tv CNN This Morning CNN November 14, 2022 4:00am-5:00am PST
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if you test positive and are at high risk of severe disease, act fast. ask if an oral treatment is right for you. covid-19 moves fast, and now you can too. two new ihop lunch and dinner menu items for twice the goodness, twice the flavor, and twice the choice. sirloin salisbury steak and all-natural salmon. perfect for lunch or dinner. only at ihop. download the app and earn free food with every purchase. happy monday morning to you, everyone. good morning to you, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> good morning. it is monday, november 14th. we're talking about politics. we still don't know everything. but democrats will keep control
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of the senate. but what about the house? this morning republicans appear to be inching closer to a majority. >> a major sitdown also currently under way overseas. what could come from president biden's meeting with china's leader, xi jinping? also right now, police are searching for a shooter this morning after three people were killed at the university of virginia. there's a massive manhunt under way. >> we're live in ukraine's newly liberated city of kherson also. >> the people of the city resisted the russians, the russians suppressed them. this is what ukrainians are like when that suppression comes off. >> we are live on the ground in ukraine but first we are going to start with the high stakes meeting between president biden and his chinese counterpart, xi jinping. it was their first in-person sit down since biden took office. it's happening on the sidelines
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of the g20 summit in bali. so let's talk to david sanger. david, good morning, and thank you for joining us. i wonder what you are watching ahead of this summit as this meeting between biden and xi is under way right now? >> reporter: good morning and great to be on the new show with all of you. i have to say that this meeting has a lot of high stakes to it. even if you don't hear a whole lot of specific deliverables at the end. the leaders of the world's two largest economies have never met as president. they've talked on the phone, partly that was because of covid but partly that was because of the spiraling relationship spiraling downward between the u.s. and china. and we are at the point right now where the relationship is probably the worst it has been since nixon did the opening to china in the early 1970s. that's 50 years.
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so i think what we're looking for on -- out of this meeting is some understanding of what floor the two of them are willing to put under it. a little bit about taiwan, in which the president has spoken quite aggressively in recent times saying that the united states would, in fact, come directly to its defense, different from the way we have dealt with ukraine. i think from china some sense that the expansion of their nuclear arsenal is something they're willing to discuss. >> david, your piece is great, laying all of this out this morning in the times. but this line struck me in particular. you wrote whether it's a partnership of convenience or robust alliance, beijing and moscow share an interest in frustrating the american agenda. talk about that as this meeting happens. >> i think one of the least discussed parts of this is the fact that we have seen over the past few years a deepening of
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the relationship between vladimir putin and xi jinping. there are a lot of people who believe that, in fact, those two countries do not have a lot in common, and really can't bring themselves to form a true alliance. we had a very senior member of the pentagon tell us last week that, in fact, he thought the alliance was coming together and that has big implications for our nuclear deterrents, for our operations around the world, for the future of russia's confidence as it stays in ukraine or leaves. and it also, poppy, i think, has big implication for whether or not the united states has to think about defending itself quite differently if it thinks it's facing a joint russian and chinese force. so that's going to be a big subject along the way. president biden told me in a question i asked at the press conference last week that he did
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not believe the chinese had much respect for putin. >> this is really about two super powers occupying space, coe coexisting. this is another quote from your piece, this is in a sense the first summit from the superpowers, and this is a quote, will both leaders discuss the terms of coexistence amid competition or by default will they let loose the dogs on unconstrained rivalry. what do you think it is? >> that is the question. for the past two years it's been rivalry. you have seen the united states try to cut off china's sources of technological supply for the most advanced semiconductors saying this is mostly about their ability to build weaponry. but we know that goes to the larger competitions of the
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future, quantum computing, artificial intelligence, and so forth. we've seen china be far more aggressive, particularly on territorial issues. you saw what happened around taiwan after nancy pelosi's visit. they're trying to set new facts on the ground and at sea to keep the united states pushed back beyond that first island chain and to make sure that it's china that really rules the pacific. so we're at a pretty critical moment. and having a three-way competition, russia, china, and the united states, that's something we haven't seen before, don. >> absolutely. we're watching it so closely. the fact that xi is more powerful now than any chinese leader has been in so long. we'll hear from president biden after he leaves that meeting. thanks for joining us. >> thanks, kaitlan. >>. this morning ukrainian president, volodymyr zelenskyy, made a surprise visit to the newly liberated city of kherson,
