Skip to main content

tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  November 7, 2022 8:00pm-9:00pm PST

8:00 pm
the insurance company enwasn't fair.ity y ca i didn't know what my case was worth, so i called the barnes firm. llll theararnes rmrm now the best result possible. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪
8:01 pm
i d d so my y quesonons eouout hicacase.y y son, ♪ call one eight hundred, cacalledhehe bars s fillion ♪ i d d soit was the best call eouout hii could've made. call the barnes firm and find out what your case all could be worth.uld've made. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ we are now less than an hour away from election day and candidates are making their final pitch to voters tonight. an election that really could change the entire future of this country. >> there are rays and margins in multiple races that could determine who controls congress. here's what's on the line. 435 house seats, 35 senate races, 35 governor races. let's bring in john berman, we also have cnn political commentator finney and --
8:02 pm
welcome and thank you. >> we are just talking to john meacham who is saying that if history is any guide, it is usually the opposite party of who controls the white house that who controls the midterms. so that means tomorrow will be good for republicans bad for democrats. are you seeing any signs to the contrary that you'd like to share? >> i am very mom so didn't, i can just feel it. >> the two most optimistic of democrats in america. >> 40 million people have already turned out. that 36 million had turned out in 2018. that is just good for democracy. tell me it's not. >> it's great for democracy. >> so, we are seeing high turnout among women in a number of key states as well. so i think let's have the voters have their say. let's not tell them what to do, let's have them tell us what to do. i feel optimistic about the fact that it is not going to be a shellacking.
8:03 pm
and i think that a lot of democratic voters, including young, people show up on election day. i know that seems kind of crazy, given all the gloom undo, but i think it is going to be an interesting day. i tell you the races that i'm watching, it is actually the attorney general, the state attorney general, additional to the governor races, that is going to tell us a lot about 2024 actually. they will control the levers of democracy in those states. >> also, we are talking about the optimism might seem crazy to people, we are also talking to 2024 already. before we even get to tomorrow's race, we're talking about 2024. and the idea of how much these midterms election results are going to be, maybe instructive in some respects, of what to expect in 2024. some of the names that are on the ballot tomorrow are already being floated as 2024
8:04 pm
candidates. in florida and pennsylvania as well. when you think about that john, we are an already on the tabulation part of the mid term, and we're thinking about what this will mean in 2020. for >> david irvin and i will talking about josh shapiro who is not even been elected governor of pennsylvania, and about if he would be a leading candidate in 2024 if biden should not run. i think it is the perfect time to speculate about the next election. >> be optimistic, right. [laughs] >> i think in addition to the candidates that may or may not win tomorrow, it is the dynamic of donald trump and you can see him make a announcement on november 16th. you can see the domino starting to fall. trump announces on the 15th, and i happen to think that if trump runs biden runs, or at least doesn't announce that he does not run. freeze is a bit of the field,
8:05 pm
-- to any republicans have the guts to say they will run against trump? i think that a number of republicans, like ron desantis, has to. he has to run if he ever wants to be president. in 56 minutes. >> as the things weren't interesting enough. these midterms were not interesting enough. a case in point, georgia. all eyes on georgia. that has been such a hot spot, so here are, not necessarily the closing arguments of the candidates there, raphael warnock and herschel walker, but certainly their predictions. >> everybody is asking me what is going to happen tomorrow. well, listen. i am making the case that it really is in your hands. if the people show up, i win. if the people of georgia show up i win. if the people joe up, we win. are you ready to win this election? >> we are talking about runoff.
