate crisis. that is, i think it's quite fair to say, a consensus issue here in the u.k. prince philip was also very mindful of what other issues might be consensus issues. he talked to the young then prince about youth development, didn't he? this, again, is one of those issues despite the fact he will have to move away from the day-to-day machinations of this but remain president, youth development and work with youth, i think we can all agree, is a consensus issue and that's a good thing, isn't it? >> it is a good thing. i've sat with him with young people in prisons, on some really grimace states, in colleges, in job centers and he has this amazing ability to really connect with young people. i don't know where it comes from. i don't know it's because his
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own school days as we know weren't the best but he really does connect and the difference it makes to them afterwards is extraordinary. some of the businesses the prince's trust has set up, they've gone on to become multi-million pound organizations. i think that passion he has for people is not going to change because he's become king. he is genuinely interested. he's passionate and he's compassionate and personally i think that is really to be welcomed in a monarch. >> we wish you the best of luck, the trust the best of luck. i know that at cnn we have worked closely with you around the world in promoting the work that you do and we will continue to do that. thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. and thank you for all of your support. >> thank you. dame martina milburn outside of buckingham palace. people have been mourning the loss of the queen since thursday, but at the center of
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all of this of course are the queen's four adult children. cnn's elisa soares. >> reporter: four children united in their grief. king charles iii, princess ann, prince andrew and prince edward dutifully honoring in death the life of their dearest mama, the queen. queen elizabeth was already mother to a young prince charles and princess ann when she unexpectedly ascended to the throne at just 25 years old. it forced her to suddenly be far less hands on as a parent. >> so it was difficult for her to balance both of those parts of her life. >> reporter: the heavy demand of the crown meant she and prince philip were often away for months at a time.
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during their two older children's more formative years something that changed once their younger children andrew and edward were born. >> she's much more in the mode of being a queen, she's proved herself. she's proved the political naysayers around her all wrong. when she has andrew and edward in a different stage, she has more time to devote to them. >> reporter: for charles, heir to the throne, it was a childhood that was difficult. charles felt excluded, warm, wasn't very sympathized with, that the queen mother was a particular friend to him but his parents were not particularly sympathetic to him. >> reporter: charles's relationship to his mother particularly trained after his tumultuous marriage with prip ses diana exploded in public view. in later years they appeared to repair that rift and grow closer. charles giving an emotional tribute to her mother shortly
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after her death. >> my beloved mother was an inspiration, an example to me and all of our family. >> reporter: there was much public speculation andrew was the queen's favorite child, something the queen never dignified with a response. >> i think it's something that's said why he's so self indulgent. >> reporter: andrew caused trouble with his mom. allegations of that led andrew to engage in sex acts with an underage girl, allegations andrew has repeatedly resigned but forced the queen to have to strip him of his military title. in her later years one of her closest relationships appeared
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to be with her closest son, edward and his wife. >> she became particularly fond of edward and sophie. when she was in the covid bubble she was with them. >> the queen's daughter enjoyed a particularly close relationship with her mother. princess ann even making a rare point during jubilee celebrations to defend her mother against allegations that she was cold and unfeeling saying, i simply don't believe there is any evidence whatsoever to suggest she wasn't caring. it just begs belief. over 70 years the queen took great pains to juggle duty and country. kate winslow perhaps summing it up best with this anecdote from when she accepted the cbe. >> you're a mother, aren't you? >> yes. >> she said, well, that is the
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only job. >> isa soares, cnn, edinborough, scotland. >> reporter: recent polling done back in may ahead of the queen's platinum jubilee found a sizeable majority of brittains want the monarchy to continue. 86% of those surveyed approved of the job that the queen was doing. this of course done in may. they felt the same way about prince william. just 65% were happy with then how prince charles was doing as prince of wales. it remains to be seen whether those numbers will change in the weeks and months to come. i'm becky anderson in london. do please stay with cnn's continuing coverage throughout
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the day of the queen's remembrance. for now, let's get you back to rosemary church at cnn center in atlanta. rosemary. >> thank you, becky. thank you for your great coverage today. we appreciate it. still to come, as the u.s. federal reserve continues another interest rate hike, could falling gas prices sway their decision? we'll take a look at that.