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this is days after they were able to force-out russian troops that occupied it. this weekend fighters returned home, families were reunited, including this soldier with his grandmother. watch. >> doesn't that say everything? nic robertson is on the ground in kherson. nic, that singing that we heard and all of the people behind you. this was, i'm sure unimaginable to them for so long. >> reporter: and it's still hard for it to sink in to people here. i've been talking to them again today, 72 hours after that liberation. they still feel they cannot really show their true emotions. particularly those beaten by the russian troops. there were plenty of those. president zelenskyy said he was here to send a signal that he wanted the people of the city to
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reconnect with the rest of the country. they put up a temporary cell phone tower over here to help people get a connection with loved ones. but literally the last few minutes, a truck, it's going to be hard for our cameraman to get around to here but you see a big blue truck that just pulled around here. that is the first humanitarian aid to be coming into the city. it is much needed. there's celebration here but still coming out of the darkness of russian occupation. the joys of kherson's liberation keep on giving. how are you, she says? i survived her friend says, but the russians kicked my door in and stole everything. this city once home to more than a quarter million people is
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still celebrating its freedom but beginning to count the cost of the eight-month brutal occupation they endured. the city's phone and internet connection cut, residents crowding around soldiers' communications in desperate hope of contacting loved ones. on their way out, the russians crippled almost every vital service. electricity off, and water too. this pump close to the river bank giving water too polluted to drink. the water stopped when the power went off he says. this is the fourth day without water. but what can we do? we need to survive somehow. >> the russians even felled the city's main tv transmitter. they blew it up just before leaving, a final act of punishment for a population that until days earlier they said was part of russia and would be forever.
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that same message kherson and russia together forever blast erred on hundreds of billboards around the city, is already being torn down. why? because eight months of occupation is not very nice. i didn't feel very good living in fear that any moment a car could pull over near you and bring you to a very unpleasant place. alexander was unlucky enough to be taken to one of those unpleasant places and shows us around the jail he was in. says the russians beat him daily. they abused everyone. kept us hungry. used us as free labor to repair their military vehicles he says. they were beating us whenever they wanted. this is where they say russians killed people for shouting out glory to ukraine or having tattoos saying the same thing. and over here in this room, this
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is where they used to torture people. the fire he says started by the russians as they left to cover up their crimes. but it is across the road in kateryna's church russia's oddest brutality was perpetrated. a grave was looted days before the russians left. father vitali takes us into the gloomy crypt, shows us where his coffin was stolen from. he lay here for 240 years through many wars he says. we honored him as the founder of kherson and they took him without permission. repairs of souls and city have
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only just begun. and some of that beginning -- well, he's going to pan over to the blue truck. look to the people gathered at the back of that humanitarian truck here. there is no drinking water in the city. there is no electricity. there is a shortage of food. people, the water they have is polluted as we said in the story. it is very difficult for people here. so it's no surprise for me to see them gathered around the back of this first humanitarian truck to come into the city to see what it might offer them. >> the winter is upon us and them and that's going to impact the war. >> reporter: it certainly is. the war is literally -- this town is now on the front line of course, the russians just across the river. you routinely hear barrages of outgoing fire we were down at the river early on, you can't see the russians on the other side but they're dug in. seems the winter perhaps will freeze the line here. but it's going to take some
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time. president zelenskyy said we're moving forward, that's still the message. they want to take more territory. but for sure the winter is going to be brutal and hard here. at night subzero temperatures. the city doesn't have heating. it gets cold here at night. >> nic robertson we're so glad you and your team are there. thank you for that remarkable reporting. we have new video showing the moment an explosion ripped through a packed street in ist istanbul. a major pedestrian thoroughfare, the attack killed at least six people, injured more than 80 others. turkish officials say the incident is an terrorist attack and the president is vowing to punish those responsible. police have detained 46 people, including the suspected bomber, a syrian woman who they say entered turkey illegal and trained with kurdish terrorist groups. they have footage of a woman sitting on a bench for more than
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40 minutes and leaving the bag behind before the explosion happened. this is the deadliest attack in turkey in more than five years. in the united states, an urgent manhunt at the university of virginia going on. three people shot and killed. a gunman believed to be a student is on the loose and the entire campus is on lockdown. we want to get to joe johns this morning in charlottesville. what's going on? >> reporter: this is a sprawling place in charlottesville and it's awash as police continue to canvas the campus in search of a killer. the university president put out a statement this morning saying he was heart broken to report three people dead, two injured. those people, of course, now being treated as the search continues, the shooting occurring around 10:30 last night eastern time just down the street from where i'm standing.