8:06 pm
and i'm like runoff? runoff? are you talking about runoff? no, we are winning this. we're not talking about a runoff. we are winning this. when we leave tomorrow night we are leaving as winners. >> i didn't hear go dogs there. >> is senator warnock right that if there is high voter turnout he wins georgia? >> i would think yes, right? that was the model that the democrats are looking for. they are trying to get enthusiasm up, obviously they pump up enthusiasm, they get the vote out, and he will squeak it by. but i do not think he gets the 50%, so does he win, i do not know if he winds. unfortunately, herschel it's gonna be a runoff. i heard scott jennings talk about earlier in the night that this third party candidate who had been running, the republicans kind of micro targeted him away and nibble down the percentage of he was taking, so that herschel may
8:07 pm
garner more of that and get to those 50.1% that they need. but we could be here into old summer sixth talking about this race. here we are again. >> once again, georgia is part of the entire fabric of why we have the balance of power that we have right now. i want to bring in richmond right now, a senior adviser for the dnc, and biden. we are all talking about the idea of whether optimism is warranted, how are you feeling about the democrats chance of maintaining the majority in both chambers of commerce tonight, let alone the other races? >> i am optimistic. it will be tough to hold if you look at what has happened over the last year. the first term presidents usually lose a lot of seats. we think that we have reverse that trend, and we are looking forward to what happens tomorrow. but right now, everyone is
8:08 pm
focused on closing strong and getting the vote out. i would just say that, this will not be settled tomorrow. it will be days and days to make sure that every vote is counted, and we believe that when every vote is counted, our candidates are going to win. >> is that why you think biden had his closing arguments about democracy and prospect, and people engaging in election denialism throughout the midterms. do you think that this will be something in the long haul it genuine to obligation, but this more importantly will be another reflection about the strength of our democracy if that denialism continues? >> the president -- i think >> i do not here is audio. >> i think part of what. he is always talked about democracy and the need protected.
8:09 pm
if you look at current events this democracy needs attention, and i think he is just pointing that out while not ignoring the fact that people are facing real pressures at the dining room table concerning costs. that families face. >> he indeed is being consistent, but that consistency is not focusing on, maybe a higher priority than the comedy, he does have people in the democratic party's right feathers ruffled. we spoke to hillary rosen who is a longtime democratic strategist, and i want to play what she had to say and get your reaction. >> i am a loyal democrat, but i am not happy. i think that we did not listen to voters in this election, and i think that we are going to have a bad night. when voters tell you over and over and over again that they care mostly about the economy,
8:10 pm
listen to them. stop talking about democracy being at stake. >> so i've heard this criticism a number of times, now and i'm wondering if you can address the idea that some believe that biden, by focusing on democracy in peril, that he has exclusively focused on that rather than being able to walk and chew gum at the same time from the oval office? can you address whether the president of the united states in the democratic party more broadly, as done a good job of persuading voters that they are focusing on the bread of issues around that? >> well i think democrats have been highlighting their accomplishments to bring down cost. whether it's capping the cost of insulin, bringing down prescription price of -- bringing down health care. if you look at what he did with student loans to give college graduates more breathing room.
8:11 pm
all of those are things that he is doing to bring down the cost that people face. and then if you reverse that, republicans are saying that on day one they are going to repeal all those things that reduces household costs. so they're going to bring up costs. let me just say one thing about president biden, which i think is very serious. political pundits and politicians only concern themselves with -- statesman concern themselves with the neck with the next generation. if we look at what happened to speaker pelosi's husband, paul, we would be irresponsible to not talk about the danger that we face in protecting this democracy. so while some people have the ability to sit back and talk about strictly a next election, i think that that would be irresponsible and i think it is important for voters to know the different extremes that the parties represent. in the it is a good closing argument when you highlight differences in the parties. nice talk >> nice talking to
8:12 pm
you, thank you for having me. >> you think about the idea of the closing argument, and just by nature being a lawyer, i think about that also means that they had to develop an entire case. this is just the end. so maybe voters are convinced? who knows. >> yes, we will not know. possibly even tomorrow. [laughs] >> i asked for a murphy bed, but i was turned down. >> you are going to need it. >> you are on very early in late hours. there are already some legal battles playing out that could impact which votes get counted, and we are going to explain where and what next. this is how tosin lost 33 lbs on noom weight. i'm tosin. noom gave her a psychological approach to weight loss. noom has taught me how yothink about food has such a huge pact
8:13 pm
on your relationship with it. (chuckle) noom weight. gain knowledge. lose weight. ♪ here goes nothing. hey greg. um...hello? it's me, your heart! really? yes! recording an ekg in 30 seconds. tada! wow that was fast! good news, pal. i'm not detecting any of the six most common arrhythmias. what next? let's get some fresh air. been cooped up for too long. yeah... ♪ get kardia mobile card at kardia.com or amazon.
