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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  November 4, 2022 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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thanks so much for joining us tonight, and all week. follow me on facebook,
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instagram, and twitter. coverage continues now with allison. >> good evening, everyone. it happens to be crunch time now, we are four days away from election day. want to know which states are in a fight to the finish? just look at the map, all the big names hitting the trail in the final days. it tells you what you need to know about the race where every single vote will count. >> there's a remarkable new ad that we have to show you that claims to know what god wants. >> and on the eighth day, god down on his planned paradise and said i needed a protector, so god made a fighter.
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>> oh my god. we are going to talk about that . >> i hope so. >> plus the politics of god, recreational marijuana is on the ballot in five states, most conservative red states. finally an issue that brings americans together, getting high. >> you go low, they go high. >> i had to, i don't know why it came out, it's a whole thing. >> let's bring in experts on that. we have scott jennings, and a former clinton white house aide , and a former advisor to george hw bush and john mccain. okay, we will dive into things momentarily. first, when you look at that map of where all the biggest names in politics are being deployed to right now, from beau biden obama, biden, donald
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trump, what does it tell you about the anxiety levels? >> it tells me a lot. if you want to know where immigrants are in trouble, follow obama, followed by. they are there because democrats are in trouble. that's where they smell opportunity. just watch the map. nevada, arizona, new york. >> why was he in a blue state? >> because they are in trouble in new york. if that doesn't tell everything you need to know, if they are sending the president of the united states to new york, you've got a problem. we can't say anybody's interval when we haven't had an election yet, all we can look at is whole numbers. every vote counts and democrats are racing to the. scott is smiling over there. it's true, every vote counts, we've got to race to theand
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reach that point before we make any conclusions. considering where we were, democrats are not that far off, expected this to be a bloodbath from the beginning of the year. >> after roe versus wade, that's had a surge. >> from june until september. now we are coming back to the dorm. people are realizing this is a tough race. we can't take this for granted. just because we had a surge, we are not on a roll, we have to get to the finish line. >> i've seen trump travel differently. biden is being deployed for political purposes. for trump, he's in florida, which is an in-your-face dissent is moved. i imagine it's more through the personal lens for him.>> chuck
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grassley is having some problems.>> i do also want to show you this app, you all remember this risky gambit democrats made of investing millions of dollars into far right, but they considered extremist republican candidates. let's see if that has paid off. here are six races where democrats did that, rolled the dice on that, and the pews at the moment that it did pay off for them. none of these in the polls are matching the democrats. >> they narrow it in pennsylvania, in illinois, it was clearly a beneficial
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decision. whether it was a smart decision, i don't know if it was. because the race is so tight, that's $53 million the democrats spent that could have spent on turning out the voters for their own candidates. >> ethically dubious, politically effective. >> not in every case. they spent a lot of money for kerry lake. >> the arizona democratic party put in an effort to hide her, but they didn't put dollars behind it. >> you think they put money into her campaign? yes. they did that. >> they didn't put any money in that. >> the one on that list and most interested in is baldock, running neck and neck, i don't know if he's going to win or not, but chuck schumer's outside group spent at least 5 million at the last minute and i think rectally caused him to get the nomination. if he wins, you can bank joe biden and
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chuck schumer for that, a direct intervention at the last minute that i do believe change the outcome.>> over $1 billion spent on television. >> if these candidates win, you are the ones responsible for making them when. if it works. if it fails, there's going to be a lot else said.>> now we have to play this piece. it's a run to census deposits a rhonda santos - - >> on the day - - on the eighth day, god looked down on his planned paradise and said i need a protector, so god made a fighter, god said i need somebody willing to get up for don, kiss his family goodbye, travel thousands of miles for no other reason than to serve the people come to save their
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jobs, their livelihoods, their liberty, their happiness. >> it goes on, it goes on for another minute and a half. i've heard of messiah complexes, but this one takes the cake, mark. what do you see here? >> i've done a bunch of presidential ads and seen anything like this. i think he lost his mind on this. i thought it was a parody. it's a direct ripoff of paul harvey, line for line that he did for farmers, and no attribution to paul harvey. >> the first - - this is my satanic - - >> takes a tremendous ego, he's showing himself to have it. >> mark has been around a few residential candidates, as have i. i don't know if this is going to be that tournament item
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. i think he's going to transit his race. >> do you think that going to that level of saying that you are the chosen one, you are anointed. >> is there an audience for that? oh, yeah. i look at it campaign advertisements, there's an audience for that, sure. >> it sad. we live in a country with separation of church and state, we should not be appealing this way to be elected. he's basically running for president in this ad. he's feeding into the argument that he is not serious about fulfilling his term as governor. he's putting it out there. this is not an ad for governor of florida florida, this is an ad for someone who wants to be president of the united states. >> there's no one around saying no. somebody with some common sense should have said that's insane. >> you think that apple hurt? >> 100%. the blowback on this.