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authorities say they have locked down this campus. they told people to shelter in place, classes have been cancelled for the day as the search continues not only for that suspect but also for the vehicle he was driving, a black suv. don? >> so, joe, can you talk to us more about the suspect and a possible motive? we're hearing sort of conflicting information about who he is, his relationship to the school, et cetera. >> reporter: right. well, we don't have a lot of information about the motive as of yet, but what we do know is that this individual is -- his name is christopher darnell jones jr. he is said to be, according to the president, a student at the university of virginia. and also, we believe, he was on the uva football team, at least in 2018. although it's not clear whether he played in any games. so there's certainly an
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association with the university and specifically with the athletic department, the football team. >> joe johns joining us from charlottesville, virginia this morning. thank you. this morning democrats are celebrating a narrow senate majority after weekend wins in nevada and arizona. but a number of house races still undecided, a lot of them in california which is fascinating. >> the democrats had a steep climb to maintain majority. it's getting steeper. right now in the races called, republicans 212 for them, democrats 204. you need 218 to control the house of representatives. which means republicans would need six. democrats would need 14. there are currently 19 uncalled races in the house. let's look at where those 19 races stand. republicans lead in ten, they only need six, democrats lead in nine, they need 14. which means if you look at this map, democrats need to hold
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every blue seat here and flip five. five of these red seats to blue. is there a path? >> is there? >> it's tight. it's very tight. maybe. but as i said, it's getting more difficult. let's look at california quickly. the two most promising races from democrats where they're still trailing are california's 13th, 84 votes separate the two, only 46% -- >> 84 votes. >> right. there's room there. they could win there. here california's 22nd district, almost 3,000 votes but only 39% in. still possible there. if you're being optimistic and giving both of those seats to the democrats, that's two. can you get three more? that's where it gets very, very hard. looking down to california's 41st congressional district. 4,000 votes separate the two. but saturday it was 2,000. the lead for the incumbent is growing, only 59% in but going in the wrong direction for the
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democrats. where democrats' hearts might get broken is arizona. in arizona's six congressional district down here, the lead actually grew a little bit last night for the republican. going in the wrong direction for democrats here. 1,700 votes separate them. this is the one that really is bugging democrats this morning. you can see david swiekert the republican, ahead. but going into the weekend, the democrat actually led in this district by 4,000 votes. >> and 85% reporting. >> yes. votes reported last night flipped that and now you have the republican ahead by some. so you can see you're stuck nationally at these two seats, they would need three more to get there. not impossible but challenging for the democrats. >> where's pima county? >> i'm going to show you the
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governor's race here, this is tight. you can see katy hobbs the democrat ahead. pima county is right here. you can see katie hobbs the democrat with the lead there. still 40,000 votes to be counted. she's been getting 60% of the vote in pima county, that could expand her lead. kari lake would need about 58% of the vote that's left, 170,000 or so votes left, she needs 58% to overtake katie hobbes, in maricopa last night, about 55% she got, and pima county about 40%. so a steep climb for kari lake. >> almost vertical. >> a little less vertical but steep. >> thank you very much, john berman. ahead we'll be joined by the senate majority leader, chuck schumer. he'll be here live with us at the table on cnn this morning.
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still ahead, this story blowing all of our minds. a cryptocurrency empire imploezing. what you need to know. how does this apply to you? ahead. plus the red wave that had been predicted did not happen. we'll have frank luntz here to explain how pollsters got it wrong, what can be different going forward. >> you got some explaining to do there, luntz. s a lot without spending a lot. shop early and save, only at kay" ♪ i i was born here, i'm from here,e, and i'm never leaving here. i'm a new york hotel. yeah, i'm tall. 563 feet and 2 inches. i'm on top of the world. i'm looking for someone who kes to be in the middle of it all, but also likes some peace and qui.