8:14 pm
8:15 pm
(ted koppel) 30 million americans have copd, half don't yet know it. every one of them is especially vulnerable to covid-19. help us find them at copdsos.org.
8:16 pm
a few hours away now for that
8:17 pm
from the very first polls opening on election, day but already lawsuits and challenges are in play. they say the potential to impact the outcome of the potential battleground races. what to look out for as -- elliott williams. elliott i am glad you are here to help unpack all of these things. so where are the key challenges happening as we get ready for these votes to start being counted? >> you know council, there is nothing new about challenges being made to election to the united states. there are 50 states, each of them have their own systems, there are several rights it here. the course of his go to be lawsuits. the issue now is that they happening before election, day and that is very big deal. so let's look at some of the states. pennsylvania is going to watch right now. in pennsylvania, what you have, in order to cast an absentee valid voters have to sign an
8:18 pm
envelope and put their ballot in it. thousands of people got this wrong in the state of pennsylvania. it is minor error relatively, but at the end of the day, that might have invalidated their ballots. there is litigation right now over what to do with them. now they will not be counted on election, day but will they be treated as valid? that is one to watch. you have a very very close senate race for governor and senator at the end of the day, those vote may not be counted and that could be the difference in pennsylvania. moving further west, which takes you to michigan, there was a suit there where the republican secretary of state nominee in michigan sue to invalidate thousands of ballots in detroit. now a judge that looked at that one really shredded the lawsuit, saying it was not based in much, if any, evidence. they raised the question of why this candidate was targeting detroit. michigan has 10 million people in it, why are you focusing
8:19 pm
your election challenge in the one highly democratic city in the state of michigan. there was question about the partisan makeup, or the partisan backdrop of the lawsuit there. so that one is not likely to succeed. but, it is out there and a big one. moving to wisconsin, further west. i think we are moving from east to west here. in wisconsin, also a big battleground state. so what, does happen there is a question of curing a ballot. when someone makes a mistake on their ballot, what do you do with it? in wisconsin they allowed election workers to cure or fix signature information on ballots, and that created a series of lawsuits. republicans all timidly won that one. finally, arizona, another battle. these all seem to be happening in battleground states, rather curiously. in arizona, there were state workers, election workers, the partisan makeup of them. a number of states have rules over the number of democrats
8:20 pm
and republicans who can be election workers. there are challenges there. >> we've got these challenges as you lay, lg idea of how to cure the ballot, the idea of clerical error in terms of the date of the envelope if it is on the outside, whether those can be cured before the election day. we are hours away now so the curing period is probably not there. but we are saying for election day, we've already seen in places like arizona for example, that there have been acts of possible voter intimidation. i am wondering, given that we've already seen this, are you concerned or other legal challenges surrounding the presence of people who are outside the polls trying to intimidate voters either not to show up, or to persuade how they actually vote? >> i think, i would look for those tomorrow in particular. and beyond, as people start showing up to vote. now certainly there have been a number of suits in past elections, but already in this
8:21 pm
election cycle sort of armed security guards who claimed to be deputized by the state patrolling people as they voted. so that is going to keep coming up. certainly, this is going to continue to be an issue. this idea of, can voters, what does it take to secure the ballot box? what does it take? at the end of the day, there is the possibility that the voters might be intimidated to have radical challenges to raise their. >> so important keep an eye on all these things, these issues are going to likely arise continuously. as we think about things stand, thank you elliott, in trying to think about this as a holistic approach in a way. there is already been issued about the counting, in some of these battleground states, it might turn on the ballots are being challenged. so let's zero in on the one to elliott was talking about. in pennsylvania, where a decision to count ballots with
8:22 pm