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>> i wish i believe that was true. at least among republicans. >> the people of florida like him so much because they have trade florida like the model governance for the nation, they think of themselves as being elevated right now. >> this sizzling about his decision-making. small circles said this is great, go for it. this is problematic. >> laura, your thoughts?>> the 2014 ram truck add, they played up paul harvey, under god he made a farmer. it was a successful campaign. there were these ads, about the politics of symbolic pickup trucks and trying to connect these. 's. i think that he was obviously trying to appeal to what has
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worked in a super bowl ad in the past. i think he's right, they are all right, this is an ad for a presidential run, not just for a gubernatorial race. at the end of the day, it does take a lot to compare oneself to being the anointed one. if you're going to tell people you are the leader of the free world, this is might - - this might be where you start. let's hear all about that 2014 game. laura lopez and liam donovan are joining us. let's address the elephant in the room. not talking about ram trucks, but this was obviously a moment to say i can use this again in four. he has his sights set beyond florida, right? >> yes, absolutely. i think he believes that he is
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absolutely going to win the gubernatorial election. it is sort of a set up. i think mark in new york is right, there will be some low back. i think what it shows beyond that is it is exactly, scarily, what people did around trump when there's no one there to save maybe not such a good idea, i don't know if you want to go there right now. there's going to be a bunch able around him that are going to you know. so you are talking about yes people. >> yes. and part of the yes-man philosophy, it's scary to some people, the prospect of dataview when it comes to the 20/20 election versus now. listen to what mandela had to say about his opponent. he essentially says he's petulant, if he decides he's not going to
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concede defeat. listen to this. he's shown us exactly who he is. he didn't commit to accept the results of the 2020 presidential election because he did not get the result that he wanted. it is petulant to say the least, a person would go so far, it's very argument arrogant, it is the height of arrogance. that's what he always has been and will continue to be. >> the theme is arrogance. how do you see it? is it setting up for the notion that look, they've been talk about the prospect of widespread fraud. biden had a closing argument, also democracy in peril, is he picking up on that? even the president thinks that, so johnson is saying that's where i am. what do you think?>> this is media faith, launching segments,
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rhonda santos, has he gone mad? this is about triggering mainstream media and getting them to question these tactics or question whether you are an election denier. when you pick at these issues and they stick to their guns, it ends up looking a little bit hysterical.>> you mean ron johnson? >> with johnson, it has become a gotcha question two acknowledged that one should respect the outcome of an election, an implicit swipe at the former president, not something that republicans want to do right now.>> i remember the conversation a few years ago, do you have confidence in this person? that's always the way the mission was asked. he think about dan crenshaw, he essentially says it was a day and switch, it was always kind
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of a lie. listen to what he said. >> it was a lie, the whole thing was always a lie managed to rile people really. the promises you are making that you are going to challenge the electoral college and overturn the election, there is not even a process for you to do that. it doesn't even exist. i was like what the are we doing ? i told that to people behind closed doors. we definitely had arguments, people just need their last hurrah, like they thought just one last time. devoted to certify the election. this is part of this whole truth podcasts. what do you make of that? there are two big things i want to point out. there are ramifications to that
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big lie, the lie about election's. jerry sixth, the violence that day was a direct response to the fact the president repeated this lie over and over again. i don't gets a gotcha question to ask candidates if you are going to accept the results if you lose. that is a very serious question now, we've seen where lies about not accepting election results leads to violence. i was speaking to election workers in michigan, once you have been running elections for 20 years or more, they are upset, they are scared. for their physical safety. the city clerk of madison heights i was just talking to, she now has cameras on her home. she's not letting her election workers put their last names on their nametags. she's in constant ordination with the local police in a way that she has never been before. she's tracking external threats the fbi might send to her. all unprecedented external steps that did not happen
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higher to 2020, she knows they are happening, because of the election deniers running up and down the ballot in michigan. she said if she could say something to them, it would be that life have consequences, those words have consequences. as a reporter, it's my job to hold politicians accountable. i interviewed the atty. gen. candidate in michigan also spreading lies about the 2020 election and asked him the same question, the same that i asked the incumbent in general, are you going to accept the results if you lose? he refused to answer the question. it's a very serious question that every candidate needs to answer. >> we've heard time and time again that sort of vivid, the idea that you are not just saying yes or no, which is a very difficult thing for people to say, apparently, and if it was a gotcha question, couldn't
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you just answer it in the affirmative? >> we also have a word for that we used to teach our kids, sore losers. don't be a sore loser. left back >> it's amazing how many elected officials are now willing to be arrested sore losers and say it out loud. yes. laura, we will see. do you know what else is on the ballot on tuesday?>> pot. voters in five states decide whether to legalize recreational marijuana, and my panel has some stoned, i mean strong feelings about that coming up. a plan with tax-smart investing strategies designed to help you keep more of what you earn. this is the planning effect. why do nearly one million businesses choose stamps.com to mail and ship? stamps.com is convenient you get the services of the post office right on your computer
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pot is on the ballot this election day. voters in arkansas, maryland, missouri, north and south dakota will decide whether recreational marijuana use should be legal in the states, joining 19 other states plus the district of columbia, where recreational uses currently legal. four of five states are red states. what does that say about the politics of what? it's ask the panel.