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so, everyone, put down your coffee and listen to this or take a sip. i want you to listen. this is where america is right now, this is an inconvenient truth, voters have show that america is overindexing on maga and extremism. and voters stepped in to push pause on attacks against democracy and america. for example, voters rejected a candidate who called the
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insurrectionists who attacked america on january 6th political prisoners. also with so many election deniers on the ballot this year integrity was on the ballot. 26 of them lost their races. many of whom beat out moderate voices in the primaries. the noteworthy part here, the rejections include pivotal secretary of state races, the winners of which will excerpt considerable power over how their state's elections are run. also, many of the candidates who lost are or are in jeopardy of losing are trump-backed candidate who is adopted his anti-democracy lies. and many hinted this was a problem for republicans chances in the elections. >> i think the -- there's probably a greater likelihood the house flips than the senate. senate races are just different. they're statewide.
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candidate quality has a lot to do with the outcome. >> so now what's the outcome? more republicans are in full self-reflection mode. wonder whether hitching their wagon to trump and the election lies, whether that was such a great idea. >> this is a time that donald trump is no doubt in the rear view mirror and it's time to move on with the party, with candidate quality. >> it's an opportunity to reassess what trump's role is inside the republican party and are people willing to stand up rather than caving in on him. >> i think governor desantis is the single biggest winner of the of the night and will almost certainly become the rallying point for every republican in the party who wants to move beyond president trump. >> election denialism is still alive with well in america. protesters gathered in arizona this weekend to protest and cast doubt on the legitimacy of the electoral process there. why? because their candidate is losing.
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>> i believe at this point we need to just have a new election at this point and we need to do paper ballots and do it all in one day and be done with it. it's an absurd notion to play the charade and act like after this counting we won't have tainted results either way. >> but democracy is not a static thing as we know, it lives and breathes and must constantly be defended against those who would destroy it. we're still a young country and on november 8th millions of americans went to the polls and did that. a lot of folks got it wrong. so how did the pundits and poll watchers get it so wrong? one of them here is frank luntz, he tweeted out, when the dust settles the gop will have between 223, 230 house seats. republicans will also take control of the senate. let's bring in the man behind
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that tweet mr. frank luntz. >> and i acknowledged on tweets since then. i don't see any pollsters showing up. where are you? >> you are. how did so many people, including you, get it so wrong? as i said in the beginning there, we tend to overindex, we've been doing it since 2016, over indexing the maga part of the electorate. >> there's a fear they did not include enough republicans in their samples. because we knew from 2016, 2018, and 2020, that trump voters tended not to respond to pollsters because they thought the results would be used against them. there's an effort to, as you say, over index, that's number one. number two people came to the polls and decided enough is enough. about 8% comes in undecided and has to decide at that moment. they want to vote one way and
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end up voting the other. >> what do you mean by that? >> reporter: they come in and think i'm going to vote republican. and then they go and have to decide do they pull the ballots or do they want to make a statement by voting democrat? 8% of the population comes in and may change their minds. third is that the independents, and this is where the republicans have to take very close analysis to. the independents usually break 55/45 republican. if they break 60/40, republicans win. in this case they broke 50/50. that's a real problem for the gop. it's a drop. and one more, republicans got 5 million more votes for the house than the democrats. 5 million. so why don't the results show themselves in the congressional races? the answer, redistricting. that had a bigger impact against the gop than anybody realized and you could not know this until election day. >> you brought up independents,
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right. and one of the splits was 49/47, you said 50/50, but we get the gist. "the washington journal" editorial board writes the message couldn't be clearer, independent voters may be unhappy with the direction of the country but they didn't trust the gop enough to give them power. they go on to say that party will have to adjust policy on abortion and message for 2024. >> you can never ask people to adjust their policies based on elections. sometimes principles, sometimes principles are more important. you have to convince the american people even if they disagree with you on their principle you're worthy of their support. so i challenge changing their position. that said they have to accept if they're going to be that strict on abortion, they're going to turn off younger voters which voted overwhelmingly democrat. and they're going to turn off women. which voted significantly democratic. and that's the way it is. there are times you don't follow
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the polls. there are times you look people straight in the eye and say enough. i hear you, i know where you stand, i'm simply against it. but accept what happens on election day. >> since you mentioned election voters i want to get to this. a presidential adviser said i was telling potus the streets were not saying what the polls were saying and young people were coming out. >> that's a given. that's not so insight -- i don't want to be critical of that person. yeah, the young people were voting but they still vote on a smaller percentage than their parents and a tiny percentage compared to their grandparents. so to me, i want to look forward. i want to take where we stand right now and focus on what it means over the next few weeks and next few months. everybody is rehashing the past. and that's why people had enough of donald trump. he wasn't rehashing last week, he was rehashing what happened two years ago.