a date error on the outer envelope, that could have a big impact. cnn's brian todd has the impact for us. brian. >> laura, alison, there is a real scramble to count all of the absentee and mail-in ballots in pennsylvania because between philadelphia and pittsburgh, about 4400 of those are in danger of being rejected. why? because they were incorrectly dated on the envelopes. these are the envelopes that you sign here and you date here. in philadelphia about 4400 people did not date this properly, or put no date on, and those ballots are in danger of being rejected and that is according to a new ruling by the pennsylvania supreme court. you can go into your county election office and fix that, meaning curate and fix the date, you had all day today to do that. you had all day tomorrow to do that. or you could cracked provisionally on election day, and those provisional votes will be counted later. it is crucial because in
8:23 pm
pennsylvania, mail-in and absentee votes accounted for about a third of the votes. laura, allison. >> brian, thank you very much. joining us now is alex schmidt, is the commissioner of philadelphia. all, thank you for being here. how big of a problem is at these 4400 ballots between pittsburgh and philadelphia that somebody forgot to put the date on the outer envelope? >> well, for a state like pennsylvania, which is very much a swing state, and will likely have a race for the united states senate that will determine control of the senate, it is distressing mainly because it is a transparent and cynical attempt to prevent voters votes from being counted. >> what makes you say that? how do you know that this is a cynical attempt? >> having run elections for the past ten years in philadelphia, the board of elections know
8:24 pm
that when they mail the ballot out to voters, and i know that when they receive that ballot back on or before election day by 8 pm. so, whether the voter puts their birthday instead of the date, or something like that, really has nothing to do with whether the vote if it's a registered voter who's eligible to vote, or if it's that voters vote. it is a meaningless technicality. unfortunately, the way the laws written, the court of tougher to the way the laws written, consequently we are going to see thousands of voters votes in jeopardy as a result. >> our election result officials going to be able to remedy those? if there is 4400 of these outer envelope that do not have the right date, are they calling voters, how are they going to fix this? >> yeah, they are really hustling to let them know in time. it does not allow the voter to cast two votes, their first is
8:25 pm
not going to be counted. it gives them an opportunity to still have their vote count. and they are both vote find them by email, if they provided an email address, and also posting lists of voters who for one fatal defect or another, have their ballot brought into question. whether it is not signing it, not dating it, or putting it in what is called the secrecy envelope that the ballot goes inside of. then the secrecy envelope goes in the outer declaration envelope. >> the fact that the majority of these are out of philadelphia, do you think that is indicative of anything? >> yes. it is pretty conspicuous. and all of those is being done in the name of election integrity. there is no evidence of a single fraudulent vote that would have been blocked by any of these measures. but, there is plenty of evidence of legitimate votes
8:26 pm
cast by eligible voters that will not be counted as a result of this one. well, they have their work cut out for them. we can see if they have these 4400 voters, and if it happens this week. thank you very much for explaining this challenge to us. so laura, his vote is that they are register voters and their votes to count, but the law has said that they have to date accurately that outer secrecy envelope. >> that was part of the concern when this was first put in place, which was how would you get the message out to voters to ensure that they were doing it correctly, because there is always concern that people would get it wrong. human error would come into play, and people would be -- that has been part of the whole plan, what political campaign strategies have tried to include of here is how you actually vote and have it be clear. not a lot of recourse, and we
8:27 pm
will see what happens tomorrow. >> i cannot tell you how many of my checks have the wrong date on it. i also think it just signed them, routinely. and then they get return. >> that might be a different problem. >> if those checks are rubber, that is a whole different problem. but the votes might not be, the 2020 election showed us anything, it could be that we have quite a while to go before we know the full election results and, also the dates of allison's checks. so when can we find out the date? we'll talk about that timeline next. >> plan that includes all your accountnts so you can enjoy whatever comes n next. that's the planning effect. from fidelity.