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it is said that god is the great uniter, finally we found a bipartisan issue. scott doesn't like this one bit. >> i recognize my views are in the minority of americans on this. >> what are your views? >> i think we are going to regret this. this is a country that 40% of americans were able body should be in the workforce aren't participating. we got kids suffering from learning loss, we have adults whose lives absolutely ruined and loss, and we need more drugs in this country? >> i think it can make them do better so they can go back to work. >> this is a difference between drugs and recreational, in terms of recreational, do we need more people in altered states walking around? so i don't see the problem with
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it, i have done it recently, and i don't see the problem with it, because i'm capable of being a auctioning human being and capable citizen even while using i want to. the majority of americans know it is not problematic. even president biden at 70 something years old has come to realize it is not as troubling a health issue as scott suggests that it is. 19 states have already legalize it. if these five states do, half the nation will have legalize marijuana. that's a dramatic shift from where we were 10 years ago when colorado became the first state to do it. i remember the bill clinton campaign when he said i'd inhale, we've come a long way since that time. >> now people are consuming it in droves. >> they are not ashamed of it, they should be ashamed. >> i've done a lot of personal research on this. colorado has had 10 years of experience now, there's no
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correlated increase in crime rate, it is way safer than alcohol, and the reason many of these service states are doing this, show me the money, show me the revenue. >> if any of my four children are watching the show, you should be in bed, and under no circumstances should you be doing any drugs at all, say no to everybody who's trying to take you down this really stupid path. >> let's talk about magic mushrooms. they are also on the ballot. colorado, your state may legalize, and oregon is the first state to have done so, interestingly, on the ballot now, some communities want to ban them. they don't like that the whole state has legalized them. they want to ban it. are you in favor? >> i've also done personal research on this. >> tell us. >> this should go slowly, but should be looked at. the regulation is on the screen and should be.
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they are seeing upside for veterans and ptsd issues. more research needs to be done. it should be done, it should be looked at. >> it is also used for fighting discretion depression. and it is being distributed at centers, it is used under supervision. that's an introducer that is an interesting concept. there's a new look at how mushrooms and psilocybin, the drug in it, every time i look at scott, he's curling his lip at me. all drugs are based on plants of some kind. if psilocybin helps fight depression, what's your beef? >> i'm sorry. maybe i'm in the minority here. i just feel like a lot of this is trying to rationalize people who just want to do drugs because they like to do drugs, where does this lead us? is this really what we want for our future? >> should people be able to use alcohol and tobacco?
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>> we've crossed that in this country. tobacco use is going down. >> alcohol and tobacco are more destructive than marijuana is. >> what about magic mushrooms? >> you are against both of those. i think we should decriminalize all of the position of drugs, and legalize marijuana completely for recreational and medicinal uses. i don't think we should target people for using drugs. >> what about doing drugs? >> dealing is different. for possession, i don't think someone should be jailed for having a drug in their possession. >> thank you all for sharing your personal views on that. laura? >> should i order your panel some munchies? >> for three of us. [ laughing ] >> scott jennings is not going
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to be hungry at all. >> i will have a glass of water, that's all they really want. [ laughing ] >> part of the idea, talking about crime being on the ballot in invisible ink in some places and red ink and others, one month ago, president biden at a proclamation essentially to say the idea of marijuana in one's possession, recreational or otherwise, that led to mass pardons. still, the rubicon may have been crossed in that respect. we will see what happens on the ballot as well. it's really fascinating. also fascinating that half of an entire company was unceremoniously laid off, allison, and now come the lawsuit. just what is going on at twitter? we will try to tap into it, next. [ music ]
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nearly 50% of twitter's workforce was laid off today, which means that a headcount of some 7500 employees is now down around 3700. that after the world's richest person acquired the platform. the - - regarding twitters reduction in force he said that unfortunately there's no trace in the company losing $4 million per day. everyone was offered three months of severance, 15% more of than what was legally required.