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we need to look forward. that's what the american people are asking of all of us. it's done, we voted, we have a really, really split government right now. now let's move forward and see if we can get something done. >> i want to get to the trump aspect of this. i know you did a focus group this weekend on who people prefer. i think people do not trust polls right now. >> we shouldn't. >> how do you fix it? >> you don't. >> the polling is irrelevant is what you're saying? >> you spend too much time focused on who's going to win and lose and trying to predict that. >> isn't that what you do? >> i don't do that. i haven't worked in a political campaign in more than a decade. i used the numbers given to me by the democratic congressional campaign committee and the republican congressional campaign committee -- >> how can you say that, your tweet said before i predict this group to win -- >> yes. based on their polling, not my polling. >> here's my question on that. people are saying the media said
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this, pundits said this, democrats also thought they weren't going to farewell tuesday night, they're happy they did, but they were bracing for losses. how do their pollsters fix this? is there any point in polling if you can't get it right? >> what a great question to the media. >> very good question. >> stop focussing on who's up and down, and start trying to understand why. give us insight. give us information that we can use. people watch this show because they're more informed by giving you their ten or 15 or 30 minutes. they watch because they care about what's going on and they want to stay up to date on all the events that are important. they're not asking you to project the future. they want to fully and completely understand the present. so let's go back to using polling for what it was meant to do. insight, information, knowledge, and if you're lucky, wisdom. you have to show that focus group. that's what's really important. >> we do because you spoke to these are trump voters.
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>> yes, all of them. >> here's what they think they want 2024 to look like. >> to me he's a more polished version of trump. willing to fight back and go after it but doing it in a way he doesn't degrade or say things that are just off putting. >> that's talking about desantis? >> yes. and almost every one of them. they all voted for trump two years ago and almost all of them would vote for desantis today. they appreciate what trump did. they appreciate his agenda but they don't appreciate him as a person and they're actually worn out with him as a person. and i believe if trump goes ahead and announces tomorrow, he doesn't understand the world that has been created over the last week. and trump's vicious brutal attacks not just of desantis but also of the glen youngkin, the governor of virginia, the republicans are beginning to say, okay, enough already. >> who he insulted with a racist slur. >> yes. i appreciate all that you did.
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i respect what you went through, but go home. >> what else did you learn? that's one of the reasons we love having you is, because you'll be so candid about when i got it wrong but also because you spend so much of your time speaking with these people. what else did you learn from that focus group that surprised you? >> we did a study for the american conservation coalition about climate. an example. the republicans seem to be hostile to climate legislation. the young people in particular and the party in general has to tackle climate. it doesn't mean that they have to go all in with the biden proposal. it doesn't mean they have to shut off exploration for energy. but it does mean if they don't respect and appreciate and make specific tangible efforts on the climate issue, then the voters are going to continue to reject them. it's not just climate, it's the economy, it's taxes, it's on the budget. >> it's on abortion. we're running out of time here.
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so everyone asks trumpism is over, right? is this the last gasp of trumpism? >> this is friday the 13th party 15. freddy always comes back just when you think he's done. >> didn't we say we shouldn't be projecting what happened. >> that's as far as winners but if you look at the donors running away from him, the trump supported right wing media, the murdoch media moving away from trump, i think that's a fair question. are people just over it? are they over it? >> they're over the language, they're over the meanness, the ugliness. more than anything else, i'll give you one word to close the segment. unity. that is what they're looking for right now and the more we can help them achieve that, the better good we are doing. >> i think you're right. we have to see what the voters
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decide. thank you, frank. appreciate it. straight ahead, breaking down the dramatic rise and fall of one of the top cryptocurrency companies. what it means if you invested. and former vice president mike pence is calling out former president trump's actions on january 6th. >> the president's words were reckless. it's clear he decided to be part of the problem. steak and crispy bacon. but what about the new boss? it looks so good it makes me hangry! settle down there, big guy the new subway series. whwhat's your pick? my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicats neurivaof brain health.tasker to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger.