8:28 pm
seatgeek presents the reeeeally into its. the confidence of knowing your concert tickets are legit, brings everything to life. yeah! seatgeek handles the tickets, so fans can fan.
8:29 pm
as someone living with type 2 diabetes, i want to keep it real and talk about some risks. with type 2 diabetes you have up to 4 times greater risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. even at your a1c goal, you're still at risk ...which if ignored could bring you here... ...may put you in one of those... ...or even worse.
8:30 pm
too much? that's the point. get real about your risks and do something about it. talk to your health care provider about ways to lower your risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. learn more at getrealaboutdiabetes.com
8:31 pm
all right, in less than half an
8:32 pm
hour now alison, in less than half an hour it will be like officially election day in america. we have millions of voters casting their ballots tomorrow, along with 41 million who have already cast their votes in early balloting. it may be days or even weeks before we know the winners are in some key races around the nation. back with us now is john berman, karen finney, and david urban. we are constantly trying to manage expectations with very good reasons. we know that the process by which votes are counted in a variety of states have people believing, when they go to bed, it is one thing and when they wake up into something difference. it is vulnerable period in our country for our democracy because there is room for the talking point and the seeds planted to come in to say, oh what happened overnight? >> look, if people are allowed to believe that they are told dishonest things. your vote counts as much if you voted three weeks ago as a few vote tomorrow, and you need to
quote
8:33 pm
know that. you need to know and believe that. your vote counts as much if it is tabulated tomorrow and if it is tabulated on wednesday, thursday, or friday. you need to know that and believe it. everybody should be saying it out loud. there are a few states that count slowly. one of the problems we have is that a few of these states tend to be some of the closest states in the country. so my best friends in pennsylvania, but you do an awful job. by choice, though. pennsylvania has chosen not to start counting early votes until election day. they could have it all buttoned up so that at 9:00 tomorrow, when the polls, close we could find out in pennsylvania, but they have chosen not. to >> personally now, john. >> david irving and his friends have done this. >> in arizona, this is a largely mail ballot states, and
8:34 pm
nevada also they've changed and they are a very male heavy state and is going to take a couple of days. there are a few key senate races there that could dictate control of the senate, so there's going to take time and people need to know it is going to take time. >> look at this, it tells you just how long it did take, as a reminder of people back in 2020. look at this 16 days in some area, four days, eight days, or in this case of some people, it has been almost two years. >> there is one theory that we should stop calling election day and start calling it election, months because that is more realistic. >> or maybe we just fix it and get it all done in one day. >> how do you do that? nowadays >> i bank by phone. i move money, i do not even go to the bank. >> people are afraid of mail-in ballots -- >> america, most people bank by phone. have you seen a cue outside of bank lately? >> you do not think that is
8:35 pm
going to arouse suspicion of conspiracy? >> i think if people are comfortable doing everything on their phone ordering, food banking, but they distrust the election just system? you trust all your money in the world -- >> you are going against what republican orthodoxy. >> shocking. >> i'm a little shocked. because we are trying to make voting a national holiday so it would be easier for people to vote. >> it should be a national holiday. let's get it down on one day. let's not linger. >> you want the counting done. >> if they could do it in brazil we can do it in america. >> but there is no practical reason not to give people a month of voting, let them do it at their leisure. >> why can't we do it in a day? >> you mean count in a day. >> count it in one day, we
8:36 pm
should go to bed and know the results. >> but can we put our big people pants on and chill out? >> we do hard things. we put people on the moon. we can count. votes >> it is not going to happen this year, is not gonna happen. john what you are saying is that a right need to know their vote counts, but on election night there is -- there is a perceived surge some, people called a mirage. that is real. i know that is in oxymoron that the mirages real, but there is a feeling when you go to sleep that something's happened. and sometimes candidacies that momentum wrong with it. >> they are being disingenuous. it is on people, frankly, people like us when we are describing what is happening as these votes are being counted to make clear which votes are being counted first and how it could change as time goes on.