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cara and liam are both back. you and i talked a lot about twitter over the years, and over the month. did you see this coming? if so, we talked about this, does the way it actually unfolded surprise you? >> there are other tech people, it's never good to do a layoff, right? people were caught unawares. people are changing everything, including editing documents the way they like. the layoff is alive. what he is paying, he has to pay. i could be higher in europe, were new york, but most of the employees are in california or new york. you will have to pay two
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months. women severance is not particularly generous. they have to sign a document to get that - - it probably says non-disparagement, tweet nicely about elon musk, i don't know what it says.>> what might surprise people are the types of departments where they've laid off people from. i want to hear your reaction. some of it includes human rights, ethical ai, marketing and communication, wellness, duration, trust and safety. that's a lot of different apartments affected, and we are a couple days away from a midterm election and two years away from the presidential, and you notice something already in the air.>> what is most concerning about all those departments, those are the
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departments that take care of humanity, right? and there was a study done by researchers from montclair university that showed that there was a measurable spike in hostility, vulgar language, hates tweeting against people based on their ethnicity, gender, and religion. they actually measured it, from the couple weeks leading up to when elon musk took it over, there were about 84 hostile tweets per hour, the moment he took it over from that moment on until noon the next day, there were more than 370 per hour. they have measurable numbers. >> what are you attributing that to? not you personally, but what is the thought or assumption? >> they are testing the boundaries of it. they haven't changed content moderation yet. only 15% of that staff, the trust and safety staff were laid off.
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they laid off in other areas, like disability areas, which is unfortunate. >> what are your thoughts, right? >> this parallels the rhonda santos stuff. this is all about triggering the media, this is his brand, he came into clean house. there are corporate departments, the existence of these departments is mind blowing to folks that follow elon musk. this is a feature, not a bug, he is taking the sorts of bites. you are seeing some of the discourse on the right as advertisers flee twitter. and the realm of woke capital and social pressure. >> he made that comment earlier. that doesn't sound like
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capitalism to me, that some for communism.>> the issue is, he's angry, they don't like him, they don't want to advertise with him. if satan had a company he could advertise on, he would. >> twitter is not a big advertising platform as you can see by the numbers. it's not a big choice. one of the things that is have, but they leave after that, they look even worse, this is not worth their time. they are not going to do that. >> to your point, i think there are people testing it, because they see how elon musk in the run up to him taking it over was saying he's going to let trump on, he doesn't think moderation is fair, he thinks it's an attack against free speech, once he took it over, people were like okay, let's check this out. the fact that they let go of
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the moderation team is indicative that he is going to be having a bigger allowance for heat speech. >> there's not thousands of these people, there's 300 of them. they just want to test the system, that's what's happening. >> he is not helping. >> we are past the point of testing to see if twitter is a space where you can really ignore boundaries. i'm thinking about what the testing must look like at this point. people are just dipping their toe in that pond, they are fully in and invested. what's going to happen when the wave crashes on others? >> every day seems like new
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drama. it doesn't seem like things are going to even out yet. and then, kyrie irving finally apologizing for not speaking out against anti-semitism. why do nearly one million businesses choose stamps.com to mail and ship? stamps.com is convenient you get the services of the post office right on your computer stamps.com saves you money with great rates from usps and ups
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nike ending its relationship with kyrie irving, in the wake of him tweeting out a link to an anti-semitic film last week. the company issued a statement saying "at nike we believe there is no place for heat speech and we condemn any form of anti-semitism. with that, we have suspended our relationship with kyrie irving immediately. he will sit out tonight's game.