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welcome back, everyone. the latest u.s. inflation report is due out in just a few hours from now. investors in the stock market seem confident the news will be encouraging. the dow gained 229 points on monday. about 3/4 of a percent. nasdaq finished 1.3% higher. the s&p 500 was up a little more than 1%. i want to bring out those u.s. futures numbers.
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that is encouraging. both the dow and nasdaq up about .4%. there the s&p 500 futures up around about the same amount. that inflation report i just mentioned to you could be affected by falling gas prices across the united states. fuel prices have been slashed dramatically since the early summer. lower energy costs could spell good news across the board. >> reporter: there have been 90 straight days of falling gas prices here in the u.s. that is good news for americans. on monday the national average stood at $3.72 a gallon. that is down substantially from june where we saw an all-time high of $5.02 a gallon but it's not where we were a year ago where gas prices were $3.18 a gallon. the cpi report, the key inflation report we've been
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tracking, as we look to see if prices come down. analysts say they will month over month because of the falling gas prices. energy makes up such a big part of this report. this is not looking to have any bearing as the fed meets next week. we are expecting this aggressive interest rate hike. however, if we continue to see falling gas prices and we continue to see these cooling off of cpi reports, it certainly could send a signal to the federal reserve that maybe they could start to back off of these interest rate hikes in the months to come. cnn, in hoboken, new jersey. u.s. senator sent twitter a series of questions about its security practices on monday, a day before twitter whistle-blower is expected to testify before congress. all this as twitter prepares to go to trial with tesla ceo elon musk. the company is accusing him of trying to back out of a $44
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billion acquisition deal he had previously agreed to. still to come here on cnn, the u.s. president announces an ambitious plan to reduce cancer deaths. how he plans to save others from the same disease that took his son. do stay with us. rapid wrinkle repair® smooths the look of fine lines in 1-1-week, deep wrinkles inin 4. so y you can kiss wrinkles goodbye! neutrogena®
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u.s. president joe biden says he has a plan to cut cancer deaths in half in the next 25 years. the president made the announcement in boston where he traveled to highlight white house accomplishments ahead of the mid-term elections. cnn's kaitlyn collins has our report. it was 60 years to the day since jfk delivered that legendary speech talking about his vote to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade. president biden today gave his own speech at the jfk library talking about what he says is a similarly bold proposal. cutting the death rate from cancer in half in the next quarter ensign -- century. the president saying that they did not have the tools 60 years
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ago to put a man on the moon. that was something they had to work on. president biden arguing that today, in 2022, the united states does have the tools to achieve his goal. he said it is a bolt, ambitious and completely doable proposition that he is putting out there when it comes to cutting cancer rates in half in the united states. one that president biden said is personal to him. he talked about his own son beau biden dying of cancer. the president talking about this, talking about this as part of his broader proposal trying to achieve this goal that he says is just as ambitious as the one jfk rolled out. kaitlyn collins, cnn, the white house. the 74th emmy awards aired on monday. "squid games" actor lee jung jay became the first korean actor to
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win the prize. there was this special moment as well. ♪ i am an endangered species but i sing the victim's song ♪ >> and that was actress sheryl lee ralph who took home the award for supporting actress. she is the only second black woman in the history of the emmys to win the award. all right. just before we leave, i do have this for you. a flash flood warning has been issued for outtown new york city
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impacting 7 million people. that is from the national weather service. we will keep you updated right here on cnn. i'm rosemary church. be sure to stay connected with me at twitter. you're watching cnn. do stay with us. show your sore throaoat who's boss. mucinex instasoothe. works in seconds, lasts for hours. and it's easier than ever to■ get your projects do right. inside, outside, big or small, angi helps you find the right so for whatever you need done. with angi, you can connect with and see ratings and reviews. just search or scroll to see upf on hundreds of projects.
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all right. here we go. it is tuesday, september 13th. 5 a.m. exactly here in new york. thanks for getting an "early start" with us. i'm christine romans. we begin with ukraine's claims of stunning advances on the battlefield. top military commanders declaring hu a

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