8:37 pm
some of us have made a concerted effort over time to say tomorrow is election day, or eight days in till election day -- no. eight days left until you cast your ballots. and then the counting begins, in some cases just began since i'm states. >> i think americans deserve better. >> i think we need to change -- our look, we need to change the way we voted. now we need to change the anticipation when we are going to the wall and get all the answers. here's the thing, it is messy, but at least it tells us that it is working. i agree with you that it should absolutely be, there should be an overhaul. >> say that again, i want to hear you say that. >> only once. >> i try that home whatever works. >> he was the annoying thing about it is that we are all assuming that people make claims that elections are fraudulent, that we had they actually believe the claims, which we know is not always the
8:38 pm
case. >> who knows what people believe. they seem to doubt lots of things that we take as facts. but we are going to assume that tomorrow everything goes smoothly and all counting works beautifully for the next few weeks. meanwhile, as you know, there is a major upheaval at twitter and a time when election security is more important than ever. and now elon musk is giving his recommendations to who people to vote for. we will tell you about that.
8:39 pm
8:40 pm
eva's about to learn her fear of missing out leads to overating. i totally eat stuff to not miss out. ♪ that's just a bit of psychology eva learned from noom weight. sign up now at noom.com
8:41 pm
8:42 pm
8:43 pm
today, twitter's new owner, elon musk taking to twitter to advise people to vote republican. moscow writing, quote, to independent minded voters shared power curves the worst excesses of both parties, so i recommend voting for a republican congress, given that the presidency is democratic. the panel is back with us now. does elon musk recommendations matter? >> i think any endorsement at this point, he would rather have at the not. i think the question with elon musk's, is this the right thing for a guy to do who just bought a media platform and has been out there for some time saying, i'm going to make this neutral.
8:44 pm
i'm going to make this down the middle finally. and then when the first thing he does, well one of the first thing he did was spread misinformation about the beating of paul pelosi, but the second thing he does -- >> well the second thing he did was far of a. staff >> but the third thing he did was come out and support republicans. >> he is also said in the past that he would not go this way. he would not talk about politics or same way. >> every newspaper in newspaper endorses. it depends what you consider twitter to be. i know is different than a newspaper, but every newspaper endorses, it is not unusual for someone who runs some kind of a saying we -- it is we >> it is not a glowing endorsement of the republican party by the way. to my independent -- we have it to mike democratic executive, -- then power will be equally
8:45 pm
shared and there will be a better outcome. i think that his what his intent was here. >> he said that eloquently, but i think that is what he was trying to say. >> thank. you >> i think he's going to tweet himself out of relevance here. i think what's gonna happen for a lot of folks, like, myself the concern is what john is saying. wait a second, i thought you said this was going to meant to be the town square where we all get a voice, but the people that he fired or the people who do moderation. three days before the election. so, that is incongruent with what he said he was going to do. i actually know about a dozen people who have already quit twitter because they assume that he is not going to be good to his workers. >> forget the message for a moment, does the message resonate? is he correct? if you can have a good check and balance on power, or if you do not allow the same party to be control of the house, senate, an oval office --
8:46 pm
>> the past 40 years of midterm elections show, as the party in power loses seats in the house and senate. i think the american public is done that themselves without elon musk telling them to do. >> think about jim jordan, he wants to do earrings about the fbi's investigation of white supremacy. that is his agenda. so, the agenda of investigation, which i think the republicans are going to overreach, i think absolutely. a balance of power is an excellent thing. we do not live in that reality anymore. we do not live in reality anymore where you can count on a balance of power resulting in a better result for the american. people >> and then there is also the factor of election deniers. that is also a new wrinkle where there are 300 running for different roles, and that changes everything. if somebody saw her becomes the secretary of state and is in charge of elections, that changes everything. so --
8:47 pm
>> there is also a pendulum swing. there is a pendulum that swings between complains about divided government, and then complain about single party rule. if you have -- >> it is gridlock, or it is moving too fast. >> i do not think government has ever been accused of moving too fast. >> well, you know republican things that joe biden is running away with his agenda right now. that's what i mean by moving too fast. >> that thank you so much. >> i have nothing to add, alison. >> they agree. >> [laughs] isn't that interesting? a note about america tomorrow? >> it is all about turnout how and where, could the weather impact who shows up to the polls, we are going to give you the forecast next.