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it's the start of at least five game suspension over the controversy after initially defending his decision to share the content, he issued an apology on interim late last night saying in art "to all jewish families and communities that are hurt and affected from my post, i'm deeply sorry to have caused you pain, and i apologize. i initially reacted out of emotion, instead of focusing on the healing process of my jewish mothers and sisters that were heard from the hateful remarks made in the documentary. bob, it's great to have you here. that he's issued an actual occult apology, will he be back ? >> a minimum of five games. it's an 80 game or so regular- season. it's going to cost him in the low seven figures. it's going to cost them millions of dollars, and the nike suspension, that will cost
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intense, if not hundreds of millions of dollars. he's a free agent after this year. he's only 30. his value is going to be less because teams are going to wonder about him. it's not just this. he was a flat earth or at one time, anti-vaxxer, linked to stuff from alex jones, a despicable conspiracy theorist to pumps poison into the water supply on a regular basis, and now this. those who are skeptical are going to say with some justification he only came around when this five-game suspension was levied, which is going to cost him a lot of money, and the condition that they've set forth is as of right now, he is unfit to be part of their organization. that was before the apology. but they still said this, after
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the apology, they didn't use the unfit thing, they said until he takes remedial steps and coast counseling, conference with antidefamation league and satisfies us that a lesson has been learned, the five games is only a minimum. it could be longer. what should have been done? after he tweeted that link, it seems nobody moved with the speed and forcefulness that was necessary. what was the right thing to have done here? >> the right thing was to hold him personally accountable instead of making vague statements to the effect that of course we stand against hate speech, and hate has no place, anti-semitism has no place. the initial statement from adams over, the initial statement from the league didn't mention kyrie irving by name, it just kind of condemned anti-semitism and hate speech. finally they came around, partly because kyrie irving kept digging himself in deeper. jerry brewer described him as
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both delusional and defiant. and he did an impromptu press conference with the basketball press the night before last, or maybe it was last night, and he duck himself in deeper with some sort of word salad, and at that point they realized there was no way to distance themselves or try to split the difference, they had to flat out come down on him, and they did. so let's say that kyrie irving does harbor feelings about jewish people, let's say this is a teachable moment. can he be redeemed? >> anybody can be redeemed, in theory, from almost anything, if the redemption is sincere. if they truly learn something. given his prominence, he could be what he claims to be at hasn't been, some sort of beacon of light, somebody who is eliminating important issues for people. if there are people who share his viewpoint, and sadly,
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although twitter shouldn't be viewed as a people, but we've heard there is a lot of support for kyrie irving and kanye west and anti-jewish stuff, now that twitter has taken some restrictions off in the name of free speech, there's a lot of support for this. it may be in raw numbers a lot, we hope it's a small percentage of the population, but it's out there. if those people can be set straight, now we are into wishful thinking, it redeeming kanye west, they both seem to be on another planet. but you can turn a bad situation around for the better, it's always possible. >> it's always great to talk to you, we really appreciate it. laura, your thoughts? >> it is so important to hear the inside. thinking about all the different controversies over the years, we are at a real fork in the road.
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where will things go from here? is there an opportunity to use the platform in a way that is reductive? i certainly hope for that. >> twitter isn't known for productive discourse. >> i mean the players and the epiphany of really doing the right thing, i'm not as hopeful about course correction in all fields, that is true. >> well said. >> about this? thinking about you than what they can take teach us, a 14- year-old is making his mark on election day. we are going to tell you all about it. my favorite story of the day. that's coming up next.
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election day is just four days away, but early voters are getting a chance to collect coveted i voted stickers. in new york, they are looking a little different this year. >> here are some of the entries that teenagers send in from the i voted sticker youth design. perfectly normal, patriotic, there is an eagle, you see some flag colors, red, white, and blue. here's the winning entry. okay. i'd like you to look at that sticker. that's the winning entry. it is so awesome on so many levels. it is colorful, it has six legs, it has bulging eyes, and creepy teeth. this is from a 14-year-old who received more than 200,000 votes in this contest, laura. >> i love the creativity, i love it. you know what? it makes you stop and wonder honestly, who did you vote for?
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>> on every level it captures the spirit of these midterms, terrifying, creepy, and absurd. >> look at that. a spider. maybe it's a web of lies. over caffeinated, looking at the polls all life long. - - over caffeinated, looking at the polls all night long. >> 14-year-old hudson rowan made this. he said it gives off a chaotic vibe. yes it does, hudson. >> i like it. >> tell us what you think. what does that i voted sticker say to you about the midterms? you can tweet to us. we will be right back. and we know 80% of couples sleep too hot or too cold.
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the crucial midterm elections are coming down to the wire. candidates have four days to make their final pitch t

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