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i want to show you something just in to cnn. take a look now. this is back in ukraine to this dramatic scene in the liberated city of kherson right now. this video taken moments ago. residents there getting humanitarian aid days after the russians left. we have been seeing emotional scenes play out of reunions, families telling their stories of survival. cnn's nic robertson is on the ground. we'll go live with nic in moments. he's called the bernie madoff of crypto. this morning the stunning implosion of the digital
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currency company known as ftx that's triggering new investigations. brynn gingras is live with the latest. brynn, the story is fascinating and i'm obsessed with what's happening and where this is going forward. >> bernie madoff now but it was a few months ago when ftx's cfo was on the cover of fortune questioning if he's the next warren buffett and now his company has imimploded. and it'sshaking up the future of digital currency. ftx filed for bankruptcy. the company's 30-year-old ceo sam bankman freed resigned and his $16 billion fortune erased. bloo bloomberg called it one of the greatest destructions of well.
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he has apologized saying i was shocked to see things unravel the way they did. now questions of mishandling customers funds have emerged. at least one billion in customers' funds have vanished. he transferred $1 billion funds from ftx to his trading company sources told "reuters." >> in some ways the collapse of ftx is the moment of the crypto world. it is a classic financial crisis. >> the downfall of the crypto exchange began earlier this month when questions were raised about the financial health of the company. those questions caused many customers to cash out then a failed merger caused more strain on ftx. binance backed out of plans to acquire the company saying the problems were beyond our control or ability to help. the justice department and
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s.e.c. are launching probes into ftx, the company this is headquartered in the bahamas is also being investigated by authorities over potential criminal misconduct. and the white house addressing the need for oversight. >> without proper oversight, cryptocurrencies, it risks harming everyday americans. but the most recent news further underscores these concerns and highlights why prudent regulation is needed. >> reporter: at its peak the exchange was worth $32 billion and benefitted from super star endorsements from tom brady, gisele bundchen, and steph curry. >> i'm not an expert but with ftx i need everything i need. >> the miami heat had their arena renamed as ftx arena last year but now it's coming off the building. it ran an ad this super bowl
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featuring larry david. >> i'm never wrong about this stuff. >> reporter: stakeholders losing big here, investors and customers, reports are those with money couldn't withdraw from their accounts. the company is now in chapter 11. what comes next is possibly washington passing legislation on this industry. so this is the next step, what's going to happen, how is wa washington going to respond? >> i think mark cuban tweeted something interesting about it. he said it's the same version of a different story we're seeing right now. >> thank you, brynn. at least the wild west has a sheriff. >> you know her. >> let's talk about that. >> christine romans. >> with our chief business correspondent christine romans. there's no sheriff. and one of the things when you think about bernie madoff, think about cash and assets stolen and
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lost, it's hard to get it back but it's not impossible. c crypto makes it harder. >> it's an asset that is not regulated at all. there are no regulations on crypto. for a long time people said crypto was, it was a hedge against inflation. it's not. it is not a vehicle that you can measure value with. it is a speculative tool. and there are a lot of people who put a lot of money in on the next big thing, everyone is going to get rich in crypto. you have seen the billionaire boy wonders, especially this one, don't appear to know what they were doing. >> can you talk to us about what set up this downfall. a lot of people said actually you could see it coming. >> he was sort of a hero, a progressive champion, one of the big donors of the midterm elections, giving to liberal causes. >> he's been at the white house. >> he's someone that everybody thought this guy really knows what he's doing.