8:48 pm
seatgeek presents boomstick lady. seatgeek helps her find the perfect seat, so she can sit where make the biggest boom. oh, okay! seatgeek handles the tickets, so fans can fan. i was trying to refinance my mortgage. i went to check my credit score and i found a couple of inquiries that i had not initiated. within a few weeks of working with creditrepair.com, my credit score went up about 60 points. get started at creditrepair.com.
8:49 pm
8:50 pm
8:51 pm
can you believe someone thought this would help you hear better? and no one will notice it? genius. now this is eargo. made to be heard. not seen.
8:52 pm
robin after went along to see for billionaires. test into cnn, the 1.9 billion dollar powerball drawing is not happening tonight. powerball folks it's been delayed because of participating lottery it's time to complete security protocols. >> whatever that means. that is bizarre. you win and they just not fair. >> i don't want anybody else poking around. i've never had a security breach of the lottery or protocol update you since we have more. >> it was the one person holding up hudson's billionth? we'll figure it out.
8:53 pm
also, over 50 high temperature records broken or tied today at cities around the northeast of south. but now those are supposed to drop soon. the weather mean for voter turnout. transforms in weather channel. pedram, what should people expect tomorrow at the weather center? >> we got a lot going on at the weather here across the western u.s.. across arizona. look at all these key battleground states across the baton particular. really broad disturbance. we're in quite a bit of wetter across the western u.s.. wet weather in place, or rain showers, snow star, we know certainly getting in on the wet weather. and believe the best piece of advice for the forecast over this region, in the coming 24 hours. as we get up to the polls early as weather kind of goes out. -- you are doing to snow showers. 70% chance of snow related to
8:54 pm
the afternoon hours in places like las vegas, notice the increased probability of rainfall. 335, even 7 pm. up to seven plus percent chance of rain going to the place and gusty in places around here. studies have shown how what has played a role in voter turnout and typically plays well it republican voters. they come out more for weather than democratic voters. lucille a reducing turnout there when it comes to what. whether it comes across western that. states again, the activity shifts a little farther to the south. -- parts of the areas of northern arizona, like that, notice what happens. he had three, five, 7%. the winds pick up in intensity and it gets very quickly in the eastern front. -- offshore with any significant impact. it temps well above average. which studies have shown four times above average unlikely.
8:55 pm
that doesn't greet voter turnout. but it also has seem to be more likely to keep in complete power in play there and keep them likely to continue forward. so the temps remain above average across the set something u.s.. parts of eastern u.s.. and the cool air is eventually arrive and the tropical storm, subtropical feature, that is offshore guys. it's gonna remain well offshore. >> thank you for all of that. just from that the democrats need better fall weather gear. that's why the given that weather forecast. thank you for that. thank you the news you can use. all right, are minutes away from election day. and america. we'll go through all the critical races and what possible surprisises to what had for next.
8:56 pm
8:57 pm
8:58 pm
julian's about to learn that free food is a personal eating trigger. no it isn't. yes it is. and that's just a bit of psychology julian learned from noom weight. sign up now at noom.com
8:59 pm
hi, i'm jason and i've lost 202 pounds on golo. being a veteran, the transition from the military into civilian life causes a lot of stress. i ate a lot for stress. golo and release has helped me with managing that stress and allowing me to focus on losing weight. for anyone struggling with weight and stress-related weight gain, i recommend golo to you. this is a real thing. this is not a hoax. you follow the plan, you'll lose weight.
9:00 pm
no that means it is election day officially in america. and the people about the cast ballots for control of the house and senate. and state. orange and 35 house seats. 36 candidates. 37 governor -- makanda certain that could change election of america. >> with some key states to watch. harry? >> finally, election day is. where my prayers have been answered. of course, this could be a long election day. it cou

297 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on