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he's been called the next john podesta -- he's been called the next j.p. morgan. ironically they spawned legislation as well. so maybe he is. essentially running the exchange, a hedge fund and using the crypto in his exchange in the hedge fund and people found out about it and they wanted their crypto back. and a run on the back. >> this is not exactly analogous to bernie madoff, but he ran a ponzi scheme, people feel dubbed by this one. you have elon musk, kind of melting down with twitter. you have mark zuckerberg with what's happening now with metaverse. is this the fall, at least the spotlight of something to do with the sort of billionaire genius that maybe is not so genius. >> it's the billionaire trifecta
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fail with those three. the through line is maybe the geniuses don't know what they're doing. >> or don't know everything. >> don't know everything. or have no brakes and now they're crashing their cars. look at elon musk, for example, what is happening at twitter? he bought it and they're already talking about bankrupt -- what is happening with twitter? it's blowing up before our very eyes. and he has spacex and tesla. questions about how stretched he is. he's riffing with randoms on twitter and this is the world's richest man. a serious responsibility when you have shareholder money in some of his other endeavors. and then you have mark zuckerberg, who another billionaire boy wonder. but his company is the worst performer of the s&p 500, stock is down 66% over the past year. this is a widely held stock. there are real mom and pop investors being hurt here. the other question, does he really have the grown ups around him on all of these cases.
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do we stamp someone with a billionaire status, so smart, dropped out of college and created the company. you need to have regulation, strength and vision and we're seeing it unravel. the contrast would be jeff bezos. listening to him on this show. he's running the board but stepped back from day-to-day operations with a bit of a vision. i think he's the grown up in the billionaire bunch right now. >> as poppy points out, he has issues when it comes to workers and unions. >> yeah. >> obviously no company is perfect but all those people losing their jobs at twitter and the social media companies, it's crazy. >> to fire and rehire at twitter, fire and rehire to try roll out an $8 blue check and then roll it back, it looks sloppy. >> we need leaders with christine romans with strength,
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judgment, and from iowa. >> in the meantime we'll keep you around to talk about the federal probes. >> there's so much going on. >> so well said this morning. switching gears soon we will hear from president biden after his bilateral meeting with chinese president xi jinping. you'll see that live right here. we're heading back out to the newly liberated city of kherson, as residents there get shipments of much needed aid after months of living under russian control. these images coming into cnn. ''twas a wintry day, and at ihop quite soon hot cinnamon apples would be coaxed with a spoon on the fluffiest french toast with red currants on top we wish you a happy holiday, only at ihop. new gingersnap ape french toast, part of our new holiday menu. try all three flavors.
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it's every-other-month, injectable cabenuva. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete, long-acting hiv treatment you can get every other month. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by my healthcare provider, every other month. it's one less thing to think about while traveling. hiv pills aren't on my mind. a quick change in my plans is no big deal. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions post-injection reactions, liver problems, and depression. if you have a rash and other allergic reaction symptoms, stop cabenuva and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have liver problems or mental health concerns, and if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or considering pregnancy. some of the most common side effects include injection-site reactions, fever, and tiredness. if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. every other month, and i'm good to go. ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. hey lexus, take me to c studio.
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getting humanitarian aid days after the russian troops were forced out. let's head back to ukraine. our nic robertson is on the ground there. nic, it must be just remarkable to experience. >> reporter: it is. it's very remarkable. it's remarkable because over the past few days we've sort of witnessed this you for yeah, this excitement, and people coming out more and opening up more about what they've experienced. and to see the first aid, and it's hangover there, our cameraman clayton filmed the pictures that you have there, this truck has been provided by a church here in ukraine. they're the first to get in here, remembering that the government has had to des moines som demine some of the roads here. i know some people here will need that spiritual up lift from the bibles as well. they've been through a terribly traumatic time, fearing every
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time they go out on the streets they could be picked up and taken and beaten. these are basics for you and me and most people around the world. bread and water, we take it for granted. here it isn't. this is the first clean drinking water people have had for four osh five days here. this is important. maybe you can hear that explosion going off there. the ukrainians still are firing out across the river here just a few miles away where the russian troops are still dug in. >> nic robertson, thank you very much for being on the ground for that reporting. democrats have secured the senate majority, but they still have their eyes on one more seat. up next, the senate majority leader chuck schumer is going to join us live this morning. you don't want to miss that. hold on... you're a night manager and mom. and the bill payer, baker, and nightlight maker?
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as you know, i'm committed to keeping the lines of communications open between you and me personally, but our governments across the board, because our two countries have so much that we have an opportunity to deal with. >> a statesman should think about and know where to lead his country. he should also think about and know how to get along with other countries and the wider world. good morning everyone. it is monday, november 14th. that is what's happening overseas. the president is traveling. that was president joe biden and chinese president xi jinping this morning in bali, indonesia at the g20 summit. the two leaders briefly spok
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